HOW THIS WOMAN "GOT STRENGTH Put Up 300 Quarts Fruit, 500 Chivers Jeils and Took Care of Four Children Norwalk, Iowa.—*‘ I have been mean= Ing for some time to write and tell you Ti how much fa our medicine one had had any one to care for my children. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound and used Lydia E. Pinkham’s San- ative Wash, and found that so pealing. 1 am not entirely well yet for I was bad shape when [ started your medicine, but 1 am so much better thatl am not afraid to recommend it, and I think if I keep on taking it, it will cure me. have done my work all alone this sum- mer, caring for four children, and I canned 300 quarts of fruit and made 500 glasses © ae so you see I must be better. I feel pretty good all the time and I am glad to tell others about the medicine.’’— Mrs. C. J. WENNER- MARK, Box 141, Norwalk, Iowa. Women can depend upon Lydia E. Pinkham?'s Vegetable Compound to re- lieve them from female troubles, For sale by druggists everywhere, is all you need Kaep your complexion free of blemishes, your skin clear, soft, smooth and white, your hair vilky and glistening, your entire body refreshed, by using ne Soap for TOILET BATH Sulphur Soap Containe 33349, Pure Sulphur. At draggists. Rohland's Styptic Cotten, 25¢ Confidences Muriel—*Don't you like a man who always flatters you?" Madge—"No; but I hate one who never does” A man is alowed to have his own way when he wants to hide his light under a bushel, It's hard to one's work when every day brings morning lameness, throbbing backache, and a dull, tired feeling. If you suffer thus, why not find the cause? Likely it's your kid- neys. Headaches, dizziness and kidney irregularities may give further proof that your kidneys need help. Don't risk neglect! Use Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys. Thou- sands have been helped by Doan’s They should help you. Ask your neighbor! A Virginia Case Albert 8. Pattison, prop. of plumbing establishment, cor. Sixth and Liberty Streets, Wytheville, Va. says: “I had dull pains through the muscles of my back and mornings my back was stiff and lame. My kid- neys didn't act asg should, so 1 p to try Doan's Pills. A couple lieved me in every way.” DOAN’S "&c® STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS Foster-Milburn Co. Mig. Chem., Buffalo, N. Y. d Oo boxes re- My Picture on Every Package P.D.Q. P. DQ. a chemical (not an insect powder) that will ac- tually rid a house of Bed Bugs, Roaches, Fleas and Ants with its proper use-impossi- ble for them to exist as it kills their eggs as well and thereby stops future generations. A Be package makes a quart, Free—a patent spot in every package, to get them in the ard-to-get-at places, Special Hospital- size, 2.50, makes § gallons, Your druggist has It or can get it for you. Mailed prepaid upon receipt of price by the Ow! Chemical Works, Terre Haute, Ind. Money back without guestion If HUNT'S SALVE falls in the treatment of ITCH, BOZEMA, RINGWORM TETTER orothar itehing skin diseases, Price The at rRagiats. of direcs from A.B Richards Ca. Sherman Ten Agente~Where to Buy 250000 Articles wholesale, Most complete directory published. Everything rock<bottom prices, Directory 3 Loftin Co., 31511 King 8t., Alexandria, Va ———————— A A AR SM DAVIS AGGEPTS NOMINATIOK G. 0. P. Regime is Subjected to Sharp Attack THIRD TICKET IS IGNORED Clarksburg Overflows With Visitors To Notification Ceremony; Rain Mars Programs—Outiines Problems. Clarksburg, W. Va—With “joyful confidenge” in the outcome of the No vember election, John W. Davis ac cepted the Democratic nomination for President. The notification cere-| monies were held in a torrent of rain, | which drenched thousands in the au-| dience. i A vigorous arraignment of the Re- | publican administration and the | pledge of “an honest, an impartial and a just government” constituted the | theme of the address. Half of his speech Mr. Davis de- voted to a detailed and carefully- drawn indictment of the Republicans The disclosures made by the various Congressional investigations figure large in the indictment. Addressing his hearers as “the rep-| resentatives of millions of Americans who are dissatified with existing con-| ditions,” Mr. Davis outlined “the prob-| lems of the hour” as follows: i “The allied forces of greed and dis-| honesty, of self seeking and partisan. ship, of prejudice and ignorance, threaten, today as they have rarely done before the perpetuity of our na-! tional ideals, traditions and institu-| tions Men are looking askance at one another: are mistrusting one an- other: are doubting each other's good will and honesty of purpose. “The solidarity of the Great War] has given way to a chaos of blocs and sections and classes and Interests, | each striving for its own advantage, | careless of the welfare of the whole, Government itself, to which the hum- blest citizen has the right to turn with confident reliance in its even- handed justice, has