The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 20, 1928, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE OREGON STATESMAN. SALEM, OREGON. SUNDAY MORNING. MAY 20, 192S
1 5
REPUBLIC S CRADLE
ILL BE RESTORED
By Frank Fuller
WILLIAMSBURG. Va. (AP)
This little town, which has come
down through the years as the
-Cradle of the Republic," is to
rise again. in the beauty and ro
mance of its ancient buildings and
shaded streets. ;
Duke of Gloucester street, the
main thoroughfare of Virginia's
colonial capital, ortce a rain will
become a broad avenue of stately
mansions with ivy-colored wallj
and soaclous greenswards. Here
the visitor will see an Eighteenth
century city as he strolls down a
thoroughfare familiar to Wash
ington, Jefferson and Patrick
Henry.
Many of the original structure
-- Mill ar Ktanriinir anrl the firs!
stage of the restoration acquisi
tion of property virtually is com
plete. Dr. W. A. R. Goodwin
rector of Rrnton Darish church
du nirciiur oi ine won, a'reaay
has expended $1,600,000 . in buy
Ing property.
The Identity of the men provid
ing funds for the work remains a
secret Rumors that John D.
Rockefeller Henry Ford and sev
eral others were behind the move
ment are characterized by Dr.
Goodwin as "mere speculation."
Bruton parish church has been
In continuous service longer than
any Episcopal church in the coun
try. Bruto parish was established
'n '15 heyday of -Jamestown, when
Williamsburg was known as Mid
dle Plantation. The original
building probably was of wood.
Jpt in 1676, the brick church was
constructed.
The governor's pew is elevated
above the high back seats for the
- !! '-eee. Here worshiDDed co-
ial governors before the Revo
lution, and later Washington. Jef
ferson, Patrick Henry, George
iw;, oisiier oi ine declaration
or Independence; Peyton Ran
dolph, president of the Contine-
tal Congress; General Winfielri
Scott. Presidents John Tyler and
Jarmes Monroe and Chief Justice
John Marshall. The font from
which Pocahontas is said to have
been baptized is near the altar.
The Duke of Gloucester street
leads from the old capitol ground
to the College of William and
Mary, named for the king and
queen of England and the second
college built in America. Wash
ington became its first chancellor
after the Revolution. Jefferson.
Monroe. John . Tyler, Marshall.
Wythe and Randolph were stu
dents. Here In 1776 was organized
Phi Beta Kappa, the first Greek
letter fraternity in America.
George Wythe's house is over
rnn with ivy and Virginia creeper.
Washington ued It s headauar-
ter during the Yorktown cam-
Dalm.
via t-owaer nam, ortg
. fnallv built to house ammunition
but later used as a church, a danc
Ine school and a stable, is being
renred.
The Christopher Wren build
ing on the campns of William and
Mary was designed by Christopher
Wren and completed In 1697 to
be used by General Washington
during the Revolution as a hos
pital. Creditors in Virginia are sairi
to hire been "very merciful." but
the "Poor Debtors Prison" still
stands. The Raleigh Tavern, de
rived In 1859. is to be rebuilt
as are the old eolon.'a! capitol and
Palsce Green, 'center of early Vir
ginia social life.
Dr. Goodwin has met with little
onro?ition . in acquiring pr;erty
dne largely to the consideration
shown the owners who will be al
lowed to live in their homes after
remodeling, in many cases, for a
rentnl of tl Per month. The re
storation will be completed within
two years. '
BLIGH'S CAPITOL
OFFERS BIG ACTS
(Continued from page 2.)
banjo player. Is the star of a new
Vitapbone tfiimber called "Banjo
mania." Peabody has been ap
pealing on the west coast for a
long while, as an added attraction
in movie houses and is a decided
success. With the help of Jimmy
Maisel. Peabody put over "Ban
Jomania" in great style.
- A girl who started out to reach
the very top of the ladder on the
musical comedy stage will bjBseen
and heard here. The young lady
Is Frances Williams, who is the
tar of the Scandals, George
White's great show. Miss Wil
liams both sings and dances, but
it Is through her songs that she
DEAR NOAH- WHEN THE
WADY BUS FUIHS AVAY
j4&NewHEfcs will the
DEAR NOAM " l
IF IT COSTS ONC DOI.UAR
TO CHAR&e.5 .8ATTEA7f;
ritN' rASHT MtesT MoMbt
COMB Of POkKSC
M Mt JACt-SCMO IT M
NoM NUMSKUU.
