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Joplin Globe from Joplin, Missouri • Page 3

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Joplin Globei
Location:
Joplin, Missouri
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3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

JOPLIN GLOBE, TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1929. 75 ON CHAftTER LIST Additional Officers Are Elected at Meeting Pittsburg Woman Is Speaker. Seventy-five charter members had been registered for the newly organized Joplin Business and Professional Women's Club when the roster of charter memberships closed at a dinner meeting last night in the Colonial room of the Connor hotel, attended by sixty-two women; Additional officers elected ware Miss Opal Spoddard, first vice president; Mrs. Hazel Porter Groves, second vice president, and Miss Sadie Wax, corresponding secretary. Miss Louise Scott, Miss Spoddard and Miss Wax were appointed to compose a constitution committee.

Pittsburg Women Guests. Five officers of the Pittsburg business women's club were guests. They were Dr. Alberta Stone Moore, president; Grace I. Erame, finance chairman; Juanita Pease, recording secretary; Cora Helman, treasurer, and Edith Plymate, membership chairman.

Dr. Moore, the principal speaker, described the activities and work of the Pittsburg) club, dealing especially with the various committees appointed to superintend various activities. It was decided that a noonday luncheon and a night meeting would he held each month. Dues were set at $5, $2.50 of which go to the state and national federations, with which the Joplin club is affiliated, and $2.50 to the local group. Miss Grace Hamilton led pep singing, assisted by Miss Christobel Cox.

DR. HOUGH AND WIFE INJURED IN A CRASH Carthage, March Dr. and Mrs. Louis R. Hough of Mor-.

gan Heights were somewhat injured today when their car went out of control while proceeding down a hill near Hallwood farm, six and a half miles northwest of Carthage, and went into a cashing into a tree. Dr. Hough suffered a severe cut on one hand and Mrs. Hough suffered minor cuts and bruises! The car was badly damaged. Apportion Corporation Tax.

Carthage, March An order has been made by the county court to draw warrants apportioning corporation taxes collected by the county collector for various municipalities in the county outside of Joplin. Public corporations, such as railroads and telegraph and telephone companies, pay their tax direct to the tax due the other cities is paid through the county collector's office. The warrants to the various towns follow: Carthage, Webb City, Carterville, Alba, Asbury, Carl Junction, Jasper, Larussell, Neck City, Oronogo, Purcell, Reeds, Sarcoxie, $545.08, and Waco, $6.16. Take HILL'S for that COLD! To stop a cold quickly and completely you must do four things all at once. You must break up the cold (2) check the fever (3) open the bowels (4) tone the system.

That is what HILL'S CASCARA-QUININE tablets do. That's why they stop a cold in twenty-four hours. HILL'S CASCARA-QUININE RED OUGHS Apply over throat and chest small pieces WICKS VAPORUB OUT IT Million Jan Vfd Ymarh 1 TREAT GALLSTONES If you treat Gallt fries in time, you may avoid an operation. FRUITOLA has been for twenty- live years a recognized treatrnentforGallatones. Everywhere people use it.

Before it ia too late, try FRUITOLA. It may be secured at all drug etorea and, your own druggist will recommend it. One dose of this wonderful medicine shows results. Pinus Medicine Monticello, III. PI SO coughs Eighteen Captains Named In Greater C.

of C. Drive The selection of eighteen captains to serve under three divisional majors in a drive for a greater Chamber of Commerce budget of $46,901 was made at a meeting last night in the Gold room of the Connor hotel under directions of Charles E. Watkins, campaign educational director, and Daniel H. McFarland, campaign director. In addition, 144 persons were selected as lieutenants.

Campaign directors plan to get in touch with, these men week in order to be able to announce the complete list of lieutenants by Sunday. Captains JVamed. The three majors and the eighteen captains who will serve under them arc as follows: Major Roy Breazeale, division No. 1. Captains Perry Hurlbut, C.

A. Elam, Harold Stephens, E. E. Pfenning, E. R.

Caskey and E. W. Trott. Major M. Margenau, division No.

2. Captains Thomas B. Martin, George Osborn, J. H. Douglass, Daniel Bartholomew, Charles F.

Wells and Ralph Schellack. Major W. M. Markwardt, division No. 3.

