Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| THE ARMY Citing the ease with which mob violence suddenly demoralized the| city of Boston during the riots of 1919, the Secretary of War, in his address at the graduating exercises of the United States Military Aca- demy last week, stressed his bellef that, under certain conditions, it is; but a step from civilization to bar- barism. It took, he continued, centuries to reciaim the world from barbarism. but civilization is secure only as long as organize governments are secure and the law of the land is based on , Justice and right, and behind the law is the power to enforce it. That the civilization of the world! rests on no surer foundation thdn did the civilization of Boston, was an- other belief expressed by the War ‘Secretary, for, as he reminded his West Point hearers, “if it were not for the restraining force of the mili- tary establishments of the nations of the world, an indescribable state of chaos would resuit.” Following this line of thought. the Secretary stated he_had “no patience With the oft-repeatéd assertions that the United States does not need an army,” and averred it “just as reason- able to say that New York, Bostom, Uhicago and our other large cities do not need a police force” — . Assuming, sald the War Secretary, that we are to maintain an army, whether large or small, there is no stlon or difference of opinion as to If it does not consist of 1is quality. rore than a thousand men, it shoyld he an army of the best possible 1tousand men which can be develop- put you cannot have the best y. or even a good army, however @ the individual elements which 1t may be, unless it is ly commanded. Therefore, ye than a hundred years ago our rnment established ~this academy, %nd has maintained it at the highest Possible state of efficiency for the o of training men to lead its ary forces.” = Pointing to radica precent method: of modern warfare, . Secretary stated that today a military man must be a scientific man. trained thoroughly In every branch .of his profession. so that when he Teaches the higher ranks he shall be competent to perform duties in any one ot the arms of the service, es- pecially in the fighting branches. changes in the Change in Uniform Regulations. An extension of authority for the wearing of civilian clothes and the official changes in uniform regula- tlons, effective last week, came as a pleasant but somewhat sudden sur- prise to members of the Army. Hereafter the wearing of the uni- form by members of the Army not on duty with troops will be optional. ex- cept that the uniform will be worn when attending functions of an offi- clal character. Authority to wear civilian dress does not extend. how- ever, to members of the Army serv- on foreign stations. 1o o Neearing of the uniform by members of the Army not on duty with troops or only technically on duty with troops, the command of a corps mander, or the commander of trict of Washington, will be rected by such commande! The order, as directed by tary of War, definitely prescribes that the unifo will be worn by “all members on duty with troops during duty hours: by all members of the Army at all times ‘When on a military post or Teseria- tion while stationed thereat, except while oing therefrom or returning thereto.” Exception is made, as here- tofore, to members engaged in ath- Jetic sports, for which clothing ap- propriate to the game will be worn. or who are under area com- the dls- as di- Medical School for Brooklyn. A school for the instruction-of off- cers of the Army Medical Department has been recommended by the sur- geon general. It is proposed that the school be located in the medical sec- tion of the general intermediate depot of the Army supply base at Brooklyn. N. Y., and that the student body shall comprise about ten officers from the ARMY AND NAVY NEWS By Maj. Arthur G. Duncan, U. S. R. of commisston. medical department of the Regular Army. The number of students to be in at- tendance from the Natlonal Guard and Officers’ Reserve Corps will de- pend upon the appropriations that bacome avallable each year for that purpose. ~ World war experience taught the great importance of train- ing in the procurement of medical supplies. The maintenance of such & school will, it is claimed, require the assignment of only one additional utficer on duty at the depot. 