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Production to Get More Attention Than in
Peace, Declares Secretary—U. S. Farmers
Need Not Inerease Crops in Hope of Markets.
By JUSTIN M'GRATH.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 ‘lt is a mistake to think that war
necessarily means a deerease in agricultural produetion In the
Balkan countries farm productions iner ased while the war was
waged. The same was true of the Northern States during our Civil
War These is no good reason to suppose that farm produetion n
the F.ll"n'w.na countries now at war will be lessened during the
coming vear even if the war should continue through the summer
On the contrary, it is likely that greater attention will be paid and
greater energy applied to agriculture
in those countries during the present
year™
I had sought an interview with
Secretary of Agriculture David
Franklin Houston to ascertain what
he thought of the suggestion that
since the foodstuffs productions of
the warring natlions probably would
fall off American farmers might well
be urged to increase their production,
The thought had occurred to me
that it might be wise for the Ameri
can farmers to grow as big crops as
possible during the coming year, not
only because they would have a better
opportunity than ever before to sell
their products abroad, but because of
the not improbable contingency that
production above the normal home
demand might be vitally necessary to
the United States.
Has Deep Insight.
“We have been hearing a lot about
our national defenses. What are we
doing to improve our food delonsea'.‘"‘
The response of Secretary Houston |
to both suggestions was illuminating
and instructive, and ought to prove
:If‘ great interest to the country gener
y.
The Secretary is a conservative
man. But his conservatism would
never be confounded with lack of ini
tiative. It is a conservatism which
comes of deep insight into the prob
lems with which he deals. He cre
ates the impression that he is a man
who is always in mental motion, but
who chooses after deliberation the dai
rection in which his mental energy
can be applied with the best assur
ance of definite and desirable resuits,
Hé has deep-set eyes and a larze
brow, which contracts as he talks, in
dicating a habit of thinking carefully
before speaking.
“The people of Great Btitain, of
France, of Germany and Austria.”
the Secretary continued, “are intelli
gent people. They realize fully, and
perhaps keenly, the importance of an
adequate food supply for the success
ful conduct of the war.
Nearly, Self-Supporting.
“Germany and Austria, of the coun
tries now at war, are nearly self-sup
porting. Germany has 65,000,000 peo
ple. Probably about 6,000,000 are en
gaged in warfare. On account of the
conditions with - which Germany 'S
confronted, it is reasonable to think
that the German people will apply
themselves to agriculture during the
coming season by planting even to a
greater extent than ever before. The
same is true of Austria. It may be
that with gzood seasons both these
countries will show an increased pro
duction of farm preducts.
“We learn through iie Rockeieller
Foundation that only about 450,000
to 500.000 of the people of Belgium
are still in exile from the country.l
The rest of her r.jllions not engaged
in war are back on Belgian soil, and
the information we get is g'un many
of them are tilling the sofl.
“The reports from Argentina, India
and China and other wheat-growing
countries indicate that those coun
tries largely will increase their pro
duction. The fall sowing in the
Unijted States increased 11.1 per cent;
so 1 do not think there is any need of
apprehension that the supply of the
world is to fall short during the com
ing year.
Orly Muderate Increase.
“And I would not Uke to take the
responsibility of urging tie farmers
of the United States enormously to
increase food production, with the as
surance that they would find a market
for their surplus because of decreassd
production in the countries now at
war.
“Now, as to your second sugges
tion,” said the Secretary. “While we|
should labor to increase productions
in all profitable directions, the great
need in the United States, viewed
from the agricultural standpoint, 1s
for a balanced agriculture, a diversi
fied production.
“For instance, the South last year
imported from the Western States
nearly $400,000,000 worth of foodstuffs.
This great importation was made nec
essary by the fact that the South, al
«ough a splendid agricultural coun
try, devotes !tself almost exclusively
to the raising of cotton,
One-Crop Plan Unsound.
