The Syracuse Journal, Volume 16, Number 12, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 July 1923 — Page 2
fe WRIGLEYS and give your stomach a lift. Provides **tl»e bit of sweet** In form. Helps to cleanse i the teeth and keep £ them healthy. • Pat Proc** J| LOOM 1 Iny Baby Carriages {/Furniture Ask Your Local Dealer Write Now for 32-Page r-Qq- Illustrated Booklet ZZy The Lloyd Manufacturing Company G*.) t , P*v< K Menominee, Michigan (19) RE-LAY YOUR OLD FLOORS ' Use CRO.MAR READY-FINISHED OAK FLOORING poß't tot worn apft w--l or frayed rarpwta the !,«,** of jwnr b. tw Put down >. ROM AH—anv handy mwn ran <!<• It — genuine OAK floor!ua completely fhil.hed at the factory. No •craping, no varnishing. \ This d'.scraua shows our patent tongue \ \ aud <roov*. CRuMAH never cups or \ / toich’es, b«*u«o of its shape, and be- J / cause It la ux»sture~pnx>f. / lAid and ttM-d the samedav. Bra nil fn I and pennasent, bend BOW for free sample and special price*. OHIO OAK A MAPLE FLOORING CO. 141 Eart Fourth St. Lincmnati. OMa I Steams’ Electric Paste 1 ti rwognbed m the miamnteed 1 ’ exterminator for Rato. Mice. Anta. Cockroot‘bee and Watering*. Don't waste tune trying to kill these pests with powder*. liquid* or any eiperlroeotad prepswatbura Ready for U»o-Bettor than Traps Poo. box. «ea M-o*. box. »1J« SOLO BVBBYWHKRK MIGHT BE IN EITHER PLACE Lawyer's Ghost Could Have Been Telephoning From Heavenly Home, or the Other Spot. Governor Morrison of North Carolina said at a dinner: "With my-t<-nous voices floating to Us on the one hand from our broad-, easting stations, and with Conan Doyle on the o(ber ding-donging his spiritualistic miracles in our ears, we can't help getting superstitious and jumpy at times. “The death of a lawyer was announced In the papers by mistake the other morning, and a brother lawyer believed the ttnnotimcmvnt. While h»was brooding over it at his breakfast bls telephone bell rang. “ •Bill,’ said a strangely familiar voice, *thls is Jim Taliaferro, BliL Did you see the announcement of my death?" "The breakfasting lawyer shook so that the breakfast dishes rattled. ‘•’Yes, Jim. 1 saw ft,' he said with a gulp. ’Where are you speaking from T" Japs Learning American Methods. Eitaro Kano. pre*ident of the N‘:tt<> Ice company of Tokyo. Japan, accompanied by engineets, Is making a tour to investigate Ice making and refrigeration In this country and Europe. The party arrived here recently after an Inspection tour of ice plantfl In the various cities on the way to New York. The Nltto Ice company is the largest ice company in Japan, and makes 80 per cent of the total product in the country. Usual Procedure. One day Arthur and the little boy downstairs, Bobby, were playing together. Arthur, In his endeavor to run away from Bobby, stumbled and fell, then began to cry. Bobby, feeling sympathetic, bent over Arthur and said. “Don’t cwy, Arty." But Arthur only said: “Well, when a fella falls he’s gotta cwy.” jjHii W. N. U, FORT WAYNE. NO. 27-4*21
Rsideligman British Honor Our Unknown Soldier
p ASHINGTON.—-Tribute was paid, to America’s “unknown soldier’’ -when a wreath was laid on the
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tomb at Arlington by the members of the “30 club,” composed of British newspaper and advertising men, who were in the city as guests of the Washington Advertising club. The English visitors were delegates to the. recent convention of the Advertising Clubs of the World at Atlantic City and succeeded in getting the next convention to take place in London. John Cheshire, president of the club, snd who had five sons In the World war, placed the wreath on the tomb as the members of the club stood for a minute with bowed heads in silent reI sped for the soldier. Leaving Arlington, the party. In 17 ' automobiles, drove around the speedway and to the Washington monument, the Lincoln memorial, up Seventeenth street, past the Pan-American building. Corcoran Gallery of Art, Continental Memorial hall and the Red Cross building? Passing up Sixteenth street and viewing the famous homes and embassies, the party swung down
Make Decisions of Great Importance
ASES brought to determine the constitutionality of the Shep-herd-Towner maternity act were dismissed for want of
