Newspaper Page Text
i£3 THE m,
OkitgienH
klcabinetuJ
Copyright. 1921, Western Newspaper Union.
Who hath not met with home-made
bread.
A heavy compound of putty and lead.
And home-made wines that rack the
head.
Home-made pop that will not foam
And home-made dishes that drive one
from home. —Hood.
MORE LAMB AND MUTTON.
Those who object to mutton (which
is so popular in England) do not ob
ject to the nicely roasted
S joint or leg of lamb if it
is properly killed and i
cared for. The skin
should always be re
moved. Do not touch the
meat after handling the
skin. The wool-grows on
tlie skin and the oil from
the wool gives the meat
tlie objectionable flavor.
Roast Leg of Lamb.—
Itub salt, pepper and onion with any
sweet fat all over the meat. Place
in a roasting pan and sear it well in
a hot oven. Now add one-half cupful
of water, one cupful of tomato or two
jsliced fresh ones, one onion and six
or eight peeled potatoes around the
leg of lamb. Roast in a hot oven and
serve very hot with a gravy made
from the liquor in tlie pan. Mint
sauce may be served with it if de
sired.
Mutton Stew. —Take a neck piece
and put on to cook in boiling water
with a small onion. Simmer until
tender, then add a can of peas, thick
en the gravy and serve the peas and
gravy poured around the meat. Sea
son well with salt and pepper while
cooking.
Mutton en Casserole. —Brown a
pound or less of mutton cut from the
shoulder, cut in serving sized pieces.
When well browned season with salt,
pepper and dredge with flour. Add
one cupful or more of carrots, a cup
ful of peas, one onion and place in a
casserole to bake for two or three
hours. Serve from tlie casserole.
Barbecued Lamb. —Cut cold re
lamb in slices and reheat them in the
following sauce: Two tnblespoonfuls
of butter, one-half tablespoonful of
vinegar, one-third cupful of currant
Jelly and one-fourth teaspoonful of
mustard. Cook until the lamb is well
heated and flavored.
Lamb Patties. —Grind meat from
the shoulder, season, form into small
putties, wrap each in a strip of bacon,
fastening with a toothpick. Fry until
well browned in a hot frying pan and
serve with the pan gravy.
Softly the evening came. The sun
from the western horizon
Like a magician extended his golden
wand o’er the landscape.
Twinkling vapors arose, and sky and
water and forest
Seemed all on fire at the touch, and
melted and mingled together.
—Evangeline.
WORTH WHILE DISHES.
After you have enjoyed Hubbard
squash, baked and steamed and
mashed, the fol-
remove tlie
and tlie stringy portion and remove
the rind. Place in a steamer and cook
over boiling water until tender, then
mash and season to taste with salt,
pepper and butter. To two cupfuls
of the mashed squash add gradually
one cupful of cream and when well
mixed, the yolks of two well-beaten
eggs. Mix well, then fold in tlie whites
of the eggs beaten stiff. Pour into 6
buttered baking dish and bake in a
moderate oven until firm. Serve at
once.
Bread Sponge Cake. —Take one and
one-half cupfuls of sugar, three
fourths of a cupful of lard or any
sweet fat, two well-beaten eggs, one
fourth of a cupful of sweet milk, two
cupfuls of bread sponge, three cupfuls
of flour and one teaspoonful of soda.
Add spices, raisins and a few nuts if
liked. Mix well and when risen bake.
Stuffed Quinces. —Peel and core six
quinces and place them in a baking
dish with one cupful each of sugar and
water: Fill tlie cavities with chopped
nuts and raisins, cover and bake until
tender; set away to cool. Serve with
cream.
Golden Fleece.—Break in bits and
melt in a frying pan one-half pound
of cheese, adding one cupful of cream
and a dash of cayenne. When smooth
break over this mixture five fresh eggs,
cover for two minutes; when the white
is set, remove the cover, add salt and
beat the mass briskly with a large
spoon for a few minutes. It will rise
in a yellow foam. Serve on buttered
crackers or toast.