“For any section of the country to
confine its agricultural efforts to the
raising of a single crop !s economi
cally unsound. This fact has been
borne in on the minds of Southern
planters through conditions brought
about by the war in a more forceful
and convincing fashion than they
could have been made to realize
through argument.
“In the Northwest the tendency has
been to confine agricultura! energy to
the raising of wheat. This is just as
economically unsound as it is for the
South to rely for its support upon
cotton,
“But, fortunately for the farmers in
the Northwest, existing conditions are
more avorable for the sale of wheat
at a good price than they are for the
sale of cotton. Consequently the
Northwest's great supply of wheat
has brought unusual prosperity to
that section.
Farming Is Neglected.
“Phe department and«the land grant
colleges, which are its auxiliaries
realize that in the long run the way
not only to increase farm preductions
but also to secure and retain in the
United States a sufficient rural pop
ulation is to attack the whole rural
life problem through its many as
pects.
“Until quite recently the thought of
the people of the United States prin
cipally has heen directed toward-the
upbuilding of cities. Every city in
the United States is trying to rival
some other city. The pring¢ipal means
of doing this is to build up industry.
Consequently the thought of our peo
ple has been much more ditected to
ward the development of industry and
manufactures than it hasgbeen to
ward the development of agriculture.
U'ntil recent years we have been too
largely drifting agriculturally.
“The time has come when this pol
icy of neglecting agricultural life
must be changed. The prosperity of
the country may be said to depend
upon the effecting of this change.
“Both this department and the land
grant colleges are proceeding upon
the theory—which has been proved
by experience to be correct—that
the only way in which agricultural
conditions can be largely changed
and agricultural production increased
is by improving rural life in many
direcfions, .
Would Improve Conditions.
“It can not be done by merely cry
ing out, ‘Back to the farm.’ Nor can
it be done by making a few farmers
prosperous, for the first use they
would make of their prosperity under
the existing conditions, in all prob
ability, would be to move to the city.
“What must be done to keep men
and women on the farms is to make
the conditions of living surrounding
them more nearly approximate those
which the people living in cities enjoy
—more effectively to organize rural
activities.”
“And bow would you bring about
anything like an equality between
the country sections and the cities In
the respects which you have men
tioned 7"’ 1 asked.
“Well, one way,’ said the Secre
tary, “is the construction of more good
roads. Where they have good roads
the communal life of agricultural sec
tions is improved. .
Good Roads Are Vital.
“Good roads lead to more co-opera
tive endeavors. They lead to better
schoolhouses because where there are
good roads more children can come to
any one given point. And it is then
pussible to have a large school with
good teachers rather than a little red
schoolhouse with a single school -
teacher.
“Also farmers must be brought to
gether so that they will be able to do
their business through agents rather
than middlemen, It is along these
lines that agricultural prosperity-—
which means general prosperity —will
best he secured in the Unijted States
and not through spasmodic effort ex
erted to meet unusual conditions.”
HEAKST 8 SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLAMN U sLADAY thuw
Panoramie view of the marvelous Panama Exposition. Tower of Jewels in the center.
Wonders of Great Exposition at San Francisco Are Described Vividly by
o Two of Country’s Best Known Writers.
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb, 27.~—Dawn |
on the Goiden Gate; dawn on the
tumbling waters of the bay. dawn on
the circling green hills. A peari-pink
mist lifts from the waves, and there
slowly unveils a city which might
have been transplanted from some vi
sion of the Orient; a city of tinted
towers and gilded minarets and opal
domes; a city of waving paims and
lofty pines and brightly nodding flow.
ers; s city of majesty, of digaity, of
beauty.
A dominating tower marks the
center, and as the flery rim of the
sun rises above the hills, the tower
bursts into dazzling radlance, its
countless jewels glittering and flam-
Ing, scintillating and flashing. rubles,
emeralds, sapphires, diamonds, they
blaze and glow, a queenly diadem
for the most beautiful spectacle the
world has ever seen-—-the Panama-
Pacific International Exposition!