1 TTHE NavY ] It is not generally known that the purpose of the recent national elimi- nation balloon race at Milwaukee was to enable the Aero Club of America o to select three teams to send to Switzerland for the international race for the Gordon Bennett cup, taken by the Swiss from the Belgians at Birmingham, Ala, in the fall of 1921. In these events the meterological conditions have a great deal to do with the racing problem. Aside from peing a skiliful free balloon pilot, one must select altitudes for drifting with the winds that will constantly give him good ground speed and carry him away from the point of departure. Racing pilots usually draw distance circles every fifty miles from the place of departure, using & large chart, to enable them to quickly judge their distance at any time dur- ing the race. As a rule, the pllot brings forward the line of his ground course hourly on this chart, having obtained his ground speed by ground reckoning instruments and his dis tance by reference to the compass. It a pllot is not making distance from center, he is not worried If he is running on or parallel with a circle while searching up or down for an- other favorable wind, but when the wind dles out or changes so as to bring his course Inside of a circle or back to- ward the starting point, he decld: quickly whether he will suffer temporary loss of distance in the hope of eventually getting favorable cur- rents or come down with the distance he has made. In a recent report of the race made at Mllwaukee on the afternoon of May 31, it was stated by the writer, Lieut. Willlam F. Reed, jr., M. 8. N. R. F., whose observations are recorded above, that there was on that after- noon perhaps the widest range of winds to seleot from of any balloon race ever held in this cgunfry. Lieut. Commander Norff€et, U. 8. N., was permitted to demonstrate what a helium-filled balloon would do without entering the race, it being the first time a non-explosive gas had ever been used in a free balloon. The only advantage found was that helium being non-explosive, it was perfectly safe for the occupants of that balloon to smoke or do cooking wnile In the alr. - Effect Economy in Stores. It has been requested by the pay- master general of the Navy that the commanders-in-chief direct that ac- tion be taken by all vessels to re- duce to a minimum the amount of stock being carried under the naval supply account and in the ship's stores, in order that the government be protected from avoidable losses ‘which would result from the dispos: by public sale of large quantities of suppli and stores remaining on hand when decommissioning actually occurs. Request is made that excess items be listed and circularized in order to permit of any possible transfer to of vessels present or to commis- stores ashore. This procedure is ly important for vessels now unde- orders to be placed out Medal for Life-Saving Feat. Acting Secretary Roosevelt has commended Troy Chester Miller, ma- chinists' mate, first class, U. S. N. attached to the U. S. S. Dixle, and recommended him to the Secretary of the Treasury for the award of a life-saving medal in recognition of his brave and heroic rescue of R. L. Fullord, a seaman, second class, from drownifig oft the piers of the navy yard at Charleston, S. C. Running after a ball, Fullord fell overboard and was carried down stream, unable to swim back against the ebb tid Realizing the situation Miller dove iito the river when Ful- lord had drifted to a distance of about thirty yards below the pler and pushing a cork ring buoy ahead of him, soon reached the drowning man, gulding him into a slip out of the strong tide, and assisted him until both were picked up by the ship's Wwherry. CANADA ACCEPTS PACT. Accedes to U. S.-British n)'operty Transfer Regulation. Accession of Canada to the conven- tion of March 2, 1899, between the United States and Great Britain, pro- viding the regulation and transfer of real and personal property, was brought about yesterday at the State Department throught ~ signature of such an agreement by Sir Auckland Geddes, the British ambassador, and Secretary Hughes. Ambassador Geddes returned to ‘Washington Friday night for a brief stay before leaving for the summer. He will speak at the Brown University commencement next Wednesday and then go to Dark Harbor, Me., where Lady Geddes and their children now are.” With Lady Geddes he will sail June 28 from Boston for home, the children remaining at the summer embassy at Dark Harbor. ORDER CENTERS LIQUOR. Stock of 304 Warehouses to Be Put Under Fewer Roofs. Regulations providing for the con- centration of liquor now stored in 304 government warehouses into a limited number of storehouses were issued