Peanut Butter Fudge.—Take two
cupfuls of confectioner’s sugar, one
half cupful of sweet milk, four table
spoonfuls of peanut butter; boil five
minutes, stir until It thickens, pour
into buttered pan and cut in squares.
Halibut Salad. —Place flaked halibut
(smoked) on a bed of lettuce. Pound
the yolk of a hard-cooked egg and three |
sardines to a paste, removing the skin
and bones. Mix this paste with boiled
dressing or mayonnaise and pour over
the fish. Garnish with overlapping
slices of lemon.
C== —"" -
Stories of
Great Scouts
By ELMO SCOTT WATSON
o -=c
((g). 1921. Western Newspaper Union.)
“LONESOME CHARLEY” REY
NOLDS, CUSTER S SCOUT
Many noted scouts served with Gen
eral Custer during his Indian cam
paigns, but his favorite of them all
was Charles Reynolds, known as
“Lonesome Charley.” In tlie early
seventies, Reynolds was a hunter for
the garrison at Fort Rice, N. D. He
was a quiet little man who lived
much to himself and preferred to
hunt alone, no matter how many hos
tile Indians were near. Because of
his disregard for human companion
ship. he became known by everyone
as “Lonesome Charley.”
Reynolds first served under Custer
in tlie exploration of tlie Yellowstone
country in 1878. During his expedi
tion two inoffensive civilians with
Custer’s command were murdered by
tlie Indians. The next year, while
Reynolds was attending a sun dance
of tlie Sioux near Fort A. Lincoln,
N. D„ he heard a young chief named
Rain-in-the-Faee boast of the murder
of tlie two men. Charley reported this
to Custer and Rain-in-the-Face was
arrested and imprisoned. Later he
escaped and sent back his now-famous
vow of vengeance of tlie whole Custer
family.
“Lonesome Charley” was witii Cus
ter during the exploration of the
Black hills in 1574. When gold was
discovered, at Custer’s request he
rode 150 miles, through a country
swarming with hostile Indians to Fort
Laramie, Wyo., in 48 hours and gave
to the world tlie first news of the
discovery, causing a stampede of min
ers into that region.
When Custer started on liis last
campaign against the Sioux in 1876,
Reynolds was offered tlie position of
chief guide.
When the Seventh cavalry left the
steamer Far West, Reynolds was ill.
(’apt. Grant Marsh of tlie Far West
tried to persuade him not to go with
tlie expedition since lie was in no
condition to do any fighting. Reynolds
refused.
“I’ve been waiting and getting
ready for this expedition for two
years, captain, and I’d rather lie dead
than miss it,” he said earnestly. So
he rode away to his death.
When Custer divided his command
to attack tlie Sioux on the Little Big
Horn, tlie scout was sent with Major
Reno. The Indians swept down upon
Reno and forced him back to the
wooded bluffs across tlie river. “Lone
some Charley” was killed in this re
treat. His body was found surrounded
by <SO empty cartridge shells. He had
died fighting.
CUSTER’S CROW SCOUTS
There were six of them, these war
riors of tlie Crow or Absaroke nation,
who rode with Custer on his last
march down tlie Little Big Horn river
in Montana that day* in June, 1870.
When tlie leader of tlie Seventh caval
ry asked General Terry for his best
Crow scouts in tlie camp on tlie Little
Rosebud creek, Terry told him he
could have Curley, “White Man Runs
Him,” Hairy Moccasin, “Goes Ahead,”
Yellow Face and White Swan. The
Crows were glad to serve with the
famous Indian fighter and they guided
him until they located the hostile camp
on tlie Little Big Horn.
When Custer divided his command
to attack the village, Yellow Face and
White Swan were sent with Major
Reno and Custer kept “White Man
Runs Him,” Curly, “Goes Ahead” and
Hairy Moccasin with him. Yellow
Face was killed while fighting with
Reno, and White Swan was badly
wounded, but finally recovered and
lived until 1905.
Today Curley is the only survivor
of tlie Custer Crow scouts and, ac
cording to his story, he is the last
man who saw his comtnauder alive.