XJy YbO ARE,
is achieving her reputation, and ft
is in a program of songs that she
appears here.
Another feature will be a one
act skit, titled "Tuning la." All
the satire that hat been thrown
upon the radio station from other
corners is curmounted by the
broad humor of the Vitapbone
production. In the cast are three
comedians who are in themselves
assurance that the act is good, Mr.
Herbert, Roy Cummings and Har
ry Downing are veterans of many
a laugh.
Accompanying these artists will
be a restful jazx orchestra, which
will offer among its numbers, se
lections from William Tell, Tore
adore March, "Taps" and "Morn
ing." Not only is tnere the accom
panying glee of the comedians In
this skit, but Vitapbone has done
something novel in the number.
Flash-backs reveal both the radio
station and the home in which the
music is being received. . This is
the first time a double setting has
been given in a comedy number. .
IIPOLISMEEK
OF 11 RECALLED
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) The
Annapolis convention of 1786, re
garded by historians as the fore
runner of the Constitutional con
vention, was commemorated at
a patriotic celebration at historic
St. John's college here May 1,
with President and Mrs. Coolidge
as guests of honor.
The principal addresses of the
celebration was delivered un
der the Liberty Tree on St. John's
campus, beneath which Washing
ton and Lafayette addressed citi
zens of Annapolis.
The tree, a giant tulip poplar
estimated to be more than 600
years old, was the scene of many
colorful events in colonial and
revolutionary history. Ln 1752
the colonists met there to sign a
treaty with the Indians, and in the
troubled days before the War for
Independence citizens gathered
there to bear such patriots as
Samuel chase and Mathias Ham
mond arraign King George. In
1791 it was the scene of a wel
come to Washington, who visited
the college, and in 1824 Lafay
ette was greeted under its spread
ing branches.
The Annapolis convention of
1786 was called to consider trade
relations between the states. It
was attended by only five dele
gates, one of whom was Alexander
Hamilton. The convention could
do little to straighten out trade
relations, but it proclaimed' the
need for greater federal unity and
named a date and place for an en
suing meeting1 to be large enough
and powerful enough to unite the
states. This meeting was ln Phil
adelphia the following year and
went into history as the Constitu
tional convention of May 1787.
St. John's college was founded
in 1696 as King William's school.
the name being changed to - St
John's in 1784. The school edu
cated the aristocratic youth of
Maryland and the surrounding
states, among them William Pink'
ney, later United States attorney
general and minister to England
and Russia.
Four signers of the Declaration
of Independence. Charles Carroll
of Carrollton, Samuel Chase, Wil
liam Paca. and Thomas Stone we're
among the promoters of the col
lege at the time the name was
changed to St. John's Washing
ton sent his grandson. George
Washington Parke Custiss, to the
college and three other members
of the Washington family. Fair
fax. Whiting and Needham Wash
ington attended it. Francis Scott
Key was a member of the class of
1796.
The celebration on May 15 will
include a dinner in honor of Pres
ident and Mrs. Coolidge at the
Hammond-Harwood house, recent
ly taken over by St. John's. This
dwelling built about 1770 by Mat
thias Hammond is considered one
of the most perfect examples of
colonial architecture.
BRITAIN SENDS FULL
APPROVAL OF PEACE
(Cotinad from po 1.)
the right of self defense was in
alienable, Great Britain feels no
addition to the text of article I of
the American draft is necessary.
French Idea Brought Up
Regarding the French sugges
tion of the addition of an article
providing that violation of the
treaty by one of the parties should
release the ' remainder f rom jtheir
obligations under the treaty In
wards that party, the British note
said Great Britain was not satis
fied that if the treaty stood alone
the addition of some such provi
sion would not be necessary. .In
view of Kellogg's statement that
any express recognition of that
principle of law was wholly un
necessary and it is agreed that
this principle will apply, the Brit
ish government said it was satis
fied and would not aek for an
amendment.
"Means can no doubt be found
without difficulty of placing this
understanding on record in some
appropriate manner," . said i the
British note, "so 'that it may nave
equal value with the terms of the
treaty Itself."
MOSCOW, Ida.. May 18. (AP)
The University of Idaho' base
ball team took its fifth conference
game today by defeating Washing
ton State college. 2 to 0 in the
first game of their series. .
