McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Mar 1919, p. 7

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WW " /%" '0 **mt* McHENRY PLAINDKALER, MeOENRT, IL^ McQsrs who «dH CbakeeltfcaCtbalrclui- ^Munwawrl tori toad to Relict* Warns, Constipation. Head* ache, Teething disorden and Stomach T rouble* . _ Used by Mother* for JO gears. Sold bf Dragging ererr a. Trial package FREE. Addrea* MTIEI liivce., LB ^11, tL V. No it?o • is no wise toeu^s *ro® » tbat cant STOMACH UPSET? DIAPEPSIN AT ONCE ENDS Y8PEPSIA, ACIDITY, OAS, 3 INDIGESTION. Tour meals bit back! Tour stomach la sour, add, gassy and you feel bloated after eating or you have heavy lamps of Indigestion pain or headache, but never mind. Here is Instant relief. I** •lay upset! Bat a tablet of Pape's Diapepsin and Immediately the Indigestion, gases, acidity and all stomach distress ends. Pape's Diapepsin tablets are the surest, quickest stomach relievers In the world. They cost very little at drag •tores. .Adv. Love Is blind,, especially the kind known as self-love. Important to Mother* Bbramine carefully every bottle Ot CA8TOR1A, that famous old remedy tat Infants and children, and see that It Bears the Sgnature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoris And an awful lot of argument can come out of a little mouth. Inportant to all Womei Readers of this Piper tiiotisancfa upon thousands of women have kidney or bladder trouble and never •aspect it. Women's complaint* often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition , they may cause the other organs to become diseased. Ton may suffer pain In the back, headache and loss of ambition. Poor health makes you nervous, irritable and may be despondent; it makes any one so. But hundreds of women claim that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by restoring health to the kidneys, proved to be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions. Many send for a sample bottle to see what Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder medicine, will do Sot them. By enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer 4 Co.,, Binghamton, N. Y., you may receive sample size bottle by Parcel Post. You can purchase medium and large sise bottles at all drug stores.--Adv. An Idle brain Is the devil's scheme factory. Weekly Health Talks What is the Caused Backache? ^ ^ BY DOCTOR CORNELL • Backache is perhaps the most corntoon ailment from %hich women suffer. Rarely do yon find anybody free Krom it. Sometimes the cause is oblecure, but Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., <a high medical authority, says the cause Is very often a form of catarrh 'that settles in the delicate membranes of the feminine organs. When these •organs are Inflamed, the first symptom is backache, accompanied by bearing down sensations, weakness, unhealthy discharges, irregularity, painiful periods, irritation, headache and fa general run-down condition. Any hvoman in this condition is to be pitiled, bnt pity does not cure. The trouble calls for Dr. Pierce's Favorite prescription, which la a separate and 'distinct medicine for women. It is made of roots and herbs pat up [without alcohol or opiate of any kind, for [Dr. Pierce uses nothing else in his prescription. Favorite Prescription is a natural remedy for women, for the vegetable ^growths of which it is made seem to have been intended by Nature for that very purpose. Thousands of girls and women, young and old, have taken it, and thousands •have written grateful letters to Dr. Pierce Mying it made them well. In taking .Favorite Prescription, it i> reassuring to know that it goes straight to the cause of 'the trouble. There is but one way to overcome sickness, and that is to overcome tthe cause. That is precisely what Favorite Prescription is intended to do. Send 10c (or trial pkg. of Tablet* ; Address lavalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. Constipated women, as well as men, an advised by Dr. Pierce to take his Pleasant ^eUeu^ Thay an just splendid for co» SOIMB filie FOR HOME WILE WAR Forty Downstate Cities in Agitation to Repeal Public UtiiH ties Act . • ' ' t -•-r; • ommZED TO HUE ffcHT shown. far 40 Two Measures for City Manager Plan fOF Chicago--Cook County Civil • • Service Bill Is lnt&- " * " duced. Springfield. -- Arraignment of the state public utilities commission before the legislature, with mayors and attorneys from some forty downstate cities as plaintiffs, and the defendants such members of the utility commission as desire to enter an appearance, uppears to be the chief case an the iv ^islative docket this week. Yl". lownstate cities--perhaps forty of them already have started an agitation to repeal the utilities act. This started at a conference held in Peoria in November. The cities involved have perfected an organization of which Robert L. Watson of Aledo is the head. This organization is to be represented a£ the