The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, March 30, 1916, Image 7

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

    Id
1€
ly
ith
ipeful
cedo is
nder-
pleas-
rm of
"0 en-
ent,
and
ing.”’
~
en—
TS, are
1 out-
5. It’s
ul, re--
their
need.
forts a
1, cool,
0
d Cigareite
1 three
hogs-
yw and
> thing
te and
uxedo
that it
nsitive
e fam-
uxedo
Tux-
ywhere
from
ALE
and good
of sale
TED
RE
s Board
os, ete.,
ayment
INFOR-
NT
—
A TALE OF
RED ROSES
3
By
GEORGE
RANDOLPH
CHESTER
Copyright, 1914, by the Bobbs-
Merrill Co.
SYNOPSIS
Sledge, & typical poiitician, becomes in-
tatuated with Molly Marley, daughter of
{a street car company president. He sends
her red roses.
On Molly's invitation Sledge attends a
A ty. Before the crowd disperses Molly
ks Sledge for his kindness. and then
he proposes marriage. Her refusal Is
treated as only temporary by Sledge.
Molly attends the governors ball, and
her attractiveness results in her climbing
the dizzy heights of popularity. The no-
table respect accorded Sledge, however,
perplexes her.
Sledge moves for the car company’s re-
organization. He asks Marley for Molly's
hand, but is refused. Having financially
ruined Bert Glider, Sledge threatens te do
the same to Marley.
Marley's loans are ordered called by
Sledge. Feeder, who receives a salary. for
keeping quiet about the public fund scan-
dal, confesses during Sledge’s questioning
and is roughly handled.
Molly becomes angry at her father’s ob-
vious fear of Sledge. He tells her to mar-
ry him, but she refuses and suggests a
«ght on Sledge, which encourages Marley
Bledge visits Bozzam, and a heated ar-
gument arises. The chief finds Bozzam
i» working against him. The reorganized
rallway company stockholders meet. Mar-
«oy presides, and Sledge is present.
The two votes of Marley and Bert Glia-
er are sufficient to carry the amendment
te the resolution for the purchase of the
franchise for $50,000 cash.
Sledge receives an announcement of tng
engagement of Molly and Glider. Bozzam
tells Marley Sledge decided not to sell the
franchise at any price, and that he is
financially dead.
Sledge goes to the state capital and gets
everything fixed up for the passage of a
bill granting a new car company a fifty
year franchise free of charge.
Marley visits the state senator at home
and meets Sledge. He finds out the par-
ticulars of the bill and then wires a syn-
dicate for best offer for controlling inter-
est.
“#1 mean to protect the honest work-
- ingman, to save our houses and fire-
sides and add honor and glory to the
American flag,” responded Allerton sol-
emnly.
Marley accepted that merry quip
with the courteous chuckle which it de-
served.
“Outside of that and drying the tears
of the widows and orphans, what do
you propose to accomplish by it?” he
persisted in like vein. “If I didn’t
know you were above spitework I
should think that you had it in for the
street car interests.”
Again the senator looked at him with
a puzzled air, then he turned to Sledge.
“Doesn’t he know ‘anything?’ he
queried. !
“Naw!” rumbled Sledge.
“I gee,” answered Allerton coolly. “1
supposed you all knew that before the
bill was passed it would be amended
to conserve the important financial in-
terests.”
Marley pondered that statement
awhile, and then he laughed.
* “Qf course,” he said. “It's only polit-
ical claptrap, intended to make the
voter think you are eternally on the
job in his interests.”
“I wouldn’t put it in exactly that
way,” soberly reproved Allerton, justly
offended by this coarse method of im-
pugning his motives.
“I apologize,” said Marley. “1 should
have said ‘the bill displays that you
constantly have the interests of your
constituents at heart.” We were rather
exercised about it, but we should not
have been, for in your long service for
the public 1 do not think you have ever
promoted or fostered any legislation
which would be destructive of capital.”
“Certainly not,” agreed Allerton, who
never let down his pose in the presence
of a man who had not proved his right
to sit within the sacred circle. “With-
out the proper and legitimate fostering
of enterprises requiring extensive finan-
cial support there can be no national
prosperity.”
