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Show THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Friday, January 15, 1932 THE VALE OF ARAGON ~y FRED McLAUGHUN On Your Rad io • IIFRI ENDSHIP .Author of TOWNII FRIDAY, 7:00 P. M., M.S.T. "The Blade of Picardy" • N 8 C Coast to Coast Network Oopyrtgbt by BQbbs-MorrUl Oo. CWNU Service.) Vaseline CHAPTER IX REG. U. $.PAT OFF. PR EPARATIONS HOME PLANNING AIDS REVIEWED ON RADIO Speaker Will Cover the Presi· d ent 's Home Building Conference. Bruce L. MelYin, research secretary of the committee on Farm and Village UousJng, of the President's conference on home building and ownership, will tell Nntional Farm and Horne nour listeners what nlds to planning farm and tity houses ca n be hnd from the committee, wlien he speaks ln Ule United States D epnrtment or Agriculture period of t he Farm nnd llome Hour. EducatlonnJ nnd Co-operath·e Union monthly broad· cnst will be !ward in the National Farm nome flonr on \Vednesday. January !!0, nod will fenture a prom T he inent F'arrnet·s' speala~r JeS:s. Andther on agricultural sub· epl!=:Ode Jn the experi- ences of the United States Foresr nnn~Prs will he given on Thursday. January 21. 'l'IJis Sf'rli?S, lna.uguraterl t11is month, is designed to arouse interest In forest fire pre· great v lon and protertlon. Many Government Speakers on Air Fh.-e lnmdrerl nnd fifteen broad cnsting hours were utilized by tbe Unit('(] Stmes go\·N·nmt>nt over Ute netwnrks of the National Bronfl.casttng compan.v during 1931, M. H Aylel'!worth, pre~fdent of the com pany, reports. The United State-s Department o1 AgrJculturE> made the grentest use o1 rndio ilul'ing the year. Exactlv 2fl J officluls or this department ga\'"·e 581 talks berore the microphone. Mos1 of these talks were broadcast In thf' rintional Farm nod ITome Hour. broadcast enrh week day at 11:30 a m. to 12:30 r. m., central standard lime. JJoover, Mr. A)'lesPrf'~ident WOl'th's report show~. ~poi>:P. 29 time~. \Vhfeh Is the grPntest number of time~ nny Pt·r~idt'nt has heen henrfl O"rer the radio In one sear; VIce PreslrlC'nt rurtts mnde three radio speeche::;:: the chief justice. CharJe~ lll\'"an~ OuJ.!hP!'I. spokp fltte times. Every mNnher of the enhlnet face~ the mic-rophone at least once durint: · the year. Thirty-two memhers of the senatP made !12 rarlio addresses, ond mern· bers nf the hcm!'=P spoke 25 times. Am,riC'n's three service bands were lrearrl fn 241 r.ontests, mnny of whlcl! were In the National Farm and Home IIour. Tl1e Army Iwnd hrondcnst lOa tlmC's. the l\lnrlne hand 71 times. and the Kavy hand 07 tlmPs. ~ Numerous officials ot foret.gn gO\·· crnments nlso spoh:e oyer t11e net \\•orks. Sln<'e his lnnu.~urnl.lon Presiden1 Hoover has mnrle 6(1 rmllo addresses rn hf~ SPYf'n ~-ears A.s Pr·eRirleni, Cal \'in Coolfd~e Rpolu• only 37 tf.meF OYer tile radio. Mnny of PresJden1 Hoover's n(]dres5:PS were made d1recf ly from the White Oouse. All known l'ecords for a continu oos hronllcast were broken recently when Ge-m• nntl C;Je-nn were on tbf' nlr from \YTA~J to Cleveinnd tor more than ~f'~·en hnurs tn the 1nter est or the Clevel:md Christmas funtl program. • • • admirf'r of Lowell Thomas, sent him n hr:1ter for hts nutomobUe. 