The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 28, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 12, 1927 Page: 6 of 8
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THE CASS COUNTY SUN
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Mwft
IS®
mm ';
IS A HEALTHIER
STRONGER GIRL
Because She Took Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound
.Tho fertile valleys o£ Oregon help to
supply the tables of America. This la
possible through tho
magic of the hum-
ble tin can.
In one of the can-
ning establish-
ments, Julia
Schmidt wa3 em-
ployed. It was com-
plicated work be-
cause she did seal-
ing and other parts
of the work. It waB
strenuous work and
she was not a strong
girl. Often she forced herself to work
when she was hardly able to sit at her
machine. At times she -would have to
stay at home for she was so weak she
could hardly -walk. For Ave years Bha
-was in thiB weakened condition.
She tried various medicines. At last,
a friend of hers spoke of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and
ahe gave it a trial.
"Everyone says I am a healthier and
Btronger girl," she writes. "I am rec-
ommending the Vegetable Compound to
all my friends who tell me how they
suffer and I am willing to answer let-
ters from women asking about it."
Julia Schmidt's address is 11J Willow
St, Silverton, Oregon.
Girls who work in factories know
just how Miss Schmidt felt. Perhaps
they, too, 'will find better health by;
taking tho Vegetable Compound.
pi
ViC#\
For Dancing, Ten-
nis, Golf, etc., let
thia be your first
thought for foot
comfort. The
Antiseptic, Heal,
ing powder to
shake into your
shoes.
Sold everywhere.
'ALLEN'S
FOOT = EASE
Bible Is Being Read More
' The old hiding place Isn't depend
able any more, wives are warned. A
Los Angeles luan, turning the leaves
of a Bible, found a SO bill.
Men who can write brilliant max-
ims seldom guide themselves by their
precepts.
CHILDREN CRY
FOR "CASTORIA"
Especially Prepared for Infants
and Children of All Ages
Mother! Fletcher's Castorla has
been in use for over 30 years to re-
lieve babies and children of Constipa-
tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diar-
rhea ; allaying Feverishness arising
therefrom, and, by regulating the
Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimi-
lation of Food; giving natural sleep
without opiates.
The genuine bears signature of
Grove's
chm
Invigorates, Purifies and
iEnriches the Blood, coc
For speedy and effective action Dr. Peery's
"Dead Shot" has no equal. One doae only
will clean out worms. 50c. All druggists.
Dr Peery's
0 DeodShoi^or W0RMS(
HANFORD'S
Balsam of Myrrh
For Mosquito Bites, Sting of Bees
and Venomous Insects
AO iukn art aathoris«4 la rtfaad your money for lh«
lint bottle if not mi ted.
fltye;
all d
oh YOUR EYES.?
MITCHELL EYE SALVE
Is inflamed eyes, granulated lids,
es, etc. Sure. Safe. Speedy. 25c at
druggists. Hall & Ruckel, N. Y.C.
Agent* Wanted. Men and women to sell JHU.-
E-AiAKK. B new fruit concentration tor mak-
ing Jolly. Great seller and repeater. A 10c
bottle with 2 lb*, of burst makes 1 Ige. glasses,
always jells. Write (or terrt. and 60c trlsl
bottle. Mary Hart* Jelly Co.,Jacksonville, is.
Plan Highway
of 2,275 Miles
< >--
Concrete Roadway From
Chicago to Los Angeles
Is Contemplated.
Chicago.—A concrete highway from
Chicago lo Los Angeles will link the
corn fields of the Middle West with
the oil regions and fruit lands of the
I'aclflc. This is the plan of the re-
cently formed United States Highway
00 association, which visualizes u
"Main Street of America," that will
serve both as a commercial and a
military highway. Travel time be-
tween the two points will be reduced
by several days, it Is expected.
This pavement will be about 2,275
miles long and the width In heavily
traveled sections will be as much as
40 feet. The mapped-out route Is 200
miles shorter than any other highway
or railroad between Chicago and Los
ing any dangerous passes, welcome
news for prospective tourists from the
Great Plains. The roadway then drops
down to San Bernardino, Calif., and
Los Angeles is but a short journey
away.
Permanent Organization.
