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BLIZZARD RAGES ENTIRE SEABOARD New York, Conn. and Mass, Get Brunt of Storm New York, Feb, 4 (®—The entire winds. In Flori carried on for the vietims of yoster- duy's twister which killed one baby, injured 50 persons and did property danmage of nearly $1,000,000, Only one ship was reported in dis. 1f sea, That was the Manches- Produe bound from Halifdx Manchester, relief work was tro ter for The German Tanover, wirelessed Halis fax that she was hurrying fo «the freighter's aid. Cars Keep Going north and central & bLlunketed in result ot storm which ha from northeast Georgia o the wings of a heuvy gale, Two barges were sunk Jersey with a probabl lives and shipping ter from all points before heav high winds and thick w Pacific coast 1 Jashed the worst s in which is driving all ter. Miners und business men of the Wyoming Valley, Pennsylvania, hive been driven to the min for fuel, in the midst snow tall 8o severe Atlantle snow tod weaboard y as the swep! Mulng on ofl Now | 1088 of vight urried 1o shel ong the and i coust trom Tho | of o v by recent W ong ston| ¥t shipping to shel- culm banks of the heavy | was the combination of the driving snow and . near-gale that all air mal' service was sus- pended between New Yopk and Chi- cago, transcontinental mail from San Franciseo was carried by ajrph far as Chicago and tast trains, Between 1o transferred uy to 8,000 and 10,000 men wore employed in New York clty this mornihg clearing the heavily drifted strects. Portland, Me, re- ported snow throughout the state and the general storm area extended west to the Great Lakes, One de has been reported in New York be cal of the storm. Comparatively moderate tempera turcs have been ofiset by high wind, carrying hiting broadsides of sleety flak s, ; outhern states have reported heavy rains. The northwest also has been visited by storms and high Quick Relief! A pleasant effective syrup, 35¢ and 60¢ sizes And externally, use PISO'S ‘Throat and Chest Salve, 35¢ STOMACH BAD! INDIGESTION Chew a few Pleasant ‘Tablels, Instant Stomach Relief! The moment “Pape’s Diapepsit reaches the stomach all distress gocs. Lumps of indigestion, ga rtburn, sourness, fullness, flatu- paipitation, vanish, Sase yonr stomach now! Correct digestion nd acidity for a few cent Druggists sell millions of | packages. No More Piles the | Thousands Bless Dr. Leanhardt, Physician Who Discovered This ! commuters | Providenee, with ! not | Royal Hineh, | Hampshire Surface curs, elevated and su- Burban - railw officials reported only slight delays on transit lines' ngmented by spe tntervals, halped ks elear. Suburban ad more diffculty get- ting from tholr homes to stations than from the to their offices, Constwise shiping not w0 fortunate. Several thousunds porsons cre snowhound on stcamers which were forced an anchor in Long Island sound to await a lifting of the storm which was so thick over the water that it approximated a heavy fog. Pour steamors which left New York early last night for Ngw Iing- land ports today were anchored within a hundred yards ef one an- other just beyond City islund, Among these were the Iall River lin five hundred Fall River, Mass.; liner Concord, for with one hundred pas- Fall River lino Pequonnock, for New Bedford, Mass., und the. Mohawk, for Providence, R. 1. Another coas wise the Richard Peck did r pier on River ause of the transatlantic liner, the liner Orduna from was expected today. loomed oft Ambrose Channel Lightship at five o'clock but later | was lost to view in the storm. Sev- | eral ships from South Atlantic South American ports were reported lio as nearing port. ins at Kkeep the tr lutter places Wi sengers bound for the Colonia) Providence, sengers, and two freighters, the steamer, leave h last night be Only one Mail outhampton, Mass Snow Covered Boston, IFeh. 4 (Pl—A lering varying in depth inches in western M tts to an inch in Maine had been spread over New and early today by a {storm which entered the arca about I midnight accompanicd by northeast galc ports from all sections of N 1 indicated that the