10 llope tills will keep you from catchtog cold," r£-ud nn nccompanyinf! Nl':tt da.v he got a dozer1 note. handkerrhicfs-"in cn~e he did." An • • • Elnlnp Pal~e. style expert of \Vom "n's n~uHo Ue\·iP.w, mentioned to o tall{ a new style knitte-d boret tbnt could he mnde at home~ oncl received three thousand requests tor direc tioru:. • • • ui'Ye gllne vlng-pong mad!" says Odette l\lyrtil, orchestra lender. vlolln mi~tres~ of cerenwnle~. and and vo£'al soloist of the Gaytees m·· chestru progTam. She has turned the cellar oF hPr Dougln:;:;ton (L. L) home tnt.o n gume t·onrn om1 Installed o doubles tournamf'nL tahle, where n chnnlt1innshl[) match ls In full swing -Douglnston \'S, Great Neck. • • • Tf.ends in dnlry produc·tlon Is beJn~ reviewed In the Kntional Farm and Home llour by J . B. Shepard, econ· oml.r In the United States Depart· ment or Agrlcu lture. -1 4--- Tbe Spirit of the Dead or the sa hun<lred and fifty men who had gone so blithely to the investment of the town of Maracay, scarce four hundred remained ; star veli ngs trnpped tn a strip of jungle that Ues between the Valeoncla range and Lhe sf'n : blocked on the north by the sea ltself, on the south by an army pa.trollln~ the road that followed the crest of the rant;!:(>, and menaced tn the rear by an en~r approaching body of well-nccoutered and well-fed Spnn· Ish troops. Adolfo de Fuentes him~ self led them, and ft must ha\'"e atforded lt\m a deal of joy. urt we ba'cl Boll var-" Monahan ventured. Doctor L!ml~ay lnu~hed. "Does our Irish lenezuelan pntrlot, who comes from Killarney. and who, tl1ere!ore, must belleve In fairies, tmnglne that Genernl Bolivn.r mts:bt free us trom this Impasse?" "Sure." sntd the Irlshman; "at a word from Simon Bollvar men will spring, full-armed, lil{e spirits out ot the earth. But we haven't the spirit of Boltvn.r with us now: instead, we ha"Ve a spineless jpllyfi!'!h who sits and broods over his blnnders, knowing that we face Eltnr't'ntlon or cnptm;e by the Puerto Cab<'IlO garrison when the army be>hind us shnll hn\"'e pushed os westward to the mouth of this funnel ot jungle that hollis us helpless." Ten days bef1lre t11is a vnstly superior force had pushed us out of Marncay. Fighting eveTy toot of the way we had been be-aten Q.ack, ever back. Eastward and northward we had gone, conten<llng desperately, hopelessly, yet never giving up; each night fincling us farther Into the SpanIsh area, WNtker, less nble to end~re, with a morale th.nt gu ve 'vay with the slow passn~e of time. Between Colone-l Pinl and myself a.n armed trnce e..~lsted. ,n.~ether, by some miraculous turn or good fortune, we won free, or whether the mnleV"olent jungle OT the Spaniards claimed us, the result to me would be lhe same; for the frientlshil) of n few trusted aides of Bolivar might never save me In a court, because I was guilty and could not offer a defense. Yet no npprehenston of what Pinl might do to me could prevaU against my happiness, because I had seen the Senorita again, hnd caught the tender cndences of her voice, had won forgtveness. As the days went by the shoulders ot our soldiers drooped, the Ugbt went out of their eyes, and the flesh went off their bodies, for food we bad almost none; and the desperate heat of the O\'erwhelming jungle sickened them, and the gloom and sllence ot this. c.lre-nd desolation entered their souls, yet that vital spark still burned within them. We came, one day, to a great rent Jn the close-packed trees and the Interlacing vines or our forest prison. It was such a path as some monster dragon of the deep, emerging trom the sea, might have made In tts passage through the jungle; yet we knew that no dragon of the deep existed, Imew that no animal might have laid these mighty tret.