A self-finding golf ball has been
patented. The Inventor was a
Scotchman. Savannah Press.
'ini
WASHINGTON (AP) Econo
my at last has invaded the realm
of the time honored green back.
The demise of the present paper
mosey will begin next year, and
new notes of smaller size will be
put ln circulation t6 replace bills
that have held sway virtually since
1861, when the original issue was
authorized by the government.
The prospect of saving annually
1787,000 in printing and the pos
sibility of producing a better bill
in more convenient form induced
the treasury department to replace
the old with the new. Nearly an
Inch will be clipped off the length
of the bill and also a half inch
from the width, the new bill being
six and five-sixteenths by two and
eleven-sixteenths inches against
the present measurements of seven
and seven-sixteenths by three and
"one-eighth inches,
t The new bill also is expected to
lend better protection against
counterfeiting, as the portraits on
the bills will be finer cut. with
particular attention to facial ex
pressions, which the engravers
claim will be almost impossible to
duplicate. The paper will be of
finer quality, with a higher fold
ing and tensile strength, guaran
teeing a longer life for paper cur
rency. . The saving in storage fa
cilities, printing, paper and ink is
described by bureau officials as
"enormous."
Engravers now. are engaged in
preparing plates for the new bills,
which will embrace all of the pa
per money except national bank
notes. Approximately two years
are expected to be required to
complete the transition from the
old to the new sized currency, but
the treasury expects to make the
switch in all denominations o a
particular kind of bill at the same
time.
The reduction in size is the be
ginning of a movement which the
treasury hopes will culminate in
the issuance of only two classes of
bills, the gold certificates and the
federal reserve notes. At present
there are six kinds of paper
money; United States notes, gold
certificates, silver certificates, na
tional bank notes, federal reserve
notes and federal reserve bank
notes. Only a comparatively few
national bank notes, federal re
serve bank notes and United States
notes are now in circulation, and
the treasury believes that ulti
mately they will disappear along
with the silver certificates, leaving;
the monetary notes restricted to
only two.
Restriction of classes and sizes
of notes particularly is desired by
the bureau of printing and engrav
ing; which complains it is unable
to supply the needs of the increas
ed population for more bills. Dur
ing the fiscal year 1927 the bureau
delivered 992,339.984 pieces of
paper currency compared with
514.688.180 pieces in 1917. As a
result it has been necessary to
keep many worn out bills in cir
culation that are unacceptable to
the public and are a menace to the
security of the currency by encour
aging spurious issues.
WRONG AND RIGHT WAYS TO
EXERCISE
Relaxation
- Once upon a time it might have
been a thousand years ago, from
present indications, relaxation was
a natural instinct. Today it is an
acquired art, an art so essential
to health and beauty, that one can
not begin too soon to re-cultivate
it!
All over the civilized world ten
sion is he order of the day. It
is a wonder that here in America
we are not a nation of hypochon
driacs! Blind, nerve-racking speed
dominates everything we do. We
rush to work, rush to eat, rush to
finish eating, rush to play, and
rush to bed. I am, not at all sure
that subsconsciously we do not
try to get an eight-hour sleep in
four hors! And of course, this has
a very bad effect upon both physi
cal welfare and appearance. Even
youth cannot withstand the strain
of long-continued tension.
The body is a human dynamo.!
It cannot run on forever supplying
bealth and strength to the limbs
and blood to the brain without de
manding at least an occasional day
off for rest and re-fueling.
' !
In this country we have acquir
ed the reputation of being tremen
dously energetic. Perhaps we are
ioo proua or tne title and we
have learned to mistakenly asso
$Ujte relaxation with laziness. La-
iltifess Is a negative sUte of doing!
Othing. Relaxation is the very!
positive condition which calls vonr
body to attention and then defin-!
itely, scientifically orders it "at
ease."
If we could learn to relax, there
would be no more overwrought
nerves, no more hysterical excite
ment, no more brain fog and brain
fever! If we could train ourselves
to relax just three minutes in ev
ery working hour, giving the body
and brain time to rebuild and re
pair, both physical and mental ef
ficiency would develop 100 per
cent Then how shall we relax?
' Begin with the exercises of body
relaxing. Stand very straight with
the arms stretched outward. Begin
with the wrist. Pretend to your
self that it is much too tired to
even existThen the arm. Let your
head droop.'Tour neck the upper
part of your body. Keep the idea
in your mind of a heavy burden
that is slipping; away from you.