yesterday by the Treasury. Under plans announced by the pro- hibition unit it Is proposed eventual- ly to concentrate all the liquor held in bond In the country into twenty or thirty warehouses in different sec- tions. According to the unit's latest figures there are 37.000,000 gallons of liquor on the entry gauges of the warehouses, but officlals declared it was belleved evaporation and shrink- age would reduce this figure to 2 000,000 gallons. Selection of the warehouses into which the liquor is to be concentrated will be made by the prohibition unit after applications have been filed by warehouse men in accordance with the new regulations, which provide for a bond of $100,000 in each case. _ CHILD HURT IN CRASH. In an effort to avold a collision with another automobile at 5th and O streets yesterday afternoon, Mrs. Louise Cobb, wife of J. M. Cobb, Bladensburg, Md. drove her automo- blle against a tree. Mrs. Cobb sus- tained painful injuries to her mouth, while Katherine Louise Cobb, her four-year-od daughter, sustained a fracture of the skull. Howard Cobb, a two-year-old son, who accompanied his mother and sister, escaped injury. Mrs. Cobb was in the city on a shop- ping expedition, and on her way homeward she stopped at O Street market. Two blocks east of the market it became necessary for her to make a quick turn in an effort to avold a collision, and the accident to her car resulted. ‘The mother was taken to Garfield Hospital, where she was treated for injuries and shock, and the injured child taken to Children's Hos- pital, where surgeons found it neces- sary to perform an operation to re- lieve the pressure on her brain. 4 sk Your Doctor UR family physician will tell you that any The U. S. S. Jacob Jones Post, No. 2. American Legion, with the Federa- tion of Women's Clubs, will observe Citizenship day by a patriotic rally at Keith's Theater July 4, at 10'a.m. The regular opening ceremony used at post meetings of the American Legion will be used on this occasion. The ceremony will be conducted by Commander Lois M. Beach. A pro- 8ram, consisting of several musical numbers, an address and the awarding of prizes by Department Commander Watson B. Miller for the best essays on the subject’ of ‘‘Citizenshi open to contestants under the age of twenty-one, is to ‘be given. Com- mander Lois M. Beach, Ollle M. Steele of the U. S. S."Jacob Jones Post, No. 2, and Mrs. Frizzell, president of Dis- trict of Columbia Federation of Wom- en's Clubs, are in charge of the ex- ercises. Co-operating with them are the following popt members: S. Kol- hos, Martha E. Whitcomb, Hope Knickerbocker, Viola Benedict, Helen G. O'Neal, Helen McCarty, Raye G. Fenwick, Roxana B. Willard and Kate Clagett. ~ Boxes wliil be reserved for President Harding, Vice President Coolidge and members of the Army and Navy, G. A. R., Confederate Vet- erans, veterans at’ Walter Reed and other hospltals, the District Commis- sloners, Chamber of Commerce, Ki- wanis and Rotary clubs, Federation of Women's Clubs and the American Legion. 1In the graduating classes of the Washington Law School and the Washington School of Accountancy, Wwere eleven United States Veteran: Bureau trainees. Melvin Dwight Wil- son, president of his class; Welford Jackson Massie, vice president of his class, and Wesley Williken Mewer, have finished their training in law and have been awarded degrees. Joseph Carrol Behen, Jean T. Dinger, Emery Robert Flaherty, Oscar Mayo Lewis, Clarence Lee Mitchell, Ward Cheever, and Joseph Heneschel have| completed courses {in commercial sclence, and have won bachelor of science’ degrees. ; The second annual convention of the National Disabled _Soldlers’ League {s to be held June 27 to 30 at Philadelphia. A pyrothenic exhibi- tion at the National League base ball park, portraying land and naval bat- les, has been arranged as a_feature of the convention program. Reduced transportation rates have been grant- ed to delegates by railroads. The winner of the patriotic essay contest conducted by the J. Francls Quisenberry Unit, American Women's Legion, will be announced at the Busi- ness High School commencement ex- ercises Tuesday. A prize of $20 will be presented the winner by Mrs. C. G. MacCartee, president of the unit. Lieut. Col. Robert I. Rees addressed members of Lincoln Post, No. 17, the American Legion, at its last meet- ing. He spoke first of the origin of the legion in a meeting at Parls called to raise the morals of the American expeditionary forces. fol- lowing the Amistice. Watson Miller, department commander