continning, and weather forecasters said it probably would develop into the heaviest snowfall of the winter. The moderate femperatures pro- vailing made the snow soft and sticky and consequence frans- portation was hampered somewhat ilroad companics reported th ins on the longer runs were delayed but that there was no seri- ous interruption of traf In the cities the eclectric lines suffered from drifting snow and blocked switches. In Boston many of the schools mained closed hecause of the driving galo and the difficulties of trans- portation for the pupils. Teleeraph companies reported wires down the Cape Cod region hecause of the heavy snow. reenfield, Mass, reported a snowfall of a foot at § o'clock this morning. There were six inches on the level i North Adams and fivo in Tittsfield, Country roads western Massachusetts wero blocked es with deep drifts and trol- rvice in the towns was ham- SNOW cOove om six 1clinse weather burean reported t fall fn Maine in Vermont two inches. a two-inch fall, land and#southern the early preciptation rain and sleet. The s ave and ha was ons and N while in ¥ Ts Massachusetts ade Worcester: Paralyzed Worcester, Ma Ieb. 4 With traffic on all suburban bus lnes paralyzed. and but ) and Common Sense Remed you think that the surgeon's | is the only method of the misery of cuuse you haven't he freatment known as hardt's HEM-ROID. The Doctor's treatment By experimenting for ye overed tho cxact caus then went furiher pounded a remedy that the cause. Leonhardt to benefit 1" ' knifc from . piles, it's be- rd of the new Dr., Leon- ape | inter- rs he o of piles | and com- | would re- is move Dr every sut- discovery wanis by his HEM-RO1D t will do @ that i hack henarable should guarantes or mo on | ' b very | or seen package | r a onl of day Terrible Eczema Goes Quickly Powerful Yet Safe, s Prescription Called Has Strong, Surgeon’s Moone’s Emerald 0Oil Asfonished Physicians. There is one s and | sive way to re the roof | swollen veins and bunches, and get them down to normal, nundgthat is to apply Moone's perald On night and morn u the Moone's Bandag pport them during the day who hat. painful, enlarged veins should not | negleet them for they sometimes burst and much and loss of tim Moone's ing so it at on sons cau mark | expen- | [ ¥ to People c misery 0Oil besides be- antiseptic that germs and poi- rms is such ni that ec rheum skin imerald marvelously ¢ destro; d by hr r's Hl'h inflammatory a few days. it h I salt her in Ior boils ¥ ule been os used and for | open | perfect | bottle | supply rs. nd with With any the most original can distre Your druggist Dept. wily ssing complaint | and the Fair Drug | glad to supply you. i { ployes in | ments d 4 1-ROID to- | city cars moving in groups behind | electrie plows and sweepers, assisted by stene-laden motor trucks equipped with snow plows opera tives in the fndustrial plants, cm- the mercantile establish- ter ting the difficulty in this mornipg Llizzard which after midnight signal sounded at 30 scveral of the a department stores and many of the retail stores permitted that portion of their employes who liv the outlying districts to return * hom © had great on the job" result of the ek here shortly The no school % o'clock and at ns 8 m and the an hour York to Trains from New west were 45 minutes and a half late Drifts in Springficld Ingtic Mas Teb. 1T heavi snow of the tarifting hadly in outla beginning to impede trans. portation early teday. Trolley lines functioning with the aid of plows but with schedules awry, Schools in some suburban towns did not open 1 e sed was Blizzard in Pennsylvania Philadelphia, T 4 P— Pennsylvania was grip of onc of the worst of the winter. Driven by high winds, snow which began falling yesterday aft- ernoon, was piled high in the count districts, blocking motor trafic and seriously interfering with railroad and trolley schedules. The storm was particularly vere in the anthracite reglons and what little hard coal therc is ground almost inaccessible. Bloomsburg reported a snowfall ten inches and drifts five feet Roads wera blocked, trolley were tied up and