Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, February 19, 1918, Page 14, Image 14

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    14
$3 WHEAT PLEDGE
TO BE FOUGHT BY
ADMINISTRATION
Scheme Seen to Saddle Tax
of *600,000,(XX) on tlic
Masses
Washington, Feb. 19.—Adminis
tration leaders in Congress are to
fight the proposals for a guarantee
\ of $3 wheat to the farmers this year
because they believe there is no ne
cessity for the imposition of a tax
of $600,000,000 on 85 per cent, of the
American people for the benefit of
the remainder.
It was pointed out yesterday by
leaders at the Capitol that $3 wheat
would mean just such a tax. It would
result in an increase of not less than
two cents a pound loaf on bread.
The wheat situation does not war
rant such an additional burden, It is
contended.
The movement for a fixed guaran
tee of $3 wheat already has gained
some volume at the Capitol, and
resolutions have been offered by
Senator McCumbcr, of North Dakota,
proposing a guaranteed minimum of
$2.50 in all local markets and Sen
ator Gore, of Oklahoma, chairman
of the Senate Agriculture Committee,
advocating a $2.75 minimum. Both
of these resolutions authorize the
President to increase these prices
whenever in his judgment it nniy be
necessary to do so.
A $3 minimum is being urged
very strongly by that group of grain
* reatment"
withCuticura
Clears Dandruff
"I COULD
NOT SLEEP
just Felt Miser
able,"
Says Mr. T. Dohoney, 633 Briggs St.,
Hurrisburg. "I was miserable, when
I would walk any distance I be
came nervous and unsteady, I just
feared to sc: night come for I could
not close ar.y aye and would lie
awake fo- hot - , at a stretch and
pray for daylight.
"My stomach was bad, my food
did not seem to agr.ee with me and
1 was always bothered with pains in
stomach anc" s'de, and generally
speaking. I felt all to the bad.
"Sanpan restored me to perfect
health an 1 feel that the least I
can do is to recommend this won
derful medicine to other sufferers."
Sanpan is being at
Keller's Drug Store, 405 Market fet.,
ilarrisbui t;.—adv.
Beautiful Bust and Shoulders
EtwjflTJi •' B< C if ,V on will wear a scientifically constructed
S[ The dragging weight of an unconflned bunt no stretches the
Hk .) supporting muscles that the contour of the figure is spoiled.
WM\ JH W put the bust back where it be
I Rsll M M fcyOUE having the appearance of flab
< I' \ (be-an biness, eliminate the danger of
■ M'/ih. ' RD4 ??IFRF? dragging muscles and confine the
Mr . ' v TO* DKAOJItIttO fl( , s h of the shoulder giving a
B \j graceful line to the entire upper body.
They are the daintiest and most serviceable garments imagi-
XJ'J&'.urKl ,1 nable—come in all materials and styles: Cross Hack, Hook
\' / A Front, Surplice, Bandeau, etc. Boned with " Walohn," the
JE '-M'fJ rustless honing—permitting washing without removal.
f$M/Have your dealershow you Bien Jolie Brassieres, if notstock-
We w,li gladly send him, prepaid, samples to show you.
The ——iT
H T°a u y s ,or of HOTEL MARTINIQUE
j lllto AD WAY, 3-1) STItKET, SEtV YORK
One Block From I'enn-.
1" nylvanla Station.
Equally Convenient for
f/[ Y Amusements. Sliop-
P' n £ or Business.
*_]] 157 Pleasant Rooms,
lltj ~"|l with Private llaUi,
gftpjlf 52.50 PER DAY
257 Excellent Rooms,
! r /// with Private Batli,
Jw facing street, south
\Sk E'.'jnf crn exposure,
$3.00 PER DAY
Also Attractive Iloonm from 81.50.
400 Baths llcHtuurnnt Prices Arc Most Moderate I
600 Rooms I*— ■ i i
%
I
"Food Will Win the War"
-Don't Waste It~
Likewise conserve gasoline and oil
—own and drive a Model "R" Hop
mobile—the War Time Miser—rightly
named "The Comfort Car.''
We invite any one interested for
practical demonstration without in
curring any obligation to purchase.
