Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 43, Number 42, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 12 June 1924 — Page 2

COOLIDGE SIGNS NEW TAX BILL '■ ST Chief Executive Criticizes Many Features of Measure. Washington. President Coolldge signed the tax bill. As he did so he Issued a stuteinent describing the bill us providing tax reduction but not tax reform and severely criticizing many of its features. lie pledged himself to devote his energies toward the passage of a tax hill "less political and more truly economic at the next session of congress. The President said that in Its administrative features the hill represents generally an improvement over existing law; that It will provide sufficient revenue for the fiscal yeui 1925, and probably thereafter if unforeseen expenses do not arise; that Hie retroactive tux cut of 25 per cent U expected by the- people, and should be promptly given, and that it is desirable to huyo M definite determination of the taxes as applying to 1924 incomes while the income Is still being received. The bill becomes effective Immediate! \ as to tiie repeal of various excise taxes, changes in estate tax rates, and administrative provisions Certain excise tax changes 'become effective In thirty days These include tbe repeal in the tax on admissions of 50 cents or less, the repeal of the tax on telegraph and telephone messages, the reduction and repeal of portions if the .automobile tax. the repeal of taxes on jewelry below certain amounts.* and the reduction of the stamp tax on grain and other produce exchange transactions. * The income tax changsp. Including the new normal tax raths of 2, 4 and tt per cent, and surtaxes with a maximum of 40 per cent, -tire effective on interne of 1924. pavuble in March. 1925. -t The retroactive cut of 25 per tent on Incomes of 1923 payable In 1924 makes it possible for taxpayers to make a deduction from their June 15 payment. Announcement xvas made at the treasury that regulations will be issued within the next few days governing the retroactive tax reduci tion. In making the June 15 payments taxpayers may take off one-fourth of the March 15 payment and one-fourth of June 15 Installment. The effect, is to permit the June 15 installment to be cut in half. A 25 per cent reduction will then be permitted for the Sept. 15 and Dec. 15 payments. It is estimated that the treasury will have to refund from $15,000,000 to 520.000.000 to taxpayers who puid the full amount of their tax on March 15. Taxpayers who desire to finish up their tax payments for the year off June 15, may obtain the benefit of the entire reduction at that time. Congress Adjourns June 7. Washington.—By a nonpartisan vote of 53 to 36 the senate adopted the house resolution, fixing 7 o'clock the night of June 7 for final adjournment pf the first session of the Sixty-eighth congress. Republican and Democratic organisation leaders Joined to put the resolution through, carrying with them 34 of the majority and 19 Democratic votes. The opposition comprised 14 Republicans. 20 Democrats and the two •Farmer-Labor members, most ot whom are interested in reclamation. Muscle Shoals, and farm relief. The LaFollette substitute resolution, for adjournment until July 7 was voted down hy 52 to 96: The house defeated -the McNaryHaugen bill by a vote of 224 to 154. This, was the measure that the farni bloc had demanded. Not only did the lionse kill the Mc-Nnry-Haugen bill, but it refused to fake off .any modified scheme. The vote showed 100 Republicans, 52 Dem ocfats and | Independents for it, and 122 Democrats ini Republicans and 1 RoclailsT agi.~]ife< if. * m* ' "V-aC*-—• „ ; • _ North Dakoia Banks - 'Reopen Their Doors Bismarck, N D.—Two trtnte jmijjft which vvere closed recently teopened. Dne Js The Snoe thujk jf HnmiuTi, mCnvHlTer lOhhiy, And the other is the Michigan City hank <jf Michigan City. The Hannah hank sits pended in. December. It has deposits pf $40,000. The Michigan City hank suspended in December. It hag deposits of $138,000. Major Martin Reports to Washington Chief Washington.—Maj. F. I. Martin, who started as commander of the army's round-the-world flight anil nearly lost Ills life in Alaska when his airplane smashed Into a mountain, reported to Ben. Mason M. Patrick, chief of the army air service. House Seats Buckley Washington.—The house approved without a record vote a report of the flections commltte holding Representative Ruekley, Democrat, of the Sixth Illinois district, entitled to hts-seat and threw out the claim of J. J. Goniian I* , Bishop Stunts Dies Omaha. —Homer C. Stunt*, bishop yf tire Methodist Episcopal church, Sled at the Methodist hospltnl here. He whs stricken with paralysis at Uhiml Flu.. February 12.

