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THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY
If you have been waiting and hoping for the day
when you could get better tires for less money, now
is your time.
Goodyear Tires are at their best. They are bigger,
heavier, and more durable than ever. Their quality
is at its highest level.
And these better Goodyear Tires today sell for less
money than at any previous time in our history.
The prices listed below established a new low level
for Goodyears, averaging more than 60 per cent less
than the prices of Goodyear Tires in 1910.
These would be low prices for any good tires. They
are almost unbelievably low for Goodyears.
You have never had such an opportunity before to
buy fine and lasting tire performance at such low
cost. Call on your Goodyear Service Station Dealer,
and take advantage of this opportunity today.
30 X 3K CroM-Rib 32 x 3J* All-Weather _ _ ...
Fabric $10.95 Tread Coed $25.50
30 x 314 All-Weather a,,.-- 32 t 4 All Weather a-i-,.,,-.
Tread Fabric $14.75 Tread Cord SJZ.4O
30 x 3'4 All-Weather , 0 3.3 i 4 All-Weather
Tread Cord SIB.OO Tread Cord $33.40
Manufacturer '* tan extra
GOOD-YEAR
SHAKE Giant Lye down the
drain-pipes to keep them M JrmJH B.
clear.
The lid fits tight on the can.
This keeps the air out and keeps
the lye from lumping. ■
Write lor our h'HEE txxiklet shitwing I tr
pictures atul telling uses of Giant Lye I wr M J
B. T. BABBITT. Succeaaor 1
The Mendieson Corporation
IS Uni 34tli Street. New York
one-eleven
TURKISH l| \ ( tt»I'RLKT
FIFTEEN
In a ntn*- package that fits the pocket—
At a price that fits the pocket-book —
The same unmatched blend of
Turkish. Virginia and Burley Tobaccos
® 9 - Guarani—H b»
#lll I-,\rTH AVE.
THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR, MT. VERNON, GEORGIA.
Bkitcmcn^
CABINET^
Copyright. ISi 22. Weetern Newspaper Union.
"It to do were aa easy an to know
what were good to do, chapels had
been churches, and poor men's cot
tages prince's palaces.”
MORE GOOD THINGS
Egg contains about 15 per cent pro
tein, 10 per cent fat, 1 per cent min
eral salts and the rest
■£■■■ wuter. It will be seen,
then, that they lack car
| J bohydrates (starches and
sugar) and this must be
I \ V@nTl HU l , r»lled by combining
vQf 1 egss t * le nee( *ed
',}! I amount of carbohydrates
to make a well balanced
diet. The yolk of the
egg has 32 per cent of fat while the
white has none. Often the yolk of a
hard-cooked egg will agree better with
a young child than a whole egg cooked
soft.
Stuffed Egg*.—Cut hard-cooked eggs
In halves, crosswise; remove the yolks
and place them In n bowl; mash and
mix them with an equal amount of
chicken, seasoned, anil mix with salt
and pepper and a little cream. % A few
chopped mushrooms may be added.
Fill the halves of the whites with the
stuffing, press them together and roll
In crumbs, then fry In hot fat. A cream
or tomato sauce Is good with these
eggs.
Apple Balls. —Cut 24 balls from ap
ples with a French potato cutter; add
two tablespoonfuls of lemon Juice and
then add one-fourth cupful of sugar
and one-half cupful of water; steam
until tender, but not soft enough to
lose their shape. Beat the whites of
two eggs, add two tablespoonfuls of
powdered sugar and a few drops of va
nilla. Toast six rounds of bread until
well browned, dip In hot milk, then
butter and pile the apple halls on each
round. Cover with the meringue and
brown In the oven.
French Omelet. —Scour the omelet
pan with salt so that It will he per
fectly smooth. Add to the hot pan one
tablespocnful of butter; when melted,
add tin* omelet. Break four eggs Into
a bowl and beat them just enough to
mix the yolks and whites; add four ta
blespoonfuls of warm water, table
spoonful of minced parsley and a
sprinkling of pepper. Place the pan
where the heat is hottest and pour in
the eggs, dust lightly with salt and
shake the pan to keep the omelet In
motion. Lift the edges with a knife
so that the center will cook; fold and
turn on to a hot platter. Serve at
once.
Apple Drops.—Sift together one cup
ful each of Hour and sugar, rub Into
this mixture two tablespoonfuls of but
ter. Reserve a quarter of a cupful
for the top. Add 1 % teaspoonfuls of
baking powder, one egg, three table
spoonfuls of shortening and one-lmlf
cupful of milk; beat well and put the
mixture Into a shallow’ pan, cover with
the reserved flour and shortening mix
ture and bake In moderate oven. Cut
| In rounds, cover with apple sauce and
serve with whipped cream.
In matters of generosity a woman
aels first and reasons afterward; a
man reasoas first—and generally for
gets to act.—Boston Transcript.
