Newspaper Page Text
ißsinol
would help your
poor complexion
Does a poor complexion stand between
you and popularity —good times—suc
cess ? Resinol Ointment and Resinol
Soap do not work miracles, but they do
make red, rough, pimply skins, clearer,
S fresher, and more attract
ive. Use them regularly,
for a few days and see how
your complexion improves.
Sold by all druggists.
Adjusted
—To Positions £" ’A/i
—To Temperature ffHI 91 1
—To Isochronism tt’* | u.iNois Lfl !
SOSOM
i /j-A-Wml
4HI Month W kTW
MS Sixs Thin Mod si ft? 7
■•25 Year Gold Case i
*-Ooublo Koller !
-Solid Gold Settings
-Send No Money!
i Ask For It On Approval
You don't risk a cent. If you send
your name and address now (postal
’ will do), we will place this superb
19 Jewel in your own hands for free
examination. You will then know
that it is the kind of a Watch you want —a
real Watch of Railroad quality. Now is the
time to own one at our Special low price and
easy terms, and to prove all we say. we will
I tend it on
30 Days Free Trial
i You take absolutely no chances.
! Our Special Price is rock-bottom.
1 We guarantee to refund your money if you
)• ean beat it for spot cash. Our 20 years ex-
Serience and large volume of business ena
les us to make this remarkable offer to wage
earners everywhere and throw in our easy
terms for good measure. But this Special
Offer will not last always. The price may
<o up. The factory guarantees it will not go
down. So write today for our
FRFF Catalog and full infor-
■ mation on this Big Special
Offer. Remember, we sell all kinds of
Watches and Diamonds on easy payments
but If you want thia auparb 18 Jewel at this
month’s bargain price, sot now
Harris-Goar Co. KANSAS CrtT.«&
We Do At We Advertise
The newest creation
in fine China making
0 )J —a beautiful 42-
piece set of exquisite
W»<=— ware. Full size, dec
orated with popular
Old Rose floral de
sign, edged with
I a B' old - Each piece will
/ B be decorated with
your personal Ini
vtajg tial in pure gold, or
■egaH [ s w\the emblem of Ma
sonic, Odd Fellows,
r z p -> Wood-
I [ » | , /fimpn, -Elks, Moose,
I A / This accomp
kV lishment is abso-
fcs- lutely new in fine
China making, and
gives your set an added personal value.
Just think, we give it to you abso
lutely free for telling your friends and
neighbors about
KIBLER'S ALL’ROUND (HL
The Ci! of a Thousand Uses e
Truly the perfect furniture polish,’
cleaner and brightener, rust preven
tive and leather preserver. It’s the
national standby. Takes the drudgery
out of cleaning—makes cleaning a
pleasure in over two million homes.
It is so well known that it sells on
sight. To get this beautiful dinner
Set —or cash commission simply
order and sell 30 bottles of this won
derful oil at 60 cents each. Return
the SIB.OO collected and the dinner
Set is yours. Or you may have
choice of Silverware, Rugs, Lace
Curtains, etc.
BEND NO MONEY. We trust you
and take the oil back if you cannot
sell it. Order today, giving your
nearest express office. Be the first
to enjoy the luxury of these new,
novel and beautiful dishes.
The Klb ler Co., Dept. A-29 Indianapolis, Ind.
Bargain to
SI only your name an J I
*esaon the coupon be* |
te4ev—send no money ]
wad we’ll ahip you this m- /
tecndiny, price cmeuihir.g
•hoe barraTn, pottagej>re-Zjlg Jy
end pliable leather
Verfc eSaee. Yoor
woney bark If
Soo’t aarrea th
4berbaat any ihoe
*alaa you've -ZtilMetK ;<Z2EMF/a?vJSB»E
gter
Brown
. Black
Work
Shoe—
Army Style
SenOoMoney
Crash ffoshoe prices! Manufacturer’s price direct to yea. |
~ ..kri Wholesaler’s and Retailer's profit eliminated.
Think of it 12.98 for this super-comfort, army style,
•town or blac< Blocher work shoe made extra durable of
•rater and acid resisting leather. Two full layers of
heavy, tough extra Quality.leather In the soles. FuU
•rain leather Inner sole Triple stitched and reinforced
.throughout against wear, bust-proof bellows tongas.
There’s nothing you ever saw to beat it at IS to 97 else
where. And only U-98 on this bargain offer to oev
Customers.
Order a pair on approval now. Band m ma»oy. Just
b ß £3 »ol
vFred’k M. Dunham,
Ind mtoMtalrot •ran rtrl« vror* «>— t win w th. I
bifVMi, vafoe. 1 wfll return them at fmu sxpsase sad Foe I
Sl r i f ?£k £*hKS cx fl£ • |
Color: O Crown O Black
Sfamessosss—eoeeeo— l
• I
Aids'S® •
CRYING BABY POLL pR PC
/She is an awfully A
pilij Noisy Baby. You can hear her all"
s**®Wk over the bouse. Sounds just like
If a live baby. Wears a long white
4 JnlVll ,lre? s and !>aby bonnet. We send
her free,'by parcel post paid, for
‘*"11 ilselling only 8 peks. Novelty Post
«rds at 15c each. We trust you. Simply
l nd your full name nnd address to JONES
AFG. CO., Dept. Z, Attleboro, Mass.
Bracelet, Locket, Neck Chain
Complete outfit given for
wZpjt selling only 40 packets Gar
den Seeds at roc. Write
quick.