>s ftn.t and pushed others out or its puth. I recalled the day ot the storm, and the wr@Ck of tbe Snnta Lucrecia, and the dark bulle that had passed in the gloom as I fought for my life witb the WU\'eS_ I remembered that t'be tremendous thrust or the wind had Ufted the ocean tnto the mnze of woods, and had deposited me to a tree. The Santa Lucrf'cia. then, had freed herself from tlle clutches or the reef and. riding the ele\' ated waters oi' the tidal wave, had drl ven over the flat floor of the jungle--which lay only a few feet nbo\·e lhe le,·el of the sen-and had found nt lnst a gra\~e In the forest whence it had come. And the Santa Lucrccin, I remembered, had a cargo or arms nnd ammunition and roofl 1 "Colonel Pin!,'' said r, in the long sllence that had held us, ••may not this smnl! army of ours-given rood nnd arms and powder and ball-win through tlle Unt>s of Spnln? It I fill them with rood, and PUt weapons and ammunition into their hnnds-7" .. Are you mad?" he cried. "1! 1 do tltese things, my coloneJ, may I ask that tills court will be f{lrgot, that ml' wouncled arm and the broken door at ~raracny--and the Senorita-?" "Lindsay and Captain Monahan mny witness," Mid PlnJ, and he smiled, llmy promise to forget : uarn.cny 11 you ob~ tnln the manna for these ~tarving soldiers.'' "I will teU you, then, my colonel, thnt tills rmth marks the first and last land passage of the Santa Lucrecia, and if we only fOllO\V It we wll1 come upon a store suffi.clent tor an army." • • • • • • • For tnree days we ate and rested ud caroused, unmindf ul ot the f orces of Spa! n. f or we oould have held this ship against an army. And the lean Indians filled out Hke dogs at a feast, nnd eyes brightened, and shoulders squared, and patriotism flamed a.gnin, and strength came back to usstrength of body and mind and spirit -and the wfll to win was ours, and a desire to pit against the enE•my thls ren<!wed vigor that belonged to us. We put away one more gargantuan meal-a brenk1nst-and took, each. two pislo1s and a musket and sufficient ummnnitlon to carry us through a score of skirmishes, o.nd then we set the torch to the good ship Santa Lt<'ICrecla in a dozen dltrerent places. 'Ve turned our faces southward toward the barrier range, where an enemy awutted us, ond with songs of 'Victory on our lips, we dl·ove onward up the timbered slopes while 1lames spurted skswnrd from the doomed ship nn(l, spreading lnto the jungle, fashioned a raging hell btr hind us. We emerged from the cover of the forest and fell upon the thin line that held the heights. '!'hey must have considered us shrieking demons from the fiery pit that we had left, for they broke, crying out in the· fulness of their terrors, and cast their weapons a way as useLess ngnlnst the imps who had just escaped from the blazing tumult thnt deYoured the jungle. On we went, ever southward, down the forested fncllne that led toward the vast basin ot Lake Valencia. East of Vnlencin we swept across the fields A slmple th ing Indeed.• he way . jeered, "for La Toue and MoraleS, wlth all the availnhle :forces of Spain., await us on the plains of carabobo." "Then we meet them there, Fran· cisco 1'' "Aye!' He thought a moment. ..1 think Ln Torre made a mistake when he did not dispute our passage at Buena Vistn; he lost no ndyantage there. I-I cnnnot help believing, Garde, that at Carnbobo tomorrow. we stand-or fall. 'J'lte general stakes all on tbls lnst battle; we win nn empire -.or we are for ever slaves.'' Forgotte n HEROES 'By EJ.MO SCOTT WATSON The Battle of Carabobo The Hero of Campbell's Island all of the heroes of tbe Wa r N OTof 1812 made their bltl for fame tbe nnvaJ flghting which forms such a brilliant page In the history or that conflict. Out In whnl was then "the West" there were heroes, too. One or them was Capt. Stetllten Rector. ln 1814 cnptatns Re<!tor and Ril!gS with 6G Illinois Hangers were ol'dered to accompany Lieutenant Campbell with a fol'ce or 42 regulnrs in three keel boats up the Alissfssfppi to