Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Yale Expositor from Yale, Michigan • Page 2

Location:
Yale, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE YALE EXPOSITOR PAINS NEARLY DOUBLED ME UP Nothing Helped Me Until I Took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Wyandotte. Mich. "For the last four years 1 have doctored off and on without help.

1 have had pains every month so bad that I would nearly double up. Some times I could not sweep a room with out stopping to rest, and everything I ate unset my stomach. Three years ago II lost a child and suffered so I badly that I was out of my head at times. My bowels did not move for days and I could not eat without suffering. The doctor could not help me and one day I told my husband that I could not stand the pain any longer and sent him to the drug-store to get me a bottle of Lydia E.

Pink-ham's Vegetable Compound and threw the doctor's medicine away. After taking three bottles of Vegetable Compound and using two bottles of Lydia E. Finkham's Sanative Wash I could do ray own housework. If it had not been for your medicine I don't know where I would be today and 1 am never without a bottle of it in the house. You may publish this if you like that it may help some other woman." Mrs.

MARY Stender, 120 Orange Wyandotte, Mich. With ss Eatonlc Brings Relief "I hare been awful sick with pas," vrrites Mrs. W. II. Person, "and Eatonlc is all I can get to give me relief." Acidity and pas on the stomach quickly taken up and carried out by Eatonlc, then appetite and strength come back.

And many other bodily miseries disappear when the stomach is right. Don't let sourness, belching, bloating, Indigestion ami other stomach Ills go on. Take Eatonlc tablets after you eat see how much better you feel. Rig box costs only a trifle with your druggist's guarantee. ji (tun "DODD'S KIDNEY FILLS Oulckly freed me from torturing rheumatic pains in my joints.

After paying five large doctor bills I was still totally cripplod. My wife pmiMed me to try DODD'S KIDNEY FILLS, and within ten days the pains had gone and I was bark to work." CHESTER I FANCHKR, 625 Meigs St Rochester. N. Y. Ask your druarKlBt or ordsr direct from Dodd' Medicine Buffalo.

K. Y. Only 60a and Catrnted. dogged-Up Liver Causes Headache If a foolish to suffer from constipation, sick headache, biliousness, dizziness, inaigesuon, ana run- dredailmenta wnen unira Little Liver Pills will end CARTERS ITTLE all miiprv In few hours. A VEH PILLS table.

Act gently on liver and bowels. Small nil Small Dose Small Price SAYS PILES ALL GOiiE AHD HO MORE ECZEIM "1 had eczema for many years on my fiead and could not et anything to atop the agony. I aaw your ad and grot one box of Peterson's Ointment and I owe you many thanks for the good It has done me. There Isn't a blotch on my head, now and I couldn't help but thank Peterson, for the cure is great." Miss Mary HU1, 420 Third avenue, Pittsburgh Pa. "I have had Itching- piles for 15 years and Peterson's Is the only ointment that relieves me, besides the pllos seem to have gone." A.

B. Ituger, 1127 Washington avenue. Racine, Wis. Use Peterson's Ointment for old sores, alt rheum chafing and all skin diseases. It cents.

Druggists recommend It. Ma orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co, Buffalo. N. T. Cuticura Talcum Fatlatasfanly Fratt 1 Always Healthful Seas 2U.

OsstsMsrt ZS aaJ 54c. TsJro 2Sc 100 HAVANA CK1AKH, FIVK INCH. 5. prpal, factory (Tlrrt. Value tuaraateed.

IHas, Alvares A Tampa, Florida. SIS A CRK FARM CHEAP. WILL PAT YOU, iny land borer, to write W. K. BREWSTER, wfiir, I.RALIC ARKANSAS.

To parrel pout. Old Ky. Chawing, Smoking. Laf ar prepared. Flavoring fraa.

Randolph Tob. Parm.Paducah.Ky. PorslstontCougho Piaa's. Stop brltationj anotbtog. KftWttv ad aafa for yoong sad aid.