After crossing the ridge, Custer
turned to “White Man Runs Him,”
Hairy Moccasin and “Goes Ahead,”
and said to them: “You have done
your duty. You have led me to tlie
enemy. My soldiers will do the fight
ing. You are to go now and save
your lives.” The scouts left him and
made their way to the pack train un
der Capt. Tom McDougall.
When Curley returned from Reno’s
position, he was given the same or
der. He started and soon found him
self in the midst of a hot fight. Find
ing a dead Sioux warrior, he took his
horse, gun and blanket. Wrapping
tlie blanket about his head to conceal
his Crow scalplock from the Sioux.
Curley suceeded In reaching a high
butte. Looking back he saw that
Custer had charged down upon the
Indians and was surrounded. Curley
says that he watched the battle until
j he saw Custer, who was the last man
standing, fail and then he rode away.
Tlie next morning the Crow scout
I appeared in General Terry’s camp,
j He could not speak English and there
was no interpreter. Curley took
I blades of grass, piled them all in a
I heap, and then, exclaiming “Pouf!
I Pouf!” in imitation of the sotind of
i a gun, scattered them wide apart. By
means of this he made the officer un
derstand that Custer and all of his
men had been killed. Like the fa
mous Greek. Curley the Crow was a
messenger of disaster and lie brought
the first news of this Thermopylae of
America —Custer’s last figbL
THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR, MT. VERNON, GEORGIA. x
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
Sunday School
* Lesson *
(By REV. V. P FITZ WATER, D. W..
Teacher of Hn«lush Bible in the Moefty
Bible Institute of Chicago.)
Copyright. 1921. Western Newspaper Union.
LESSON FOR DECEMBER 4
PAUL IN MELITA AND ROME.
LESSON TEXT—Acts 2S:I-31.
GOLDEN TEXT—I am ready to preach
the gospel to you that are at Rome also.
For I am not ashamed of the gospel of
Christ: for it is the power of God unto
salvation to everyone that beUeveth. —
Rom. 1:15. IG.
REFERENCE MATERIAL—Mark 16:18;
Rom. 1:8-17.
PRIMARY TOPIC—The End of Paul s
Journey.
JUNIOR TOPIC—The End of a Long
Journey.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC
—Paul Living in Rome.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
—Paul’s Ministry in Rome.
I. The Shipwrecked Crew on Melita
(vv. 1-30).
Through tlie storm they lost their
bearings, and when they were safe on
land they learned that the island was
called Melita.
1. The hospitable reception ot the
natives (v. 2). They built a fire and
made them as comfortable as possible
from the cold and the rain.
2. Paul gathering sticks for a fire (v.
3). This is a fine picture of the world’s
greatest preacher and missionary not
above picking up sticks for a fire. The
ability and disposition to serve natu
rally in whatever way is the evidence
of capacity for great commissions.
3. Paul bitten by a venomous ser
pent (v. 3). With tlie sticks that Paul
gathered there was a serpent. Per
haps it had already curled itself up
for its winter sleep, but when tlie
warmth of the fire aroused it it darted
at Paul and fixed its fangs upon his
hand. The natives expected to see him
fall down dead, yet he shook it off,
nothing harmed. At first the natives
concluded that lie was an escaped
murderer and that this was retributive
justice being meted out to him. When
they saw that lie was unharmed they
concluded that lie was a god.
4. Paul heals Publius’ father (vv. 7-
10). These people are now getting
some return for their kindness. When
this man of note was healed others
came also and were healed. To this
they responded in appreciation by load
ing them down with necessary sup
plies.
11. Paul Arrives at Rome (vv. 11-16).
When Paul landed at Rome Christ's
charge to the disciples was fulfilled.
After three months’ stay at Melita,
Paul departs for Rome in the ship Al
exandria, whose sign was Castor and
Pollux. At Syracuse they were de
layed three days, perhaps for favora
ble winds. At Puteoli he found breth
ren, at whose request he tarried seven
days. At Appili-Forum and at the Three
Taverns brethren from Rome met him.