Finally, let your legs weaken un
der you and sinktothe floor, r
Lie very flat and follow, the
same principle. Relax little by lit
tle until your whole body seems
ISSUED FOT WEEK
nerveless, unable to achieve the
smallest effort. At nigbt, msteaa
of sinking into soft mattresses and
softer pillows which encourage ac
tual physical resistance and ten
sity in your body, try out the
straightest, hardest mattress in
your house and sleep pillowless.
Ton will soo find every muscle
in your body relaxing.
Relaxation is a beauty measure
which is both literally and figura
tively "priceless." It does not cost
a penny, and its value is manifold.
It strengthens and soothes tired
muscles, conserves and develops
energy.
Relaxation is the first step to
ward poise that most ' necessary
of social assets, and so simple oi
cultivation that every American
woman who is interested in com
batting the verj bad 'results of
tension, noise and rush that is our
modern existence, 'should begin to
day to systematically study the art.
HOOVER AND SMITH
BOTH MAKE HEADWAY
(oliaud from Kr 1.)
Watson and the 19 from Maryland
who will be in the Hoover camp,
as a result of the preferential pri
maries in those ' states. The
South Dakota primaries will be
held Tuesday, with Lowden alone
entered on the republican side of
the political fence, and on the
same day Texas republicans in
convention will decide on the
make-up of their delegation. The
Hoover managers hope to annex
the 26 delegates from that state.
despite the fact that there is op
position among some of the repub
licans there, including that of Rep
resentative Wurzbach of San An
tonio, against R. B. Creager, na
tional committeeman who is a
leader in the. fight for Hoover.
The last of the republican dele
gates will be selected 10 days
hence in West Virginia. There
Hoover will fight It out for 19
delegates with Senator Goff a fa
vorite son candidate, with both
sides straining for a knockout that
would be felt at the Kansas City
convention which gets under way
three weeks from Tuesday.
PATT0N WINNER HERE
IN DELEGATE CONTEST
(Continued from pf 1.)
heavy plurality in Marion county
for district democratic delegate
getting 1128 votes to 907 for W.
H. Canon of Jackson county, 831
for R. A. Harris of Marion county
and 634 for O. Henry Oleen of
Columbia county. Fry and Canon
ran on the Al Smith ticket, the
other two favoring Thomas J
Walsh.
The vote for democratic dele
gates at large was as follows:
Hugh McLain 723.' Daniel W
Sheahan 302, Harvey G. Stark
weather 541, Frank B. Tichenor
286, R. R. Turner 817, Elton
Watkins 400, Louis Palmer Web
er 413, W. A. Wood 244, George
L. Curry 600. W. A. Delzell 667
Ashby C. Dickson 574, Bert E.
Haney 823, John Manning 750.
The Marion county vote for
democratic electors was:
Walter B. Gleason 970. Nanny
Wood Honeyman 697. Manche I.
Langley 677. J. N. McF&dden 984,
Robert A Miller 1100, E. E. Brack
ney 902, Thomas H. Comte 917,
Carl C. Donaugh 974.
Wisconsin university has ruled
out a girl candidate for the foot
ball squad. And q uite right, too.
The game's rough enough as it is.
-Akron Beacon Journal.
Beautiful New
English Home
Owner offers unusually good
buy in original design English
home of 6 rooms and vestibule
in fine view district close to
schools, bus. highway. Corner
lot, paving paid, bearing Fran
quet Walnut trees.
Strictly, modern, well built,
arranged and finished. Brand
new. Good terms.
Look at 365 Rural Ave. if in
terested. Call at 1340 If. Cottage
LANG'S
CHOCOLATES
Creams and Chews
This is your last opportun
ity to buy creams at whole
sale prices this Season.
A Five Lb. Box
$1.45
Regular Price $3.00
One lb. lots 30c a lb. or
Two lbs. for 58c
Only at
chaefer's
DRUGSTORE
135 North Commercial St
Phone 197
The Original Tdlow Frost
' Penslar Agency '
HEALTH JMCIES
0
era
NEW YORK (AP) Plans for
obtaining the active aid of otfical
public health agencies in the fight
against cancer in the United States
nave been made by the American
Public Health association and the
American Society for the Control
of Cancer.
This movement, regarded as the
most significant step ever taken
against the disease, seeks to bring
before state and local bealth de
partments the importance of ade
quate facilities for diagnosis and
treatment, of accurate statistical
information and of public educa
tion in the symptoms of cancer.