Na asWaiaa la I i'A mm STATE NEWS Mancelona Irwin LaKs, 11 years old, son of Gux Lakies, is dead of lockjaw after being kicked In the face by a horse. Petoskey The Dlackmer Rotary Pump Co. of this city has wired Its agents in all parts of the country to reduce prices ti 2-3" per cent. Mackinaw City Warden James Russell of Marquette prison was stricken with apoplexy while crossing Mackinaw strait en route to Lansing, and died at Mackinaw. Empire It is proposed here' to erect a shaft to the memory of Miss Deborah DeCostello, aviatrlx, who was drowned in Lake Michigan while performing at the Benzie-Leelenau fair.

Cheboygan Paul llarker, arrested Oct. 2, charged with killing Harry Lefler, a Wolverine real estate dealer, on the night of Sept. 30, has been bound over to Circuit Court for trial. Iron Mountain Frank Hager, 63 years old, of Fife Lake, dropped dead while hunting deer in the woods, five miles east of Sagola. Heart trouble is believed to have caused his death.

Mt. Clemens Eagle Son, of Detroit, will erect a 1250,000 factory here, according to the Business Men's Association. Eagle Son manufacture kiln linings lor pottery and china factories. Edmore Burglars gained entranco to John Sack's meat market here, cracked the safe open with two charges of explosives and escaped with $150 in cash and $900 in notes and bonds. Charlevoix John E.

Mills, who Is said to have put poison in sugar bowls at the home of his parents in Boyne City, has been taken to Ann Arbor, where he will be placed in a state hospital for treatment. A leak In a gas main in the Newton block on Pine street caused the building which Is divided into a number of apartments to fill with the fumes and many of the occupants were partially overcome. Iron Mountain Archie Lahale, 1-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lahaie, fell into an air hole In Crystal lake while playing on the ice and was drowned.

The boy was alone at the time. The body was recovered. East Lansing Demonstration of practices in potato growing will fea ture the annual meeting of the Mich igan Potato Producers' Association, scheduled for East Lansing during Farmers' Week at M. A. C.

Jan. 31 to Feb. 4. Adrian Fire destroyed the Tipton yards of the Adrian Lumber Sup ply company with a loss of $20,000. The blaze started when an oil stove placed in the workshop of the yards exploded.

The plant had no fire protection. Bay City Israel London, of Cor-ran, Alcona County, reported to the police hero tnat he was held up and robbed of adiamond ring valued at $3,600 and $250 in cash, while he was making repairs to his automobile on a road near Omar. Adrian County officials here will make a new departure this winter In keeping open Main street from Seward, through Adrian and Tecumseh to Clinton, and Beecher street, through Cadsus to Hudson. The object is to aid motorists. Albion While en route to Northern Michigan to go hunting, Ray Campbell received word that his farm house near Parma had burned to the ground.

Campbell had bolted the doors and windows and neighbors were unable to remove his furniture. Houghton One of the greatest pieces of mining machinery ever devised went Into commission at the Qulncy Mining Co. plant, north of Houghton. It Is an engine capable of raising a 9-ton load from a depth of 14,000 feet. The engine was eight years in building.

Sandisky Glenn Nurenberg, of Pontiac, was held up two miles east of Applegate by two bandits driving a large touring car. Twenty-four hundred dollars was taken from him. He had sold his place In Pontiac the day before and was going to Sanilac township to visit relatives. Pottervlllo The animal world seems to "have it in for Dwight Backus. A cat attacked him first, biting him seriously on the hand.

He went to the barn to get a horse to take him to a doctor, when the horse kicked him in the back, breaking three ribs and causing Internal injuries. Flint Park Randall, who admitted having 180 quarts of liquor In his possession' which he brought Into Flint from Wyandotte, was given the heaviest sentence ever handed out for a prohibition violation In Genesee county. Judge F. W. Brenan sentenced him to from six months to a year In Ionia, with a recommendation of full time.