railroad was delayed. Similar reporfs came from Pottsville, Wilkesbarre, Lewistown and Hazletort In city only abont inches of snow fell, but that it kept forces busy Zastern in the blizzards nade Love of lines three it arif the street roughout this so rapidiy aning 1 | the night State Blanketed Y. Feb. 4 P — at*gave ev the heaviest over New had con authorities ha in an attempe York Albany, N, storm A snow Ise of bel he of the winter day ast swept Tis ind municipal their forces been pani coming fore traction vell as s m d re- | in | | d | | running which reported her | | vudder post broken, | steamen, to | railway | | la and | {'the | Kenzle of Pawtueket was largely | w to keep the open, In this city, the fall began a Iit- tle after midnight, and in elght hours elght inches of snow covercd the ground. Trolley companies and bus llnes kept in operation, but chedules wero r- Up to mid-forenoon but deluy had been ‘reported by New York Central and Delas and Hudson railroad systems, "he (all was greater in the ewste and southern portions of the than in the northern and scetions, While there wery inches of snow in Locks port ;\ml Watertown, Gloversville had a 12-inch fall in six hours, md an uthlvnu ineh blunket cove red Binghamton, in the ticr. Moderate generally streets and highwa di ranged little Vi ern stute western only four temperatures throughout th prevatlea state, Liners Anchored, Providence, R. I, lI'ch. ¢ (A— Azents of the Colotial and Bay State ines reported this morning that the sound steamers Concord and Hart- ford due to arvive in this port from New York at 7 o'cloek this morning were anchored off City Island, The storm « s service through the irea tod, hetwee M Providence v, particuilarly hus service n this city and all River ew Haven trains on the Cn- od line between this city and 1 River were delayed during the carly morning hou Fire Dept. Hampered, Haverhill, Mass, Ieb. 4 (®) heavy snowstorm and ard to- day kept the Haverhill fire depart- ment from attending the fourth i wday morning fire in the city in as many weeks. The cottage home of Dana A. Brewster, twofmiles from the center the city, was burned to the ground. Deep drifis hlocked made it impossible for the apparatus to get within a quarter of mile of the burning Jome. Mrs, Brewster and two small children fled in their night clothing, braving the snow and gale to reach a neighbor's house. Brewster was out attending a trap line when the place caught fire from an overheated furnace. RAYMOND, FISK, ARE MASONIC OFFICERS Former Senior Steward, Latter Grand Chaplain of which the Ha tion ford, I'eb. 4 (P)—The f the new officers nd Lodge of Connecticut, y was the main feature closing seasion this morning of one hundred angd thirty-cighth nual communication of the gra lodge. Past Grand Master Thomas M ster Arthur City was grand ling officer and Tas M. Brown of Jewe't marshal. A past grand master's jowel and apron were given to retiring Grand Master Walter T. Arnold ot Meriden Past Grand Master Ired A. Ver- planck made the presentations. An amendment to the constitution t the date the first Wednesday was introduced and Jaid on the table until the innyfil meeting. The appointment of officers and tee by Grand Master Arthur Pawtucket were as fol- he Nush of Grand Marshal-——Howard W. Mid- 1 Brook Stewar Broa and Senior ymond, New Rrit and Junior Stewar N Haven, Grand Chapla Hatfield, Westerly Grand Georg ton, Sherwood —famuel A The Rev., Byron A. Loomis, {Hartford and business offices in Wor. | | Colehester; | district | | too. Piles aren | prom- York state | District De Jistriet, George G. § Walters Day n 8, putins -— Iirst ott, Ridgetield; second, Bethel; thivd, Benja- n 8. Coe, Waterbury; fourth, Wi iam L. Larash, West Have: fifth, Thomas Desmond, Simsbury; ixth, Norman (' . Hartford; venth L. Prann, Deep River; lward H. Norton, 0 be appointed. ciate Grand Chaplains—Diirst the Charles A. Marks, wvalk; second, the Rev. Donald Dorchester, Woodbury; third, the John N. Lewis, Waterbury onrth, the Rev. Donall W. Greene Bethel; fifth, the Rev muel A Iiske, Berlin; sixth, the | eighth, ni Gr \s: i Rev seventh, She Could Never Have Done It With Piles! Bless the American girl who has glorified all the sports! Qhe makes a pretty picture in the water, and 1s a plucky swimmer, hinkabls foractive e them, you ought to g to do! Hiat: pox tiave the biles e @ crhide, even women, 1f you h pilveny bleeding a once Lo the soc fect privacy. 