Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 29, Number 21, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 19 January 1922 — Page 2

DE VALERA BOLTS AS GRIFFITH WINS Former Irish Head and Followers Walk Out in Protest as Vote Is Taken in Dail. HEW CHIEF NAMES C^INET All British Troops Are to be Withdrawn —Amnesty to Be Grarted by England to All Who Can Bte Regarded Political Prisoners. Dublin, Jun. 11.—The three outstanding developments at . Tuesday’s session of 'the Dail were; 1. The election of Arthur Grifflthjas, 'prestrienfaM prime''minister of the Dail . 2. The making of Dick Mulcahy, who has been the actual commander-in-chief of the Irish republican army and the one man to whom the headquarters staff rank and file have given unswerving loyalty, the minister of defense. 3. The adjournment of the Dail to February 14—marvel of marvels —by unanimous vote. This last miracle was due, without question, to the tine patriotism and basic kindliness of heart of De Valera, now a plain "deputy," as pointed out by the speaker during tire evening session. rrrltlith announced his cabinet as follows: Foreign affairs—George Gavan Duffy. Finance —Michael Collins. Defense—Jiichard Mulcahy, chief of staff of the I. R. A. Home affairs —E. J. Duggan. Local government affairs —Deputy Cosgrave. Economics —Bryan O’Higgins. President Griffith and his cabinet constitutes the provisional government of "the Irish Free State, which will shortly take over all- administrative authority in Ireland (outside of Ulster province) from the British. Eamoriri de~ aiera and his adherents bolted Dail Eireann. Eamon de Valera and his followers walked out while the vote was being taken, in protest against the nomination of Griffith. Speaker John MacNeill put the motion for Griffith’s election, and he was unanimously chosen. In nominating Griffith shortly after the beginning of the session, Collins said that as maters stood, Ireland was without a leader. He charged the opposition with obstructionist tactics and declared its desire was to create the Impression that Ireland was still unfriendly to England end to discredit the support of the treaty. The present course of the dail, If persisted In, would give England an excuse for remaining In Ire- . land, he said. Some form of government. Is needed immediately to prevent a state of anarchy. The Irish nation had no captain, continued Collins, who preceded to tell the dail that he had received a letter from the proprietor of the Cork Examiner saying the management of that newspaper had been held up at two o'clock In the morning and compelled to publish a proclamation. Collins said he called such methods "black and tan,” whoever employed them. After bolting the tnorning session •with his followers In .protest against fhg nomination of Griffith for the presidency, De Valera returned to the'fifternoon session with a promise Qf help for Griffith as president of the Dail but not as head of another government. After his election President Griffith made this announcement: ? “The Dail will continue to exist until the Irish Free State is'set up.” The . Dail adjourned until February 14 to permit the new government to proceed with carrying out the provisions of the Anglo-Irish treaty. s Among those who walked out with De Valera was Robert C, Barton, a signer of the pence treaty, who, while voting for it, had declare/! he signed it under duress. He voted for De Valera’s re-election vesterday. London. Jan. 11. —The Times declares that all British forces are to be withdrawn -from Ireland, excepting Ulster, as rapidly, as possible, the - BKiveflW'iit- tuv-oi-v+ng -about 50.44*1 - men.The amnesty to tie granted by the British government, according to the newspaper, Is expected td embrace ali who can be regarded as coming under a generous :. construction of the term “political prisoners." EGG PRICE DROPS 5 CENTS Last Wholesale Quotation on FirstClass Spot Stuff Is 29J/ 2 .Cents at Chicago. ■ Chicago, Jan. 11.—Spot sates-es first quality fresh eggs dropped“oH cents on the wholesale market, the last quotation being 2914 cents a dozen, with a few sales at 30 cents. Agree on Prlc.e Probe. Washington, Jan, 12. —Tentative agreement, for an investigation of wholesale and retail prices throughout the country has been reached. Attorney General Daugherty announced here.- —-- -7 *-- Founder of Lake Shippers Dead. Winnipeg, Man., Jan. 12. —Frederick William Young, general manager and secretary of the Lake Shippers’ Clearance association, which he organized In 4900, is dead at his home here, after a hriejt Illness, aged fifty-nice.