hearing by spokesmen from each city. The main object of the organization is to secure home rule for the downstate municipalities over public utilities within their respective boundaries. * The Cook county civil service bill Introduced by Senator Barbour was advanced to second reading. This provides for a commission of three, one to be named by the governor, on* by the president of the county board, •and the third by the judges of the circuit court, to administer civil service. Every job in the county service is carried into the law. All present employees are included. Revamping of the city government of Chicago is proposed in identical bills introduced by Senator Barbour and Representative Dahlberg. It provides for the election of thirty-five aldermen, one for each ward, on a nonpartisan ballot, and permits the "city manager" plan to be placed in operation. The bills were brought to Springfield by George C. Sikes. The Chicago Association of Commerce, the Chicago Bureau of Public Efficiency, the City club, Citizens' association, Civic Federation, Real Estate board. Woman's City club,' Cook County Real Estate board and the Committee of One Hundred are all back of the bill. In case the legislature paSges the measure, it would be submitted to * referendum vote in Chicago before becoming operative, and (he terms of officials serving at the time would not bw affefcted. John H. Walker, president of the R nte Federation of Labor, anil J. P. Lewis, vice president of the United Mine Workers of America, delivered such a broadside against the state police bill before the senate sitting as a committee of the whole that It was practically agreed that the measure Is dead. Intimation that the Rockefeller interests are backing the fight to put the same kind of bills through the legislatures of other states was given by Senator John Daile.v of Peoria, who openly announced that he was against the bill. . Mr. Walker warned the legislature that jamming such a measure down the throats of the working people of the state would do more to create anarchism than anything that could be done. He said it was a plot of the Illinois manufacturers' association to put their heel on labor and charged that the state constabulary of Pennsylvania was used to a large extent as a strike-breaking agency. This was disputed by Captain Pitcher, deputy commissioner of the Pennsylvania force. F. Scott HfcBride, state superintendent of the Anti-Saloon league. In a letter to the dry members of the assembly, asked their support of the bill, declaring a state police department would help materially in suppressing violations of national prohibition. The bill of Representative Smejkal appropriating $1,(500,1)00 to meet deficiencies In the department of public welfare for operating expenses in state charitable and penal institutions was favorably reported by ^he house appropriations committee. A companion measure to the. Buck motion-picture censorship bill was Introduced by Representative Havill and sent to the license and miscellany committee. Structural engineers would be 11* censed by the department of registration and education under a bill of Rep* resentatlve Nobel. A bill introduced by Representative Abbey, aimed at bootlegging, would amend the act regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors In cities and villages by providing that any person wishing to dispense such liquors outside cities and villages obtain, from the county board of commissioners a license to do so. It went to the temperance committee. . ' • Representative Harry Wilson is sponsor for^a bill Intended to compel the attendance of all employed children between fourteen and sixteen on continuation schools for at least eight hours a week. Want Duty on Argentine Corn. - The Illinois Farmer's Grain Dealers' association in convention at Peoria protested against the importation of Argentine corn free of duty. They also went on record as opposing the daylight saving law. The following were elected officers for the ensuing year: John Miller, Galva, president; Harry Wood, Del a van, vice president; Fred Mndge, Bureau, second vice president; 'VI lliani Hinduhl, San Jose, treasurer. W. H. Kay. Watsega, C. Fairfield, Fisher. attd O. .lacoby, Champaign, direci, tm, .... ry Bill Ue firHearing. A heaiiug on the optometry licensing bill introduced In the house by Representative Roderick of Chicago will be held by the house judiciary?: committee this week, when opponents of the measure will set forth their ar-. guments. A companion bill, sponsored by Senator Dalley, Is before the senate i judiciary committee. The law licensing optometry was declared unconstitutional by the Illinois ^supreme court. The present b!lls are Intended to remove the objections, said to have been in the definition of the word "optometry." / The Roderick and Dalley measures have the backing of the registration and education department. They provide that