2 Supp: plied in per But bear the n mind; Pyra- heg, usually th ons. Pyramid is her single hali-hour enly one Ne wil matvelous. W with painful piles? Sisty cents the bo, the world around. But 02 a free box plainly wrapped will be sent Pyramid Drug Co, 200 Pyra I, Mich souttwrn rranged trolley and | fire | Bx-Mayor Quigley the Speaker; of the annual meeting | | in March v. Joseph | the | Rev, B, T\ Mathison, Clinton; elghth, 1o be appolnte ninth, the Rev, Cliarles 1. Puffer, Stafford Springs. Committecs Correspondence—~George A. Kies, Harttord, By-laws—Weston Litchfiold Printing—George A, Kles, Harts ford; John M. Parker, Hartford; H, Wales Lines, Meriden. Auditing—Bdward Rutled, | Canaan; Samucl A, Moyle, | ven; Clinton G. Nichols, | Jurisprudence—Leonard crson, Cornwall; Arthur M. Jowett City; Joseph G. Shelton. Grand Lodge Library and Regis. try—George A. Kles, Hartford: Har- old B. Waldo, Glastonbury. Grand Mastor's Address, 1027— Thomas McKenzie, Pawcatuck; Winthrop Buck, Hartford; I'rank L. T'riend, Westerly. Custodian of the Work vears)—Weston G. Granniss, fleld. Masonic Rev G. Grannlss, o, New New Ha- Hartford. Brown, Shapiro, (five Litch- Home Assoclation—The T. Mathison, Clinton; | Charles N. Baster, Branford; Frank L. Wilder, Bridgeport; Leonard J. Nickerson, Cornwall; Weston G Grannlss, Litehfield; Arthur C. Wheelor, Norwalk; Ired A. Ver. planck, Manchester; the Rev. Dr. Willlam 1" English, Hartford. Jewels—I"red A, Verplanck, Man- chester; Benjamin B. Crocker, Hart- ford. Masonie Home Endowment Fund —Robert 8. Walker, Waterbury; Charles M. Gerdenier, Bridgeport; Arthur C. Wheeler, Norwalk; Clin. ton G. Nichols, Hartford; Carleton | H. Stevens, New Haven, HFNITWORTH VIR ANNUAL BANOUET | Evening The Kenilworth spirit, manhood and strong which has always been identified with the Kenilworth club of th! city has never once departed since {the foundation of that organization 1901, according to ex-Mayor George A, Quigley, who addressed the 25th anniversary banquet of the society last evening at the Burritt hotel, his speech being heard by nearly 200 members and ex-mem- hers of the organization, who gath- ered at the hostelry in observance of the elub’s quagrter century of ac- tivity and progress. The Kenilworth elub, according Mr. Quigiey, was formed by & group of young men who were anxious to band together in a spirit | ot brotherhood. At first they met {in an office maintained by M. Quizley, but later they formaily ganized into what has become the foremost societies in city. Mr. Quigley was the | president. He said that the name | was suggesicd by Dr. 1. A, B. | rest of this eity, “Why has the club survived? giving the following “It was founded on chars ind manhood and it survives today or those reasons. In the old day vhen a man became a member o the club, people knew he was one of acter.” described an fnstancs character of the members of the club was demonstruted that when the United [ tered the World war, 63 out of tho 88 members entered the serviee. “Three of those boys gave their lives in the service of their coun- try and 1 feel proud, when I pa through the memorial arch at W nut Hill park, hree of boys so honored were memhers the Kenilworth and that the foundations laid their boyhood chums of vears ago still sur- | vived,” s the speaker e habit of the club to stand back of its members was brought out in a touching ancedoto of onn young man, afflicted with a serious discase, who wus enabled to a cure through the efforts g sacrifice of fellow members of organization. A her of the will never go back on stated the speaker | He touched on many of the memt highly honored in hus by the state gove of the son, that spirit of character in to one ho ' He at os he elul hy i geek nd the club) anotl; me member is state