POTATO COOKERY
Potatoes are the common food and
are popular because of the ease of
preparation a a
"ell as for their
i e ness
mBT AVsjgpffijj and adaptability.
I Any one Is sup
boll water, but
the fact is a good potato Is not pro
duced by nil cooks. Potatoes should
be of uniform size if cooked together,
or tin* small ones will be ruined by
the time the larger ones are cooked.
This is true of both boiled and baked
potatoes. •
The sweet potato should not be for
gotten for it is a most valuable food.
The yams are especially fine flavored
and one never tires of them, while the
too sweet potato cloys the appetite.
Potato Muffins.—Take one cupful of
cold mashed potato, soften with three
fourths of a cupful of milk, sift one
and one-half cupfuls of flour, one-half
teaspoonful of salt, four teaspoonfuls
of baking powder, add the potato, then
two well-beaten eggs and two table
spoonfuls of melted fat. Bake thirty
minutes. If the potato Is very dry
add a little more milk.
Potato Pudding.—Take two and one
fourth cupfuls of grated sweet po
tato. one cupful of milk, one-half cup
ful of sugar, two eggs, one teaspoon
ful of cinnamon and one-fourth tea
spoonful of ginger. Mix well and hake
In a moderate oven until Arm. Serve
with milk or cream.
Potato Soup.—Boil four medium
sized potatoes In salted water; when
soft mash through a ricer. Add a slice
of onion to one quart of milk; when
scalded remove the onion. Add the
milk to the potato. Melt three table
syoonfuls of fat. add two tablespoon
fuls of flour, stir Into the boiling soup,
boil one minute. Sprinkle with pars
ley and serve hot.
Potato Cake*.—Form mashed and
seasoned potato Into small cakes and
roll In seasoned flour. Melt some fat
In a frying pan and brown the cakes
on both sides, turning them carefully
with a spatula.
'HctCuc Frcl£
WAR IS RAGING IN
CHINESE CAPITAI
AMERICAN LEGATION IN CHINESE?
CAPITAL APPEALS TO WASH
INGTON FOR WARSHIP
BOMB DROPS NEAR MARINES
First Victory On Long Battle Front
Is Claimed For Forces Os General
Chang-Tso-Lin
London.—An airplane bomb was
dropped near a tramload of American
marines on the road to Peking, by an
J aeroplane belonging to the Chi li or
attacking army under General Wu Pei
j Fu, according to the correspondent of
; The Lon Times.
The bomb, however, did not fall near
j enough to the tram to cause any
damage.
Peking.—Martial law was declared
in Peking. The armies of General
Chany Tso-Lin and General Wu Pei
i Fu fought continuously . The fighting
centered around Changsintien, 12
miles distant. A government commun
! ique says Chang Tso-Lin was victor
; ious in the fighting at Machang.
The American legation has request
ed Washington to send another war
ship to Tien-Tsin.
The French cruiser Craonne has ar
rived at Tien-Tsin.
The residenth of Peking feel safe,
nothwithstanding the booming of can
non heard from the direction of
Chang Sintien. The gates of the city
here are heavily guarded. They are
j being kept open, but it is expected
they will be closed in the event of
1 any indication of a rush toward Peking
| by defeated troops.
Commander Charles T. Hutchins,
American naval attache at the lega
tion here, returned from the battle
field. The automobile he used flew
the American flag.
He reported that firing had not
ceased during the last 36 hours. From
a hillside overlooking the Hun river
he witnessed the operations of both
i armies, with Chang Tso-Lin’s troops
i holding the village of Chang Sintien
I and the Wu Pei-Fu forces two miles
southward fighting desperately to ad
j vance.
Smoke front the cannon enveloped
the hillsides; shells were busting in
the trenches; camels were to be seen
j transporting guns to various points
and refugees were observed running
i from their homes. A vivid picture of
i the seriousness of the contest was ob-
I tained.
About 1,000 dead or wounded were
1 observed by Commander Hutchins.
Roth sides appeared to be shelling
wide areas. The relative position of
the contending forces did not seem to
have changed materially since the bat
tle began.
The opinion expressed by Comman
der Hutchins as that Wu Pei-Fu’s ob
ject is to push forward and capture
Peking, with a view to controlling af
fairs from the capitol. Chang Tso-
Lin, in a declaration, asserted that
Wu Pei-Fu was ambitious to become
a Chinese Napoleon. He declared that
peace would not be possible until
Wu Pei-Fu was captured, Chang Tso-
Lin said he was willing to resign and
assist in abolishing the Chinese sys
tem of military dictators.