From Puteoli the news went before
Paul’s coming, and so interested were
the brethren that they came more
than forty miles to meet him. This
greatly encouraged him, for which lie
gave God thanks. No one, perhaps,
ever enjoyed more close fellowship
with God, and yet no man ever en
joyed more and derived more benefit
from human fellowship than he. liis
readiness to preach the gospel at
Rome, which he had expressed in the
Epistle to tlie Romans, written from
Corinth about three years before, was
now realized. He was treated with
great leniency at Rome, for he was
allowed to hire a house there and live
alone except that the soldier that re
mained his guard was constantly with
him. Being chained to a soldier was
rather irksome, but yet it gave him a
chance to preach to tlie soldiers which
lie could not have had any other way.
He rejoiced in whatever circumstances,
just so tiie gospel was preached.
111. Paui’6 Ministry in Rome (vv,
17-31).
1. Ilis conference witii the leading
Jews (vv. 17-22). He did not, as
usual, wait for the Sabbath day to
speak to the Jews. He only allowed
one day for rest. His object was to
have a fair understanding with them.
When they came be endeavored to
conciliate them. He told them that,
though he came as a prisoner, lie was
not a criminal. Though his own
countrymen had so sought his life, lie
did not come with an accusation
against them. The result of this inter
view was that the Jews cautiously
took neutral ground, but expressed a
desire to hear what Paul could say In
defense of a sect which was every
where spoken against. The fuct that
this sect was spoken against Is no evi
dence that it was wrong. Many times
a thing may be wrong in men’s minds,
because their judgments are biased. If
a thing is right in the sight of God it
matters not what men think about it.
2. Paul expounding the kingdom of
God and persuading concerning Jesus
(vv. 23-31). He pointed out a real
kingdom—the Messianic Kingdom witl
Jesus as the King.
Consecration.
If you want to live in this world,
Joing tlie duty of life, knowing the
blessings of it, doing your work heart
ily, and yet not absorbed J>y it, re
member that the one power whereby
you can so act is, that all shall be
consecrated to Christ. Alexander
Maclaren.
Supplication of Solomon.
Now, my God, let, I beseech thee.
,’hine eyes be open, and let thine ears
be attent unto the prayer that is made
in this nlace.—*ll Chronicles 6-so
MANY LIVES LOST
IN NEW HAVEN FIRE
THREE BODIES RECOVERED IN
PICTURE THEATER HOLOCAUST.
SEARCH MACE FOR OTHERS
INJURED ESTIMATED AT 400
Many Yale Students In Crowded House
Manager Arrested On Orders
Os Coroner
New Haven, Conn. —Fire swept the
crowded Rialto theater, a motion pic
ture house, recently and the police
estimated on tlie basis of various ac
counts that 20 persons perished.
Three bodies have been recovered,
those of two women and one man.
Only one has been identified, that of
Mabel Moran, of Derby, Conn. The
other two, those of a young woman
and the man are badly charred and
identification will lie difficult.
Timothy Halou, who was not in
the theater but rushed in from the
street to help in tlie rescue work died
of heart failure in an ambulance
while being taken to a hospital.
From five to fifteen bodies are be
] lieved to lie in the ruins of the thea
j ter.
At the New Haven general hospi
tal, where most of the badly burned
and trampled persons were taken,
three persons were reported to be
dying.
Lawrence W. Carroll, manager of
the theater, was arrested recently on
the order of Coroner Mix who said he
was prepared to lodge a charge ot
manslaughter against him.
Frank Kildea, member of the New
Haven fire department, is among the
badly injured at the general hospital.
He was caught beneath a section of
a side wall of tlie old building while
searching for bodies within the house.
Firemen searched carefully in the
ruins which were scarcely cool. Every
one able to tell a connected story of
the disaster insists that other bodies
are in the ruins,some estimated that
over a score were unable to get out.
The Rialto, holding from 800 to
1.000 persons, was an old church, a
tinder-box structure.
Possibly 50 persons out of the 40-0
reported injured are so badly burned
that their lives are despaired of.
Every physician in New Haven and
others from nearby cities are work
ing in the hospitals or the Hotel Taft.
A motion picture wiis being shown.
Incense was being burned on the stage
as the prologue was being shown,
when from somewhere behind the
screen there came a burst of flame
and, according to some, an explosion.