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jurisdiction by the Supreme court, which refused to pass upon the validity of the law. Justice Sutherland, announcing the court’s opinion that the cases coukl not be considered on their merits, pointed out that the cases in which the court hitherto had assumed jurisdiction differed from the maternity cases, which presented only political and not Judicial questions. The highest court. Justice Sutherland said, was without authority to pass upon abstract questions. He anserh d that a state had no right to bring suit to protect the rights of the citlxens of the United States. The federal government must look after the rights of its citizens, he said, taking the position that there was nothing pres ( -nT»-.| to di-tlnguish the citizens to such an extent us to give the state a right to act for them. Referring to the claims of a taxpaver. as represented In the separate case brought by Harriet A. Frothingham, the Justice asserted that the effect of the law upon future taxes was so remote that no basis was offered under which any court of equity could entertain the complaint
See Great Evil in Forest Exhaustion
• NVF.STIGATIONS hy the Department of Agriculture show that forest exhaustion has added greatly ‘ to the cost of construction.
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Lumber production has been decreasing for 13 years In the face of an unparalleled building need. Os 37 eastern and southern lumber-producing states 36 showed a decreased cut, and only one a slight Increase tn while Pacific slo;m> states all report substantial Increases, showing that the center of priwluctlon is shifting to the western states, tbe last of our softwood reserves. Thirty years ago. after the depletion . nf New York «Md Pennsylvania white pine siH'tlons. the American lumber market was drawing its supply from the Great Lakes states. When the source in those sections became exhausted and the forests were no longer able to supply the demand or furnish enough to keep the qillls in operation, the industry moved to the southern yd-
U. S. Army Tanks Mow Down Trees
pNCLE SAM'S herd of mechani- | cal elephants were on display I at the army '■ tank sctiool. Camp Meade, MtL, In a dem-
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onstratlon put on for the benefit of some seventy officers and Instructors from the staff school at the army war college. Half a dozen of the huge, lumbering “Mark VIII" giant tanks devel.»j»ed during the war, but too late to share In the fighting, and a whole flock of the six-ton French type which did get into action, participated In the show. To introduce the student officers to the possibilities of modern tank warfare. UoL 8. D. Rockcnbnch. com tmindant. of the tank corp* and school. > scf\t two of his huge 40-ton “Mark j vni" monsters skirmishing through | the heavy woods on either side of a i narrow roadway. When the signal to j advance was given, the land battle- j ships surged forward reslstleasly. tearing great swaths as they passed, aa though twin, narrow-gauge cyclones . had cut parallel paths of wreckage through the woodland. Towering trees
Plan to Build New National Cathedral
HIE national cathedral is to be completed as a “place for great assemblies, national and international. meeting in Washing-
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ton upon great missions that relate to the best interests of America and the peoples of the world." rA. Dr. James E. Freeman, bishop-elect of Washington, declares in his first public statement concerning the plans of the Episcopal church to complete the structure. The bishop went into some detail concerning the plans for the building of the cathedral, which will be of dignity worthy of the national capital. “This cathedral, that it is proposed to erect in the capital of the nation, makes an unusual and unique appeal, because it is national in character," said Doctor Freeman. “There Is no city on this continent where such a building can so fitly express the high ideals of our nation as Washington. “This is more than a. diocesan building, and Its Interest is more than local. Here In Washington stand the great buildings that have to do with
i Columbia'road and drove past the res- • Idence of former President Wilson to i the British embassy, where the party > stopped and called to pay their re- ’ flpects. i The British visitors and guests were > received by President Harding at the • White House. Much favorable comment about America’s capital city was i voiced by the visitors. One member of ■ the club said, “Certainly the hospital- • Ity here is wonderful, everything for us and even arrangements have been made with the local weather man to provide some real English weather I during our short stay.” i One of the half-dozen ladies of the i party . declared she thought things in America were perfectly all right and the only objection she had was that ' “your dollar bills fly so fast." The members of the Washington Advertising club expressed themselves ns fairly with tin- pleasant and affable manner of the visitors, and are all anxious to fulfill the “On to I London I” slogan next year. i Herbert Hoover was the principal i speaker at a luncheon at the New Wil* i lard.