Kalamazoo Love for his little daughter, which landed Arthur Volets in prison on a charge of violating the federal liquor laws, has resulted In his commitment to Borgess hospital with a nervous ailment. The accused man, who was bound over to the federal grand jury at Grand Rapids, has been so worried about the possible fate of the eight-year-old girl In the event he Is sent to prison that he has not had any sleep since his arrest His condition became such (hat he was removed to the hospital for treatment as a nerve patient. 'j Saginaw Lorent Gazek, 35, is dead from drinking moonshine whisky, alleged to have contained wood alcohol. Albion M. Bruce Fish, 43, Adrian grain buyer, was killed by the Canadian flyer of the Michigan Central railroad.

Kalamazoo Jason" Hammond, 83 years old, a pioneer lumber dealer of Allegan, Is dead at the Kalamazoo State Hospital." Grass Lake Dell Teeples was so seriously injured when he stepped off a farm wagon backwards that he died a few hours later. Sterling Peter Gilbert, 76, who represented the Twenty-fifth senatorial district In the legislature of 1891, died at his farm home here. Charlotte P. J. Wilson is acting mayor of Charlotte since the resignation of Lawrence Dodge, who was Michigan's youngest mayor.

Constantine Military honors were accorded Elmer Royer, who died in France Oct. 26, 1918, when the body was brought here for burial. Kalkaska Reuben Leonard was killed by the accidental discharge of his rifle while hunting in the woods near Island lake, west of here. Lakevlew William MeaCb, 63, business man, was fatally burned by the explosion of the kerosene he was using in starting a fire In a stove. Menominee The new concrete dam of the M.

and M. Paper' Mill Co. here, 600 feet long and one of the largest In the state, has just been completed. Menominee The Menominee Sugar Beet Co. paid out $400,000 as the first installment of the returns from the farmers' sugar beet crop this season.

Mt. Pleasant The Columbia Sugar Co. has begun operations in Its new $2,000,000 plant here. The plant will turn out thousands of pounds of sugar daily. Petoskey George Near, awaiting trial for burglary, and Robert Johnson, for passing bogus checks, have sawed their way out of the Emmet County Jail.

Menominee Edward Cello, 40, was fatally injured in a lumber camp of the J. W. Wells near Sagola, when struck on the head by part of a falling tree. Caro Charles Murray, 83, a resident cf Vassar for 37 years, is dead He was commander of the G. A.

It. here for 15 years and also a former justice of the peace. Kalamazoo The Kalamazoo Traffic Association has been organized by officials of steam and electric roads entering the city and traffic managers of a number of factories. Grand Rapids Injuries received when struck by an automobile as he stopped his own car to help a fellow traveler whose machine had struck a woman, caused the death of Harry Sichterman, aged 32. Albion Carl A.

Mapes, whose appointment as solicitor of internal revenue was announced in Washington, is a native of Albion, and had been connected with various government departments for several years. Pontiac Mrs. Mary Olsen, teacher in Birmingham schools, this was arrested on a charge of assault preferred by her husband. She is paid to have beaten him with a stove poker, and smashed a mirror over his head. Ann Arbor Sir Auckland Geddes, British ambassador to the United States, has accepted an invitation to deliver the Commencement address at the University of Michigan, June 30, 1921.

His subject has not yet been announced. Iron River Joseph Konwinhky, a member of the volunteer fire department, was caught under an electric sign when it fell in a fire that destroyed a pool room and was so seriously injured that he died later in a hospital in Ironwood. Mt. Clemens B. F.

Anderson, a former employe of the Medes hotel, was arrested charged with attempted blackmail of a patron, it is alleged he wrote, demanding $50 on pain of telling the wife that her husband was courting a woman patron of the same hotel. Grand Rapids Resolutions indorsing the "Truth in Fabric" bill have been adopted by the executive com-mitee of the Kent county farm bureau. Members of the organization are said to have suffered severely because of backward tendencies of the wool market Ann Arbor Frederick W. Stevens has left for China, to become sole representative there of the 37 American banks, hearted by J. P.