American L Harry Scheu the Brit commander of ion, another, ler is com of New or- ization son also Parker delivered n which rs and th they have work of which 1 to fa moembe what the in bers the members, Dr. Clifford W clever composition ish, in which club w G. Kimball, a lifs organization, pre talk, Interspersed with remarks, in which he str point that friendships made club are lasting and arr most pleasant of life. He expr tion that there breath of scandal ¢ ing the Kenilworth that it is a record William E. F ond he Introduced the appropriate remarks rounds of applause from bled guests. The following Queen olives, gherki: royale, filet mignon rooms, auw gratin pota routs, salad a la Melba tan fce cream, lady fing tasse. | The banquet | o’clock and vened rtainment furni by ents entertainment burcau of Har ford. A string trio furnished pop ular dance musie ? the course The affa successful ¢ much eredit headed by | K. Dolan and thesc arrange \ in var deser memi nted h century Hus vities . Arthur r hi rousir i the in the al, ssed dec has yastmaster akers wit nu was served consomme h mush- i t about Hy an mo a chairman by & acted men we J. Nick- | or- | tho first | Vor- | whera | among the | Wh ere V\xld Life ls r‘rm cted |France Jasper National Park, in the Canadian Rockies, is a haven for wild life, similar to Yellowstone Park in the United States. The C(Canadian govern- ment protects thousands of animals on its ranges. Above is a big elk who wasn't at all camera- shy; below, a couple of cub bears are shinning up a sapling, capable staff The 25th | elosing event | bration, will 1 ning at the ol | Dr.C. W Vivien is oh committee n charg of co-workers. anniye ball, tho | the week of cele- | 1d tomorrow eve. Harttor City Items has been & ‘Was- Kirk- Katy as issued by Hungerford & hle in the eity Monday of Marel Ired W court Con- ched Another 1 streets ale of Daring Comes Asbury Park Wherc Effected S 3 rved returnable in t vleas Asbury I [Seven cons Istation wnder the tain Patmer battls death today in of gizantic men from to pleces one mile Superintendent et said heroic rose ol M Vile non of rt , throi bro for § od divorce ere n thr 1 1 off 5 Lewis I t this term of R it 1St 3 1d by members 1 of the Re- N post- night. conipa lay wport N soft coal Georges Cre ed Abr ih am hn- led Cel mml n post- nnounces locat | Soen WOMAN SWINDLER New Haven, Fob, 4 n, of uncertain @ ail for her part Derby dr t out mon stat for isimilar to t jail ofl WANTED of 7 o R CEPTION POSTPONED lanned by muel 1 Mrs Nassau co taking T it carri ci postponed ¥ Say an .«u" on Lough This Quaker pi identifies ge Quakes ~ Oats~ Quam Quake! Look for it h flavor is what you want in oats; if the finest that money at you want for your family .. . . the finest oats that grow milled under highest im!« food standards. Imitations cost the same. See that you get the uaker Oats. ~Cooks in 3 to 5§ minut. 2 Kinds—at GroCers gy the rege Jar Quaker Oats as always tain Lumber | Camp | {one direetly oppos hands she waited, 1 I Poland and France Say She's Par a leglance Curje, ku | Madame with her treasured dium, But [though a ness takes her back to Warsaw each summer, when she 18 the grave 5 and land Since she tlonality of “the |France.” Gitizen Feb., 4 ® nd I'olar of N own to Plierre husl of , conte rle all Curio, und of one 8¢ th Madame Curi Nttle touch of received French married Pier feels that she that has chosen there is not a most notable holds his TWO COUNTRIES CLAIM MME. CURIE Two countrles, | nd for t Sklodows world co-discoverer of the crots mo e herse homesic: citizens) re Curle belongs “rest French Frenchma altve who would refuse her the th woman Madame Curfe works and lives the h One of t} the sclen {8ty of P {ngly huil finished which the cit Dierre Curie st tific aris. ding labho! It is a surrounde cavation. Mme, waiting r quietly & Curle oom nd from her unobtrusivel y of Ta s named after her husband. Num. | reet, is o newer buildings belong schools of the raw d by e itories and muddy ex- came into a laborato v slppi through a partly opened door. “Mme. “I am Curje?" Mme. Curje.” She sat down in