rein· force the garrison at l'ralrie du C'hlen tn \ViSconsin. Going Lbrough the dan~ I gerfJUS rapids near Hock lsland, Cami,.. hen·s barge wns driven ashore oo the I smnll Island which now bears hls 1 name. Here he ore1)aretl to spend the \ njgbt but no sooner had be oitch(.)d his camp than he was attnt·kecl blyl "r war party of Snc ln<lin.nR und er C' ~ Black Bawl;: and drlvPn back to tbell' I think Bolivar as a tollstmnster was the peer of any man I hn,•e ever seen. It was his wont to brin~ hls omcers together once a week In whnt be termed a dinner, hut which osunlly de· \'"eloped lnto a well-ordered caro1;tc;e, for wine and rum and other spirituous ll()uors were chenp nnd plentiful In Venezuela_ Botlvnr, demanding only obedience or his men, took no note ot their morals; wherein, t think, lay one o:r the secrets ot his amazing hold upon his soldiers. In the spacious hall of the adobe house that was his henrlquarters we were gathered on tlle night before the battle of cnraboho. Be~illes lloli'\"nr there was the wiRe and suave l!arlno, boaL Rector nnd Ri~gs, hearing the Hrfng. chlef ot: staff; Unlaneta, whom ·the to return to his aid but in the tried gen ero.l called llafnel, a faithful follower of Bolivar, who, tor many years storm-tos~ed river Hl;;gs' bout bel'nme after the death of the Ltherator, unmnnngeahle and wns stranded ln sen·Cd his country witb brilliance and rhe rapids- Hector managed to bring distinction; Pnez, chief or the ll::meros, his boat near enough tn Cnmpheli'R Plaza, Cedeno. Colonel Plnf, all smiles men. hiding In the trees which fringed because of his ftnestlonably won dec- tbe e<lge of 1he Island. to fire upon tllt' oration; Colonel Mackintosh, Colonel S..'l \'ages at long rnn~e. Suddenly neeFerrier, who, on the morrow, was des- tor was horrlned to see Camjlhell's tined to ftod tl1e fatal bullet i Captain bnrge burst into llnmes. Cnnght beMinchin, another Briton who fe11 upon tween the blnzing bont and Black the :fl.eld or Cnrnbobo; Moore and Lind- Bnwl~'s wbooping brn\·es, the regular• say, EngUsh medicos; Captain Scot4 fa<:ed annihilntion. nector made his decision Instantly. Monahan, the swarthy Mnnue1, Franthe anchor to he rniserl and Ol'(lerjng conjure to clsco and others-names with tn Venezuela. Santini, the sol~ t11e barge to be ll~ht e n e d by <'nstln~ dier, hnd not survh-ed the storm that overhmud nenrly all of his ['lrO\" i~inns, b.e guided his boat down the ral!'lng wrecked Ute Santa Lucrecia. Under the snrface o! laughter and stream into the teeth of the lndjan 1 badinage lay the tension of over- fire. Forcing it to the windward of wrought nerves, for we felt the por- the burning boat. his br.mtmen lenpetl into the watPr and held the-Ir crart tent of the morrow's battle. Men were called upon for speeches , close to Campb~ll's harge. fndlnn butor toasts. Colonel PinJ, whose blood.. J iets were crashmg Into 1he timbers of shot eyes showed the errect ot the both boats but Rector .coolly went vast amount of wlne that he had con.. about the wort{ of dlrecttng the ressumed, found unsteady teet and, 1 cue of Campbell's men. While some swnying beyond the bounds or safe of the Rangers opened fire on tbe ln~ equlJibrlum, related the trngment of dians, tbe others trnnsrerred the an amour, the questionable wit of wounded nod. c!:ytng from the burning whlcb might have lifted laughter only bnrge to. tlleJr own. "Lindsay an d Captain Monahan M ay Ji'inal1y the last wounded man had out of wine-bemused minds. Manuel Witness," Said Pin!, Still Smiling. gave an account o! my un.sucees~ul been transfen·ed_ Then Rf.'ctor cast that were checkered with green and nttemut In New Orleans to