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ASPIRIN
Name “Bayer” on Genuine
/ A \ /A- w
v I JHan
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” is genuine
Aspirin proved safe by millions and pre
scribed by physicians for over twenty years.
Accept only an unbroken "Bayer package”
which contains proper directions to relieve
Headache. Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia,
Rheumatism, Colds and Pain. Handy tin
boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Drug
gists also sell larger "Bayer packages."
Aspirin is trade mark Bayer Manufacture
Monoaceticacidester of SSalicylicacid.
((Advt.)
Acts On The Liver,
Regulates Kidneys,
Purifies the Blood
The liver is the largest and most
important organ in the body, and
when 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 immedi
ately.
An inactive liver places an extra
burden on the kidneys, which over
taxes them and causes the blood
to absorb and carry into the sys
tem the impurities that the liver
and kidneys have failed to elimin
ate.
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 i/ot go far enough. If
you would treat your kidneys and
blood while treating the liver, you
would put your entire system in
order and frequent purgatives would
then be unnecessary.
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. r 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
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.” It will
prove a household friend and a val
uable remqfly.—(Advt.)
Rupture Kills
7,000 Annually
Seven thousand persons each year are laid
away—the burial certificate being marked
"Rupture.” Why? Because the unfortunate
ones bad neglected themselves or had been
merely taking care of the sign (swelling) of
the affliction and paying no attention to
the cause. What are you doing? Are you
neglecting yourself by wearing a truss, ap
pliance, or whatever name you choose to call
It? At best, the truss is only a makeshift,
a false prop against a collapsing wall—and
cannot be expected to act as more than a
mere mechanical support. The binding pres
sure retards blood circulation, thus robbing
the weakened muscles of that which they
need most—nourishment.
But science has found away, and every
truss sufferer in the land is invited to make
a FREE test right in the privacy of their
own home. The PLAPAO method is un
qnestionubly the most scientific, logical and
successful self-treatment for- rapture' the
world has ever known.
The PLAPAO Pad, when adhering closely
to the body, eannot possibly slip or shift
out of place, therefore cannot chafe or
pinetar Soft as velvet—easy to apply—inex
pensive. To be used whilst you work and
whilst you sleep. No straps, buckles or
springs attached.
* learn how to close the hernial opening as
nature intended, so the rupture CAN’T come
down. Send your name today to PLAPAO
CO.. Block 101, St. Louis, Mo., for FREE
trial Plapao and the information necessary.
(Advt.)
NUXATEO
I
FOR
RED BLOODMO? ’
STRENGTH and
EACH GENUINE NUXATED IRON
TABLET IS STAMPED AS ABOVE
RHEUMATISM
RECIPE
I will gladly send any Rheumatism suf
ferer a Simple Herb Recipe Absolutely Free
that Completely Cured me of a terrible at
tack of muscular and Inflammatory Rheu
matism of long standing after everything
else I tried had failed me. I have given
it to many sufferers who believed their
cases hopeless, yet they found relief from
their suffering by taking these simple herbs.
It also relieves Sciatica promptly as well as
Neuralgia, and is a wonderful blood puri
fier. You are also welcome to this Herb
Recipe if you will send for it at once. I
bellpve you will consider it a God Send
after you have put it to the test. There is
nothing injurious contained in it. and you
can see for 'yourself exactly what you are
taking. I will gladly send this Recipe—
absolutely free—to any sufferer who will
send name and address plainly written.
W. G. SUTTON. 2650 Magnolia Ave.
Los Angeles. California.
(Advt.)
irsjpEmto
MONEY
VP’U'UVW'LTU uos Ila V 11 fa I
B For This GUARANTEED
Safety Razor
and get thia wonderful Self-
Filling Fountain Pen abso
lutely Free. Just send your
name and address and we
will send you this guaran
teed Safety Razor, complete
with Blade and also thia won
>•- derful .self-filling Foun-
talp .. Pcn .^■ thoi ! t
one cent in ad*
vance.
