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THE MONITOR, FEBRUARY 2, 1921 PAGE THREE H KIDNEYS MM STRONG And Baclcach Stopped After a Short Treatment wi th "FRUIT-A-TIVES" MOSES MURPHY Moretown, Yeraont,March27th 1918. "I am warranted in having the strongest faith in 'Fruit-a-tives' after receiving such wonderful benefits from them . For years, I was a sufferer with Kidney and Liver Complaints. My back ached ; my liver wag sluggish ; and my whole system seemed out of order. , 'Fruit-a-tives' was the only remedy to help me. They strengthened the kidneys, made my bowels move regularly and freed me of all the distress caused from the kidney trouble, constipation and indigestion. A few weeks' treatment with 'Fruit-a-tives' made me feel as if I had a new lease on life, and I am glad to make known the great value of these Fruit Liver Tablets". MOSES MURPHY. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c. At dealers cr from FHUIT-A-TIVE3 limited, OGDENSBUKG, N. Y. 5 fc ' S r-: tureen r.v.isn tn-3 tr ir, racked vith pci'j?. Kverythii-g - -orriea r-.nd the victim ?Hcor.i3& triis hs.i. the su-ihkie take 2, .or - '1Y.3 liotior. -J re!2-" . r r - cf lIol??.nd for ov?r - ciiemv cT r.l! r;. ins ra- ' -'tine!' fro. i kidnerv liver end uric acid : c-;b)r, Ali di-uKsriat.;, three f?izes, for t1; " f.- jvi -d-.I oi orry ?icrc ' Money bock without question If HUNT'S Salvo faite in the treatment cf ITCH, ECZEMA. RINGWORM, TETTER or other itching skin diseases. Try a 73 cc;.t box at our risk. FRED D. PIERCE, BARTON, VT. HAPPY WOMEN Plenty of Them in Barton, and Good L Reason for It. Wouldn't any woman be happy, After years of backache suffering, Days of misery, nights of unrest, The distress of urinary troubles When she finds freedom. Many readers will profit by the fol lowing: Mrs. E. W. Barron, Main street, Barton, says: "I was troubled with a ferent occasions and as I had known of the good Doan's Kidney Pills had done for other people here at home, I used some. I found that I was greatly relieved. Two boxes of Doan's were sufficient to relieve me and I certainly praise them because they are deserving of it.". (Statement giv en October 11, 1916) On May 13, 1920, Mrs. Barron said: "I haven't changed my high opinion of Doan's Kidney Pills for they are very good. I have used Doan's since I last recommended them and they have never failed to help me. I am glad to renew my former statement." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Barron had. Foster-Milburn Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. FIRE INSURANCE Vermonters will be proud of the record made by the Green Mountain Mutual Fire Insurance Co., 01 Mont pelier, Vt., this past year. Their re port shows more than four millions of dollars of insurance written the past year, showing that Vermonters appreciate and patronize home insti tutions, especially as the cost is less than elsewhere. Policyholders for dividend policies are receiving 20 per cent dividends making a very low net cost to them. The company have for the protec tion of their policyholders, $500,000.00 and their officers and trustees are all well known and successful Vermont ers. Policies are issued by this company upon the assessment, dividend or stock plans, upon all classes of de sirable property, including that of au tomobiles, thus meeting with the wish of the insuring public for any kind of policy that they desire. The company's motto is Service, and they pride themselves upon prompt and liberal adjustment on all honest losses. They are willing to answer the questions of the public in regard to fire insurance, whether they are ' in sured with this company or not. They are a home company and wor thy of your patronage. The following are. agents in this county: Albany, J. G. Martin Barton, May's Insurance Agency Brownington, William Davies Derby, G. O. Burton Newnort, " Williams and Smith North Troy, H. H. Lewis Glover. A- P- Bean Greensboro, R. A. Ritchie Irasburg, A. G. Healey Lowell, A. P. Sweet Orleans, Harry Dickens More desirable territory still open to prospective aeents. Green Mt. Mutual Fire Insurance Co., Inc.. Montpelier, Vt. adv LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE Editor's Note: The . questions surrounding the eradication of bovine" tuberculosis are vital. The subject is before our legislature in the nature of a bill asking for $500,000 in the next two years for the work. We are glad to give space to discussion concerning it but ask that communications be made short. - . The question of Sabbath observance has taken a tangent into a dis cussion about what day is the Sabbath. It will become necessary to con fine letters to the original question and make them concise. Simpson Comes Back at House Ag- ricultural Committee. F. E. Simpson, ripar Sir: Your favor of the 16th at hand. As clerk of Agricultural committee I wish to say the committee stands solid for the plan of Commissioner Brigham to eradicate bovine tubercu losis from the herds of Vermont. 