fallen under the prevalent distrust, Distrust Is Abroad. “There is abroad in the land a feel ing too general to be ignored. too deep-seated for any trifling, that men in office can no longer be trusted to keep faith with those who send them there, and that the powers of Gov- ernment are being exercised in the pursuit of personal gain instead of the common service “Out of this and because of it there has developed an alarming tendency to take the administration of the law out of the hands of constituted officials and to execute its processes through individuals or through organized so cleities, by methods little different from those of private revenge. “A situation so threatening to the very foundations of the social order demands boldness in facing the causes which have brought it about, and tire less exertion in the effort to remove them. “In 1920 we passed through a po- litical campaign in which materialism was preached as a creed and selfish ness as a national duty, and [ say that it has brought corruption in high places, favoritism in legislation, divi gion and discord in party councils, | {mpotence in government and a hot] struggle for profit and advantage which has bewildered us at home and humiliated us abroad. “For all these things the party now | in power cannot escape the responsi-| bility that is its due. No repentance at the eleventh hour and no promise of reform can cancel half a line of | the indisputable facts. Robbery Under Law. “To pervert high office to personal gain is an offense detested by all honest men; but to use the power of legislation purposely to enrich one man or set of men at the expense of others is a robbery on a larger scale, | though done under the forms of law. | “In the passage of the Fordney Mc | Cumber tariff act, imposing the high. | est rates and duties in the tariff his tory of the nation, there was an un- blushing return to the evil days of rewarding the party supporters.” Mr. Davia then took up the tax re visfon program supported by Secre- tary of the Treasury Mellon and claimed for the Democrats full credit for the tax law passed by the last Congress. He referred pointedly to the disagreements between President Coolidge and the Republican Congress, and charged the Republicans “with division in couneil and impotence In action.” When a party “becomes a leader fess and incoherent mob,” he asserted, “it must give way to some rival bet ter fitted for the task of government.” Raps Foreign Policy. In this connection, Mr. Davis took up the foreign policy of the Harding Coolidge Administration, which, he charged, was evidence of “creeping paralysis.” He mentioned the differ ences between the President and Con: gress over. tha World Court proposal, and pledged the Democrats to support the World Court idea. Secretary of the State Hughes, he said, had made a “confession of impotence.” Continuing, Mr. Davis said: “A political party, which is at best but human, may make honest mis- takes: they can be forgiven. It may pags unwise laws; they can be re pealed. It may, through honest error, set men to tesks beyond their power, “I indict the Republican Party in its organized capacity for having shaken public confidence. 1 charge it with having exhibited deeper and more widespread corruption than any that this generation of Americans has been called upon to witness. I charge it with complacency in the face of that corruption and with {ll will toward the effort of honest men to expose it, “I charge it with gross favoritism to the privileged and with utter disregard of the unprivileged. 1 charge it with difference to world peace and with timidity in the conduct of our foreign affairs. “l charge it with disorganization, division and incoherence, and on the record I shall ask the voters through- out the length and breadth of this land to pass judgment of condemna- tion, as a warning to all men who may aspire to public office, that dishonesty either in thought, word or deed, will not be tolerated in America. I cannot doubt what verdict they will render.” ‘ Having disposed of the Republican Party, Mr. Davis turned his attention to a thorough presentation of the Dem. ocratic virtues as he saw them. His and the reactionary.” “From my He said: point of view, he called a progressive out an effort to redress it, or a right denied without an effort to it; who feels a deep concern for the economic welfare of the United States, men and better women is a matter policy first of all in its bearing upon upon ma- in human equality and detests priv disguise, and who finds the true the dollar, but the .individual man. All that goes to make better and hap pler and freer men progress; all else is reaction. gressives of this sort, though may not care to use the name, never theless In their hearts are erats.”