♦ COUNT SZECHENYI

Count Laszlo Szechenyi, who has been appointed Hungarian minister td the United States. Countess Szechenyi was formerly Gladys M. Vanderbilt of New York city.

TRAIN HITS BUS; 4 DIE Seventeen Children Also Injured Near Van Wgrt, 0. Driver Failed to See Approaching Freight Owing to Fog—Victims Were on Way to Sfchool. —V Van, Wert, rr, Jan. 11. —Four children were instantly killed and seventeen others, were,.injured -sltoFtly—be--Tore 9 o'clock In the nfoming when n school bus was hit by a Pennsylvania fast freight train three miles east of here. Three ambulances and all available physicians In Van Wert were rushed to the scene of the crash. Preparations were made at Van Wert county hospital here to receive the injured children as soon as they were given first aid and could be moved. There were 33 children in the bus when it was hit, it being one of the four which takes the pupils each mornlug to the township school. Joseph H. Murhalt, the driver of tlie motor bus, did not see the. approaching train on account of the heavy fug, it was said. HITS MOTION PICTURE OFFER Senator Harrison of Mississippi Tells Senate He Sees Plan to Control Legislation. Washington, Jan. ’9. Protesting against acceptance by Postmaster General Hays of the position as head of the motion picture industry, Senator -iHarrison, Democrat, Mississippi, declared-in the senate that if the motion picture producers “get the biggest politician In the Republican party to head that industry, we must look upon it with suspicion." Senator Harrison said he was ‘‘fearful" that if the former Republican national chairman "becomes the head of the motion picture industry he will place ‘ a censorship upon' some Democratic pictures that should be shown.” KILLER OFFERED BIG PRICE Twenty Thousand Dollars Promised Gunman to Kill Ex-Police Chief in Montreal. Montreal, Jan. 9.—Vincent Trescoll, who wais found slnlh in g rear- storeroom, was promised $20,00(f to kill Gonzagtie Savard, former Montreal police captain, detectives said they had learned, alleged New York gunman, came here with two others of his ilk, hut they quarreled and he was shot, the police understood. Savsr iPSTrtffstriTfhefrt aUrrfHie'prosecu-" tion of nine men hanged for murder. FOUNDATION IS WELL FIXED Rockefeller. -Institution Has $179,279,807 in Stocks and Bonds, Report Shows. . New York. -Tan. 10.—Stocks and bonds held-by the Rockefeller .foundatinn hadTa'book, value of 5170.27'.i.50T at the beginning of 1021, according to the annual report of-the treasurcr Tor the year ended December 31. svnnounced here. Tills total represented both, the principal and Income terns •porarily invested. Jap Chief to Go to Manila. Tokyo.'Jan. 12.—I.ient. Gbn Raron (ttirtri ' Tafmktt. J 'fnriner r minister: of war, will, go to the Philippines, nbont the, middle of the present -month, to the visit rmtii to Jacwen—bevfTtUl liy. f aottMll iWoodi ' .. St. Louis Bank Out $754,000. St. Louis, Jan. 12.—Circuit Attorney Sldener announced the defalcations of Arthur O. Meininger, fugitive cashier . -of the Night and -Day hank, would total $754,000. Assets of the hank, he said, will cover about SOOO,OOO.