“That's sound enough doctrine,”
commended Marley. “What are the
amendments which are to soften the
blow?” ,
With kindly patience the senator ex-
plained to him the amendments, one
by one, being careless enough, how-
ever, not to mention the fifty year
franchise clause.
At the end of an hour Marley, much
relieved in his mind, took his depar-
ture, regretting that Sledge was not
ready to accompany him.
«Ips strange how easily a man in
eontrol of important investments ®kes
fright,” he acknowledged, as he arose
te go. “We can be put on the run
with a _penny’s worth of firecrackers.
Not long ago our friend Sledge, here,
had me stampeded, but I checkmated
the old villain. As a matter of fact,
| the only result of his campaign against
me was to put me in control of my
own company, and now, I fancy, 1
have the thing so well tied up that 1
ean’t be hurt. I beat you at your own
i game, eh, Sledge?” and he chuckled
8 down at his defeated oppressor with |
triumph.
Sledge looked up at him and smiled.
f Ta thick tos parted, displaying his
teeth. The under side of his upper lip
showed a sharp roll of vivid scarlet,
and his cold gray eyes combined to
give that facial distortion an expres-
sion of malignity startling even to Al-
lerton, who knew the man even bette:
than Tom Bendix
Marley was conscious of that strange
sensation which those who had run
foul of Sledge had described as an
actual physical chil’, like the sudden
opening of a window to the cold rain.
and the smile upon bis own face froze.
He was conscious %aat his lips were
still in the contour “#hich his bragging
chuckle had given them. and he felt
the embarrassed # #kwardness in re-
storing his features to their normal ex-
pression. which a man does who has
committed some atrocious social blun-
der.
The horror and the menace and the
malignity of that smile increased upon
fim as he drove into the city. In front
of the telegraph office he abruptly
stopped, and hurrying in sent this mes-
sage to his up state syndicate:
Wire best offer controlling interest.
Bert Glider, a necessary adjunct to
the Sunday dinner, came just in time
to sit down at the table with the fam-
ily, and he was so preoccupied that
Molly was half vexed with him,
“Now, who has won part of your
marbles?’ she chided him, attempting
to conceal her annoyance with him un-
der the guise of gay raillery.
“Bert already looks like a married
man,” laughed Fern. “I’d be fright:
ened half to death, Molly. Think what
he'll look like at a breakfast on the
first of each month.” . .
“He'll never see the meat bill,” de-
clared Molly. “I intend to begin with
alimony.”
“I hope I can pay it,” responded Bert,
catching the all too jovial spirit of the
assemblage and pretending to gayety
himself. “I think my first step toward
making a living, however, will be to
move out of this state where I can buy
and sell a piece of property without
asking permission of some alderman or
ward thug.”
“T think we'll all go.” suggested Mar-
ley, who had been looking studiously |
into his soup. ‘What has happened to
worry you, Bert?’
“Since Sledge smiled?" queried that
neatly mustached young man in order
to head him off from that reproach. “I
think I have good cause this time. I
took a drive out Lincoln road this
morning, and they're going ahead with
their amusement park project.”
“Impossible.” asserted Marley,
straightening in outraged dignity,
“while the Ring City Street Railway
company has a Lincoln road franchise,
which would prevent our competitors
from obtaining one. It has not an-
nounced any intention of building in
that direction and will not do so.”
Bert laughed quite without mirth.
“You remind me of that good old
standard story of the man who was
arrested for some trifling offense. He
sent for his friend and explained the
circumstances. ‘Why. it's confounded
nonsense!" exclaimed the friend, hold-
ing the bars and looking through the
grating of the cell door. ‘No policeman
on earth-can thvow you into jail for
that.” ”* #
“Why, he was in jail at that very
minute,” protested Fern.
“I think thatls supposed to be the
point of the story,” guessed Molly. “Of
what is it apropos, Bert?"
“Of the impossibility of building an
amusement park on Lincoln road,” he
answered. “They're digging a lake out
there. They've erected the scaffolding
of a roller coaster. They've built a big
workshed, which is later to be turned
into a Tannenbaum hall, which just
now is stacked with gaudy parts of a
three story merry-go-round. It may be
utterly impossible for them to build an
amusement park out there, but they're
doing it.”
Molly glanced quickly at her father.