The Supreme court will not assume jurisdiction over the authority of another and co-ordinate branch of the government, the congress, the justice said, and will consider the constitutionality of a law only when there is a direct Issue presented In which the legal rights of a citizen would be Impaired by some enforcement which he Is unable to escape. The government’s injunction suit to prevent dealings in sugar futures upon the New York coffee and sugar exchange was advanced by the court for hearing on November 12. States cannot compel national banks to surrender to them the deposits made in the name of persons who, under the state laws, are “considered dead," the court held in a <a<e brought by the First National bank of San Jose against the state of California. In 1880, P. A. Campbell deposited $1,192 in the Sian Jose bank. Since then he has not checked upon the account nor made an addition to It. His present address is unknown. < allfornia claimed that, under pvo laws passed In 1915, the money escheated to the state and that the courts of the state also took that view. The bank contended, however, that the national banking act and not the state laws controlled In such cases.
low pine region, and is rapidly duplicating the same procedure there. Tbe result follows that the country may be wholly dependent upon the Pa- <•!”<• slope. Not only Is this the only remaining domestic source of softwoods, but a recent survey of the world’s supply discloses that there are no foreign forests of tills character that America may draw upon when its own art 1 exhausted. _ A bulletin issued by the department says: “The average rate of decrease over tbe last 13 years has been about 2 per cent a year. The figures for 1920 are about 27 per cent lower than the high production peak tiiat was reached in 1907, when we produced about 46,000.000,000 feet. We have passed the high point and the present tendency down ward is permanent. Since this Is the case there must be some active steps taken to Insure permanent local sources of timber for the future." —...
went down before them like reeds, the tanks grinding them remorselessly under the steel-shod runners. At times each tank was knocking over half a dozen trees at the same time, literally rooting them from the earthand lumbering forward over prostrate trunks a foot. or more tn diameter. The sheer j»ower of the gvared-Llberty engines overcame every obstacle of ditch or bank or brush or tree clump, and not an inch to right or left from the selected course were the monsters forced to swerve. Later a miniature tank attack was delivered over the rough, sandy field that is the playground of the school herd. Three “Mark VHTs” led the drive, their six-pounder guns roaring I and machine guns snarling as they ; crept forward behind a smoke bar- : rage hurled from their guns. They I looked like crawling dragons, breathing smoke and flame, as they shoul- ! dered their way over ditches and sand 1 dunes to disappear over a ridge beyond In clouds of dust and spouts of flying debris flung up from land mines.
