The Alvin Sun. (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1918 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brazoria County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Alvin Community College.
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THE ALVIN SIN. ALVIN. TEX AS
I Kt hfcW bERiftrtiv MLi'JAGi:
'O
DRY ZONE MEASURE
• HSSCOW
EFFECTIVE ON APRIL 15
o
o
the
fol
Ar-
The British after
*
LATEST NEWS FROM
li
Iss
tmong
ALL WAR FRONTS
J 3
num-
•J
bill.
J— '
IS
TEXAS SENATE AND
HOUSE PROCEEDINGS
i
Igned
:5iJ
to
In
fcH-t.
i
Senate Passes Deficiency Bill.
Washington -With the legislative
riders authorizing sale of all enemy
property in the United States and pur-
chase by the government of the Ger-
man-owned wharves at Hoboken, N. J .
the urgent deficiency appropriations
bill, carrying $1,800,000,000, was pass
ed Tuesday by the senate without a
record vote. It already has passed the
house.
Havana—The American government
it is gnnounced has offered to Ioan the
Cuban government fifteen million dol-
lars to be used in carrying on the war
against Germany.
BOTH HOUSES AGREE TO MEAS-
URE BY MORE THAN TWO-
THIRDS MAJORITY.
Every Large City in the State Is Af-
fected and Several Smaller Places
Where Troops Are Stationed
Will Be Included.
airplanes participated in the German
raid on Paris Saturday night, accord-
of 95,000
■i 29 and
ordered
A man never forgets what to say
when a horse steps on his foot.
Small Pill
Small Dose
Small Price
Jersey,
York,
North
or
to
io-
What He Gave Up.
“I thought you hnd given up smok-
ing cigarettes?”
“Not exactly. I merely gave jp buy-
ing any of my own."
Sure things are more or less uncer-
tain.
attacks by
Germans all along tne western | vention in Siberia.
British airmen
I
nine killed and t
One of the raiding
,s destroyed. An official
the airplane, of the
found in the forest of
7.828;
Carolina.
Tennessee,
i j
md |
itb
V
I
Minety Five Thousand Men ikrom All
States But Minnesota and Iowa
to Answer.
/
Clear Pimples
With Cuticura
And Be Happy
• g—p Ibe OuttnwrtV. *®4 63fl. *
IRRITATING COUGHS
Promptly treat coughi, colds, boaraeneia.
bronchitis and similar inflanx d and irritat'd
conditions of the throat with a tested remed; —
PISO’S
Kentucky,
Maine, 349:
Massachusetts, 2.069;
Mississippi. 2,220;
with
I Mr.
on it
NEW DRAFT CALLS 3943
TEXANS TO 0. S. ARMY
A minority report for the house
conferees was I rought in, signed by I
Cope and Veatch.
TRENCH-RAIDING OPERATIONS IN
FRANCE AGAINST AMERICANS
BY GERMANS PUT DOWN.
Fifty Thousand Nurses Needed.
Washington—A call for 50,000 nurses
between now and June 1 for service in
military hospitals a+ home and abroad
has been made upon the Red Cross by
Surgeon General Gorgas of the army.
Americans Killed in France.
Washington.—A casualty list, issued
Monday by the war department, con-
tains the name of Lieutenant John H.
David and twenty-seven men. killed in
action; Lieutenants Ralph M. Daven-
port and Stephen C. Markae and five
men slightly wounded, and one pri-
vate severely wounded.
For j
men
ten are
short
expellee I
PALE FACES
Generally indicate • lack
of lion in tee Blood
Carter’s Iron Pills
Will help th’s condition
to consummate the sale of :
erty and surrende
meat.
The governor Tuesday ...
filed in the office of the secretary;
. tate house bill No. 13, te prohibit
purchase or procuring for, or sale.
V-
I
Raid Coast of England.
London.—Hostile airships attacked
the Yorkshire coast Tuesday night,
according to an official statement.
I ’
Sills Covering Election Law Features
Filed in House—Governor Signs
Several Measures.
Smileage Campaign a Success.
Houston, Tex.—The campaign
Harris county for the sale of smileage
books, which admit soldiers to liberty
theaters in army camps, was brought
to a close at Camp Logan Saturday
with a monster entertainment attend-
ed by about 10,000 civilians and a sim-
ilar number of soldiers. As a large
massed band made up of nine regi
mental organizations played popular
music more than 100 Houston women
•circulated among thv thousands and
hundreds of books were sold.
