Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, February 04, 1919, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    4
RECORD MADE ON BA TTLEFIELD
BY PENNSYLVANIA DIVISIONS
WAS BEST IN AMERICAN ARM Y
79th Suffered Great
Losses in Final
Days of War
As more detailed Information Is
gathered about the bravery and fear
lessness of the American troops in
action, honors are ever increasing for
the heroes from Pennsylvania and
the part they played in crushing the
Hun in France. A review of the
casualties reveals that the Seventy
ninth Division, composed of selective
service men from Eastern Pennsyl
vania and Maryland, many of them
from Dauphin county and other
nearby districts, lost more men be
tween September 26 and the end of
the war than any other division of
the American Army.
The Twenty-eighth, the Keystone
Division, of course had more casual
ties than the Seventy-ninth, but it
was engaged for a much greater
period of time. Only the first reg
ular division suffered more than the
old National Guard.
Ten other American divisions have
it larger total of major casualties
than the Seventy-ninth, but these ten
were lighting In France long before
the boys from Camp Meade went into
Backache Is Discouraging
But Not So Bad If Yon Know How
to Reach the Cause
Nothing more discouraging than a
constant backache. Lame when you
awaken, pains pierce you when you
bend or lift. It's hard to work or
to rest. Backache often indicates
bad kidneys. Harrisburg people
recommend Doan's Kidney Pilla
Head this case:
Mrs. Myrtle Rodgers, 1412 North
Green St., says: "I have been
troubled off and on for several years
with kidney complaint. At times it
comes on without warning and I
suffer something terrible with my
back. There is a dull constant ache
through the small of my back, and
it gets so weak and lame I can
hardly straighten up when I bend i
over. By kidneys act irregularly |
too, causing me a great deal of
annoyance. Mornings tberg are puffy
sacs under my eyes and dropsical
swelling in my feet. At these times
I get Doan's Kidney Pills at Ken
nedy's Drug Store and they never
fail to relieve me."
Price 60c, at all dealers. Dont
simply ask for a kidney remedy
get Doan's Kidney Pills the same
that Mrs. Rodgers had. Foster-Mil
burn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. T.
ICaeST"-
*• -• liJ *=*■-- J
Quality M
Put tiie m
mm HI
O. K. The original Bricker's O. K.
Bread met the demand for a quality
1| iU bread and pleased thousands of
- people from the start.
Bricker's ma ke our bread in a
modern bakery, with every facility
Jl f° r clean bread as well as for good
VJm bread. ' M
Bread For the past twelve years or . (||
■ more we have been making bread that
has stood the test of time—when it jfll
j|U comes to quality.
There was no thought in our
mind to deviate from the quality
standard that we set when we started
out to make bread in this community.
That ideal of THE BEST
BREAD has been our guide through
all the years we have been in business.
Now that we are back to all
wheat flour the original
I Bricker's 0. K. Bread
'I j _____ ! _
I n
is made the same as it was
made for years.
You can't mistake the quality
for there is only one bread like
Bricker's and that is Bricker's
bread.
Eat Bricker's Bread—you can depend on the quality
I Bricker's West Shore Bakery ||
Lemoyiie, Pa.
TUESDAY EVENING.
28th Division Loses 3890 Men;
79th's Total Casualties 2389
THE detailed casualties In units of the Twenty-eighth and Seventy
ninth Divisions, announced by General March, follow: •
Twuity-dgbth Division—National Guard Troops
*
Killed Died Missing
in of In Pris
actlon. wounda action, oner*. Total.