no person who does not obtain from the department a license before October 1, 1919, shall be permitted to practice optometry--"the science of fitting of glasses." An optometrist, under the bill, must be at least twenty-one years of age,' have a high school education or its equivalent and njust have studied optometry for at least two years. All candidates must pass examinations. Proponents of the bill declare supervision of the optometry profession is necessary to guard the sight of the people. Bills are being prepared to amend the state medical practice act os that physicians will be required to renew their licenses annually and pay a nominal fee for the renewal. Vigorous opposition Is being manifested from certain medical circles. It Is declared foes of the proposal fear It will be difficult for some physicians to maintain their right to practice under the high standards set by the statute. At its last meeting the Illionls State Medical association favored a bill to require renewal of licenses every year, thereby eliminating unworthy physicians. The department of registration and education has been attacked because of its advocacy of the legislation. Trades and professions under the department, now subject to annual license renewal, are barberlng, chiropody, dentistry, embalming, horseshoeing, nursing, pharmacy, plumbing structural engineering and veterinary medicine and surgery. PEACE BRIDES IN . THEIR GAY GOWNS Millions for State Institutions. . h With the Introduction In the Senate by Senator Curtis of a bill providing for the expenditure of millions of dollars for state institutions at Lincoln and Jacksonville explanation was made that they would be divided as follows: To the Illinois School for the Deaf, Jacksonville--For salaries and wages, $213,448: for office expenses, $1,200; for travel, $3,100; for operation, $85,- 614; for repairs, $34,992; for equip* oient, $2,300. v To the Illinois School for the Blind, Jacksonville--For salaries and wages, $128,758; for office expenses, $2,800; for travel, $3,100; for operation, $55,- 427,- for repairs, $22,938; for equip-, ment, $4,100; for permanent improve ments, $1,000. To the Lincoln State School and Colony--For salaries and wages, $397,• 352; for office expenses, $4.400; fop, travel, $3,000; for operation, $530,047; for repairs, $74,678; for equipments $7,390; for permanent Improvements, $50,000; for custodial cottage for delinquent women, $15,000; for building for infants and small children, $30.- 000; for building for tubercular patients, $19,906. To the Jacksonville State Hospital --For salaries and wages, $375,322; for office expenses, $5,200; for travel, $6,000; for operation, $406.487; for repairs, $62,468; for equipment* $3,925; for permanent improvements, $53,000; for land, $40,000. Bond Test to Supreme Court The friendly guit filed In the Sangamon circuit court by John P. Mitchell of Mount Carmel, to test the validity of the $50,000,000 hard roads bond Issue, will be taken Into the Illinois supreme court at the April term. Judge E. S. Smith, after hearing arguments, found the issues for the state and dismissed the bill for want of equity. The case was brought by agreement, to secure an opinion from the Illinois supreme court in order to erase all doubtas to the validity of the bond issue.. Assistant Attorney General Albert D, Rodenberg and Edward C. Fitch appeared for the state, and the cause of the complainant was presented by Judge E. B. Green of Mount Carmel. New York.--Peace brides will have more splendid weddings than war brides. There will be less of tragedy attached to them; less of nervous emotionalism, and probably less of haste , In selection, observes a leading fashion *vriter. There was much to lie said against the epidemic of war weddings; but the public remained quiet because the world loves a lover, and loves even better a fighter, and with the two combined the rush of super-emotion which filled America since April, 1917, tolerated much that was done in the name of love and war. Sumptuous weddings were taboo In war. Marriages took place, in the simple meaning of the term. To a large majority of minds there is an acute difference between a marriage and a wedding, and this difference has been sharply Impressed upon the public mind during the last twenty months. These war brides are getting a glimpse of what a wedding may be through the new trousseaus that are ordered for the belated honeymoons, and the peace bride is swinging into the full regalia of a splendid wedding, now that the trumpet -has ceased to call for the man to go and the whistles blow to show that the man has come home. The world is again turned topsyturvy, and all our conditions and emotions, <jur mannerisms and expenditures turn an even somersault with it. It is thus that the world Is kept from losing Its balance. When we all turn together we do not feel abnormal. Eighteenth Century Pageantry. In the centuries