I:
1 Z\
.*JN
KiANG
I
federal government, disposing of
the latter.
Cyclone Winds in Central West.
Chicago, Ill.—High winds, which
started in Eastern Colorado Friday
night and lashed parts of the Central
West Saturday, spent their force in
Indiana and Ohio, where several dis-
tricts reported loss of life and heavy
property damage.
IMMEDIATE ATTENTION
should be given to sprains, swellings,
bruises, rheumatism and neuraligia.
Keep Mansfield’s Magic Amici Lini-
ment handy on the s?ielf. Thre? sizes
—25c, 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
Many peopl®
worm canno* _
Those who have used '
Peery's Vermifuge, know that
imagine that Worms cr Tape—
be gotten rid of entirely.
"Dead Rh< t" —Dr.
that they ct n. Adv..
Uld
Ithe
_________r_______, .....Lift
or delivery to any person engaged; or
enlisted in the military or naval forces
of the United States, or any associates
of either, any spirituous, vinous
malt liquors or medicated bitters
produce intoxication, and making
lation punishable as a felony. The bill
carries the emergen y clause and is
now in full force and effect.
The two anti-bootlegging bills, holise
bills Nos. 10 a: d 11, which the govern-
or signed Saturday, were filed Tues-
day with the secretary of state. Tljiey
make it a felony for selling withput
license spirituous and malt llbuihrs.
and both carry the emergency clause.
House bill No. 15, declaring if ijny
person use any language concerning
the United States, the entry or con-
tinuance of the United States in war.
concerning any flag, standard, color; or
ensign of the United States, or the uni-
form of any officer of the United
States, which is disloyal, shall ; be
guilty of a felony, was also signed.
to their attack, captured
then Bagdad, and their
stand firmly across the
The Russian
^®|CfiRTES‘sl
MLffl
FOR
CONSTIPATION
have stood the test of time.
Purely vegetable. Wonderfully
quick tc banish biliousness,
headache, indigestion and to
clear up a bad complexion.
Genuine Lears signature
Austin, Tex.-— «Vith overwhelming
majorities in both houses. 4he ten-mile
zone bill was finally passel and went
to the governor for hie signature. It
will become effective on April 15,
having received more than the re-
quisite two-thirds vote in each house
to put It into effect earlier than ninety
days after adjournment.
The house accepted the senate
amendment as carried in the bill by
the conference committee and yielded
its date of April 1.
On April 15 the saloons will close in
Galveston, Fort Worth, San Antonio.
Houston, El Paso. Wichita Falls, Or-
ange, Beaumont, Eagle Pass, Del Rio,
Brownsville, Laredo and probably
other places where troops or small de-
tachments are stationed. Not only will
the saloons close, but residents in the
ten-mile district are prohibited from
importing liquor into their homes or
places of business for any purpose ex-
cept for scientific, sacramental, medi-
cinal or mechanical purposes, under
pain of a felony. Transportation com-
panies are forbidden to transport li-
quor into such zones. The zone law
is repealed by the end of the war.
Austin. Waco and Dallas also come un-
der the ten-mile law ami importation
cf kquor therein is specifically pro-
hibited.
The senate by a vote of 24 to 0 Mon-
day adopted the tree conference tom-
n-ittee report on tne ten-mile zone bill.
I! contains a new paragraph inserted
by the committee authorizing the at-
torney general to maintain injunction
suits either in the county of residence
of the parties to be enjoined or in
Travis county to prevent offense
against this act.
By a vote of S8 to 2 the house Mon-
day voted to adopt the conference
committee report on the ten-mile zone 1
that their line having been heavily re-
inforced, the entente arn i?s and the
American forces soon will be asked to
withstand thrusts of a more serious |
nature.
Gauged by the firmness of the Brit-
’ like coming into hand-to-hand encoun-
i ter with the Americans and invariably
' give ground in the face of their do-or-
■ die attacks.
. As in France and Belgium, the activ-
ity along the entire front in Northern
Italy is heightening, and here also pa-
j trol engagements and artillery duels
I seemingly signalized the approach of
| bitter fighting. Doubtless with the
spring thaw the enemy will endeavor
1 to force his way from the mountain
i regions out upon the plains of Venetia,
I and also to cross the Piave river and
| form a junction with his northern ar-
Here, however, the Italians.
