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MUTT AND JEFF —Sometimes the Wise Guy Is the Booh After All. —By Bud Fisher
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aPenny
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How to Treat
A Torpid Liver
The liver is the largest mid most
important organ in the body, and
tvhen the liver refuses to act, it
causes constipation, biliousness,
headaches, indigestion, gas, sour
stomach, bad breath, dysentery,
diarrhoea, pains in back and under
shoulder blades and under ribs on
right side. These symptoms.lead to
colds, influenza or other serious
troubles unless corrected immediate
ly.
An Inactive liver places an extra
burden on the kidneys, which over
taxes them and causes the blood to
absorb and carry into the system the
impurities that the liver and kidneys
have failed to eliminate.
When you treat the liver alone,
you treat only a third of. your
trouble, and that is why you have to
take purgatives every few nights.
Calomel or other ordinary laxatives
do not go far enough. If you would
- treat your kidneys and blood while
treating the liver you would put
your entire system in order and fre
quent purgatives would then be un
necessary.
Dr. W. L. Hitchcock many, years
ago recognized these important
facts, and after much study and
research, compounded what is now
known as Dr. Hitchcock’s Liver,
Kidney and Blood Powders, | three
medicines combined in one. This
was the Doctor’s favorite prescrip
tion for many years, being used by
his patients with marked success.
It is a harmless vegetable remedy
that will not make you sick, and
you may eat anything you like
while taking it.
Get a large tin box from your
v druggist or dealer for 25c, under his
personal guarantee that it will give
relief, tone up the liver, stimulate
the kidneys to healthy action and
thereby purify the blood. Keep it in
the home for ready use whenever
any member of ■ the family begins
to feel “out of sorts.” Ib will prove
a household friend and valuable
remedy.— (Adyt.)
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New Questions
1. Q. What is the longest golf
course in the United States?
2. Q. How did people first meas
ure the circumference of the earth?
3. Q. Is there a fundamental dif
ference in the language of vaious In
dian tribes.
4. Q. What is the fastest ship
in _ the world?
5. Q. Is the tree still standing
under which William Penn addressed
the Indians on the peace pipe
treaty?
6. Q. Why did President Casimir
Perier resign the presidency of
France so suddenly?
7. Q. Who said “We love him for
the enemies he has made?’’
8. Q. Who wrote “Westward the
Course of Empire Sets its AV ay?”
9. Q. In what year was the Grand
Duke Alexis, of Russia, in the Unit
ed States on a Buffalo hunt?
10. Q. Where was Alexander Du
mas born?
Questions Answered
L Q- —What does it cost to run our
government?
. 1-. A.—According to treasury sta
tistics, the present average expenses
amount to $18,000,000 a day. This
does not take into account a possible
soldiers’ bonus bill or the appropria
tions that may be made by congress
before the end of the fiscal year.
2- Q. —How many railroads are
there in the United States?
2. A.—-There are 1,287 railroads of
sufficient importance to be listed.
This does not include several small
roads that make no connection with
other lines.
3. Q. —What are the Apostle
spoons?
3. A. —These are spoons in seto of
thirteen, the handles of which are
formed by images of the twelve
Apostles and the Virgin Mary. These
spoons were once favorite christen
ing gifts. Complete sets are now
quite rare and in 1904 such a set
was sold in London for 4,900 pounds
sterling, t
4. Q. —When was the greatest fire?
4. A.—ln point of number 'of lives
lost, the destruction of Jerusalem
in 70 A. D. ranks first with one
million, one hundred thousand. The
fire' in San Francisco, April 18,
1906, following an earthquake, de
stroyed the greatest amount of
property, which was valued at three
hundred and fifty millions of dollars.
5. Q. —What Is the moving plant?
5. A.—This is a plant native to
East India and is remarkable by
reason of the motion of its leaves.
Brutality Better Than Ardent Love,
Asserts Wife Smothered by Kisses
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.—How
much should you love your wife?
This is the absorbing question
brought up here by the 1 divorce ac
tion of Mrs. Leigh M. Stewart, who
sues her husband, Commander Stew
art. because he loved her too much.
The divorce courts are cluttere'*
with actions because “love has d'ed."
Now there comes the reverse—the
newer and absorbing question for a
judge to determine: Just how much
should a man love his wife?
A modern cave man was Comman
der Stewart, according to his wife. A
cave man with gentle human kind
ness, but overpowering in his love.
“His love for me was so overpow
ering, so terrffile in its intensity,
that it killed my own love for him.