Supply Hous
Bldg., Pept.l2s Chicago -
| Money hack without question
\1 if HUNT’S Salve fails in the
11 treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA,
yAjF k/f RINGWORM, TETTER or
fji f Py other itching skin diseases.
I Try a 25 cent oox at our
risk. AH druggists.
One Doz. Silver-plated Tea-
Sfes?iKgraiii spoons (fancy pattern) given
fef-SfeSgsSM for selling S boxes Prof. Smith's
Headache and Neuralgia Tab
]ets. 25c a box. Catalogue of
other premiums sent with goods. SMITH
THtITG CO.. Box 2, Woodboro, Md.
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
525.000.008 TO BE
SPENT ON ELECTION.
LAWRENCE ASSERTS
BY DAVID LAWRENCE
(Copyright, 1020, for The Atlanta Journal.)
WASHINGTON, June 3.—Twenty
five million dollars is the estimate
of the amount of money that prob
ably will be spent by all political
parties in order to elect the next
president of the United States.
This figure, considered an underes
timate at that, embraces every class
of expenditure not only in the na
tional but in the state committees.
The writer is assured by the persons
who are likely to be in on the financ
ing of the national campaign when
the conventions have nominated their
candidates that in all probability the
national committees themselves will
not spend more than a few million
dollars each. Indeed, it is question
able whether the Demo’crats or Re
publicans will show on their official
records more than $5,000,000 each.
But throughout the union in the
slates it is fully expected that many
millions of dollars will be spent and
there is no real way to get at the
facts because the federal government
has no jurisdiction over state elec
tions. It is making the canvass for
state officers that money is spent for
the top of the national ticket and for
congressional candidates.
The truth is that the present inves
tigation of expenditures in the pri
mary campaign is making the sea
soned financiers of political cam
paigns smile. A mere half --million
dollars is nothing compared to the
big sums that will be spent in these
identical states and perhaps for one
of the identical candidates when once
the two conventions have named their
men.
More Investigations Coming
Preparations are being made for
the most lavish expenditures in the
historj r of American political cam
paigns. The investigation thus far
shows that large sums of money are
spent for publicity and advertising
but that fabulous amounts are put
in the hands of “party workers.”
Some states have laws which limit
the expenditure in state campaigns.
But the laxity of the more populous
states where the big electoral votes
come from enables the polticians to
lay his plans so that he does not
come under the jurisdiction of the
federal government.
But if ly supposes that all
this is going to ..’.ppen without some
spectacular intervention such as
came in the primary campaigns, he
is very much mistaken.
The senate committee may not
have made up its mind what it will
do during the summer, but it seems
certain that as soon as the conven
tions have chosen their men and an
extra session of congress is called
there will be pressure to continue
the investigation. Some Republicans
have said that it would furnish a
splendid opportunity to Investigate
the Democratic nominee in as much
as too much publicity already has
been given the financial efforts of
the various Republican aspirants for
the presidential nomination. But it
is hardly likely that the Democrats
Who are in possession of another in
vestigation branch of the govern
ment would let the matter rest there.
If Attorney General Palmer is not
the Democratic nominee or if he re
signs to make the campaign and an
other attorney general is appointed,
the chances are that the Democrats
will do a little investigating too.
To Spend Big Sums
What appears doubtful at the pres
ent moment is whether the two .old
line parties will have a tacit truce,
to drop investigating and spend all
they can to elect their respective
candidates or whether they will con
tinue to fight each other through the
publicity and insinuations of cam
paign investigations in which case
the chances of a double-barreled in
vestigation conducted by the senate
committee on the one hand and the
department of justice on the other
Hand can be said to be good.
Much will depend upon the choice
of each national convention. Maybie;
if the friends of Senator John’shn'are
disappointed and think money*‘heat'
them, they will insist on pursuing
the trail no matter what effect it has
on Republican chances. On the oth
er hand. Chairman Hays and others
have repeatedly hinted at large sums
of money gathered by the Democrats
for the coming campaign and op
portunity will not be lost to keep- the
controversy in the public prints in
the hope of influencing the electoral
next autumn.