IX4 I KI The Wiiaon Seed C®.
°°°?) Dtpl. T 405 Tyrone, Pa.
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
JAPAN OBSERVES
BIRTHDAY OF
HER EMPEROR
BY JUNIUS B. WOOD
(Special Cable to the Chicago Daily News
Foreign Service, by Leased Wire to
The Atlnnta Journal.)
(Copyright, 1020.)
TOKIO, Japan, Nov. 2. —Japan is
gay with the red and white flags of
the rising sun by day and bright
with paper lanterns at night. Flags
and lanterns are in front of every
residence and place of business until
the streets present continuous vistas
of bunting and transparencies. The
occasion of the celebration is the
birthday anniversary of the present
emperor, though he was born August
1 31, 1870, and the opening today of
J - the Mei jo shrine here as a memorial
1 to a former emperor.
3 Though the newspapers are trying
to arouse interest in the California
. dispute and elections the common
people of Japan are attending strict-
< ly to their own affairs and enjoying
i the celebration. Despite the belliger
ent editorials few of the rank and
’ file are interested in happenings of
the other side of the Pacific.
One of the features of the birth
day celebration was a garden party
given by Count Uchida, minister of
foreign affairs, and Countess Uchida
in the beautiful Kasumigaseki' de
tached palace. It was a formal affair
with the men in silk hats and frock
coats and the women displaying both
western gowns and native costumes,
including rich silk kimonos and simi
lar gorgeous articles of dress. The
dedication of the shrine, which cost
several million dollars, is to be pop
ular affair. Today has been declared
a national holiday. Half a million
visitors are expected in Tokio and
the occasion is to be observed even
in the remotest villages. The demon
stration continues three days, the
royal family visiting the shrine of
its ancestors on Tuesday.
The newspapers forecast that the
California referendum will go
against the Japanese and that Sena
tor Harding will be elected president.
No particular anti-American demon
stration is expected on Wednesday
even if the predictions as to the Cali
fornia vote are verified unless one is
organized for political purposes.
In one respect the American politi
cal combination has given the United
States a black mark which may never
be completely removed. The efforts
of the politicians to besmirch the
American record in Haiti have great
er weight in distant lands than at
home. People in the Orient are un
able to 'understand why any Ameri
can should make charges of that
nature against his own country un
less unspeakable atrocities have been
committed. Though the Japanese do
not know the nature of the charges
against the American record in Haiti
in their minds the United States
is effectually barred from protesting
hereafter against the cruelty of any
other nations to its colonies.
Interpreter Needed
When Girl of 26 Weds
. Man 69 Years of Age
NEW YORK.—When the Italian
liner Duca d’Aosta arrived and dock
ed at the foot of West 57th street,
Miss Anita Madalena Sabalo, twenty
six, an Italian, stood at the liner’s
rail alternately waving a tiny hand
kerchief and throwing kisses. On the
pier was William B. Gilben, sixty
nine, a rancher, of Miles City, Mont.
They went to the municipal building
where they were married by City
Clerk Michael Cruise.
Mr. Gilben said he was only as old
as he felt, and that was pretty young.
Ha met Miss Sabolo in Milan four
vears ago and recently sent for her
to come here and marry him. She
could not speak English and Gilben
could not speak. Italian. From the
pier to the marriage bureau they
spoke with their eyes and hand
squeezes, to say nothing of a long
embrace when they first came within
arms length. An interpreter at the
bureau helped them out. They left
hand in hand.
Gilben is an Englishman and ac
cording to the paper filed at the mar
riage license bureau he secured a di
vorce last April on the ground that
his wife deserted him in Strafford
shire in 1885. He has a son forty
live yea” Sold and a daughter thirty
seven, both of whom live in Eng
lan.
Use Dandelion
Butter Color
" Add a halftea*
«—■ spoonful to each gal-’
, lon of winter cream
and out of your
« chum comes butter
* of golden June shade
Oto brinij you top
prices.
DANDELION .
II i Butter Color
II All stores sell 35-
■ |i cent bottles, each
Sj | sufficient to keep
• Kr~r~m o ) that rich, “Golden
J Shade” in your but
ter a |) £j] e year
round. Standard
Butter Color for fifty years. Purek
vegetable. Meets all food laws, State and
National. Used by all large creameries.
Will not color the buttermilk Tasteless.
Weils & Richardton Co., Burlington, Vermont.
mJ p J JgSr colq j]
ZB a 1
1 rfon r-j
< Mentto dalv« at M WoMar*
RC. for catarrh, auto. barn-, ate Ordnr today
aa4d rataro 91 to aad aU • Ftecaa are yoora.
sumt cawui.RU RrMsniis. ra
B«n<i no money. JoM uk ox
wondorfal, dazsiinf. cenulno Tlfnlte Gem rinra to wear /<»
10 daya. If you ean toll It from a diamond, aena It back.
Na.l. Solid void Ro. 2. Salld cold No. 2. Solid fold
mounUnff. Eirht- Lad lea’ nowea t alx-pron* tooth
etaw deal<n flat mountin*. Ham a mountinr. Guar,
wide band. Ahn oat ruarantead renu- antaad venulneTlf.
a carat. <uaran- foe Tifnito Gem. nite Gem. aimoat a
toed Tifoito *em. aknoat a carat. carat in aice.
| In sandier, send atrip of paper fitting aroond second Joint
•f fiaxer. Pay only 94.50 upon arrival; then pay only 93.00 per
month until the price Sie.BOiopaid for either oao. Otherwise
rotom the rinr within tan days and we will refund any pay
ment made. This offer to limited. Send wb.Ua it holds rood.
