The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 44, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 4, 1919 Page: 3 of 8
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THE CASS COUNTY SUN
ASPIRIN FOR COLDS
Name "Bayer" is on Genuine
Aspirin—say Bayer
Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
rn a 'Buyer pncknge," containing prop-
er directions for Colds, Pain, Head«<
ache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Itlieu-
matlsm, Name "Bayer" means genuine
Aspirin prescribed by physicians for
nineteen years. Handy tin boxes of 12
tablets cost few cents. Aspirin Is trade
mark of Bayer Mani> rachire of Mono-
aceticucidester of Sallcyllcacid.—Adv,
Prepared.
"\Vh:it Is preparedness?"
"Knitting sweaters for soldiers of
the next war."
"MOTHERS PREPARE
When a girl beoomea a woman, when a
Woman bcootnos a mother, and when a
woman passes Hi rough the changes ol
middle life, are tho three periods of life
when health anil strength are most needed
to witliBtu J Wie pain and distress often
caused bf severe organic disturbances.
Many othor women would testify just as
do the following:
Houston, Teicas.—"When I was a young
girl I suffered from irregularity and pain.
Dr. Pieroe's Favorite
Prescription relieved me
of all paia and regulated
me so that I was com-
pletely restored to
health. Since I married,
whenever I have needed
a special tonic I have
' taken 'Favorite Prescrip-
V tion' and have been
amply repaid for the
comfort and strength it has given me."—
Mrs. M. Freemau, 414 Marie St.
Waco, Texas.—"It is a pleasure to me
to recommend a medicine that has been
of such great benefit to me as Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription was while
raising my family. I have taken this
'Prescription' as a tonic during expec-
tancy and I know it helped me in every
way. It is an ideal medicine for tho
mother to be."—Mrs. Beulab Or/ens, 313
North 4th St.
Galveston, Texas.—"When I was quite
a young girl I had a terribly nervous
spell. My stomach was affected so that
1 craved food all the time, and I could
not sleep at night. My doctor advised ma
to take Doctor Pierce's Favorite Pre-
scription (sold by druggists), and before
half the bottle had been taken I lost all
the abnormal appetite and was able to
rest well at night. I have never had such
a condition since that time, so can hon-
estly say that the 'Favorite Prescription'
cured me of my nervous ailment."—Mrs.
Ellen Laswell, 1614 19th St.
Southwestern Agents for C. G,
Conn Band Instruments
Everything for the Band and Orchestra
Band Instruments Repaired and
Plated
Send for catalogue and terms.
MARSH-IViARLEY
music co.
1810 Main Street, Dallas, Texas
We also bay and sell ased instruments.
Shorthorns in America
133 Years
The flrst purebred Short-
born cattle wero brought to
the United States In fiSB, a
simill shlpniont being im-
ported from Hngland to
Virginia that year. Tho
Shorthorn bus hud more to
do with the Improvement
of cattle In this country
than any other breed —
Ebably than all other
nds. It U the combined
t and milking quality
o( tho Hhorthorn that has
made tho profits on the
'anus, plantations and ranches. It pays to use Short-
lorn balls. American Shorthorn Hrvedurs*
Assn., 13 Dexter 1'urU Ave.. Chicago, 111.
Your Best Asset
— A Skin Cleared By —
Cuticura Soap
AJ1 druffsrfata: 8<mp2R, Ointment 215 A 60. Talcun St.
Sample cach fro® of "Cvtloara, D#pt R. Beatoa "
"OLD KENTUCKY"
If you like old fashioned leaf TOBACCO
like they use "back home" send us
$2.00 for (lve-pound carton sent prepaid.
One pound prepaid, 60 cents. Five
pounds prepaid, $2.00.
Send bank draft, money order or your
personal check.
Old Kentucky Tobnoco Association,
Water Viilley, Kentucky.
Agents Wanted—For the "Household Phy-
sician;" bust medical book published. Fix-
cluxlve Co. territory, lllg prollts. The Do-
mestic Tress. 217 Norton HMg.,Lou!svl!le.Ky.