Hupmobile Sales Corporation
103 Market Street
i R. J. Church, Manager.
i
I ;
• * ' *• •
i ~*r -m. - wwrn*r *
TUESDAY EVENING, 1 HXRBISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 19, ITO. " "
growers which protested against the
$2.20 price tlxed last summer l>y the
President's price-fixing committee,
headed I>y Dr. Harry A. Garfield,
now the fuel administrator.
Dcniuiid $3 For No. 1 Northern !
At the time the Garfield commit- j
tee was considering the 1917 price
representatives of the grain growers
were in Washington demanding "" j
for No. 1 Northern at Chicago, on;
the ground that such a figure was
necessary to guarantee them
,quate return, as the bulk of their
wheat did not grade No. 1. That
they really expected such a price
was doubted, and their representa
tives on the price-fixing committee
asked for $2.50 at the outset.
The price for the 1918 crop was
fixed at $2 for No. 1 Northern by
Congress in the food control act, and
the movement now on foot presup
posed, among other things, that
farmers will not plant wheat this
year on such a. guarantee—that they
will grow corn, rye and barley. The
present market price of corn is held
by experts to be an entirely fictitious
cne, due to transportation conditions
which have resulted in the moving
of only about 40 per cent, of the
corn crop to date. Director General
McAdoo has made every effort to get
cars to the grain centers of the Mid
dle West, but the movement has not
been in anything* like the number
necessary.
Widespread reports have reached
Washington members of Congress
receiving them daily from farmers,
saying they will sow corn this year
instead of wheat. One very pertinent
menace in the demand for $3 wheat
is seen by officials in the almost in
evitable decision of farmers to hold
wheat at this time in order to ob
tain the benefit of the high price, if
such develops.
liner's Seed Plan Supported
Congress generally is very respon
sive to the demands of the American
farmer, and the President and other
administration leaders have called
for the greater possible crops this
> ear in order to meet the deficiencies
in the world food supply. Food Ad
ministrator Hoover and other officials
have urged support of the proposal
of Representative Baer, of North
Dakota, for financial aid by the gov
ernment to the farmers to enable
them to obtain seed grains, although
Secretary Houston, of the Agricul
ture Department, is held to be in
opposition to any further steps than
those provided in the faod survey
bill, which calls for government dis
tribution of seed.
SIOO.OO REWARD
: RHEUMATISM
gout, sciatica, lumbago, neuritis or
other uric acid disorder, if anyone
proves after using refined alkia
saltrates that this is not the equal
of any treatment ever perfected
for quickly eliminating the uric
acid and any other impurities from
the system, flushing out clogged
kidneys, or stimulating a sluggish,
congested liver. This standard
compound, obtainable at little cost
from any druggist reproduce* cer
tain rNsentini constituents found
In the Miller* of fiimotix nutiirnl
ineilleinnl springs hence its won
derful effectiveness even when
numerous other treatments have
failed. Get a trial supply to-day,
dissolve a little in plain hot water,
and notice the amazingly quick ef
fects of what users term "Spa
treatment at home." The refined
alkia saltrates compound referred
to above is always kept in stock
1 locally by Keller's Drug Store, G.
i A. Gorgas, Clark's Medicine Store,
' H. C. Kennedy.
U-BOATS SINK 7
PER CENT. OF FOOD
HOOVER'S CLAIM
U. S. Consumption Increased
by Ten Per Cent., Saj's
Administrator
Washington, Feb. 19.—Food con
sumption In the United States his
increased ten per cent per capita
since the outbreak of the European
war. U-t>r>ats destroyed Jitwecn five
and seven per cent, of tiie food s<nt
to our allies during 1917.
Hi rbert Hoover, Food Administra
tor of the United Stat?;, mad•
public lu'fore the House Agricultur
al Committee in a secret hearing, In
v/hu'li he explained the urgsnt ne
cessity of passing the food conser
vation bill now pending !i; the
House. The increase 'n consumption,
Mr. Hoover said, can be attributed
to Increased wages and a rise in the
standard of living. *
"Unless we can bring consumption (
back to somewhere near the 1914
Normal, we cannot hope to meet ex- (
port demands," Mr. Hoover told the c
committee. Showing no.v disastrous J
this would be to the civilian popula- t
tions of England and France, he t
produced figures showing that with '
unrestricted exports of foodstuffs the j
present consumption of meats in >
Kngland and France is only nine- '
tenths pound per capita per week, as '
against three and cr.c-tenth pounds
in this country. /
. In breadstuffs it is four pounds a
week in Kngland, five in France and
six pounds a week in this country,
which normally consumes less bread
than either France or England. In
sugar the English and French ra
tion is now threa pounds per month,
as against an average consumption
of seven pounds per month per cap
ita in the United States. Mr. Hoov
er suggested that a steak should not
weigh more than six ounces per per
son.