A frightful panic ensued, many per
sons being trampled or overcome
either by extreme heat or suffocation
Human forms dropped from the bal
cony, which had a seating capacity
of 300. tnto tlie struggling mass in
forced over the rail or leaped to make
a short cut to the exits.
As the first burst through the
screen, every light in the house was
extinguished. The panic-striken pat
rons could be described only by the
reflection of the mounting flames. In
this setting the people began their
struggle to reach the doors to the
streets.
The crowd waiting in the lobby for
i.lie second show was apprised of the
tragedy by screams from behind the
house doors. Then the doors burst
open and the lobby crowd was fairly
swept out into the sidewalk and to
the street by the mad rush of panic
sticken men and women, some with
their clothing singed.
Experts To Make Navy Cut Report
Washington.—With the question of
land armaments definitely thrust in
to the background by tlie develop
ments of the recent week, the con
ference on limitation of armament
will enter its third week with another
stride toward agreement on naval
limitations foreshadowed.
Tokio Takes Hand In Navy Problem
Washington.—The Japanese cabinet
and diplomatis advisory council at
Tokio are taking a band in the nego
tiations at Washington over the ton
nage ratio of capital warships to be
allotted Japan. Admiral Baron Kato,
senior Japanese delegate, has laid the
entire situation growing out of the
discussion by the committee of ex
perts before his own government.
Three Men Killed When Boiler Bursts
Columbia, S. C.- Three men were
killed in a wreck of Seaboard Air Line
northbound freight, train No. 86 two
miles south of Youngviile, N. C., at
8:15 o’clock at night, according to in
formation reaching the Columbia of
fices of the railroad one night recently.
The dead are: Engineer Gerow, Brake
man Murphy, white, and Fireman
Jones, negro. Nineteen cars are re
ported to have been derailed. The
men were killed when the engine ex
ploded. The cause of the explosion
Is not given out.
Married Woman Not Barred From P. O
Washington.—Women postal employ
ees hereafter will not suffer a change
of status or lose service by marriag?,
Postmaster General Hays annouiu.es.
“Heretofore,” Mr. Hays says, “when
an unmarried woman holding the po
sition of postmaster married, she was
obliged to secure a new appointment,
execute a new bond or pass the re
quired civil service examination in
competition with other candidates
seeking the office. If she had not pre
viously taken such an e.ramina
tion ’
GEOPHIA HAPPENINGS
9F TIMELY INTEREST
I __ !
Dublin. —S. J. Lord, former cashier
of the Dublin and Laurens bank ol
this city, which was merged with the
First National bank early in February,
announces that the directors of his
former bank have definitely decided to
reopen for business and that the date
will be announced within a few days.
Atlanta. —The first act of (’lint W.
Hager, the new United States district
attorney, was to formally request the
resignation to take effect immediate
ly of W. Paul Carpenter, who, for
more than eight years has been as
sistant United States district attor
ney under the administration of Hoop
er Alexander.
Savannah. Four hundred and
twenty-five thousand foet of lumber
sold for ten dollars—to the first, last,
highest, lowest and only bidder for
the lot —that is the record far low
prices in lumber in South Georgia. It
was paid by E. J. Black of the Augusla-
Savannah Steamship line, tor the car
go of the Gertrude A. Somerville, a
schooner stuck in the mud at Hilton
Head, where the rescuing Yamacraw
recently left her. The schooner was
sold for SIOO to E. E. Price.
Atlanta. —T. W. Armstrong, 21 years
old, who was arrested in connection
with the alleged theft of an automo
bile belonging to Dr. H. L. Provano,
and who was liberated under bond,
was re-arrested in connection with the
larceny of another automobile. He is
being held under a blanket charge of
suspicion, pending further investiga
tion. Two others suspected of larce
ny of automobiles have been arrested
and are being held for investigation:
C. L. Pittman and J. M. Spratlin.
Athens. —Judge George C. Thomas
was nominated for mayor of Athens
by a small plurality over K. H. Young
kitT, in the Democratic white primary
here recently. The surprise of the
race was the poor showing of O. It.