GEORGE E. MARTIN

MS | j-.JS

.lustice George K. Martin <t the court of customs appeals who tas 4>een nominated by President Coolld£e to he chief Justice of the United States court of ‘appeals for the District of Columbia, succeeding the lute Justice Constantine J. Smyth.

SUM IS SET APART FOR SOLDIER BONUS Committee Reports Appropriations for Measure. Washington. Appropriations totaling $1*1,043.18.8 for expenditures for i the soldier bonus during the fiscal year lit'g'i, which begins this July, are included in a deficiency hill reported to the house from the committee on appropriations. The items include $100,000,(XX) for the sinking fund, $26,629,408 tor ud- j justed service pay ami dependent pay.! $.'1,000,000 for administrative expenses of tlie War department, $1,188,500 for administrative expenses of tlie veterans’ bureau, $450,000 for administrative expenses of the Navy department and $75,240 tor administrative expenses of the general accounting “office. ■c The $26,629,808 includes $8,178,124 for cash payments to those entitled ty> iess than SSO. The deficiency hill wltl he passed by both houses before adjournment. Tlie total carried by the hill for all purposes is $158,196,417.89. which Is $1,898,408.15 less titan recommended by the budget bureau. Children Die in “Home” Death Trap Los Angeles, Cal. —Ashes of the Hope Development School for Subnormal Children at Playa Del Kay. eighteen miles from here, on the ocean beach, yielded the burned remains of 23 persons as the result of a tragic fire. Eighteen—others. Inmates of tlie school. Tire In a precarious condition at St. Catherine's hospital ir. Santa Monica, a few Julies aWa v. The dead ranged in age from four to fortyeight. The’ three-story structure was. dp* TTtired by investigators to have boon a fire trap isolated from any protection. U. S. Balloon Mail Over Atlantic This Summer Lakehurst, N. J.—Tlie American dir- j igilile ZK-.3. now nearing completion in N a German factory, w ill he put into j transatlantic mall service this sum- | mer, said Admiral llolTatt, c’tilef of tlie bureau of naval aeronautics,, who visited the naval tilr station with Secretary of the Navy Wilbur. Tlie Zlt-3 will operate between Lakehurst and | TTilTlTi'illi'Tlfe iiilniTFal sald7to prove Ills commercial practicability of rigid dirigibles. Attempt to Murder Austrian Statesman Vienna. —Chancellor Seipel was dan- j gerously wounded when four shots ! \vere fired nt Biijn by a Workman All | of the stint's took-effect. One bullet is j believed to have entered the lutigS Tlie workman tried to commit sulcitTe Tmf .wnj trot dungeroiisiv wnumUot, The attack on tlie Austrian chancellor was made as Tie "was leaving (lie railroad . sin Sfc * . ' Chinese Bandits Free Europeans They Held Vekln.—l'r, UO. Mlltej, tin American. and nn Englishman named J affray were freed hy Chinese, bandits, after being held for ransom two weeks. Kevercnd Hay. nn Ainericnn mlssfobary. nnd an Englishman named Chine still are tieing held. Further Relief for Disabled Service Men Washington —The house passed n I hill llherallzlng existing laws' for the'-j j -are of disabled war Veterans. The j law- will involve an additional expenditure of $36.0n0.000 annually, McAdoo Wins in Florida .TaoUwnvltle. Kin.—Scattcre*!' retinr.s. fmm forty-one precincts nni ••f 1.104 In the* state, jrnvfc Willinin G. McAdoo n lend of nlmost two trT’one over Senator Oscar W._‘. JLmterwuoU- In the Democratic prlmnry. Qerman Relief Turned Down Washington rTwo resolutions proposing Hppropflatlons hy the American irovernmewt for German relief wre rejected hy the senate foreign relations eomuHttee.