lOftia Infantry Ri|lMem. ....... 349 136 376 261 1112
15>* Ihfantxy Regiment ........ 436 134 373 199 1142
llith Infantry Regiment ....... 863 114 214 v 24 714
112 th Infantry Regiment 27ff 93 153 143 661
107 th Machine-Gun Battalion ..4 3 1 0 8
108 th M&chtne-Gun Battalion ... 23 21 7 1 61
109 th Machine-Gun Battalion ... 0 0 0 0 0
107 th Field Artillery Regiment .. 21 11 3 0 35
108 th Field Artillery Regiment .. l9 9 3 1 32
109 th Field Artillery Regiment .. 17 15 8 0 40
103 d Trench Mortar Battery .... 5 0 1 t 6
103 d Engineers Regiment ....... 37 17 35 0 89
Totals ..... 1644 653 1174 619 3890
ScTaitb-ninth Division—National Army •
313 th Infantry Regiment 187 76 223 5 471
314 th Infantry Regiment 195 53 206 1 455
315 th Infantry Regiment ...... 217 79 277 6 579
316 th Infantry Regiment 262 115 420 3 800
310 th Machine-Gun Battalion ...5 1 0 0 6
311 th Machine-Gun Battalion - IX 7 4 0 22
312 th Machine-Gun Battalion ..15 9 4 0 28
310 th Field Artillery Regiment ..1 1 0 0 ~2
311 th Field Artillery Regiment ..1 0 1 0
312 th Field Artillery Regiment ..0 1 0 0 1
304 th Trench Mortar Battery ... 0 0 0 0 0
304 th Engineers Regiment ...... 6 10 7 0 23
Totals 880 852 1142 15 2389
! action. The Seventy-ninth, records
show, went into action September
26, in the morning, but It lost 2.359
i men.
In connection with the losses of
the Seventy-ninth division, the work
of the Three Huhdred and Sixteenth
Infantry Regiment, composed al
most entirely of men from Dauphin
county and nearby districts, who an
swered the first selective call, stands
out prominently. The unit had ma
jor casualties totaling 800, the high
est for any National Army Regiment.
The losses were only 342 less than
those of the One Hundred and Tenth
Regiment of the Twenty-eighth Di
vision, the unit which has the rec
ord for losing more men than any
other regiment in the army.
The other ten divisions which ex
ceeded the 79th in losses and the
dat,es they first went into action
show how terrible the losses of the
79th must have been in the drive on
Alontmaucon and northeast of' Ver
dun to reach a total so high. Those
divisions are:
First, 6,248, in action May 28.
Third, 3.617, in action June 1.
Second, 2.965, in action June 16.
Twenty-eighth, 3,890, in action
July 15.
Forty-second, 2,950, in action
July 15.
Fourth, 2.986. in action July 18.
Twenty-sixth, 2,86 4, in action
July 18.
: Thirty-second, 3,213, in action
) July 29.
Seventy-seventh, 2,629, in action
j August 1.
! Fifth, 2,504, in action Septem
j ber 13.
1 The first nine of the above dlvi
< sions participated in 'the fighting
| which swept the Huns from the 1
I Soissons-Rheims salient, and some of
| them later joined with the sth di
i vision, which made its debut at St.
i MJhieL
The First division may be said to
| have been fighting constantly for
j more than five months. In that time
| it slosses were 5,248, while the 79th
fighting just exactly a month and
HAWUSBTTIUjSiSSkTELEGiaPH
one-halt, lost almost half aa many
men.
The 77th Division—the only Na
tional Army Division to have greater
losses than the 79th—only exceeded
the latter by about 300 losses, al
though it fought desperately at the
J n August, long before the
great September offensive.
Likewise, the 6th Division, which
lost but 115 more men than the 79th
partcpated in the reduction of the
at. Mihiel salient before going to the
Argonne.
Even a further Indication of the
terrific losses in the 79th as compar-
A? °ther divisions which swept
northward on a twenty-mile front
p T t T ber 26 > '■ the Io w the
Vi o a^ try - That unlt - attached
"OM. J i Infa try Brigade of the
Jkl v major casualties totaling
th' wit T ere th greatest of alt
m Army Infantry regl-
r * I T on Kht Four Months
S.' the 316th's losses were
InfaiSJl ? losses of the 110 th
Jhlf .11 f the 28th Division, and
of in.. unit has the distinction
or losing more men than any other
regiment in the Army. The lloth
however, fought from July is to
me end of the war—practically four
the 816 th fought a
month and one-half.
Th e 79ih *rnt in on September
-6 and was relieved October 1. It
returned to the offensive November
1 northeast of Verdun but did not
begin actual fighting until Novem-
l r , '• £ rom then on " was engag
ed in a bitter struggle. Summarized,
the results are these:
Twenty-eighth Division, days of
"khting, fifty; total major losses, 8,-
Seventy-ninth Division, days of
fifteen; total major losses,
2,889.
The comparison Is not to detract
from the magnificent work of the
-Sth or any other division, but
merely to demonstrate what two
brief offensives cost the selective
service men from eastern Pennsyl
vania and Maryland.
