Newspaper Page Text
"MTS" FOR LIVER, BOWELS For sick headache, bad breath, Sour Stomach and constipation. Get a 10-cent box now. No odds how bad your liver, stomach or bowels; how much your head aches, how miserable and uncomfort able you are from constipation, Indiges tion, biliousness and sluggish bowels —you always get the desired results with Cascarets. Don’t let your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable. Take Cascarets to-night; put an end to the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nerv ousness, sick, sour, gassy stomach, backache and all other distress; cleanse your inside organs of all the bile, gases and constipated matter which is producing the misery. A 10-cent box means health, happi ness and a clear head for months. No more days of gloom and distress If you will take a Cascaret now and then. All stores sell Cascarets. Don't forget the children—their little in sides need a cleansing, too. Adv. Actors Fight Well. The large number of actors now in the field for Germany is indicated by a recent remark of the emperor while on one of his flying trips to Berlin. Bent on a visit to Staff Physician Dr. von Illberg, his majesty encountered a well-known playwright and Gustav Kadenburg, the actor. Summoning them to him, he announced that many others of their profession were at the front, including two famous actors who have received the Iron Cross. “I am very well satisfied with them," the kaiser declared. “They fight very well, indeed." KIDNEYS CLOG UP FROM EATING TOO MUCH MEAT Take Tablespoonful of Salts If Back Hurts or Bladder Bothers—Meat Forms Uric Acid. We are a nation of meat eaters and our blood is fllled with uric acid, says a well-known authority, who warns us to be constantly on guard against kid ney trouble. The kidneys do their utmost to free the blood of this irritating acid, but become weak from the overwork; they get sluggish; the eliminative tis sues clog and thus the waste is re tained in the blood to poison the en tire system When your kidneys ache and feel like lumps of lead, and you have sting ing pains in the.back or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or .' o blad der is irritable, obliging you to seek relief during the night; when you have severe herdaches, nervous and dizzy spells, sleeplessness, acid stomach r rheumatism in bad- weather, get front your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morning and in . few days your kid neys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid ot grapes and lemon juice, combined with 'thia, and has been used for genei.th -.s to flush and stimulate clogged ,- dneys, to neu tralirs the acids in urine so it is no longer a cource of irritation, thus end ing urinary and bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful efferves cent lithia-water drink, and nobody can make a mistake by taking a little occasionally to keep the kidneys clean and active. —Adv. To Be Expected. "Chumpson took his wife to all the tango parlors and now he says she neglects him.” “Serves him right. He might have known that she would meet some fel low who can tango better than he can." Fly in the Ointment. Her —Do you enjoy Wagner's music? Him —I probably would but for one thing. Her —And that? Him —It's so noisy one can’t hear It. Opposites Meeting. “This is fine fare.” "Yes, it is a course dinner.” —Balti more American. Weeks’ Break-Up-A-Cold Tablets A guaranteed remedy for Colds and La Grippe. Price 25c of your druggist It’s good. Take nothing, else. —Adv. “The only trouble with credit,” re marked the Man on the Car, "is that a fellow has to pay some time.” Be happy. t7se Red Cross' Bag Blue; much better than liquid blue. Delight! the laundress. All grocers. Adv. One song in the heart is better than two in the next flat. LATEST NEWS EPITOMIZED FROM TELEGRAPHIC REPORT* THAT COVER THE WEEK’S EVENTS. OF MOST INTEREST KEEPING THE READER POBTBD ON MOST IMPORTANT CURRENT TOPICS. Western Newspaper Union wows Service. ABOUT THE WAR. The British Admiralty announces the loss of the auxiliary crulßer Bay ano while the vessel was engaged in patrol duty. The bombardment of the Darda nelles was resumed by French and British battleships, says a dispatch to the Paris Matin from Athens. The advance of the British troops in the vicinity of Neuve Chapelle is estimated at aobut four miles, in a dis patch reaching Paris from Bethune. Secretary of the Navy Daniels or dered the destroyers McDougal and Dayton from Guantanamo to New York to aid the port authorities there in maintaining neutrality. The submarine U-29, one of the larg est and fastest of German under-water craft, lias had a successful three days off the Scilly Islands and the English Channel, where, on Thursday, Friday and Saturday she succeeded in sink ing four British steamers and one French steamer, and in damaging three others. A Basie, Switzerland, dispatch, states that tho Russian forces near Dukia Pass forced a battle upon five Austrian regiments on the Hungarian side of the Carpathian divide. The Austrians were enveloped, losing 1,800 men in killed and wounded. Two en tire regiments capitulated, according to the report. The Mittag Zeltung of Berlin has published a list of merchantmen said to have been destroyed by the Ger man army since the beginning of the war. According to it, German vessels have sunk 111 steamers with a total tonnage of 400,000; four auxiliary cruisers with a total tonnage of 32,- 500; one sailing vessel, one schooner, eight mine sweepers and one troop transport. WESTERN. The New Mexico Legislature ad journed Saturday. y' ~ Representative Taylor of Colorado was among a party of Congressmen visiting the San Francisco Exposition. A compulsory education law for Texas was signed by Governor James E. Ferguson. It becomes effective in September, 1916. Brigadier General Scott left Bluff, Utah, Saturday, for Douglass Mesa, 75 miles away, in search of hostile Piute Indians whom he is trying to pacify. Mrs. Edith Hatfield of Portland, Ore., was awarded damages in the sum of $5,000 against the Travelers’ Protective Association of America in the District Court at Des Moines, la. John B. McManus, formerly well known in Denver, was slain in Mexico City, according to word which reached Denver. McManus, says a telegraphic dispatch, met his death while resist ing a raiding attack of Zapata bandits. Mrs. E. S. Griffin, ninety years old, is dead at Salt Lake after a residence of fifty years in Salt Lake county, leaving two children, twenty grand children, forty-eight great-grandchild ren and thirteen great-great-grand children. ® WASHINGTON. Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo was stricken with appendicitis and went to the Providence hospital for _an operation. Secretary McAdoo had a fairly good night after his operation, and, with no complications, should make a good recovery, as conditions are satisfac tory. Wheat held in country mills and elevators on March 1 amounted to 86,000,000 bushels, the Department of Agriculture estimated, compared with 94,000,000 bushels one year ago and 118,000,000 in 1913. Encouraging advices telling of the relief of the food famine in Mexico City through the evacuation of the capital by the forces of Gen. Obregon, the Carranza commander, were clouded Friday by the news that on the entry of the Zapata troops John B. McManus, an American citizen, was murdered. The rioting included at tacks on the national palace to liber ate 250 Catholic priests imprisoned there. THE CHEYENNE RECORD. FOREIGN. A British soldier was killed by a Hon, according to the latest casualty list from German East Africa. Warning to Americans to leave Mex Ico has been reiterated by the State Department through the Brazilian min ister at Mexico City. Mrs. Clara Muriel Kipling, a nurse In the American hospital in Parts, has been awarded the gold "medallle d’Honneur des Epidemles.” Great Britain’s plan to give effect to the naval reprisal measures against Germany as embodied in an order in council was signed by King George. Mrs Emma Dalqulst, proprietor of a road house at Safety, twenty-two miles east of Nome, Alaska, was lost in a blizzard and no trace of her can be found. Count Sergius Julovich Witte, Rus sia’s first prime minister, is dead, sayß a Petrograd dispatch to Reuter's Tel egram Company. Death was due to tnfluenze. Italy and Rumania probably will enter the war together on the side of the allies, according to newspapers at Rome, which oppose the present policy of neutrality. The Chinese government has official information to the effect that the sec ond Japanese squadron, conveying two divisions of approximately 30,000 sol dlerst, has-sailed for China. Mms. Sarah Bernhardt was dis charged from the hospital at Berne, France, pronounced entirely and safe ly convalescent from the recent oper ation by which her right leg was am putated. Walter Hines Page, the American ambassador, and Mrs. Page, have an nounced in London the engagement of their daughter, Katherine, to Charles Creeiy Loring, son of the late General Charles Loring of Boston. SPORT. William Martin, infielder of the Boston Nationals, broke his right ankle while practicing at Macon, Ga. The baseball season opens ‘n Rocky Ford, Colo., Sunday, April 4, when a game will be played with the Mit chells of Pueblo. Betting on horse races In Texas was put off for at least two years when the House killed the pari-mutuel bill by a vote of 78 to 17. Miss Madge Frazer, Scottish woman golf champion, died of fever in Serbia, according to dispatches received in London from Nish. The annual Colorado state golf tour nament will be held at the Lakewood Country Club, Denver, on Thursday, Frkiny and” Saturday, August 19, 20, and _ Mayor -Baker sounded the death knelbrof professional boxing in Cleve land. Ohio, by refusing to sign an or omance apthorizing a city boxing com mission. ’The Legislature had killed ( the boxing bill. The spectacular career of Lincoln Beachey, . one of the most daring of American aviators, was ended when he fell to his death at the Panama- Pacific Exposition at San Francisco, in sight of thousands of spectators. Arthur Smith, an aviator, showing off before the members of the Ameri can Association of Fairs and Exposi tions at Chicago, ascended in his bi plane over the lake front and des cribed thirty-two samersaults in the air. A bill to permit horse racing in Arizona under the pari-mutuel system of betting was acted upon favorably by the lower House of the Legislature sitting as a committee of the whole. The bill already has passed the Sen ate. GENERAL. A total of 9,51G,452 books were given out by the New York public library last year. The American schooner William J. Quinlan sang after a collision with the Norwegian steamer Laly near Cape Hatteras. Hiram H. Nickerson, a widely known former railway, president, died at North Wayne, Maine, after a pro longed illness. Mrs. Ida Shiffen Walters, arraigned in the Supreme Court in New York, pleaded not guilty to indictments charging her with the murder of her babies, Loretta and John, by poison. At Cincinnati the U. S. Court over ruled the decision of the lower court in the cash register case against Pat terson and twenty-six others and re manded the case for a new trial. Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, wife of the richest man in the world, died suddenly at the Rockefeller country home in Pocantico Hills, N. Y. She was seventy-five years of age and had been an invalid for a year. The torpedo boat destroyers Dray ton and MacDougal, two of the fast est in the United States navy, arrived at New York from Guantanamo, Cuba, to help preserve neutrality regulations at the New York port. KEEP ANIMALS FROM DRIFTING National Foresters Build Fences to Confine Cattle to Certain Sped-‘ fled Districts. , Many miles of "drift” fences have been built by the government In re cent years for controlling the move ment of stock, grazed under permits on the national forest lands. These fences do not serve to inclose areas, but are simply intended to prevent the animals from going in cer tain directions, or "drifting," to use a cattleman's expression. In many cases they are used to restrict the animals to certain areas during the winter, as well as to prevent grazing on lands where poisonous plants are found. In one case five' miles of drift fence was built to prevent a city water sup ply from contamination by forest-range cattle. In one fobest, a four and one half mile fence was built to keep cat tle on one range.—popular Mechanics. SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR " DARKENS YOUR GRAY HAIR Look Year* Younger! Try Grandma'* Recipe of Sage and Sulphur and Nobody Will Know. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur properly compound ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray; also ends dandruff, itching scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays we simply ask at any drug store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur Hair Remedy.” You will get a large bottle for about 50 cents. Every body uses this old, famous recipe, be cause no one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and «ira\v this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morn ing the gray hair disappears, nnd after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, thick and glossy and you look years younger. Adv. The Wrong Time. "You can’t blame people for not tak ing good advice. It's so tiresome." “That’s true. And it Is usually of fered at a time when the person ad vised is tired of everything.” Those of Middle Age Especially. When you have found no remedy for the horrors that oppress you during change of life, when through the long hours of the day it seems as though your back would break, when your head aches constantly, you are nervous, de pressed and suffer from those dreadful bearing down pains, don’t forget that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the safest and surest remedy, and has carried hundreds of women safeljNhrough this critical period. Read what these three women say: From Mrs. Hornung, Buffalo, N. Y. Buffalo, N. Y.—“l am writing to let you know how much your medicine has done for me. I failed terribly during the last -winter and summer and every one remarked about my appearance. I suf fered from a female trouble and always had pains in my back, no appetite and at times was very weak. “I was visiting at a friend’s house one day and she thought I needed Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I took it and have gained eight pounds, have a good appetite and am feeling better every day. Everybody is asking me what I am doing and I recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. You may publish this letter if you wish and I hope others who have the same complaint will see it and get health from your medicine as I did.”—Mrs. A. Hoknung, 91 Stanton St, Buffalo, N. Y. Made Me Well and Strong. Macedon, N. Y.—“ I was all run down and very thin in flesh, ner vous, no appetite, could not sleep and was weak, and felt badly all the time. The doctors said I had poor blood and what I had was turning to water. I took different medicines which did not help me. 1 but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound made me welf and strong, and I am recommending it to my friends.”—Mi's. Fiied Chace, R. No. 2, Macedon, N.Y. The Change of Life. Beltsville. Md. —•“ By the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I have successfully passed through a most trying time,! the Change of Life. I suffered -with a weakness, and had to stay in. bed three days at a time. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound restored me to perfect health, and I am praising it for the benefit of ' other women who suffer as I did.”—Mrs. VV. S. Duvall, lioute Na X, Beltsville, Md. For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedyforfe- 7/) v |\\ male ills. No one sick with woman’s ailments Wf g does justice to herself if she does not try this fa- 'll Va«W\r moos medicine made from roots and herbs, it If Tv II has restored somanysufferingwomen to health. II jjr If Write to LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. UV\ Jn) (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read ana answered 0 *»y a woman and held in strict confidence, rCOLD.Si and Catarrhal Troubles Cured by Pe-ru-na A cold Is oouto catarrh. Peruna la m recognized standard remedy for catarrh. Copy "Ilk of ThmßmrssnmCo^JZolumbußjOf* Rheumatism Just put a few drppß of Sloan’s on the painful ppotjand the pain stops. It is really wonderful how quickly Sloan’-s acts. No need to rub it in—on lightly it penetrates to the bone and brings relief at once. Kills rheumatic pain instantly. Mr. James E. Alexander, of North Barpmrell, Me., write*: “Many strains in my back and hips brought on rheu matism in the sciatic nerve. I had it so bad one night when sitting in my chair, that I had to jump on my feet to get relief. lat once applied you* Liniment to the affected part and in less then ten minutes it was perfectly easy. I think it is the best of all Liniments I have ever used.’! UN?M£NT Kills Pain At all dealers, 25c. Send four cents in stamps for a TRIAL BOTTLE _ I Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc. Dept. B. Philadelphia, Pa. BATCAITC Wation E. Coleman# HI I PM I Patent Lawyer,Washington. ■ ■ w p.e. Advice and books free. Rates reasonable. Highest rtdexences. Besteerflcea