The foreign legations, foreign busi
ness houses and institutions like the
American board of missions, the
Rockefeller institute and the Ameri
can mission are flying the flags of
their respective nations conspicuously,
i The streets of Peking were unusually
animated with picturesque confusion
: among the people of many nations and
i vehicles and animals. Frequently
stretchers, borne by coolies, were to
! be seen passing through th estreets
j with wounded from the fighting zone,
j Camels, carts and automobiles are be
| ing pressed into service to move val
j uables to places of safety.
Women Excluded At Murder Trial
Montross. Va. —The trial of Miss
| Sarah E. Knok, Baltimore nurse
' charged with the murder oE Mrs. Mar
j garet L. Eastlake at Colonial Beach,
got under day after Judge Chinn had
i ordered all women spectators to leave
the court room. Great crowds of coun
try folk filled the court room and oth
i ers jostled for admittance.
Dick Croker Dies At Home In Ireland
New* York. —Richard Croker. former
leader of Tammany Hall, and one of
| the best known political figures of his j
1 time, is dead at his country estate in
' Ireland, according to a private cable
! gram received here by Arthur Bris
' bane. From the meager news obtain
able, his death was sudden Croker re
turned to Ireland several years ago. j
| but had nothing to do with the political
; history of his former countrty. When
at the head of Tammany, he was the
most feared man in American poll
| tics.
Hayes Scores Anti - Dry Propaganda
Washington.—Prohibition Commis- j
sioner Hayes in the latter part of
April issued a formal statement warn
ing the public "to be on guard against
well defined propaganda which seems
to be nation-wide, falsely alleging that
enforcement of the eighteenth amend
ment is falling in results.” "The truth
is." Hayes declared, “that It is being
enforced and its enemies are increas
ing their propaganda and this fact
alone Is evidence that the shoe is
•pinches.' ” He believe prohibition is
bound to succeed.
FLOOD SUFFERERS
FACE NEW DANGER
AS THOUSANDS FLOCK TO REFU
GEE CAMPS, SCANTY SUPPLIES
OF PROVISIONS DISAPPEAR
MANYCOMMUNITIES ISOLATED
With Railroads Blocked, Only Avenue
For Relief Is Dangerous Voyage
Up Swollen River
New Orleans, La. Reports from
Harrisonburg, La., recently that the
1,000 residents of that town, in addi- j
tion to 50 refugees from Catahoula,
Concordia and other flooded parishes
in that section, face starvation unless
food supplies arrive speedily, have
greatly itensified the gravity of the
flood situation, and every agency is
trying to overcome the difficulty of
transporting supplies to the stricken
people.
The most serious phase of the flood
situation is northern Louisiana at this
time, aside from the danger of con
tinually rising waters, is that of threat
ened food shortage. Many isolated
communities have been completely sur
rounded by water, and residents forced
to depend upon small stocks of food on
hand, when flood waters rushed
through the break near Ferriday.
Countless numbers are living on can
ned products that they are securing
from community grocers, but reports
from some sections indicate there are
other communities not so fortunately
placed, and that many people are very
little ahead of starvation. In many Iso
lated farm houses, where residents
have remained in marooned or flooded
homes, there is very little, if anything,
to eat.
With depleted stocks of food re
ported from all the refugee camps in
the Louisiana flood area and a real
crisis existing at Harrisonburg, ref
ugee workers recently expressed the
belief that those who remained in their
flood-swept homes may in the long
run be better off than those concen
trated in the refugee camps unless
some means of reaching the camp with
provisions Is found without delay.
LADY ASTOR CALLS ON U .S.
TO UNFURL THE STANDARD
OF THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS
Washington. A "little Virginian
rebel,’’ home from a conquest of Brit
ain. recently urged her first love to
raise a league of nations standard. She
is Lady Nancy Astor, daughter, of Vir
ginia, member of the British Parlia
ment and lastly, warm defender of
Woodrow Wilson’s world society of
nations. "I was told not to talk about
the league,” Lady Astor commented.
“All you have to do is to tell a Vir
ginan ‘don’t’ and It’s sure to be done.
“There will surely be a League of Na
tions one of these days. I love Amer
ica, I love England, but I do not con
fine my love of these two great na
tions. We must embrace all nations j
in the family of our love. We don’t j
have to call this world society a I
League of Nations. We can call it a
league for peace. Call it anything,
for it seems to be positively jarring
to say League of Nations to your poli
ticians . But I think the League is
coming. You can never-4;ell me that
the great heart of America wants to
progress alone.”
THE WORLD CONSUMPTION
OF COTTON IS BACK TO THE
PRE-WAR STATUS, ’TIS SAID
Washington.—World cotton consump
tion has returned to Its pre-war level,
after a five-year period of consumption, ]
according to a survey of the interna
tional cotton situation covering pro
duction, consumption and stocks as j
of April 1, made public recently by j
the commerce department. “The strik
ing feature of the situation.” the de- j
partment obesrves, "is an indicated ;
consumption of 21,000,000 bales for the
year ending July 31, 1922, approxi- ;
mately 6.000,000 bales more than was
produced for the crop year.’’