END OF PARLEY NOTIN SIGHT Harding Told by Senators ChinaSiberia' Question Must Be Settled. DEMAND GOOD FAITH ACTION Vigorous Opposition From Two Different Directions Looms Up Ahead of the Armaments Conference— No Early Adjournment Washington, Jan. 12.—Vigorous opposition Horn two different directions --hwtiiytF -up ..ithewi. iff- Uiu .JltuiauiCUU. conference. A tip ctrtde down to the administration from Capitol hill that if the Far Eastern phase of the conference, particularly us it affects China and Siberia, is not settled in good faith, all .other accomplishments requiring senatorial ratification will be seriously jeopardized. A two-and-a-half-hour session of the chiefs of the American, British, Japanese, French and Italian delegations disclosed so much objection to the fivepower naval treaty that all hope of effecting an agreement within the next two or three duys hud to he abandoned. Asa result of these unexpected developments talk of final adjournment of tlie conference by the end of the present week or the middle of next was brought to a sudden end. In light of the demand from the capitol for good faith action by the conference’ on the Far Eastern questions a statement made at the White House was regarded as highly significant. President Harding, the White House statement said, regards a settlement Vs the Shantung issue as one of the great “desiderata” of the conference. The President, moreover,was declared to have ,tlie strongest personal concern and hope that this question now at a -deadlock, between tlie Japanese and Chinese will be definitely mid. satis-' factorjly disposed of. Mr. Harding was said to have closely and carefully followed tlie Shantung "conversations" which were carried on outside the, conference hut under the “good offices" of Secretary Hughes and Arthur Balfour. Many times, according to the White House, It had appeared to the President that the whole matter was on the verge of a Settlement, then came the break In the negotiations. The flare-back at the capitol on the Far Eastern situation was caused by an obvious disposition, particularly on the part of the British and Japanese, with gome evidences of American acquiescence, to gloss over that phase of the conference. The Idea seemed to be gaining prevalence that those questions which neld out hope of early settlement should he taken up and others passed over; In other words, that whenever Japan wished to prevent any effort to deprive her of nny of her forced advantages all she had to do was to object and the matter would be dropped. Western senators have made It plain that they will resist such an outcome with all possible vigor. Elimination of the causes of friction In the Pacific was one of tlie ‘two prime objects of the conference, and these statesmen are unwilling to agree to a reduction of the country’s means of defense while still leaving In the Far East the same condition, probably in a’more aggravated form, which appeared before the conferefice to Ue leading Inevitably to war. “BUSINESS ON THE UPGRADE” W. J. Harahan, President cf Chesaapfcake & Ohio Road, Points to Activity in Mine Fields. Huntington, W. Va., Jan. 11.—Business is on- the upgrade once more, according to W. J. Harahan, president of the Chesapeake & Ohio, who Inspected the local shops. Harahan hackedup his statement by the anouneeroent that- tlie- ioaii. Jihiips-running..-oa-.less-than half force would probably open at' full capacity in February. -The most marked improvement on the Chesapeake & Ohio lines la in the coal iter®' of “West * Yirgmiar Harahan. He thinks the coal business to .be a thermometer of American industry. , Boston Loses U. S. Ship Job. Washington, Jan. 11. —Inability of the Boston navy-yard to submit a definite bid for the reconditioning of the steamship ’ ’Leviathan precludes any plan to have the work done there. President Harding notified Represehtur. tive- Daiilnger of Massachusetts, who recently made sucli a proposal. . “One Big Union” in Australia. Melbourne.. .Imi—l2.— The Australian workers’ unions have voted, seven to one, in favorvof one big union. C. S. Mitchell Dies. Washington, Jan. 11. —Charles S. Mitchell, aged sixty-seven, editor in chief of the Washington Herald, died at his home here. Hehnd been. 11l more thnn a month following a nerv'•ws"'frredkffiMrtir‘ “=*?”? Flees Jail, Dies Pn Crash. Colorado Springs. Colo.. Jan. 10.— Gene Logan, convicted of n $25,000 burglary, sawed his way out of the county Jail here, stole a car find started south. The car turned over, •and he wns lnstantly killed.

THE NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS

MRS. JOSEPH S. KORNFELD

Mrs. Joseph S. Kornfeld of Columbus. 0.. is the wife of the newly appointed minister to Persia.