He motioned that his untouched soup
might be taken away and toyed in ner-
vous embarrassment with an. almond.
“I’ve already done it,” he half shame-
facedly explained.
“Sold your stock?’ she eagerly in-
quired.
“Not quite,” he hesitated. “I did,
however, stop at the telegraph office on
my way back from Allerton’s this
morning, and I wired the people who
have been after my stock to name their
best offer.”
“Good!” she responded.
take it, whatever it is?”
“1 can’t bind myself to that,” he re-
plied. “I must confess, however, that,
whatever the offer is, I shall be
tempted.”
“Allerton must have given you very
little satisfaction about that bill,” sur-
mised Bert.
“Quite the contrary,” stated Marley.
“The bill is absolutely harmless. It is
only a bit of political flapdoodle, in-
tended to convince the voters of the
state that Allerton is constantly on the
job.”
“Something must have happened to
make you change your mind so quick-
ly,” pondered Molly. “Whatever it was
I'm glad of it. You must have met
- Sledge,” and she giggled.
“Sledge must have smiled at him”
" laughed Bert, keeping up the joke.
“J have excellent reasons,” Marley
concluded, with becoming business
gravity. “The future of street railway
investment in this city is too uncer-
tain.”
“Father,” said Molly suddenly in the
midst of the silence which followed,
“if Mr. Sledge finds you have sent that
telegram he ‘will do whatever he is go-
ing to do before you can turn around.”
“He'll have to move guickly,” an-
swered her father with a. superior
smile, his self approbation returning on
the slightest provocation. “I sent my
people that telegram today so they
would have it the first thing Monday
| morning. They were very eager while
| they were here to acquire possession,
“Will you
| and I shall dotibtless hear from them
by 10 o'clock.”
“I wish I could sleep until 10 and
when I wake up find that it’s all right,”
“If you and Dert are
not entirely out of all business deals in
this town by our wedding day Sledge |
will see to it. if he has to move heaven
and earth to accomplish it, that we
Molly worried
none of us have a dollar. and by that
mean absolute pauperism in the bes
and most
sense.”
“He has the most absurd way ©
making love.” commented Fern. “It's
like the old cave dweller plan of kill-
ing off the family, batting the fair maid
in the head with a club and letting her
wake up In her new home.”
“Not Sledge.
ferent proposition. He has reduced ev
erything in life to dollars and cents
and he thinks that if he can only break
Bert and father there'll be no wedding
bells for us. Bert and I. will each be 1
compelled to seek a more lucrative | When she rejoined Fern.
match.”
She glanced smilingly at Bert and
surprised on his face a curious expres-
sion, which plunged her into deep and
not overly pleasant thought.
“He'd have bluffed me long ago,”
“I'd have been so
scared to death that by this time I'd be
sending out afternoon tea invitations
confessed Fern.
on his business stationery.”
“You spiritless wretch!”
Molly.
“It might not be so bad, after all,”
that
she had started, in revealing the en-
“I sup-
- pose I ought to be ashamed to ac
returned Fern, persisting, now
tire depth of her depravity.
knowledge it, but I like Sledge.”
“You may pack up your things and
go home,” laughed Molly, not really
blaming her for the sentiment, how-
“You're .positively hopeless.
ever.
Fern.” ‘
“All right,” insisted Fern.
him.”
“Phrow her out.” begged Bert. “She’s science and allowed the interests of the
dangerous!”
CHAPTER XIII.
Molly’s Anxiety Well Founded.
OLLY'S anxiety was by no and he opened the rear door for them.
means feigned, for the nex
morning, at 10 o'clock, she ernor Waver, his hand on the door-
called up her father at his of- | knob. “I'm returning to the capital this
fice and asked him if he had veived
In rather
a worried tone he replied that he had
not, but that he .would let her know
an answer to his telegram.
as soon as he had done so.
She wandered about the house, quite
ill at ease; then, unable to content her-
self, suggested to Fern that they make
When they were
ready she hesitated a moment or two
in front of the telephone, but conquered
Instead, she made
their first stop at her father’s office,
ready for a drive.
that temptation.
thorougly melodramatic
He does his lovemak-
ing with red roses,” laughed Molly
“tons and tons of them. This is a dif
chided
*1 don’t
think there'd be any more fun than
taming and managing a big brute like
“I don’t see how unless Molly mar-
ries Sledge.” suggested her father, with
a laugh.