> the large concerns of federal admlnlst traticn. and here It is indispensable ■ that a great cathedral building should ■ incarnate and interpret those things • that we hold and believe to be funda- > mental to the perpetuity of the nation I itself. “Beyond the fact that It is the building of a. great religious body. It ■ must stand as the witness of our com- • mon faith as a people. In the very best sense, it is to be a house of I prayer for all people. “No building in Great Britain so t focuses the affections of the people as . Westminster abbey. This great abbey I is literally the shrine of Great Britain. , It is believed that the national cathed- , ral in Washington must ultimately ' eome to be to America what the abbey > is to the English people. It ought to i be the place of sepulture for the great i dead of our nation. It ought to furnish a place for great assendlies, na- . tlonal and international, t&eetlng In Washington upon great missions that » relate to the vast Interests of America i and the peoples of the world.**
TTIE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
J Dutton ; Illustrattonsbg I ' IrwinMyetw !j, 'I IJ Copyright 1922 8y Dodd.Mead and Co- Inc. c i
“NOT PLANNED” John Bartley, noted criminal Investigator, recently returned from Secret Service work during the war, is asked by the governor of New York to investigate a mysterious attempted robbery of the Robert Slyke home at Circle Lake, near Saratoga, and to establish the guilt or innocence of two men in the penitentiary for the crime. A miscarriage of Justice is suspected. Bartley finds in’it the restating of an old case, is interested and agrees to solve the mystery. With his friend. Pelt, a newspaper man. Bartley goes to Circle lutke, the pair becoming the guests of Bob Currie, an old friend. The three visit the Slyke home. Slyke re- t sente Bartley's coming, saying he is satisfied the two men in prison are guilty. Bartley is not. Next morning Slyke is found dead in bed. apparently having shot himself. Miss Potter, the dead man's sister-in-law, the village police chief. Roche, and the family physician, Doctor King, all agree Slyke killed himself, but Bartley insists he was murdered. Investigating, Bartley finds evidence that Slyke, after a card party he had given, was shot on the tower of the house, undressed, and placet! in bed. During his absence from the room someone removes the revolver from Slyke’s hand. A boy working in the garage asserts he heard a shot during the night, apparently “in the air.” of course really on the tower. Ruth, Slykejs. stepdaughter, still further complicates the case. Pelt Interviews the members of the card party. He finds to his surprise that Slyke, apparently wealthy broker, had offered to sell his friends whisky. He finds evidence that the men in jail for attempted robbery of Slyke were “framed.” CHAPTER V—Continued. “You did not see three glasses, did you ?” "No,’’ he answered, surprised at my question. “No. only two.” Thanking him, I said goodby and left. When I returned to the newspaper office, I found the files of the past year awaiting me. The story that Rogers told us in Bartley’s library, and the account of the crime In the paper were substantially the same. There were, however, one or two Bliglit differences that seenfed to me Important. I hktl understood Rogers to say that the step-daughter, Ruth, had positively identified the men now in prison; but nowhere In the newspaper was it stated that this had been the ease. What she had actually said was, “I think one of them is the man I saw in the room.” There had been no positive identification of the men by her, or by anyone else, for that matter. Slyke himself had testified that he did not know whether they were the men or not. Three things had convicted them. First, the piece of paper found in the room where the burglary had taken place, and which fitted Into a torn corner of a newspaper discovered later in the coat of one of the men; second, the piece of cloth said to have t>een found on a rose bush beneath the window of the room entered, and which fitted the torn place in a pair of trousers belonging to one of the men—there was some doubt as to whether the trousers hud been torn at the time the man was arrested —and last of Mil. the footprints under the window. Thus their conviction rested on a piece of torn newspaper and a hole in a man’s trousers —rather feeble evidence. It seemed to me. Moreover, the police had not discovered any of it until some days after the crime. The more I thought of it. the more I agreed with Bartley that the case was remarkably like tiiat old burglary case In England. Leaving the newspaper office, 1 called on some of the other men who had been at the cart! party. They all agreed that it was Slyke who had suggested Lawrence’s staying. and laughed nt the idea that be knew anything about his death. One of them told me that, several weeks before, he had bought three cases of whisky from Slyke. I could not understand why a man of Slyke’s position should wish td sell whisky to his friends. As I passed the court house on my way home, 1 noticed the words “District Attorney's Office” on a window, | and It occurred ‘o me that stored away somewhere in there would be the exhibits in tbe burglary case. I entered and asked to see the torn piece of paper and the bit of doth. The only person in the room was a boy of eighteen, who went Into a back room and returned with a box nnder his arm. Opening It. he shook out on the desk before me a newspaper, saying. “This is tbe paper they found ■n the man’s pocket. You can see the torn edge.” He pointed to the front sheet of tbe newspaper, one corner of which had been torn away. Lifting another piece of paper from tbe box, this time a small one, he fitted It Into the torn corner. I glanced at the heading of the paper. It was a copy of the Boston Evening Times, and the date was that of the day before the burglary. I felt that I had accomplished very little by my afternoon’s wort. The only new evidence was Lawrence’s statement that Slyke had been expecting some one after he left. I wished that he had accepted Slyke’s invitation to remain until this other i>erson came. With tbe exception of this and Slyke’s having offered to sell whisky to two different men,’a fact that could have qs bearing on the murder, 1 had | found out nothing.