that have gone before this one, weddings were spectacles. differing in degree between roy- Meaaure to License Master Painter* Each of the thousands of master painters In Illinois will be compelled to pay an original license fee of $50 and an annual rei>ewal fee of $10 If a bill introdqeed in the house by Representative Sol Roderick, Chicago, be comes a law. It Is now t-eing considered by the house committee on judiciary. ; r To Investigate Free Gravel OffeR ^ Favorable action was taken by fhe house roads and bridge committee on the senate Joint resolution naming a committee to report on the offer of 2,000,000 carloads of gravel free to the state for the hauling. Keep Peoria Collector Buay. E. W. McCabe, Internal revenu e# lector for the central district, estimates that $30,000,000 will be contributed by his territory to the national treasury under the new war revepue bill. The liquor, excess profits, income tax and other sources of revenue will, it is believed, reach that sum. There are now 5,500,000 gallons of liquor on hand, but the tax has been paid on' 1,- 000,000 gallons, leaving more than 4,- 000,000 to be taxed under the $6.40 rate which will produce $26,000,000. Material Cost Probe Sure. Investigation Into the prices of roadbuilding material is assured by the legislature. The Dailey senate resolution was adopted without opposition by the house. It calls for a committee of ten members from each branch to conduct the probe. The material n>en insist that the high cost' is due to the increase in the cost of labor, wartime freight rates and the like. Contractors are answering back that in many instances road and building material fQrif are double what they should, be. Bridesmaid trocK ot mauve georgette embroidered with gold thread and trimmed arith narrow lace. The bag and the trimming on the hat are of blue ostrich. Narrow gold and brocade ribbon form the sash. alty and peasantry, between the landed# mllllonaire and the salaried worker. A revolt against the spectacular side of a wedding controlled a majority of people on this continent for several years before the war, but the present hour seems a fit time for sumptuousness; It is an expression of the riotous gayety in every heart. Peace bVides have been quick to catch this feeling in the air, and beddings are planned for the early spring that might almost be termed pageants. It Is youth getting its revenge. Debutantes have not been allowed to make their bow to society for two years. Youngsters have been thrust into the furnace of waxwork here and on the battlefields, learning more of the tragedy of the world in twelve months than they might have learned in a lifetime during other epochs. Now youth must have its fling, for It Is the quickest to rebound from tragedy. The -old and the middle-aged feel that youth has had a ghastly experience during the last four years; that it has been deprived of Its birthright; that It has been fettered in the dungeons of grief. Now that it has been released into the sunshine, its debut-into happiness must he attended by a fanfare of trumpets, a throwing of garlands, and a brilliancy that the old have foresworn. All this traditional Impulse toward gayety will reach Its highest peak In the spring weddings. Since the day the armistice was signed the mating ©f young people has taken on brilliancy. Churches are thrown open to crowds of guests, bridesmaids are chosen as though one were Indulging in a new and riotous extravagance. It is as though splendid weddings had lain on the shelves for a century, so brightly and happily has the public taken up their revival. All that was once considered boredom is now considered an occasion for bubbling merriment. It Is good for a nation to be compelled to forego all Its luxuries, so that they may be better enjoyed when brought back Into life. The dressmakers are eager to abet this form of splendor In aj>parel, and artists, and even interior decorators, have been called in for consultation to provide new and agreeable features for the wedding service. The old fashion of dancing, which for ihany generations ruled the customs in America, where It was carried from Europe, is again on the cards. The bride remains for the festivities. Instead of creeping away after Innumerable hand-shakings. She opens the dance with the groom, and at a recent wedding, in which all the costumes were copied from the eighteenth century, the entire bridal party danced the minuet before the guests as a bit of pageantry. The bridesmaids wore the gowns that once flitted through Versailles--gowns which now look down from canvas upon the peace commissioners. The bride wore a frock of brocade fashioned after the same style, and her lace veil, mounted on net, was held low on the forehead by a chain of diamonds. Medievalism and Modern Wedding*. There Is also a drop to centuries that make the eighteenth seem modern. Medievalism, with Its splendor, barbaric as