The 316 th Infantry,
General March as .having lost 800
men. was badly cut up north of
Montfaucon between September 2 8
and October 1, and lost heavily again
on November 7 when it took the
Bols de Corneuillers northeast of
Verdun.
Sad Distinction
The 79th holds another sad dis
tinction. a distinction shared by the
28th. These two Pennsylvania divi
sions and the fighting First were the
only divisions to have more than
1.000 men missing. While the First
Division led in this respect, the 28th
and _79th followed close behind with
1,175 and 1,142, respectively.
The 28th Division holds numerous
records. It lost more men prisoners
than any other division, with a total
of 691. Two of its infantry regiments
(the 109 th and 110 th. had the greatest
! casualties in the entire army. Its to
j tal major losses exceeded those of
any National Guard Army division
| and were only exceeded by the First
[ Division's losses. It stood fourth in
the total number of men killed with
1544, being led by the 3d, 42d (Rain
bow) and 32 (Michigan and Wiscon
sin National Guards) in that respect
The catastrophe at the Marae on
July 15 accounts for the iianner in
which the division exceeft in total
losses, tn men mlrfslng and In pris
oners. Four companies, two from the
109 th and two from the 116 th. were
literally cut to pieces by the Ger
mans on July 15. There were Just
about enough survivors from all four
companies to form a single unit of
250 men when the action ended. This
disaster also aooounts for the pre
ponderant losses of the two regi
ments, the 110 th, with 1142, and the
109 th with 1112.
The bulk of the losses In the 210 th
were sustained in four engagements
, —July 15 when two companies were
almost wiped out; July 80, when the
regiment took the Grimpette woods
along the Aurcq; In August. North
of the Veale, and In late September,
In the attack on Apremont.
The losses of the 109 th were gar
nered on July 15 south of the Marne:
■ln August north of the Vesle, and
late In September, In the attack on
Apremont
The losses of the 109 th were gar
nered on July 15 south of the Marne;
In August north of Flsmette: In early
September, south of the Alsne, and
in late September, on the Argonne
front at Apremont
The 109 th Infantry Is composed of
the old First Regiment, N. G. P., of
Philadelphia, and the Thirteenth
from the vicinity of Scranton.
The 110 th Is made up of the old
Third Regiment of Philadelphia, and
the Tenth, of Western Pennsylvania
Think Europe Should
Look After Turkey
in Manadory Plan
By Ataeciaiti Pren
Paris, Feb. 4.— No answer has
been returned by the American
delegates to the Peace Conference
to what Is said to be an almost
unanimous desire of the other pow
ers that the United States under
take to act as mandatory for Ar
menia and the other severed prov
inces of Turkey. Such of the Amer
ican delegates as will discuss the
situation say they are disposed to
resist this development of the plan
for mandatoles, holding that It Is
the business of Europe to look af
ter the Europeans and the people
of the near east.
The argument used by the othel
powers In support of their desire
that the United States assume Dime
of the obligations to care for the
welfare of backward peoples af
fected by the peace settlement and
assist In their advancement to a
higher state of civilization is based
upon the unlimited confidence of
other governments and because It is
known that the United States has
no territorial aspirations.
Oil Leasing Bill
Finally Agreed Upon
Washington, Feb. 4.—After months
of deliberation. House and Senate
conferees yesterday reached a final
agreement of the oil leasing- bill un
der whiclj mora than 60,000,000 acres
of government owned oil, gas, coal,
phosphate and sodium lands In west
errf platen and Alaska would be open
ed for development under a leasing
system subject to a royalty which In
less than one-eighth of the gross val
the case of oil and gas will be not
ue of production.
his legislation—generally regarded
as the most Important affecting the
west that has been before Congress
within a decade—has been pending
for four years and has been the sub
ject of repeated discussions in both
houses. Leaders in the Senate and
House hope to complete its enactment
- before the end of this session, March
| 4.
I Use If cN ell's Pain Exterminator-Ad
Shaffer's Last
Flight
(Continued From Yesterday.)
The camp we were put in was
rather a large affair. At least, there
a large number of
which meant a roof over our heads,
and we had a stove too.