I found Bartley talking with Mrs. Currie, who had returned during the afternoon. I was Introduced and we went in to dinner at once. When the dessert was over and we were drinking our wine and smoking comfortably, Bartley leaned back in his chair with such a deep sigh of contentment that Currie laughed. ‘T.etter than murders, eh. John?" Bartley joined in the laugh. “Anything is." “1 have often wondered.” Mrs. Currie said thoughtfully, “what causes people to commit murder. They always get found out.” "Not always, Laura.” answered Bartley. "I know it’s the opinion of most people that a person who commits murder Is discovered in the long run, but that is not true? I should say that about 80 per cent of the murders are never solved. You ask why people kill. As a rule, It is done In rage or in a sudden passion of some kind. Such crimes are easy to solve. It Is the small percentage that are planned that are difficult. You see, we first look for the motive of a crime, and if we can find that we can usually solve it.” Currie, who had been listening carefully, broke in with, ‘T presume you will solve this Slvke affair quickly.” Bartley was silent, watching the smoke of his cigar curl toward the ceiling. His face was expressionless iff i ii ft idu IfsSKJ It Was a Copy of the Boston Evening Times. when he replied: “Oh, I can’t tell. Bob. I have not found anything of importance yet.” I glanced at him in surprise. It seemed Impossible that he could have spent a whole day at Slyke’s and not have discovered something of value. Mrs. Currie turned to her husband. “Bob, what are you men going to do this evening? You know this is the night of my musicale.” Currie gave such a groan that we al! laughed. “There Is a long-haired tenor coming here tonight, and a crowd of women who will roll their eyes at him and lie like the devil, murmuring ‘How beautiful!’ It’s no place for us. We’ll go to Saratoga and come back when it Is all over.” Before we started Currie said he had to give some orders to his men, and Bartley and I went to our rooms. I gave him a brief outline of what I had discovered in Saratoga. He did not ask any questions until 1 mentioned that the newspajier from which the corner had been torn was a copy of the Boston Evening Times, then he asked the date of the issue; When I told him it was that of the day before the robbery, he took his cigar from his mouth, grinned, and threw out his hands in an expressive gesture. “That’s enough to prove those men had nothing to do with the burglary. You know tbe Times is an evening paper, and is not sold on the newsstands far from Boston —not up here, at any rate. If a copy of the pajier had been mailed here, as it would have to be, it could not have reached Saratoga until hours after the robbery had taken place. Such being the case, the men that broke into the house could not have had it with them, nor could the police have found a piece torn from it in tbe room the next morning.” I saw his point and was eager to learn what he thought of the other things 1 had discovered. Above all, I wanted to know what his opinion would be of Lawrence’s statement
HEALTH CRUSADE FOR CHILRDEN
National Tuberculosis Association Has Enlisted Youngsters in Fight on Dread Disease. The problem of preventing tuberculosis among children is rapidly becoming one of the most important factors in the campaign against the disease. According to figures by the National Tuberculosis association, about 7 per cent of all deaths from consumption are of children under fifteen years of age. The best pretentatives against the disease are fresh air, gobd food, outdoor exercise, 1 sufficient rest, and cleanliness.