Morgan forming part of the international Chinese banking consortium. Other countries represented are Great Britain, France and Japan. Vicksburg S. -Zuhle, a Kalamazoo telephone lineman, is In a serious condition at the hospital as the result of a fall when a 40-foot telephone pole snapped off at the base and precipitated him to the ground. His skull was fractured and It Is believed he suffered Internal Injuries.

Grand Rapids Gifts to a fund to fight freak legislation are asked of retail dealers in circulars sent out by officers of the Michigan Merchants' association. In these documents retail merchants are declared only to be asking that laws of the universe be permitted to take their proper course, and especially the allowing of the law of supply and demand to bring things back to normal. The regulation of business under the Lever act, the circulars say, has disturbed business, and. obtained nothing for the people at large. ueei ill era teas-tea The lives of most women are full of worrjr.

Men's troubles are bad enough, but women's ara worse. Worry makes women sick. It pulls them down, arid in their weakened condition they ara sub Ject to pains, aches, weakness, backaches, headaches and dizzy spells. Most women neglect their health, and for this they par the penalty. Any woman will nna that neglect does not pay.

A little more attention to health would brighten' up her life. If she asks her neighbors she finds that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription benefits ft woman's whole system. It not only acts upon the troubles and weaknesses peculiar to women, but is an all-round tonic that braces the entire body, overcoming nervousness, sleeplessness, headaches, diizinefla and a run-down condition. All druggists.

liquid or tablets. Ypsiulnti, Mich. "Motherhood left me with a bad case of feminine trouble. The doctor did not seem to help me. I heard of Dr.

Pierce's Favorite Prescription and it gave me relief at once. I took just a few bottles and was completely cured. I have wonderful faith in Dr. Pierce's medicine for women." Mrs. Luther Jones, 514 S.

Hamilton Street. VICTIMS Kidney, liver, bladder and uric add troubles are most dangerous be-cause of their insidious attacks. Heed the first warning they give that they need attention by taking COLD. MEDAL The world's standard remtdy for that disorders, will often ward off thssa dls-ssas and strengthen the body against further attacks. Three sizes, all druggists Uok far tha urn Cold MadaJ erary beat a4 accept mo tmilatias) Ilrlp Wanted, Mai Young man wanted to represent liritf New York corporation In thla city.

HiaaiNS. 280 Broadway, New Tork. Men's Weatherproof Itrovrn Corduroy Trou-aera. lielt tunnels and curt bottoms. Send today.

Globe Tailoring Dea Molnea. Ia. New Style or Ignorance. Mary had a new "fellow" and at the breakfast table members of the family who had given him the once over the evening before, were not backward about making comments. Father said: "Mary, why does the young man wear his hair so long?" Mary replied: "To tell the troth I don't know; it may be a new style or It may be Just plain ignorance." GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER The Remedy With a Record of Fifty, four Years of Surpassing Excellence, Those who suffer from nervous dyspepsia, constipation, Indigestion, torpid liver, dlzxlness, headaches, coming up of food, wind on stomach, palpitation and other Indications of fermentation and Indigestion will find Green's August Flower a most effective and efficient assistant In the restoration of nature's functions and a return te health and happiness.

There could be no better testimony of the value of this remedy for these troubles than the fact that Its use for the last fifty-four years has extended Intf many thousands of households all over the civilized world and no Indication of any failure has been obtained In all that time wher medicine could effect relief. Sold everywhere. Adv. Why7 "How to Live More Than One Hundred Years" is the Mtle of a recent book. Hut what, we desire to ask, would be the object? Philadelphia Public Ledger.

Back Given Out? There's surely some reason for that lame, achy back. Likely it's your kidneys. A cold or strain ofttimee congests the kidneys and slows them up. That may be the reason for that nagging backache, those sharp pains, that tired, worn-out feeling. You may have headaches and dizzy spells, too, with annoying bladder irregularity.

Use Doan i Kidney Pillt. They have helped thousands. Aak your neighbor! A Michigan Case Mrs. Nelfton Ruah-ford, 201 W. A Iron Mountain, says: "My back ached and was weak and lame.