An archer on a mighty column
trains his arrow at the sun, symbeol of
the things that man will dare. Be
hind him lies achievement: and such
achievement! There is color every
where, soft, restful color. It begins
in the vast entrance garden, with its
palms and gay bowers and leaping
fountains. The background for. this
spacious panorama-—glowing in its
promise of the rich treats to come —|s
a long high wall of smoked ivory, in
the center of which is set the Tower
of Jewels,
Art on Every Hand.
But where are the bulldings: the
facades; the entrances to the Palaces
of Agriculture and Manufacture, and
what not? Inside, facing upon courts
of exqu!sita grace. You shall see those
presently, but first you will stop to
admire consummate art of those
smoked ivory walls broken by their
minarets and domes and shell-like
niches of salmon pink, where sculp
e —
Girl in Coma Plays
Girl in Coma Play
I Piano; Case Puzzles
| Curious Iliness of Young Woman
Which Music May Cure
Amazes Physicians. |
MERCHANTVILLE, N. J., Feb. 27.
Medical men are greatly interested in
the case of Miss Inez Lewis, who was
recently taken ill at school near West
Chester, Pa., and for ten days was
unconscious. She was taken to her
home in that condition and the at
tending physiciens did not expect her
to recover. They pronounced her to
be In a coma. |
Someone tapped the keys of a piano
and the notes seemed to cause the
girl to show for the first time some
consciousness of her surroundings.
The physician was told of this and
had a musician called in to play some
of the music that the patient liked
bsst. The effect was such that the
girl soon spoke a few words.
She was placed at the plano and
her hands made to strike a few notes,
and when in this semi-conscious con
dition she played several pleces of
music. Physicians have been watch- |
ing her ‘improvement and say that‘
they are unable to fathom how the
girl in her condition of mind can playJ
the piano. ‘
——————
$1,5600 Good Football
GIRARD, OHIO, Feb, 37.—Mrs. Dol}
Drake, wife of a Federal League ball
layer, while attending a matinee per-'
?ormance at a theater with her husband,
dropped a roll of money umoumlni to |
$1,650. The money was in a handker
ohief and had been fastened by a pin
inside Mrs. Drake's waist. [t was not
missed until after Mr. and Mrs. Drake
had returned home.
A search was instituted and the ball
player went back to the theater where
the money had been found after being
kicked about like so much old paper by
scores of persons.
.
Y
Girls Blamed for 1
High Cost of Living
WASHINGTON, Feb, 27.—Gowns (orl
high school girls constitute the chief
indictment against the high cost of liv
ing in many Washington families, ac-|
cording to Mrs. Court ¥, Wood, of the
District Federation of Women's Clubs,
“High school girls in Washington,”
says g/lrs. Wood, ‘‘wear dresses more
fashionable and exfpensive than are or
dinarily worn at fashionable colleges.
Diaphanous and immodest gowns are
too plentiful in our high schools, and
the girls whose parents can least afford
it are the ones who wear the most ex
pensive finery."”
DIES AT 80; NEVER ON A TRAIN.
FINDLAY. OHIO, Feb., 27.—Request
ing that he be buried in a blue serge
suit and dark shirt, the same He wore
during life, Josenh MecGinnis, 80, is dead.
1t is said he had only been-in three
towns during his life and that he had
never ridden on a railway train.