Paris Is Again Visited by T< uton Air-i having been heavily reinforced by the
planes and Several People Killed. ; British and French, sanguinary en-
Secretary Saker Arrives in
Franoc—Other Fronts.
ditional menace, nut they since have
retired before the Turks.
Meanwhile the British forces which
started their operations from Egypt
or to cross it to Batoun (or Ba- , and the Suez have continued their a<l-
1 vnnee across the Holy Land until they
now are within striking distance of
Aleppo. where a further advance by
them would cut the Constantinople
ently failed with the British successes Bagdad railroad.
X
s»
ffllTK UfllKR PAW[”X%^T^0PnX%fOXt
UUII.1 IIU'JWL'J I Flvv i of Texas and on the Mexican border
of Texas along the Rio Grande and
used in the state quarantine service.
This subject is the first of the recoru-
I mendations made by the legislative in-
vestigating committee to be submitted
by the governor. The effect of this
measure, if enacted, would be to trans-
fer to th federal government the state
quarantine service, which it is claimed
would save the state $210,000 imme-
diately and an annual saving of $30,-
000.
The governor also submitted the
subject of an additional appropriation
of $150,000 for the completion of the
hospital for negro insane at Rusk;
also a request for a deficiency appro-
priation of $18,000 to complete the
quarantine station at Sabine Pass. It
is understood the governor is also to
submit legislation looking to the relief
of the supreme court, which is another
recommendation by the legislative in-
vestigating committee.
There is much work to be done be-
tween now and the 27th instant, when
the present session expires by limita-
tion. Among pending subjects and
others to be submitted are: Supreme
court relief, election law amendments,
adopting of a state budget system,
vitalization of the conservation amend
mem adopted last August, statewide
prohibition, a system of state deposits,
regulation of rates of public utilities,
abolition of state highway commission
and merging it with railroad commis-
sion, and a number of subjects relat-
ing to regulation of departments and
state institutions contained in the rec
ommendatioris of the investigating
committees.
Considerable interest attaches Id
the senate to the subject of rates for
public utility corporations, which sub
ject was submitted last week by Gov-
ernor Hobby. It has attracted a num-
ber of representatives of public serv-
ice companies to the capitol and prom-
ises to become one of the important
subjects before the legislature.
o
Austin, Tex.—Governor W. P. Hob-
by made good his promise to submit
the matter of amending the election
laws. That matter went to the Jegis-
•ature Tuesday in a message that was
significant for its brevity but wide in
its scope of possibilities. The gov-
ernor said:
“At the request of a majority or the
members of both the senate md hpuse
□f representatives, I submit for »ou
ronsideration the subject of amending
he election laws of Texas.”
From the foregoing it is seen [that
fhe governor opened wide the subject
ind any kind of amendments ma;: be
proposed to the election laws sue’]: as
majority nominations, woman suffrage
md moving the primary from JulV «.
May or June. The governor apparent-
ly has no choice in the matter, leY|ing
it entirely to the legislature. Bilik of
ill kinds followed.
Govemoi Hobby transmitted to (the
I legislature the recommendation of'the .
investigation committee that the state
relinquish its quarantine along Ithe
I gulf coast and the Mexican border to
Washington.—A movement (
irafted men to begin on Marc:
continue for five days was
Tuesday by Provost Marshal General
Crowder.
The order calls troops frop every
State in the Union with the ejxception
.if Iowa and Minnesota. It (Includes
men remaining from the first draft
and those liable to call in the{ second.
Just how many men of tin second
draft are affected by the orjier was
not stated at General Crow<jer's of-
fice. It is understood that tt|e move-
ment will virtually complete hie first
draft and that it is part of Ithe an-
nounced plan to call registrants in
small groups as fast as they | can be
accommodated.
Texas to Supply 3.943 M-tn.
The apportionment by stales
lows:
Alabama, 2 634; Arizona, 168;
kansas, 1.541; California, 1,74 :; (’do-
rado, 323; Connecticut, 903; Della ware,
108; District of Columbia, 102; Flor-
ida, 2.506; Georgia, 5,925; Idaho, 242;
Illinois, 1,961; Indiana, 2,977; jvansas,
587; Kentucky, 1,651; Loiiisiana,
3,573; Maine, 340; Maryland, 382:
Michigan! 5,558;
Missouri. I 1,170;
Montana, 521; Nebraska, 459; Nevada,
72; New Hampshire, 212; New
4,275; New Mexico, 127; New
12,288; North Carolina, 5.174;
Dakota, 2,647; Ohio, 6,955; Oklahoma.