Must Save on Itreads
Mr. Hoover produced figures show
ing that if present exports are
maintained and no further curtail
ment of consumption made in 'his
country, the United States by Jure 1
will face a twenty-five pjr cent, de
ficiency in breadstuff*, a ten per cent,
deficiency in beef, a fifteen per cent,
deficiency in pork and pork p-oducts
and a somewhat smaller de:lcl\*:.cy in
dairy products.
Austrians Not to Fight
in North; Reluctant to
Continue War Anywhere
Amsterdam, Feb. 19. —An agree
ment has been reached between Ger-
I many and Austria-Hungary where
by, in the event of military action
being necessary, the German troops
will be confined to the frontier of
Great Russia, and the Austrians to
Ukraine only. This announcement is
made in a Vienna dispatch.
Eondon, Feb. 19.—A deep, serious
Schism has been created between
Germany and Austria-Hungary by
the termination of the armistice be
tween the Central Powers and Rus
sia and the renewal of a state Of
■war, according to the Copenhagen
correspondent of the Exchange Tel
egraph Company.
The Austrian press, continues the
correspondent. Is warning Germany
against the reopening of hostilities in
which Austria does not wish to par
ticipate. The semi-official Fremden
bl.att is silent, but the Neue Frele
Presse is quoted as pointing out that
the Austrian monarchy no longer
borders upon Russia and Is not. like
Germany, compelled to resume war
fare. The only tiling Austria might
[do against its will, says the news
paper, is to protect the free con
nection between the monarchy and
the Ukraine.
Die Zeit, which has. intimate con
nections with the Austro-Hungarian
Foreign Office, is reported by the
correspondent as contending that
Count Czernin, the Foreign Minis
ter, can continue to act as a ne
gotiator with the west. "For our
monarchy," it says, "the war is in
the mai nfinislied. and for one of our
antagonists it has virtually not be
gun. Millions of thinking people
now point to Count Czernin and
President Wilson." The article con
[ eludes with a sentence which the
correspondent interprets as being
plainly addressed to Germany, read
ing:
"From our side the predisposition
to positive negotiation has never
been interrupted, and it is to be
hoped that the negotiations will not
be interrupted from the other side."
Y. M. C. A. Convention
to Open With Dinner
The fiftieth annual convention of
the Pennsylvania Young Men's
Christian Associations will open
Thursday night with a Complimen
tary dinner for delegates, to be
held in the Board of Trade Audi
torium. Governor Brumbaugh and
W. D. B. Ainey, chairman of the
Pennsylvania Public Service Com
mission, will speak. Other interest
ing features are being arranged.
I Several prominent Canadian Y. M.
I C. A. workers will be present at the
| following sessions. Bishop Euther
B. Wilson, one of the Methodist
Church's most prominent clergymen
will speak. The Bishop spent a long
time speaking and reviewing the
work among the soldiers in France,
under the auspices of the National
War Work Council of the Y. M. C. A.
Robert B. lleevos, general secre
tary of the Central Y. M. C. A.
urges all Y. M.' C. A. members to
attend the sessions of the conven
tion, to be held in Zion Lutheran
Church, Friends of the Y. M. C. A.
arc also invited to attend.
To Address Commerce
Chamber on the War
"Personal War Observations" is
the topic which •William G. Shep
herd, war reporter for a press asso
ciation, will discuss at. the noon
luncheon of the Chamber of Com
merce at the Board of Trade next
Thursday. Shepherd "covered" the
Hecond battle of Ypres; traveled
over the whole German front; was
with the Serbs on the retreat from
Monastir and was in Petrograd when
the Czar was deposed. This is ex
pected to be the most entertaining
talk given for a long time. All Mem
bers expecting to attend should
phone immediately to No. 4120. i
FIVE-CENT FARE
ORDINANCE LAW
Borough Attorneys Contend
Authority Rests With
Municipalities
Attorneys for several cities, twen
ty or more boroughs and a num
ber of associations and individuals
crossed swords to-day before th?