of the Dis- trict, also spoke. Announcement was made that the post expects to get its women's aux- iliary started by June 30. Members have made arrangements to have a radio recelving sct at the next meet- Ing, capable of recetving from Pitts- burgh and?Chicago. Costello Post of the American Le- gion is planning an athletic carnival, to be held July 4. at Georgetown Uni- versity Fleld. The program includes bicycle races for boys under fifteen, base ball game between Costello Post and George E. Killeen Post, flag rais- ing, band concert and speeches on the bonus question, track meet from 1:30 until 3:30 and then another ball game with the Costello nine facing the Knickerbockers. Following are the events listed in the track meet: One-hundred-yard dash, 440-yard dash, half-mile relay, each man to run 220 yards; mile re- lay, speclal 880-yard invitation, half- mile relay, open to clubs, and an open mile re! The Ladles’ Auxillary to National Capltol Post, Veterans of Forelgn Wars, presented an entertalnment Friday night at Epiphany parish hall, for the purpose of raising additional VETERANS OF GREAT WAR funds for its work among the disabled service men_in Washington hospitals. Those who participated in the en- Epliphany Church Miss_Virginia Amberg, Louls Stapples, Wilbur Healy, g:tl 58 Katherine McFarland and Miss Loulse tertainment were: Boys' Choir, Elsie Miller, Alvin Thompson, Snyder. The members of the committee in Mrs. Margaret Jacon- Elizabeth Jelts, Miss Hallle Statsburg and Mrs. charge were: Eon, Mrs. Ohleson, Pough. Mrs. Robley D. Evans Post, No. 4, American Legion, celebrated its tl’x‘!;d e ladies of the auxiliary also joined the post In celebrating their second anni- business meeting of the post a buffet supper During the course of were made by Madison L. Hill, post com- mander, and Harry J. Davis, past post president was tendered the thanks of the post for the excellent anniversary Thursday evening. versary. After the short was served. the evening brief addresses commander. Mrs. Waller, of the auxiliary, arrangements. A large Dbirthday | third ennual encampment of the Vet d e et s cake was one of the supper attrac-|erans o ‘oreign Wars, to be he! squadrons, antic fleet, has been or- tions. e eatile, Wash. August 14-1, will | déred to this city for duty In the of-(G®: and to permanent station at The post is making preparations |be a three-day “old-timers'" celebra. | fice of naval operations, Navy De- ‘Walter Reed General Hospital, this for the membership drive to be held | tlon to commemorate the days when partment. clty. the 7 S0 on July 1,throughout the country at the request of.National Commander Hanford MacNider, and it is hoped that & materlal increase will be the result. Robley D. Evans Post is the only post meeting in the southeast section of the city. Meetings are held on the first and third Thursdays of each month and all ex-service men al cordially invited to join. of the legion are invited to attend at any time. Although complete returns have not been received, present indications are that the Memorial day poppy cam- paign of the Veterans of Foreign Wars was one of the most succesaful undertakings ever attempted by that organization. The money eollected is to be used in furthering the wel- fare work of the organization, and thousands of disabled or needy for- mer fighting men will benefit thereby. The Veterans of Foreign Wars con- duct a national service bureau here, which co-operates with the United States Veterans' Bureau, and there mre many branches of this bureau throughout the country. The money derivea from the poppy sale will be disbursed through these agencies and through the individual posts of the organization. Alaska. those stirring beginning are being made. Rear Admiral One of the features of the twenty- | - Beattle was the gateway to Alaska. One section of the city s belng ar- ranged to have the same outward ap- pearance as it had when the gold- rushers stampeded through this city on their way to th “Old-timers’ e |ing the arrangements, and the af- fair will be one of the most pictur- esque ever staged. Monday, Lincoln Park, Navy Y;_rd ldilnd. e e uesday. Judiclary Park, Mari: Band. NAYLOR ROAD CLOSED. arine Band” 0 e Trafic to Halt Three Days Be-| | Bapa .