Dobbs, who had announced as an anti
administration candidate, and had re
ceived the indorsement of the execu
tive board of the League of Women
Voters. He tailed the ticket, with
about three hundred votes, according
to estimates after the polls closed.
Dublin. —George Walker, a hoy of
15 years old, and son of a prominent
Laurens county farmer, must spend
the rest of his life in prison for the
murder of his playmate, George Av
ery, aged 18, if the sentence of the
court, passed upon him. stands. After
the trial, young Walker stood sway
ing before Judge F, L. Kent as sen
tence was imposed. As the last words
fell from the judge’s lips, the boy col
lapsed and now' is under the care of
a physician. His mother is desperate
ly ill also.
Bain bridge.—Ernest Brown, 17, of
Palkealth, Fla., became an appointed
father one night recently, while re
turning home on eastbound train No.
58 from Dothan, Ala., where he had
been on a visit. A pretty young girl
with a baby occupied the same seat
with him. When the train stopped
near here she asked him to hold the
baby for a tow minutes. She never
returned, Brown declared, and he is go
ing to keep the baby. He took it
home with him, after buying it a bot
tle of milk.
Atlanta. —A. J. Ware, aged 38, is in
a hospital probably fatally stab
bed on the left side of his hack, and
Emory Cantrell, aged 19, is held at
police headquarters without bond. One
of the stal) wounds is said to have en
tered a lung. The dificulty which cul
minated in the stabbing of Ware was
occasioned, officers state, by an argu
ment which arose when defective
plumbing in the room of Cantrell
caused water to leak into that of Ware
beneath —Ware cutting off the water
and Cantrell turning it back on.
Atlanta. —Under recommendations
of the coroner’s jury, which held an
inquest over the body of N. L. Post,
Mrs. T. E. Williams, 29 years old,
admitted slayer of Post, is held with
out bond, and Mrs. Alma Harvey, 20
years old, and Sherman I*. Curtis un
der bonds of $25 each as material wit
nesses. Mrs. Harvey gave bond and
was released. Len B. Guillebeau has
been retained as counsel by Mrs. Wil
liams. The killing followed an auto
ride in which, it is stated, whiskey
Atlanta. —Following receipt of infor
mation by Georgia shippers from the
interstate commerce commission cov
ering certain rulings on class rates
charged by railroads in Georgia, the
state railroad commission recently re
scinded its order suspending this
phase of the intrastate freight case
now before it and set December 5 as
a date on which shippers could re
sume their submission of evidence in
the case. The suspension originally
was ordered at the request of the ship
pers with the concurrence of the rail
roads. The shippers asked for a sus
pension pending the action of the in
terstate commerce commission in cer
tain rates in the southeastern territory
and recently they received the infor
mation they needed.
Atlanta. —Governor Hardwick re
cently heard evidence in the case ol
A. H. Glenn, tax collector of Chattooga
county, against whom charges were
preferred by citizens of his count?
to the effect that he has not made
final settlement with the state and
county and 'hat discrepancies exist ir
his accounts. Attorneys representing
the collector appeared and explainet
the charges as growing out of the
“condition of the bank account" ol
the collector; that the state and coun
ty taxes iiad been mixed with Glenn’s
SUFFER PAIN ?
Heed This Woman’s Advice
Springdale, Ky. “I was in a run
down condition and every month suffered
pain. I had taken treatments for femi
nine trouble, but seemed to get no results
from the treatments. It was through my
daughter-in-law that I heard of Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and de
cided I would try it. I took a few doses
when at her home in Illinois, and when I
came home 1 took it regularly. It surety
helped me very much. I can say that
‘Favorite Prescription’ is a very good
remedy for women in a run-down con
dition or if troubled with feminine troub
le.’’ —Mrs. Henry Soward, Route 1.
If you have the above-mentioned
symptoms, you should profit by Mrs.
Howard’s advice, and get the “Prescrip
tion" from vour druggist at once. To be
had in tablets or liquid; or write Dr.
Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y.
for free medical advice.