By GEORGE RANDOLPH CHESTER and LILLIAN CHESTER
tured surprises peer out at you from
beneath drooping encalyptus or curv
palm or flaring orange trees
‘uflcfit through the high arch, or
around through the cireling colon
nades by the Court of Palms. Color
here, too. Those gigantic red-fluted
columns, so thick and so high that
they make pygmies of us all, stretch
upward to ceilings of the azure blue
which gives an infinity of space, and
between the columns nod the delicate
branches of green willows. If you
come through the tower you emerge
upon the magnificent Court of the
Universe, its sunken garden a wild
tangle of tropical vegetation. |
To the right a huge triumphal arch,
surmounted by the Nations of the
East, on elephant and camel and
prancing steed: to the left a llke awa‘
surmounted by the Nations of t
West. with “prairie schooner” and ox
and falthful horse,
Court of the Universe. |
It will take you some time to over
come the bewilderment of this huge
Court of the Universe and settie it
into remembered detail. There is so
much worth while. A glitter catches
vour eye; another: a blaze of pure
deep blue which you had not seen
before, a flare of orange, a snap of
red, a flash of brilllant green; the
exquisitely modeled goddesses over
the cornices hold stars within the
curving arms above their heads, and
upon their crowns tremble the jewels
of the sun,
Sculpture; ‘there is sculpture every
where; and notable sculpture. At the
‘rlgm of the sunken garden rises a
pedestal of light, and on the opa
lescent sphere which tops it is a %-
ing figure of extraordinary grace. s
wings outstretched, he stands polsed
on tip-toe, ready to cast himself off
in flight; and his imminence of ac-
Hustlers, Look Out
‘Americanitis’
For‘Americanitis
Overwork and Overeating Cause It,
But You May Cure It With
Golf or Baseball.
CHICAGO, Feb. 27.—Americanitis, a
mental affection caused by 00 much
work, too much food and too little ex
ercise, is responsible for 80 per cent
of all diseases in this country “which
can not be classified as either surgical
or infectious.”
So announced Dr. William S, Sad
ler, a nerve specialist, in an address
to the Chicago Underwriters’ Associa
tion. “But the gradual cure is casy.
“A game of baseball, a round of
golf or a long walk in the country will
Go more to curs Americanitis than all
the medicines the doctors can han
out,” said Dr. Sadler.
He prophesied that soon a sickly
man would not be able to borrow mon
ey nor get commercial credit, for
banks and business houses will keep
close track of the physical condition
of customers.
s ————
.
He Claims‘Hard Luck’
. .
Championship of U. 8.
FREDERICK, MD., Feb, 27.—Life has
proved one trouble after another for
lLawson A. Dubel, 59, who belleves the
“jinx"" has followed him more persist
ently than any other man in the coun
try. ‘He now must undergo an operation
for a growth in his eye. Recently a
growth was removed from the other eye.
lI)“s other mishaps since childhond have
een:
Left hand almost cut off, right arm
broken, severely scalded, jaw broken,
trampled on by a horse and three ribs
broken, one ear torn off and a hole
pierced in hig head, left foot nearly cut
off, kicked by a horse and leg broken,
pinned beneath a 1,600-pound derrick
and every rib broken and both legs in
jured.
Wheels of Justice
CHICAGO, Feb, 27.—A one-eyed cat
delayed the administration of justice in
tne Hyde Park Municipal Court.
The animal leaped upon one corner
of the judicial bench as Judge Laßuy
was In the midst of a decision. It
trained a friendly rc%'ard upon the judge
and purred. Clerk Henry Baum seized
the animal by the tail and hurled it to
the foot of a policeman. ‘‘Skat!"’ cried
the bluecoat and kicked out wildly.
The astonished cat, ke a gray me
teor, darted about the room with bai
liffe and policemen in pell-mell pursuit.
It finally escaped through the door.
DEATHLESS TOWN IN 1914,
RICHMOND, IND., Feb. 27.—The vil
lage of Eldorado, Ohio, ten miles east
of Richmond, is not an inviting ngot for
undertakers. The year 1914 established
a record of ‘‘deathless town,” not a
death being recorded during the period.
Kldorado has a population of between
200 and 300
tion is superb. One expects him at
any ‘instant to take the air and join
his graceful mate on top of (he pedes
tol at the left
The portals to the right invite you.
The lofty Arch of the Rising Sun
leads Into pleasant paths: another
garden! Here again are flowers and
shrubs and green grass, and soft,
harmonious coloring. Is it all garden
and sculptured beauty, this exposi
tion? Why, no. These columned
facades which inclose the flower
bordered walks are the enirances to
the exhibition “bulldings: the Palace
of Transportation on the one hand
and the Palace of Manufactures and
Varied Industries on the other.