~ —ov¢ Independent tween D. C. Line and Good Hope. Naylor road southeast between Good Hope road and the District line will be closed to traffic for three days, tomorrow, L. R. Grablll, county roads, suggests_that persons going to Silver Hill, Md. tour by way of Suitland. ORDERED TO DUTY HERE. commanding BAND CONCERT. The following is a schedule of the band concerts to be play- ed in some of the parks, under the charge of the office of public — 1 gold fields of who remember s are superintend- bufldings and grounds, dur- ing the week, commencing Monday: Thursday, Grant Circle, Marine and. Friday, Garfield Park, Com- munity Center Band. Saturday, White House Grounds, Marine Band, while repsirs| | The concerts from Monday until Friday, inclusive, are to be given from 7:30 to'9 p.m. superintendent of | | That in the White House Grounds to be given from 5 to should de- $:307p.m. ON WALTER REED STAFF. Ashley H. Robert- altimore, thell demtecyerls o Capt. John 8. Glbson, Medical Corps, has been assigned to temporary” duty at Fort McPherson, 23 DROP IN YEAR’S EXPENSES Governemnt Paid Out in 1T 12 Months $3,177,000,000. Fifteen days from' the end of, the . to a cloge fiscal year which comes June 30, ordinary expenditures of the government has been $3,177,000,000, as compared with $4,804,008.000 for the first*eleven and a half months of th last fiscal year, while ordinary receipts, had aggregated $3,i62,000,000, as against :.,.uuu.uuu,u«» for a similar period last rear. These figures were contained in the.,. statement of federal finances as of June 15, issued yesterday by the Treasury. Public debt receipts for the current fiscal year aggreguted $4.933.000,000, against $7,276,000,000 a ago, while public debt enditures totaled $5,620,000,000, compared with §i,706,000,- 000 during the correspunding period last year. — e ORDERED TO FORT HOUSTON. Col. Charles McK. Saltzman, S Corps, has been Telieved from duty in the office of the assistant secretary of war, this city, and ordered to Fort Sam Houston, Tex., for duty as sth Corps area signal officer. He will re- lieve Col. Daniel J. Carr, Signal Corps’ who i8 ordered to Baltimore, Md, for duty as 3d Corps area signal officer KODAK —as you go! —record the happy incidents of your vacation on lasting picturss. TAKE A KODAK WITH YOU. At all Peoples Drug Stores you’ll find a pleasing stock of Kodaks and a full line of Fresh Eastman Films, with an salesperson to serve you as you desire. ples be your Kodak Serv- ice Station.” Bring Us Your Films —for developing and printing. cient process we produce the clearest and most beautiful pictures possible and yet charge you no more for the superior work. RN - P o Y number of disorders can be blamed on ice refrie geration. As ice melts away into nothing, the experienced “Let Peo- Noge Né&i Through an ef- Special Sale--Sino Cigars . §ino (ambassadors) mild, long-filled choice cigar, with an imported Sumatra wrapper of unusual quality—you can’t Specially priced now at all our stores, help but like them. 4 for 25c. Box of 50—$3.00 3604 SLN.-W. No.7-1160Sa.N. W. BPERL No.9-31st& MSt.N.W. Ng.:10-180% & Colambia Rood No: 11-653 Pa. Ave.S.E Glacier temperature goes up, up, tp — bacteria are roused to action and multiply by the thousands in the damp, moisture-laden air which only sluggishly circulates through the food chambers. Drinking water is con- taminated; the unsanitary drain-pipe is 2 menace to | health. pl But the intense, dry and crispcold air of Lipman Automatic Refrigeration floods your ice-box and guards, ins:=ad of jeopardizes the family circle. The most pre- cious 2nd most perishable food commodity keeps whole- some and ‘resh for days. (Milk and cream have been kept sweet for as long as 2 month. Your own exper- ience will tell you that neither of these foods will keep from souring, even when kept on a block of ice itself.) Fruits show no soft spots; lettuce keeps as crisp as the day it was bought. And besides Lipman Automatic Refrigeration permits freezing of a daily supply of pure, crystal-clear cubes ofice from your , favorite spring water, Investigate Lipmax Automatic Reffigeration to] | day. Make us prove that it will safe-guard health, ! save food, and make better buying possible — all at a cost much less than that which goes with the use of ice. Can be put to work for you in a single day. Mutual Service Bureau, Inc. 1411 New York Ave. N.W. Washington, D.C. Sale of Toilet Soaps Dermatone Soap, 1Pe, . .....8 for BOe At the First Sign of a Freckle —Apply Barnard's Com- plexion Cream—for it pos- itively removes them, and glve! to the skin a ruddy, ealthy glow and satinlUke smoothness. At all Peoples Drug Stores, trial size, 35c. $1.00 Size, Special, 89c. This Handy Sterno Outfit 59c —a convenient Sterno Canned Heat Outfit com- plete and ready to use. Ideal for camping, pic- nics, etc., and very spe- clal at 59¢. Toilet Articles Azurea Face Powder...... Pebeco Tooth Paste....... Nadine Face Powder-. .. .... Java Rice Face Powder. ... Dame Nature Face Powder. Mavis Talc. ...... Mary Garden Talc. Johnson’s Talc. ....covnvonne 35¢c Cutex Nail Preparations. . 