The United States Highway 00 as-
sociation Is a permanent organiza-
tion formed by chambers of commerce
and automobile club*, representatives
and stnte officials from the Middle
West to the Pacific coast. John T.
Woodruff of Springfield, Mo., president
of the association, has been engaged
In both railroad and highway develop-
ment work as an attorney and an en-
gineer. Mr. Woodruff assisted In revo-
lutionizing highway building In his
state.
"A great highway," declares Mr.
Woodruff, "cannot be worth its pur-
pose unless, like a trunk-line railway,
Ing 10 wounded comradesa second
Croix de Guerre for capturing 05 Ger-
mans, five of tliem officers, (Jurlng the
battle of the Argonne; the Congres-
sional Medal of Honor and the Med-
aille MlUtalre; the Italian War Cross;
the War Cross of Montenegro, and life
memberships in tho American Legion
and tho Disabled Veterans of the
World War. He also received1 tfcw
"Hero" medal of the Breaki'ust clu/
recently.
South Sea Flappers
Taking to Clothes
Snn Francisco.—Toe many clothes
.are ruination of the South Sea Isles.
Not only for romance's sake—al-
though Joseph Darnard, bishop ol
Samoa and the Union Islands, devout-
ly believes In romance—but for rea-
sons of health, clothing Is undesirable
In the tropics.
The bishop, Interviewed here on his
way to Rome after 22 years In the Is-
lands, Is a proponent of the theory
that aborigines are best off when left
alone.
He Is definitely opposed to nllowlng
South Sea Islanders to wear trousers,
shirts or collars.
Nor, he 3ays, should tropic maidens
-*ir t - - bi —
Hftsn uou Alid* about ©«v moft cunMorv* bakind 4k« purring motor of
ijour Car, todaij, Hearken back to tk« Um« of vjour Grandfather-- Our
orliat kt porLrmjed for *jou a fkuj of tke moa«« of trovol common 100 tjears
460 lt\ U\« aUUs noui served btj U.S."t)6 tuktcK. It skorfcer than an\j. railroad or
" other kighujaij between. Great 1
ouf o
tuooo
DO u>mch ic SKorcer uvan an\j raiiroaa or
bu onween vjreae Lake* and Loa Arv6clee.—11 is maintained
all'ljaar-all-lueatker-road and u>ill bs paved,uuilhout
dttoure^poonJrom Chicago Id Tuctjic CouL.--
St.tOUIS
CAL
JOPLIH
§K(LiS.
TUCUMCA
f ruosrAr
•.■vaoK
X
MEW RUE
CORNS
Angelps and when finished the trip
may be made comfortably in eight or
nine days.
United States Highway 00, its offi-
cial name, follows established main
roadways as much as possible. In Illi-
nois, for Instance, the route follows
the 275-mile paved highway from Chi-
cago to St. Louis. However, in t he
Interest of shortened travel United
States Highway 0(5 breaks to the
southwest from the Riilionurea to
Springfield and Joplln, even though a
250-mlle stretch of concrete now ex-
tends westward from St. Louis to
Kansas City. About half of the high-
way Is paved from St. Louis to Jopiin.
Expect Co-operation.
From Joplln on there Is very little
paving, but through the centralized or-
ganization highway authorities are
certain that the co-operation between
county, state and federal government
road builders will bring about an
early completion of this concrete rib-
bon.
The route extends to Tulsa, Okla-
homa City and Texola from Joplin and
then touches an oil region of upper
Texas. The roadway then passes on
to mysterious Santa Fe, N. M„ and
from there to Albuquerque, which
hardly anybody can spell, and on to
Gallup, made famous by eastern sce-
nario and magazine writers who have
been there.
Holbrook, Flagstaff and Needles are
high spots on the thoroughfare
through the tombstone and cactus
state of Arizona. The Rocky moun-
tains are crossed without encounter-
Million Miles Flown for
Each Fatality in U. S.
Newark, N. J.—One can now fly
more than 1,000,000 miles to the risk
of a single fatality. This Is the pres-
ent situation In this country as estab-
lished by the air-mall service and
which Is welcomed by those Interest-
ed In commercial aviation enterprises.
In the army and navy the distance
flown to a fatality is about one-half
this rate due to the greater Inherent
hazard called for by military require-
ments.