Court of Abundance.
Beyond, through spaclous arch
ways, is the Court of Abundance; and
now the whole atmosphere is
changed. The round fullness of By
zantine has become the vertical
sharpness of the Spanish-Moorish
adaptation of Gothic. The colors are
still deeper, richer. more bold; and
at the four corners of the splendid
arcade which surrounds this court
are mural panels as warm in color
ing as stained glase. The big garden
Maunts its exotic beauty with fervid
flamboyance. Orange trees border
this court, their yvellow fruit ripe for
the picking, and in the center is one
of the most notable fountains in the
grounds, .
At the end of this garden spot
crosses an avenue of palms, leading
down to the Esplinade and the shim
mering bay. Across this avenue is
the stupendous Palace of Machinery,
and here again is the joy of smoked
fvory walls, and shell-like salmon
pink niches and panels silhouetted by
pines and poplars and green shrub
bery, and graceful, festooned vines
swinging and swaying from the cop-
Recipe for Long Lif
Given by Man of 91
Sleep Six to Eight Hours, Do Gar
dening and Cut Wood, He
Advises.
CHICAGO, Feb, 27-Wish to live long?
Franklin Newhall says he has the cor
rect recipe. Here it is:
Sleep fromn six to eight hours at night.
Chus down a tree or two for firewood
each day.
Mow with a scythe
Become a iflrdener.
Newhall, who is 91 years old, is con
testing court action brought by his son
for the appointment of a conservator for
his $750,000 estate. He was on the wit
ness stand recently before Judge Gregg,
in the Probate Court,
The old man gave in detail his habits
of exercise.
“I eut down trees and chop them up
for firewood,”” he said. ‘“That is the way
1 exercise.”
“How long have you indulged in this
form of exercise?’ asked the court.
“For fifty years or more,’”’ he replied.
“] have other exercises, too. In the
summer 1 mow with a scythe and tend
the garden. 1 generally sleep frem six
to eight hours at night.”
Colt Born With Two
'
Heads; Only 4 Legs
PITTSBURG, Feb, 27.—Vital statis
tics of the farmyard have been en
riched by reports ‘- of freakish occur
rences at nearby points. At Cambridge
Spring a mare owned by Joseph Bradic,
gave birth to a colt having two heads,
two necks, and two bodies from a }mim}
half-way back to the tail. The reak
had only four legs. !
Three cows belonging to John Lin
weber are belleved to hold the record
for increasing their herds having given
birth to five calves in one day. Two of
the cows became the mothers of twin.‘!.“
e i e ‘
Varnish Leg of Auto
. . I , ‘
Vietim and It's 0. K.
i |
SAN BERNARDINO, CAL., Feb. 3‘7~‘
Rushed to the Ramona Hospital for pos
sible internal injuries in an automobile
accident, Kenneth Mcßae .was treated
with a coat of varnish on his wooden
leg, which was sceratched in the wreck. |
An axle of the automobile in which
he was ri(lhibroke as the machine was
erossing the Lytle Creek bridge and Me-
Rae was thrown several feet. At the
hospital it was found he was uninjured,
but the physicians apfi)ued a coat of
varnish to the artificial leg where it had
been marred.
City People Sh
ity People Shy on
Phone, Says Expert
CHICAGO, Feb. 27.—People living in
cities are shly in telephone conversa
tions, according to C. Y. McVey, of
(leveland, who was elected president of
the National Independent Telephonse
Assoclation at the annual convention
here.
“The country boy makes love over a
ten-party line with a farmer's wife
Ilsitdenlng at every receiver,” MeVey
said.
ing. Here agaln are opal-tinted
Jomes and warmly colored minarets.
which heighten the sky behind them
to deep Italian blue.