Public Service Commission on the
proposition whether the commission
has jurisdiction to decide complaints
of increases of trolley fare from five
to six cents when a five-cent rate is
stipulated in franchise ordinance.
The municipalities strongly contend
ed that the commission is without
power, a position to which counsel
tor some of the big traction sys
tems of the state took exception,
saying that the situation was one to
cope with which the commission was
created under "police pow r ers" grant
ed by the constitutional convention.
The hearing was opened by the
presentation of the views of the
counsel for Wllkinsburg and a num
ber of other boroughs in Allegheny
county, who had filed demurrers to
the consideration of fare ordinance
propositions by the commission. The
borouglis hold that the franchise
ordinances were passed under con
stitutional authority and that they
can not be set aside either by courts
or commission as they are purely lo
cal affairs, control of which is grant
ed to municipalities by the organic
law. A number of amendments to
the records were made to emphasize
the contention that the commission
is without authority. John C. Bane,
of Pittsburgh, counsel for the Pitts
burgh Railways Company, against
which the boroughs had complained,
follbwed. The State Eeague of Bor
oughs and the State Street Railway
Dives, Pomeroy
Worth - While Economies Are Offered For To-morrow
In the Mill and Factory Sale
we are willing to save the fovd-
With Only Eight More Days of
The February Furniture Sale D ress Fabrics
There's Not Much Time Left
Great Economics thc Mi - 11 and tactory Salcare ofakind tllateveryw ° manwdi
The opportunities to realize big savings in furniture arc greater in the February Sale Suiting for youths suits and rompers, in stiipc.-, and l d,d "
than they're likely to be at any other time this year. Exceptional values will be offered dur- shades; extra fine cloths in fast colors. 1 ard >.JO
ing thc eight remaining days of thc salc. * Pongee skirting in white grounds and colored stripes. Yard,
Bed R.OOTH Flirnitlire Ginghams, 32 inches wide, in fancy paids and plain shades.
Mahogany bed room suites of dust-proof construction; cannot be duplicated again at Yard 250
this price , $129.00 Galatea cloth in plain shades. Yard iJJtO
Four-piece American walnut bed room suites, with dust-proof partition throughout. Ginghams in neat stripes. Yard 200
Special $10.1.00 Challies, 36 inches wide, in Persian and floral designs. \ard,
For Living Room and Library 18^
, r . ... •./ .. . .J . -.i , • r. Victoria serge; 36 inches wide; in floral designs for house
1 hree-piece library suites in fumed oak and golden oak with leather spring seats; 54- . , , -u- . .>•✓
inch settee, chair and rocker. Special $47.00 waists and dresses. ard
Two-piece living room suite of chair and 78-inch davenport; loose cushion seat; one of the ' Dives, Pomeroy & stenart, Basement.
most luxurious suites we've put on sale :.... $95.00 *
Three-piece mahoganv living room suite with tapestrv spring seat; 54-inch settee, chair /->t , -r*\ • 1 • A 1
and rocker. Special . .. ... HS.SO (jOrSetS DeSlgned 111 ACCOFCI
rour-piece Sun parlor suite of chair, rocker, settee and table, in grey enamel, with fancy °
cretonne upholstery. 5pecia1......... $58.00 T TT'ii il n A -n
Three-piece living room suite in Queen Ann period with mahogany frame; loose spring anee w ltn ine season s
cushions, upholstered in extra quality tapestry. Special $1(59.00
Suites and Pieces For the Dining Room Style Tendencies
incheSln%aW^ g SpLi d a i ;" ng r °° m Period; The arbiters of fashion have sanely decreed in favor of the
Nine-piece Jacobean dining' room 'suite* in Wm.' and 'period'; 54-inch'buffcf 48-ind nat . ural % urc ; a / s " r ] n & f the . charms of f aceful i,lcurve at the
extension table. Special $149.00 wa l st h , ne and ft 11 f , recdonl ° f movement.
Jacobean tea wagons with rubber tire wheels. Special $10.50 Th ? charm of a modish frock or a well-tailored
Brown fibre tea wagons with two extra shelves and rubber tire wheels. Special, $11.95 suit depends so much upon leir la us ca urc canno
Nine-piece American walnut dining room suite in Oueen Ann period; a well-balanced w overlooked. .... . . ~. . , ...
well-matched suite. Special T $195. W Beautiful corst models designed in strict accordance with
' season s stvle tendencies and made with that extreme at-
Dlves. Pomeroy & Stewart. Fourth Floor. marks thc pcrfect corsct are now being
shown in a great profusion of styles.
