OCR Text |
Show PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION. UTAH Mother Claims All Can Have Good Health ado Co-o- r Springs Woman, Mother of 13 Children, after Suffering For 20 Years, Regains Health and Strength Quickly. Takes Tanlac n Mrs. Sulle V. Noble, a Colorado Springs woman, living at 805 Bontoy Ave., says: My experience proves that nearly very one can have good health. After 20 years of despair, pain and worry, I regained health, strength and energy. .. .Thanks to Tanlao. "I had suffered from what I believed was asthma. I would wake np at night coughing and struggling for breath and my daughter would have to sit up with me for hours. The strong piediclnee I took upset my stomach, spoiled my appetite and put me where I could scarcely eat and retain food. A friend suggested that I try Tanlafe. I did. And the results amazed me. I began to sleep better, relish my food without suffering from Indigestion pains. I gained weight Tanlao was a life saver to me. I now enjoy good health, sleep like a child, go all day without tiring. But I have not stopped taking Tanlao tor It is the one remedy for continued good health and well-know- should take it. strength. Everyone Tanlao has ' helped many Colorado men and women. It Is natures own remedy made from roots, barks and herbs. The first bottle usually brings relief. Dont negloot your health, dont suffer from pain needlessly, begin taking this wonder tonln nova Ask your druggl3t for Tanlao today! 1 Sees Radio Movies Matter of Couth I expect to see and hear by elec- tricity the Presidential Inauguration lu 1929 even though I nmy be thousands of miles away from Washing-ton,declares Dr. Gerald Wendt, director of the division of Industrial research, Pennsylvania State college. He is foreseeing electrical advances that are sure to be made In the next few years by industrial research. "Single pictures are already being sent across the sea, lie points out. "When a more sensitive cell Is developed, ploture will be transmitted as rapidly as the movie can Hash it on the screen. In Washington during the ceremony, the microphone will have a lulornsoope alongside It and I shall he sitting In my own living room seeing and hearing the entire performance as If I were on the spot. Then we shall have radio movies for every home." " SAFE FOR CHILDREN For bumps, bruises, cuts, burns, chafing and rashes. Internally for coughs and colds. Vaseline Jelly is an invaluable remedy for many childrens ills. photo-electrt- Chescbrough Mfg. Company New York State St. Vaseline fit, I. IAT. 99 PBTROLCUM JILLY HEN Cliri.stopher Columbus was a boy. lie and bis playmates regarded men and women who had attained to two score years and t n as very old people indeed. For at was in the Fifteenth century when the averape span was but little more than thirty-siyears. In the United States today the averape life span is about fifty-s- i In 1910 it was about v yevrs. fifty-one- , and in 1901 about forty-ninKxaminalion of tables givlife in various countries of of the ing expectation the world show similar inereises in the life span, with the exception of India, where the expectation during the years SSI-- 891 was about twenty-fivwas about years and for the period twenty-twyears. With this, exception the world seems to becoming a healthier pi nee to live In. The limit set by the psalmist is three seore years and ten, but today it seems no little feat at all to have arrived at your seventieth birthday. The census of 1920 gave Uncle Sam 1,501 sons end .2.7(H) daughters at least one hundred years old. Some of these undoubtedly were much beyond the century murk, but the census makes no distinct. on between centenarians and supereen-tenarianAs far as the census is concerned, you are no worthier of note at one hundred ten or more than you are at one hundred, unless, of course, you ate yljpost a Methuselah and can prove Coughs and Colds are not only annoying, but dangerous. If not attended to at once they may ievelop Into serious ailment. Boschees Syrup e It. Comparatively few of us study, the census, how-eveand when we hear of the existence of a centenarian it is usually that he or siie has Just become one, lias celebrated a still later anniversary or has died. Sometimes, observes J. B. Gilder in the New York Times, be is a person of more or less Cole of California, note like the late who died at one hundred two, or the chairman of the board of (lie United States Trust company, who on August 26 celebrated his one hundred fourth birthday. Many of the oldest folks In this country were born abroad ; a goodly number of the native-bor- n negroes, which suggests that elders are Indians a dark skin, constitutes a protective coloring. A point to be noted about all of, them Is that the number of their- descendants Is not, as a rule, exactly proportioned to their age. Here, for example, is a pioneer of Marquette, Mich., leaving behind him. at one hundred two. a