..The investigations may check
expenditures for illigetimate or
doubtful purposes but the high cost
of campaigning is fully realized at
both Democratic and Republican
headquarters so no matter how con
servative the leaders may try to be,
they probably will find in the end
that all combined will have spent
more to elect a president of the
United States in 1920, than in any
other year in the history of American
politics.
Hew to Heal Leg Sores
A WONDERFUL treatment that
heals leg sores or Varicose Ulcers
without pain or knife is described in
a new book which readers may
get free by writing a card or letter
to Dr. H. J. Whittier, Suite 229, 1100
Mcg ee, Kansas City, Mo.—(A d v t.)
Working Girl’s Kindness
Rewarded With $90,000
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.—Gentle,
kindly ways—human sympathy and
the power to radiate the joy of life—
seldom bring their just return on the
money market.
But these precious qualities were
recognized to the extent of $90,000
in the will of the late Lucien Guil
bert, pioneer lumber man of Yreka,
who died recently.
As a result, Miss Caroline O. Koes
ter, chief clerk of the field division
of the Federal General Land office,
in this city, and her mother, Mrs.
Katherine Koester, of Alameda, are
wealthy.
“The large legacy came as a great
surprise to mother and myself,” said
Miss Koester, when Seen at her Ala
meda home, following a decision of
the Third district court of appeals,
which awarded them the bulk of the
Guilbert estate.
“We were kind to Mr. Guilbert’s
sister during her long illness at
Yreka, and she always considered
our home her home. We simply did
what we considered our duty as
friends, and had no idea that we
were going to be so richly rewarded.
Mr. Guilbert, of course, often spoke
of our kindliness and real helpful
ness to his sister, and seemed to ap
preciate it deeply.”
“Shall I continue to work at the
land office? Why, of course. I have
always worked, and I don’t see why
this money should change my life
in any way.”
The Guilbert will was the subject
of bitter contest, waged by the four
children of Guilbert’s half-brother,
who were each left SSOO bequests.
Britons BuFWcTHoney
From American People
American honey is becoming in
creasingly popular in Great Britain.
On account or the shortage of sugar
the English people have taken read
ily to its use, and it now seems
probable that the demand will con
tinue even after sugar again becomes
plentiful. The clear, strained honey
in the glass has the best sale, the
preference being for California hon
eys, according to reports issued by
bureau of markets, United States de
partment of agriculture. In 1914 the
total importations by the United
Kingdom were approximately 2,600,-
000 pounds. By 1918 this had in
creased to .36,500.000 pounds, valued
at $13,150,000. The United States
contributed more to these totals in
1918 than any other country, its
share being 16,000,000 pounds, valued
, at $5,500,000.
FAMOUS INTERNATIONAL
ROMANCE ENDS IN COURT
I x.,,
A*—
\ GJL O£7?T A L LIS*
I
MILWAUKEE.—This is the last
chapter of a famous international
romance that has come to an end
with the filing of a suit by Mrs.
Amber Allis, asking divorce from
Gilbert Allis, scion of the family of
E. P. Allis, founder of the Great
Allis-Chalmers company, manufac
turing mammoth engines.
It might well be called “The
Wreck of the Allis Millions.”
Mrs. Allis has taken a small cot
tage on a Wisconsin lake, where she
hopes to live quietly with her son
and daughter, Gilbert. Jr., nine, and
Amber, 7, whose custody she asks
in her bill for divorce.
Her complaint charging cruelty
and inability to support the children
follows her husband’s recent request
before the federal courts here that
he be adjudged a bankrupt.
Mrs. Allis says her happiness last
ed only three years after the wed
ding in Europe in 1910, though the
separation by agreement came only
this year.
Gilbert Allis, one of the eleven
children, of E. P. Allis, inherited
$300,000 at the time of his father’s
death in 1890. His petition in bank
ruptcy lists his liabilities at sll,-
000 and his assets at SBOO.
Our Radium Ore Will Soon Be Exhausted
The United States the Largest Producer
Because of the fact that the de
posits of radium ore in the United
Sates are by far the largest in the
world, there has been a tendency to
overestimate the amount of ore
available and the probable length of
time the deposits will be the source
of commercial radium. Richard B.