Whan too pad over my back hurt worse. I out and work ba-jy came burdensome tr. Black- apota oftari" blurred my etshtl and made me dizzy. l', Mr kidneys weraV out of flx. Through a friend's advice I rave Doan's Kidney II lis a trial.

A few boxes rid ma of kidney complaint" CM Daeas a Any Store, tOe a Bom DOAN'S JftlV roSTUl.UILBURN CO, BUFFALO, N. Y. IWi-iJ LEAGUE ORDERS TROOPS TO VILNA BRITAIN AND SPAIN ASKED TO MAINTAIN ORDER DURING PLEBISCITE. SIX VICE-PRESIDENTS CHOSEN Committee On Disarmament And Man dates Carries Motion to Hold Sessions Open to Public. Geneva.

Great Britain and Spain will send military contingents to Vilna to maintain order during the "popular consultation of the inhabit ants." This announcement was made by the assembly of the League of Na tions. It was added that the French and Belgian governments already had agreed to dispatch contingents thither. The communication Issued avoids the use of the word "plebiscite" in connection with the dispatch of the troops. When Gen. Zellgouski entered Vilna with his outlaw troops some time ago he announced it as.

his pur pose to allow the inhabitants to de termine their government. Lord Robert Cecil and Iljalmar Branting at the first meeting of the committee on disarmament, economic blockade and mandates put through a motion that the session of the committee would be open to the public, thus profiting by the latitude left by the assembly for the holding of the committee deliberations behind closed doors or not. Much curiosity is evidenced here whether the example will be followed by other committees. The League of Nations assembly completed its organization by the election of six vice-presidents, who with the six chairmen of the committees elected form a sort of executive committee of the assembly. The vice-presidents are: Viscount Ishll, Japan; Honorlo Pueyrredon, Argentina; Sir George E.

Foster, Canada, and Rodrigo Octavlo, Brazil; II. A. Van Karnabeek, Holland, and Dr. Eduard Benes, Czecho-Slovakia. MAY REVOKE CABLE PERMIT State Department Insists on Privileges Accorded Other Governments.

Washington A veiled threat that the permits granted for the landing of Western Union cables in the United States will be revoked unless the company continues to accord the American government the same privileges that It accords the British and other governments in handling cable messages is contained in a formal statement issued by the state department. The Western Union Telegraph company, says an announcement issued by the state department, not only has refused to accept any government cable messages without prepayment of tolls, but also has refused to carry at the reduced government rate mes sages originating outside of the United States. CHARGES MADE BY CAPTAIN Says Coast Guard Stations Failed To Lend Aid During Storm. Sault Ste. Marie Capt.

Arthur Forbes, of the wrecked steamer Fran cis J. Widlar, charged the Crisp Point and Vermillion Coast Guard Stations with Inefficiency and lack of co-opera tion In the effort to rescue the Wld-lar's crew when the vessel grounded at Pancake Shoals. Rescue tugs had arrived and taken off the crew, Capt. Forbes declared, before any of the Coast Guard vessels came to their assistance. In response to the call for aid, he said, the stations had replied that they could not get boats away immediately, owing to ice-covered launchways.

Capt. Forbes added that flares from his vessel had not been seen by the Coast Guard crews, while points further distant had observed them. BOSTON POLICE OPPOSE UNION Federation Charter To Be Returned; Strike Conditions Removed. Boston More than 800 members of the Boston Policemen's union voted unanimously to instruct officers of the union to surrender its charter to the American Federation of Labor. A statement said "the conditions leading to the police strike of 1919 have in many ways been remedied and efforts are being made to improve them at all times." No members of the present police force are members of the union.

Mall Theft Reported $3,500,000. Council Bluffs, la. Loss in the Chi cago, Burlington Sc. Qulncy mall car robbery here will total at least according to a story published by a local newspaper. This, according to the newspaper, Vcame known when additional postoftlce officials came to assist local Investigators In a check of the Insurance on the stolen mall pouches.