son and two daughters, while a Tonawatida (Fa.) woman, dying the, next, day at only ninety. Is survived by children unto the third generation, and to the number of 114. the Incontrovertible evidence Notwithstanding for cases ' of extreme longevity, two English writers of note in the last, century saw fit to question the possibility of human life extending appreciably beyond five score years. They had no other but a womans reason. They thought it so because they thought it so. The very oldest people like the wickedest are seldom to be found in our immediate neighborhood, or even in our own country. Usually they live very far away. Take Zorah Agrah, for Instance, a Kurdish porter resident In Constantinople,, we .are fold, .for more than one hundred twenty years, "whoSfe claim tftdate from November 15, 1774, is said to be supported by a birth certificate and the testimony of a dozen pjd men that h& was an old roan when they were lads. Too poor to buy much meat, he has relied chiefly oh dried legumes, bread, raisins, figs, honey, sugar and tea. Water he sips occasionally, but liquor and tobacco he has always abjured. Still further oIT, In the village of Mochln, Icrla. lives an old woman who was discovered not long ego by the first census of that country, taken for the benefit of the American administrator of the national rurse. Tbo TeberaD correspondent of the London Daily Express reported in January that nod this woman was then one hundred forty-six- . that her son was one hundred seventeen. Ye nr left in the dark as to how they achieved their bur-de' of years. ' Even In America, however, one can live to le fairly old, a$ was shown by Mrs. Kezlalt Elizabeth r, - Btorcs und general stores sell bottles of Dandelion for 35 cents. Adv. soothing and healing In such cases, 30o and baa been used for sixty years. and 90c bottles. At all druggists. If you cannot get it, write to U. U. Ureen. Great Fun Inc., Woodbury, N. J. Madame Do Lange, whose luxurious hair vies in fame with that of the Seven Snt he'land sisters, naturally t In too many eases, quickly relieved and often cleared t deplores the bob. (hough lmi always, a woman loses away by a few applications of much of 'her feminine charm. Even ehlldron noliee it, as I had oeeasiou to observe when tin- - twins. Tessie ami Teililie, were condoling with one an oilier. Of course you can never lie a Imy." Drown Them? but you cun cut conceded Teddie, In of town The small Wullassay, the oilier girls d hair the way your Cheshire, 'England, Is concerned over 8Z 1 can and you're a girl forget maybe womIts 2,XM) surplus the problem of a nose bleed and black and you give three years ago, to see three sons and a duughtei en. Chinn lias a very effective, alns hoys. of rest like the Just eyes method already-settleof here, but declined to be a burden though rather ruthless, Los Angeles Times. upon any of them. Ills wife a spry old lady of dealing with tills problem, hut, of one hundred nine walked home from the funeral, course, we Hre too gallant to suggest Its adoption by Wnllassay. Treuton Old Railroad Junked disdaining several offers of a ride. Born at Mastic, L. I., January 25, 1815, Martha State Gazette. The first German railroad, built Indian woman, lived at one Bradley, a 91 years ago from Nuremberg t time in New York, but some twenty-siyears ago a to is calculated Fuerth, Bavaria, a distance of sli give Nothing moved to Ashury Park, N. J., where, after fifteen man a harder Jolt than a bill miles, has been sold us Junk. years employment in domestic service, she became, of fare In French'. at the age of one hundred, an Inmate of Woodluwn How much water different treei farm, the Monmouth county almshouse. At her the .only establishment that drink is being measured in u series About death, after her first Illness, she lacked only a makes money without advertising Is of experiments which are to last fout fortnight of being one hundred eleven. A lover. of the mint. years. candy, she also liked "a wee bit of gin" now and held and to be "ail then,, prohibition wrong. Dating from the first day of the year 1810. John Morron, born In the Province of Quebec, but for the past forty years a resident of Vermont, was still capable of u fair days work at one hundred ten. A year earlier he had celebrated his birthday by cutting a cord, of wood. Some of the most famous headline names of today are those of men well above the Biblical1 three seore years and ten. Following is a list as compiled by the World Almanac. The age at the last birthday Is given and the list is dated as of October 1, 1925: One hundred seven Mrs. Sarah Bosworth Brad-- . ford of Eastford, Conn., real daughter of the Revolution. One hundred three John A. Stewart, bunker, New York. John R. Voorhis, president of the Ninety-siboard of elections, New York city. Ninety-five- Ezra Meeker. Oregon pioneer. Prof. William E. Warren, formei Ninety-two- president of Boston university. Ninety-on- e