More, chief chemist of the United
States bureau of mines, writes in
the Journal of the American Medi
cal association that, ‘.‘Based on the
.pces.fiut uri.ee .of,radium, it is prob
•nble tna,t the carnofite deposits of
and-Utah "WiM not last as
a commercial ‘‘source OT ore for long
er than six to ten years.”
Mr. Moore says that probably be
tween 100 and 11) ’ grams (about
3 1-2 ounces) of radium qlement has
ben produced Iff ‘‘all the world, of
which about 70 per’ eent has been
Men in Search of Diamond Mine
Wind Up at Shoveling Nuts
NEW YORK, N. Y.—Robert Lin
demere, a ypung Englishman, re
luctantly has admitted that he and
Edward Broughton-Adderley, an
other English youth, had run out of
money after sailing up the Amazon
river in search of a diamond mine
several weeks ago, and had been
compelled to work their way to New
York at the unromantic task of
shoveling Brazil nuts in the hold of
a freight steamer.
Lindemere and Brougton-Adderley
are waiting in New York till the ca
ble brings them money froh home.
A third member of their treasure
party, Walter I?. Bawden, who is
Scotch, remained in Brazil under a
contract to superintend laborers on
a banana plantation.
Lindermere lives at London. He
says his father is wealthy. His
mother was French.
Sailing from Liverpool with his
two chums on January 6, Lindermere
carried an old map that had come
down in his family, describing' a
tribe of Indians on the Amazon river
who had the location of the diamond
mine. They arrived on February 1
at Manaos, Brazil, about 1,000 miles
from the coast, and sailed a little
boat three or four hundred miles
further up the river.
O-o-o! Here Come the Indians.
“When we had sailed about 150
miles above Manaos,” said Linder
mere, “we came to a large bamboo
swamp. Overnight we slept in ham
mocks strung in the huts of the na
tives, and next morning started to
cut our way through miles and miles
of Bamboo.
“At one place two Indians took me
up a hill, where I saw footprints in
the sand of some large animal —
prints four feet long, three feet wide
and five inches deep. Ten miles
further on we came to a small lake
that is not on any of the maps I
have seen. We stayed there three
days, making maps and taking photo
graphs, which I shall turn over with
a report of the discovery of the lake
t the Royal Geographical society.
“The last night we camped by the
lake we were attacked by twenty or
thirty Indians, the first warlike na
tives we had met, who woke us with
hideous noises and from the protec
tion of the dense brush shot arrows
and poisoned darts from blowpipes
at us. These darts, which would
have meant death, struck our boat
as we pulled out into the lake.
Had to Turn Back
“After this we went some dis
tance further up the Amazon, pass
ing the village of ManaCapuru, the
only civilized nlace we saw after
Manaos, but finally had to turn
Girl Oddly Vanishes
On Her Way to Bank
Fear that something has befallen
fifteen-year-old Henrietta Bulte of
No. 116 East One Hundred and Six
teenth street, a pupil in the public
school in One Hundred and Nine
teenth street between Second and
Third avenues, who disappeared on
the morning of April 12 on her way
to deposit $265 in the Harlem Sav
ings bank, has caused her parents to
notify the police.
The girl did not reach the bank
and that she did not go away of her
own accord is apparent to her father
and mother because she could have
taken with her the balance of money
on deposit if she had intended to dis
appear. The girl is vivacious and
womanly, but a careful search among
her school companions by her father
and detectives has failed to reveal
L she had a sweetheart.
At one time the owner of stock in
the Allis-Chalmers company, a beau
tiful ’ home on a big Montana ranch
and homes in New York, Paris, Lon
don and Milwaukee, he has recently
been selling player pianos.
The romance of Gilbert Allis and
his wife attracted attention in Amer
ica and Europe. Mrs. Allis, born in
Chicago, was on the London stage
with Sir Henry Irving when Allis
first saw Tier. He was living in
Paris and had "run over to London.”
Amber Lawlord was her name then.
They returned to America to live
shortly afterward.
