The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 5, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 May 1924 — Page 2

MARRIED TWELVE YEARS BEFORE BABY CAME Gladly Recommends Lydia E. Pinkhajn’a Vegetable Compound Louisville, Nebraska.-“I was married twelve years before my boy was r 1 l^ 001, * had a lot of IHJJIIHIII female troubles and IUBBbU II ha,i been treated by |l ||Mw a physician for them but’they continued much the'ame.Then a I * rea d y eur adveriflai 1 ti seme nt in the : 'ill newspapers and IfiSSm thought i would give Lydia EL Pinkham’s ■ Vegetable Com- . ’ pound a good trial, Jfnr if it had helped others, why not me? I have taken 36 bottles of the medicine and am never without it in the house. My baby boy is three years old now and 1 sure am happy since I got relief from my troubles. When any one has troubles like mine, or any ways like mine I am always glad to recommend the Vegetable Compound so that they will get the right kind of medicine. ” — Mrs. JOE Novak, Box 662, Louisville, Neb. In a recent country-wide canvass of purchasers of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, 93 out of every 100 report they were benefited by its use. For sab-by druggists everywhere. The Old Story Sirs. A —“Do you keep a second girl?” Mrs. B—“No; we can't keep the forty-second.” Shake Into Your Shoes And sprinkle in the foot bath Allen's Foot* Ease, the antiseptic, healing powder for Tired, Swollen, Smarting. Sweating feet It takes the friction from the shoe, prevents blisters and sore spots and takes the sting out of corns and bunions. Always use Allen’s FootEase to break in new shoes and enjoy the bliss of feet without an ache. Those who use Allen’s Foot-Ease have solved their foot troubles. Sold everywhere. Trial package and a Foot-Ease Walking Doll sent Free. Address Allen’s Foot-Eaae, Le Roy, N. Y. i f Loveliness X C. A Clear V\ \ Healthy Skin \ I H \ Insured by Every-day 'f \ Uae of Cuticura Soap Hard Knock* Giri—-“Did you ever try your hand nt skating’*” Guy- “I’ll say I did—•nd several other parts of me. Ivo." Granulated eyaUds. stiaa. inflamed eyes reli-'-.i .emight t,y Jii.:, »n Eye Hata-r-, Ona trial convlucea. STS Pearl St. N. Y. Adr. Several states In the Union., it Is anid. are still without women dentlata The X; Greatest B Boclq RTW" Builder |L.v *jg w£sv JU I j; I IkHxlllLlyßichesl ■ * n BBBBbI Vitamins Healthy, Happy Babies The best way to keep baby in crowing.'contented health is Mrs. Winslow's Syrup. This safe, pleasant, effective remedy regulates the bowels and quickly overcomes diarrhoea, colic, flatulency, constipation, and teething troubles. MRS. WINSLOW’S SYRUP n.Msufa’aU Obi/drsn’i ftcfulotot is best for baby. Guaranteed free from natgotx-s, opiate*. alapci and all harmful inmedsestta. Mt* - formula on every label. At all Draggiat* t Write f* booUat of tetters trim grateful swUmm. aisai7F«hete st / New Yosfc I Don’t neglect indigestion, mt, ■ It often causes serious di»- ■ orders of the digestive tract, g Belching, nausea, heartburn g and biliousness are signa of ladigecnoa that call for bring sure relief. ■ Sopericr to pills or tablets. Only 60 cants at druggists or El g PLATTSBURG, M. Y. g

1 . i 11 i " 111 * 11 "I ’; o - ° | Diamonds of Malopo I By VICTOR ROUSSEAU ' ’ \ Copyright by W. Q. Chapman O