Cancer work has been done large
ly by endowed clinics, hospitals
and institutes, for public health
administrators have not looked
upon cancer as a distinctly pre
ventable disease, nor as one a
gainst which headway can be made
jaey have felt that cancer could
best be com batted through the
joint action of physicians and pati
ents and that health departments
could cooperate best bv limiting
their activities to instructing the
public in the par it should play in
the cancer battle.
More recently, however, public
cancer institutes have appeared in
several states In response to a
popular demand for clinical .serv
ice and now the American Public
Health association has decided
that. the country's official health
agencies must be prepared to take
more active parts in the efforts to
reduce cancer mortality.
The association is basing its
plana on the report of a special
committee which suggested a pro-
Tram of action, recommending
that official public health admin
istrators "should take cognizance
of the cancer problem and engage
;n various activities connected
.herewith.
It was also recommended that a
survey be made to determine can
cer death rates in the territories
within the jurisdiction of the vari
ous health departments, to ascer
ain available facilities for diag
nosis and treatment, to estimate
the cost of available treatment
and to determine the ability of
natients to meet the expense of
treatment. Health departments,
he committee found, should pro
vide free laboratory assistance in
making of diagnoses or should en
courage and assist the develop
ment of this service through medi
cal societies.' teaching institution"
or-hospitals.
"Departments of health should
encourage and assist the establish
ment of special cancer clinics in
connection with general hospitals
equipment, and personnel already
available," the committee report
ed. "In every large center of pop
ulation there should be one first
"lass cancer center where everv
modern facility of personnel and
apparatus should be available for
the diagnosis and treatment of
"aneer."
With a view of stimulating lo-
-al health officers to take un this
urogram in their respective com
munities, the association is adding
cancer work to Its health apprais
al form by which the adeflnnev
ind efficiency of the health worV
'n a given territory are systemat
ically measured. Points will b'
awarded on the basis of a e.itv'f
hospital provisions for cancer, itf,
usterBrown
HEADQUARTERS
diagnostic service, completeness
and accuracy of statistical infor
mation, and to campaign of public
instruction.
The program of the American
Society for the Control of Cancer
for the next year is broadly along
the same lines, and the two organ
izations have signified their in
tention of cooperating in the new
movement to bring cancer work
closer to the people.
mi m nnn i nmrn
uui uutu.nu i tu
LONDON. If you do not know
that amazing personality. "Old"
Odelt. who for more than three
score years and ten has been an
actor in the haunts of Shake
speare, then you have missed
much of England.
One can find him sitting in his
own corner at the Savage club
most any day, chatting with his
colleagues of ruminating on the
events of bis 94 years of life'.
The spirit of the past, is Old
Odell, destined by a whim of fate
to stalk the stage of several gen
erations. He might have stepped from
out the pages of a book a tall,
gaunt ancient, with Victorian
bearing and speech; a tragedian's
face; a long, white, forked beard,
which certainly must have been
the product of an actor's dressing
table; a broad-brimmed, black hat
of a vintage beyond the memory
of man; a black, frock coat, either
flung open or buttoned so that its
top gapes an invitation for the
actor's hand to take the Napoleon
ic pose.
What a subject for an artist!
And indeed Old Odell probably
has posed for more painters and
sculptors than has anyone else in
England, save royalty.
Old Odell acted with Sir Henry
Irving when that immortal figure
was struggling for recognition; he
dandled Ellen Terry on bis knee
and unbent to play at childish i
games with little Richard Mans
field. If you press him a bit. Old
Odell will tell you of those days,
as he sips his favorite Irish whis
key and pulls away at his inevita
ble cigar. And he is 14!
Notwithstanding his mighty age.
Old Odell is active and regularly
recites pages from the Bard of
Avon at club affairs. He also
sings "The Harvest Home," a fa
mous song which he has sung so
many years that he has forgotten
when he first learned it.
One may see him often, making
his sprightly way along tbe
Strand, with wind tossed beard
and flapping coat; ctill vigorous
and yet so very, very old.
One wonders what those retro
spective eyes of his eyes which
never have known the need of ar
tificial aid are seeing as he
strides along. Are the taxicabs
motor-busses transformed into
the horse-drawn carriages of the
days when Queen Victoria still was
young? Are the modern business
men, who rush along to work in
their prosaic lounge suits, turned
into slowly sauntering beau brnm
mels, with their mincing ways?