U. S. WEEKLY MARKET Weekly Marketgram of Bureau of Markets and Crops. Washington, Jan. 10. Week endln* January 7-FRUITS AND .VEGETABLES —Potato markets made price advances ot 15 to 36c per 100 lbs. during the week. In producing sections prices advanced tc $2.00 f. o. b. and closed firm at $1.95-$2. Northern sacked stock, sl.tv-$2.10; up 10c, at $1.75-1.95 f. o. b. shipping points; northwestern extra fancy Jonathans steady in Kansas City at $3, weak in Chicago at $2.25-2.75, selling at auction in New York ; at $2.10-2.00. GRAlN—Market trend uncertain during the week and prices averaged lower; Chicago May wheat net, closing at $1.12%; Chicago May corn unchanged, at 53%c. The tone strengthened somewhat the last of week, largely on improved milling demand and 'strength in coarse grains. Cash demand for- wheat and corn good; .country offer.; iftgs light:' Closing prices iii Chicago cash market: No. 2 red winter wheat, $1.18; No. 2 hard winter wheat. $1.08; No.' 2 mixed corn, 48c; No. 2 yellow corn, 48c; No. 3 white oats, 35c. Average price to farmers in central lowa for No. 2 mixed corn about 35c; to farmers in central North Dakota for No. 1 dark northern wheat $1.06%; to farmers in cfentral Kansas for No. 2 hard winter wheat 90c. For the week Minneapolis May wheat down lc, at $1.20%; Kansas City May wheat down 2%c, at $1.05; Winnipeg May wheat down %c, at sl,lO. Chicago July wheat closed at $1.02: Chicago July corn. 56%c. Minneapolis July wheat, $1.15%; Kansas City July wheat, 96%; Winnipeg July wheat, SI.OB. HAY’—Quoted January 6: No. 1 timothy. Cincinnati, s2l; Chicago, $23; Minneapolis, $18.60. No. 1 alfalfa, Minneapolis. s2l. FEED—Quoted January 6: Bran, $21.50, middlings. $21.75, Minneapolis; 36 per cent cottonseed meal, $34=60, Memphis; gluten feed, $43.50, .Boston; No. 1 alfWlfa meal, $16.50, Kansas City; white hominy feed, $20.75, St. Louis: linseed meal. $46; Buffalo. DAIRY PRODUCTS—Butter markets in a demoralized condition and weak at the close. Closing prices, 92 score: New York, 36%c; Chicago, 35c; Philadelphia, 37%c; Boston, 38c. Prices at Wisconsin primary cheese markets January 6: Twins, 20c; daisies, 21c: longhorns and young Americas/20c; square prfnts, 22%c. Cold weather interfering w.'.th shipping In Wisconsin. * _> LIVE STOCK—January 7, Chicago prices: Hogs, top, $8.75; bulk of sales, 57.60-5.50; medium and good beef steers, $6.85-9.25, butcher cows and heifers, $3.508.25; feeder steers, $5-6.60; light and medium weight veal calves, $6.50-9.25. fat lambs, $11.25-12.35; feeding iambs, $9.25-11; yearlings, $8.75-11: fat ewes, $4,25-6.71). Stocker and Teeder shipments from i2 important markets during the week ing December 30 were: Cattle, 22.207; hogs, 3,061; sheep, 22,697.

NEWBERRY IN OWN DEFENSL Mlchlgan Senator Makes Sweeping Denial—Knew Nothing of Campaign Fund, He Says. Washington, Jan. 11. —A sweeping declaration of his innocence was.,made in the senate by Senator Newberry (Rep.) of Michigan. Taking tlie floor for.Ms own defense in the ouster proceedings brought by Henry Ford, the defeated Democratic candidate, Senator Newberry emphatically denied personal knowledge of the collection ur expenditure of tlie large campaign fund spent in his ben half. “As God is my witness,” said Senator Newberry. “I- aft’ not this day arid hour conscious of raving done, In.eonnectlon with either the primary, cam-paign-or the general election of 1018, in the state of Michigan, a single act that was, cr is. In anyWvay unlawful, dishonest or corrupt, and this I say to the senate of the United States with-, out reservation or qualification.” FORT WAYNE MAN IS NAMED Frank J. F. Thiel Nominated as Assis. tant Treasurer, -of tho United States. Jan. 10.—President Harding sent the following nominatlens to tiie sennte: To be-collectur’of Internal revenue for the fourth district of Michigan, Charlds Holden of Grand Rapids. . To be assistant treasurer of the United States, Frank J, F. Thiel of Fort Wayne, Ind. Soldier Bonus Soon. Wayhiiiuton: Jfrii. 17— Knldlpr hnruiA ■legislation wilt he -held up temporarily by tlie house ways arid means commitdee until—tho—jomate—has—indicated what action It Will take on tlie forForm*? Judge Reynolds Is Dead. SL Louis. Jan. 12.—Matthew G. Reynolds, former circuit.judge here, who served ,ns a representative- In the Missouri legislature In 1884, died hero of pneumonlu. He was sixty-six year* ot age. .