Police Character Slain By Detective
Memphis, Tenn. —Ed Only, alleged |
police character, was shot four times ;
and killed recently in a downtown
street by Alfred O. King, house detec- \
tive for a prominent hotel. King told
the police he shot in self-defense when
Only moved as if to draw a pistol.
War Vets’ Widows To Get Preference
1
Washington.—Widows of honorably i
discharged soldiers, sailors and ma- !
rines who served in the world war I
and wives of Inured soldiers, sailors
and marines, will be given preference
in examinations for postmasterships at i
first, second and third class postoffices i
under the civil service commission's ;
interpretation of the executive order
of October 14, 1921. This is line with
public sentiment throughout the coun
try, so it is stated in Washington, and
will give general satisfaction In all sec-
I tions.
Allies Plans To Aid The Russians
Genoa, Italy.—The allies propose to
aid Russia financially to the extent
of twenty million pounds sterling
(nominally one hundred million dol
lars), to be extended through the
agency of an international consortium,
it has become known, as a result of
the completion of the preamble to the
reply which will be made to Russia.
It is the concensus of opinion here
that this will solve the vexing ques
tions which have come before the con- ,
i terence, and that from now on things !
1 will proceed smoothly.
HARDIN PUT BACK
ON HIS FEET TWICE
Was Relieved of Both Rheumatism
and Stomach Trouble by Tanlac,
States Los Angeles Man.
“For the second time Tanlac has put
; me on my feet, and you may know by
that what I think of it,” said William
; T. Hardin, 1409 Garden St., Los An
geles, Calif.
“Three years ago, I had rheumatism
in my shoulders and neck so bad I
could hardly work. I tried medicine
after medicine only to get worse, but
finally I got hold of Tanlac, and I
haven’t had a trace of rheumatism
since.
“Then last summer my stomach got
out of order, I lost my appetite and
what little I did eat made me feel
bloated, all stuffed up and miserable.
I always felt weak, tired and worn out,
and was so nervous I couldn’t sleep.
“Well, Tanlac did a good job for me
before, so I just got some more of it,
and now it has again fixed me up, and
I’m feeling strong and energetic like
I used to. I’ll tell the world Tanlac’s
the medicine for me.”
Tanlac is sold by all good druggists.
Not First Class.
“It takes two to make a quarrel,”
said the friend. “A small one,” admit
ted Murphy.—American Legion Weekly.
Thousands Have Kidney
Trouble and Never
Suspect It
Applicants for Insurance Often
Rejected.
Judging from reports from druggists
who are constantly in direct touch with
the public, there is one preparation that
has been very successful in overcoming
these conditions. The mild and healing
influence of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is
soon realized. It stands the highest for
its remarkable record of success.
An examining physician for one of the
prominent Life Insurance Companies, in
an interview on the subject, made the as
tonishing statement that one reason why
so many applicants for insurance are re
jected is because kidney trouble is so
common to the American people, and the
large majority of those whose applica
tions are declined do not even suspect
that they have the disease.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp Root is on sale
at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes,
medium and large. However, if you wish
first to test this great preparation send
ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham
ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When
writing be sure and mention this paper.
Advertisement.
Matter of Taste.
She —What color is best for a bride?
He —I prefer a white one, myself.—
Boys’ Magazine.
A Year’s Wear or more, W r %
m when yon buy r
( Mml
f ExcellO Jmmukm
A SuspenderS jHfcdPl//
• No rubber to rot. Phosphor , y ~7-
% Bronze Springs give thejffl '///-
\ stretch. Ask Your DeaJe? f
% for Nu-Way Suspenders
and Hose Supporters. Jr )
If he hasn't them, send direct, M . 1
dealer’s name. Every 1 /nfj
pair guaranteed. I jLA )
Str ech Suspendery/1 \ / cS#
Co:, M tr% A
I —■■■!■ ■■ ■
Hospitable Soul.
“That’s the third time this week
the kitchen roof of this boarding house
has caught fire,” grumbled the chief.
“What are you going to do about
It?” asked a bystander.
“What can we do about it? The
landlady had coffee and sandwiches
ready when we arrived.” —Birmingham
Age-Herald.
Hardly anybody groans much if
there Is nobody to listen.
__________
Wise Is the man who refuses to
i take his troubles seriously.
An Expert
Writes:
“I used to be called
a poor cook, and
never pretended to
bake a cake worthy
of praise, but now
I am called the
champion cake baker
of my community,
thanks to the Royal
Baking Powder.”
Mrs. R. W. P.
ROYAL
Baiking Powder
Absolutely Pure
Contains No Alum
Leaves No Bitter Taste
Sond for Neu> Royal Cook Book j
— lt ,FREE. Royal Baking Pow