TBn TKnltn C«., Dept. 1055 Chicago, HL
1921 Model s2§2
to introduce oar watches. Thin model, beautifully nolithed
■ilveruid case. Men’s and women’s siae. Fitted with hiah
grade movement, fully tested. Stem set and stem wind.
EVERY WATCH GUARANTEED
Sd h A ,n,e k **»* r • r « r 7
Diwreturn ft. We IDr«fwnd your mopey. Send your order TODAT.
Offsr: Goto AHed ehaia. 91 extra.
Camtotoee Watoh Oa lao Camtotofte RWfl..
all cprr
.old-plated Laval
Here and Chain.
/VeE: t iair Earbobs. Gold
51 2? plated Expansion
£“ O Bracelet with Im.
K Watch, guaranteed
?■'ZWSC # (^W)S3o' la,itv sn( ’ 3 Gold-
V V/ plated Rings AT.I.
v FREE for selling
to«»slts»®tMMMMscacS^EjSr on,v 13 pieces Jew
vss«wwwmwww>.-w«m»i» e | rv at 10,, each.
Columbia Novelty Co., Dep. 361, East Boston, Mass.
Prize Beauty Bride of Millionaire Brady
I I
\ /
' * Ja'£•' ’’ “ Jew
\ ...
. *** F
LONDON. —The "most beautiful
woman in the world” is on her honey
moon with a multi-millionaire who
is described as a "Greek god.”
Miss Helen McMahon, proclaimed
by competent judges, nature’s fair
est handiwork, is the bride of Jamey
Cox Brady, son of Anthony N. Brady.
“Mystery of Wall Street.” who died
possessed of thirty-five million dol
lars.
His Third Marriage
Somewhere in England Brady and
his bride are spending the first weeks
of their marriage. They were wed
at Westminster Cathedral. This is
Brady’s third marriage, he having
been widowered twice before.
Anthony Brady was born in Lille,
Belgium, and emigrated to the
United States with his father. At
one time Anthony Brady was bar
tender tn New York. Step by step
he rose and his first plunge into
finance was the consolidation of east
ern gas companies. He engineered
one great merger after another un
til when he died he was Jhe power
People Eat Dogs, Rats,
Snails, Lizards, Mud and
Many Other Odd Things
BY CHARLES H. LAWALL
In the Forecast
In Italy, Syria and parts of Aus
tria and Germany a fine variety of
clay, mixed to a buttery consistency
with water, is occawionally used on
bread and known asW “stone butter.”
Asia has had its earth-ea"ters from
time immemorial. In Senegam
bia a soft soapy clay is used as we
use butter, and in New Caledonia a
ferruginous clay is eaten in the
fresh condition and is also prepared
and sold in dried cakes. In Bolivia a
white clay is sometimes eaten with
boiled potatoes. The foregoing in
stances indicate that the habit of
earth-eating is usually peculiar to
tropical or subtropical peoples, prob
ably based upon the human craving
for salt and the fact that some of
these clays possess a saline taste.
The clay-»eaters of the Appalachian
mountains of the southern United
Stages, consume a heavy clay which
accumulates in pellets in the beds of
the mountain streams after the tor
rential rains of early spring. Sand
eaters have also been reported from
some localities in Missouri, where,
however, it seems to have been in
troduced as a remedial fad. the rea
son being given that it prevents dys
pepsia.
In‘the markets of some of our
large cities it is not uncommon to
see platters of snouts, jowls and ears
of pigs, which find a ready sals.
Sweetbreads and brains have long
had an established place upon res
taurant menus, but there is scarcely
an animal gland that is not market
able for food purposes. The testicles
of young sheep are sold under the
name of “lamb fries# or “mountain
oysters.” In these same markets
are also found the “chitterlings (usu
ally shortened to “chitlings”), which
consist of the frill-like small intes
tines of swine and which, when fried
crisp, are esteemed as a delicacy
by those to whom they are not re
pugnant.
The meat of the whale, which
closely resembles Idan beef in ap
pearance is now appearing in canned
form in our American markets. It
has long been eaten in Japan, where
it adds variety to the menu of rice
and fish upon which so many Jap
anese live almost exclusively. An
average whale will yield 80,000
pounds of meat, which can be cut
out in 100-pound lumps of lean, bone
less flesh, and when cooked it can
scarcely be distinguished from boil
ed beef.
The shark or dogfish has long been
eaten locally in certain countries,
but only recently has it appeared
in our own markets under the less
objectionable name of “gray fish.”
The skate is Ynuch esteemed by the
Italians, and it is said frequently ap
pears in high-class European restau
rants under the name of turbot,
which is a species of flounder, and
in English and American hotels un
der the title “filet of sole,” which
is another flat fish of the flounder
tribe.
In Japan a curious custom is fol
’owed upon ceremonial occasions of
erving raw fish, which are cut up
zhile yet alive, and eaten immedi
■ely.
Snails, which are raised for food
urposes and eaten in France, are
'ally no more objectionable than
•sters and Dean Swift once said,
t was a brave man who first ate
i oyster.” In Canton, China, rats
e sold in the markets at fifty cents
. dozen and a dog steak commands
higher price in some parts of China
. NDIGrSTION i
I GOES, GONE! j
I =
t
I Pape’s Diapepsin” at once j
? fixes Your Sour, Gassy, i
Acid Stomach |
• I
Stomach acidity causes indigestion!