Among the Art Goods Are A Polish For | you for thc benefits which we know it will bring to you. The
° . experience of our fitter guarantees your satisfaction.
Found Many Attractive Mill Wood Work &
** A 'j 1 •! Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Second Floor.
and Factory Sale Specials u omobl,es
25c stamped cushions; top and back. Special 15, 1.0 Zn- Men'S UnderWear
39c stamped cushions, top and back. Special £ss „ . -r-v t
m. i , . . ' . ers as well as 111 many homes X?
50c and /st stamped cushions, in round, square and oblong |\ l |-(i 1 Jftf-*(1
shapes. Special 350 whcrc a safc P ol,sh 15 de " iVCUUtCU
$2.00 white pajamas, in pink and blue trimming. Special, 980 sir^ d " ... Men's heavy Egyptian cot- .?'■-? medium weight
" SI.OO long crepe kimonos. Special 490 • Specially priced in the ton r jbbcd shirts and draw- Egyptian .cotton ribbed
50c short crepe kimonos. Special 350 Mill and Factory Salc. crs . fi eecc lined Mill and shirts and drawers. Mill and
SSSr&SfiZt.. ■ pccia !.::;:::::::::::::: \U * tf u* I,ac,ory Sak ' Prfcc ' •&
75c satin slippers, stamped. Special 250 ff , r ? lZC ' ° 7 ' sl-2o Egyptian cotton
10c Yapcrs tapestry needles. Special, paper 20 SI.OO size, 16-oz <>.<• $1.95 heavy grey cotton ribbed union suits; fleece
10c ball Macramc cord. Ball 30 $1.50 size, 32-oz 950 ribbed union suits. Mill and lined. Mill and Factory
Embroidered initials in pink nnd blue. Each 10 Dlveß . Pomeroy & Stewart, Factory Sale Price, $1.50 Sale Price sl.lO
1 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Third Floor. Basement. Dives, I'onieroy & Stewart, Street Floor.
DRAFT BOARDS TO'
USE MORE CARE
Government Wants Informa-J
tion About Color and Race j
Placed on the Cards
State draft headquarters has is-i
sued a Earning to all local draft!
boards to not only speed up tliei
completion of the industrial occu-;
pation cards, but to use the utmost
care in specifying race of the per
sons registered. The occupational!
cards are urgently needed at Wash-i
ington, say state draft officers, be
cause of the demands for men with
special training for Army service.
Pennsylvania, they point out, is a
state of diversified industries and
it is highly important to get the
information to the War Department
so that calls for them can be made
as the necessity arises.
MRS. J. S. K. HIVNKR
Word has been received here of I
the death of Mrs J. S. E. Hivner, 29,1
jat Bloomlngton, Neb. She was the
wife of the Rev. Mr. Hivner, former
ly a member of the Nagle Street
Church of God. and Is survived by
her husband and a son. Funeral
services will be held at Bloomington.
Association, the latter composed of
practically every street car system
in Pennsylvania, were also repre
sented.
The Scranton situation was taken
I up after the Allegheny cases and
| will be followed later In the day
: by complaints from Reading, Leba
non, Conshohoeken and Philadelphia,
I which is affected in its Roxborough
I and Manyunk districts, Meadville and
other places. There will be no de
cision to-day.
MIDDLETOWN )
1
Funeral Services For
Two Middletown Residents
The funeral of Addison Robinson
was held from the home of his sis
ter-in-law, Mrs. George Baumbach,
East Water street, yesterday after
noon at 2 o'clock. The Rev. H. F.
Hoover, pastor of the Church of
God, at Elizabethville, officiated
The pnllbearj'.'s were .Toha U.uyc-
Charles Mumma, John Martin, J.
Brownwell, Harry Herman, W. Mc-
Gutre, members of the Brotherhood
of Trainmen, Harrlsburg.
The funeral of Sirs. Frances Sher
riek was held at the homo of her
daughter, Mrs. Harry M. Hess. Emaus
street, on Sunday evening. The Rev..
I. H. Albright, pastor of the United
Brethren Church, officiated, assist
ed by the Rev. W. Romig, Florin.
Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Young are
spending the week at Philadelphia,
where Mr. Young is undergoing
treatment for rheumatism.