That helped a lot, both for
warmth and cooking—if one had
anything to cook. I didn't and what
was worse, my bread was all and al
though we had been led to expect
something to eat when we arrived at
this camp, nothing materialized. For
a day and a half no bread was given
us, and all we had to exist on was
soup once a day, and a cup of acorn
coffee night and morning. One did
not grow fat on this diet, you can
bet, but kicking about it did not
seem to help any, so all we could
do was wait and suffer. Escape
seemed to be out of the question,
for not only was it well guarded by
bobwire entanglements and fences
and guards, but the camp was
placed bang up against a fort Very
kind and thoughtful of the Boche
indeed, for naturally, the allied
planes came over to bomb and they
came every clear night, too. From
both observation and heresay, I
know it is rather hard to direct a
heavy bomb from a fast traveling
airplane to the exact spot one wishes
to hit, so you see the position we
were placed in. When it came to
Gotha raids Paris had nothing on
us, the only difference being that
they had cave cellars and we did
not All we could do was stick in
the barracks and hope no bombs
came our way. Fortunately, during
my short stay, none did.
This camp had more conveniences
than the other camps I had been
in. One could even get a warm bath
if he didn't mind doing it in an open
shed, for a big kettle of hot water
was heated every morning and into
this the prisoners dumped their
shirts and trousers—cooties and all
—and after cooking them awhile,
scrubbed them clean. I ligured I
needed a bath as bad as my shirt, so
took that first. After that I washed
my shirt, hung it on the fence to
dry, and then sat down to watch it. j
One had to, else it would be stolen. I
Fortunately, the sun was shining!
brightly that day, so sitting outside
minus one's shirt was not so bad.
It was soon dry and I soon had all
my wardrobe on again. What a
pleasure putting on a shirt, clean,
soft, warm and minus "cooties" —
for the hot water had killed them
all—only a man having been trou
bled with these hungry insects can
know. Being free from dirt and
"cooties," for a time at least, I be
gan feeling the old ache of hunger
again, and having a little monej.
invested in some vegetables which
were being sold by prisoners who
went out of camp to work every day.
They got them in different ways.
Sometimes a kind French womaiij
would give a sack of vegetables
other times they stole them. But
min(k not to question why or where.
It was enough that I could buy
something to eat. True, turnips,
cabbage and carrots are not very
filling, hut Its better than nothing
at all, and dividing the mixture
with a. Frenchman for his services
as cook. I ate it A man
beside me even bought a ,
That it was horse did not dlmln
lsh his Joy in the ? or .
ceived so little meat that a, .teak
from any sort of an animal was
welcome. In fact, the same brought
a big price. Where the Prisoner got
all the money was always a mystery
to me. but then a French man is a
thrifty soul and spends few sou
foolishly at any time.
oner makes him doubly careful so
you can bet he always got his
money's worth.
Tough LOCK.
In keeping himself In smokes,
however, he always lost out. for
there was only one source from
which he could get them and that
was the Boche. As always, tney
STk advantage of his unhappy con
dition and charged extortionate
prices. One cigaret cost ten cents
and a cigar 35 cents, according to
men who smoked them they were
rather good, too, probably being of
Turkish tobacco, but at those prices,
the "Poilu" with his hunger for to
bacco and several francs in his
pocket did not last long Hunger
for food was bad enough, hut add
to it the hunger for tobacco also
and you can believe a man suffer
ed. After I had watched some of
these prisoners suffering from this
double hunger I thanked my stars
I did not smoke. I had only one
hunger to deal with, and many were
my comrades who called me lucky
for not having the smoking habit.
I have seen men so hungry for a
smoke they would see the coat oft
their back to get money to get it.
Many even sold their shoes, while
others wishing to remain warm as
well as smoke were driven to the
extremity of smoking leaves. As
cabbage leaves seemed to be fairly
easy to obtain they were used by
many, as they dried quickly over a
hot fire and when cut up fine made
a good substitute. At least, they
looked like tobacco, and when put
in a pipe, even tasted like it—until
the first draw.
On the second day in this camp
rations were given us. A small
piece of black bread and a couple
handfuls of small crackers. Golly!
How good that black soggy bread
tasted by that time! And that
same evening a small piece of
sausage—about an inch long—was
given each of us with the "coffee."