™ To the farmers of the United States, Mr. Davis sald, the Democrats “prom. ise not patronage, but such laws administration of the laws as will en- able them to prosper in right.” The farmer, he attacking the Republican tariff, must buy “in a protected market and sell in a market open to the world.” Stand On Rates. With reference to railroad Mr. Davis that was entitled “to demand an adequate of transportation at able rates.” It was “quite as import ant to the railroads that the farmer should prosper, as it is to the farmer that the railroads should be adequate ly paid for the service that they ren- der,” he said. Mr.’ Davis also advocated further re ductions in the income tax He pledged his own support te the bud get system. The Democrats, he as. serted, also stand “definitely pledged” to the enforcement of “all law.” In this connection he added: “To the enforcement of the law, and all the law, we stand definitely pledged Demo- their own rates asserted the farmer service reason. wealth that endeavors to restrain trade and create monopoly as against pov. erty that counterfeits the currency; as vigorously against ambition which seeks to climb into office through the corrupt use of money as against the lesser greed that robs the mails. “Obedience to the law is the first duty of every good citizen. whether he be rich or whether he be poor; en- forcement of the law against every violator, rich or poor, is the solemn Mr. Davis also urged the necessity for lifting “the burden of vast arma. ments which now weighs upon the world” and silencing “the recurring threat of war.” He denied positively “that the league of Nations is a closed issue zo far as we are con cerned,” and stated that, on the con. trary, developments had shown it “destined more and more to become the bulwark of peace and order to mankind.” Although urging disarmament, Mr. Davis also declared himself in favor of maintaining “the means of ade: quate national defense until reason is permitted to take the place of force.” Denounces Bigotry. Mr. Davis also took occasion to de- nounce “Bigotry, intolerance and race prejudice as allen to the spirit of America,” and to state that, If elected, lis appointments to office would be made without reference to “the race or creed of the appointee” He declared, too, his determination to remain “free from pledge or prom: ise to any living man.” He concluded: “Neither the Democratic Party nor 1 as its leader have any favors for sale. We can make but one promise to all men alike, that of an honest, an impartial, and so far as human wis. dom will permit, a just Government. To these things I pledge myself. In the struggle to secure them I invoke the support of all patriotic men and women to whom country is greater than party, honor more sacred than expediency and the right dearer than personal gain or all things else be side.” Real Stories About Real Girls By MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN FFP (©, 1934, Wemtsra Newspaper Union.) CANARY-CRAFT HE craze for canaries Is an excel lent one for the up-and-coming small-town girl to capitalize, “Because of lack of competition in this country, coupled with a constant ly growing demand for the birds, it is easy to make good rulsing canaries,’ says a girl who has Investigated the subject und, subsequently, has launched herself In this well-paying business. “There are few drawback: to the business. The canary Is # hardy pet, used to captivity, and able to survive with a minimum amount of care. Its breeding requires little cap ftal to start, and the business can be expanded readily, as profits justify it." The, prospective canary producer should, If she Is a novice, Invest ir the common canary of commerce One male and two females will stant ind about mating The amateur breeder should nll she can from books breed, classification, varieties, sters. In general, the prime food re quisite of canaries Is canary seed Ic tity of rape seed and a little hemp During the incubating period, ‘the tiny eggs, fragile; as they are and she must see that noth worries or disturbs the mother while sitting. When -the nest exceedingly bird The the the them. that teaches for io bird who be provided wee *“truiner,” the upon his “training” depends the qual male birds Only the males are songsters The novice ean hardly hope to com them or, taking in a city, ton if none pet. store her own and busiest in The immediate sales store fOwn. the adver the rent of the window. Or perhaps youn would lke to start There are many such small establishments scattered over the country. Usually the trade Is combined with a business In dogs guinea pigs. white mice, goldfish, and on. Sometimes the proprietor Is All this is not #0 simple sa starting with a few pairs of birds In your home, but it shows h@r by study and application, one ean develop the business to any ex- “SIDE LINES” #COMDE LINER” to the small-town girl or woman, sometimes seem as alluring and as unattainable us the proverbial fruit that Is just out of reach. “But they're not!” insists one girl who manages to turn out numerous tittle painted cards, after a full day's work behind the counter. "It