one of the | tle chairs at seen ow Keep to over with A minu {the interviewer out of ecountenance, | and inte come for. {unblinkingly thr |The stra the | |improper T {more “ |about {most, dress seel ‘haeckgrou {shoes has o pair w like radf of her ho ed ke brain. “What for?" Mme, startled herself inspeaking so sud- denly. “It {8 considered that you are the woman d s, her site, ned to say: young man the point te passed while forgetting Her wh oves ugh her Ight, soverely. med to d nd, the odd re forgotten of um in dy wi a whit ot fla do vou Curie seeme {stingunished 'rance, Mme. Curia, We no and we intervicwer takin Folding | face expression- . but with a gleam in the oy nonsen: she star hat he h chone steadily, 1 bla spect cut ppear into the old-fashioned Mmo. keen eyes gleaming the dark. dead, but life glow The me in h want to see me | d to ha are collect. ing a series of articles on the most notahle women of all countries." “Wera tion that h ali thing: Inour no Imyself. Oh, ldest daughter, Trene, » exhibition of !rese | Nohel kind. iy ahout my things to “This tells erfca, Rainst {meeting at the . wi {my |ing in you slance she er for {t Iy years, on the Curie hing constantly, advising oth- experimenting, organ- hospita er scienti izing a during B have Pierre Cu lahorator: and o ly hl the Pssary hings Mm speak re. of; Mme. Curje nmyself, tations on scientific things. my Eve, she plays work wag run over vou inte 1 should spea my husl T neve hut only you ask me, hecause ve now IREL here work you somethin Tt is all 1 ut my And ope th what the Oh! you ARE the younger, is giving a forty years of They must have too, for two by sts, dium treatmen e world war, w rize for urie in the little y when both the f '+ money for C ie i Mme, here is ahout befora T wont people said. s 15 all T will tell you ahout say that is work- oratory with me and is a pianiste know-—with a hesitant the piano. And may was wholly unmoved rested {n the study {of radtum's properties before met your hushand, I think that is not a good ques- v Curle? think it 13 band is r talk give consul. At th » information of that ng writt and T will give such can do. Koing t &l concert scienti rch have worn away her body, but her mind seems only the strong- been lon since she had to carry | aiter Plerre a truck t winning chemistry—these Dbeen the labors and the fruits srowing out of the first work with inadequate were poor nds su and the materials experiments. does not they are known every- wisu 'PATROL BOAT FIGHTING HEAVY STORM AT SEA int Radio Reports Indicate 186 'Will Reach Port in Ne w L coa Arrying 1 via ra ter t was ri boat night, an sponsible sel to Boatswa reckoned navigating ocal st 34, nd safety, ondon, Feb, st guard patrol a crew of eight adio to the loc morning, that rific and v ages iundicated ding the h shelter s atrol boat 34, this mor ng 4 (P—The boat 1 men, repo | headqu: was iolent that storm well and | ly. which ed he g Lo Y Unive -colore her 'l get V):Isi rest of those These Boat | ar. gal of Block Island. Rid Yourself of Skin Eruptions Revitalize Your Blood With Ocean-0, the New Deep Sea Water Treatment Watch Eczema, Acne, Pimples, Boils and Even Psoriasis Disappear he ka a8 Thousands of People Are Happy Today Thonsands of people arehappy to- day— Happy because they heard of Ocean-0, the natural treatment for |all sorts of skin blemishes. Using It as directed caused ugly and em. harrassing skin eruptions to vanish, leaving a elear, healthy skin, Skin eruptions and blemishes ex- cept those of a contagious nature are ull caused by bad blood or at least by blood that is not balanced min- crally, You can supply your blood with just the alkaline minerals that it lacks by taking a teaspoonful of Ocean-0 (concentrated deep sed water in a half glass of water morn- Ing and night as directed, This {8 because deep sea water * |contains just the same natural re- vitalizing minerals as pure, healthy blood. Ocean-O comes from far out at |sea from a depth of 50 feet and in the big laboratory at Newark it is 5 |distilled and concentrated and the |excess of common salt removed. It is surely ridding