'Yours respectfully, W. K. Warner, Clerk of Agri. Com. Montpelier, Vt., January 20, 1921. In connection with Mr. Warner's letter I wish to call attenxion to the report of the committee appointed by the state of Illinois to investigate the tuberculin test. The report is an in teresting document embodying as it does, a large amount of testimony from leading bacteriologists and veterinarys as well as from dairy men and doctors. The unreliability of the test is as serted by Dr. James Law, for 40 years veterinary instructor at Cor nell. Other experts are quoted as to the unreliability of the test but not satisfied with this the committee got out and saw cattle tested and witnessed the post mortems which demonstrated the unreliability of the test. Thi3 committee included two doctors and the following report "was unanimously adopted "That it(the test) is unreliable, dangerous, fu tile, unnecessary and so costly as to be impracticable." The following is the gist of the Illinois law: "An act to prohibit the establishing and en forcing of the tuberculin test for dairy animals by any city, village, incorporated town, county . or other corporate authority in the state of Illinois." Just compare the hasty action of our agricultural ' qpmmittee as per letter with the thorough-going and painstaking committee of Illinois, who after listening to expert opinion did - the only sensible thing a com mittee could do get out and see the actual results of the test. Now readers, I will leave it to you. Has our committee done one single thing to prove or disprove the rea dability of the test before proposing to vote away the lives of unreplac able cattle and hundreds of thousands of dollars of- the taxpayers money ? Have they made one single move to ascertain the truth of Dr. De Fasset's theory that bovine tuberculosis is a menace .to humans or to substantiate the theory of the eminent Dr. Fish berg that bovine tuberculosis is a benefit to the human race ? From this distance it seems evi dent that the veterinarys have ap peared before the committee and that they-Jiave swallowed the bait of these theorist's hook, line and sinker, with apparently little knowledge of medical history are groping blindly in the mists and under the smoke screen thrown out by the medical propa gandists. It would be interesting to know whether this committee was favoring the test to help the farmers or to as sist in filling the pockets of the serum trusts and veterinarys. Is it not their duty to inform the public what per cent of the sum they desire appropriated will go to . the serum trusts, veterinarys and farmers re spectively f .- - The writer can find nothing in med ical history to indicate that a dis ease was ever stamped out by stamp ing it in and does not understand how this committee or our health board can honestly believe that bovine tu berculosis can be stamped out by stamping in its product. The ,T. B. test is an anomaly among people who boast of their intellectual at tainments and democracy. The Amer ican people profess to scorn submis sion to any aristocracy but there is an aristocracy before which we cringe in abject servitude because of our ignorance of things medical and mys ticism in which the doctors enshroud their practice. A veterinary from St. Johnsbury recently tested a nearby herd. He came on Monday and injected tuber culin into the animals' tails, then re turned on Thursday to ascertain the results. This is called the entrader minal test and is said to be valuable in "checking up." Mos of us do not understand just what this "checking up" is unless it's the state expense account. To the future medical historian I think this test will be classed with the medical idea prevalent in Shake spear's time "ou took a pinch of the dust (mummy powder) of a dead Egyptian and it did a great deal of gooU," It is not the people nor the fam ily physician who 'are clamoring for the test as a health measure. vVhen every calf that is brought into the state has to be tested and retested at an expense of $40 (except those from federally tested herds which is a still more costly method to the pub lic) it seems about time for the peo ple to inform themselves of the mo tives that lie behind the advocates of the test. If the Illinois law could be passed with an additional clause that when an animal is sold and the law re quires a test (the test is compulsory tin all interstate shipments) and that animal reacts the state snail pay two-thirds of the sale price and when no absolute evidence of the disease can be found the owner shall receive full sale price. This would, undoubt edly save many valuable herds. I know the arguments against it would be that the state would have to pay this without federal aid but the cost would be negligible compared with the cost of testing all the herds- As long as there is a. law in, the United States requiring the test," large appropria tions should be made to meet the losses entaiied. Under present reg ulations there is no incentive what ever to build up valuable pedigreed herds and if this important industry is to be maintained radical changes must be made at once. The editor of-the Burlington Free Press asks "If vaccination is