it seems to us now, suggests the pageantry for weddings and balls. It was then that royalty spent the millions given In taxes by the poor for such weddings as that of Catherine de Medici to the young king of France. The entire trend of fashion having gone toward medievalism since the end of the war, It Is not difficult to arrange these wedding pageants in keeping with modern costumes. The lattice work of metal threads and seed fpearls, which distinguished that era In history, was revived several months ago, not only for eventng gowns, but for those afternoon gowns Intended for something more formal than tea at a restaurant. One apparel scheme for a bridal group Includes a wedding gown of satin embroidered In pearls without price and silk and sliver threads. The lattice work Is carried up to the knees, downward from the hips, and covers the train, which Is lined with cloth of silver. (Copyright, 1919. by the MeClure Slews* paper Syndicate.) SKIRTS MAKE TRAINS SLOWEfi Tight Garments Upset Railroad Schedules Qnly Slightly Leas Than the , Fiercest Blizzard. T!(fl»* skirt8 of women passengers have upset schedules on the railroads only slightly less thap a blizzard. One prominent railroad, which reduces the operation of trains to scientific accuracy of detail, has found that since the women have begun to wear tight skirts the atNsrage traih stop is now 17 seconds ldnger than when skirts were short and loose. In reply to a complaint of the South Jersey Commuters' association, the management says the running time of trains cannot be shortened unless styles o* skirts c4iange. Taking or leaving a train anywhere la no easy task for the tight-skirted woman, but In New Jersey It is serious business. The equipment there Is largely old Pullmans converted into day coaches. Formerly a porter put a stool under the bottom step, but there Is no/itool or porter now and the women have fairly to throw themselves into the armtf of the brakemen In detraining. In entraining the is even worse. Seasonable Hints. Velvet hats with large brims are inclined to have crushed crowns. The close-fitting bodice is a smart fashion. Cirnilnr metal buckles are used for the new cloth belts. Suit cuffs are tluriiiK and fasten with a single large buttqn. Always, If possible, have the breakfast room in a llgbt and sunny part of the house. White Fur» Again. White fox, "the fur of peace," was one of the most popular furs at the big St. Louis fur sale. Buyers claim th« vogue for white fox this spring will exceed the craze that swept over the country two summers or so ago. t AHSmdkagTSfa are Flavored V "YourNoseKnows use ykhe (of I 3The Encyclopaedia Britannic* •ays about the manufacture of smoking tobacco, " on the Continentand in America certain 'sauces' are employed . • . the use of the 'sauces' is to improve flavour and burning qualities of the leaves." Your smokc-etifbViiiicht' itt&rw: pends as much upon the Quality* ;! and kind of flavoring used a£ ; upon the Quality and apng'of^^ the tobacco. • Tuxcdotobacco uses the purest, ' most wholesome and delicious or all flavorings--c/joec^afe / That flavoring, added to the finest of, carefully aged and blende<f burley tobacco, produces Tuxed# ^ --the perfect tobacco-- x "Your Nom Know*." J*f Jt MS m Try This Test: Rub a little Tuxedo briskly in the palm of your hand to bring out its full aroma. Then «mfH it deep--its delicious, pure fragranc* will convince you. Try this test with any other tobacco and we will let Tuxedo stand or fall on your judf* ment--"your Mom Known*9' - -- v UARANTCCO TO SATIS** OR rouu MONEY BACK :-JW &ei£-esteem U about all the satisfaction some men get out of life. RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half p'nt of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum, a small box of Barbo Compound, and H oz. of glycerine. Any druggist can pat this up or you can mix it at home at Very little cost. Full directions for making and use come in each box of Barbo Compound. It will gradually darken atreaked, faded gray hai*-, and mnke it soft and glotwy. It will not color the scalp, it not sticky or greasy, and does not rub off.--Adv. vv The secret of true wisdom IS know your Ignorance Some folks are bora simple others play the stock market Good health cannot be maintained there is a constipated habit. Garfield TS overcomes constipation. Adv. i • man can have a pretty toot on a cool million. I Om ptmptoa, haadich*. M bmtk hr ttUH May Apple, Aloa, Jalap rolM late t day naM •Ul eaUid UMtoc PtercVa riimit Mttfa. d| It's one thing to have an .idea aipi.' another to carry it out. • -- ' i i : Out of Pain and Misery to Comfort! , /' Variety of Sport Sklrta. In sport skirts there Is an endless and fascinating assortment. It seems, as to fabric, color and design. Among the most delightful models are those of tricolette, satin, crepe de chine and fancy plaids both in silk and in wool. # FLOOR COVERING OF JLB00M Material