Food souring, gas, distress! Wonder
what upset your stomach? Well,
don’t bother! The moment you eat
a tablet or two of Pape’s Diapepsin
all the lumps of indigestion pain,
the sourness, heartburn and belching
of gases, due to acidity, vanish—
truly wonderful!
Millions of people know that it is
needless to be bothered with indi
gestion, dyspepsia or a disordered
stomach. A few tablets of Pape’s
Diapepsin neutralize acidity and give
relief at once—no waiting! Buy a
box of Pape’s Diapepsin now! Don’t
stay miserable! Try to regulate your
stomach so you can eat favorite foods
without causing distress. The cost
is so little. The benefits so great.
(Advt.)
i f
behind the throne of many a Wall
street financier.
Xovos Art and Honea
Young Brady inherits, it Is said,
few of his father’s money-getting
talents. His passion is horses and
art. In this his bride joins him. She
r’des as though born on horseback,
her friends say.
Mrs., Brady was chosen the most
beautiful woman alive when she was
18 years old. .A great New York
newspaper made a careful search and
from many contestants its corps of
judges selected Mrs. Brady. She was
an artist’s model.
than does mutton. Muskrats are
Commonly sold during the winter
months in our eastern cities, notab
ly in Philadelphia and Maltimore,
where heaps of the unattractive,
bloody, skinned carcasses are often
seen on the street stands, selling
usually for twenty or twenty-five
cents each. They are sometimes
called “marsh rabbits” by the vend
ers.
In africa and some parts of Asia
elephant flesh is eaten, principally
the foot, the trunk, and some of the
internal organs. The hippopotamus
also satisfies the meat-craving of
some of the African savages.
The Oriental edible bird-nests,
which are looked upon as a great
delicacy by the Chinese and Japa
nese, are the nests of a small species
of swallow which makes its home in
the limestone caverns along th*
coast of Borneo. . . . The ma
terial of which the nests ara built
is undoubtedly of seaweed origin.
They are pale yellow, translucent and
somewhat gelatinous. . ’.
Sunflower seeds are eaten raw or
slightly roasted by the Russians as
we in America eat peanuts and the
exprest all from these seeds is used
as a table oil also by that people.
The “ripened” eggs of the Chi
nese, which are prepared by burying
them in the earth until they have
undergone decomposition to a mark
ed degree, are also dietary curiosi
ties.
In Mexico the eggs of certain
species of flies are used in making
a food paste which is considered a
great delicacy. Some of the African
native tribes are known to eat cater
pillars, but whether they prefer the
smooth ones or those which are fuz
zy is not stated.
In the East Indies “kava” is the
name of a beverage which is made
from the root of a species of pep
per. In preparing this delectable
concoction the women chew the fresh
root and spit the juice into a large
vessel, where it is allowed to ’ stand
for a time to undergo fermentation,
which is said to give it potency. In
the Marquesas, where the foregoing
practice is followed, it is also the
custom to take the bread-fruit,
which in most countries where it
grows is eaten freshly cooked, and
place it in pits in the ground. These
pits are then tightly covered for
some time and the food is not con
sidered of value until it has under
gone decomposition to an extent that
makes it very objectionable to the
uninitiated. These same natives who
eat it would, however, probably balk
at eating some of the varieties of
cheese which are highly esteemed
by us.
It is in Central and South America
that snakes and lizards find a place
on the regular menu. The snakes
that are eaten are the larges ones
of the anaconda species. The larger
sized lizards, too, are selected for
eating, and it is said that after
catching them the tendons of the
hind toes are pulled out with uliers
and then used as cords to tie the
animal’s feet together to render them
helpless and enable them t,o be easily
carried.
In Liberia a curious food called
“dumboy” is made from cassava by
pounding the root in heavy wooden
mortars with long-handled pestles
until a tough, doughy mass is pro
duced, which gives out a loud crack
ing sound when the pestle is -with
drawn from the mortar that can be
heard for long distances through the
forest. This paste is eaten only
when freshly prepared, as it is be
lieved «to be dangerous to eat It if
it stands for more than a few min
utes after the correct consistency is
attained. The sticky mass must be
rolled into boluses and swallowed
whole. To chew it is to run the
risk of having the jaws tightly lock
ed together. What is left over from
a meal id drl»d and becomes so hard
that it is often broken into frag
ments and used for shotgun ammuni
tion by the natives. These same peo
ple drink the juice which can be
SAFETY FIRST--AND LAST
DENVER, Colo. —Patrolman Bert
White, while walking his beat the
other night, saw a “naked flivver.”
The car was sans lamps, sans
wheels, sans everything that could
be unscrewed or taken off.
rofeiji
“Must be stolen,” ruminated
White and tailed a passing car to
tow the heap to the station house.
Harold Harper came a-dashing
from his house, clad in his nightie
and armed with a gun.
ELECTION NEWS
ARRIVED SLOWLY
IN OLDEN DAYS
The will of the American people
in the presidential election today
will likely be known In less than
twenty-four hours after the polls
close. The relief with which Sen
ator Harding, the Republican nomi
nee, or Governor Cox, the choice of
the Democratic party, will learn of
his success was not shared by pres
idential candidates in the early his
tory of the nation.
Washington was reported to be
very uneasy, as it his wish to
lead the new nation. Congress did
not count the votes for the first elec
tion until April 6. After the votes
had been counted, the Continental
congress sent its official messenger
by horseback to New York City.
Seven days later he returned and
went to Mount Vernon, Washington’s
home, to “break” the news.
Old Customs Caused Delays
Many customs in vogue during the
early days of the republic caused
considerable uncertainty and delay
in counting the votes. In New York
and Kentucky, election booths were
frequently open two or three days.
It was not until 1845 that congress
fixed a uniform date for one election
day. Pennsylvania and Ohio had
been voting in October, while South
Carolina did not have its election
until November 26.
Thomas Jefferson believed he was
elected to the presidency as “early”
as December 14, 181)0, and he wrote
to Chancellor R. R. Livingston, in
New York City, asking him to be
come a member of his cabinet. A
few days* later it was discovered
that there was a tie between Jeffer
son and Aaron Burr. The tie re
mained unbroken until the following
February when the house, after a
week’s balloting, decided in favor of
Jefferson,. Madison and Jackson
waited weeks for the news, but were
never in doubt as to the result.
Newspaper Made Prediction
Vice President Van Buren arrived
in Washington in November, 1836.
One of the enterprising newspapers
in the capital early in December
printed returns from the south, an
nouncing that there was no doubt
of Van Buren’s election.
A newspaper published in Cincin
nati. 0., on November 19, 1840, print
ed a brief notice, stating that Gen
eral Harrison was visiting in Louis
ville, Ky. No other mention was
made of the newspaper’s candidate
that month, although he was living
near the city. It is not known how
General Harrison heard the results
of the sweeping Whit victory.
Telegraph Comes Into Use
The first announcement of th4 re
sults of a presidential nomination to
be sent by telegraph occurred in the
spring of 1844, when the election of
Polk was telegraphed from Balti
more to Washington over tM first
American wire. During the follow
ing campaign, Polk was in Tennes
see.
Four years later, when Franklin
Pierce was elected, the telegraph
came into general service, and there
was little delay in announcing re
sults of the election.—Grit.
Armed Men Sent When
Rum Smugglers Attack
Canadian Border Trains
SPOKANE, Wash.—Attacks upon
trainmen and car inspectors by al
leged whisky smugslars along the
Canadian boundary hjA’e led to the
dispatch of armw,’ ju-ards to East
port. Idaho, «ccormhg to announce
ment by W. E. Stauffer, chief agent
of the Spokane International rail
way.
The whisky smugglers, Stauffer
said, were Importing large quanti
ties of liquor and had declared they
would shoot their way through if
refused access to freight trains. Sev
eral trainmen actually had been at
tacked by armed men, Stauffer said.
Ninety cars were lying at Eastport,
causing congestion and could not be
moved until Inspected, which was
being prevented by the alleged
whisky runners, the special agent
declared.
“The bootleggers take the hinges
off the doors on merchandise cars
and put the liquor into the cars on
the Canadian side,”. Stauffer said.
“When they get at some point in
the vicinity of Spokane they open
up the car and take out the liquor
and send it in here, where the well
to-do bootleggers sell it. If an in
spector goes around one of these cars
containing liquor, he takes his life
in his hands.’
squeezed from the pulp that sur
rounds the seed of the oil-palm. This
beverage is called “whaney.”
In Arabia the locust is the insect
commonly called by us the grass
hopper, our locust being the cicada,
and is a regular article of trade as
a foodstuff. The legs and wings are
pulled off, but not the head, and the
insects are then partly roasted in an
open pan over a hot fire, after which
they are then dried in the sun and
stored away. They are said to have
a somewhat fishy taste. . . . The
statement regarding locusts and
wild honey of John the Baptist un
doubtedly refers to this insect
There is no food so new or un
usual that it may not in time be
come commonplace or even a staple.
The tomato was once an\prnamental
garden curiosity and was called “love
apple.” The fruit was at that time
believed to be poisoned. This now
indispensable combination of fruit
and vegetable, together with the lima
bean, the potato, and Indian corn or
maize, are invaluable contributions
of the western hemisphere to the
world’s dietary. Who can say that
after another five hundred years
have passed some of the foods class
ed now as freaks may not become
world-wide staples? There is a large
and growing number of persons who
can “eat in all languages.” This
makes for health, for the restricted
diet usually is accompanied by the
development of nutritional diseases,
and many obscure ailments and even
chronic troubles may have their in
ception in the lack of some little
known food accessory or food ele
ment.
Scientists and medical men have
proved that beriberi and pellagra
are the result of a too limited diet.
Deficiencies in children’s bone de
velopment and poor teeth in grown
up people may also be traced to £he
lack of certain mineral salts that or
dinary foods do not always supply.
The greater the variety of foods that
a nation eats, the tronger that na
tion. The late Richard Mansfield,
who was very fond of sweetbreads,
delighted in telling how he gained
publicity in Quebec, Canada, because
he went to a slaughter-house for
these delicacies. The news spread
abroad that this great actor was
"queer.’’ The giddies followed him
through the streets and pointed him
vnt as "the man who eats innards.”
Now sweetbreads appear on the
menus of the best hotels in Canada
as well as the United States.
“Ha, ha,” chortled he, “Got yuh
this time, didn’t I? Caught you red
handed, stealin’ my auto, didn’t I?”
White had a hard time convinc
ing Harper he was a cop and not
a crook.
THI £F ’
“I took off everything that could
be taken off my bus,” explained
Harper, “because thieves have been
looting my car of everything. I
take off the movables at night and
put ’em on again in the morning.”
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4. 1020.
The Tri-Weekly Journal’s
HONOR COLUMN
A Department for
. People Who DO Things
I / *' /
V
k
I
Today’s oc
cupant of The
J>l Trl ‘ Weekly
. tW" Journal’s Hon-
Q=?_7—/|i i or Column is
' Is! perhaps the
ill most distin
’XX guished Os the
rySfL+s “fighting chap-
P i lai ns’’ who
N J helped look aft-
l B ,■ er the spiritual
X _ needs of Amer-
lea’s young men
jSST’-rtV jfjvrmift.Hrife'W overseas. The
Rev. William C.
w Gilbert, after
valiant service with the Forty-first
division, One Hundred Sixty-Sev
enth infantry, he came home with
the rank of major and figured as the
second ranking chaplain in the A. E.
F. Now he is pastor of the First
Presbyterian church in the little
town of Astoria, Ore. He Is the first
clergyman in the United States to win
the honor of heading a state depart
ment of the American legion, a post
to which Oregon veterans recently
elected him. This militant young
preacher was not new to the ways
of war when he crossed the Atlantic.
He has been a chaplain in the na
tional guard of his state for twenty
five years, saw service in the Phil
ippines and enjoyedia brush with the
Mexicans on the border. He wears
the French Croix de Guerre.
Ranchman Begins Suit
When Road Takes Fire
And Burns Up Auto
SARGENT, . Neb. — Ed Becker,
ranchman from over in the Middle
Loup country, has hired a lawyer and
proposes to find out ,if a peaceful
autoist must assume the risk of hav
ing his machine burned under him
just because the road catches fire.
The sandhill region of Nebraska is
one of the few parts of the country
where the danger of a road burning
up confronts its users.
That is because the only way to
make a sandy road that has gone
bad fit to drive over is to put straw
or old hay <pnto it and work in it.
Before it is safe for an auto to travel
over after this has been done, it
must be subjected to wagon and team
travel, which pack it in. A sandhill
road after a rain is a fearsome thing”.
Using a plow and scraper on a sand
road makes it worse than before, and
to clay it to a depth sufficient to
make .it worth while costs too much.
The material to grade into the roads
is the same as the roads themselves,
afld putting more on makes them
worse. /
Becker drove his car onto the un
packed straw, and the farther he
went the more difficult became the
going." The speeding up of his engine
caused the straw to catch on fire. He
tried to pull out the burning straw,
but this only caused the air to get
into the remainder and it burned
more freely. In about ten minutes
Beckley's 52,500 car was gone. The
county refuses to pay because it in
sists he should have known better
than to drive onto an unpacked straw
road.
Carolina’s Oldest Woman
Voter Goes Democratic
•GREENVILLE, S. C„ Nov. 2.—Miss
Mary C. Judson, aged ninety-two,
professor emeritus of the Greenville
Woman’s Baptist college, and the
state’s oldest woman voter, cast her
first ballot Tuesday, for Governor
Cox.
DOWN
BUT NOT
OUT!
Buck up! Misfortune failed to
make failures of many world
famous men. In a series of
thumb-nail sketches The Tri-
Weekly Journal will tell their
inspiring stories. They won out!
So can you!
Sjf
GENIUS IN 3AIT.
One of the most widely read of all
books is “Pilgrim’s Progress.” John
Bunyan wrote it after he had been
thrown into prison. The master
piece of Spanish literature, Don
Quixote, was also, written in prison.
CASCARETS
“They Work while you Sleep”
Do you feel all tangled up—bilious,
constipated, headachy, nervous, full
of cold? Take Cascarets tonight for
your liver anjl bowels to straighten
you out by nforning. Wake up with
head clear, stomach right, breath
sweet and feeling fine. No griping,
no inconvenience. Children love
carets, too. 10, 25, 50 cents.— ((Advt.)
&
EDUCATION TO BE
OFFERED TO U. S.
ARMY SOLDIERS
CAMP GORDON, Ga.. Nov. 2.—The
chance for a thorough college edu
cation, according to a war depart
ment circular received here will
soon be open to qualified sol
diers of the United States army.
From the first grade to the final col
legiate degree, the way is being
paved by the war department, with
the co-operation of numerous educa
tional institutions, for a complete
training in all academic and in many
technical courses.
By the autumn of 1921 it will be
possible for more than 100 qualified
soldiers to lay aside their uniforms
and enroll as students in as many
colleges throughout the country.
While this project is an entirely
new departure for the military es
tablishment, it is the result of a defi
nitely conceived plan to make the
army an organization of the fullest
educational opportunity and to offer
soldiers the same chance for mental
improvement which they might se
cure in civil life.
The present educational and voca
tional program of the army, -which
has been in operation for more than
a year, includes elsementary and
secondary subjects and it is now pos
sible for the soldier to obtain the
equivalent of a high school educa
tion. The arrangement which has
been made by the war department
and various educational institutions
throughout the country will enable
soldiers to continue their education
with a minimum of expense to them
selves.
A number of southern colleges have
' already joined in with the war de
partment and have offered very ma
terial aid to the plan in the way of
tution and other help. Among these
1 colleges are: University of Georgia,
Athens, Ga.; North Georgia Agricul
tral college, Dahlonega, Ga.: Centre
college, Danville, Ky.; Georgia School
of Technology, Atlanta, Ga.; Univer
-1 sity of Alabama; State College of
Agriculture and Mechanic Arts,
‘ Athens, Ga.; University of Louisville,
Louisville, Ky.
While all pians in connection with
■ the scheme to send soldiers to col
lege are still in the formulative stage,
the co-operation that has been ex
fended the war department in its
scheine has exceeded expectations
and many other prominent colleges
1 have shown an interest which insures
' co-operation with the army in the
; sending of its soldiers to higher uni
versities and colleges.
’ America Now Has
7,000,000 Hunters
! There are 7,000,000 hunters in the
’ United States, according to the chief
United States game warden in the
biological survey, United States de
partment of agriculture. This esti
mate was made from reports on the
number of game licenses issued by
the various states.
In 1919, 3,000,000 state licenses
were issued, and in addition it is
estimated that 3,500,000 hunters are
exempted under various state pro
) visions. The returns to the states
from licenses was approximately ?!,-
, 500,000, all of which was expended
» by the states in administration of
state laws for the protection of game.
1 This sum permits the employment of
I approximately 2,000 salaried state
game wardens and 600 fee wardens.
The congressional appropriation for
1 federal game warden service for pro-
• tection of migratory birds is $142,-
i 500, which permits the employment
, of only twenty-nine salaried war
dens.
’ At its recenL meeting in Ottawa
the International Association ot
> Fish, Game, and Conservation Com
i missioners adopted a resolution call
’ ing for the issuance of federal 11-
• censes for hunting migratory birds.
I The recommendation called for
■ licenses in the' form of. special
i stamps to be issued by postmasters
I and attached to state licenses. It
• was estimated that the revenue from
I such licenses would amount to be-
I tween $1,000,000 and $2,0(W,000, which
' could be used for the protection of
game.
Road Asks for Bonds
WASHINGTON. Nov. 2. The
Moore Haven and Clewiston railroad,
’ of Florida, today applied to the in
terstate commerce commission for
: authority to issue first mortgage,
' forty-year. 6 per cent gold bonds to
the amount of $50,000.
imcoLD *
.EASEDATONCE
“Pape’s Cold Compound”
then breaks up a cold in
a few hours
Don’t stay stuffed-up! Quit blow
ing and snuffling! A dose of “Pape’s
Cold Compound” taken every two
hours until three doses are taken
usually breaks up a severe cold and
ends all grippe misery.
The very first dose opens /our
clogged-up nostrils and the alt pas
sages of the head; stops nosa run
ning; relieves the headache, dullness,
feverishness, sneezing, soreness and
stiffness.
“Pape’s Cold Compound” is the
quickest, surest relief known and
costs only a few cents at drug stores.
It acts without assistance, tastes
nice, contains no quinine—Insist
upon Pape’s!—(Advt.)
this nova-tonk
talking machine
f part*
** O>OIBV 10 c* out or<^r * csotUtn
reproducer, eajoyroCTrt for aJL Sei li
I boxer Mestbo-Nova Sahrtr r**t foi
j i —■■■■- ■. 1 csta, buroK influenza, etc. Return $2
T L - , r •’*l *bt machine it yours. Guaraateed.
I "" "1 ' Records free. Order today. Address
\> —k U. S. CO., Box 4M,
Greenville, Pa.
Not Working But Tired Out
When one feels always tired without
working, or suffers from backache, lum
bago, rheumatic pains, sore muscles or
stiff joints it is not always easy to lo
cate the source of trouble, but very fre
quently it ctpi be traced to overworked,
weakened or diseased kidneys. Mrs. L.
Gibson, 12th and Edison st., La Junta,
Colo., writes: “My kidneys were giving
me a great deal of trouble for some time.
I took Foley Kidney Pills and they helped
me right away.”—(Advt.)
LADIES’ WAIST|
Mrzt f '^ e are keepi n g one of
A these beautiful waistsfor
iilUlVr (I ’"A 7 0u - Made of good qual-
I A !t 7 vo 'l e with fancy em
tAUniOlJli ta broidery. Simply sell 40
packets Garden Seeds at
» The Wilson Sood Co.
NT Dtft. tv 105 Tyrone, Pa. 1
f Walking Doll
FREE
This doll Is a foot tall, you
can make her walk and her
feet really move. She has a ,
pretty face and Is dressed In I
lovely colors. Given for selling ,
12 pkgs. Bluine at 15c a pkg. i
Blulne Mfg. Co., 564 Mill St., I
Concord Jet., Mast.
rDrC’ rlli ’ BEPAIR OUT- 1
rKILJuFIT is given to you ■
ifor selling only 40 packs
“Quality Brand Garden <
Seeds’’ at 10c per packet. Or
tier today. SEND NO MON- 1
SltaEooaaT. ey. we tbust you. I
When sold return $4.00 col
i F lected and the BEPAIR OUT-
FIT is yours. Cash commission if pre
ferred. Many other valuable presents. Cat
alogue with order. NATIONAL SEED CO., j
Dept. 24, Lancaster, Pa.
I The Best Cough Syrup s
is Home-made. 8
Here’s an easy way to save 82, and g
yet have the l>est cough remedy ®
’ you ever tried. w
You’ve probably heard of this weTl
known plan of making cough syrup
at home. But have you ever used
it? Thousands of families, the world
over, feel that they could hardly keep
house without it. It’s simple and
cheap, but the. way it takes hold of a
cough will soon earn it a permanent
place in your home.
Into a pint bottle, pour 2% ounces
of Pinex; then add plain granulated
sugar syrup to fill up the pint. Os,
if desired, use clarified molasses,
honey, or corn syrup, instead of sunaf
syrup. Either way, it tastes
never spoils, an# gives you a full pint
of better cough remedy than you
could buy ready-made for three times
its cost.
It is really wonderful how quickly
this home-made remedy conquers a
cough—usually in 24 hours or less.
It seems to penetrate through every
air passage, loosens a or
tight cough, lifts the phlegm, heals
the membranes, and gives almost im
mediate relief. Splendid for throat
tickle, hoarseness, croup, bronchitis
and bronchial asthma.
Pinex is a highly concentrated com
pound of genuine Norway pine ex
tract, and has been used for genera
tions for throat and chest ailments.
To avoid disappointment ask your
druggist for “2*/ 2 ounces of Pinex
with directions, and don’t accept any
thing else. Guaranteed.to give abso
lute satisfaction or money refunded.
The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
IIS”
is offer is one of the biegtot,
lost generous ever made by
ny tailoring house. Jt’s yopr
no birf opportunity to get a
inely tauo; ed«to>measure f
piece suit with box back. Su
perbly trimmed and cut in the
[atestcity style for only $15.00.
We’re out to
beat high
ailoring prices
»u eave gt.OOto glt.OO.
hy not save 50/f on you i next
it? We have such • tremen
us business, buv all tnateriala
iuch large quantities and have
:b a perfect organization that
can make these wonderful
!es—and remember we guar
ee style, fit and workmanship
rour money back.
g Sample Outfit FREE
ite us today and we will mail |
i absolutely FREE our beauti- ]
illustrated pattern book show- «
dozens of the latest city \
!es and designs, also many large f
ize cloth samples to choose <
from. Don’t delay; we r«te r
you to act quick: today. «
Th» Progrm Tallorln^Co.,JbjL349 I Chicago
'■ 1 1 j j ■■
KEEPING WELL—An N? Tablet |
(a vegetable aperient) taken at I
night will help keep you well, by I
toning and strengthening your di- I
gestion and elimination.
for over
■1 *
Get a x^^/ fYour
25c. BOX z l)ruggist
r i
A Bomarkable Home Treatment
Given by One Who Had It
In the Spring of 1893 I was attacked
by Muscular and Sub-acute Rheumatism.
I suffered as only those who have it
know, for over three years, I tried
remedy after remedy, and doctor after
doctor, but such relief aa 1 received
was only temporary. Finally, I found
a treatment that cured me completely,
and it has never returned. I have given
it to a numßer who were terribly af
flicted and even bedridden with rheu
natism, some of them 70 to 80 years
old, and results were the same as in
my own case.
I want every sufferer from such forms
of rheumatic trouble to try this mar
velous healing power. Don’t send n
cent: simply mail your name and ad
dress and I will send it. free to try.
After you have used it and it has proven
itself to be that long-looked-for means
of getting rid of your rheumatism, you
may send the price of it, one dollar,
but understand, I do not want your
money unless "you are perfectly satisfied
to send it. Isn’t that fair? Why suffer
any longer when relief is thus offered
you free. Don’t delay. Write today.
Mark H. Jackson, No. 741 G Durston
Bldg., Syracuse, N. Y.
Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above
statement true.—(Advt.)
-ft YOU Can
aFordfREE
Witbwrt a Dollar of Cost
You don't have to pay for—»
It—not even the freight
Not a dollar of your Z/liy—-a
money la required. The i -yn— rj
man shown tn the car an
awered our ad. Now he’»
riding In the car we gave him. Toil can get one too.
Don t send a cent—just your name and address—
that a all. Do It now. A post card will do. I want t»
aend you a dandy auto also.
«. WOODS, Mgr.. 223 Capital Bldg.. TOPEKA. KANSAS
CATARRH
TREATED FREE
lO days to prove this treat-
t ment gives relief to catarrh
1 of nose, head and air pas
-1 sages. I had catarrh, deaf
/ ness, head noises, had two
J surgical operations, found a
I treatment that gave complete
’ relief. Thousands have uso.l
it. Believe '< will relieve
anv case. Want you to try
it rree. Write DR. W. 0. COFFEE, Dept
X-7 Davenport, lowa.
H SSI I ™ETILEPSY
sickness
To in sotferers from Fits, Epilepsy. Falling
or Nervous T rouble, will be sent AB
SOLUTELY FREE a large bottle of W. H. Peeke'e T«ot.
Went For thirty mre, tbouMtitls ot soferer* bare used W. H.
Peeke’s Treatment with eaeellent reanlts. Giro Ex press and P.O.
Address, W. H. PEEKE, 9 Cedar Street, N.JL.
UKELELE FREE
Ukelele mahogany fin
ished, four gut strings, bra> s
frets and instruction book. All
given for selling 25 Jewelry Novelties at 10c each.
Eagle Watch Co.. Dept. 462 East Boston. Mass.
vCT \ Money back without question
\l if HUNT’S Salve falls in the
i ■«» Il treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA.
RINGWORM, TETTER or
f 'jf f Y'/ other itching skin diseases.
( ) I Try a 75 cent box at our risk.
%y a g 0 [ ( j a n druggists. .
Mm.so.nwoi S.IW «
3