RATS and MICE
\ By Viiriß the (timin' STEARNS*
ELECTRIC PASTE
Ready for Uso Better Than Traps
Directions in 15 languages in every box.
Hats, Mien, Oockroacht's, Ants anti Waterbngs
destroy food and property and are carriers of
disease. Strum*' t'lrrtric Past? forces these pests
to run from the building for water find fresh air.
36c and 11.50. “Money back If it falls.’*
U. H. Govern men t buys It.
YOU CAN SAVE
By recovering your old -
auto top frame yourself.
W«i make these recover
to At all m»kei end
models of cam. Any (C '7C and up KZjfl
person that can drive a ,7|J. f 3 Parcels Post Paid CS2M
ear can put it on. We T
furnish Instructions. Roof and quarters aswsd t»|-sthsr with r»»r
curtain, faatsnors, waits and larks. All complete. ns tha
name. roar and modal number of roar car and wa will aand r»«
oar catalogue with samples and quota you exact price.
LIBERTY TOP A TIRE CO., Dept. 7. Cincinnati, O.
The Truth About Me
lam a mop. Not Just an ordinary mop. but
the best WRINGKK Mop in the world No
more backaches and red hands for MOTMKR
Light weight. Guaranteed three years. De
tachable scrub brush. Regular price $3.75,
BUT If you send $2.00 and this advertise
ment I will he sent to you POSTPAID. A
practical gilt.
TICK SMITII-TANNKR SALKS CO.
227 East Eleventh St.. Jacksonville, Florida.
Necktie Device—Greatest seller of season.
Demonstrators overwhelmed with business
Each sale 50c, 126% profit. Sample 30c
The Necktie Form A- Holder Co., Elgin, 111.
Cause for Flight.
“I know as well as you do that the
grand jury Imin’t in session now,”
said a citizen of tin- Rumpus Itidge
region, whom Gap Johnson while
coon hunting laid found ensconced in
a cave. “I keep posted on the march
of events better than that. I’m hiding
out simply b’euz my wife is the most
peculiar woman in seven states —Hops
right up in Hie tree tops over mith’a.
a-tull. Night before last I was sel.tin’
there, not looking for trouble any
more than a sucking dove, when wife
spoke up and said that next day was
the twentieth anniversary of our wed
ding. I never believe in arg.ving, and
so I just let il go at that. But when
she said we’d better kill the lame
hog and invite in the neighbors, I
says, ‘Wind do you want to kill the
lame hog for? The pore varmint
hain’t to blame for something that
happened twenty years ago.’ And the!
—well, I just sorter came away.”
IN BUYING ASPIRIN
ALWAYS SAY “BAYER”
Look for the Name “Bayer" on Tab
lets, Then You Need
Never Worry.
“Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” can be
taken safely for Colds, ileudnclie,
Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Lum
bago, Rheumatism, Joint I’ains, Neuri
tis, and I’nin generally.
To gel quick relief fallow carefully
the safe and proper directions In each
unbroken package of "Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin.” This package is plainly
stamped with the safety “Bayer Cross."
The “Bayer Cross’’ means the gen
uine, world-famous Aspirin prescribed
by physicians for over twenty-our
years.—Advertisement.
R-r-revenge!
He had been bitter against the old
top sergeant and used to give a vivid
outline of what he was going to do to
tiim when lie got out of service. Great
was the surprise of a friend on meet
ing him about* a year after be had
started wearing civics again to find
him carrying a parrot which he intend
ed giving to ills old enemy.
“How come?" asked the friend. “I
thought you were sore at him.”
“Man, oli, man !” gloated the other.
“I’m getting even. I taught the bird
every word he knows.” —American
Legion Weekly.
FOR COLDS, CROUP AND PAINS
Use Vacher-Bulm ; It relieves at once.
AVOID IMITATIONS.
If we have no agent where you live,
write to E. W. Vacher, Inc., New
Orleans, La. —Advertisement.
Then He’ll Learn.
"Did your son learn anything in col
lege?” “Apparently not. Now he
wants to get married.”
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
err J/&
M /zMytim il iNDiJ|gj/
Hot water
Sure Relief
DELL-ANS
and 754 Packages. Everywhere