Molly started to laugh also, but found
Bert looking at her speculatively.
“She doesn't need g» that far,” he
mused.
Molly looked at him in sharp incredu-
1 lity for a moment; then, without a
t | word. she turned to leave the room.
“Where are you going?’ asked her
father.
f “To see Sledge,” she responded. “I
think you told me that he is always at
the bank between 11 and 12 in the
morning.”
“Molly.” commanded Bert sharply.
recalled to bis senses by her bearing.
“you mustr’t see him. I forbid it.”
“1 am taking your advice, but I re-
fuse to take your orders,” she calmly
informed him, surprised to find in her-
self an inclination to giggle over her
use of that splendidly ringing remark.
“Molly ‘wiil shield you from all harm,”
she added, and she was snickering
“What's the joke?” asked that young
lady. “I've been dying all morning to
hear somebody giggle.” :
“You're to chaperon me while I go
over and make love to Sledge.’ Molly
gayly informed her. !
“You're not really,” protested Fern.
“1 am really,” retorted Molly, her
eyes flashing a trifle more than a mere
jest would seem to warrant. “I must,
Fern. I plunged both father and Bert
into this trouble, and Bert seems to
think it's up to yours truly Molly to
fool Sledge along until they Have time
to get out of it. Besides that, it's a
sort of a game between Sledge and my-
gelf, and I'm not going to have that big
duffer win it.” .
“This is too delightful for anything,”
applauded Fern. “I'm perfectly mad
about it, Molly. I hope Sledge is in.”
Sledge was in. He was closeted with
Senator Allerton and Governor Waver
on a most important conference, one
involving the welfare and prosperity of
half the voters in the state; but, nev-
ertheless. he promptly stifled his con-
sovereign people to suffer when Davis
whispered in his ear that Molly Marley
. wanted to see him.
! «Bring her right in" said Sledge.
: “Men. you'll have to go. It's a lady.”
t, “Just one moment,” parleyed Gov-
afternoon, and" —
“J’11 see you up there,” interrupted
Sledge. pushing the door and the gov-
ernor with it.
“By the way, my coat,” called the
senator from the rear corridor.
The knob of the other door rattled.
“All right.” grunted Sledge, closing
them out in the draft just as Molly and
Fern came in. “Hello, girls!” said
Sledge. “Sit down. Excuse me a min-
ute till I poke a guy’s Benny out to
him.”
and. with a curious degree of consider- * ® * * * * *
ation, waited in the little red reception
room to be announced. She was told
to come right in, and found Bert with
her father.
- Sledge walked into Marley's office
with his parlor smile, the recently out-
lived one which belonged of right to
the r e he wore, and he sat down
Marley silently handed her a ‘téle- tener 16 ‘speak. His usual
gram. It read:
Our Mr. Coldman will see you in two
weeks from today.
“Two weeks,” she worried.
you possibly hurry them up?”
Marley handed her another telegram:
Impossible to arrange earlier date.
“Hunt's resignation was in my mail
with
“He has taken a
position as secretary with Sledge’s
company, and I suppose half my office
this morning,” stated Marley,
forced quietness.
force will follow him.”
“Two weeks,” speculated Bert, then
he added impatiently: “Confound it,
I’m in a pretty pickle if we
can’t clear our skirts of this thing!
I bofrowed the money to buy up Mood-
son’s stock from some friends of mine,
and on my unsupported note. To lose
would mean the absolute end of my
Marley!
social standing, here or anywhere.”
“We'll see that you get yours first,
offered Marley, whose respect for his
son-in-law to be was only superficial.
“I didn’t mean to urge my personal
=
i
I meet
>
v
n
»
—
pu
—
— [)
\
“] don’t see how unless Molly marries
Sledge,” suggested his father.
claims above yours,” Bert hedged, his
slightly
fact ig
fmpatience, however, only
modified. “The fundamental
that we must gain time.”
ir A i. DO) ATA DT TTT le
“Can’t|
i
mm
=
A
method was to deliver his messages
standing. .
“We ought te figure a’ consolidation,”
he suggested.
Marley considered that statement
carefully. He was beginning to learn
that he really needed caution in deal-
ing with Sledge.