really rests me, after standing all day, to sit and make the littie flub-dub- beries: I think any girl can have a paring hobby"” Every girl who spends a stated number of hours every day at her typewriter, or behind her teacher's desk, or who has her life job taking sare of a house, should have, if possi ble, an avocation that she can enjoy. Living In a small town is not a handi- cap. It is easier to make “pin money,” in connection with one's regular du ties, In a small place than In a larger one. There Is less competition in a small town, and more leisure, The small-town girl whe doesn't gnow what she can make her “paying aobby” should take an inventory of her abilities. Can she make hats, do hemstitchiag, make buttons, paint postenrds, make paper flowers, ribbon rosettes, silk lamp shades, quilts house slippers, fancy handkerchiefs, or garters, lingerie ping, vases, bead ed bags, door stops, wooden string holders, desk sets, directory covers, bird shelters and feed cups, toys? One girl raised money making a new theater curtain for the village opera house, collecting the money for the advertisements painted on I from the town business men. Another embroiders collars and blouses, Still another makes a steady income pian ning and managing parties In her spare hours. There Is money In but terfly gathering and mountiog, mak- ing of soaps and tollet articies, mak. ing halr switches, poultry raising, gardening, running a rental Ubrary, and even In such a simple feat as ad vertising and selling one's old clothes. In general, the article upon which the girl decides as her side line should we low In wholesale cost and simple in construction, It should be as near 'y professional in appearance as pos aible. Lastly, where it Is to he dis we carefully packed—for taking care sf the article gives the subtle lmpres don that it Is worth taking care of, md that the hobby of making it is a “My recovery has been a surprise to myself and all my friends,” recently declared Jacob Ferdinand, R. F. D. 2, Fond Du Lac, Wis., a prominent citl- zen of this city, In relating his re- markable experience with Tanlac, “The suffering I went through from stomach trouble for 12 or 18 years simply can't be described. In my ef- forts to find relief I spent over one thousand dollars, but kept getting worse instead of better, A large part of two years 1 was laid up in bed and for four months of that time I couldn't get up at all Exactly the Opposite Bill—"1 hear you can't meet creditors.” Bob-—-"Can't meet Why, I can't dodge them !™ ‘em! 7 Syrups, prepared for Infants Proven directions on each package. Pine Tree Money coined in Massa- chusetts in half of Seventeenth century was called "pine tree” money from the device which it bore, a pine tree. It was as “Boston” or “Bay” money. The sliver money the second the Don’t chuckle if you put over a substitute when an advertised product is called for. Maybe your customer will never come back. Ben Mulford, Jv. The Way of a Maid Dot-Jack when I wasn't Tot-My! And what did you do? Dot—1 kept my eyes shut the rest of the evening. kissed me last night looking Cuticura for Sore Hands. Sdak hands on retiring in the hot suds of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub in Cu ticura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. only one of the things Cuticura will do if Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used for all tollet purposes. —Advertisement Luck’s Companions Good luck is the willing handmald of upright, energetic character and conscientious pursuance of Lowell On Time you.” Wife—"But I said I'd be five minutes late"—From Life. “Finally 1 sent my daughter for a bottle of Tanlae with the result that I found immediate relief, and seven bottles made a well and happy man of me, I will gladly talk to anyona personally and answer all letters re- glirding my experience with Tanlae, It proved a godsend to me.” Tanlac is for sale by all good drug- giste, Accept no substitute. Over 40 million bottles sold, Tanlac Vegetable Pilils, for consth pation, made and recommended by the manufacturers of TANLAC, Imagination Not Necessary She—Men have so little imagination | nowadays. He—Gosh! They don’t need any, ee . Cry for in arms and Children all ages Physicians everywhere recommend it, Today's Simile Our simile for the day: As faith fully maid servant goes throogh her mistress’ belongings when the lat ter is not at home.— Ohio State Journal, iis 0 Say “Bayer Aspirin” INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by phy- sicians for 24 years. a Accept only Safe” Bayer package which contains proven directions Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Mann facture of Monoscetiescidester of Salicylicacid Restaurant Conversation Guest—Is this supposed to be aaslf ia chicken” Waiter—Yes, sir. i Guest—Then kindly bring me the other half, instead. pare it has been our biggest Robomgin ht sb
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers