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4 RED CROSS DRIVE AIDED BY WILSON Support in Fourth Roll Call Is Asked. WASHINGTON, Not. B.—The following message from President Wilson, who is also president of the American Red Cross, to the American people, was Issued from the White House today: ‘The American Red Cross deserves a hearty response to its fourth invitation to annual membership, which will bo Is sued during the fortnight beginning Nov. 11, Armistice day. “Under the stimulus of war and throngh the cooperation of our people, this or ganization grew into immense size, en larged its range of activity, served not only fighting forces but also civilians in volved in the hardships of war in our own nation and in the nations associated with ns in a great common enterprise and gave to the world an example of effective mercy through coordinated ef fort. “Since the cessation of hostilities the organization has faced a dual duty: First, to fulfill obligations created by the war, and secondly,, to adapt its exper ience-' and machinery to the needs of peace. • “It is, today, still assisting govern mental agencies in the care and cheer of our disabled soldiers and sailors. In re placing those able to work in civilian occupations, and in counselling and aid ing the families of former combatants, and It is still assisting, with undimln- 1 iehed resources, th process of rehabili tation in some of the more prostrated countries of our former associates. WORK MANIFEST IN THIS COFNTRY. ‘AYhiie continuing these manifest obli gations, the Red Cross has been accom modating methods and applying lessons learned In war to the normal needs ’of our own people in times of peace, espe cially In regions where provisions for public health and welfare were Imper fectly developed. It has placed public health nurses in many localities, ,and has endeavored to enlist greater numbers of young women in the nursing profession in order that the supply might more nearly equal the steadily increasing de mand for community nurses. It has de vised a scheme of “public health centers’’ for the relief of maladies and for In struction in hygiene, dietetics, and gen eral principles of disease prevention. With its nurses and nurses’ aides it has rendered Incalculable service in the seri ous epidemics of influenza. "It has carried instruction in hygiene and first aid into schools, the women’s clubs, and the homes of our country. It has taught young and untaught mothers how to care intelligently for their babies, and has done much in many ways to promote child welfare, upon which th? welfare of the nation ultimately rests.! It has made it a fundamental principle to avoid futile duplications, to cooperate with public agencies when its cooperation was sought, and to supply deficiencies where such agencies had not yet been established. RED CROSS PREPARED FOR EMERGENCIES. “It has continued its educational work among the school children through its Junior Red Cross branch, and it has, an one result of its war experience, put preparation for disaster-relief on a scientific foundation, so that it is now equipped to meet disaster emergencies promptly in almost every part of our eountry. * “By systematic plans and practical performances, it has given a clear an swer to the question why the Red Cross should be continued and carried over from war activity into peace-time ac tivity. The answer is in the record. “Additional to these obvious aspects of the matter there is another reason why I, as President of the United States and president of the American Red Cress, urge my fellow-countrymen to Join the Red Cross in impressive numbers. Re action follows emotion, and after great 42-STORES—MENTER- 42 CITIES —p*" "" Listen to This, Efl I Elegant and Classy Models ' I The Choicest of the Choice 111 South Illinois Street -<l* f tu ' t° 1 Open Saturday Xi*ht t?nti. . Third Door Sooth of Maryland Street. > **— ■ <8 [(• •,’'/',,, 3/;tf 3f [p if# t? "' <hrr IP We Uladly Open Account* With Out-of-Town Customer*. fSffffiMflßh %aLantfg<B^!!jCTy^*MkiJKL tn — $7.00 gpi effort comes perilous lassitude. Sound patriotism and genuine human service are continuous, not intermittent, not con tingent merely upon the excitement of war. “If there is in some of ns an inward cooling of the tine fervor which animated us in the crisis of the stress and peril, a contraction of the spirit which ennobled us as Individuals and as a nation, now, during the "Red Cross roll-call,” is a fitting season to take counsel with our inner selves, to re kindle the old flame, to reaffirm allegi ance to practical patriotism and prac tical humanitarianlsm, and to symbolize the regeneration of our better thoughts and handsomer selves by re-enlistment In a great army mobilized for the com mon good. (Signed) WOODROW WILSON.” Jealous Hubby Stabs Hartford City Man Special to The Times. HARTFORD CITY, Nov. B.—Jealous be cause, he said, Frank Woolard, 40, a con tractor, had been paying attention to his wife, (rnm whom he was separated, caused Joseph Crabtree, 60, to assault Woolard here late Saturday evening, cut ting him severely on the chest and ab domen. He was placed, in jail to serve a sus pended Sentence of thirty days, for stab bing his step-son, Everett Nelson, a few weeks ago and another charge of assault and battery wich Intent to kill will be placed against him. 2 Hurt in Effort to Avoid Hitting Woman Special to The Times. WARSAW, Ind., Nov. B.— Ernest Bet zer narrowly escaped death and his wife was badly cut and bruised late Saturday, when Betzer steered his automobile over a steep embankment to avoid running over Mrs. John Harris, an aged woman, who stepped in front of his machine on a country road, north of here. The automobile was overturned and wrecked. TO TELL OF STEEL RESEARCH. Charles M. Johnson, director of the research. department of the (Crucible Steel ComfTacy of America, will -peak on “Nondnagnetic, Flame. Acid and Rust Resisting Steel; Its Properties, Uses, Heat Treatment and Micro-structure.” at the meeting of the Indianapolis chapter of the American Society for Steel Treat ing, this evening in the Chamber of Commerce Building. _ ASPIRIN ~ Name “Bayer” on Genuine f M Take Aspirin only as told ‘in each package of genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin, Then you wlij be following the directions and dosage worked out by physicians during twenty-one years, and proved safe by millions. Take no chances with substitutes. If you see the Bayer Cross on tablet*, you can take them without fear for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism. Earache, Tooth ache, Lumbago and for Fain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost f*%v cents. Druggists also sell larger pack ages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaretieacides ter of Saiicylieaoid.—Advertisement. TO OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY. The thirty-fifth anniversary of the In diana Academy of Science will be ob served Dec. 2 to 4. The program will in clude addresses by resident and non resident members of representatives of various State societies. HAD TERRIBLE COUGH AND NIGHT SWEATS Cough about gone, .eats and sleeps well, and gained 12 pounds “In December 1913, I had a fearful cough, and mj physician ordered me to change climate immediately. I went to San Antonio, Texas, and entered a sana torium. Left there and came to Okla homa City in October, 1915. Had no appetite, could not sleep, had night sweats and was losing from otie to three pounds a week. I also had catarrh of the bowels, which the doctors had been unable to relieve. “Relatives urged me to try Milks Emulsion. I did so and began to im prove, slowly, at first, but steadily. My weight has increased 12’pound*. I have no temperature, and my cough Is about gone. I'can eat heartily, sleep well, and nnx working at my trade,” said V. W. Neff, CIO No. Dewey St., Oklahoma City, Okla. Nature does wonders in fighting off dis ease, if given the chance. Milks Emulsion is a powerful help in providing strength and flesh. It costs nothing to try. Milks Emulsion is a pleasant, nutritive food and a cor/eetive medicine. It re stores, healthy, natural bowel action, do ing away with all need of pills and phy sics. It promotes appetite and quickly puts the digestive organs in shape to as similate food. CUrouic stomach trouble and constipation are promptly relieved. This is tin* only solid emulsion made, and so palatable that it is eaten with a spoon like ice cream. No matter how severe your case, you are urged to try Milks Emulsion under this guarantee—Take six bottles home with you, use it according to directions and if not satisfied With the results, your money will be promptly'Tefunded. Price 75c and $1.50 per bottle. The Milks Emulsion Cos., Terre Haute, Ind. Sold by druggists everywhere.—Advertise ment. It Is Easy To Imitate Name3 The public is constantly being swindled by imitations, count erfeits and substitutes that re semble in name and appearance Foley’s Honey and Tar Com pound. It is because the origi nal Foley’s is so good,so reliable and so well these frauds find sale. Always Has It In His Homo T. J. McCall, Athens, O , writes: ”W have used Foley’S Honey and Tar in our home for several years ard find it almost invaluable for cou£ha a J cold*, and especially for croup for our children. We are never without it and can not too highly recommend it for coughs, colds’ or croupfi.r e<tfie-. grown-up pecpla or children.’* Foley's Honey and Tar COMPOUND IS PLEASANT TO TAKE, and sooths the raw, inflamed surfaces; stops the rasping, strangling feeling in the throat. It is made es the purest, fresh est and finest ingredients to be had, con* tains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and costs twice a* much to make at any imitation of i(. For more than thirty years Foley's Honey and Tar has been used with satisfaction and succcsf INMAN A DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1920. €a 127 West Washington St. e Good Clothing for You and Your Family Cash of Payments. Suit Yourself. VTla fiinjc €a 127 West Washington St. JUST GAVE UP SUFFERED SO Weakness, Paias and OtherTronbles Had Discouraged This Arka&s&i Lady. She Took Cardui, Found It He!pful. Got Weil! Harrisburg, Ark. —After nericus symptoms had become apparent, Mrs. Belle Wilkerson, of Route 1, this place, says she "got woreo and worse.” “I -wasn’t able to stand on my feet and had to go to bed," she explains. The . . . grew worse, and for about three weeks nothing seemed to do me any good. I grew so weak and nerv ous and could not sleep. I began to have pain In the lower part of my body, and ail across my was a great deal of soreness and pain in my left side ... I Just gave up, for I suffered so. I grew dis couraged and thought I was not go ing to get well. ”My head rot only ached, but would feel so light and dizzy . . . I decided then 1 would take Cardui, as I read of how many women it bad benefited, and some whose case was like mine. When I began Cardui, Just after a few doses, I noticed a change. I slept better at night . . . and fell like 1 cou’d eat something. I got up and began to do the work In th house and yard, and after three oi four bottles of Cardui ! was well.' If you suffer from disorders pecu liar to women, take Cardui —the Woman’s Tonic. It should help you, like other*.— Advertisement. aUmjj/L Mum cd ijn hjz for Highest Possible Quality at Lowest Possible Price “it’s more like a Smoke!” There you have Spur’s big reason in a „ nutshell. It’s what an American" l Legion man said after he had puffed a Spur for a moment or two. He knew cigarettes. Found how com forting a good one is. Had 16 months S in France. And he \new what he was talking about when he said: “More Li\e a Smoke”— That’s because you can taste the good tobacco in Spurs. You get the aroma of a new r and delicious blend of the finest leaf grown in Turkey, fine Bur ley and other home-grown tobaccos/ Unmarred by starch because the seam is crimped not pasted. Longer and sweeter in the smoking— slower in the burning. Fresh and fragrant as you open the pack, be* cause it’s triple^wrapped. Priced to be popular and packaged to be select. See for yourself—“more li\e a Smoke.” Liggett 6? Myeils Tobacco Cos. CumetteJ ' |/| ‘ this on your office desk: open up one of the netc t acuum-seaied S j I Spur tins (fifty cigarettes) and inhale slowly. Some fragrancel v AH locked in Pll you light up your Stna and P m it loose. ML "friendly glass’? M film IniritniOoa-value M// pplpv and satisfaction Mw ineverij bottle. JjW MtJj An h e4ser-Busch # if' P’sitora cordially invited |^BMKii!ti^WMIIIII!aliyilMIIMBmillHiyilll^lllliroilliBMllliyiBnMBMlllBIHIIWIMIIIIlllllllllljBjHM IJ \j ANHEUSER-BUSCH BRANCH ffl 11 f Phones—Old Phone, Main 211. Automatic, 31-148. |j jV I) >