Search America's historic newspaper pages from 1756-1963 or use the U.S. Newspaper Directory to find information about American newspapers published between 1690-present. Chronicling America is sponsored jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities external link and the Library of Congress. Learn more
Image provided by: Library of Congress, Washington, DC
Newspaper Page Text
8 Feel Splendid! Nicest Laxative, “Cascarets” 10c Don’t stay head* achy, dizzy, btl ious, const! pat ed. sick! ' sBMRI One or two gfx? ~~ pleasant candy- like “Caacaretf” 99 «flf taken any time Jr will mildly stim- Y ulate your /iver i B nd start your C bowels. Then -G t>i s you will both .' ■' look and feel clean, sweet and refreshed. Your head <lll be clear. Stomach sweet, tongue pink and your skin rosy. • Because “Cascarets” never gripe •r sicken, it has become the largest gelling laxative in the world. Directions for men, women, chil dren on each box—any drug store. 1— BM A CHEST COLO WITH HEAT OF RED_PEPPERS Ease your tight, aching chest. Stop the pain. Break up the con gestion. Feel a bad cold loosen up tn just a short time. "Red Pepper Rub” is- the cold remedy that brings quickest relief. It cannot hurt you and it certainly seems to end the tightness and drive the congestion and soreness right out. Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers, and when heat penetrates right down into colds, congestion, aching muscles and sore, stiff joints relief comes at once. The moment you apply Red Pep per Rub you feel the tingling heat. In three minutes the congested spot is warmed through and through. When you are suffering from a cold, rheumatism, backache, stiff neck or sore muscles, just get a jar of Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from red peppers, at any drug .store. You will have the quickest relief known. Always say VRowles.” For Free Sample Mail This Advertisement to Whitehall Pharmacal Co., Inc. M 8 Madison Ave. New York, N. Y. gSSIIMTO H Ml SKIN Any breaking but of the skin, even ■ fiery, Itching eczema, can be quickly over » come by applying Mentho-Sulphur, de clares a noted skin specialist. Because of its germ destroy- W ing properties, this sulphur preparation instantly brings ease from skin irritation, soothes and heals the eczema right up and loaves the skin clear and smooth. It seldom fails to relieve the tor ment without delay. You can ob tain a jar of Rowles Mentho-Sul phur from any good druggist. Let a trial of Mentho-Sulphur show what this means to you. Send the coupon, for it. Clip it now. Whitehall Pharmacal Co. F—— M 8 Madison Avenue Tree Mew York, M. Y. T- • 1 uept. n-ss-d i rial JMme a Free Sample of Mentho- 1 Sciatic Neuritis Use Allenrhu Special For-1 mula No. 2 The sciatic nerve, situated at the hack of the hip joint is frequently the swhlect of Neuritis, civinr rise to the painful disease Sciatica. The symptoms are intense pain which shoots down the thigh to the foot, often aggravated ar walking, and with painful points eng the course of the nerve, very tender to the touch. The disease is a very obstinate one and does not readily respond to ordi nary treatment. It takes more than the usual pain sedative even to alle viate the pain. The quickest, safest and surest way to get rid of the persistent nerve rack ing pains of Neuritis is to get a bottle of Allenrhu Special Formula No. 2. which comes in capsule form. Taka them as directed and notice how in about 24 hours they have considerably reduced. If not entirely banished, al! pain and soreness Continue until the Neuritis hs« entirely disappeared and you are able to work and rest in com fort once again. Peoples Drug Stores keep. Allenrhu Special Formula No. 2 in stock all the time and sell'lots of it. ALLENRHU SPECIAL FORMULA NO. 2 For Cold on the Chest Musterole is easy to apply and it ' does not blister like th- old-fashioned mustard piaster. Musterole is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. Hlrnply mas sage it in gently with the finger tips. You will be delighted to see how quickly it brings relief. To Mothert: Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Children's Musterole B*nU TMAN A MUST ABD PDABTFM ■ SEMIS ran 'cis 1 By International News Service NEW YORK. Jan. 28.—Among the citizens of America busily en gaged in pushing civilization’s frcntiere in many lands is a strange elan of men who walk about wield irig a sort of hammer. The scien t'fic name for this genus In geolo gists. but thev are more familiarly I called “rock hounde.” "American oil companies.’ - says a recent bulletin of the American Research Foundation, “have a far flung army of scientists, mostly young men. who arc penetrating the jungles of the tropics, the ice bound reaches of the arctic, the sands of the driest deserts and even poking around in submerged lands and swamps. “These men are the advance guard of the great oil company or ganizations. “Everywhere they go these geol ogists are seeking the proper s rt of rocks and the necessary 'forma tions.' If they find them, a few millions of dollars may be spent, for good luck or bad. so that the motor cars can be kept tunning.” PAIOMIE TOTEM POLES By International News Service REVELSTOKE, B. C.. Jan. 28. Along the banks of the Skeena river, In the heart of the Rockies In British Columbia, is a veritable for est of ancient totem poles decaying for the want or-a little protection: Long before the white men pene trated into that country, the queer ly carved poles, symbolizing Indian traditions, were erected, and now, through neglect, they are threat ened with destruction. Dr. Harlen J. Smith, internation ally known archaeologist, has com pleted six months of a three-year job of trying to save them. Dr. Smith reports there-ere more than 65 totem poles within 15 miles of the railroad in the * section in which he is now’ working. Forty can be seen from the train windows, he says. Some of the totems are receiving a coat of paint to protect then! and great care is exercised to get the exact shade because, he says, a slight variation in shades might, in the belief of the Indians in that section, send a line of ancestors of a tribe, reaching back hundreds of years, to the native equivalent of the white man's hell. | Will Buy Corn t ■ - y —Photo by International MATTHEW B. WELLS Bloomington (Ill.) capitalist, who has been deluged with letters and telegrams since he announced his intention of btndng 10,000,000 bushels of corn at one dollar per bushel, 18 cents above the market price. He is also engaged in forming a farmers’ co-operative grain marketing company with a proposed capital stock of $200,- 000,000. MOORE VISIONS GREAT PARK A splendid national park near Washington to rival that of the Yellowstone, may be a dream come true not far in the future, Repre sentative R. Walton Moore of Vir ginia told the 300 diners last night at the annual mid-winter dinner of the Chamber of Commerce in the Willard Hotel. About 40 miles from this city there is a paradise of .rolling hills situated in the Blue Ridge Moun tains of Virginia, between Pied mont and the valley section, which, if made a national park, would make United* States citizens even prouder of its capital, explained Representative Moore. Continued dissatisfaction by Dis trict residents concerning the fiscal relations between the Federal Gov ernment and Washington may re sult in Congress imposing, per manently, the “lump-sum” system i on the District, Representative j Moore warned the chamber mem bers. Referring to the right of franchise ' i in the D. C.. which many would have instituted, the speaker re called the early days qf Washing ton when it did have the vote and described it as one of the most unhappy communities in the coun try. on account of the vote. j District Commissioners Fenning ; and Bell made short addresses con i gratulating the Chamber on its i work for the city. Martin A.) Leese, president, was toastmaster. Uouveturnedto Studebaker j; tradefor one to day THE WASHINGTON TIMES [ The Toonerville Trolley That Meets All The Trains s—Z— —o f -fe-A fats Past The «oLL»A« Stock ©F T>f£. T»eA£ltWiLL£ TRacT’ioA Co. HAS / x iH such «haP£ That »T MAS To Bk HAKoiao vagy DgLiCATfcLT 1 (Copyright. bv Th* Botl Svndteato. tec.) ’ Near East on Screen The Near East Exhibition and Fair in Palestine will be shown * 1— l.l. —'■ ■- ——— ' ' ?' z \ * ' \ N Wa en the most glamourous picture is over—and you come' out- r side to the bright lights and the brighter laughter of friends —have a Camel! ' ■ \ WHEN the exciting scenes are over. And you leave the great theatre thrilled at what you’ve sccn * en » as t^ie or B an peals forth its rolling •• ♦ music, you come outside with jovial, laughing friends—have a Camel! z | K J IsF For nothing else on earth could be so refresh- I |Vhu|! /I \ * n S among the great white lights as Camel. j W L Z wW i \ HnV / 11 X Camel adds of its own bright goodness to the | |S V J \ f j|iL k enjoyment of every pleasing scene. Camel is . |l L>| y V \ f I w th e k a l e friend and companion for eventful days /I • il fefl/ IA \ V |HBb || and carefree evenings. Here is something worth | |HI| k* I \ jhxj writing in woiMs of gold: "Camels never tire the I i t il taste, or leave a cigaretty after-taste, no matter daUMI | kL fi ' | JT 88l you can’t buy choicer tobaccos or more perfect —C en<^n S> no matter how much you pay. ■ "f" ’/ , 1 BRSE ill as you leave for the brilliant '// 1 |(1 r J scenes. And when the big show is finished and | fl II B - I ' you’ve seen life in its tense and purposeful mo- 1 Ifi-i /a uB Vm ments —know then the mellowest fragrance that BHVAbw IfK I B \ 1 uRMT* W ever came from a cigarette. BBHHKe It I V) Bi Have a Camel! w No other cigarette in the world is like Camels. Camels contain the choicest Turkish highest wish, if you and domestic tobaccos. The Camel blend is the triumph of expert blenders. Even C«wW qualtty, ts that you try them. the Camel cigarette paper is the finest —made especially in France. Into this one mrife you to compare Camels wtm brand of cigarettes is concentrated the experience and skill of the largest tobacco . r %<*re tte made at any pnee% f organization in the world, yT R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co« I. . Thu National Daily here in motion pictures on Mon day night In the auditorium of the new Maaonio Temple, Thirteenth street and New York avenue northwest. The pictures were brought here by arrangement with the Chamber of Commerce of Palestine. \ z THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1928 JUDGE QUITS BENCH TO VIEW LICENSE TAG Not satisfied with the testimony in the case, Judge John P. Mc- Mahon left the bench in Traffic Court last night to inspect the rear license tag on ths automobile of Miss Helen B. Warren, to da- I Doctors Prescribed It I I Long Before the Public Knew It I I TONG before the general public Read what doctors write-then I -Lr knew the virtues end effective- youwill have fulleztconfidencem the neM at Gude’s Pepto-Mangan, it prompt and undoubted tenie power I wee prescribed by hundreds of of Gude’s Pepto-Mangan. At all I physicians to patients in need of a druggists in either liquid or tablet good tonic. Since itsintroducticn to form, the public.’doctors still prescribe it. I The fact that it has had the confi- I dence of the medical profession for over 33 years is the best proof that I it is a quick and efficient iron tonic. But Gude’s Pepto-Mangan is J more than an ordinary iron tonic, for with the iron there is scientifi- | cally combined manganese and pre- digested albumin, the value of which fIMKV,.-' ■ is well known to physicians. a. v i S Doctors Write ■ "I have been prewrlb- EK 9 ing Gude’. Pepto-Man- gan now for quite .num- « her of year.... I have I aiw.y. found iron a valu- r able tonic and the ex- tremely plea.ant and fl 9 palatable form in which te&Ms | easy Maimilackm, baa {■ rendered it invaluable to ». IO easy pvflCYlC®. « x ‘ t. ‘ J “I have had result, in M » MF < 1 I **l hyp need it for IS - : ■ 1 J G^ B I I Pepto—MantfarT I PrescribedbyPhysiciansfor33Years t ide whether the tag was hidden by the bumper. The Inspection revealed that it was, but the court took her per sonal bond since he did not think that she tras a conscious violator of the law. Mies Warren is visit ing her mother at 1225 Eleventh Kt. n: w, Baby Changes Stores NEW YORK. Jan. 28—A three months-old baby, kidnapped er taken by error from in front of » Brooklyn store, was found seven hours later in front of a store two miles away.