Down beneath the paims to the Es
planade, where the cool, iavigorating
breeze sweeps in from ‘he Dbay,
flocks of gray-breasted gulls whirl
and clrcle in the azure air or cluster
upon the green lawn. Again to the
Court of the Universe, so that, enter
ing past the daring archer on his
mighty column, you shall see through
the great arch of the Tower of Jew
els, the streets of San Francisco ris
ing steep and straight above their ter
raced hills, 4
Court of the Four Seasons.
The Court of the Four Seasons! A
colder beauty here n caimer beauty,
& beauty of more «ignity «nd maj
esty; but a beauty which soothes, In
each of the four quarters of the cir
cular eolopnade are niches with foun
tained statues -Spring, Summer, Au
tumn, Winter. |
The noonusy sun beats down, but.
strive as it will, it can not render
garish those delicate colors, nor ren
der glaring those cool corridors im
mersed In shadows, bordered by
Juxuriant foliage, and swept by the
{ breezes from the bay.
' Beauty! It has come into its right
{in the Panama-Pacific Internationa
Exposition, and it dominates every
thing'
One is tempted to forget that this
exquisitely harmonious panorama of
structures houses the very iife of ma
terial progress, from every quarter ot
the globe; that here utility Is holding
its mightiest congress; but never have
utility and beauty joined hands in
such perfect amity as this.
San Francisco has proved that it is
not necessary for utility to be ugly
nor for beauty to be useless!
‘. r .
Little Louisa, Just 4,
. .
ik »
Missed Her Train
But the Engine Driver Backed Up
Three Miles to Get Her, So
it's All Right,
TERRE HAUTE, IND., Feb. 37—
When the Keystone kExpress, the
Pennsvivania train running from New
York to St. Louis, had gone three
miles from Limedale Junction, Theo
dore Brow: a paassenger, looked
around for his seven children and
found only six. He wasn't sure if lit
tle louisa, aged 4, had been put on
the train
The conductor stopped the train
and the engineer backed up slowly,
the rear platform filled with people
ccanning the right of way for fear
that the child might have got to the
open door and fallen off after the
train left Limedale,
At the station the agent was wait
ing with Louisa in his arme. He said
that by chance he looked down the
track after the train pulled out and
saw Louisa, who had not been aboard,
toddling along in pursuit of it
The Keystone was fifteen minutes
late leaving Limedale in the first in- |
stance and 50 minutes when Louisa |
was a passenger. The Brown family .‘
was moving from Bloomington Ind.,
to Home, Il |
e — A ——————————————
” ‘GETS-IT”
Me for - ,
When I iave Corns™
en I Have Corns”
- .
Simple As Saying It: Never Fails.
It does your heart good to see how |
easilv and quickly any corn comes out
when you put “GETS-IT" on! And then
when vou've gone along for vears try- |
@f'fl (¢ “Look,
Y ‘GETSIT'
\ Makes
b \ ; Corns Fall
P \-\\: Right |
SN, DogFubieeg o
A CRE ] i
\o\\\/\.7 Y.’ = I
X /,‘ L & 7 1
W / 3 '
et
A Ve ’
/ " |
ing evervthing, when you've sat upg
nights wrapping up your toes in band- |
ages, smearing on salves that rub off
or swell up the corn, pasting on cot
ton plasters that make corns pop-eyed,
slaughtering your toes with razors, jab
bing them with knives and pruning to
the quick with scissors—and then you
put on 2 drops of “GETS-IT" and see
vour corn fall right off—why, It just
looks like a miracle. Just try it
“GRETS-IT” never fails. No pain, no
\troublo. Use it for any corn, callous,
wart or bunion.
“GETS-1T" is sold by druggisis ev
erywhere, 25c a bottle, or sent direet
hwy B. Lawrence & Co., Chicago,
Actress Suing Clubman-Husband
Advances Novel Idea in Fight
for Half Million Dollars.