not a success, how do we account for the stamping out of small pox in' Bur lington?" For a full reply I will re fer the editor v to, "Vaccination, a Curse and a Menace to Personal Lib erty," by J. M. Peebles, A. M., M. D Ph. D., who has spent 30 years in the study of smallpox and vaccination in Turkey, British" Indjia, Ceylon, Egypt, China, South Africa, Mexico and the Islands of the Pacific In the early days there were, other and more fatal diseases classed as smallpox then eariy m ne 18th cen tury came inoculation which turned Europe into a house of lamentation in Which she mourned for her dead. Under present sanitary methods most of the contagious diseases for which no vaccines or inoculations have been used have grown less serious in a far greater -per cent than where in occulations are used: for instance, yellow fever has been stamped out without ' inoculations of -any kind. Smallpox is not a native of this coun try and could undoubtedly be entire ly eradicated if vaccination was abol ished. The only person, so far as I know, that has died of smallpox in Vermont in recent, years had been vaccinated twice. To the editor of the Morrisville Messenger I would say that an editor who has the moral courage and strength of character to stand deter minedly against the onrush of a mighty monopoly should be commend ed rather than criticised. There are altogether too many spineless individ uals without sufficient moral courage to oppose the evils of the day. In closing I want to thank the ed itor of this paper and the writers of appreciative letters from all over New England. I do not intend one word of censure or criticism towards the honest, brbadrniinded - doctors and veterinarys. In fact I have the greatest admiration for our local physicians who rode over our storm swept hills day and night during the "flu" epidemic. F. E. Simpson. West Glover, Vt. What Happened in 1898 in the Leg islature. F. E. Simpson, Glover, Vt. . I haye read with much pleasure your article in the Barton paper, which recalls my experience .in the House in 1898 as a member on com mittee of agriculture, when a bill was presented to wipe out the cattle com mission, and for which I stood. I have just been looking for the bill in my folio but do not come across it. As I remember the vote which was taken just. before the noon hour, the speaker, who was Mr. Has kins, of Brattleboro, (deceased) left his chair and spoke strongly to re tain the commission as did all the state ringers. Clerk Nutting passed him up the total yeas and nos and the speaker declaimed the nos one more than the yeas. While at dinner the clerk told someone, it was said, that the declamation was wrong, that there had been a transposition in the vote, that the vote to abolish was one more than to retain the commission. So in the afternoon session there came some heated arguments and it voted to reconsider the bill, which was tabled for a while, no doubt to fix two or three members which seemed to be the case on final vote, and a good, bill was politically killed. I listened to a great, deal of vet erinary's testimony as well as farm ers'. One condemned the test, having one cow where injection was made, the whole shoulder of which rotted off and he had to kill her. An old M. D. while we were in session went over to Barre where a whole dairy was to be slaughtered and examined every cow killed. He said he did not see a single animal that was affected by tuberculosis. There was one that had a little sore from which matter came and he said that this was a sure sign of a healthy, healing sore that no matter was ever discharged from the tubercules of a consumptive. Cut into them and it was like cutting into granules of sand, no pus. When asked if he had ever .made any autop "Yes, hundreds." There were many more which I do not recall. AH those in favor of the test were those who had an axe to grind and it has been a hard grind on the farmers of Vermont, with not as healthy herds of cattle as they had 50 years ago; consumption 'more pre valent. I think this test and much of our health inspection a joke. Every city disease, nearly, is traced to the farmer's cow, which drinks of the dews of heaven gushing from the caverns of our mountainsides, while there are thousands of families who live like rats an windowless rooms in the city and drink the waters polluted by the offals from many cities above. A farmer's milk is opened up in a germ-laden city and traced to the farmer and his cow. A good man passed the evening with us last night. Had not seen him since he was with the boys in France. .There was a great change in him. When he went away he was plump, round and pink faced. Now he is poor, pale and sunken faced. Your article appealed to me and I asked him if he was treated so he might be immune from tuberculosis and he said he was. I said "They have given it to you," and he answered, "I don't doubt it." Now I think. we should go slow with these things and not jump at the conclusions of those who are striving to go down into history un deservedly. Yours for all that is good, M. C. Borden. West