598; Oregon, 369; Pennsylvania
Rhode Island, 301; South
343; South Dakota. 226;
2,753; Texas. 3.943; Utah, 2Gi: Ver-
mont, 156; Virginia, 2,178; Wj-.shing-
ton, 638; West Virginia, 1,514; Wiscon-
sin, 2,214; Wyoming. 134.
Provost Marshal General Crowder
Tuesday made the first otficijal an-
nouncement of the time of the Le. ond
draft. It will be ordered as s- -on as
congress amends the law to compute
the basis of apportionment
states on the number of registrants in
class 1 instead of population,
purposes of computation 890,00
will be considered as composing the
second draft, although no such
ber will be called to the colors i|t any
one time.
Men in deferred classifications, the
provost marshal general anno’ aced,
would be called in small numbers as
well as men in class one for th|‘ pur-
pose of utilizing special technical, qual-
ification or send them to schools (to ac-
quire such qualifications.
Austin, Tex.—The senate passed the
ten-mile zone lawr under a suspension
of the rules just before adjournment
(Thursday. The law as passed becomes
effective April 15, this being the
amendment adopted in the senate com-
mittee. Several other amendments
were added to the bill in the senate.
The house fixed the date as April 1
and the senate measure will now go
back to the lower body for concur
rence.
The vote on the Hobby ten-mile law-
in the senate was as follows: Ayes,
22—Alderdice, Bee, Buchanan of Bell.
Buchanan of Scurry, Caldw-ell, Collins,
Dayton. Dean, Decherd. Floyd, Gibson,
Henderson, Hopkins, Johnson of Hall,
Johnston of Harris. Lattimore, McCol-
lum, McNealus, Page. Robbins, Suiter,
Westbrook. Noes, 1—(.’lark.
Paired, Smith and Strickland, ayes,
with Parr and Hudspeth, no.
Present and not voting, Faust and
Hall. Absent, Bailey and Woodward.
Mr. Bee made a plea for the amend-
ment setting date for the act to go into
effect at April 15 as against house bill
provisions for April 1.
The amendment was adopted by a
vote of 17 to 9.
The object of the bill is to prevent
and prohibit in time of war the sale or
barter of spirituous, vinous or malt li-
quors or bitters capable of producing
intoxication within ten miles of any
fort, arsenal, training camp, canton-
ment, aviation field or school where
soldiers or sailors, marines or aviators
are quartered, or where ships are be-
ing built under contract with the gov-
ernment in time of war in any branch
of the army or navy of the United
States.
It also prevents and prohibits trans-
portation of liquors into such territory
and bars application for suspended
sentence in such case, and prohibits is-
suance of 'liquor licenses in such ter-
ritory. The bill makes violation of its
provisions a felony, and fixes the pun-
ishment at confinement in the peniten-
tiary lor not less than two nor more
than five years. Each violation is
made a separate offense. Courts on
whose dockets cases under this act ap-
pear shall give such cases preference
setting over ordinary felonies.
The provision relating to shipyards
was placed in a separate section on
account of possibility of its being de-
clared unconstitutional; and the bill
provides that saould any part of the
act be found in conflict with the con-
stitution or invalid, this holding shall
not affect any other part of the act.
The provision as to sacramental
wine and liquor for medicinal pur-
poses is the sane as that provision of
the general law s as to present dry ter-
ritory.
Local bills received practically all
of the attention of the house Thurs-
day, aside from a spirited discussion,
taking up most of the morning session,
on the Paige resolution against teach-
ing German in the public schools or
the State University of Texas. Much
of the time of the session was taken
up with the hearing of speeches from
visitors and other diversions. The
house calendar was so nearly cleared
that a movement was put on foot
adjourn until Monday morning.
Austin. Tex.—This week, the third
of the session, the legislature finds it-
self well up with the governor s war
program. His liquor ant vice meas-
ures have stood the test and this week
the last of them will be :n his hands
for approval prior to becoming laws.
This is notably true of the ten mile
zone bill. With It out of the way, the
governor will send a flood of other
work for legislative consiceration. He
has indicated so much important mat-
ter to be submitted that it has been
suggested that it can not possibly be
accomplished in the remainder of the
thirty day session and perhaps a sec-
ond session may be convened. How-
ever, at the outset of this session Gov-
ernor Hobby openly said that he be-
lieved the log slature should finish in
thirty days and tha^ he did not think
it would be necessary to call a second
session. Thus he has committed him-
self to one session and is expected to
adhere to that intention since his war
emergency bills w ill be out of the way
early this week.