YOUTHS CONFESS KILLING FRANKS Wealthy Chicagoans Murdered Small Boy to Obtain Money. Chicago.—Positive identification of Nathan F. Leopold, ,|r„ and Richard I.oeb as the two men who five months j 1 made Charles Hearn a victim of a -land robbery bore out StHte's Attorney Crowe's contention that tlie kidnaping and killing of Koltert Franks by the two students was not their first sally into weird crime. Nathan K. Leopold, nineteen years old. millionaire University of Clii I eflgo student. and his intimate | chum. Hl.chard I.oeb, eighteen, contitey murdered fourteenj year-old Holier: Franks. “whos* body ' was found in a railroad ctdvert a few ! day* ago. i- Prosecutors and detectives characterized tlie plans of Nathan I .eopolti and Hiehard I.oeb to obtuln the $lO,tH*O ransom money they demanded of Jacob Franks as perhaps the most . elaborate and most likely of success ever evolved jn a kidnaping plot. No ban of hardened veteran orind- : nals, it was stated, ever plotted more j carefully. ■ w ith more acumen. Had j hi cob Frati Us followed iut their instructions—wlrich were to be issued j to him leading him from one step to another until lie was on a moving/ - train—it is almost pertain. the tie- : teefives said, they would not have ; been apprehended, and lu addition, gone free with the money. Nathan K. Leopold. Sr., the father of young" -Nathpn. and Michael Leo- | poM. an older brother, ap' eared at once in behalf of Nativan. Jacob M. i I.oeb. former president of the board jof education, an uncle of Hiehard I.oeh. appeared at the state's attorney’s office on behalf of Hiehard. "The murder was committed In a spirit of adventure and for the 510.0'9 ftansom they hoped to collect," said State’s Attorney Crnv.e. “It was /planned nine months ago and Leopold calmly said the first intention was to kill Voting Franks. There was no accident In his death. He was beaten with a chisel, strangled and then suffocated l with ether." j After killing the hoy the youth" sped hack to the city and calmly telephoned ! the Franks family that the bov had been kidnaped, hut was in no danger. The extortion letter, demanding *lO, 000 ransom, was written and mnlled. the hoys spending the remainder of the evening drinking and then went home foi i nigilt's rest. The confessions were ohtalneu by a complete moral breakdown of I.oeh. the youngest bov ever to receive an A. B degree from the Fnive.'glt.y of Michigan. He, was graduated when only seventeen years old. Bishop Brown Found ,1 “U orof Cleveland. Ohio.—Declared "guilty" of teaching doctrines not held by the Protestant Episcopal" church, WilPatn Montgomery Brown, retired bishop of Arkansas, asserted his case was far from settled. * I "I cannot he deposed." he said, and this was supplemented by formal notice of appeal, filed by his counsel. The trial court Itself gave the defendant a respire of nearly six months by announcing that it would net pass sentence uatil October 14 next. After that the defense will have 00 days in which to file its appeal tu jhe church's hoard of review. Will Go Ahead With Farmer-Labor Meet St. Paul. Minn.—Decision to go ahead with the Fanner-Labor progressive national convention here June IT was reached tit a meeting here of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor federation's state committee, in spite of withdrawals of several groups following tire statement of Senator I.aF'oljette repudiating the .convention. Bemidji Bank Cashier Sent to Penitentiary Bemld.lt Minn,— iVlrtll 8. Smith,-j cashier ot th*>. Solway State batik* I which closed recently because of !*.ck nt resources, pleaded guilty before •ludjfe C. W. Stanton in District court ! lierje to a Charge of embezzling *2,404 and wtts sentenced to an Indeterminate teem, not to exceed seven years, in the penltenitary. Tom Gibbons Easily Beats French Boxer Michigan City. Ind.—Tom Gibbons "f St. Paul, the only boxer ever to stay the limit with Dempsey after Jack (became champion, decisively defeated [(ieorses Carpentler, ring Idol .of .France. In'their ten-round Lternutlonal contest. Brookhart Renominated ' Des Moines. —United Stales Senator Smith Wlldnian Rrookhtirt was renominated in the'Republican primary election in low if hy "a majority which is aaßuaU*d Ml ■oirtawiinl im • -eseewi of 30,000 votes. Governor McCray’s Debts Indianapolis. Ind.—Debts of former Governor McCray were listed nt $2,657,924 lu a report of assets: and liabilities filed before the r-feree In •bankruptcy.