that Slyke was expecting some one to call after he left. To my surprise he was ""much more interested in the fact of Slyke’s having offered the whisky for sale. I had expected, when I had finished with my story, that hs would tell me what he had discovered after I left him at Slyke’s. But as he did nothiug of the sort, I finally found courage to Inquire. “Well, Pelt,” he said with a quizzical smile, “there are two things that I want very much to discover. The first thing I would like to know is, what has become of Slyke’s chauffeur?” Seeing I did not understand, he went on: “You know we sent for him but they could not find him. Up to the time I left the house they were still looking for him. Not only that, but the chauffeur and Slyke had a quarrel yesterday afternoon.” “A quarrel?" “Yes. No one was near enough tc hear all that was said, but the cßbk heard the chauffeur say, ‘I don't dare to do it.’ and Slyke reply, T should have done it before.’ The butler, you remember, told us that while we were in tlie tower he saw the chauffeur on the steps lea fling to the second story. The chap Bas disappeared, no one knows where. The police are looking for him and may get him. I hope so. There am a few things I should lik« to ask him.” “Maybn It was he who took the revolver,” I suggested. “Has it occurred to you that it is a strange thing that a man like Slyke should spend most of his time up here? For the past two yeats he has lived here almost entirely. His office in New York is closed, and he is rumored to have lost money. Why did he stay here all the year round?” Bartley suddenly changed the subject. “Miss Potter cleared up one thing for us today. I knew .’.lat. If the murderer was shrewd enough to go to the trouble of placing Slyke in bed), he knew enough to know how the eyes should look. Their being closed puzzled me. I wondered how he had made such a mistake. But when Miss Potter told us it was she who had closed them, I knew that 1 had not been mistaken. Whoever .killed Slyke knew what he was doing. There was only one chance in a thousand that he would not get it across.” “It was well planned." I suggested. “It was not planned at all. It was a sudden impulse, a quarrel. I don't believe that, when the murderer went into that tower room to see Slyke, he had the least idea of killing him.” “But think of the pains he took. It must have been planned.” "No,” he replied, “the planning was done afterward.” “After he was killed?” "Yes. Look at the facts, Pelt. Slyke was killed on the balcony of a tower, fifty feet above the ground. A man who planned a murder would not pick out such a placed It was the last place in the house he would have chosen. Just suppose that some one had heard the shot and investigated. The murderer would have ’ »en trapped with the dead body of his victim. To escape he had to go dowij. two flights of stairs and through the big room. Let us say that Slyke invited the man to go upon the balcony—for what, we cannot say-—and then they quarreled and the person killed him on the impulse of the moment. The next thing do was to get rid of the- body. Finding the coast clear, he took It into the nex room and undressed it. and carried it down to the bedroom and placed it in bed. He knew how a body should look after suicide and that a gun could be placed in its hand.” "He seemed to be pretty sure no one would disturb him at It,” I ventured. Bartley nodded. "Yes, there is no doubt of that. That brings up another astonishing fact. Down in the big room was a young dog that did not like strangers. The murderer, in order to get out of the house, had to go through that room, yet the dog did not bark.” “Then it was someone in the house!” I Interrupted. “The coolness with which the murderer took plenty of time in undressing the body and the fact that he did not seem to be afraid of being found out makes it seem probable. Why didn’t the dog bark r Be<nuse he knew whoever it was. That makes it seem as If it were someone hi the house, or at least as If it were someone that knew both the house and the dog well. “Os course. J’elt, until we discover the motive we cannot get very far. At present there seems to be none. There is nothing missing and no apparent reason for Slyke’s murder. It seems an absurd sort of a crime. That’s why I think it was done on impulse, not premeditated." He thought a moment, then added, “I did .think I knew the kind of a person that might have committed a crime like this. But—” “But what?” I asked eagerly. He opened the door with a little smile on his lips, and it was not until we were half way down stairs that he completed his sentence, "But —I don’t know." “He removed the paper and disclosed the label of a wellknown brand of imported whisky.” (TO BE CONTINUED.) »x»x»x»x»x»x»x»x»x»x»x»x»x»
The Modern Health Crusade, the child-health movement Inaugurated a few years ago by the national association, and which now has an enrollment of over 6,000,000 school children, introduces these elements into child life in an appealing way and at the same time enlists the co-operation of parents and teachers. In order to appeal to the child's imagination, the crusade program compares the various disease germs to the dragons of medieval days, and the children become Lancelots and Galahads in the Twentieth century crusade- for better national health.