As I look back over the period of
five years of our married life some
thing tells me if he had loved me
less I could have loved him more
“He was never satisfied unless he
I.ad me in his arms, kissing me. He
’Planes Bomb Ice Gorge to Save
Maryland Towns From Flood
PHILADELPHIA, —Aerial bombs
dropped from army planes are be
j ing used to break ice jams that
menace two Maryland towns on
me tsusquenanna river.
An ice gorge which has piled up
from twenty to thirty feet high on
■ the river between Fort Deposit and
Cherrydale, Md., has flooded the
river streets and houses in both
towns.
Answering an appeal for help,
the chief of ordnance at Washing
ton gave permission to aviators
from the Aberdeen proving grounds
; to fly over the river in bombing
planes and drop explosives to break
■ the ice jam.
One plane dropped a bomb near
I Port Deposit to test the effect.
Along the four-mlle line of the
Pershing Taken Off
Rock Bound Vessel
SAN JUAN, Porto Rico.—Gyferal
John J. Pershing, Governor Yager and
others of the passengers aboard the
United States transport Northern
Pacific, which went aground at the
mouth of the harbor Sunday shortly
after the ship sailed from here, were
brought ashore in the afternoon.
An attempt is being made to light
en the vessel so that tugs may drag
her from her present position. All
work has been made difficult by a
strike of longshoremen in the har
bor, and other workers refused to
man tugs and lighters for the re
moval of the passengers and cargo.
The crew of the transport is being
used. Little damage is believed to
have been suffered by the Northern
Pacific thus far, but she is in danger
of becoming fast on the rocks in the
next few hours unless refloated.
The cabin passengers include General
Pershing’s personal staff, Major Gen
eral Andrew W. Brewster, Governor
and Mrs. Yager, Miss Frances Brad
ley, daughter of Colonel J. J. Brad
ley, and A. E. B. Stephens, member
of congress from Ohio.
These are arranged in groups of
three. the lateral leaflets mucn
smaller than the terminal one. These
lateral leaflets are 'in constant mo
tion, being elevated by a succession
of jerks and then moving downward
by similar rapid jerks. The motion
is not rapid, a complete up and down
movement taking from two to four
minutes. The terminal leaf does not
remain quiet, but its movements are
not like those of the others.
6. Q. —How much vacant public
land is there in the United States?
6. A. —The last report of the de
partment of the interior gives a total
of 212,901,622 acres in continental
United States that are unappropri
ated and unreserved public lands.
Os this, 74,112,938 are as yet unsur
veyed.
7. Q.—How did the name Jack
Ketch originate?
7. A.—This is a familiar title for
a hangman in England, and John
Ketch was actually the nhme of the
public execqtioner during the reign
of James 11.
8. Q. —What is the meaning of the
word Mazda? From what language
does P come?
8. A.—Mazda, in the Zend or
Aveston (old Persian) language,
means “the supreme one.” It is ap
plied to electric Rights in the sense
of being as near perfection as possi
ble.
9. Q. —-What diseases are supposed
to follow an absence *f vitamines in
food?
9. A.—Scurvy, pellagra and beri
beri are three of the recognized dis
eases that are directly traceable to
a lack of sufficient vitamines in food.
Foods that are particularly rich in
vitamines are fresh milk, butter,
fresh fruit juices, yolks of eggs,
meat juice, cereals, and such vege
tables as potatoes, spinach, onions,
peas, cabbage, green corn, cauli
flower. carrots and lettuce.
10. Q. —Who was known as the
president-maker ?
10. A. —This title was given Henry
Clay. He was a candidate for the
presidency in 1824, his competitors
being Andrew Jackson. William H.
Crawford and John Quincy Adams.
No candidate received a majority
of votes cast, whereupon the elec
tion was thrown into the house of
representatives. Clay, as a member
of the house, was. according to
the constitution, ineligible. He gave
his support to Adams, who was
chosen, and Clay gained The title.
“The president-maker.”
never semed to be able to caress me
enough.
“Then we married. It is easily im
agined how he won me by his love,
but later, incessant as it became it
tired me. I was never free from the
very awfulness of his love.
“Life became hateful. Can you
Imagine sitting at a breakfast table
with-a man who wouldn’t permit you
to eat because of the time it took
from kissing? At luncheon he would
have thought up a new love poem, the
kind he always returned witlh from a
rfea voyage, and I would have to list
en to it. Then at dinner it was more
kissing, kisses, kisses, kisses.
“Not so ‘very long ago I tired su
utterly of his kisses that I asked him
to leave me alone for a moment. He
flew into a rage and choked me. I
thought then that he was going to
kill me, and I came nearer at that
moment to loving him than in any of
the long years of our married life.
“His caresses were so tiring that
brutality was welcome.”