Imitate off anrJ running a gantlet of renewed brown. Free. at last, of enemy tnter San Isidro, and my equally unsuccess- [ndian fire, bls boat swept ttown the 1'erence, we sk1rted the lake and bent fu1 effort to vanquish four men, which river with its precious cnrgo or wound~ our steps toward the town of Tina· drew the attention of the gathered ed men safely out or the ran;;e or the qutl1o, near which, we knew, would officers in my dlrectJon. enemy guns. lie the Hues or Bolh-ar. and where, beI had neYer made a speech, nor • • • tore t'he sun bad set, we fell, exhaust- offered n toast, but when Dollvnr, en.. He Saved Pennsylvania ed but happy, into the arms of our couraging eyes upon me, sa.id, "Should own. ~ A llot summer's ulglll In 17G3 we not get the voice or the United Verliy the splrlt or the dead had States, a great nation after which we the fate of the colony of Pennsylarmed tlte living! hope to pattern our own?" I came vania-and perhrtps of all the English slowly to my feet, my mind a blank, colonies-rested in the hnnds of the Storm-clouds were gathering tn the and tremors Rhnking me. Leaning commnnder of a little body of English south and east, and thunder rumbled against the tah1e for supnort, I stared troops camped on a barren hill ahout along the crest of the Carnbobo hills vacantly at the half~ftlled wine glass 20 miles from the present site or Pittswhne we stood at attention, waltlng in my right hand, and P1n1, noting my burgh, Pn. De wns Col. nenry Bontor General Bolivar to pin upon the embarrassment, lnnghed harshly. quet, a Swiss soldier of fortune who jacket of Colonel Pini the coveted Or· "A speech/' he cried gatly, "or J1 was leading n l'ttle nrmy of less than der of Liberators. ne complimented the America no's mind refuses to func~ 500 men, composed of detachments of the colonel upon the courage of hlm- tlon. a toast. . . • A toast to the the Sb:tleth regiment of Roral Amereelt and his men in breaking through Senorita-to the lovely Lamartina!" iCans, the Seventy·seventh regiment, town the taking and lines the Spanish A silence feU upon u.s-a grim tor&- Montgomery's Blghlnndcrs, the Forty~ of Mnracay, and he otrered mlld apol- boding silence-tor many of these men seeond regiment of Hoynl Highlanders ogy that l 1 nez nod Plaza had tailed l..."'Dew of my mad worship or. the Seno- (the famous "Black Watch'') and a to help him bold lt. rita. The look that I bent upon Plnl few rangers, from Fort Ltg:onler to Francisco touched my elbow. "Do had nothing or friendship in It; 1t was raise the siege of Fort Pitt. not your :fl.ngers ache, Garde, do not more like a challenge. That be wasJ Pontiac, the great Ottawa chieftain, those capable bands of yours Itch to drunk 1 knew, and that her name upon hnd united t11e tribes to wipe out the take hold of Plnl's throat?'' hts Bps. gained nothing for a lady waa hated En'glish.. Every military post "\Vhy should they." said I, for I a thing or equal certainty to me. 1n western Pennsylvania, except Pitt knew that Monahan bnd talked i uilld Looking across the narrow table and Ligonier bnd been captured l:f not Pint alve me my Ufe?" into the leering eyes of my tormentor, Pitt fell, tJgonler fell and a storm of "ll·or the Order ot Liberators." he 1 felt the surge of an overwhelming savage wrath would brenk over the so.ld, smlling, "a cherished decora· fury, and before I bad taken tlme to towns or Shippensburg, Car1lsle and tlon . • . and to think that a man consider my act, or the consequences Bedford into which hundreds of terrorlike Plnl should have got it." of it, I had cnst the contents ot my stricken fugitives had crowded. "As far as I am concerned, Fran ~ wine glass into his face. '!'hen, wblle About noon on August 5 Bouquet's cisco, our colonel may have it; surely Plni spluttered in anger, I turned to advance guard was attacked. The tt will give hlm little joy." Now Ire- Bollvar. "Blacl\ \Yatch" soon scattered them member the look in Ptnl's eyes when "That, my general, Is the votce ot but almost immediately the snmges they had rested on the Senorita, and the Unlted States, where men are came swarming bnck and within a a flame or rage scorched me. I won- wont to look with reverence upon a short time the soldiers were surround· dered then It I would not yet have to woman. The amours of Colonel ed and Hgbtlng for their lives behind . ' deal wlth the colonel, nnd I hoped fn Pint-" -1 a hastily eon~trncted defense on top my henrt that 1 would. Pinl came to his teet, his t.nce fiama or Edge hill. All afternoon they bent "Has there been any news or the tng, eyes gleaming. "I wlll have his off the nttacks. That night their case Senorita, or or Polito 1'" Francisco's life for that, I'll run him through, I'll seemed hopel~s:s. finger, I knew, was upon the pulse of drive a sword-!" When mormng came the Indians re. Venezuela. D(Juf)uet saw their attacks. newecl furrows Bol1var-the I bowed, while ".None, ~xcept thnt Adolfo Is now in In bls Wgh -forehead deepening and that it was only a mnttE'r of tlme uncommand ot the Valencia garrison, hi.s heavy eyebrows drawing together tn the plunging fire of the enemy cot and we may assume that the Senorita 1n a portentoc:s frown-considered us. down his force ontl1 the fPw tha.t and her brother are there also." "I thlnk," said Francisco coldly, were left could not withstand the 4 'It is good news, my trJend, for 11 thnt colonel Pini torgets the wounded. ehnrge tbnt was sure to come. DeValencia is st.:arce twenty miles from arm of Major Garde; lt has not yet clcling to wa::rer CYerything on on~ here." healed, and tile major, therefore, would stroke, b.e plnnoed n during mnneuver. "\Vith only a Spanish army ot seven be at a se.rlous dtsQdvantage." After e..~pll'tlning to his mPn exnctl.v or eight thousand soldiers barring our Whftt they we-re tO clo, SO thnt there (TO BE CONTINUED.) would be no mistake and no pnoic <><><><><><><><><><<><><><><><><><><><><><><> when tt gM onder way, he suddenly withdrew the two companies of £1lgh. • • from the Une. harl !hem relanders Sacred Manuscripts ln Profusion ln Chicago trrnt acro~s the hill and enter a smaiJ ---this. the fnrllnns beSeeing ravine. Rare go~pcl m:tnuscrlpts, dating United States to 1916 !rom Jamlna, about back several centuries, have come to the Albnnhtn city noted for its mo- Ue~ed thnt H g~neral retrPnl was Ugbt 1n the Greek, Armenian and Sy~ nastic library or the Greek Orthodox to begin and came whooping toto the rlan colonies of CWcago, the Chicago church. It was round in the posses- Often. This was just what Bouquet wanted. Association of Commerce announces. sion o.t n Chicago dentist. the mnRs of savages struck the As Recent discoveries of important manu· line, the "Blaek Watch" weakened scripts hn\'"e revealed Chlcngo as a rich Garfield Monument out of the rn vine on charging came hunting ground comparnhle wltb ageThe Garfield monument occupies the enemy. Too lnte the tlle of f1ank t.he old cities or Europe and the Near highest spot in Lake View cemetet y, had b~en trapped. they realized East. Cleveland. It cost $22~'l,OOO, was begun Indians broke his line, agnin Bouquet 'l.'he latest dlsco\·ery, which has been In 1885 and de<licate<l in 1890. 