THE XAPPANEE AHVANIT^-XEWS

DR. M. R. HUTCHINSON

Bp|f||F * JSm * : '"' . 4

Dr. Miller Reese Hutchinson ot New ■fork, noted inventor and scientist who has conquered the deadly carbot monoxide in motor gas. His chemlca compound, if mixed w ith so reduces the strength of the carbon monoxide as to make it harmless..

U. S. GOVERNMENT MARKET QUOTATION S Washington.—For the week ended May 31— LIVE-STOCK— Chicnero prices Hoffs. J 7.50 for the top and s**.9o(s 7.4 C for the bulk Medium and pood beet steers $9.00©11.15; butcher cows and -fretfersr feeder steers, $5.25 (ffIO.OO. Fat lamhj $13.00® 15.25; lambs. sll.soft 17.15: yearllnps $10.25 ff 1 3.25; fat ewes. $4.50@7,50 DAIRY PRODUCTS—Rutter 92 score 38 He In Chicapo. Cheese at Wisconsin primary mykets: Sitiple daisies. 18c. double daisies. lonphorns. 1814 c: square prints. 19c. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES—Eastern round white potatoes sl.Bs'® 2.00 sacked per* 100 lbs in leadlnp eastern markets: Michlpan round whites $1 80 1.70 in Chicapo; Florida Spaulding Rose potatoes. $4.75® sfo per dQublehead barrel Texas yellow Rermuda onions. $1.50'9 1 1.75 per st.andard crate in eastern consuming centers Alabama pointed type cabbage $2.00(0 2.50 in midwestern city markets SI.OO f o. b Florida tomatoes, .turning, wrapped, fancy count, in six-basket carriers. $3.75 ©4 00 In consuming: centers. $2.75 f b Tennessee strawberries. Aromas. $3 00'S 5.00 per 24-quart crate in midwestern cities; Klond.kes. $2 ')0©3.50. HAY—No 1 timothy. $24.00 In Cincinnati. $27.00 In Chicapo. $25.50 in St. Louis. 120.00 in Minneapolis; No. 1 prairie sl9 50 In St. Louis GRAIN —No. 1 dark northern spring wheat. $1 14(01.23 In Minneapolis; No. 2 hard winter wheat. $1 0*5 , 5>1.15% In Chicago. $1 red winter wheat. JI.OB © 1.1(1 'ln St. Louis; No. 2 yellow cofn. 79Vfcc in Chicapo. 7\.%c *n MinneA[)olis; No. 3 yellow corn 77He In St. Louis. 70\c in Minneapolis; No. 3 white corn, 79c St. Louis; No. 3 white oats. 46 1 4©47 1 4c in Chicapo. 4814 c in~§L Louis. in Minneapolis Solemn Ceremonies in France Memorial Day Paris. —Memorial day ceremonies were held in the French cemeteries where- the Aim-riran doughboys are buried. At Suresnes, where thousands of American heroes lie, 800 French war orphans sung hymns and national anthems. . In historic Relleau Wood cemetery Senjamin H. Conner, European commander of the American Legion, spoke. Frank S. Funningham of Chicago, whose son, Oliver, is buried at Ttitnucdurt cemetery, presented the church of the village of Saint Menehould with a set of chimes. Pray for Dry Planhs ** in Party Platforms Washington.—Prayers will j>e delivered all over the country to keep "wet" or “damp" planks out of the platforms of the two major political I parties under plans announc_e<] bj the Women's Naihinni Committee for Law Enforcement, representing 11 women’s organizations. Nl-sage? have been seni To Protestilnt ministers TeqiieslIng that a brief period he devoted Isl silent prayer, and that this be stipplemented by other exercises relevant to the subject. 1 “t . . tti Deny Bergdoll Attempt to Get to U. S. in ZR-3 Friodrlchshufen, Germany.—Reports that Grover C. 5 Bergdoll. American draft evader, has applied to go as a passenger to'Amerlca In the dirigible ZR-3. which Is living built here for the United States, or that he has enlisted ns, a member of the crew, nre denied by Zeppelin company officials.- * *- Italians Land Troops on Rhodes, Greek Isle ‘Constantinople.—A telegram received here from Angora says flu*.ltalians are landing troops, on the island, of Rhodes., In the Mediterranean sen off tlie southwest const of Asia Minor. Fire Lou at Little Rock Little Rock. Ark.—Fire destroyed the local salesroom of the StrattonWttrren Hardware company of Memphis and Little Rock, with if tlfreo--storr warehouse, the fotet ' loss being estimated tit sJ'Viooo. Bulgarian Bolsheviks Lose Sofln. Bulgaria.—The Communists Incurred material losses In munhlpnl elections In Bulgaria, despite active encouragement "from foreign sources." It Is reported