The Junior Red Cross, which was
started In town last Wednesday aft
ernoon. has a membership of 500.
The Poketa Tribe of Red Men do
nated $5 to the Red Cross fund and
Mrs. Charles Stroker, of the Jednota,
also donated $5.
Holy baptism services will be held
in St. Michael's and All-Angels'
Episcopal Church, Emails street, this
evening at 8 o'clock. The Rev. Wil
liam Dorwart, Harrlsburg, will have
charge of the services.
Charles Hickernell, who had been
working at Magnola, Mil., for the
past several weeks, has returned
home.
H. 3. Roth is confined to his home
in Spring street with the grip.
D. H. Palmer, of Columbia, is vis
iting his sister, Mrs. Raymond Con
dran, Commercial avenue.
Harry Mayer !s spending two
weeks at Sparrows Point, Md.
The Mitfdletown Praying Band will
meet at the home of Kobert Spring
er, Spring street, this evening.
A service flag containing thirty
one stare has been displayed at the
Keseue Hose Company building in
honor of their members who are in
the service.
H. S. Roth is ill at his home.
Miss Catherine Raymond is ill at
her home with measles.
Mr. and Mrs. R. Coble, of Eykens,
are the guests of the latter's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Brinser.
John Krodle, an employe of the
car works, sustained a badly man
gled foot while at work.
Isaac Coble, Addison and
A. E. Erb attended the mid-winter
meeting of the Dauphin County
School Directors held at Millersburg.
The Oaklane Terrace and
Improvement Company has opened
an office at Musgrave's barber shop.
George Aughinbaugh, a member
of Company F, Engineers Corps,
now in France, ltas been promoted
to corporal.
Mr. ad Mrs. Miles Brandt spent
Sunday at Dillsburg.
Mrs. Alexander Kohr, of First
Eock, spent Sunday at Philadelphia,
the guest of her son, John E. Kohr,
who is a member of the Coast De
fense Corps of the U. S. federal serv
ice.
George I. King, Jr., a student at
Mercersburg Academy, lias returned
to his studies after spending a few
days at his home.
Grant Gerbericli, of Mercersburg
Academy, is the guest of liia par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Gerbericli.
David Zorger and son, George, are
visiting the former's son, Charlfes
Zorger, of Altoona.
Iva Hardy, 38 West Water street,
Middletown, is in the Ilarrisburg
Hospital with a fractured right leg
which she sustained yesterday while
running for a street oar in Middle
town. She slipped and fell.
Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator—Ad
VETERAN PUBLISHER DEAD
Scranton, Pa., Feb. 13.—Marsnall
Preston, 71, dean of tlie printing
craft in Scranton, prominent Civil
War veteran and publisher of the
Si nday Free Press, the second Sun
day newspaper published In the
United States, died at his home hero
last night.
Good Advice For
Nervous People
WIIAT WORN', rKA/7,1,K1). UN'.
STKUNG. "JUMPY" NERVES
RKAIXY NEED
When you nre run down, out of
sorts, tiro easily, have lost eonlidence
in your ability to do things, and am
bition seems to have deserted yon,
it's a sure sign your nerve force has
run down and that your nerves noo.il
a stimulant to restore to your system
its old-time strength and energ\ k
and bring back the good old pep that
used to make you famous.
Kennedy's Cut Rate Medicine Store
and many other of the leading drug
stores in Ilarrisburg and vicinity, are
selling a wonderful nerve remedy
called Margo Nerve Tablets on a
positive guarantee of satisfaction or
monev back. It's amazing how
quickly these Margo tablets tone up
the eijtire system, calm and steady
the nerves, and put vim, vigor anil
vitality into men and women who are
fagged out. nervous, despondent and
ambitionless.
Thousands testify to their remark
able value in cases of severe mental
depression, nervous prostration, nerv
ous dyspepsia, trembling, "jumps."
"lidgets," and the generally unstrung
nerves that eotne from excessive
work, worry, lack of sleep or over
indulgence in drinking, eating, 01
smoking. They never fall to benefit.
If you are blue and feel as though
you didn't give a hang, or are cross
irritable, and your nerves are right on
edge, get a package of Margo Nervi
Tablets right away. They come 4i
tablets to a box. Bat one with every
meal for a few days, and see whal
a wonderful improvement they makt
I. in your whole nervous system.