“One of us might be gobbled up,” he
sagely concluded. “As I understand it,
you own 75 per cent of the new com-
pany, while I only hold a bare majority
of the old one. It would scarcely be
possible that in a consolidation I would
still have control.”
“We'd have to pool our stock for
either one to hold it,” agreed Sledge.
Marley looked at him wonderingly.
«I don’t quite understand the advan-
tage to you in this,” he puzzled. “Frank-
ly, Mr. Sledge, I'd have to see that ad-
vantage before 1 could consider the
» | matter.”
“There ain’t any,” Sledge confessed.
«I want to protect you if everything's
all right. Molly was just over.”
“Yes; she said she was going to see
you,” replied Marley, clutching eager-
ly at the straw.
“I thought she’d get enough,” stated
Sledge, and he chuckled. “She's a
smart girl.”
“Yes; she is,” assented Marley, won-
dering just how much she had said to
make such a remarkable change in
Sledge. “A consolidation would proba-
bly be a very sensible thing. It would
enable us to plan extensions, lines and
loops which would increase our reve-
nues tremendously, with no possibility
of dividing the patronage. Moreover,
a mere announcement of such a move
would add immediately to the market
value of the stock in both companies.”
«We consolidate after the marriage,”
amended Sledge. “We get all ready
now.” ;
“Any time you say,” readily consent-
ed Marley. “I'll meet with you and ar-
range the details tonight.”
“Naw!” refused Siedge. “Theater to-
night.”
“With Molly?”
wanting to smile,
«Molly and Fern. Fern’s a nice kid.”
«All right; tomorrow night, then,”
suggested Marley, his mind firmly
fixed on the commercial opportunity.
off?”
«Did Molly say so?’ evaded Marley.
“No,” Sledge hesitated. “Is it?”
“That's entirely Molly’s affair.”
again he chuckled as he arose to go.
“1s there any objection to giving out
a hint of this consolidation?” asked
Marley, with an instant thought that
at the very least this new turn would
enhance his price with the syndicate
inquired Marley, |
i
«1 pelieve you,” coincided Sledge, and ulated at
Chil
SANA NN RAN
dr
en Cry for Fletche
NANNNANNNNANNNK
AMIARRRRRRRRRRRRRNRRRN
r’s
NERA
NNNRNNRANR ANNONA NS
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years,
has borne the signature of
and has been made under his per=
sonal supervision since its infancy.
o { Allow no ene to deceive youin this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and ¢ Just-as-goed *’ are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against ent
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor C.., Pare= |
goric, Drops and Soothing
Syrups. It is pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance.
and allays Feverishness.
Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
For more than thirty years it
has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation,
Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and
Diarrhcea.
It regulates the Stomach and Bowels,
assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural
sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
CASTORIA ALwAYs
Bears the Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years
The Kind You Have Always Bought
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY,
\
which had proposed to buy him out.
“Hunh-uh!” assented Sledge. “You
better see Davis about your mortgage.
He won’t extend. but he’ll hold off.”
“I'll go over right away.” answered
Marley. anxious to take advantage of
that offer also as quickly as possible.
“Wait till tomorrow,” ordered Sledge
and stalked out. having but very little
time to waste.
His way lay directly past the Grand
Opera House. and he stopped at the
ticket window. |
“Give me a box for tonight.”
grunted.
“Thanks!” grunted Sledge and stuffed
the tickets in his pocket.
“Don’t mention it.’ returned the
treasurer as nonchalantly and walked
back to the manager of the company.
(To be continued.)
he |
INDICTMENT DENOUNCED
Judge Orr Says He Doubts Validity of
} Bill Against Thompson.
Introducing for the first time em-
bezzlement and abstraction, a new
presentment against J. V. Thompson,
head of the defunct First National
bank of Uniontown, was returned by
the federal grand jury at Erie, Pa.
The jurors were directed to bring
in an indictment. It contained thirty
counts.
Judge Charles P. Orr, who with
Judge W. H. S. Thomson received the
presentment—to the surprise of the
crowded courtroom—denounced the
presentment from 'the bench.
“] doubt the walidity of this pre-
sentment,” said Judge Orr, after
Clerk ‘Wilbur Harris took the present-
ment from the hands of George L.