News Brevities From Indiana

At the forty-ninth annual commencement of the Noblesville high school. 50 received diplomas, the largest number iu the history of the school. Crawford Fairbanks, Civil’ war veteran. capitalist and tong a prominent figure in Democratic politics in Indiana, died at Terre Haute. George Lanpheur, fifty-five years old, city engineer of Anderson, 'died suddenly of apoplexy. His widow -survives. He had lived in Anderson 20 years. Rudolph Schug, Berne, was elected president of the Adams County Bankers’ association at the annual meeting. M. Kitsch, Decatur, was chosen as secretary. Mr. and Mrs. John Lancaster observed their fiftieth wedding anniversary at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Small. Noblesville. Among the guests present was Zachariah Wells, wlto was best man at the wedding. Leroy Belote, age fourteen, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Belote, of Seybirt. 25 miles east of Elkhart, was fatally burned when, In building a fire in a heating stove, he [toured kerosene on live coals and rite stove exploded. The Hartford City Oil and Gas company decided to drill an oil well to a depth of 4.000 feet, seven miles north of that city, to test the territory at that depth. Blackford county formerly was a paying oil field at lesser depths. Cecil Sasher, age twenty-seven, wbs killed and Hugh -Landers and Rose Wilcox were injured in an automobile .accident at Richmond. The car in which they were riding struck a telephone pole. Constant worry and fear of being arrosTett’for two robberies recently committed nt Wakarusa and Walcottvllle brought about his decision to surrender l imself. Karl Deyo, thirty-three years old. of Detroit, Mich., told officials as lie walked into Laporte police headquarters. Charles, ten-year-old son of Lawrence Langley. Noblesville, is dead from injuries suffered when he was kicked hy a horse. The child was "truck in the stomach, hut the injury was not considered dangerous until a short time before the fVdlTVdeath. R. C. Julien. secretary of the state live stock sanitary hoard, says Indianahas more accredited herds of cattle than any other state in the Union. Tire accredited herds total 6,114, it is shown in a report issued by the Department of Agriculture at Washington. Jsurl W. Abrams, age forty-seven, of Springport. committed suicide by hanging himself in a barn ou the William Peckinpuugh farm, where he was employed. Despondency over financial affairs was believed to be the cause, V T. Davis, county coroner, said. Abrams is survived by the widow and a son, Two unusual deaths shocked South Bend. Mrs. John Modhel, sixty-two, dig[J from shock after witnessing a coin shin between two a lit o m obi leTffnil ii"truciT. Mrs. Alvin 11. Robbinssiffortjtwo, picked a pimple on tier face. Blood poison developed nnd she died in great ugony. Both well'known. —: Contracts for the Indiana World war memorial nt Indianapolis, which is to be a monument to Indiana’s dead in the. World war ns well a national headquarters for'tTie American Legion, were signed hy Marcus Tt. Sonntag, president of the World war inemoriul commission. The contracts were awarded to the Craig-Curtls company of Cleveland and the figure given as $339,820. *3* Refunding of tlie $4,890,303 debt that has beeft accumulated against the state general fund in tbe hist three yenrs will lie up before the State hoard of finance Jnnc 8. The hoard will determine whether any of tlie debt can he paid .nnd:ln wliylt manner It will lie refunded if not paid. State record? s tow that $4,240,000 of the debt Is covered by . Interest-hearing -notes given by the general fund. The remaining $050,303 of the debt- is owed by tlie general fund to the highway fund without n note having been given. e -- Suit for.sloo,ooo, charging libel, wns filed In Federal court nt Evnnsvtlle by the Wheeler . Book company. Chicago, agnlnsi L. I*. Benezet, retiring superintendent of schools. Thq book firm cTnTifiS TieWzol unlnwruTty prevented a contract for supplying readers to Indiana schools. A broken wheel on n freight ear rausetl the derailment of sixteen <eire of a Nickel Plate fast freight train near South Whitley. The damage was estimated at about S3OOOOO Most of the onrs were broken to splinters