Ice jam the river is about one and
one-quarter miles in width. Know
ing in advance that the bombs
would be dropped, the river banks
were crowded with spectators. At
Port Deposit a holiday was de
clared.
The plane flew 500 feet above the
stream. With a thunderous roar
the bomb exploded, showering ice
and water on all sides, but only
clearing a small area.
According to the Aberdeen offi
cials this was due to the fact that
the bomb was not heavy enough.
Four airplanes, each carrying 350-
pound bombs, will attack the jam.
There are 10,000 heavy bombs at
the proving grounds, and orders have
been given to use them in breaking
the gorges.
Man, Age Sixty-One,
Ends Life While
Family Is at Mass
Louis Paul Haungs, sixty-one years
old, ended his life by sending a bul
let through his right temple whife
members of the family were at
tending 0:30 o’clock mass at St.
Charles Borromeo church. He had
been confined to his bed more than
a year.
Mrs. Haungs found her husband
dead when she returned to her home,
2621 West Jefferson street, Louis
ville, Ky. An old 22 caliber revol
ver, which was thought useless, was
lying by his side. Coroner Roy
Carter was notified.
Mr. Haungs was a machinist at the
National Casket company for more
than forty years. He is survived by
his widow, five daughters, Mrs. Rob
ert P. Clark, Mrs., Frank J. Mitsch,
Mrs. Joseph J. Judd and Misses Lot
tie and Mary Ellen Haungs, and a
son, Louis Charles Haungs.
“ONE-MAN” SUBWAY TRAIN,
WITH HARMLESS DOOR, REAPPEARS
NEW YORK.—Just as the plat
form man had shouldered the last
passenger into a crowded subway
train at Bowling Green, a man in a
fur-lined coat removed his hat and
gave every indication of a desire to
commit suicide by a new system.
He inserted his head into the open
doorway of the first Car and calmly
held it there while the door slid for
ward and struck him on the fore
head. Then he fixed himself more
firmly in the doorway and smiled
as the door drew back, paused a
moment, and raced forward to hit
him across the nose.
Passengers stood speechless while
he took considerable more punish
ment than is required to establish
the'reputation of a prize ring contest
ant. Then, as< guards stood about
awaiting the conclusion of the weird
act,« he put on his hat and moved
into the crowded car.
For the benefit of those who prob
ably retired with the notion that they
had witnessed the actions of a man
struck with suicidal mania it may
be explained that the man in the
fur-lined coat was Frank Hedley,
president of the Interborough sys-
SHOULD COW WEAR AUTO TAIL LIGHT?
Yes, Says Motorist Who Hit Animal at Night
NEW YORK, N. Y. —Justice of
the Peace Egbert L’Ecluse, of
Great Neck, L. 1., is *face to face
with thjs problem:
“Can a cow moving along the
highway at night be considered such
a moving vehicle under the motor
law as to be compelled to carry a
red light in the rear?” ,
“The facts in this case are un
usual,” said Judge L’Ecluse. “One
of our most influential residents
was driving home the other eve
ning in an automobile. Ahead of
him was a man in a wagon who
had a cow attached to the rear of
the wagon.
No Hoboes, So Tramp College Quits; x
Advent of Prohibition Puts Old ‘Bums’ to Work
NEW YORK. N. Y. —Old John Bar
leycorn’s chief friend and mourner
has followed him to the grave. The
Hobo college, the only “educational”
institution of its kind in the world,
has closed its doors for lack of stu
dents. Just a few days ago the
old AVashingtonian home, an ancienr
establishment where drunks formerly
were brought in by cart loads tor
treatment, retired from business be
cause their were no more souse
fiends, and now the Hobo college
puts up the “To Let” sign.
“Jungle Buzzard,” “Gay Cat.” “Bar
Fly” and “Ganty Dancer” have de
serted the flops that were once their
menagerie. They have established
themselves in more luxurious quar-
$25,000 Is Lost
From Mail Wagon
En Route to Depot
En route from Grand Central sta
tion to the West Shore ferry at Wee
hawken, a" government mail wagon
lost a mail pouch containing “less
than $25,000” in currency, it was
made known yesterday. The pouch
was found where it fell from the
wagon, but the contents, consisting
of registered packages in which were
the mondw consignments, were miss
ing. Reports that postoffice
ployes had estimated the amount
lost as high as $1,500,000 were de
nied by Chief Postoffice Inspector W.
C. Cochrane.
Mr. Cochrane declined to give de
tails of the loss, other than to say
that “a certain mail wagon which
left Grand Central station for the
weehawken ferry, lost a regulation
mail pouch which contained several
regulation packages of currency.” He
expressed the belief that the pouch
was not stplen.