Pawlet, Vt., January 25, 1921. Editor of "The Protest" Commends Simpson. Mr. Editor: I see by a stray copy of your paper wThich reached me that there is one 'man in Vermont who thinks practically as I do upon the ques tion of filling the blood of healthy men and animals With the rotten flesh of other men and animals, and is not afraid to express his thoughts for the benefit of a benighted world. I'm again asking our "honorable" legislature through a bill to be pre sented tomorrow, unless our repre sentative weakens, for the poor privi lege of protecting my family against this devilish superstition. But I have been doing this for more than thirty years without result, so hope seems only to be against hope. At the last session a bill giving ex emption for a dollar and presented by the doctors themselves as a substi tute for several bills we offered, passed the House, by more than a two-thirds majority and the Senate by nearly as much was vetoed by the governor on the last day of the session so that it could not be passed over his veto, while the real bill of they had asked for the last thirty years and .making any opposition to them in the discharge of their duties as defined in their bill a crime punishable by a fine of $100 and three months' imprisonment, was signed and is now a law. All these things make a man feel very pa triotic and want to shout for Old Glory every time it passes and fur ther extol the virtues. of "my" coun try. In England, where the disgust ing scheme ' of the doctors to make more business for themselves was hatched, a man can get out of their, clutches by paying a shilling or two, but why should a man pay anything for the right to live" a natural life? Only because every year our colleges turn out an army of men who must be supported because they pretend to know something more than the rest of us about curing disease. With what we know of sanitation and hygiene there would be no sickness at all if we could lock up every doctor for one generation. And it looks as if it would come to that. In the next issue of TJie Protest (ante-vaccination) I shall make the article by Mr. Simpson of Glover one of the leaders. Yours truly, F. K. PERRY. Union City, Conn., Jan. 27, 1921 The Sabbath. Mr. Editor: - I did not write tfye previous article for controversy, but seeing that ex-, ception was taken to part of it you will please permit me a brief space for reply. In John 20:19, Mrs. Bishop illus trates her method of argument by on ly quoting in part. Such methods will not do justice to her own mentai capacity , and will not convince the thinking people. What .reasonable person could think of them being as sembled for fear of the Jews, when they did not possess either strength nor implements of defense! "Th: doors were shut where the disciple. were, for fear of the Jews." Thc only thing that would o3use them to risk capture in numbers was a service worship. This has been illustrated by the Puritans. Regarding the question of the "eight days" the Jews counted both the day in which they were then, and also the day in which the incident took place. Read Mark 8:31, where Christ speaks of the number of days after his death to the resurrection. Even Seventh Day people admit he was crucified on Friday and rose on Sunday. That is the three days. "Eight days after" would be just one week as we reckon time. Penticost means fiftieth, and according to their method of counting days this would fall on Sunday, and most Seventh Day people admit it. The words, "best commentators" is an evasion of the fact. In Cor. 16:1, 2, the collec tion was for the poor and was tak,en by Paul to Jerusalem. Read your Bible and you will get that fact. Further more the letter was addressed to the church, not to individuals. Justin Martyr who wrote about A. D. 140, in his Apology, chapter 67, makes this clear even to the unbeliever. Regard ing Acts 20:7, we must remember that the Romans were rulers, and up on their coriquered people they im posed, among other things,, their method of reckoning - time. From their earliest history they began their day at midnight. Luke wrote this to a Roman, Theophilus. therefore, with out a doubt, woulduse 'their time. So says Prof. Rauschenbush of Roch ester Theological Seminary, Prof. Hachett, and many others. This meeting therefore took place on Sun day evening. So says Dr. Scott, Shaff-Herzog Enycclopedia, Dod dridge, Matthew Henry, " Carson, Dr. Barnes and many others. The old Sabbath day was Jewish, Exodus 31:16, and was classed with other Jewish holy days and sacrifices. It is to be hoped that Seventh Day people observe these, v and if they really believe what they preach, they will, also circumcision. Be sure also that the Jewish Sabbath laws are ob served, such as traveling not more sies of tubercular people he answered than one thousand yards, and avoid kindling a fire and all other laws im posed. My statements in the pre vious letter remain uhrefuted. I thank the friends for the free litera ture received, and would be grateful if the Seventh Day Adventist who borrowed (?) my "Seventh Day Ad ventism