Friday’s Sess on.
Austin, Tex.—Prohibition measures
occupied much of the attention of the
legislature Friday, but the time con-
sumed was brief. Inasmuch as both
houses adjourned over Saturd. uniil
Monday, no final action was had on
the zone bill in conference, or ti »
statewide measure pending in the sen-
ate committee on criminal purispru-
deno.
The house Fi’iday finally passed two
general bills and concurred in the sen-
ate amendments to two others, thus
disposing of them. Those passed were
the Yantis-Murrell bill to prohibit ship-
ment of intoxicating liquor into dry
territory in Texas, to take advantage
M t ie provisions of the Webb-Kenyon
act, and the Monday bill for patriotic
instruction in. the public schools. The
house concurred in the senate a-nerd-
merits to the Blackmon drouth relief
bill anc1 also to the Bledsoe bill against
giving or delivering intoxicants to sol
diers or others in the natien’s armed
service. The Poage resolution against
teaching German in the public schools
or the University of Texas was voted
down, after nearly two hours' addi-
tion*.! discussion, ay a majority of 72
to 28, after having received a favor-
able report from the education com-
mittee, 10 to 3.
Governor Hobby Friday submitted
to the legislature, at the request of
Representative George B. Terrell, the
subject of the enactment of a bill prt-
viding for the sale and transfer to the
Germans now claim
The collapse of Russia j
has given them the north coast of the
Black sea. It puts them into a posi- ;
tion either ro sweep around The Black
sen
turn) and thence to the gates of India.
The route by which Germany first
sought the entry into India is shown i
by the dotted line. This route appar- :
I in Mesopotamia.
I their first disaster at Kut-rl-Amani
I returned
I Kut
I lines
| in progress.
ish, French and Americans in meeting •
the enemy assaults in the last few
weeks, and the optimism that prevails!
on the allied front, a warm reception j
awaits the enemy when be launches
his attack. In the past fortnight from ;
Belgium to tin- Swiss frontier the Ger- i
mans have essayed minor attacks, in i
nearly all of which they have been I
l»eaten before they reached the en-
tente trenches. Where a footing luck- ■
ily was obtained the German
of the position generally was
lived, for counter attacks
them.
Everything :n the way of modern
warfare, not emitting liquid fire, has
been tried aga nst the Americans, but j
nowhere has the enemy been able to
dent the front held by General Persh-1
ing‘s men. On the contrary, the Amer-1
leans have answered all the German !
offensive with bravery, and although
they have suffered casualties, they
have jolted the enemy with their guns
and rifle fire and the Germans do not1
The map presented herewith shows
plainly how the collapse of Russia has
brought on anew the menace of pan-
Germanlsni and the conquest of mid-
dle ami eastern Europe. Asia Minor. '
India, and even northwestern China, j
The line of arrows shows the route j
which the Germans now claim Is coast of the Black sea, adding an ad-
ojwn to them. “
• • v ' ■
' ' ' J <. ■
and
now
I route north of Bagdad. _______________
i lines for a long time stretched south
I and southeast from the unatolian
OClmiq
Wisdom is never successfully pre-
served In alcohol.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
by LOCAL, APPLIC ATIONS. i s they
cannot reach the seat of the disease.
Catarrh is a local disease, great?v influ-
enced by constitutional conditions 1ALJ7S-
CATARRH MEDICINE will cure ;a’arrh-
It Is t ‘ en Internally and acts through
the Blood on the Muc -us Surfaces of the
System. HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE
Is composed of some of the bes tonics
known, combined with some of the bes'
blood purifiers. The perfect com Mnatfon
of the Ingredients Jn HALL'S CATARRH.
MEDICINE is what produces siu’. won-
derful results In catarrhal conditions.
Druggists 75c. Testimonials free
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
©
Save Health
CAMARA bJpUININE
The old family rt;nedy — in tablet
forwi safe, aure, raay to take. No
opiate*—no ur.plea; ant after effr-ct*.