Harlund Stewart, Harry Ulrica. Clifford Crouse and Alvu Meyers were each fined $1 on charges of taking bluegills from a lake near fort Wayne. Burglars who forced entrance to tha Ideal Dry Clennlng company’s shop at. Fort Wayne, escuped with twenty suits of clothing, valued at S6OO The Rev. A. 0. Cook, pastor of Trln-v Ity Lutheran church, at Gory, has been extended a cull to become Lutheran city missionary for Fort Wayne. ♦— Twelve Instructors of the Auburn public schools have tendered their resignations to take effect with the close of the present term. Charging that her husband severely heat her with a rawhide .whip. Mis. Alvie Brooks, of Peru, has fildd suit In the Circuit court for a divorce. She demands the ’eustody of two minor children. James Penfold, under Indictment nt Huntington, on a serious charge, has asked a continuance of Ills case "In order th.at he may wortc to provide himself with sufficient funds to pay liis attorneys." Ellen Gerlach. sophomore In the Aurora High, school, was awarded the first prize, a cedar chest valued at SSO, for -writing, the best essay on "The Advantages of a Cedar Chest In a Hoffie.” Oil ,In paying quantities has heen struck at Royal Center by drillers at a depth of 1.000 feet. The well Is now producing from ten to thirty barrels daily. Ahont twenty-five years ago there were several paying oil .wells near planned to drill other wells. Although the officials of the Indiana Service corporation hold the crew of the eastbound extra to blame for tlie accident at Roanoke when five persons were killed and several were injured, the company Itself is morally responsible because It did not compel tlie observance of its rules is tlie view of the state. The stnte treasurer's office nt Indian apolls received a payment of $9,000 on the amount due tlie state as a result of state funds or. deposit in the Discount and Deposit State bank of Keutland when the institution was closed. Tlie Kentland bank was Involved in the financial collapse of exGbvernor McCray. Sixty-five unoccupied farmhouses are located on the ten rural free delivery mail routes running out of Decatur, according to a survey Just completed tiy Harry Frltzinger,. post master of Decutur. Many farmers have moved to cities during the lasi few yeurs. leaving their farms unoccupied. A SIOO,OOO suit was filed in Federal court at Evansville by the Wheeler Book company against L. P. Benqzet. retiring superintendent of city schools, who is leaving to assume a similar position at Manchester, N. H„ charging libel. The book company charges that lie .unlawfully and wrongfully and with malicious purpose, prevented the Wheeler concern from obtaining a contract to supply readers for use in Indiana schools at a meeting-of the state hoard of education at Indianapolis May 20, 1924.. Newt Walker died at his home in Helmsburg. Physicians attributed lis death to injuries received May 17 in Indianapolis when he was robbed and beaten by a colored holdup man in East Washington street. Walker was chairman of the Brown County Taxpayers’ association and for many years had acted as a special guard at the I state fair. „of the crew of the east-| holing §xtra trajn which crashed Into {Tie Wabash Valley flyer, May 19, at Roanoke, and killed five persons, to comply wlthjjie rules nnd regulations of the’ company, was The principal reason given by J. W. Good, coroner of Huntington county, for tlie wreck, in his verdict, filed with the clerk of tin (jjircult court. L The' Northern -Indiana ribs nnd ElecVle cMmpiiny petition with tin public service commission at Indian apolls asking for permission to issui* $5,000,000 of 6 per cent bonds. Funds obtained from sale of the. bonds are, to be used in financing construction of a transmission line in northern Indiana and for other purposes. R,,hort Paul Rowe, three-.vear-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Rowe, south rif Lagrange was found unconscious nnd bleeding-on a pile of straw where he had been thrown hy an angry hull. Edward Barber, convicted slayer of Steve KendaJl. Terre Haute detective, was removed from the A igo county Jal' and taken to the Indiana state prison at Michigan City to await execution. The execution date Is set for August 25. Mrs. A. P. Thomas nnd Mrs. William Gardner, both Indlnnnprlta mem hers of the Nature Study efuh. will make a survey of the bird life at Turkey Run slate park In Parka counthe state conservation department at Indianapolis. Thomas Utley Marshall. Indiana's former vice president of the United States, gave the commencement ad dress to the 1924 graduating class* of the Auburn High school. Fifty pupil* 1 received diplomat