LOS ANGELES Feb 20 —~ln the
$500.000 breach of promise suit of
pretty Maude Armfleld, a moving ple
ture actress, against Bryant Howard
a wealthy San Diego clubman, which
is on trial before Superior Judge Wil
bur, the complainant huried a bomb
into the camp of the defense when she
announced that she would demand a
blood test to prove that Howard was
the father of her young chud
Howard and Miss Armfield were
married four years ago In San Diego,
but on It being discovered later that
he had not been properly divorced
lh--m his Arst wWife the couple separ
lated, Miss Armfield claiming that
Howard promised to remarry her
FOR SALE---Thi
A ive H
ttractive Ilome
e T T
B T S 3 )4—"';*..;"’” - ‘ L e SR 2
3 T R oo ’s"v - '»-.‘ : I}"‘
A e >
PR S . i b
a.:f ,i K - g ST “’&i’ %
ik b — o .Bt
‘?”" - no M 3 oo R
f¢ 8 i“,,-.} e { = ;"‘;,..“_.,.‘.. R -.} ‘ 1
enamßreTpe—— e N | e s;> A 2 < RIS e
22 B S '?’f; 3 ! @ " > ‘
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TR - ; RS
T e R T R Te S
T Tet TG S S
caiss AR LRI st et S KRN
This property is located at No. 17 Kennesaw avenue, one
of the prettiest and most delightful residential sections in
the North Side. Convenient to three car lines, nine minntes
to Five Points.
We very reluctantly offer it for sale, but only by reason
of removal from city. ‘
Seven rooms. I'urnace heat. Servant’s room in cellar.
Garage. Cement drive. Shades and screens. Fine lawn,
foliage and flowers planted. Terms to suit. Positively an
ideal home. Apply owner, No. 17 Kennesaw avenue, phone
Ivy 5386, or Martin-Ozburn Co., Third National Bank Build
ing, Ivy 1276.
A 2 Minutes
|
A Laxative OUintment
in a Collapsible Tube
® of a laxative ointment that
in 2 MINUTES emptieathe
uS n lower bowel, and makes
you feel fresh and vifmu
ous. No waiting all night
for relief—no disturbing of the stomach and intestines
—no uncertainty as to just whem your bowels are guing
to act. They act when you wish them to.
| e
For Bale at -
4
JACOBS’ PHARMACIES
And All First-Class Druggists
Or by mail upon receipt of 26c. Large Tube (contains five times K
amount of the 26¢ tube), boc. YA
TU-BO COMPANY, Philadelphiz, v L
when he secured a divorce. The baby
was born at & Battle Creek (Mieh,
sanitarium. i
Ac\"ofl!lnfi to testimony of the i
plainant, Howard has not ‘z
fused to marry her, but \
paternity of the child
Attorney Frank MeDonald :
to-day he would prove Miss id’
contention by presenting to tl
a transcript of testimony in the B
mous Slingsby case in England, §
which the blood test was used. -
George Winkler, a former
of Miss Armfield, testified to ¥
raceiving kisses and endearing lette
from her at Battle Creek. -
» “
Prisoner Thanks
Judge for Sentence
KOKOMO, IND., Feb 3M.-%1
want to say, your honor, before les
that ! am much obliged to yv©
\_\'!'nn_m _Tmso:“m .ll::? Purd B
Clirea Cour s N -
venrs and sentenced him to one to so
_cer years in the State prison for grand
Ahe court sald Trader was
to all he got. Trader robbed &
car last summer. He broke jall wi
awalting trial, but was ocaptured I 8 &
cellar .
CARROLL & HU I
Cold Wave $5--Jellico $4.7¢
Wi
_.- g
Complete Dodak System,
Covering every phase of finishing to ¢
minutest detail. T;y a real studio iab
The “Co-Op,” 119 Peachtres, L
Y e
im 00l o) S
Slas gl SR(e)
Dor’t Take PHis
Don't use
Suppositories
Don’t ruin yoeur
Stomach with
Purgatives
3