Caret coiOa in 24 hour* —Grip »n 3
day*. Monty back 'fit fails. Get th-
genuine box with
Newton D. Baker, the A merican sec
retary of war, has reached a French , operating in Mesopotamia and Pales
porf. I tine, the British commanders in these
Upon hearing of Secretary Baker’s | , w<> regions apparently are unafraid,
safe arrive, in France through the As-1 ,Both of them a8aln have drlven thelr
, lines forward, Lieutenant General
sociated Press utspatch from Paris, MarshaI1 having captured Hit, On the
the war department Saturday an-j Euphrates river, eighty miles west of
nounced that the secretary ’s visit is I Bagdad, and General Allenby in Pales-
purel;. military and not diplomatic. line having gone forward two or three
„ . . t , . a. J miles on a front of thirteen miles
and is for purposes of inspection and . .. a ,
. , .4. , northwest of Jerusalem.
personal conferences with military of-1
ficiala. Mr. Baker is accompanied by ’ Little additional information has
Major General William M. Black, chief |come through concerning -he situation
of engineers: Lieutenant Colonel M. “ Russia as regards either Great
L. Brett, and Ralph Hayes, his private • Russia. Little Russia or Eastern Si-
secretary j beria* Reports from Sweden say that
* „ , , a . a force of German infantrv and artil-
Secretary Baker plans to spend a)]erv has Inva|led nn|alid The Cos.
briet time in France inspecting 3acks’]eader. General Semenoff, is en-
suits already accomplished by his de- :,ieavoring to put dowu Uie oppositton
partment in >s efforts to place n the U(_ bolHheviki al . le Trana.sl.
field this year an army that will be a . berjon railway in Slberia The
factor in the campaign. | )apanose forei!,n minister has declined
Continvaiion of patrol attacks by | jjseuss the subject of Japan’s imer-
the Germans all along tne western I vention in Siberia.
front .n France and Belgium indicates Brltish airmen’bave B„ccesBfully
| bombed the great Daimler motor fac-
j lory at Stuttgart, where for a long
| time the intensive manufacture of air-
I planes and airplane motors has baen
Munitions factories and
the railway station also were bombed
during the attack carried out in broad I
daylight.
Ten or twelve squadrons of bombing
all quarantine property to
----- ------- -------- ---------------- rhe bill accompanying the resomn
ing to official inti filiation, i he casual- (lation creates a commission compc
ties were nine killed and thirty-nine ;>f governor, attorney general
i persons wounded. One of the raiding state health officer to negotiate v
(machines was destroyed. An official lhe fedpj-al authorities with full po
I statement says the airplane, of the (0 consummate the sale of the ptop-
i Gotha type, was found in the forest of | pjqy and surrender it to the gov- rn-
Campiegne, where it had fallen while
returning from the raid on the capital.
; The machine had been demolished and
its crew of four burned to death. Some
of the raiders came by wav of the val-
ley of the Oise, others followed the
route of the Marne.
I ■ Si’ 9BAO0A0
ON GUARD
At this lime o* the year people feel
weak, tired, listless, their blood li thin*
they have lived Indoors and perhaps
expended all their mental and rXMilljr
energy and they want to know hj.v to-
renew their energy and stamina, ove>
come headaches and backaches, have-
clear eyes, a smooth, ruddy skir, and
feel the exhilaration of real good health
tingling thru tteir body. Good, pure,
rich, led blood is the best insurance
against ills of all kinds. Almost all
diseases come from impure and impov-
erished blood. It is to be noticed n the
pale or pimply face, the tired, ha ;gard
appearance cr the list!ess manner.
Drink hot water a half hour before
meals, and for a vegetable tonic there’®
nothing better than Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery, the old-fash.oned
h rbal remedy, wldch has had such a
fine reputation for fifty years. It con-
tains no alcohol or narcotics. It is
made from Golden Seal root. Blood-
root, Oregon grape root. Queen's root*
Black Cherry bark, extracted with gly-
cerine aud made into tablets and liquid.
Tablets sixty cents, at most drug stores.
In order to insure pure blood and to
build up the system try this tonic
known as Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery. Got it now I
AIR RAIDS OVER PARIS
j mies.
, Having ut-eii iica> 11* .ciuiuiwu
b British and French, sanguinary
counters may be expected.
Although the breakdown in the Rus-
sian army in Asiatic Turkey was ex-
pected to release thousands of Turks
who might be sent against the British
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Bailey, Ammo. The Alvin Sun. (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, March 15, 1918, newspaper, March 15, 1918; Alvin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1245682/m1/2/?q=wichita+falls: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Alvin Community College.