Before her London appearance she
had been playing with Douglas Fair
banks before the screen had attract
ed the now famous movie star.
When Mrs. Allis deserted society
to go to work as a dress designer
a few months ago, she took a car
toon in a comic paper for a text on
which to hinge the announcement.
The cartoon showed St. Peter re
fusing a society matron admittance
to heaven because that place would
bore her without motors, money, din
ners, dances, fads and fancies.
“I certainly don’t want St. Peter
to deny me when I come,” Mrs. Allis
said.
produced in this country, and an
appreciable amount of the rest has
been made from American ores. But
much radium was used for war pur
poses and permanently lost, so that
the amount left is very considerably
less than 100 grams.
Mr. Moore estimates that between
20 and 25 grams of radium (less
than 100 grams.
Mr. Moore estimates that between
20 and 25 grams of radium (less
than an ounce) are at present in use
in the hospitals of the country, and
he advises that a large amount be
bought, either by the government or
by private individuals, during the
next five years and placed in the
hands of some proper organization,
to be administered for the benefit of
the people of the United States.
back, havihg a great deal of trouble
in pushing our way through the
reeds in the water; and having a mu
tiny on the part of the negro guide
to quell. One night he started at me
with a knife and I had to knock him
out with the butt of a German auto
matic.
“After six weeks in the sailboat
we returned to Manaos. We were
cold broke, but it was all the fault
of the Brazilian cable that we could
not get word through to London and
have our money sent to us. We stop
ped at the hotel and spent our time
at the Overseas club, and then the
British consul, Alex McFarland, ar
ranged for our pasage to New York
as members of the crew of the
Michael.
Another Royal Suggestion
PIES and PASTRIES
From the New Royal Cook Book
CHEER up! There is
no further reason for
worrying about table va
riety. The new Royal Cook
Book gives new suggestions
for every meal every day.
The book is so full of sur
prises there will never be
another dull meal in the
home. Here are a few sug
gestions from the new
Royal Cook Book.
Plain Pastry
This recipe is for one large
pie with top and bottom crust
2 cups flour
% teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons Royal Baking
Powder
% cup shortening
cold water
Sift together flour, salt and bak
ing powder; add shortening and
rub in very lightly with tips of
fingers (the less it is handled the
better the paste will be). Add
cold water very slowly, enough
to hold dough together (do not
work or knead dough). Divide
in halves; roll out one part thin
oft floured board and use for
bottom crust. After pie is filled
roll out other part for top.
Rich Pastry
2 cups pastry flour
% teaspoon Royal Baking
Powder
% teaspoon salt
% cup shortening
cold water
Sift flour, baking powder and
salt; add one-half shortening
“Bake with Royal and be Sure 99
SENATE VOTES TO
ADJOURN SINE DIE,
NO EXTRA SESSION
WASHINGTON, June 3.—Congress
will adjourn finally next Saturday at
4 p. m. Action necessary to assure
adjournment was taken today when
the senate passed a joint resolution
previously passed by the house.
The senate votew as 44 to 24. It
was take nafter several proposed
amendments to have recess
for a month or more instead of ad
journing were defeated.
President Wilson assured senate
Democrats that if the present ses
sion is ended Saturday he will not
call an extra session during the com
ing summer unless there is a grave
emergency.
Announcement of the president’s
decision was made in the senate to
day by Senator Underwood, of Ala
bama. the Democratic leader, who
said he had been authorized to deny
reports that an extra session was
contemplated.
Sharp criticism greeted the ad
journment resolution when it canu
up for debate. Senator Kenyon, Re
publican. lowa, moved to amend it
so that the adjournment would be to
August 30. •
An effort by Senator Kenyon. Re
publican, lowa, to amend the resolu
tion so that congress would recon
vene on July 12, failed.
The regular session of congress
opens-early in December.
Many congressmen will leave im
mediately for Chicago and San Fran
cisco to attend Republican and Demo
cratic conventions. Othesr will go
to their districts to take part in
campaigns for their own re-election.
Before Saturday the house expects
to agree to the Armenian mandate
resolution, act finally on the mer
chant marine bill and the District oi
Columbia appropriations bill.