Renounced" would return the same and thus restore my faith in him. The real question is the observance of Sunday. The day was given for man, and he needs it, mentally, phy sically, morally, spiritually, to keep him a man. There must .be rest to lift up his intellect and body, and there must be worship to strengthen the mind and spirit. We have a com pulsory educational law, because some people do not know that an education is necessary, and for the same reason we ought to have a compulsory Sun day observance. While we cannot compel worship yet we can force its observance in part, and thus permit others, who will use it right, to re ceive the full benefit and help. Un less in cases of emergency, why should any store be opened, garages running as usual, teaming,, moving, droving cattle, and any other way of secularizing the day be permitted? These can be explained only by self ish greed and wilfulness, or by ignor ance of the injury to ourselves and to others. We are accused ' of getting the habit of Sabbath desecration in youth. And it is . true with many. Why should the teacher give the scholars so much work on Friday that they must study on Sunday in preparation for Monday? Or is it this way? How is Friday night and Saturday used ? To study on Sunday for Mon day's lessons is as bad as for the merchant to prepare his goods, etc., for the "Monday trade, the farmer to grind his axe or in other ways to get reaay tor tne juonaay duties. And in like manner others. I believe in cases of emergency, where we can offer our reason to God, we may, oth erwise it is but learning in youth to attempt to steal God's time. This cannot be done without punishment. . J. J. Hutchinson. Barton, Vt., January 31, 1921. ( A Touch of Witchery. Witchery Is always a mystifying game to play. One of tbe players leaves the room, agrpe!ng to tell who of the company holds his right hand high over the head while he is out of the room. When he returns nil hands are extended to him and he can de tect at a glance the -hand he seeks, because the blood has left it. leaving It whiter than the others. Exchange- CALEDONIA COUNTY St. Johnsbury now has the distinction-of having- two women deputy sheriffs. Sheriff Wilbur Worthen, in his new appointments for the year, has offered that distinction to Miss Lora E. Varney and Mrs. Mary Lan dry. Miss Varney is the executive worker of the Caledonia county Red Cross in charge of the home service work of this district. Her work calls her into homes where her counsel is highly valauble. . In working with the unfortunate it is believed she can do valuable work for the county sher iff. Mrs. Landry is the wife of Frank .Landry, the druggist, and is very well acquainted with St. Johns bury and its people and so will be of great assistance to the sheriff. Sher iff Worthen has appointed the deputy sheriffs, some of whom follow: Her man A. Walter, Burke; H. M. Os good, Danville; A. D. Gilson, East Burke; V. W. Rand, Hardwick; W. P. Russell, Kirby; John Stafford, Lyn donville; William Peck, Sheffield; Byron M. Bundy, Sutton; O. L. Leon ard, West Burke. - . SUTTON NORTH RIDGE A. P. Sias, although a little better, is still very ill. Mrs. E. F. Richardson was ill last week with neuralgia. Merle Wilkie visited his sister, Mrs. Leo Blake, recently. Mrs. O. W. Ingalls-is a little better although not able to sit up. Charlie Walker of Island Pond vis ited his cousin, G. -H. MdFarland, last week. Mrs. Durward McShane attended the teachers' convention at St. Johns- bury Thursday and Friday. SHEFFIELD TheTe is a new daughter at Will Miles'. Thayette Barber has gone to work for Lute Chesley. Martha Drown visited her parents in Wheelock last week. Julia Chesley enjoyed a visit from her sister from Lyndon last week. Emma Simpson of Lyndonville vis ited at John Blake's the first of the week. Mrs. A.. O. Gray visited her daugh ter, Mrs. D. C. Green, in Lyndon the first of the week. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Jones visited their son, Clinton, in St. Johnsbury, the last of the week. Marjorie Jones of St. Johnsbury is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Jones, for a few days. Mrs. Lute . Chesley has taken a nine-months-old baby to care for from Lyndon, while the mother works in the hotel. WEST BURKE Mrs. M. M. Coe is visiting in Grove ton, N. H. Mrs. Lottie Straw has been sick during the past week. Mrs. Virginia Murray has been quite ill with pneumonia.