Aspirin

Say “Bayer Aspirin”' INSIST! Unless you see the- “ Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 24 years.

o Accept on] y * Bayer package which contains proven directions Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablet* Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists Aplrln i the trade mark of Btyer Manufacture of Mouoectitlcacldenter of Salicjlicadd

Stearns’ Electric

Sure Death to Cockroaches, Ante, Waterbugs, Rate, Mice, Etc. Greatest known destroyers ot food and property: tlao carriers of disease. Does not blow into food like powders. Ready for use. Money back if it fails. 35c and $1.50. Enough to kill thousands of roaches and ants. Sold by all druggigp. Refuse substitute*. U. 8. Government Buys It How Nice! First Chorine-rThe priina donna’s very sympathetic, isn’t she? Second, Ditto—She certainly is. Why, she tells tbe Johns who go broke- ’ because of her to make some rhoremoney and she'll be friends with theux again. Heavy A restaurant proprietor was overheard giving directions to one of the attendants. “Now, don’t upset that pyramid of doughnuts any more. Yesterday one of them fell on a man and sprained his wrist.”—Louisville Courier-Journal. Carrying On “And ’ow’s yer ’ushitnd keeping. Mrs. Tgglns?" “’E ain’t keepin’ ; ’e’s on strike. It’* me.thut’s doin’ tlie keepin’.” *e ■ The nlghtlngule Is no more Interesting than tlie midnight cut to tlie man who wants to sleep. Sure Relief

FOR INDIGESTION iM/jflJJjgij inpiglstiow^ l Hot water Sure Relief DELL-ANS 25$ AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE

Use Cuticura Soap And Ointment To Heal Sore Hands

CORNS Lift Off-No Pain!

is

Doesn’t ..hurt one bit! lirop a little “Freezone” on an aching corn, Instantly that’ com stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny, bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient toremove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, nnd the foot calluses, without soreness or Irrltutlon.

Keep Stonack and Bowel* Right By *Wln* baby tha harmlaM, Prly racaUble. las ants’ and children *r**ulat/>r. ARS.WIMSICWS SYRUP M. f . ..Iml.hlm. aratlfrtng raiulta 1 ta malting baby'* itnmach dlwt I food and bowali room aa .—isl th 7 ahould at taathlng f ■ tlraa. Guarantaad from _ Uj^l ataa, alcohol and aU j rfw harmful Iniradl- AfjJ —' JIM anti Safi jS