'l.'he For purchased by the New Testament de- monument Is 180 teet high; the tower threw two companies or light 1nfuntry partment of the University of Chicago, t:iO f'eet in dlameter. There are five out of Lhe c11·c1e on the other flank ts a Thlrtet•nth-century mnnuscrl_pt of panels on the outside depleting scenes and the savages were ca11~ht betwoen the gospels ln Greelt, and ls regnrded from Gnrfiehl's life. The stained glass two llres. Within R Few minutes tbe by experts as being one of the finest Is an allegorical presentation of the J English were in full po~se~sion of the b.-nown pieces ot curslYe, or runnln~ funeral or Garfield. A second casket fielll. Bouqufl't then pushed on to H'ort hand script, w rltlng In any collection. contains the body or Airs. Garfield. the Pitt and a death blow had be(!n strucb to tbe conspiracy of Pontiac. The manusc.•Jpt was brought; into th t! Presldent"o wite, who died ill 1918. 4 Q • • • • found cnrved into a tree near UnO Jnkes, ln the F:ldornclo Na· tiona.l forest. r.rhe hjstol·lral dlscov.. e1·y was mnde by a United States forest se.nl<'e ~rail crew. Six juches of new wooU had grown O\~ er the orl:,'inal bla7.e. Another tree carved by the famous pioneer Js still stand~ lng in the Klt Carson pass. rec~ntl.\' on the battlefields of the En.st or in CH APTER X Kit Car•on Memento The words 1 'Klt Carson, 1 ·1.S,'' were • • • I \@. 1981. We.tero NeWI!ll)apet U11IU l When TEETHING makes HIM FUSSY One ot the most Important tblngs you can do to mali:e a teethJng baby comfortable is to see that llttle bowels do their work of carrying ofl waste matter promptly and regular.. ly. For this nothing ts better than C'ustorla, a pure vegetable prepara~ tton specially made for babies and children. «;astoria acts so gently you can give it to young infants to relie\e colic. Yet it 1s always effective, for older children, too. Remember, Ca.storia contains no harsh drU{JB. no narcotics-is absolutely harmless. Wben your baby Is fretful with teetblng or a food upset, glve a cleansing dose of Castorta. Be sore you get genuine Castorla with the unme: ~ CASTO RIA ~Hil"D , R · E. N . IT CRY · FOR Advice ftYes. she is the gil'l of my dreams:• "There's another guy after her. Better wake up.'' 'l]l.e pPflagogue·s rule oflen works both ways. KEEP IN GOOD HEALTH • , • WARD OFF COLDS Salt Lake City, Utah-" Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, in my opinion and also in my husband's opinion, is by far the best and most reliable general tonic for a debilitated condition of health/' said Mrs. t. M. Harvey of 122 West 4th South St. "\\'e take this medicine during the winter and spring months to keep ourselves in good health. By kcepmg in general good health we ward off cold• and spells of indigestion and various other common ailments to which all people are subject more or less.'' ' Fol' free ns.ed.J.,.J ad ..lte, wrtce to Dr. f'Jero:"e'• Clinic, Uull'alo, N .Y. Dro88kr. .e.U Dr. Pierce's Discovery Un1cind Inference Rimer-"! put all my mfnd into this poem." J~llitor-"So I see-It's blank \'erse, Isn't it1" relieved this quick way If the stabbing pains of rheumatism are crippling you, rub on good old St. Jacobs OiL Relief comes in a min· ute! This famous rerp;edy draws out pain and inflammation. lt's the quick, safe way to stop aches and pains of Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago or Backache. Neuralgia or swollen Joints.. No blistering. No burning. Get n small bottle at any drug store. W'bo cnn he n lreen thinl{er hy trying to? NohoUy. Keen thinking 1~ un innate ond uncontrollnble girt~ The street car coni.ludor is a raring individual. wn~ COLD GERMS Clears head Instantly. Stop~ cold spr!ktding. Sprinkle your handkerchief during the .-~ ... ,rt at n<ght. -your AT ALL• DRUG STORES · |