Help That Achy Back! Are you dragging around, day after day, with a dull, unceasing backache? Are you lame in the morning; bothered with headaches, dizziness and urinary disorders? Feel tired, irritable and discouraged? Then there’s surely something wrong, and likely it’s kidney weakness. Don’t neglect it! Get back your health while you can. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. Doan's have < helped thousands of ailing folks. They should help you. Ask your neighbor! An Ohio Case Mrs - Cl > as - s p‘nel l, 29 W. Grant W 11* y W St. Dennison. . ®hio, says: “I was (' I — out of corrtition from backache. '‘iMlrt. caused by weakrtrt. ened and irregular kidneys. Jlornings I® m y Pack was al~’U ways lapie and ”ik . —t stiff. I had sudden sharp twinges < "VFf’rWl through my back. My ’kidneys acted too freely. I started taking Doan’s Kidney Pills. In a short time I was entirely relieved of the complaint.” Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’S VSX 1 FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. Animal Food From Holly Leaves. A cereal food on which farm animals thrive, made from holly leaves, has been discovered by S. M. Hoye of Brooklyn, N. Y. By eliminating the thorn, through a special vacuum process, a nutritive food is procured, which, with the medical by-products, is worth SI,OOO a ton. Just say to your grocer Red Cross Ball Blue when buying bluing. You will be more than repaid by the results. Once tried always used. —Advertisement. Hard Work. “Look here. Bogus,” asked Col. White. “Do you happen to know where Ink Johnson is just now?” “Yassah! Yassah! Sho’ does, sah!” replied Brother Bogus. "He’s asleep dis minute over dar in de shade of de lumber yahd lookin’ for a job, sah.”—« Country Gentleman. Aspirin Say “Bayer” and Insist! W V A \ 'K ® / Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty-two years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also , sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacldester of Salicylicacid.—Advertisement. ® Wondered About Flags. Extract from a conversation overheard Memorial day on a street car. ' “Who do you think will win .he race today?" “I think Tommy Milton will win it.” Interrogator, looking out of the ' window: “Well, I hope It don’t rain J today. Say, I wonder why fellow' has all those flags out on his front porch.” —Indianapolis News. ! Javanese Land Laws. Only natives may own land In Java, foreigners being permitted to ease it ' for periods up to 75 years, on condi--1 tlon half of the area is available free for growing rice for the natives. i To enjoy lite, don’t voluntarily seek > shudders. ’ . Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION rW? .sS?* JWw/ Hos water Sure Relief Bell-ans AND 755. RACKAGES EVERYWHERE You Walk in Comfort If you Shake Into Your Shoes some Allen's Foot-Ease, the Antiseptic, Healing powder for shoes that pinch or feet that ache. It takes the friction from the shoe and gives instant relief to coms and bunions, hot, tired, aching, swollen, sweating feet, blisters and callouses. Ladies can wear shoes one size smaller by shaking Allen’s Foot-Ease in each shoe. Sold everywhere. Trial package and a Foot-Ease Walking Doll sent post Free. Address Alien's Foot-Ease, Le Roy, N. Y. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM BMasmlMnaroff-StowHairFaUlM Restores Color and Wtseox Cbe°>- wK Prtcfartne.K. V J HINDERCORNS ■ftemosee Corns. C&I---krtSM. st*, stone all pain, ensarss eotafort totbe Kill All Flies! . Made of met.-l, / cao-t E P i!l t!l>o;>er» »isl not ®cH ortnjarj FLY KILLER tWisSiT 1 xt year dealercr BUPOT-n ?L.--cUrr. ff. Z.