According to the chief clerk in Mr.
Cochrane’s office, the currency con
sisted of bills in small denominations
consigned by the Federal Reserve
bank of New York City to small
/banks out of town.
.A mail clerk and a chauffeur were
on the wagon when the pouch is Said
to have been jarred from the closed
vehicle into the street. The story
told by the two men was that the
rough passage of the wagon prob
ably had unlocked the door of the
mail cage and the pouch fell out. The
loss was not discovered until the
wagon had boarded the ferry, when
they immediately retracted the route
and found the empty pouch.
This Man Got in Trouble
Right, Having Two Wives
When Daniel Domi), thirty-two
years old, of 1483 Fifth avenue, New
York, was arraigned before Magis
trate Schwab in Harlem court on a
charge of bigamy, he pleaded guilty
without delay. He was held in SI,OOO
bail to await the action of the grand
jury.
Domb, on September 25, 1909, is al
leged to have married. Esther Domb,
now of 11 Clinton stret, when both
were living in Poland. Domb left
Poland before the war and his wife
had not heard from him until a few
weeks ago, when she received a let
ter from relatives telling her of his
second marriage.
Wife No. 1 came to the United
States with her child. She told .Mag
istrate Schwab she found her hus
band at the Fifth avenue address
with Wife No. 2 and two children.
Domb’s second wife was Freda Wei
ner. They were married on March
10,
KENOSHA, Wis. —Eight waitresses
who waited at a banquet at the Elks’
club, waited two hours longer—until
3 a. m. for an elevator to move from
between floors. Several fainted
when mechanics got the elevator in
condition tq elevate.
tern, engaged in an experiment in
tended to prove that a blow from the
car door would injure nobody.
And, for the benefit of the 2,000
men and women who crowded into
that particular ten-Car train it may
be added that they were unconscious
participants in an experiment that is
expected to revolutionize subway op
eration in New York.
For the train was the much dis
cussed and little seen “one-man”
train, the doors of which are credited
with the. ability to do everything but
escort a/ passenger into a car and
place him in a seat. They proved
their ability to tap the passenger
lightly on the shoulder, warn him
that he was obstructing the move
ment of the train, and keep warning
him until he moved on.
The one-man train, as operated re
cently, actually was a two-man train
when the numerical strength of the
crew was considered. Mr. Hedley
was determined that there should be
no repetition of the fiasco of a few
weeks ago, when a one-man train
jammed a brake and tied up the en
tire subway system.
“The wagon, as required by law,
had a red lantern at the rear. The
cow had surreptitiously pulled loose
and proceeded to select her own
route over the highway. The motor
ist saw the red light at the rear
of the wagon and shaped his course
to avoid it. In doing so he ran into
the cow, which had no rear lights
exposed. Quite a mixup followed.
“The driver of the automobile has
requested a warrant for the arrest
of the owner of the cow on the
grounds that 'the cow was moving
on the highway without the proper
rear lights.”
ters. Many of them have married
and actually gone to work. The day
has passed when a rum-soaked -in
tellectual could be lured to lean on
the lop-sided curriculum by a cup
of coffee and sandwich. “Mike”
Walsh,, organizer of the college,
wept as he discussed changed condi
tions.
“I have been through the slave
market across the river,” he said,
“looking for recruits for the college,
but times have changed. Formerly
we eould get a thousand boys to
come on a promise of hot coffee and
a sandwich. Now we are doing
mighty well if we can round up four
or five. We had to quit.”
Jim Colosimo Murdered
CHICAGO. —Jim Colosimo, of thb
famous Colosimo’s case at Twenty
second street and Wabash avenue,
was shot and killed recently by an
unknown assailant who escaped be
fore discovery of the murder. The
body was found behind a door in the
dining room of the restaurant.
Colosimo was known the world
ovqr by the sporting and theatrical
fraternity. His resort, a landmark
in the old tenderloin district of
Twenty-second street, never closed.
That Colosimo himself, picturesque
owner of the place, should have been
slain within a month after his sec
ond marriage, gives an ironical twist
to the annals of the place. The mur-
PELLAGRA
• ■» I
CURED WITHOUT A
STARVATION DIET
AT A SMALL COST
If yon have this awful disease, and
want to be cured —to stay cured —write
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FREE BOOK.
giving the history of pellagra, symptoms,
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ment that cures when* all others fail.
Write for this book today.
CROWN MEDICINE COMPANY.
Dept. 93, Atlanta, Ga.
szßssaanasß
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EtopSt la 0 e ! I
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CLEVELAND TIRE AND RUBBER COT ,
8105 Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. I
Doni Send a Penny
Very consisting of hat. blouse, skirt and stockings goes to you on approval.