Hazards in commercial flying are
rapidly diminishing In proportion to
the distance traveled, as the aren of
operations expnnds, is the prelimi-
nary conclusion of Dr. Frederick L.
Hoffman, consulting statistician, Pru-
dential Insurance company, who has
for several years been Investigating
the situation. Doctor Hoffman last
year made 14 flights himself, covering
more than 2,500 mtles of air distance.
He Is most enthusiastic In his antici-
pation for the future of flying, believ-
ing that In a few years flying will be
as common on this side of the Atlan-
tic as it Is in Europe at the present
time.
Doctor Hoffman is also of the opin-
ion that recent legislation providing
for the federal supervision of flying
tends strongly in the direction of
greater safety by providing for thor-
ough Inspection of all aircraft and
periodical examination ol pilots.
It connects our centers of population,
taps our rich agricultural and mining
regions and presages expansion for
millions of young citizens in unde-
veloped territories. United States
Highway 06, in my opinion, does all of
that and more; It will, by every
token, become America's 'Main street'
in reality as well as name."
Moslem Piety Keeps
Irak Officials Busy
London, England.—Corpse smuggling
nt tlie frontiers of Irak keeps Euro-
pean health officials busy enforcing
quar<intine rules, according to reports
received here by the editors of the
Lancet. The desire of all devout Mo-
hammedans to wake pilgrimages to
the cities visited by the prophet, as
well as the blessings that accrue to
the faithful when they make one of
the holy cities their final restiug place,
makes plenty of work for the quaran-
tine officers.
New laws have been put Into effect
eallirifi for the examination of all local
corpses as well as those in transit
from other countries. Now no corpse
can be buried in one of the holy places
without a pass. Examinations and
health permits are also issued to tlie
thousands of pilgrims that throng into
Arabia from the East, thus enabling
health officers to check up on the most
fruitful sources of the spread of epi-
demics In the Orient.
Poem Parties Revived
by Japanese Emperor
Tokyo.—The imperial monthly poem
party, one of the features of Japan-
ese court life, Is to be resumed after
having been suspended several months
because of the death of Emperor
Talsho.
A subject for each poem party Is
always provided by his majesty. For
the remainder of this year, Emperor
Hirohlto announced the following sub-
jects upon which the versifying guests
might rfry their hands: June, "The
Thread"; July, "The Duckweed"; Au-
gust, "The Cool Wind"; September,
"Moonlight In the Garden"; October,
"A Chrysanthemum by a Mountain
Road"; November, "Ice In the Dale,"
and December, "An Icy Night."
The poem party Is held on the fifth
day of .each month.
War Hero With Many
Medals Asks for Job
Los Angeles, Calif.—An appeal to
City Engineer Shaw to find in his de-
partment a position for Louis Van
Iersel, said to have received more
decorations than any man who served
in the World war, was made by Dr.
A. D. Houghton of the state committee
of the hospital department, American
Legion. Iersel, whose health was un-
dermined during the war, formerly
worked in the city sujvey department
of the engineer's office. 1
Iersel has received medals from the
king of England for life-saving at sea;
the French Croix de Guerre for rescu-
ndopt even the flimsy lingerie of their
civilized sisters.
The tappa or cotton cloth, worn
from neck to knees by the women and
about the loins by the men, is a suf-
ficient garment for all uses in the
South Sens, the bishop declares.
"These people were constituted, born
healthy; clothing reduces their vitality
and contribute? to the Ills which have
nearly exterminated some races of is-
landers," he says.
"The Islanders can be civilized with-
out clothing. Their condition should
be improved, but it is wrong to revo
lutionize. the ways that nature hiv
taught them to live."
Bang! Playful Seal's
Life Ended by Bullet
Lynn, Mass.—A motorist on tin
North Shore motor road the other daj
noticed a seal swimming and diving
by the roadside. He stopped ami
watched It. Other motorists stopped
and watched it. Dozens deserted theli
cars and stood around the bank np.
plauding the antics of the seal.
Then? was a hopeless traffic Jam
Irate patrolmen threatened, pleaded
but the throng of nature lovers took
no heed. Meanwhile the road becamt
more thoroughly blocked.