Life seemed a little pleasanter atter
that, and we looked forward to our
continued Journey into Germany for
this was mqrely a camp of passage,
so to speak. We had been told that
none ever stayed longer than eight
days, but we had been told so many
i things like It before nobody was
foißed. When we entered the camp
A Real Remedy
For Falling Hair
Keeps Scalp Clean and Healthy
—Prevents Dandruff
When your hair becomes faded, dry,
streaked and scraggy, when it falls
out badly and new hair cannot grow,
the roots should be immediately vi
talized and properly nourished. To
do this quickly, safely and at little
expense, there is nothing so effective
as Parisian Sage (liquid form) which
you can get at Kennedy's and all good
drug and toilet counters.
Its guaranteed to abolish dan
druff —stop scalp itch and falling hair
and promote a new growth or money
refunded. It's in great demand by
discriminating women because ft
makes the hair so soft, lustrous, easy
to arrange attractively and appear
much heavier than it really Is.
A massage with Parisian sage is a
real delight—easy to use, not sticky
or greasy, and delicately perfumed—
an antiseptic liquid free from dan
gerous ingredients and- guaranteed
not to color the hair or scalp. If you
want good-looking hair and plenty of
it by all means use Parisian sage—a
little attention now maurea beautiful
hair for yean to coma, _ 7
and spoke to other prisoners wo had
our doubts verified, for some of
them had been there over a month.
However, on my third day there, I
was called out from the rest, and
given in charge of a guard, and
started on my way to the station.
At least, so I thought, for the guard
had been given enough papers to
take me to Berlin and back, but it
turned out I was only bound for
another camp on the other side of
the town. This was a camp of dis
cipline. where prisoners who had
escaped and been caught, were
placed for punishment. They were
forbidden to write any letters or re
ceive uny packages sent by friends.
This was no punishment for me as
I had never been in a camp long
enough to get an answer, to a let
ter or receive a package. They had
other carefully thought up ways of
punishing a man though, as usual,
one being to take it out on his stom
ach. About all wo got to eat was
soup called "Julian."
Why the name, I don't know.
Sounds something like "Juliet,"
who if I remember tho story aright
was mostly fcomposed of love, and
they say love is nothing. That was
about what the soup came to, for
it was made chiefly from sugar
beets. The taste was awful and its
food value was "nil." Not even a
hog would eat it. I am sure, and
here they were feeding It to men.
What was worse after eating the
mess several days in succession one
got the dysentery. Many died from
this disorder. The only reason I
escaped was because no matter how
hungry I got I could not eat this
particular soup. What did I eat 7
Well. I had my small ration of
bread, and then we were given a
sack of turnips every day. Golly!
I ate so many turnips during my
few days' stay there that I'm
ashamed to look one in the face any
more.
When it came to puishment in
my case they made a good start, for
I arrived late in the afternoon,
hungry as always .and expecting my
rations of bread that night, had
finished all I had.
That night nothing was given me.
Then it was that the comradely
spirit of the Frenchman was shown
me in its briglitess light, for seeing
I had none, they one and all, gave
a little from their scanty rations
and gave the whole to me. Know
ing how precious food was, I was
surprised and touched beyond meas
ure by such unexpected kindness.
They were a great bunch, those
fellows. Every one was there as
punishment for escapng. Some had
tried as many as five times and been
caught, and what's more, were quite
willing to make another break the
moment the opportunity arrived.
The opportunity did not come often
in this camp though, for they had
our number, and besides guarding
us very well, they had rollcalls very
mam
13 Dollars —13 Cents I
When Swift & Company paid, say,—l 3
dollars per hundredweight for live beef cat
tle last year, their profit was only 13 cents!
In other words, if we had paid $13.13, we
would have made no profit
Or, if we had received a quarter of a cent
per pound less for dressed beef we would
have made no profit
It is doubtful whether any other business is run on
so close a margin of profit.
I This is bringing the producer and the consumer
J pretty close together—which should be the object of any
industry turning raw material into a useful form.
I" This remarkable showing is due to enormous volume,
perfected facilities (packing plants strategically located, I
branch houses, refrigerator cars, etc.), and an army of
men and women chosen and trained to do their special
j ' work.
This, and many other points of interest, are found in
the Swift & Company Year Book for 1919, just published
which is brought out for the public as well as for the '
25,000 Swift & Company shareholders.
ffl'l The Year Book also represents the packer's side of
the Federal Trade Commission investigation, upon which
I Congress is asked to base action against the industry. 1
I Many who have never heard the packer's side are
sending for the Year Book.