I To Bend th i s outfit for your examination is the only m;
L3ICSI way we can Rhow you whnt » most extraordinary bargain _
Wo you to try it on and then judsre
Stylß JfjQSPi f° r yoursclr. Keep it only if you find it so
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Complete All-White
s s - AOutf it Bi®
send X oTTFoTTbe*" iXns* t w.?? ce - FoQr " iU,t jU
today < Hat ; f B B -1 M
• Fashioned on lines that are simple bat elerant-rthe :
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A Blouse i U ••X w
Note the pretty lace >■ i&f .' I SI
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Z i daintily edged with fine Vai. lace. :
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/ ' SKB » e^e° 9 f B T , A4 W 6X t .t Unti * yOU | 1 'I
• full cut end he. the SSSS XSS* agSSSSI
i < 112'11® 1 M
• X SaSSik back of waistband gives full fit- W :A ;
JSflSx tin « effect. Has all round loose
be,t °f ee, f material. Sites, : :
:V < waist. 22 to 40.1 ength 84 to 42. • gSSfc.;&?:&SS& .<
° f Tery expenß ’ ve :& ;:3gag; :ji:
tOC tit It US m t Q°ebty whits
cotton. Reinforced foot-
K R •» ing, very durable. Sizes 8 1-2 to 10.
K | WA > £ ct on 2JF while the chance is yours. Send no money with order. Pay only •KQ ft
QB for outfit on arrival. lYy it on, examine it and if not the season's most wonderful
■ ftp W bargain, return it and we refund your money. We take all the risk, because we know what you
■ w w will say when you see these dainty garments. Order complete outfit by No.BXIOBS. Price $5.98.
LEONARD-MORTON & CO. Dept. 6478 Chicago, Illinois
MOTHERHOOD
Os .... . /
Augusta, Ga.—“l can speak
very highly of Doctor Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription. I have
taken this medicine during ex-
• -i • t
pectant periods and it not only bj
strengthened and built me up in
health but I had practically no
suffering, and my babies were
fine and healthy. I have also '■
taken the ‘Prescription’ as a tonio J
afterward and found it be all psgpuy
that could Ipe desired in giving s
me renewed health and strength.” sty jy
MliS. EDNA E. BUCK,
No. 1960 Broad Street.
Just fifty years ago Dr. Pierce gave to the world this famous
“Favorite Prescription” for the distressing weaknesses and com
plaints of women. For many years he had been in the active
practice of medicine and his specialty was the diseases of women.
Later he desired to give the “Prescription” to the public, and he
received a trade-mark protection from the United States patent
office for this medicine which is an herbal, “temperance” prescrip
tion with all the ingredients printed on the bottle wrapper.
* 1•* ’ j -r •
It is now put up in tablet as well as liquid form, and sold by
every druggist in the land. A trial package can be obtained by
sending 10 cents to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y.
T UST ns the materials from which TUBE ROSE is made
BHBEyI nre the cllo,ceßt that can be found, so is this good old | i
REMARKABIX FREE BOOK
WoBF" PELLAGRA
V' V A GOOD, CLEAR DISCUSSION of thia fearful
Vl \\W' disease, written so anyone can understand it. Tells how
il a big-hearted man has successfully treated Pellagra
iiw n after it baffled science for 200 years. Describes alt the
H : y <-S'l and complications. Shows how Pellagra can be
U checked in early stages. Tells of the cures of many
?*'?■!l Southern people, rich and poor alike, after thbusauas
|t -H bad been carried away by Pellagra,
WW W Pellagra CAN Be Cured
i iW// AA-fl If you doubt, this book will convince you. And it will show
tU >A \VA 11 you the way to a permanent cure. If you are a Pellagra suf-
11 AftVNv i'' I serer, or if you know of a Pellagra sufferer, then for
l ' humanity’s sake, let this book bring new courage and
cofnf*^ B * lIH valuable knowledge. It will be sent FREE for the asking.
' AMERICAN COMPOUNDING CO ~ Box 587- L Jasper, Ala.
7 TUBERCULOSIS
11 was w hen physl
clans said it was fmpos
sible for J. M. Miller,
°bio Druggist, to sur
vive the rava^3 °* Tu *
berculosls, he began ex
-27 ' perimenting on himself,
1 and discovered the Home
t Treatment, known as
' -i \DDILINE. Anyone
-
- so Pounds ass Pounds • Latest Photo . cercular tendency or Tu-
Send your name and address to under° S
A.DDH.INE, 194 Arcade B ulldlng, Columbus, Ohio