38¢ Lustrite Nail Preparations. . ......29¢ m Ol a2 Heoward’'s “Veg- 13¢, 011" 3 for 35e De Miracle Depilatory 53c, 89c, $1.75 El Rado Depilatory. ....... 49c¢, 89¢ Neet Deodérant ..69¢ Odorono. . . veeeeess.25c, 45¢c, 83¢c Nadinola Cream.. . .. . .42¢ Stillman’s Freckle Cream. .. .. .42¢ Elcaya Vanishing Cream. ... . .38¢ Frostilla .23¢ Azurea Vegetal..... < leisieezareiereic STLLS) Pinaud’s Lilac Vegetal. ...... .95¢ Coty’s L'Origan Extract, bulk, ox... .$2.18 Moulsified Cocoanut Oil. ...... .3%¢ Hays’ Henna Shampoo. ...... Zarr’n Gray Hair Color Restorer 45¢, 89¢ White Dressing Combs*® Special, 49¢ —First Quality White Dressing Combs—specially priced at 49e. \ Welch’s Grape Juice Iy e et 29c Pint §7¢ Quart Bunion Had to Be Opened Every Few Days “My bunion gathered and I had to open it every few days,” says Mrs. Adam Ramsay. “Thought sure I would have to have it operated on, but the use of Fairyfoot did the work.” Don’t suffer any longer. Use Falryfoot. It stops the pain in- stantly and removes the whole bunion, layer by layer. , Nothing ever like it. Try it. We guar- antee it. in your house. priced right. a smooth, Full Pound Violet Borated Talc, 25¢ Household ‘Rubber Gloves Special, 48c Pair Blades or rheumatism works wonders— Try This Delightful New Shampoo —contains henna but will mot_color the hair. Simnly gives it the glos: and luster and fluf. | ness every woma: il desires, does Henna Foam $1.10 Tanlac. . Musterole. . . . Nuxated Iron. Nujol “A Shower in Your Bathroom ---Installed in a Minate”’ Know the delights of a shower bath this summer—have your “Knickerbocker” Bath Spray They form a complete, ready. efficient shower bath in one mo- ment by merely attaching to the “faucet. Three popular numbers in Knickerbocker Snrays ara priced specially at $1.39, $1.80 and $2.89. Monarch Bath Sprays are spe- cially priced at 70c, 88c and $1.18, “Geta-lt,” to-use cleanser, having a del not gritty F-E-I Tooth Paste.” Buy one special cut price of 45c and' get one free. $1.00 Value, 45¢ Safety Razor Durkam Duplex Safety Rasor Blades, package 35¢ Blades, package.. Fletcher’s Castoria. Lime Water, pint. Marmola Tablets. Pape’s Cold Compound Epsom Salts, pound. Freezone, for corns Father John’s Medicine. . Jad Salts. . .........ccc.... Key’s Aseptine, A Complete Radio Set All Ready to Install $15.00 Come let us tell you how simple and easy this com- plete little receiving set may be set up in any room $15.00 covers the total cost, including the antannae and headphones. it at our new radio department in our Store No. 2, Seventh and E streets northwest. We carry in stock a large line of radio equipment— Will tell you all about A 50c Tube of Tooth Try This Delightful and Health-Giving Dentif~ice Dr. Ellis' F-E-I Tooth Past, ntains the proper medicament to combat infection, eliminates “acid mouth” and s health to the entire mouth, yet it is a delightful- bod B The Tonic for Brain Workers Graham’s Compound Syr- up of Hypophosphites is a re- freshing tonic for brain and nerve workers—it tones the system and takes away that lazy “Spring Fever” feeling. Pint Bottle, 6 9c Special, “Hands of Velvet” See Peoples lowered 1 Singl R b P . prices on Safety Razor n a dingle ‘ubs f‘ain Blades. Night Right Au)ay Glllette Safety Rasor Musco Rubbing e g el jonace S on e glves prompt re- Auto-Strop Safety R tion softens and 2 for sore mus- zor Blades, 5 for 39¢c; soothes chapped 5 8PTains, | Gem " satery | Masor 4 rougbensd 1ises, ete. Blades, package...... 3 .unds and face. Men like it for Read; Saf =p a bottle handy. E'l::l.r m‘.‘ae’-. .-el:-:e' 27e o & Li = o Enders Safciy Rasor 35¢ & 65¢ Home Remedies 75c Alophen Pills, 100s. . . .. ........49¢ Alcorub Rubbing Alcohol. . . .. 75c Analgesique.Baume Bengue. Bromo Seltzer. . Bromo Quinine. .. ...53¢c ....10c, 23c, 43c, 89¢c ...23¢c 60c California Syrup Fige. .. . .43¢c Carter’s Little Liver Pills. . . . ..15¢ Doan’s Kidney Pills. . .. ... ...49¢ 29c, 49¢ .49¢, 89¢ Pizo’s Couzh Remedy. ... ... ve..29¢c Pazo Pile Ointment. . ....... ..49¢ .29¢ Phenolax Wafers. ........... ...23¢c Pinkham’s Vezetable Compound. . . . ..89¢ Pinex Cough Remedy........ ...49¢ Sal Hepatica. ... ... .........23c, 45¢c, 89¢ . .49c, 89¢c Gude’s Pepto-Mangan. ...... .....93c ek ....69¢ o .. .40c, 75 ois.0.0. nal’ ...59¢ ".