Deep-Seatecl Coughs
develop serious complications If neglected.
Use an old nd time-tried remedy that
has given satisfaction for more than fifty years
PISO'S
PRO BILL IS PASSED
GVER WILSON'S VETO
PRESIDENT WILL REPEAL WAR.
TIME RESTRICTIONS WHEN
TREATY IS RATIFIED.
SENATE VOTE WAS 65 TO 20
Measures Will Take Effect as Soon at
It is Transmitted to State Depart-
ment by Clerk of Senate.
Washington.—The senate lias pass-
ed tho prohibition enforcement act
over the president's veto and made
Immediately effective machinery for
preventing sale of beverages contain-
ing more than one-half of 1 per cent
alcohol.
The vote was 65 to 20, or eight more
than the necessary two-thirds majori-
ty. While there was a wrangle o\er
taking up the measure in place of the
peace treaty, which had the right of
way, there was doubt as to how the
senate stood. It was overwhelmingly
"dry" like the house, which repassed
the bill within three hours after the
president had vetoed it.
Before congress finally clinched en-
actment law, despite presidential ob-
jection to linking war-time and consti-
tutional prohibition acts, there came
from the White House the announce-
ment that the war time law, which
was put into effect after the cessation
of hostilities, would be annulled the
moment the senate formally ratified
the German peace treaty. It was the
most definite of official or semi-official
statements bearjng on the war-time
act. Prohibition leaders were plainly
disturbed by the news, for they had
counted firmly upon the couhtry reach-
ing the effective date of constitutional
prohibition—Jan. 16, 1920-—without
reopening of saloons.
Washington.—President Wilson un-
expectedly vetoed the prohibition
enforcement bill Monday, and within
three hours the house had repassed it
over his veto by a vote of 176 to 55.
The total vote was barely more than
a majority of the entire membership.
The president refused to sign the
bill because it included the enforce
ment of war-time prohibition. The
objects of war-time prohibition, he
said in his veto, had been satisfied,
and "sound public policy makes clear
the reason and necessity for its re-
peal." It would not be difficult, the
president held, for congress to deal
separately with the two issues.
Nobody had really professed to know
that the president would veto the bill.
Republicans and democrats alike—
and the countless multitude that had
sorrowfully watched the passage of
the bars—through it would become a
law without his signature. Attorney
General Palmer, it was said, had de-
clared it constitutional.
FOURTEEN PERISH IN
LAKE STEAMER WRECK
Gales on Lake Michigan Dash Craf
to Pieces Against Pier at
Muskegon,
Muskegon. Mich.—With 14 dead and
six or more missing, only time can
bring an accurate count of the toll of
the great seas which lifted the Crosby
passenger steamer Muskegon, former-
ly the City of Holland, and smashed
her to pieces on the piers at the en-
trance to the Muskegon harbor.
The steamer, a side wheeler, bound
from Milwaukee, after outriding a
night of gale, made for the harbor but
is said by Captain Edwin Miller to
have struck the bar at the entrance.
The wheel paddles jammed in the
sand, checking headway, and the great
combers threw the ship about and
hurled her into the pier. There she
hung momentarily, &nd then shipped
off into the deep channel, going down
in fifty feet of water.
GOVERNMENT ABOUT READY
TO PREVENT COAL STRIKE
Cabinet Decides on Course to Be Pur-
sued, But Plan is Kept Secret.
Washington.—How to deal with the
soft coal strike, in event the miners,
ignoring President Wilson's command
to stay on the job, has been gone into
by the cabinet.
The plan of action was not disclosed,
but it Is known that the cabinet stood
as one man for protection of the rights
Of tho public which would suffer with
the closing of the mines, in which or-
dinarily more than half a million mem-
bers of the United Mine Workers of
America are employed.
Mayor Suspended By Governor Cox.