One sack contained 800,000 In government bonds. Officers made a thorough search, without success MARKETS Furnished By U. S. Bureau of Markets WASHINGTON, D. C.

FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Northern potatoes steady f. o. b. at $1.80 to 2.05 per 100 lb. sacked, with weak tone prevailing at the close.

Carlots, Chicago, declined 10 to 15c, closing at 1.80 to 2. Jobbing prices in other mid-western markets steady at $2.15 to $2.50. Receipts light at western New York shipping points; round white stock steady at $2 to $2.10. Shipments from Maine and northern states decreasing. Apples receipts falling off at west ern New York shipping points; A-2 1-2 Baldwins $4.25 per bbl.

Baldwins and Yorks steady in consuming markets, mostly at $4 to $5. Reports of cold storage holdings Nov. 1 show a slight Increase in barreled stock, but an im portant decrease in number of boxes held. Stocks of barreled apples in storage 3,256,355 compared with 108,246 Nov. 1 last season and 2,914, 828 In 1918.

Boxed apple holdings November 1 were 2,716,734 boxes com pared with 4,244,245 last year and 2, 512,541 in 1918. Shipments of barrel ed and boxed apples decreasing rap- Idly. Sacked yellow onions about five cents lower per 100 lbs. at shipping points at closing $1.20 to $1.35. Phil adelphia 10 to 25c higher, Chicago up 10c, Cincinnati up 25 to 30c, consum Ing.

markets closing at a general range of $1.25 to $1.75. Shipments de creasing steadily. HAY AND FEED Market weak In east. Receipts more than ample to take care of requirements In that section. Buyers reluctant to buy because prevailing prices are still 100 per cent higher than before the war while prices of feed and grain are gradually declin ing to pre-war figures.

Production of hay seven million tons higher than five year average. Prices practically unchanged. No. 1 timothy New York, Philadelphia, $31; Chicago, $34; No. 1 alfalfa Omaha, $25; No.

1 prairie Omaha, Chicago, $24. Wheat feeds unchanged. Linseed and cottonseed meal weak and lower. Demand for all feed3 light. Corn feeds In fair demand.

Movement good. Jobbers underselling mills $1 to $2 on linseed meal. Stocks of high protein feeds heavy, normal for other feeds. Quoted bran $31, Minneapolis $40.50, Philadelphia middlings $29, Minneapolis, $39.50, Philadelphia, Red Dog $53, Duluth. Linseed meal $49.50 f.

o. b. mills. GRAIN Wheat markets displayed a steady tone and advancing tendency until the 17th when reported purchase of three cargoes Canadian wheat weakened confidence in prices and recessions set in on the 17th and 18th. Great weakness in corn was additional influence.

Flour stocks in hands of Important bakers and all re tailers small. Heavy stocks wheat at Fort William, Ontario cannot be moved as farmer owners are holding. Stocks of wheat small at American terminal markets. On the 18th December corn closed at 70c, New low point since 1916, caused by break of five to eight cents In Kansas City cash corn market. Corn market under influence of new crop.

Cash demand slow but prices are at big premiums over December future. New No. 2 white corn eight cents over December future on the 18th. No's. 1 and 2 old mixed ten cents premiums, yellow thirteen cents, white eleven cents.

For the week Chicago December wheat unchanged at $1.80 5-8, December corn down 6 1-4, closing at 70c. Minneapolis December wheat lost 4c closing at $1.66 5-8, Kansas City December 5c at $1.72 3-4, Winnipeg 1 l-2c at $1.90. LIVE STOCK AND MEATS Excessive runs and poor average Quality produced sharp declines in the cattle market during the week. Depreciation ranged 50c on yearling Bteers to $1.75 per 100 lbs, on west erns and medium native beef steers. Cows and heifers broke 75c to $1.25.