INDIANA NEWS

Indiana collected in 1921 from the 92 counties $12,570,000, an Increase of $1,750,000 over the total collected in 1920, figures compiled in the office of state auditor show. The 1020 Increase over 1019 was $1,949,- l 000. 1021 total was the greatest ever collected by the,state. Tlie collections came from the state tax levies, unclaimed fees, docket, fees, common school fund and permanent endowment fund interests. The December settlement of the state auditor’s nfflctrwfth pewnry Tranters- yteitlea-the state $5,890,000. Tlds with the June yield of $0,680,000 made tlie total of $12.570,000. The December settlement included taxes paid at the fall taxpaying period and the June settlement included taxes paid in spring period. A part of the June and December collections are returned to tlie counties, through the distribution of tlie common school fund, which was raised principally by one of the levies. The bodies of Leo Winiger, age eighteen, and Thomas B. Fruchte, age fifteen, who with Clyde Crow, age eighteen, were drowned in the back waters of the Ohio river about five miles above Evansville, when the canoe in which they were riding capsized, were found. The two bodies were about 100 yards from where tlie body of young Crow was found. The boys had gone duck hunting and the high water and river became rough from The wind and it is believed the canoe turned over before tlie boys were able to reacli land.. Two men who were identified ■ns robbers who held up the bank of Wave'rly were captured at Centerton, after a revolver battle in which one of tlie men was shot and seriously wounded. The wounded man gave tlie mime of Itudolph Shonfleld and his address as Wabash. He was taken to Indianapolis. The other man said he was Elzo Clevenger of Muneie. The amount of $1,353 stolen from the bank was found tied in a small sack about 'Clevenger’s neck. Because of the acute shortage of graduate -nurses, organized trained nurses in Indiana have arranged to carry on in this state a division of,the nation-wide campaign to. recruit students for nurses' courses. Miss Annabel Petersen, assistant division director for the Red Cross public •health service and also of the public •irratth division of the state board of health, heads the committee in •barge of the Indiana campaign. Compensation claims sos every exservice man in Indiana against the government are to be investigated immediately by agents working from file subdistrict office of the United' States Veterans’ union in Indianapolis.- John H. Aie, in ehnrge of the.’ office, said lie believed there are ir,.(XKI ex-soldiers in the state who have asked relief of tlie government and that at least 25 per cent of them have not received attention. ■. ~ • The city treasurer controversy at Newcastle occasioned by a new state law which prohibits city treasurers in fourth class cities having less than $100,0)0 utility revenue, was settled by the new city council when it passed on ordinances'Creating the office of deputy county treasurer and. fixing tlie salary at $1,300, tUe-sutn allowed tlie county treasurer and county auditor for handling the city's business. Mrs. iNettie Colson was elected -to the new position. Dairymen of Huntington county formed a voluntary organization known its tlie Associated Federal Tested Dairies. The aim of .tlie organization is tlie encouraging of production of milk under proper surroundings In Huntington. Tlie members include dairymen who have signed the government's agreement with regard'to the •liberoulin testing of herjl-s, and whose Im-iis -have gone through with at !<%siihe preliminary test. Tlie pof trustees of the Indiana [iefonimtory. in session at .Jeffersonville as a parole court, paroled 42out of 4'.) applicants. The oilier seven’ prisoners must serve a" further pro--Kiriiowary—term. l’rae.thnlly .a 11 the prisoners previously paroled were releaSd Itefore Christ mas-and this group -will not leave, until next month. More than“$1.000,000 will lie available for new* roads' in Wabash county during the coming year, according to a report, completed'by tlie county auditor. Enough roads are petitioned for at the present time to. use this money, but no -aefion will lie "taken on any of the Robert Clark, age sixty-eight, known in Indianapolis and several middle western states ns Sailor Bob because of bis lectures of the sea. died in ills elmlr on the pulpit platform of the Wesley ehnpel. MetTiodist Episcopal church at Indianapolis. A The Calumet region of Indiana will become -tlie largest steel center TiTTFie —United SffttM If” reportedplans of the .Tones & McLaughlin Steel-Company of Hammond to bur n tract of 900 neres along the East Chicago canal ns the site for a proposed sleel plant that-will hg tlie' largest unit of the company, are carried out. (governor McCray six mroles. three commutations of sentences nnd one remission of fine on the . recommendation of the state board of pardons. Clemency was refused by file governor in 45 cases.