Would you like one? Merely mail your name and
address to the Chicago office and the book will come to you.
Address . K
Swift & Company . ' • I
I Union Stock Yards, Chicago
Harrisborg Local Branch, Seventh ft North Streets
F. W. Covert, Manager
FEBRUARY 4, 1919.
often and at the most unexpected
times. .
Found some hot water In this
camp, and promptly took another
bath. Also found about a dozen
Itusslan prisoners. This surprised
me considerably, and I asked one of
their number, who seemed to be
well educated and spoke both
French and German, what was the
big idea! Russia had made peace,
so why were they ript free. The
only answer I got to that was an
expressive shrug of the shoulder,
which might have meant anything.
There he was, and what could he
do about it. And he had been a
prisoner for four years too. In
that time I guess one would get
sort of resigned. He was anyway.
Allied Bombs.
This camp was backed right up
against the railroad and very close
to the station. You will understand
the significance of that when I tell
you that the Allies airplanes bomb
ed that station quite regularly both
night and day. I distinctly remem
ber one day they came over thirty
strong. Goll, they were dropping
all around that camp, some as near !
as fifty metres. Some had copie even
closer than that several days before
I arrived, one bomb bitting a bar
rack squarely, killed several French
men and praises be! several Boche
guards.
That rather knocked the morale
of the remaining guards, for the
next iiight when the Allies came
over the Boche sentinels hunted up
an "abri" (case) "tout de suite."
Several inquisitive Frenchmen dis
covered this on peeping out of the
barracks and promptly took advant
age of it by climbing the two fences.
Some of them were too weak from
lack of proper nourishment to es
cape, so contented themselves with
robbing a nearby truck patch of its
best vegetables and returning. A few
however, endeavored to reach the
frontier 200 miles away, a long
walk indeed even for a man In the
best of health.
After I heard this story X prompt
ly made -arrangements with a
Frenchman to beat it the next time
such an opportunity presented it
self, even though 1 only had my
wooden shoes to walk In. I cer
tainly was not going to stay there, j
Bi-nesia Gives You
Instant Relief
From Indigestion
When you have eaten too much or
too fast, when you feel so full and
bloated that it's bard to breathe and
your heart pounds because of the
pressure against it. Just taae two or
three little 81-nesla tablets with a sip
of hot water. You will begin to get
easier at once and the trouble will
entirely disappear in a few minutes.
There is nothing else that gives the
same quick and positive relief from
indigestion, gas, acidity and dyspep
sia. That's why every package con
tains a binding guarantee contract of
satisfaction or money back. Get a
package of 81-ncsln today from Geo.
A. Gorgas or any other druggist. Then
eat a hearty meal of the things that
usually disagree and take three Bi
nmla tablets, and you will sav to your
friends: "You can eat what'you like
if you take 81-nenln."
Maybe one can lire on lore alone,
I don't know, never having tried
the thrilling experience, but one
cannot live on "Julian" aoup. X
know because I have eaten soma
But although the Alliea came often
mnd laid their explosive eggs, my
chance did not come, for Immedi
ately we stuck our heads out the
door we were greeted gruffly by g
Boohe guard and told to get back
In. It looked as if the Boohe had
recovered from their scare, or else
the Allies came eo often they was*
growing used to the racket Aoyv
way, they were always waiting far
me when the bombs began to fatt
and I came out to climb the fence.
(To Be Continued)
"DID ALL FOR HE,"
J MAKSIM
| Francis M. Quinn. 8028 Xohigh
[ avenue, Philadelphia, Is a salesman
and quick to recognize the merits
of any claim. "I suffered from
nervousness, gastritis, stomach,
trouble and a badly run-down sys
tem. I suffered more or less path
and distress from & gas and acid
stomach. I was getting very dis
couraged when I heard of lYinlac.
After I started Tanlac I began to
get better quickly. I eat well, sleep
long and soundly. Tanlac did all for
me it claims to do."
The genuine J. I. Gore Co. Tan
lac Is, now sold here at the Gorges
Drug Store.
CONSTIPATION
Is best treated by a vegetable remedy
that gently drives out the poisonous
waste that lodges In the lower bowel.
Celery-
King
Is sura and acts without discomfort.
Dae It for sick headache, colds and
feverish condition. Same old remedy
in the same old box.