thousands of sufferers from skin diseases and thousands of bottles are belng sold daily, Beeausge it conta just the right proportion of Iodine and the right kind of lodine it is helping a host of people to duce and cheek |Goitre. It you have any skin eruptions no matter of how long standing, get a bottle of Ocean-O today from Axel- rod's Pharmacy or any live drug- gists with the distinet understanding that if it does not help you your money will be returned, st - I, ke hip in 10 ng 1a- n tle in in ris ne to re all r " | | | ad Says His Prescription .rIas Powerful Influence Over Rheumatism Mr. James H. Allen, of 26 Forbes §t., Rochester, N, Y., suffered for years with rheumatism, Many times | this terrible disease left him helpless and unable to work. He finally decided, after years of |ceascless study, that no one can be free from rheumatism until the ac- cumulated impurities, commonly called urle acld deposits, were dis- solved in the joints and muscles and {expelled from the body. ® | With this idea in mind be consult- {ed physiclans, made experiments, and finally compounded a prescrip- tion that quickly and completely Danished every sign and symptom of rheumatism from his system. He freely gave his discovery, which he called Allenrhuy, to others who took it with what might be |called marvelous success, After vears of urging he decided to let sufferers everywhere know about his |discovery through fhe newspapers. He has therefore instructed the Fair Drug Dept., and druggists every- here to dispense Allenrhu with the |understanding that if his prescrip- tion does not banish every sign and symptom of the disease he will glad- ly return your money without com- ment. or ve in ou no 80, his en to he e in | Now You Can End Constipation In 10 Days or Less We Mean the Chronic Kind— The Habitual Kind That Calls for Daily Purging —Guaranteed, Too fic in al a > : what do you think, good Remember we told you the or day in this paper about Me- Coy's Rinolin and how {n ten daye it would conquer the most stub- born kind of constipation and after that the bowels would function normally and regularly. Remember how we {invited ah who wanted to get rid of constipa« tion and that viclous habit of tak- | ing salts and violent catharties to g0 to any drug store and get a hottle of Rinolin with the distinet understanding that it would do just what we sald {t would do or money back. A whole lot of people must read this paper, because hardly before the ink is dry on our notice of in- vitation druggists in this city ana | towns nearby commenced to have a brisk demand for this effective he | Emulsion. | ~And best of all — according to |the druggists — everyone who bought seems satisfied and or 10 | course they are, for McCoy's Rino- T \lin was tried on thousands of g | slaves of habitual constipation be- Te | fore it was offered direct througn to rte es Wing messages | druggists to the people. And how la s > today which ading apparen frow report ore na roubl for the failure nal ¢ ain - Carl A s one of tion base and th! ton of th N otl ed wards riding nner. Ty sighti la It le of all. Lindqu: the most cfficient officers attached to the in command of fact has aided in 2 coast guard au- orities that the craft is saf BL black bear, up d Pen train last yiv the Spruc AR HALTS TH Penn., Fe the wia railroad t night Creck tunnel. TAIN b. ¢ P seated between the ra Altoona-Harrisbur pa on the west side was re- the ves- | - | do you think it established regular NE | bowel movements? The afswer is ast | simple; it overcame the chronic he | condition by thoroughly cleaning 181 the walls of the intestines of all accumulated deposits and toxins which prevented active and normal peristalsis — no other preparations have been able to do this Besldes that — {t lubricated and | put tone into the entire intestinal track so that it will be many a day | before thess now happy people will think of purgatives again. active peristalsis, the cannot function properly -~ Rinolin increases the Itic action. Rinolin tonight ~Pep Tomorrow. ist, | of all agricultural la- bor in Germany is done by women. b) \