A decided elrnuge lias come u\ei the East Chlcngo-Indluqn Hurboi industrial district since the holidays. Producers report a large number ol orders nnd Increase In operations when the plants reopened. The Inland Steel company’s output Jumped Vum 40 to 50 per cent and further increases are expected. All of the N A 1 side of the Inland mills are operating. The sheet mills, which were completely shutldown during the holidays, are nguln running full. In addition the bur, plate, sheet and 24 inch mills are running. Tlie productive departments of the General American Tank Car corporation, closed down during the holidays, started work. The “nine-eighteen” find busholitig mills of the Republic Iron and Steel company continued work. The Steel and Tube company, shut down for New Year’s, returned to work on an 80 per cent basis. The Edward Valve nnd Manufacturing company, closed down temporarily, is expected to resume operaflbh tlie’* 1 ml3dle _ 'of “The” month. The annual report of the board o 1 state charities for the fiscal year, ending September 30, 1921, shows that $0,858,834.07 was spent last year on the poor and unfortunate in state institutions, county poor asylums, county jails and in orphans’ homes receiving public wards. The total number of inmates of state and county institutions September 30, 1921, was 18,094. New admissions to institutions last year can not be ascertained ex actly, the report says, but the total Is estimated at 33,684. Included in tlds total is the number of Inmates and recommitments received by the county jails, which totaled 24,984 Township overseers of the poor aided approximately 44,253 persons. Tlie report shows that the 18,094 inmates were distributed os follows: In state institutions, 12,529; in county poot asylums on August 30, 3,271; in fiuntj jails, 741; in orphans’ homes which receive public wards, 1,553. Contending, . that.. constitutional amendment No. 1 (citizenship), adopted in the state-wide special election September 6, 1921, does not require registration of voters and that a law requiring registration is unconsfiMiiUona 1r...l r ... so rmet.State -Senator .Abram, Simmons brought suit in the Wells Circuit court, askirfff a restraining ordei to enjoin county officials and party chairmen from carrying out the registration of voters. The suit, brought ir. behalf “of all the voters” of Indiana, is designed to test the constitutionality of the existing law. Simmons avers the registration of voters would,entail a needless expenditure by the state ol $200,000. Farmers in the “pocket” region ol Indiana, including the southwesterr part of the state, are trying to improvi their potato crops by. the use of good seed and they are co-operating with the extension department of Purdui university in obtaining seed that hai been certified ns to its purity of strait; nnd yielding ability. Only recentlj fanners in Gibson, Warrick, Vander burg and Posey counties purchased five car loads of certified seed from a northern state, all of the Early Ohlc or Irish Cobbler for early planting and Rural New Yorkers for late planting. A general program for reduction of the salaries of assistant highway superintendents of Marion county was agreed on by the county commissioners. Leo K. Fesler, County auditor, was instructed by the commissioners to have a resolution drafted to that effect. The salaries, it is said, of the assistant road superintendents, will be reduced from 40 to 30 cents an hour, the salary of laborers^ from 30 to 25 cents an hour, And that for men with teams employed on tlie county highway "work -from 50 to 40 cents an hour. Arrangements for the holding of what is believed to be tlie largest hog sale ever conducted in tlie state of Indiana have been completed at Logansport. The sale is to he held under j the auspices’ of . the. three purebred swine organizations of the cquuty, tlie Chester. White, 4he Poland China and the-DuroC Jersey breeders* It will be on the Charles. Winegardrier TiiTm north of Logqnsport, February 10. Aniiiuils'.wlll lie assigned to the sale by practically every- breeder of the liesolutJons-oi-ghig ttiMiM-diale ’grant) jury action against alleged election law violators and pledging support In election contest suits have been mailed to Warren T McCray, gov•ernw -of Ihi-huU-. 8, Losli, attorney: goffers 1. nnd George I). Heilman, prosecuting attorney of Vahderburg county, by tlie Men’s Club of Vander burg county.-, r three breeUa of hogs in tho county. The state department of health announced that Fulton, Delaware-end Gibson counties .had accepte<Mhe proposal of the international health board of tlie Rockefeller foundation to pro-vtder-wtttKtffe co-operation of tlie countv n public health officer with speclillized trniniqg for full time service in the county, S Frank .1. I’. Thiel, of Ft. Wayne, was nominated by President Ilurding to he assistant treasurer* of tlie United States’’ Seventy men were put hack to work at the Southern railroad shops in Princeton, making tlie force now employed 270. The railroad regards 500 men n- a normal force. Tills number lias not been employed since December, 11 >2O, when there were 500 on the pay roll. Efficacy of" the ’“blue sky” law in pfeventing loss of large sums by Indiana persons through investment in worthless securities was praised by Ed Jackon, secretary of state,-in-an address before the Indianapolis Real 'Estate Board.

SOME PEOPLE PREFER TIBLEIS Pepto-Mangan Is Sold in Liquid and Tablets—the Same Medicinally. The famous blood builder, Gude’s Pepto-Mangan, can be had in tablet form, as well as In liquid. Some people prefer Pepto-Mangan tublets to the liquid. They are put up in a convenient package. There are people who take the liquid Pepto-Mangan at home morning and night, and take the tablets at noon time. Medicinally the liquid and the tabjet.. form of Guilds l‘qpto-ilanfian._ure the same. Any druggist can supply this well-known blood builder. Physicians have prescribed Gude’s PeptoMangan for years. It restores the blood to its normal healthy state by Increasing the number of red cells. Men, women and children who are run down, weak, pale and sickly, regain normal health by helping the blood to get back its strength. Look for the name “Gude’s Pepto-Mangan” on the package. AdvertisemenL No man is as dangerous as he think* you think he is. MOTHER! OPEN CHILD’S BOWELS WITH CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Your little one will love the ‘‘fruity’’ taste of ‘'California Fig Syrup” even if constipated, bilious,, irritable, feverish, or full of cold. A teaspoonful pever fails to cleanse the liver and bowels. In a. few hours you can see for yourself how thoroughly it works all the sour bile, and undigested food out of the bowels and you have a well, playful child again. Minidns of mothers keep “California Fig Syrup” handy. They know a teaspoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask your druggist for genuine “California Fig Syrup,” which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother t You must say “California” or you may get an Imitation fig syrup.—Advertisement. Hope Is the tie which keeps a heart from breaking. To Insure gllstenlng-whlte table linens, use Red Cross Ball Blue In your laundry. It never disappoints. At all good grocers.—AdvertisemenL She—Ah! I see! Cold storage.

Have You A Daughter ? Here Is Some Good Advice Indianapolis, Ind.—" When my daughter was sixteen years of age she contracted a severe cold which came near resulting in her death. But I quit all ~ other remedies and fell back on the medicine that saved me several years before, namely, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, along with the Golden Medical Discovery, and before the fourth bottle was gone she was well. From that time I ave been recommending these two medicines.”—Mrs. Mary Holden, 4£ South State Ave. Health is of vital importance. Do not neglect your most valuable asset. Get* Dr. Pierce’s famous Family Remedies from your neighborhood druggist, in tablets or liquid, or write Dr. Pierce, president Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for free medical advice.

COUGHING IS DANGEROUS 4' ' Make Your Own Pine Cough Medicino and Save $2. 3 oz. of Glando Pine makes a pint of excellent cough medicine. You add the syrup arid it is ready to use. Fine for croup, colds, hoarseness and bronchial trouble. 4 ARk yonr'rtnrffgtsT or send to The Gland-Aid C<V Ft.; Wayne, tnd.

cfiaaclt KING PIN PLUG TOBACCO Known as “that good kind” Clry it—and you will know why ]

Tontorrow A1 rig ht NR Tablets stop sick headaches, relieve bilious attacks, tone and regulate the eliminative organs, make you feel fine. “Better Than Pills For Liver Ills”