Nobody knows but Old Odell, and
he would be a hardy man who
ventured to ask the Ancient what
he was thinking about, for Old
Odell is a dignified and reserved
Victorian.
ill CT0
Men's Stylish' Shoes
with
Built-in Health Features
Comfort for Men - Yet Style
The Season's Best for Men
FOOT SCIENCE SHOES
LEAP YEAR BUS
NOVELTIES GALORE
CHICAGO ( AP) The year
in which maidens are supposed to
ask shyly or brazenly, as the
maiden may be. for the hands of
their best boy friends, has turned
up the usual crop of artifices from
which girlish amusement is de
rived. Northwestern university men
have decided, in a more or less
formal manner, to tender 85 as
balm to the wounded feelings of
any coed they should refuse.
At the Uiversity of Missouri,
co-eds started out Leap Year by
giving a dance at w1nh they paid
admission charges and taxi fares
for their escorts.
There is word, too. of men be
ing given boxes of flowers at dan
ces and parties and of other men
who end mixed gatherings in to
convulsions by appearing with a
pink ribbon tied on their arm
which, they explain, means they
have accepted a girl's proposal.
Woman's rights to take the ini
tiative In gathering to her side'
Dr. Caldwell's
Keep
Dr. Caldwell watched the re
sults of constipation for 47 years,
and believed that no matter how
careful people are of their hearth
diet and exercise, constipation will
occur from time to time regardless
of how much , one tries to avoid it.
Of next importance, then, is how
to treat it when it comes. Dr.
Caldwell always was in favor of
getting as close to nature as pos
sible, hence his remedy for consti
pation, known aa Dr. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin, is a mild vegetable
compound. It can not harm thei
most delicate system and is not
a habit fuming preparation, Syr
up Pepsin is pleasant-tasting, and
youngsterr'love it. It does not
gripe. Thousands of mothers
have written us to that effect.
Dr. Caldwell did not approve of
drastic physics and purges. He
did not believe they were good for
human beings to put into their
systems. In a practice of 47 years
he never saw any reason for their
use when a modi' ine like Syrup
Pepsin will empty the bowels Just
as promptly, more cleanly and
gently, without griping and harm
to the system.
Keep free from constipation! It
robs your strength, hardens your
arteries and brings on premature
old age. Do not let a day go by
without a bowel movement. Do
not sit and hope, but go to a drug
gist and get one of the generous
bottles of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin. , Take the ' proper dose
that night and by morning you
will feel like a different person
Mutual Sayings and Loan Association
, A Salem Institution Organized in 1910
Place your savings with us
Let us finance your home on weekly,
or monthly payments
142 South Liberty Street
SUMS
FOR MEN, WOMEN AND
the man of her choice has been
confirmed through the centories,
As early as 1288, the Scots nf
acted a law that each leap yeafiJh
a maiden of either high or low s4U
Ute should have the liberty to ask
the man she likes to wed. herj
And as a dour afterthought, if
was appended upon the law that
if the man refuse, he must pay
one pound, unless betrothed to aa
other. ,)t
A few years later, tbe custom j
was legalised in France, and be-,-,, -fore
Columbus was jeered oat to
sea. a similar provision was gran-
ted to tbe maidens of Genoa and
Florence. v j ,
There is only $13,000 in Chi
cago's treasury to meet obligations
of more than a million. But what
is money, to new-found virtue?
New York Sun.
Strong flavored vegetables as,,
turnips, cabbage, onions and caulir
flower are best cooked in much
water with the lid oft to allow es
cape of gases.
With all due respect to tbe 1
youBg airmen, the record for sue- -tained
flight is still held by the
high cost of living. Toledo Blade. -
3 Rules
You Healthy
. AT AGS
Use Syrup Pepsin for yourself and
members of the family In consti-
pation, biliousness, sour and
crampy stomach, bad breath, no ;
appetite, headaches, and to break up
fevers and colds. Always have
a bottle in the house, and observe
these three rules of health: Keep. .
the head cool, the feet warm, the .
bowels open.
We would be glad to have you
prove at our expense how much,
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin can ;
mean to you and yours, Jmt-,
write "Syrup Pepsin," Montlcello,
Illinois, and we will send you pre
paid a FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE.
Adv.
TORE
CHILDREN
k
c ;.
it
i i-
1 ' -i "!!