Fat ewes declined $1, fat and feeding lambs averaged 50c down. Hogs lost about 80c per cwt. Nov. 18 Chicago prices top hogs $12.50, bulk $11.90 to $12.10, top yearlings, steers $17, good beef steers $14.75 down, heifers $12.25, cows $10, feeder steers $10.50, westerns $11.75, veal calves $15, fat lambs $12, feeding lambs $12.50, ewes $5.25. With the exception of veal and pork loins; the fresh meat mar kets were weak and lower.

Beef and mutton averaged $2 lower with lambs showing an extreme decline of $3 per cwt. Veal about $1 higher. Some weights of pork loins ranged $1 to $2 higher than a week ago. Lure of City, Divorce Cause. Kalamazoo The lure of.

the city has drawn hundreds of southwestern Michigan boys away from the farms, but the first divorce known to have been granted because of Its effect on country girls was that given to Daniel Lindsley. Their married life was one of continual dissension, Lindsley told the court, because he wanted to live In the country and his wife In sisted on moving to the city where she could give parties and go- to the movies. COULDN'T STAND WORK UNTIL HE TOOK A TONIC Lost 20 Pounds In the Army-Appetite Fell Off and He Became Weak, Rundown, TOOK HYP0-C0D KNOWING FORMULA WAS GOOD "I was In the Army and exposed to all sorts of weather, and to that, always having an Inside Job, it nearly put me down and out I wasn't, used to the exposure and grind and lost twenty pounds In weight. My appetite fell off and I became all weak and run down. I surely looked bad and nights even after I got back on the Job I couldn't sleep and would toss and roll half the night.

My appetite didn't come back either and my digestion was upset, but Just as soon as I started on a bottle of Earle's Hypo-Cod I began hitting on all cylinders and feeling tip-top, declared N. Clarke, a popular pharmacist and man-ager of Cunningham's Drug Store, 155 Woodward Detroit, Mich. "I picked out Hypo-Cod because 1 know the formula Is right, and to shew how strong and quick It is from the first dose my appetite picked up and. my digestion was so good In a couple days I could even eat anything even Array beans, laughingly asserted thla endorser. "I began sleeping better, too, and feeling better all over, and today I feel as good as I ever did in my life.

It has my endorsement and I recommend it to everyone needing a continued Mr. Clarke, Ph. who has many friends that say he looks like a different man now. When a regular druggist selects a tonic from among nil the various ones on the shelf to take himself, one may be quite sure that the formula Is right. That he knows the people make It are absolutely reliable and then when he gets results even better than he has a right to expect, he Is sure to be enthusiastic.

Drop in at the drug store tonight and nad over the formula which is on each bottle. Take home a bottle for the whole family to try. We sre sure you will be delighted the way It works, nnd with its pleasant taste. Earle's Hypo-Cod Is sold here by all good druggists, and the leading druggists In all nearby towns. Adv.

Dreaming of Skating. To dreum of skating denotes that your success Is very uncertain and depends largely upon your efforts. To Fee others skate denotes a pleasant time. To buy them, honor. ASPIRIN Name "Bayer" on Genuine Warning 1 Unless you see the Dime "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for twenty-one years and proved safe by millions.

Take Aspirin only as told In the Bayer package for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Ilheumatlstn, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacldester of Sallcycacid. Adr.

Cost the Same. "What Is the difference between a luxury and a cecessity?" "There is no difference at all nowadays." Detroit Free Press. USE "DIAMOND DYES" Dye right I Don't risk your material In a poor dye. Each package of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye a new, rich, fadeless color Into old garments, drapeTles, cover ings, everything, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods. Buy "Diamond Dyes" no other kind then perfect results are guaranteed.

Druggist has "Diamond Dyes Color Card" 10 rich color Adr- His Experience. Sllllcus I am thoroughly convinced that all women are the same. Cynlcus Don't you believe It Even one woman Isn't the same for any con siderable length of time. Morning -J2 KeeoYour EVes Clnn Clears Hlthy W. N.

DETROIT, NO. 47-1123..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Yale Expositor Archive

Pages Available:
12,348
Years Available:
1894-1922