A riot call brought an extra detail
and Sergeant Lyons, crack ritle shot
and his ritle. Rang! A few bubblei
appeared where tlie seal had been
Nature lovers returned to their cars;
traffic went on.
About Chamberlin
Plalniield, N. J.—Jersey folks read-
ing about the potential wealth ol
Clarence D. Chamberlin recall when
he seemed to be having n hard time
to make a living. He used to take
folks up in the air for $5 a flight ot
less if business was dull, but once lie
(tarried milk in his plane to a sick
child for nothing.
How Rude!
North Rergen, N. J.—Fellow In
court for sending a girl mash notes
said he thought the girl was in love
with him. "Don't think any woman
is ever in love with a man," BiUjjOte-
corder Alfred Miles. "They onlyrove
themselves."
Village Is Abandoned
When Factory Closes
Plymouth, Conn.—The desert-
ed village of Oliver Goldsmith
finds a parallel In the village of
Grnystone not far from here.
Shutters are falling from the
windows and gardens are grow-
ing up with weeds. Trains no
longer stop at the station.
The village was once called
Hoadleyville, after Silas Iioad-
ley, pioneer clockmaker of Amer-
ica. When the clock factory
went out of existence the place
was abandoned.
Ends pain at oncef
In one minute pain from corns Is ended.
Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads do this safely
by removing the cause—pressing and
rubbing of shoes. They are thin, medi-
cated, antiseptic, healing. At all drug
and shoe stores. Cost but a trifle.
DXScholl's
Xino'pads
Put one on—the pain is gone!
con be removed. For real satisfaction use
Dr. C. H. Berry Co's Freckle Ointment.
It does the work. Ask your dealer or by
mall prepaid. $1.25 and 65c.
BEAUTY BOOKLET FREE
DR. C. H. BERRY CO.
2975 Mlchl".--\ i «i. • CHICAGO
Elevator for Mount Blanc
Mount Blanc, Europe's tallest moun-
tain, will soon be "climbed" by ele-
vator. The cableway, with a car sim-
ilar to u hotel elevator and carrying
from 50 to 70 people, will soon be in
operation front Chamonix to thfe sum-
mit of Aiguille du Midi. Tlie ascent
may then he made In two hours andt
without guides. Construction of the
elevator cableway was started IT
years ago, but was interrupted by
the war.
Fresh, sweet, white, dainty clothes
for baby. If you use Red Cross Bait
Blue. Never streaks or injures them.
All good grocers sell it.—Adv.
Some people are too good to be in-
teresting.
Study your own self.—St. Bernard.
r—
*•
•—9
! !
! child's best laxative [
! is California fig syrup j
i
MOTHER! Even if cross, feverish,
bilious, constipated or full of oold, chil-
dren love the pleasant taste of "Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup." A tenspoonful nev-
er falls to clean the liver and bowels-
Ask your druggist for genuine "Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup" which has directions
for babies and children of all ages
printed on bottle. Mother! Vou must
sny "California" or you may get art
imitation fig syrup.
Natu ro's warning—helpnatureclenr your
complexion and paint red roses in your pale,
eallow checks. Truly wonderful results
follow thorough colon cleansing. Take fB
—Naturo'a Remedy—to regulate and
strengthen your eliminativo organs. Then
wateh the trannformation. Try MJ instead
of mere laxatives.
Mild, safe, purely vegetable-
At Druggists—only 25c
DBS EC TREATED and a
II LLC? Cure Guaranteed
Any form of Piles (Itching, Blind, Bleeding
or Protruding) are dangerous if neglected.
Every Druggist sells PAZO OINTMENT
with tho understanding that money will be
refunded if it fails to euro. In tubes with
pile pipe, 76c; or in tin box. 60c.
CARBUNCLESSSDEATH
arasfflrexaiRJSsKsss
stops pain and draws out cow. Get a genorous
60c box from yourdraggist today and ki-op It
on hand. Money back if not satisfied. Don't
accept substitutes—ask for CAKB01L byname.
8PURLOCK-NEAL CO., NASHVILLE,TENN.
ii
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 28, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 12, 1927, newspaper, July 12, 1927; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth340764/m1/6/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Atlanta Public Library.