Captains Fred Davis, Paul Wingo, Ed Purkett, Rolla E. Stephens, James A. Hunter and Paul Davis. The teams will meet at 8 o'clock Friday night at Memorial hall for a sales instruction smoker under direction of Watkins and McFarland. At the meeting last night kins and McFarland spoke on "The Value of The Chamber of Commerce to the Community," stressing the value of the proposed special industrial department as well as the need of an industrial promoter to handle the work.

Example Is Given. McFarland, in talking on the results produced in other cities, showed that, by using such a plan in Atlanta, 500 factories and distributing houses were brought to the city within thirty-seven months with jobs for 12,898 men drawing a total yearly salary of $22,711,550. "The campaign is progressing favorably," McFarland said, "and it looks like this will be a popular campaign." At noon today managers of chain stores and firms with outside connections will meet at the Connor hotel with George chairman of the "foreign" solicitations committee, in charge. Yesterday, students at Senior and South junior high schools were requested to "do their bit" in putting over the campaign. Watkins, who spoke at assemblies at the schools, circulated questionnaires regarding the attitude of the students towards civic and asking their help in carrying the message of the expansion drive to their parents.

The educational director will draw up an analysis of civic conditions in the city from the answers to his, questions. HUGE TRI MOTORED FOKKERNil HERE Powerful Ship on Way From Chicago to Texas Stops at Planes Arrive. The first Fokker plane ever to visit Joplin stopped at the airport yesterday for gasoline. The plane, built in Holland, is owned by the Universal Aviation Corporation. It formerly belonged to the president of the Richfield Oil Company of California.

Five passengers, including N. B. Ison, pilot, were in the plane. The huge ship can easily carry twenty- five persons, Ison said. The plane is a tri-motored affair and has powerful wasp engines, each having a horsepower of 425.

The cruising speed is approximately 125 miles an hour, although the plane can attain a maximum of 160 miles an hour. The Fokker started from Chicago yesterday morning, bound for Texas. It left here early in the afternoon, proceeding south. Sunday afternoon Pilot Brewster stopped at the airport with a special Travelair racing biplane model. Another plane here yesterday was a Curtis Robin flown by Capt.

Richard Duncan for the Curtis Company. Saturday, a Curtis Robin piloted by S. R. Gilley also stopped at the field en route to Texas. Flyers commented favorably on the extremely dry landing field at the airport.

Y'S MEN'S CLUB MAKES PLANS FOR CAMPAIGN Final plans for a four weeks' membership drive were made last 1 night by members of the Y's Men's Club at a dinner at the Y. M. C. A. building.

The drive will start Monday. the drive, proper, the club has been divided into two "regiments." At the end of the fourth week, the "regiment" which has the most points will be given a banquet the losing side. Each aaoup will be given twenty- five points for each additional member; five points for the attendance of each man in the club, and five additional points for each man who is not absent at any meeting during the four weeks. The high man will receive a year's dues free. Those composing.each "regiment" are as follows: Colonel Howard Clark, Major Buford Greer, Captain T.

E. Bright and Lieutenants S. B. Tingley, W. A.

Cooper, Clark Reid, David Gardner, Shepherd, Ray Havens, Dale Tourtelot and Ralph Johnson. Colonel John Garrigues, Major Frank V. Smith, Captain Lee Gaither and Lieutenants Arthur Hicks, Paul Phillips, E. A. Martin, Ernest Brlckey, Floyd Blgley, Victor A.

Haines, Floyd Lortz and Ben Hardin. More than 100 names were sent to the club last night by business firms. The age limit is 18 to 35. The club's goal is a membership of fifty. Five new members were taken into the club last night.

Attending Convention. Five representatives of the Joplin Coca-Cola Bottling Works are in Kansas City for the annual convention of Coca-Cola bottlers of the western division, with headquarters in Chicago. The convention opens today and will continue through Thursday night. Representating the local company are G. W.

VanPool, president and manager of the Joplin Coca-Cola Bottling Works; Paul VanPool, secretary and treasurer of the company; T. A. Davis, salesman; Charles W. Griesser, president and manager of the Polar Ice Supply Company, 511 Broadway, which distributes Coca-Cola for the Joplin company in Newton and McDonald counties and R. T.