Dawson of Uniontown, foreman of the
grand jury.
“The court will permit the grand
jury to bring in a bill (the indict
ment), reserving, however, the right
to say whether or not the indictments
brought in shall stand as a true bill
against the defendant.”
SUBMARINES! THE CRY
And Loud the Wails. Pooh, Pooh, My
Dear, They're Only Whales.
Five whales, appearing in the path
of the steamship Stampalia while that
vessel was skirting the coast of Sar-
dinia on her way from Genoa and
Naples to New York, caused an alarm
of submarines, and resulted in a near
panic among the 849 steerage passen-
gers, according to reports of passen-
gers when the ship arrived at New
York.
The Stampalia, one of the armed
vessels of the Italian merchant fleet,
avoided the. usual route coming
through the Mediterranean, because
of reported U-boats. When the whales
were sighted a frightened cry of
“gubmarines!” spread along the third
class quarters. Officers of the ship
quieted the passengers’ fears and the
whales soon disappeared.
CIRCULATED BAD MONEY
Former Policemen Get Two-Year Sen-
tences at San Francisco.
Rollie A. York and Edward Karr,
former Oakland (Cal.) policemen con-
“Daytime.” corrected Sledge. “I'M | yit0q of conspiracy to circulate coun-
busy nights. Say, Marley, is that game ;...f¢it $5 gold pieces, were sentenced
between Molly and Bert called clear! in two years each in the federal
prison.
York was caught in Columbus, O.,
and Karr in Ogden, Utah, last Octo-
ber. It was estimaied that they cir-
least $25,000 of the
| spurious coins.”
Cu.idren Ory
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
RELATIONS WITH
GERMANY TENSE
Too Late for Apologies, Indi-
cated at White House
LiRECT EVIDENCE AWAITED
All Americans on Sussex Were Saved,
Some Badly Injured—Piece of Tor-
pedo Found on Deck of Vessel.
With tension in official circles in-
creasing as cable dispatches bring
fresh evidence that the English chan-
Lei sieaunier Sussex was torpedoed
without warning, the submarine issue
with Germany is authoritatively de-
scribed as having reached the stage
where President Wilson may soon be
forced to take summary action.
rhe president will reserve final
judgment until all the evidence in the
case is before him. If he finds that
the Sussex was attacked without
warning, in violation of the pledges
of Germany, he will advise congress
of what he proposes to do and pro-
ceed to act.
According to the best information
obtainablé in official quarters there
will be no preliminaries and no
further time lost in negotiations if
complete evidence shows that Ger-
many has countenanced attacks in
violation, or in evasion of guarantees
as to the conduct of submarine war-
fare. ‘
An inspired offer of reparation and
disavowal which reached the White
House unofficially from German
sources met with a frig.d reception.
It was said flatly that the president
is not interested in disavowals and
excuses. He is interested only in the
fact pertaining to the cause of the ex-
plosion on the Sussex which jeopar-
dize American lives.
All Americans aboard the Sussex
have been accounted for. None lost
their lives in the torpedoing of the
channel packet and administration of-
ficials were hopeful that the crisis
occasioned by the attack upon the
ship had been relieved in tension,
when advices came to the state de-
partment from Bristol, England, that
T. Buckley, an employee on the
steamer Englishman, and an Ameri
can citizen, had lost his life when
the ship, carrying horses, was sunk,
presumably by a German submarine.
Consular Agent Whitman at Bou-
logne reported that he was informed
by French officials that a piece of
bronze, resembling a part of a tor-
pedo had been found on the Sussex.
Two American women passengers
on the Sussex, it is understood, are
quoted in official dispatches as saying
they saw the wake of a torpedo just
before the explosion on the Sussex
occurred.
ATT.
Accidents will happen but the bes
regulated families keep Dr. Thomas
Electric Oil for such emergencies
Two sizes 25 ard 50 e¢ at sI' stores.
Harsh physics react, weaken the
bowels, wili lead to chronie eomstips
tion. Doan’s reguiets operate easily,
2 ¢ a box at all stoves.
FOLEY AIDNEY PILLS
FOR RHEUMATISM KIDNEYS ANP BLADDER
repeatedly made to the United States .
1e,
jt
Bi