The senate alsb has to act on the
merchant marine and district bills
and pass the urgent deficiency ap
propriations bill. '
The senate also has to act* on the
merchant marine and district bills
and pass the urgent deficiency ap
propriation bill which the house
passed yesterday.
A attempts to get the bill raising
salaries of postal employes through
both branches is now being made.
Hey, Listen!
Forgive, and your reception is
warm.
Care for yourself in a spirit of
well-being.
Buckle up and you can’t slip.
Throw down the gauntlet only
when it doesn’t fit.
A snake and a coward hiss the
same music.
Why not be what you claim?
Doctor Provides Electric “Jag
Machine ” for “Boozeless Bun”
HELENA, Ark.—“No, sir, Jedge,
I won’t live with that ther man one
minute longer! Ana what’s more, if
I ever gets married again it’s going
to be to a pacifist, some man who's
never heard about a war. I’m lucky
to be alive to tell you this.”
Thus did Mrs. Amelia Francis re
late her marital woes in divorce
court recently.
It seems, according to Mrs. Fran
cis, that she had a perfectly repu
table husband until the war broke
out. Then he went to France as a
member of an infantry unit. He
came home last summer as a hero,
his chest glittering with, decora
tions.
“Jedge,” said Mrs. Francis in
court, “I know what he got them
decorations for. That man was the
biggest souvenir hound on the west
ern front, and there ain’t nobody can
tell me different. Why, if he’d just
had another month or so, he'd have
brought the Kaiser’s palace back in
his pack.
War Hero Takes Bomb, Shells, Guns
To Bed With Him; Wife Gets Divorce
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.-—A long
line of thirsty individuals stormed
the laboratory of Dr. Albert Abrams
as a result of the announcement of
his discovery of an electrical “jag
machine.”
But Dr. Abrams opened the
“juice” to only a few friends and
then only in the interest of science.
Many men of a scientific . turn of
mind have signified their desire to
investigate the “drinkless drink.”
“The operation of the machine is
very simple,” said Rr. Abrams in ex
plaining his invention. “The effect of
intoxication is produced by a di
vision and subdivision of vibrations,
just like you would break up a musi
cal scale.
“And the effects vary with indi
viduals. The elctrical jag Is all a
matter of temperament. Some men
become hilarious under these vi
brations, some become sleepy and
others get quarrelsome and want to
fight.
“The machine, in other words, pro
duces the same effect as does liquor
on various temperaments.”
By means of vibrations, says Dr,
ROYAL
BAKING
POWDER
Pure
SATURDAY, JUNE 5, 1920.
U. S. BATTLESHIP
TENNESSEE IS
COMMISSIONED
NEW YORK. June 3. —The super
dreadnaught Tennessee, the largest
and most formidable battleship
afloat, goes into commission today at
the Brooklyn navy yard. Formal
ceremonies were Set for 2:30 o’clo c -“
Constructed here at a cost of $20,-
000,000. she represents the last word
in battleships architecture. She is
625 feet long. 98 feet abeam and a
displacement of 32,500 tons.
She is the next thing to a pleasure
yacht tn the comfort of-*her appoint
ments for officers and men, she is the
first battleship to recruit her entire
personnel from the state from which
it takes its name, and she represents
advantages taken from lessons learn
ed in the battle of Jutland and other
important naval battles of the world
war.
This last sepecial feature, which
distinguishes the Tennesseee from all
other units ot the United States navy,
is the highly organized “fighting
brain,” inclosed in a steel fort near
the top of the forward mast. Here
are concentrated devices for observ
ing enemy ships, a device not known
in the battle of Jutland, enabling the
crew to quickly ascertain the posi
tion of enerpy craft. Special devices
are installed in this turret which
enable the crew to quickly train the
fourteen-inch guns on the enemy be
fore the cr-.w of any other battle
ship known could even sight the Ten
nessee. The turret consists of three
decks, and their fighting complement
is twentyrflve men.
By special signalling devices re
ports. from this fighting top can be
flashed instantly to all parts of the
ship, thus insuring instant correc
tion of range and rapid-fire. -
Another important, feature in the
construction of the Tennessee is her
electrical speed control, enabling her
to quickly change from her capacity
speed of twenty-one knots to an al
most imperceptible motion. This is
considered an mportant point from
tile standpoint of maneuvering.
The Tennesse is believed to have
been built with more care for the
comfort of her crew than any other
battleship in the world. Her size
makes possible spacious lockers,
baths and recreation quarters. She
has a handsomely furnished club
room and . library for enlisted men.
She has a printing shop with a lino
type machine and presses, on which
a daily newspaper will be printed.
The Tennessee is the first battleship
to be equipped with a motion picture
camera.’ She will not actually be put
•into service until August 1. when
she will sail vn a practice cruise to
Guantanamo. Cuba. Her present
crew of Tennesseans numbers 631.
A large delegation of Tennessee
folk was in New York today to at
tend the ceremonies. Governor Rob
erts. of Tennessee, who was expected
to be present, telegraphed that he
would be unable to do so. Captain
R. H. Leigh is the commander of the
vessel. x
“But it wasn’t the souvenirs I
minded so bad as the way he dis
played them. He took ’em to bed
with him, Jedge, and there was
enough bombs there to blow us both
to a warmer climate. He went right
to sleep, but I had to lay awake
lookin’ at ’em —just thinking over
how ftiuch chance I had to reach
Heaven when the explosion came.
“Well, 1 made up my mind that I
ain’t goin’ to be nowhere near when
that event comes off. I wants a di
vorce. I do.”
Officers made a tour of Inspection
at the Francis home at the Instiga
tion of the judge. They found—
One German machine gun, four
teen pistolfe, eleven loaded hand gre
nades, six gas bombs, nine bayo
nets, one flame thrower, three dag
gers, sixteen trench knives, two
swords, five 2-inch shells, one aerial
bomb, three gas masks, four trench
clubs and eight flare bombs.
All these were in the bedroom.
“Decree graritefd!” l said the judge.
Abrams, his machine can produce the
effect of any drug or liquor.
His machine, he explains, is based
on the generally accepted fact that
the unit of energy in the electron and
that every material thing is simply a
manifestation of different rates of
vibration.
The machine was built for a far
different purpose than producing
jags or beating the eighteenth
amendment. Its intoxicating effect
was simply an accidental discovery.
At his first demonstration of the
machine there were present several
medical scientists from other cities.
Who came herb to investigate some
of Dr. Abram’s discoveries.
Dr. Abrams turned on a switch
after appliances had been adjusted
and the orgie was on so rail present
who desired an electric “jag.” The
after effects sometimes last for half
an hour, says Dr. Abrams, and no
drinking is necessary. *
Never depend upon one thing en
tirely .
Sunshine is so strong that it
finally dispels gloom.
and rub in lightly with fingers;
add water slowly until of right
consistency to roll out. Divide in
Alves; roll out one half thin;
put on in small pieces half re
maining shortening; fold upper
and lower edges in to center;
fold sides in to center, fold sides
to center again; roll out thin and
put on pie plate. Repeat with
other half for top crust.
• Apple Pie
1% cups flour
m teaspoons Royal Baking
Powder
% teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons shortening
4 apples, or 1 quart sliced apples
2 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon milk
Sift flour, baking powder and
salt; add shortening and rub in
very lightly; add just enough
cold water to hold dough to
gether. Roll half out on floured
board, line bottom of pie plate;
fill in apples, which have been
washed, pared and cut into thin
slices; sprinkle with sugar; fla
vor with cinnamon or nutmeg;
wet edges of crust with cold
water; roll out remainder of pas
try; cover pie, pressing edges
tightly together and bake in
moderate oven 30 minutes. x
FREE
By all means get the new
Royal Cook Book—just out.
Contains these and 400 other
delightful, helpful recipes.
Free for the asking. Write
TODAY to
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO.
115 Fnlton Street
New York City
DODSON WHS
CALOMELUSERS
It’s Mercury! Attacks the
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