Smith, manager of distribution for- the Polar Ice Supply Company in Newton and McDonald counties. PITTSBURG YOUTH ACCUSED OF ARSON Son of Proprietor of Theater, Damaged by Fire. Will Be Arraigned Today. Special to The Clobe. Pittsburg, March Jack Johnson, 21 years old, son of Mrs.

Nellie R. Johnson, proprietor of the Lure theater here, will be arraigned tomorrow morning in city court on a charge of arson, following a three-day investigation of a fire which broke out in the theater at 1 o'clock Saturday morning. The fire, which caused several hundred dollars damage, was discovered by a police. Investigators said they found holes drilled in the floor, stuffed with paper and evidences of coal oil. The investigation was started by John Atchison of Columbus, deputy state fire marshal; Tom D.

Winter of Girard, county attorney, and Ben Wear. Jackson, his mother and sisters taken into custody Saturday afternoon and questioned. Jackson is being held in the county jail. Officers said they obtained a confession ffom Jackson at 7 o'cloek tonight. The fixtures were owned by Jackson and were heavily insured, some of the insurance having been obtained recently, officers said.

FOUR MEN ARRESTED IN SERIES OF LIQUOR RAIDS Galena, March Bowin, residing a mile west of Scammon, Lewie Sacchetta, Tony Welch and John Turk of Roseland were arrested following a series of raids conducted late Saturday afternoon and Saturday night by Under Sheriff Dewey Atwood, Deputy Sheriffs Henry Starrett, Bert Faulkner, Mode Dark, J. A. Mc- Clever, J. O. Carnell and Constable Charles Little.

At Sowin's place, officers said they found two stills in operation. One was of eighty-gallon capacity and the other of 100-gallon capacity. A building near the house was being used as a distillery. Officers destroyed fifty fifty five gallon barrels of mash and 100 empty gallon jugs, and confiscated forty- two one-gallon jugs of whisky, one ten-gallon keg of whisky, eighty sacks of sugar, the two stills and other material. A four-ton truck was" required to houl the evidence to Columbus.

Officers said that twenty gallons of whisky were found at Sac- chetta's place; thirty-three one- gallon jugs of whisky were found buried in the ground and in a chicken house at Welch's place, and fifty-three one-gallon jugs of whisky were found concealed in an eighteen-inch partition at Turk's place. CONSTABLE CRISP TO GET NEW BONDSMEN Carthage, March Crisp, constable at Webb City, who last week was ordered by the county court to show cause why he should not furnish a new bond, appeared before the court today and obtained a new blank bond. Crisp said he would furnish new securities on his $5,000 bond, succeeding five of six "bondsmen who notified the court they desired to withdraw. The new bond must be filed with the court by Friday or the office will be declared vacant. Coffleld Funeral Held.

Carthage, March Funeral services for Mrs. Margaret Coffleld, 73 years old, formerly of Joplin, who died Friday at the county almshouse, were held at 3 o'clock this afternoon at theUlmer- Draktf funeral home, with the Rev. W. W. Pierce, pastor of the First Baptist church, officiating.

Mrs. Ed C. Ulmer sang. Burial was in the county farm cemetery. Sixty per cent of the world's telephones, 18,500,000, are in the United States.

C. OF C. PRESIDENT INTO SCHOOL RACE To Run fOr Board of Education Post on Platform Calling for Junior College. A third candidate for a piace on the board of education was added yesterday when Charles W. Arbuthnot, president of the Chamber of Cdmmerce, and proprietor of the Arbuthnot Mercantile Company, 1910 Main street, filed on a platform favoring the establishment of a junior college under supervision of the school board.

Arbuthnot announced he intended to campaign for the post of school board member as the representative of a group who desire the establishment of a junior college. He declared that a large number of business men and other influential residents favor such a proposal. Flan Outlined. The chamber president favors a tentative plan calling for the sending of the sophomoi'e class from the senior high school building to the junior high school buildings, leaving only the senior and junior classes and providing room for junior college students. Transfer- ing of the lower class would take out about 400 high school students and would give sufficient room to accommodate two junior college classes, he asserted.

With the establishment of, a college, high school graduates could receive a preliminary college education without having to enter the larger schools at distant points, he said. Other candidates are George W. Olliver, manager of the J. C. Penney Company store and a Chamber of Commerce director, and S.

A. Harris, who has filed for re-election. Three places will be open on the board, Harris and C. S. Poole completing their three-year terms 1 and the Rev.

W. H. Flippin having resigned. Poole wil 1 retire at the end of his term. OBITUARY NYBERG.

Funeral rites for Mrs. Martha Nyberg, 56 years old, a resident of Baxter Springs, who died Sunday at Kansas City, will be conducted at 2:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon at the Frank-Sievers chapel. Burial will be in Mount Hope cemetery. The body arrived here at 1:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon. Surviving are her husband, Knute Nyberg of Baxter Springs; four daughters, Mrs.

Charles Larson, 508 East Twelfth street, Baxter Springs, with whom she resided; Mrs. Fred Lukens, Robertson apartments, Joplin; Mrs. Edna Nerlo of Los Angeles, and Mrs. A. Locarni of Carthage, and a son, Newell Nyberg of Picher.

MILLS. Funeral rites for Mrs. Patricia Mills, 40 years old, longtime Joplin resident, who died Saturday at St. John's hospital, will be conducted at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning at St. Peter's Catholic church, with the Rev.

Father William P. Brophy, pastor, officiating. Burial will be in Mount Hope cemetery. AXTON. Funeral services for Elmer Floyd Axton, 42 years old, a Joplin man who died Wednesday at the national military hospital at Leavenworth, were held yesterday afternoon at the Hurlbut chapel The American Legion was in charge.

Burial was in Ozark Memorial park. HAYWOOD. Funeral services for Mrs. Jennie Hayward, 87 years old, who died at midnight Thursday at her home, 1628 West Fourth street, were held yesterday afternoon at the Frank- Sievers chapel. The Rev.

Cliff Titus 'officiated. Burial was in Fairview cemetery. TABOR. Funeral rites for Mrs. Jewell Tabor, 27 years old, 1205 Connor avenue, who died at 2:20 o'clock Sunday morning at St.

John's hospital, will be conducted at 3 o'clock this afternoon at the Central Avenue Christian church. John Jennings, pastor, will officiate. Burial will be in Forest Park cemetery. Surviving are her husband, Ben Tabor, 1205 Connor avenue; a son, Marsh D. Tabor, at home; two stepsons, Lester Tabor and Herman Tabor; her mother, Mrs.

Ella Connor avenue; a brother, Pres Hulette, First street and Winfield avenue, and two-sisters, Mrs. Jessie Warden, 1205 Connor avenue, and Mrs. Bonnie Veach, 1123 Murphy avenue. CHIEF STRONGHEART TO GIVE A LECTURE TONIGHT Galena, March Strongheart, Yakima Indian chief, will present a dramatic lecture recital, "From Peace Pipe to War Trail," at the Methodist Episcopal church tomorrow night. ft Tho lecture will be the last number of the 1928-29 lecture courses sponsored by the Galena Lyceum Club.

Chief Strongheart is a fascinating talker, well educated and his costumes and stage settings are richly colorful. His picturesque lecture entertainment is a colorful dramatic recital of legends and facts of the American Indian. Former Carthage Woman Dies. Carthage, March Minnie Woqd Rathburn, 62 years old, formerly of Carthage, died March 10 at the home of a daughter at Portland, according to information received here. She formerly lived in this vicinity for several years, serving as matron of the Day Nursery for two years.

She left here about a year ago for California First Great Step Is Taken for U. 5. Entrance Into World Court Geneva, March The first great step for the entrance of the United States to the world court of justice has been taken. The commission of eminent international jurists today unanimously accepted the fundamental ideas of the formula of Elihu Root for acceptance of the American conditions for membership. Other important steps remain.

The American senate must ratify what the veteran American statesman has done at Geneva. More than that, the more than forty states which now belong to the court must set their seels of approval on today's agreement before American adhesion can become an accomplished fact. League officials tonight seemed convinced that there will be no difficulty about the American senate because the text of the agreement was cabled to Washington and Root, himself, was believed to have given his final approval only when he had received advices from Washington that the text was agreeable to the government. The officials did not seem so saguine as to the 40 other states. They pointed out that there is always a possibility that some one state may rebel against the American conditions as according too privileged a position to the United States.

The agreement reached today will be sent to tne United States and to all members of the council of the league of nations. The council at Madrid in June will receive a covering report from Sir Cecil Hurst, British jurist who took a leading part in bringing the agreement into form, and will send the text to all members of the court. If no objection is forthcoming, the protocol may be signed by all states during the September assembly of the league. AIRLINE PROMOTER INVITED TO JOPLIN Is Asked to Confer With Chamber of Commerce Regarding City as Junction Point. (Erie P.

Halliburton of Duncan and Tulsa, promoter of a new airline operating between St. Louis and Dallas and Kansas City and' Dallas, has been invited to confer with the board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce soon with a view toward including Joplin as a junction point on the airways system. William C. Markwardt, chamber director, presented definite information that Joplin probably will be designated on the airline at a luncheon meeting of the directorate yesterday. It was at his request that Halliburton was invited.

The chamber offers the fullest co-operation with the promoter in his forthcoming project. The line will be put in operation in April and will use a fleet of tri- motored Ford planes, according to Markwardt's information. OLD CHEROKEE COUNTY SETTLER SUCCUMBS Baxter Springs, March 18. W. Cool, 69 years old, an old settler of this county, died this afternoon at his home near Melrose, Kan.

He was a prominent farmer and stockman, having resided at his present home for forty years. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Emma Cool; two sons, Clyde Cool and Clarence Cool, at home; four daughters, Miss Ruby Cool, at home, Mrs. Virgie James at Chetopa, Mrs. Jessie Teel of Columbus and Mrs.

Edith Zimmerman of Baxter Springs; three brothers, Commodore Cool of Manhattan, Ed Cool of Salida, and Clarence Cool of Oakland, and two sisters, Mrs. Effie Murphy of Plaines, and Mrs. Nellie Oliver of Salida, Colo. Funeral services will be held at the home at 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. The Rev.

'Miles Cook of Galena will have charge of the services, Burial will be in Greenlawn cemetery. THIRTY STUDENTS TO GRADUATE AT JASPER Jasper, March students have been placed on the approved list of candidates for graduation this year from Jasper high school. Nineteen are girls and eleven are boys. The class play will be held May the class, sermon on May 12, and commencement exercises on May 15. The candidates are: Helen Weston, Bernice Rogers, Bernis Rogers, Louise Bruffett, Margie Probert, Louise Arnold, Frances Sherrel, Anna Isemann, Mildred Martin, Grayce Cline, Lucille Scott, June Ingels, Leota LeMasters, Nina Marcella Jacobs, Arlene Johnson, Edwina Farr, Bessie Elrod, Homer Etder, Herbert Stith, Kermit Wright, Robert Hill, Roy Sullens, Howard Erickson, Randa Finke, Louis Bruffett, Allen Sherrell, Gus Andrews, and Ralph Gresham.

FOCH FACES NEW CRISISJN ILLNESS Physicians Say Veteran French General Is Gradually Losing Fight for Life. Paris, March Marshal Ferdinand Foch tonight was at another crisis in his long and apparently hopeless illness. His physicians, in leaving him for a while this evening, said that he had had no actual new attack, but that it was a case merely of a gradual slow sinking and weakening of his heart. One doctor said with intense sadness: "Poor, dear marshal! It would not require much of an attack to put an end to his game battle now." Heart Is Giving Out. The heart of the former generalissimo of the allied armies has begun to give out under the coalition of diseases affecting his lungs, kidneys and bladder.

The brain which carried the allies to victory remained clear while the body was dying. This morning in a voice hardly audible the marshal commanded: "I must see Weigand." General Wiegand was his chief of staff during the great war. He appeared at the home half an hour later. The official announcement was that the general had not seen his old friend and superior but intimate sources were positive that the general had stood at the bedside for twenty-three minutes. The physicians had placed an absolute ban against visitors and queens, presidents, premiers, marshals and generals had been refused admittance when they came to inquire for the old warrior.

The fact that General Weigand was admitted was interpreted as indicating that the doctors felt the end was near. A rumor that the marshal had died suddenly reduced to absolute silence today the chamber of deputies, known as the noisiest parliament in the world. A. WILL SPONSOR CARNIVAL IN APRIL Preparations to bring the Wortham carnival and shows to Joplin for a week's stand next month under auspices of Joplin lodge No. 151, Anti-Thief Association, were made last night at the lodge hall.