Chaunecy M. Depew; former JJnlted States senator. and chairman of.the board of the New York Central railroad. James Brown yacht builder. Inventor. Ninety Mrs. William II. Felton of Georgia, first woman to be appointed United States senator. George Ekret, brewer. Eighty-ninJoseph G. Cannon, former congressman from Illinois. Lyman J. Gage, former secNretary of ti e treasury. Eighty-eigh- t Washington A. Roebling, engineer, Unless you see the Bayer Cross" on tablets, you are not built the Brookln bridge. Marvin Hughitt, railroad executive getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by milEmile Loubet, president of France, Eighty-seve- n lions and prescribed by physicians over 25 years for 1898-190Henry A. Dupont, former United , States senator. Edward P. Weston, Neuritis ( Headache Colds walker. Lumbago Eight-siJohn Davison Roekefeller. founder of Toothache Rheumatism Pain Neuralgia the Standard Oil Co. William P. Clyde, steamship owner. Henry Phipps, philanthropist. Sinanin E. Baldwin, Jurist, formei Eighty-fivgovernor of Connecticut. George F. Baker, bank er. New York. Thomas Hardy. English novelist Henry Holt, New York publisher. Carlotta. former empress of Mexico. Gen. Corgp VV. Win-gntonly Bayer" package founder Public Schools Athletic leugue. v ;h contains proven directions. Claud Monet, artist. Oliver Wendell Eighty-fou- r Holmes. United v Bayer boxes of 12 - tablets. I A bottles of 24 and 109 Druggists. States Supreme eonrt Justice. Georges Olemetr of lloaoocettcacldoeter of SoUcrIk.d4 ceau, former premier of France. A;)tru) U tL trod a-- k of Boor ITCHING RASHES 1901-191- . BUTTER COLOR" A hnrmless vegetable butter color used by millions for 50 years. Drug la x 1 DANDELION c Georges C&m&rrc??siz & Kuffu, Fennsylvnnia colored woman, whose parents built a log cabin at Gettysburg long before Pickr etts charge set the mark of the Confederacy in that neighborhood. At her death last July, nonagenarians said she had been an old woman when they were young, and relatives and friends said the family Bible indicated that she was born In 1804. Joseph Davis, who died in Milwaukee at one hundred twenty, was reported to be- one of the oldest men in the United States." He may well have bgeu. Born a slave, he cooked meals for Confederate soldiers until, and perhaps after, Lincoln emancipated him and a few million others of his race. Ills oldest surviving son turned ninety-five- , and fifty-twyears older than his youngest brother has the fathers birth certificate. A native of Mount Vernon, Va., whose father is said to have been one of Washington's attendants, Mrs. Catherine Minor of Boston, claimed to be one hundred eighteen when she herself died. Kentuckys prize centenarian was Mrs. Celia Carter, who died near Flemlng.sburg last June, her age, according to the best records, being one hundred seventeen. Her faculties were, preserved" to an unusual degree. Four generations of her descendants survived her. When death transported Maria Tomoike from Sagualda Grande. Santa Clara. Cuba, she was found though only two in full possesyears younger than Mrs. Carter sion of her faculties. Thomas Shannon, an Irish Land Leaguer, who had once heated to plow rarnells land when his famous leader was in Jail, died at Ashford, Wicklow, aj the reputed age of one hundred fifteen. Five weeks after celebrating her one hundred fourteenth birthday, Peshe Malke Urdang passed away at the Harlem Home of the Daughters of Israel where she had spent her last six years. Dressed to receive some sixty on her lust birthday, and propped up in bed, she was asked what she would like best as a birthday present. A husband," she Jested. She had had smooth shaved, as she disliked whiskers. Born in Ireland in IS 12 and arriving in this country In 1868. Mrs. Rose Garvey, who died tills year at Albion, Neb., was survived by fonr sons. One had married and left home. The other three the oldest now eighty-one- , and the youngest seventy remained bachelors for her sake. They denied themselves more than wives, to please her amang these "sacrifices being the radio, the contelephone and the automobile traptions for which their mother had no liking. Nearly a year ago Meyer Lebowitz was carried by his grandchildren to the Rumanian synagogue in Kivington street. New York, to worship on his one hundred eleventh birthday. He had been a moderate smoker till long after he crossed the cen tury stile. That he had lived to cross it at all be ascribed to having observed moderation in all ihlngs. For Passach Yeservsky. who died at the Hebrew home in Baltimore, in April, at the age of one hundred eleven, the moderate claim was made that he was perhaps the oldest man of his race in that city. Passach came from Suwalkl, Poland, high-wate- o well-wishe- new-fangle- d Zobert Doter, d d x self-mad- e . x Iler-reshof- f, e SAY BAYER ASPIRI- long-distanc- x e DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART : . |