Newspaper Page Text
2
BHSICOLD
IN J FEW HOBOS
“Pape’s Cold Compound” in
stantly relieves stuffi
ness and distress
Don’t stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing
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 your
clogged-up nostrils and the air pas
sages of the head; stops nose run
ning; relieves the headache, dull
ness, feverishness, sneezing, sore
ness 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—lnsist up
on Pape’s!—(Advt.)
-
HEED THE DANGER
SIGNAL
Your face, your skn —your whole
body have certain signs which they
use to warn you of danger. A sore
mouth or tongue usually means
more than you think. Broken-out
skin, loss of appetite, nervousness,
dizziness—all these are danger sig
nals.
Usually they are signs of anemia,
dyspepsia, chlorosis, or even the
dreaded pellagra. They indicate a
run-down system which should be
treated at once.
Don’t take chances. Treat your
self before it is too late. A treat
ment has been compounded which
will rebuild the body and tone up the
nerve and blood and vital organs. It
is Argaliep—a really successful safe
guard against wasting diseases. It
has been found particularly effec
tive in treating Pellagra.
You can get a regular $2 Argaliep
Treatment Free if you will only
send for it. The people who prepare
it are glad to let you have the ad
vantage of this generous offer just
so you can see the wonderful merits
o£ Argaliep.
Just send your name and address
—NO MONEY —to the Argaliep Com
pany, Dept. 902 Carbon Hill, Ala.,
asking for the $2 Argaliep Treat
ment Free. They will send It to you
with full directions and valuable
and Important information —all free
—in plain wrapper.—(Advt.)
Thousands Cured By
Drinking Mineral Water
The Famous Perlax Mineral Springs
at Excelsior Springs, Mo„ Makes
Generous Offer to Sufferers
Every year as manv as 250,000 peo
ple visit Excelsior Springs, Mo,, to
drink the wonderful waters found
there. Invalids from all over the
country, given up by their home
doctors, find health and vigor in
the minora] and curet’ve agents
compounded far underground by Na
ture.
Probably the most famous waters
are those found in the Perlax Min
eral Spring, and many thousands
who have suffered from Gout,
Rheumatism, Constipation, Liver
and Kidney troubles and similar ail
ment- have been permanently re
li- Ved by drinking it.
So confident a>e the owners of
the spring that this water will ben
efit you that they offer to send
a '.«l carton of Perlax Mineral Salts
to anyone who will write for it.
When dissolved in water this is
t-q-ul to ten tr ’long of Perlax Min
eral water. Their offer is that it
:s to be paid for only if it benefits,
’’■e person taking it is to be the
o'e judge and report results within
thirty days’ time.
If you stu.er from any of the
'■ove diseases write for a carton to
•ay. Send no money—just your
n ma and address to Perlax Mineral
Springs, 470 Perlax Bldg., Excelsior
Springs, Mo.—(Advt.)
NUXATEO
IROMo
FOR
RED
STRENGTHano,4£W
endurancewk
EACH GENUINE NUXATED IRON
TABLET IS STAMPED AS ABOVE
5 GOOD $1
MAGAZINES *
American Woman, (■<>) lYr.'i n n .
Good Stories, (noatUy) 1 Yr. nr * r,ce
Gentlewoman, (monthly) l y r. |QQ
Household, (monthly) . .lYr. A n
Farm & Home (monthly) 1 Yr.’J a “
ORDER BY CLUB NUMBER 3
A Dollar Bill will do —We take the risk
S*nd all orders to
WHITLOCK & SUMMERHAYS
25 North Dearborn Street, Chicago
Solid Gold Birthstone Ring
For selling only one dozen boxes
White Cloverine Salve at 15c
with Free pictures.* Write quick.
The Witooa Chemical Co., D'N- R 3*a TyroM, Pa
A O IT>Y Y ?k.T Genuine. Name on
ASPIRIN
sl.lO I’ostnnld. Sent anywhere tablets
$2.00. FREE catalog. Nationally adver
tised.
MERIT CHEMICAL CO.,
Box 658. Memphis, Tenn. I
Send no money
_ ’j m^ ynime
Ul V L.IH with Fret p : e .
DC Tirpmilim tures at MC and receive this
<ls pivnilUlll wonder(u | premium and many
others, according to offer in catalog Write at once
The Wilson Chemical Co.. Depl. A 302 Tyrone. Pa.
FBEBb
This Rifle free for selling only 2C 1
pieces of our Jewelry at 100 each i
Jewelry and Rifle sent prevaid
Eagle Watch Co.. Dept. 460. East Boston. Ma« '
SALES AGENTS
wanted in eve r y
■wgilltfW“y, . ounty to give all or
spare time. Positions
worth $750 to $1,500 yearly. TVe train the
Inexperienced. Novelty Cutlery Co., 127 Bar .
st., Canton, Ohio.
THE ATLANTA TRi-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
New Ponce de Leon
Claims He’s Found
Secret of Youth
BALTIMORE, Mil.-A new method
of rejuvenating mankind, discovered
by Dr. Steinach, an Austrian scien
tist. has aroused the interest of Eu
rope, according to Dr. Ernest G.
Marr, of this city, who has just
made it known that the experiment
has been tried on human beings. A
man of sveenty years. Dr. Marr said,
has regained the vigor and powers
which he possessed at the age of
forty.
The new method does not involve
the introduction of any external or
gan into the human body, blit is bas
ed simply on the injection of sporif
erous germs and the removal of in
active and non-producing corpuscles.
No Monkey Glands
Man, it is believed, will be to
regain the powers of youth by the
new method, which differs from the
“monkey gland” theory in that or
gan from other animals are not
grafted.
The theory has been put to the
test and found practical in most of
the leading German hospitals. Most
of tae experiments have been con
ducted with rats, and every case, ac
cording to the reports brought by
Dr. Marr, has been successful.
In the case of rats, the Steinach
discovery has not only prolonged the
life of a rodent from twenty-eight
months to thirty-six months, but
also has caused a new growth of
hair and a marked return of the rat’s
bodily vigor. The process, first tried
on rats, has been perfected on hu
mans. The operation is simple
Performs Operations
While in Berlin Dr. Marr was of
fered the opportunity to study the
Steinach theory and personally per
formed the operation several times
with success. He will deliver a se
ries of lectures on the subject to
members of the American medical
profession shortly. He brought to
America with him one of Dr. Stein
ach’s books, in which the results of
years of research work are outlined.
From a scientific standpoint, the
discovery is said to be of inestima
ble value, not only in the matter of
prolonged life, but also in the mat
ter of reproduction. Owing to the
present depleted population of Eu
rope. the discovery has become a
matter of national interest in Ger
many, Austria and other countries
which suffered considderable loss of
man-power through the war.
Tobacco Growers
Plan for Smaller
Yield, Better Prices
RALEIGH, N. C., Nov. 11.—Cur
tailment of the 1921 crop of tobac
co 33 1-3 per cent, production of
ample food crops and launching of
plans for nationalization of state as
sociations of tobacco growers with
the final goal of national co-opera
tive marketing of tobacco, were de
termined upon here by representa
tives so the Growers' associations in
Virginia the Carolinas and Georgia.
Leaders of the movement declared
that already plans were under way
looking toward the enforcement 6f
the reduction agreement, which, it is
believed, will reduce the bright to
bacco production in the four states
represented by more than 100.000,000
pounds.
An organization executive commit
tee was named with powers to em
ploy expert services looking toward
the duplication of the plans of the
California Fruit Growers’ associa
tions, the scheme to embrace every
tobacco growing state in the union.
Formal nationalization of the asso
ciations is expected to materialize
before January 1, 1921.
Many Pilgrims Visit
City of Holy Wells
Benares, “the city of 2,000 tem
ples,” is also the city of holy wells.
Only the devout Indian pilgrim would
care to drink of the sacred wells, for
custom says that flowers must be
flung into most of them as peace
offerings, and these decayed floral
offerings tend to make the water
unfit for drinking.
The most holy of the wells is the
Well of Knowledge, which stands
near Benares’- most sacred shrine,
the Golden Temple, and is said to be
the dwelling place of a very impor
tant god.
The most mysterious is the Well
of Fate. Any one who .looks into
the Well of Fate exactly at noon
and fails to see his shadow is said
to be doomed to* die within six
months.
“I Feel as Iho’ I Could Not
Drag Thru the Day’s Work”
is the complaint of many a woman in the household,
office or factory. After suffering pain, feeling nervous,
. z .
10 cts for trial package. After taking this well-known
remedy you will feel strong and healthy. Such a change
in feelings, too—there’s sparkle in the eyes, a rose tint
in the cheeks, for one has rich, red blood. There’s elas
ticity in every movement and a spring in the step. Love
comes to every woman who has bounding health—but
when she is pallid, dull-eyed, languid, she has no mag
netism, nor does she appeal to any man.— (Advt.)
H SMASH! Go Prices!
I am making the greatest price and quality drive of my
life, this yeai. right now. I have smashed feather bed and pillow
prices way down. The profiteers all over the country are trying to
keep up war-time prices and send them higher. I’m fighting them.
This year I can save you more money than ever and give you better
qu»l>ty. I’ll make good my promise if you will send for my big new
Free Bargain Book, filled with beautiful colored pictures of my
new sanitary feather beds and pillows, all fully described.
Get My FREE BOOK—Let’s Get Acquainted
lay are largest firm of our kind in the world and our Factory-to-Home prices
Ey will open your eyes. I have saved thousands of dollars for feather bed users all over
| the country 111 save you money. Let me prove it. I guarantee satis-
' faction or your money back. You take no risk buying from us. That’s rix
the way we do business Before buyipg any feather bed at any price,
learn about my high quality and low pneea. Send your name and address \
on a post card or letter today for the free book and sample of feathers. k
Agents wanted everywhere.
AMERICAN FEATHER A PILLOW CO.. Desk 72 . Nashville. Tenn.
TICKLE HIS TOES
* —
' £'V' -I
This ourang-outang has just come
over from the wilds of Borneo, be
ing a post-war immigrant. He’s a
gift of a Singapore, East Indies,
man, to the boys and girls of Wash
ington, D. C. Although only three
years old, the little cuss is fully one
quarter grown and weighs twenty
seven pounds. He’s gentle and likes
to play as well as any puppy \or
kitten.
As you will notice by another
Rival of Old Noah’s Ark,
LoadedWith4,l 00 Beasts,
HasLivelyTrip to America
NEW YORK.—A cargo rivaling
Noah’s has arrived here on the
American freighter Bellbuckle f-om
New South Wales. There were 4,100
specimens of animals, birds and rep
tiles, all consigned to the Bronx Zoo.
According to Captain N. A. Swin
son, it was no quiet voyage despite
fairly good weather; and when his
ship tied up at Fifty-seventh street,
Brooklyn, he was glad to get away
from the din under the decks last
ing fifty-five days and to enjoy the
boiler-making quiet of the water
front. '
There was some confusion over the
ship’s manifest, as when the jour
ney started there were only 3,800
specimens on board. Family in
creases ran far ahead of demises.
It was some job to keep the census,
all hands declared.
All the animals were captured by
Ellis S. Josephs, an Australian bush
man. He had many of them sub
dued, but three emus ate up their
cage and a quantity of galley cut
lery and glassware before their ap
petites were appeased sufficentiy to
enable the seamen to shoo them back
to quarters.
The Bellbuckle stopped at Colon,
the Canal Zone, and four Tasmanian
devils apparently decided all hands
and feet might like to bound ashore.
They got loose and opened the cages
of several other animals, but were
detected before they had gone far
and put in solitary confinement.
Josephs, who acted as ship’s sur
geon on the trip, said the kaola eats
only the leaves of the eucalyptus tree
and a ton of the leaves was brought
along to feed the one kaola bound for
the zoo. The kaola is the first one
dizzy, weak and dragged
qown by weaknesses of
her sex with eyes
sunken, black circles and
pale cheeks such a
woman is quickly re
stored to health by the
Favorite Prescription of
Dr. Pierce. Changed,
too, in looks, for after
taking Doctor Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription the
skin becomes clear, the
6yes brighter, the cheeks
plump. It is purely
vegetable and contains
no alcohol.
Druggists sell it in tab
lets or liquid, or send
Dr. Pierce, at Invalids’
Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y.,
squint at the photograph. Master
Ourang-Outang is sitting as nice as
you please for the camera man.
Usually he jumps around too much
to get a good picture. But this
time the smart photographer told
the little boy to tickle (rutang’s toes.
Note the expression of calm content
upon the Outang’s near-human map.
Bear this in mind if ever you wander
through the wilds of Borneo and a
huge Outangs gets after you. Tickle
his toes!
brought here and looks like a teddy
bear. It had first cabin accommoda
tions.
The belle of the hubbub was a
spotted female dassarus, another
new-comer. Shi* was very gentle and
liked petting. Some said she was a
real vamp. The monkeys shunned
her. One of them discovered she
carried nine children about in a
pouch.
Oscar Moore, assistant to Josephs,
could stand everything but the Kuku
Buarras, which are familiarly known
as laughing japkasses, although vul
tures.
It was quite a problem to arrange
the menu for the trip, but $3,000
worth ’of hay, grain, worms and in
sects sufficed.
William Powers, of Chelsea, Mass.,
ship’s cook, died of a tropical fever
at sea. Most of the officers of the
ship were ill from the fever until
the sea breezes out in mid-Pacific
brought them around.
DOWN
BUT NOT
OUT!
Buck up! Misfortune failed to
make failures of many world-
I famous men. In a series of
1 thumb-nail sketches The Tri-
Weekly Journal will tell their
inspiring stories. They won out!
I So can you!
lit
Blind Poets
Homer was the master poet of
Greece, and Milton was the epic poet
rs England. Both these great men
were blind.
Mother Takes Life
That Son May Believe
She Was Beautiful
CHICAGO, Nov. 11.—Mrs. Clarence
W. Russell, widow of a famous Chi
cago university football player, car
ried out her wish that her son would
always remember her as a beauti
ful woman. Her body was taken
from Lake Michigan Wednesday. She
had killed herself relatives believed.
Mrs. Russell had always feared
that as she grew older, her son might
not realize that she had been a beau
tiful woman. She had a cousin take
care of The boy. The mother never
allowed her son to see her, although
she watched him from behind trees
and from other hidden points as he
went to school. She disappeared Mon
day.
John C. Singleton, her brother,
identified the body.
GALLSTONE TROUBLES
A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Pad
dock, Box 55201, Kansas City, Mo., tells
of improved method of treating catarrhal
inflammation of the Gall Bladder and Bile
Ducts associated with Gallstones from which
remarkable results are reported. Write for
booklet and froe trial plan.—(Advt.)
1 Wholesale Killing of
Arizona Coyotes
An extensive campaign caried on
under direction of the biological sur
vey. United States department of
agriculture, against coyotes and
other predatory animals in Arizona
has resulted in materially cutting
’ down the number of maraueds. In
I one drive near Flagstaff 340 coyotes
i were killed in ten days. Stanley P.
1 Young, assistant predatory animal
inspector, has sent to the survey a
photograph of eleven coyotes which
he personally noted one day, taken
on a poison line laid out the pre
vious evening. To produce these re
sults he used pork-fat baits with
one-grain standard strychnine alka-
I ioid tablets. Part of the carcass of
, some animal is generally used to at
tract the coyotes. Large stock rais
ers have lent enthusiastic aid to the
campaign, which, they say, will save
] them thousands of dollars in sheep
and young calves.
Check for SIO,OOO,
Signed “The Mayor,”
Lands Man in Jail
NEW YORK.—Edward Pace., who
said he was a trolley-car guard, but
looked more like a lily of the field,
strolled into the bank of Coney Is
land just before closing time, and re
marked that he’d like to see the pres
ident. The account which the at
tendant gave of the impressive rai
ment and manager of the caller was
so glowing that William J. Ward,
president of the institution, offered
the cordial hand-clasp that welcomes
five-figure accounts and invited Mr.
Pace into his office.
Seating himself with affectionate
regard for his razor-edged trouser
legs, Mr. Pace drew a check from
his pocket.
“Any of the merchants down at
Bath Beach, where I live, would have
cashed this for me, of course.” he
said, as he extended the check to Mr.
Ward, “but as it was drawn on this
bank and I wished to observe all the
formalities. 1 brought it here. It’s
merely in settlement of a little elec
tion bet.”
The check, which was numbered
2544, called for the payment of “ten
thousand” dollars to the “United
States States Trust V. C 0..” and was
signed “The Mftyor, 144.488.” Mr.
Ward looked at the check and then
at Mr. Pace.
“With whom did you make this
wager?” he asked.
“Why, with the mayor,” replied his
dapper caller in obvious surprise.
“He told me that he was too nerv
ous as a result of the outcome of
the, election to hold a pen, and told
me just to make out the check my
self. I did, and It’s perfectly good.
Anv Bath Beach merchant" —
“Yes, yes, I know.” said Mr. Ward:
"I’ll see the cashier right away, if
you’ll excuse me.”
Mr. Pace graciously did so and
presently two detectives came in re
sponse to the message the cashier
sent to the Coney Island police sta
tion. They locked Mr. Pace up there
on a charge of attempted grand lar
ceny pending efforts to find out
whether somebody was kidding Mr.
Pace or whether Mr. Pace was trying
to kid somebody.
Owing to the fact that he gave a
fictitious address the police have
their own opinion on the subject. An
other check, similar to the one pre
sented to Mr. Ward, but drawn on
the United States Bank of Brooklyn,
was found in Mr. Pace’s pocket.
Madman Stabs Girl
He Never Saw Before
On Busy Gotham Street
NEW YORK.—A shabbily-dressed
man, with one arm concealed be
neath his coat, stood on the curb in
front of the Thirty-fourth street en
trance of the Waldorf-Astoria and
watched Miss Dorothy Stauffer,
twenty years old, of ScotsdaJe, Pa.,
alight from a taxicab with her
mother. As she started across the
sidewalk something in his hand
flashed and he quickly stabbed her
twice in the breast.
Brandishing a long knife, he ran
to Fifth Avenue, where he was
knocked down by Patrolman Doyle,
who was in charge of traffic at the
crossing. At the police station the
demented man said he was Liberi
Marioni, of 221 West Thirty-third
street, a cook, and out of work. He
did not know Miss Stauffer.
“The sight of the young girl with
furs and fine clothet made me go
mad with anger,” he said.
Miss Stauffer was attended by
physicians at the Waldorf and re
moved to New York hospital. It was
said her injuries were not serious.
Bathers in Dead Sea
Say Water Resembles
Salt, Kerosene and Lye
The Jericho region is supplied with
three kinds of water, and this prodi
gality, coupled with the historic fame
of the Jordan Valley, has furnished
a regular formula of bathing for pil
grims to this hot depression, nearly
a quarter of a mile below the level
of the sea.
Os course, every tourist has to
bathe in the Dead sea; it is the thing
to do. Lucky is the man whose skin
does not crack in the heat of the val
ley, for the film of the eye reminds
one of boiling oil and the Spanish
inquisition.
Having performed the necessary
rite and dutifully completed an ex
perience which can be recorded in
the diary of the trip, the poor pil
grim, laved with a tenacious fluid
that seems to be composed of salt,
kerosene and lye, drives off to the
Jordan and seeks relief in the muddy
waters of that river.
Then, as night rapidly settles in
the deepest wrinkle on the face of
Mother Earth, the tired traveler
rides between the miserable hovels
which constitute modern Jericho and
dismounts at the Sultan ’s spring,
once sweetened by Elisha.
Here the water is collected in a
large pool, both cold and clear, and
few, indeed, resist the temptation to
plunge into it and remove forever
any lingering signs of the holy but
muddy waters of the Jordan.—Na
tional Geographic Magazine.
Woman, 103, Proposes,
Man, 100, Declines
Offer of Marriage
SEWARD, Neb.—“ Better too laie
than never,” is the philosophy of one
of Omaha’s oldest—in fact the old
est —female resident.
Mrs. Patrick Convey, aged 103, re
cently took advantage of the Leap
Year opportunities and proposed to
Daniel Kennedy, aged 100, of Seward,
by the mail route.
Kennedy, who recently made a trip
to New Y'ork and other cities, taking
?10,000 with him, received the propo
sition with little enthusiasm. He
stated that he was too busy at the
present time to accept the invitation
and also declared that his lawyers
had tied his money up so that mar
riage was almost out of the question.
Court Upholds Prohi
Law of Georgia
That the prohibition law of Geor
gia is not superceded by the prohi
bition law of the United States, but
that the congress and the states ahve
concurrent jurisdiction, was the sub
stance of a decision rendered Thurs
day by.-the supreme court of Georgia
in the case of Jones vs. Hicks from
the city court of Macon,
The plaintiff in this case was ar
rested on a bench warrant issued by
Judge Guerry, charging him with
violating the prohibition law. He in
stituted habeas corpus proceeding
to compel his release. The writ wai
denied. He then appealed his case o
the ground that the state prohibition
law had been superceded by the fed
eral prohibition law, and that th- 1
state courts had no jurisdiction ii
such cases.
“The powers of the congress and
of the several states are equal,” said
the supreme court in affirming the
judgment of the court below, “ami
may be concurrently exercised in
their legitimate spheres."
Alabama Slayer
To Die December 3
MONTGOMERY, Ala.— (Special.)
Charles Wimberly, who killed Joh.
Jackson, in Jefferson county, will be
put to death December 31 under an
order of the supreme court issued in
connection with a ruling denying
Wimberly's •’nplicatio’ l
ing. Tt" c
attorneys for uie
had asked for another hearing, con
tending that, the tri.il court had not
certified to the supreme court all
charges which had been refused the
defendant.
The supreme court held that the
charges not certified were either not
admissible or had been covered by
other charges and that no error had
been committed by the trial court in
refusing to submit them to the jury.
SATURDAY, NOV
Spanish Immigrants
May Help to Solve
Farm Labor Problem
gi.
w •
gfW"
« ■
-» w
• Sir
■ iv/.-.W.WA.Xv.- Jt .:
This photograph taken at Ellis
Island shows a type of Spanish
immigrant, 1,390 of whom ar
rived recently in New York on
our jships to work on farms in
the great southwest. Immigra
tion officials say these Spaniards
are of an exceptionally high type
and that all of them seem to have
plenty of money. In these high
class immigrants is seen the solu
tion of America’s farm labor
shortage, if the number swells
sufficiently.
Two Husbands Argue
While Fickle Wife
Runs Off With Third
SIOUX CITY. la. —While husbands
No. 1 and 2 were in conference in a
railroad station as to who was enti
tled to recognition, Deborah
Canover-Smith. the subject of de
bate, eloped with a third man.
Mrs. Canover-Smith was waiting
for the men to settle their argument,
when Eddie “Immune” Jackson, of
Chicago, happened along. After a
short talk with Jackson, who has a
long criminal record in Chicago,
where he has been arrested count
less times on charges of being a
pickpocket, Mrs. Canover-Smith left
the following note for her other hus
bands :
“Boys, to make it easier for you.
I’m going to leave with Eddie Jack
son. I love him and he taught me
what love really was. We are going
to Chicago. Bye-bye.”
Marion Canover, the finst husband,
married Deborah Chatfield at Camp
Shelby, Mips., just before, he left for
overseas. After he had been reported
killed in action by the war depart
ment, she married Lieutenant D. C.
Smith.
Both husbands met her here in the
station and agreed to retire and ar
gue out their'troubles while the con
tested wife waited.
Another Royal Suggestion
COOKIES and DROP CAKES
From the New Royal Cook Book
WHEN r the child
ren romp in hun-
I here are some
I wholesome delights that
a will satisfy the most ’
I ravenous appetite.
Cookies
| % cup shortening «
I 2 cups sugar
I $
» % teaspoon grated nutmeg
I 1 teaspoon vanilla extract tea ferVA RM L
3 teaspoons Royal j
Baking Powder
Cream shortening and an- j& /k ISxT
gar together; add milk to I vt! MW P
beaten eggs and beat «. M jhLJL w
again; add slowly to
ereamed shortening and
sugar- add nutmeg and __ __
flavoring; add 2 cups flour EJ IS /K gk W / Ej '•k Wlb
sifted with baking pow- bl §a H ®
der; add enough more M M V W W Im &
| flour to make stiff dough. |
I Roll out very thin on
floured board; cut with « * . - _
I Absolutely Pure
■ ein or a piece of English
| walnut in the center of
J each. Bake about 12 min-
| Ut *’ in hO L ove \ , Made from Cream of Tartar,
<tab°s P oons P S h?Sn!ng derived from « ra P e **
1 cup sugar
1 egg
% cup milk
1% cups flour
3 teaspoons Royal
Baking Powder
% cup cocoa a
*4 teaspoon salt ________. . .
1 teaspoon vanilla
, C K“ COOK BOOK FREE
3 egg; beat well and add „ , _ , „ .
milk slowly; sift flour. ’”. w
baking powder, salt and containing 400 delightful fe-
B cocoa into mixture: stir cipes, will be sent to you
5 until smooth, add vanilla. freo 7° n ..Y 511 wnd. your
I Put one tablespoon of name and address.
I batter i nto each greased ROYAL BA KING POWDER CO. I
3 mufnn tin and oako in ■*,«
moderate oven about 20 118 Fulton Street, New York U:ty.
I minutes. Cover with boil
| ed icing.
g WATCH, CHAIN AND TWO RINGS
M a* premium*—send no money—simplv name and address—merely give away S
g FREE 12 Beautiful Art Picture* with 12 Boxes ol our famous White Lfl
l£aCioverineSalve.whichyou aril at 25c each. >Lewillaend you this Genuine p I
tueucan Watch, also Chain and two Gold Shell Rings, according to K II
j oiler tn our Premium Catalogue which you receive with the Salved Millions are usings
lor cuts, | R T\Q 1 YOU CAN ALSO EARN
LALtILO! a BEAUTIFUL DINNER SET
OR SIX LACE CURTAINS 8
man y other beautiful premiums. Our plan is the easefl and
Wb.9 A _ .-jW absolutely square. Wnte quick—Pictures and Salve sent promptly.
post-paw. Be first in your town.
u THE WILSON CHEMICAL CO_
lIG CASH COMMtSSIOW TO AGENTS Dept. L 223 Tyrone. Pa. "
/gaa, premium* for selling only a few boxes of our
A fa”’ ol ' 9 Rosebud Salve at 25c per box. Rosebud
(CtlS’) .t-— Salve has been giving relief ard satisfaction
'Sr for 25 years to millions of users for Inrrns,
' tetter, sores, piles, catarrh, coms, bun-
ions. etc - Easy to sell. We eend 12
//o'* boxes postpaid on credit, trust you un-
f r s°id - Big catalog of other prem-
t o g 7 iums. Jewelry, Lace Curtains, Phono,
graphs, etc., sent FREE with salve.
0) jgnrrt today MP oct otaottd.
PerfumeCompany, Box 61 Woodsboro, Maryland
EMBER 18, 1920.
Veiled Women Seize
Child in Classroom |
And Make Escape
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.—Entering
without knocking into the Richfield
school room just before recess time,
two tall women dressed in deep black
and heavily veiled, kidnaped from the
room Blanche Barker, eleven years
old, while the teacher and the excited
children looked on in astonishment.
The two black-clad women appeared
suddenly in the school room just as
the children were rising from their
seats for the recess period. Their
long veils completely hid their faces.
Looking quickly about the room, they
spied little Blanche sitting back in
a corner. They hurried toward her.
"Blanche, come with us,” com
manded the older and taler woman.
The little girl shrank back, fright
ened.
“No, no; I don't know you,” she
cried.
Then the little schoolma’am inter
vened. “Leave the child alone,” she
ordered. “She doesn’t know you. You
mustn’t take her.”
The tall woman turned in fury,
according to Miss Thayer.
"Keep your nose out of this,” she
commanded, sharply. “This is our
affair, not yours.”
Without another word, the two
young women made, for the child,
took her between them and started
for the door. But the school teacher,
highly indignant, stood in the way.
She seized the little girl and at
tempted to hold her back. But the
two women were too strong for her.
Some of the children, excited by the
struggle, started to cry.
The school teacher, despairing of
retaining the child, turned her atten
tion to the older woman. She seized
her black veil, lifted it, and gazed
full into her face.
Jerking the veil down, the woman
turned back to the child, rushed with
the other woman out the door, put
the screaming child into the waiting
touring car, and the three drove off
behind the crippled driver, down
Thirty-fourth avenue, south, toward
the open country.
Deputy sheriffs, under Sheriff
Earle Brown, and the city police
scoured the city and surrounding
countrV, but found nd trace of them.
Little Blanche Barker is the ward
of Mrs. E. M. Chandler, of Minneapo
lis. For six years previous to com
ing to live with Mrs. Chandler she
lived in San Francisco, Cal., with
Mrs. Bertha Barker.
i Italy Pays America
$1,000,000 Per Day
For Wheat Supplies
ROME..—The constant dropping in
value of the Italian lira, with the in
evitable soaring in food prices and its
companion—unrest—naturally makes
thinking Italians anxious, especially
since Food Controller Soleri has an
nounced that the country must pay
America no less than $1,000,000 a
day for bread, which is sold to the
public at a lower price than in any
other country.
Signor Gayada, an Italian newspa
per writer, interviewed the ablest ot
the European financiers who gathered
at the Brussels financial conference,
asking how they accounted for the
lira’s constant slump. Almost like
one man they gave three reasons.
The first is the “political price” of
bread. It costs the Italian govern
ment six millions a year; foreign
financiers will not give Italy credit,
in the experts’ opinion, while this
absurd stale of things lasts; Italy
must sell bread at cost or continue
to suffer from lack of credit. Bread,
the only cheap food in Italy, is given
to cattle, horses and pigs—those an
imals are fed with loaves that .cost
almost their weight in gold Experts
told Signor Gayda that if Italian
cattle were not given this dear bread
the food controller would save one
third of his American grain pur
chases.
f! /I F r H
ißesinol
g keeps skins clear
P in spite of everything
The smoke and dust of city life,
“y the sun and wind of the country,
the steam and dirt of housework
all spell ruin forgoodcomplex
ions. But the regular use of
Resinol Soap, with an occasional
application of Resinol Ointment,
keeps the skin so clean, clear and
fresh that it simply cannot help
being beautiful.
All druggists sell Resinol Soap and Oint
ment. "Why don’t you bejin using tliera?
—— ..i..—
“Only One Thins
Breaks My Cold’
‘‘That’s Dr. King's New Dis
covery, for Fifty Years
a Cold-Breaker”
TIME-TRIED for fifty years an
never more popular than toda]
Nothing but the relief it gives froi
stubborn old colds, and on-rushii
new ones, grippe and throat-torturir
coughs could have made Dr. King
New Discovery the standard remedy
is today. No harmful drugs.
Always reliable, and good for tl
whole family. Has a convincing, hea
ing taste with all its good medicin
qualities. At all druggists, 60 cent
F 1.20 a bottle.
For coldsandcoagh
Dr.Kmg’s
New Discovery
The Results of Constipatio
are sick headaches, biliousness, sallo
skin, waste matter in the intestiM
system. Correct this , health-unde
mining condition by taking Dr. King
Pills. Feel good every day. Ke<
the system clean and virile.
old price, 25 cents. All druggists. '
D prompt! Won’t Grit
_ IllunffsPili
RHEUMATISM ?.
RECIp
I will gladly send any Rheumatism su
serer a Simple Herb Recipe Absolutely Fri
Hint Completely Cured me of n terrible a
tnek of inusfulnr end inflammatory Hire
matisni of long standing after evej-ythii
else I tried had failed me. 1 have giv<
it to many sufferers who believed the
eases hopeless, yet they found relief fro
their suffering by,taking these simple herb
It also relieves Sciatica promptly, ns sye
ns Neuralgia, and is a wonderful blood ptir
fier. You are most welcome to this He:
Recipe if yon will send for It at on"e.
believe you will consider it a God-Spnd aft,
yon have put it to the test. There is not
ing injurious contained in it, and you ca
see for yourself exactly what yoii nre tai
ing. I will gladly send this Recipe—abs
lately free—to any sufferer who will seb
name • and address, plainly written. A
W. G. SUTTON, 2650 Magnolia Ave.
Los Angeles, Califor;4l
AN ENEMY TO GOOQ
HEALTH
Good health has no greater enem
than constipation. You cannot “kee
fit” for work or plajf If the bowel
ar© irregular or clogged with a d<
composed mass of undigested foo
from which the blood picks up dli
ease-causing impurities and carrie
them throughout t.ho entire systen
Foley Cathartic Tablets are mild bi
sure in action. They banish bilious
ness r sick headache, sour stomac
and other ills caused by indigestioi
Take one tonight and you will fe<
better in the morning. Sold every
where.— (Advt.)
BOYS. HERE’S YOUR CHANCE
TO GET A BASEBALL UNIFORM FREE:
You,choioro(uze» 12, Hand l6.Catooth»
’77 Mae line* *■ lhe uniform* worn by the Big
4" if ‘r, Leaauen. Made of sood material to wiO>~
rtandthe atrain of sliding to base*. Your*
nfiJL'V for telling only 60 bags of high grade Bowe*
and vegetable seeds at lOe a bag. A large
(1 I r J ouantity in each hag. Sella quickly. Ga*
) tv J oilier member* of your team to club ia
CJ .J with you and each sell 60 bags ot seed anj)
n n oct the uniforms for your ball team frea.
U [J Write today. Addrets Department A.
COCD SEED CO.. Dunkirk, W. T«
Moving Picture Machine Gi vei
Boys, here is you
' AgaF Pl lA chance to have i
NFW 111 real movingpictun
rilcUnnßs Irffrwria Ib machine with filn
NuDELmf Khi’T.'v complete. Simp!)
as selhrboxesfamou
FS3E BL—WhiteCloverin
Y,t ;Si Hf ( z Salve a'see withFre
’ Ry.," picture* according t
S' ’iki; offe’innrcminmratalog
Befirtinynurtown
Th* WilsonCbendealCo., Def><- MP 77 Tyrowi.Pa
26-Piece Silveroid Set Given
Full size for family
lEgSßatat;.Sfc' use; will never t.tf.
nis h; beaut i f ut
pattern. Simply sei!
40 packets Garden
-__2< Seedj at 10c. Many
—-4 valuable premium*
given. Write today.
The Wilson Seed Co., 3 54 Tyrone,Pa.
aMB| | ■■ m Wf|
Money back without question
" * **< \ I if. HUNT’S Salve fails in th<
.«jD* i ! treatment of ITCH. ECZEMA
K-l RINGWORM, TETTER
f H { ri other itching skin diseasea
I ’xj J 1 Try a75 eent box nt our risk;
• * Sold hv nil druggists.
F I TSJ
If you have Epilepsy, Fits, Falling SioJt
tess or Convulsions —no matter how batg-.
■vrite today for my FREE trial treatment.
Used successfully 25 years. Give age antj
explain case. Dr. C. M. Simpson, 1685 West
14th St., Cleveland, Ohio. A
Walking Doll FREE!
This pretty Walking Doll i 3a
and > ou can make her walk as f a ,t al
I you wish and her feet really move. SRe
has a lovely face, becoming dress and
fL'fr ll *** bonnet in bright ralora, and you can carry hat
irrti her Y a,k 4 ust 0 Giv*a
VwZ J IL (or aellmff only 15 Wwelfy Novelties at 10c ex.
Wnte today. coiUmbia NOVELTY CO.. OmT
3OTEAST BOSTON. MASS.
Bracelet, Locket, Neck Chain 7
Complete outfit given f or ,
selling only 40 packets Gar-,’
< i en Seeds at 10c. Writ*'
Ivl TOl ' The Wilson Seed Co.
Deft. T4-O5 Tyrone, p*.