- Miss Eva Rosebrooks of East Burke is trying to start a piano class here. B. D. Ruggles was a business visit or in St. Johnsbury on Friday of last week. Lane Fyler of New Haven, Conn., was in town on Tuesdayof the past week. Mrs. Charles Coburn is spending this week in Montpelier with her hus band. Mrs. Bertha Way and son, Leigh ton, were in St. Johnsbury last Thursday. Mrs. Annie Gordon has been having an attack of erysipelas, but is im proving now. Mrs. Vera Ogilvie of Boston spent the week-end with her brother, Dwight Cheney. Mrs. Nellie Brockway continues to improve and has been out driving during the past week. The Ladies' Aid society cleared the sum of $17.25 at their splendid sup per last Friday evening. Dr. and -Mrs. R. H. Burke and lit tle daughter, Anna, of St. Johnsbury were visitors in town Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Colby entertain ed Mr. and Mrs. J. Lambert and Miss Helen Mitson of Newport over Sun day. G. A. Jamieson and many teachers in this section attended the teachers' convention in St. Johnsbury during the past week. The Sunday school of the Metho dist church is to have a sugar party in the vestry Tuesday evening, Feb ruary 8th, to which all are most cor dially invited. Earl Fyler is much better and has been sitting up more or less, during the past week. His nurse, Mrs.Jen nie Goodwin, has returned to her home in Newark. The O. E. S. will serve a chowder supper at their hall on Friday even ing of this week at 6 o'clock. The supper, which is sure to be excellent, will be followed by a short program, consisting of readings and music. The next and last entertainment in our course will occur Monday even ing, February 7th, and will be a lec ture by Carlton Chamberlayne, for mer editor of The Union Star, of Schenectady, N. Y. His subject will probably be "Tomorrow." The two addresses by Professor Dauber of Boston, Friday afternoon and evening, were very good indeed and he deserved a much larger au dience. He spoke on "Evangelism," and was accompanied by District Superintendent Sharp of St. Johns bury. Lieutenant Sharman gave us alfine lecture Wednesday evening- of last week and those who failed to catcji a glimpse of "New Age Junc tion," missed something worth while. The speaker is" a student of life and his message was a challange to the very best in American manhood and womanhood. The West Burke Woman's club met at the home of Mrs. Ellen Smith last Thursday afternoon, and voted not to die but to remain in a state of quiet until spring, when its members hope to blossom out into a community league, village improvement socety, or something of the sort, which will be. open to men as well as women. Catarrh Can Be Cured Catarrh is a local disease greatly influ enced by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treat ment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICIN E is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease, gives the patient strength by improving the general health and assists nature in doing its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio. 2!J S!5 !5 S!5 '5 X!5 !5 25 5 J 25 S3 p EPAIRING is in 55 XIX x mK Six as !S 5mj S!S m xiS Six 3 x XIX x KX 2!5 xx IX xk XIX are at your service. We are doing a lot of it, but would try and do a little more. i i We do not claim to do the cheapest work, but we try to do the best. The best is the cheapest in the end. The Hutchins Store Wrong Side of the Square 25 xx a BARTON, JfJxixxixxixxivxixxixyixxixxixxixyixw XCXXXXIXXIXXIXXIXXIXXIXXIXXXXIXXIXXIXXIXXIXXIXXIXXIXXIXXIXXWXIXXIXXXXXXK. Kill Thai Cold With CASCARA If QUININE FOR AND Colds, Couglis 70MV La GriPPe Neglected Co!J".3 ere Dangerous Take no chances. Keep thi3 stanrlcr J remedy handy for the first sneeze. Breaks up a cold in 24 hours Relieves Grippe in 3 days Excellent for Headache Quinine In thi3 form docs not affect the head Cascara i3 best Tonic Lax-Uvo No Opinta in Hill's. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT THE UNIVERSAL CAR THOUGH we have been taking our full allotment of cars from the factory during the slow selling months of October, Nov ember and December, we still have on file or ders covering cur total allotment for January and February. This brings us up very close to the rush period, when orders are sre to come in faster than we can take care for them. It is the thrifty farmer and shrewd business man that buy the majority f Ford cars. These men figure ahead; that is why we have so many cars in November, December and January. Be forehanded , and let us have your order now. P. W. LAWSON Newport, - - Vermont The "Essentials" in a Savings Bank Safety Strength Service and how they apply to The ILamoilIe Coiamty Savings Baaik and Traist Company Hyde Park, - - Vermont M 5?l1F'("V Wtn a single exception, this Bank has invested I GijLiCVrjr a larcrer proportion of its Deposits in United States Bonds the safest investment in the world today than any other Bank in Vt. "rrtFR 0l3"lhl Since 1889 when this Bank was establish E,& Cifig &iLfl. ed, there have been thirty-three Savings Hank & Trust Companies organized in Vermont. At present there are but two 'whose proportion of Surplus to Deposits equals that of the Hyde Park Bank. . StfMPWidM Wnen the government was calling for funds ICJL vfiLC to carry on the great war, this Bank subscrib ed for more Bonds and Certificates of Indebtedness than any other Bank in Vermont, large or small, State or National, by more than $200,000 Our grand total being $750,000. We solicit your Deposits and offer our record as your assur ance of the absolute SAFETY of your funds. Our SERVICE is the same to all Depositors, large or small. CARROLL S. PAGE, 25 Jix w vtx vt vix vt it yiw t yyy y order just now and we VERMONT n President