Colubus, Ohio.—Governor Cox has
suspended Mayor Poorman of Canton,
following a hearing on tho steel strike
rioting In thnt cify. Cox threatened
Poorman with suspension Saturday,
when the Ohio nntional guard w 3
mobilized to cope with the situation.
It was alleged Poorman did not exer-
cise sufficient restrictive measures
Eases
Colds
At oncel Relief with
"Pape's Cold Compound"
The first dose eases your cold 1 Don't
stay stuffed-upl Quit blowing uutl
snuffling! A dose of "Pape's Cold
Compound" taken every two hours un-
til three doses are taken usually
breaks up a severe cold and ends all
grippe misery.
ltellef awaits you! Open your
clogged-up nostrils and the air pass-
ages of yonr head; stop nose running;
relieve the headache, dullness, fever-
Ishness, sneezing, soremess and stiff-
ness.
"Pape's Cold Compound" Is the<
quickest, surest relief known and costs
only a few cents at drug stores. It
acts without assistance. Tastes nice.
Contains no quinine. Insist on
Pupe's I—Air.
The Better One.
"Yen ought to see Belle's figure In
a pose." "Ton ought to see Nell's fa-
ther's figure In Bradstreet."
KEEP IT HANDY
If you paid a specialist $25.00 for a
prescription, you would not get any-
thing that would give quicker relief
for Cronp, Catarrh, Colds, or Sore
Threat, than VACHEIt BALM, which
only costs 25c in jars, or tubes.
Write for Samples and Agent's
Prices. Beware of imitations. E. W.
Vacher, Inc., New Orleans, La.—Adv.
Good Job of Painting.
"What do you think of her complex-
ion?" "I think she puts it on remark-
ably well."
D0DS0N TELLS THE
HORROR OF CALOMEL
0HI MY NICE HAIR
IS ALL FALLING OUT
Vou Don't Need to Sicken, Gripe or Huityl
Salivate Yourself to Start
Liver.
Tou're bilious, sluggish, constipated.
You feel headachy, your stomach may
be sour, your breath bud, your skin
sallow and you believe you need vile,
dungerous calomel to start liver and
bowels.
Here's my guarantee! Ask your drug-
gist for a bottle of Dodson's Liver
Tone and take a spoonful tonight. If it
doesn't start your liver und straighten
you right up better than calomel and
without griping or making you sick I
want you to go back to the store and
get your money.
Take calomel today and tomorrow
you will feel weak arid sick and nau-
seated. Don't lose a day. Take a
spoonful of harmless, vegetable Dod-
son's Liver Tone tonight and wake up
feeling splendid. It Is perfectly harm-
less, so give It to your children any
time. It can't salivate.—Adv.
As Usual.
First Farmer—How do you find your
new hired man, Ezry?
Second Farmer—I look in the shade
of the tree nearest his work.—Buffalo
Express.
1 'iF
i
Let "Danderlne" save your
hair and double its
beauty.
To stop falling hair at once nnd rid
the scalp of every particle of dandm*.
get a small bottle of delightful "I'an"
derine" at any drug or toilet courier
for a few cents, pour a little in y^ur
hand and rub it into the scalp. AffiSr
several applications the hair usually
stops coming out and you can't find any;
dandruff. Help your hair grow long,
thick and strong and become soft,
glossy and abundant.—Adv.
Girls like compliments—also ice
cream and oysters.
Save the Babies
INFANT MORTALITY is something frightful. We can hardly realize that
of all the children born in civilized countries, twenty-two per cent.,
or nearly one-qtlarter, die before they reach one year; thirty-seven
per cent., or more than one-third, before they are five, and one-half before
they are fifteen!
We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would sava
many of these precious lives. Neither do we hesitate to say that many
of these infantile deaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations.
Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children's complaints contain
more or less opium or morphine. They are, in considerable quantities,
deadly poisons. In any quantity, they Btupefy, retard circulation and lead
to congestions, sickness, death. There can be no danger in the use of Cas-
toria if it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher
as it contains no opiates or narcotics of any kind
Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of
"KILLJOYS"
Constipation, Headache,
Colds, Biliousness ended
with "Cascarets"
Nothing takes the Joy out of life
quicker than a disordered liver or
waste-clogged bowels. Don't stay sick,
bilious, headachy, constipated. Remove
the liver and bowel poison which is
keeping your head dizzy, your tongue
coated, your breath bad and stomach
sour. Why not spend a few cents for a
box of Cascarets and enjoy the
nicest, gentlest laxative-cathartic you
ever experienced? Cascarets never
gripe, sicken or inconvenience one like
Salts, Oil, Calomel or harsh pills. They
work while you sleep.—Adv.
Did it ever occur to you that near-
ly nil fireproof buildings are insured?
Egyptian Cotton.
Stock of Egyptian cotton on hand
in Alexandria, Egypt, July 18, accord-
ing to the United States bureau of
markets, totaled 261,000 bales as
against 220,000 bales last year at the
same date, and 84,000 bales two years
ago. The total visible world's supply
of cotton, all classes, July 18 was 4.-
927,937 bales, over one and a half
million bales more than last year.
Be not vexed at trifles.
The Retort Discourteous.
He—When I was a youngster they
used to tell me I would be foolish it
did not let cigarettes alone.
She—Why didn't you?
The prices of cotton and linen have
been doubled by the war. Lengthen
their service by using Red Cross Ball
Blue in the laundry. All grocers, 5c.
Much charity ends with the bestow-
al of a sympathetic smile.
IT'S NOT YOUR HEART;
IT'S YOUR KIDNEYS
Kidney disease is no respecter of per-
sons. A majority of the ills afflicting
people today can be traced back to the
kidney trouble.
The kidneys are the most important
organs of the body. They are the fil-
terers of your blood. If the poisons
which are swept irom the tissues by the
blood are not eliminated through the
kidneys, disease of one form or another
will claim you as a victim.
Kidney disease is usually indicated by
weariness, sleeplessness, nervousness,
despondency, backache, stomach trou-
ble, pain in loins and lower abdomen,
gall stones, gravel, rheumatism, sciatica
and lumbago.
All these derangements are nature s
signals that the kidneys need help*
You should use GOLD MEDAL Haar-
lem Oil Capsules immediately. The
Soothing, healing oil stimulates tho
kidneys, relieves inflammation and de-
stroys the germs which have caused it.
Go to your druggist today and get a
box of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil
Capsules. In twenty-four hours yott
should feel health and vigor returning.
After you feel somewhat unproved
continue to take one or two capsuiea
each day, so as to keep the first-class
condition and ward off the danger of
other attacks.
Ask for the original imported GOLD
MEDAL brand. Three sizes. Money re*
funded if they do not help you.
Middle Aged
Women,
Are Here Told the Best Remedy
for Their Troubles.
Freemont, O.—"I was passing through tho critical
period of life, being forty-six years of age and had all
the symptoms incident to that change -—heat flashes, (
nervousness, and was in a general rundown condition,>
bo it was hard for me to do my work. Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound was recommended to me as
m
1 7/ 7
c*—
I
the best remedy for my troubles,which it surely proved
bet
ing it, and the annoying svr
eared."—Ilrs. M. Godwin, 025 Napoleon St., Fremont,
iter and stronger in every way since
mptoms have disap-
to be. I feel
taking it, and the annoying
pei " -1"
Ohio.
North Haven, Conn.—-"Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound restored my health after everything else
had failed when passing through change of life. There
is nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms."
■—Jirs. Flobehck Isklla, Box 197, North Haven, Conn.
M Swsh Cases
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
lias the greatest record for the greatest good
LYDIA C.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNM.MAS*.
j j
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 44, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 4, 1919, newspaper, November 4, 1919; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth341413/m1/3/?q=%22Erwin%2C+W.+L.%22: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Atlanta Public Library.