The shows will arrive April 15 for a week's engagement at the grounds, Twentieth street and Maiden Lane. The lodge board of trustees, composed of S. W. Coglizer, chairman, J. H.

Farnworth and L. L. Travis, has been in charge of preliminary arrangements. Forty members attended last night's meeting when six new members were initiated and four applications were received. Gets Divorce From Poisoner.

St. Louis, March B. Stump, whose wife, Mrs. Ida Stump, admitted she had attempted to poison him, was granted a divorce today on grounds of general indignities. They had been married more than ten years.

Stump also charged his wife with taking $3,000 of his savings and giving it to other men. Feel Well-Keep Well! Keep Health by "Keeping Kidneys Active. enjoy health and keep your' kidneys working right! If troubled with lameness and stiffness; constant backache, dizziness; scanty, burning, or too frequent passage of kidney excretions, and getting up at night, don't Regain health by helping your kidneys. To promote normal kidney action and assist your kidneys in cleansing your bipod of poisonous wastes, use Doan's Pills. Recommended the world over.

Ask your neighbor! 50,000 Users Endorse Doan's: Adam Schmidt, 2211 S. tlth St. Louis, tin: "I can recommend Doen'a PUle lot what they have done for me. My acted and the eicrttiocu were Kant. Morniaga I felt tired without ambition my work.

My back pained and waa Miff and lame, and I felt much better after wing them." Doan'a Pills railed me sat Doan's Pills A Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys At all 75c a box. Fotter-Milburn Mfg. Buffalo, N. V. CORRECTION Jn our advertisement In Saturday's Globe we quoted Swift 's Premium Hams at a lb.

This should have been Swift's Hams lb. Krogeifc New safe sure way of Corn pain instantly! OF NO RlfeK OF ACID BURN TO THE TOES Corns The very moment you apply Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads, corn pain stops. You never tried anything so quick-acting, so soothing and healing. Zino-pads remove the cause of corns friction and pressure of shoes and relieve and only scientific way to treat corns.

No danger this way as with cutting your corns, or using harsh liquids or caustic plasters that expose the toes to acid burn. Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads won't harm the tenderest skin. Small, thin, dainty, cushioning, guaranteed safe and sure. Won't come off in bath.

Doctors recommend them. At all drug, shoe and dept. cents. Dl Scholl's Zino-pads Put one on pain is gonel Doctor Found Women and Children Sick More Often than Men As a family doctor at Monticello, Illinois, the whole human body, not any small part of it, was Dr. Caldwell's practice.

More than half his "calls" were on women, children and babies. They are the ones most often sick. But their illnesses were usually of a minor colds, fevers, headaches, biliousness all of them required first a thorough evacuation. They were constipated. In the course of Dr.

Caldwell's 47 years' practice, he found a good deal of success in such cases with a prescription of his own containing simple laxative herbs with pepsin. In 1892 he decided to use this formula in the manufacture of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, and placed it on the market. The preparation immediately had as great a public success as it previously had in Dr. Caldwell's private practice.

Now, the third generation is using it. Mothers are giving It to their children who were given it by their mothers. Every second of the working day someone somewhere is going into a drug store to buy it. There are thousands of homes in this country that are never without a bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, and we have many hundreds of letters from grateful people telling us it helped when everything else failed.

AT AGE 83 While women, children and el-' derly people are especially benefited by Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, its mild, gentle action promptly effective oh the most robust constitution and in the most obstinate cases. Containing neither opiates nor narcotics, It Is safe for the tiniest baby. Children like it and take it willingly. Every drugstore sells Dr.

Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. A new method of correcting constipation, minutes of Feen-a-mint, the delicious chewing- gum laxative. Chew it 3 a few hours it banishes languor, irritability, headache And because you chew it, its tasteless medicament is swallowed gradually for easy, gentle, thorough action, without bodily shock and without drugging the system. You cannot find a druggist who does not sell approval! SA-MINT Chewing Laxative Makes Redder Blood Dr. Pierce's GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY All DRUGGISTS.

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About Joplin Globe Archive

Pages Available:
131,897
Years Available:
1896-1958