Should Be Chosen With greatest Care, Especial Attention to Harmony Being Advisable. The floor of a room is. the foundation upon which rests the entire decoration of the room; therefore, its covering should be chosen with the greatest care that the room may look as though furnished from the' bottom up. with the most careful attention to harmony throughout its appolntings, writes Amy L. Itolfe of the home economics department of the University of Montana, whose "Interior Decoration for the Small House" is full of practical and fnterestlng information for homemakers. "As a general rule it is wisest to decide upon the wall finish first, because of the necessity of adaptation to the amount ojf light which the windows let lh, but next In order should come the floor covering," says Miss Rolfe. "From It Is usually worked out the entire color scheme of the room. If the rug or the carpet is many-hned and figured, some dominant color is selected and repeated in varying degrees of value and Intensity in the window draperies and unholsteries. If the floor covering Is plain, the same color or harmonizing hne is repeated elsewhere in the room* Make Your Own Shadee. It is not always economy to make things that take a lot of time and save very little money in the end, but It will be un economy to make your own shades that can be washed and ironed. Select a heavy bleached cotton cloth, cut the length and width of the windows and make a hem of one inch at the bottom. Tack onto the rollers with small tacks, and insert the old curtain sticks In the bottom hems. These can Be taken off the rollers, washed, ironed and starched stiffly as often, aa they show soil. Quaint Blouses. Blouses made with round neck and no collar, and buttoned down the mid die of the front with closely space<< small buttons, reflect the quaintnes which is shown In many of the lata* Paris design* A day or nighfs suffering is often saved those Jiaving "Bayer Tablets of Aspiring J$ndyf " ' *•' \ •' / • Safe to take! Such quick relief! So yhy suffc ffor Headache Rheumatism m Joint Pai$ 1^ Neuralgia Gout • • ^Teeth Palf ^ Toothache Lumbago. Stiff Neck; Colds BackacW~< • Baracfae Influenzal Colds Sciatica : * r Fever "Wv. Nfuritis ; Proved safe by milliorl^ American ownedf Adults--Take one or two "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" with ipftter. If necessary, repeat dose three times a days after meals. ^ Dauer-Tablets f A A A ^ OF# # toAspirin The"Bayer Cross"on Genuine Tablets 20 eent Bayer paekagea--elao larger Bayer padcagea. X ^ , Bay Bayer packages only--Get original package. JU^rin tt the trade mark ef fcger Itiaa&eture of Meoeacetfcaddester of SaiiyrUca«5l NOTED OFFICE M IMS THE REff If you contemplate making au inresimeot iB the Oil Fields ot Texas we wuuld like to hav» you write us. We oiler you m permanent investment of great value purchased BY ID oath Businest com pan j. Add rasa, pay menu. iumnui Hon. C. P. Grandfield s Testimonial Endorsing EATONIC Is Evidence of Its Real Worth Not often doe» a Po«t»l Serrlcc Offlcid put btnuelf on record In thla way. And that no lee* a pers<MU*« than Hon. O. P. QrandOrKl. the Qrst Analstint Poat master under Ttft. t» th« one wbo testifies to the t*Iu« of EATONIC and Its beneficial r e s u l t s , p l a c e s EATON I C a bore tbe ordinary ao-called •tomach core* ana lndlcatr* tbat bare, at laat, la som*- tblng that will rellere all forms ot stomach miser?-- 1: digestion, flatulence, heartbarn, sour, aosil or gassr stomach. The letter, deroid ot ail unnecessary words. Is printed below. It bits the Ball squarely on |h« baa4. Every sufferer from stomach misery 1>WM 4a what ha talla than. Washington, D. G. "Too mach praise cannot W fUrea - •ATONIC. Its beneficial results Me enqealfed. Very trnly yoors, a P. ORANDKIELD.** Beta's the secret: EATONIC takes up tba •xceos acidity, drive* the KSI sst of the body --and the Bloat G««a With It! It la guaranteed to brtng relief or you get rtmr money back 1 » cpnt or twrt n te it. Oct a box today from your drugiilaW FAD cat P Rich Southeast Bllaauvrl. Oora. WkMl runaJUiEi aL 'If • Business and oil men at head of i Poet Office Box 1356, Fact Worth, Teabt ! No Better Land Anywhere 208 acrea first bottom, underlaid with coal and probably gas and oiL 10 miles froat Henrvetta. Okie. Two new four-room box bwMS» Good fence* andbcrildiaaa 160 acrea is cuitfratiMb balancapeetureaad timber. )K per acre; half caalL MAXfil t flMJtlTT KmYETTA. MDLM tea wssmi El Jktoitot pr«9anii«i ot iwii, ^ lWtMlMftvGakrMC RsMtytsGrayarFaMIkh, If Toa TM Ul Caallaai.a aIeft yoa want . Hags<ala. x•a wilts tor list list yoar .oniue AT*., * of (km tl» W. N. Uh CH9AGO, NO. 10-191* ' i • • •• Irritating Coughs Proaatly treat co«<fc% eel&v laaietMfe bcoccluiia and gieiiTar iiiW--miI aa4 InileM. ooodiuoo* ot the threat vfckataatad »«•!<# PISO'S • - ' . . - A • V N ! • • ' ' ' ' K • . I

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