CHAPTER XV—Continued. He went back. The animal had not moved. He looked about him. In the far distance were the faintest blue outlines of hills. It occurred to him that De Witt might have been making for these. And he might as well go forward as tffrn back. He trudged on endlessly, leading the horse, the sun a grilling fire above him. His boots were burned through from contact with the hot stones. Loose shale and flints slipped under his tread. The sun, even tn Its descent, seemed to grow hotter. Winton was half dead from thirst. The punting horse was becoming a burden. At last It stood still and dropped slowly upon Its knees. It looked at him and whinnied. As Winton glanced hopelessly over the plain his eyes were arrested by the sight of a dark object lying an Indefinite distance away. It was too large for a man —too black for a rock. And there were no rocks anywhere, for the whole plain seemed to have been crushed flat by a giant steamroller. Winton made his way toward It. It began to take form; It was a dead horse. It had dropped in Its tracks, and Its sufferings had been ended by a hullet through the head. But there were no signs of a rider, and It was Impossible to distinguish any foottracks on the stones. It was no doubt the horse that had been ridden by one of the three. It was not De Witt's. Probably It was the Hottentot’s. Winton's spirits soared upward. He set his teeth grimly and went back to his animal. He must go on now. even if he had to leave the beast beI hind him. < He stood looking at it. It had fallen upon Its stomach, and crouched thus, with its legs bent under It It. raised is head and whinnied again faintly. It was past saving, unless water could he procured Immediately. Winton <lrow his nnolver. took careful aim behind the ear. ami fired. The least’s head went down —it quivered, rolled on its side, and digd. And he went on. By degrees his Journey became automatic, so that he was hardly conscious of his surroundings. He saw only the distant hills and the western sun descending with tautalixlng slowness. His tongue, swollen and numb, seemed to distend h.s cheek*. Sometimes the stony desert yielded for a few steps to sparse patches of flinty earth, indicating the hope of some fertile region Iteyond, but it always began again. The sun dipped into the west, and <lll the man staggered onward. The significance of the patches of thorn scrub was lost to him. of the ragged and broken terrain, of the foothills alwjui him. with their straggling mimosas. But suddenly Wintun stopped, trembling. Green grass was at his feet, and out of a fissure In the ground there bubbled a little spring, unguessed at by the map-makers. It was a tiny unknown Mats in the vast wilderness. De Witt had evidently possessed the secret, and had planned to make this his hea<h|uartero until the hue and cry had been dropped. Winton flung himself upon the earth beside the spring, and, burying < fa 'e in Fbe water, drunk until bis shriveled veins seemed to pulse with new blood. The sun had set. and the intense heat w as changing to the ley cold of the desert night when he arose, rested, and with all the grimness of his resolution nerving hint to action. He knew that Sheila could ms be tar away. He looked nt his revolver. To his cun•tvrnatlun he discovered that only two shots remained. However. these should he.enough—one, at least, would save Sheila from De Witt; the other— He would not face the possibilities that unf,•ldeal themselves before him, but rose to his feet, and was about to follow the spring through a valley Into the hills when something lying upon the ground attracted hl# attention. It was Sheila’s handkerchief. He snatched It up aud pressed It to his Ups. He felt that Sheila had dropped It for an Indication, knowing that he would follow. Lightly he stepped forward into the bush-clad hills, among the boulders. The valfey o;>ene<l. The scene grew desolate again. All round Winton were hills of a precipitous character, which gradually gre >• steeper until he found himself In a sort of level amphitheater, apparently inclosed, save at the end through which he had come. Thin tufts of grass and sparse vegetation grew around the bases of the dirts, but the central portion of the valley was of a daollng whiteness, as If tncrasted with salt or alkali. Along one side were numerous trails, showing the sharp edges of the spoor of beasts. After a while Winton discovered that the white door, on which he now walked, was not composed of mineral but of animal matter. It was a layer of pulverised bones, thousands upon thousands, picked bare by jackals and vultures, bleached by the sun and disintegrated by the passage of years. . Gradually the bones grew larger until Winton was stumbling on that uneven floor. It was one of those • death places of the wild beasts <rf the veld, often described but seldom encountered. It was a natural restingplace for the antelope and creatures of prey, which, feeling the approach of death, drank their last drink at the spring and turned aside among the c*iOs to die uumolaotod. It had been need for countless generations Winton saw the immensely long thigh-1 bones of the giraffe, exceeding the height as a man. though the beast had

| long since been driven northward. I There were the skulls and horns of springbok, koodoo, hartebeeete and gnu, with their varying forms and spirals. Gaunt ribs stood out like the framework of old, rotting boats; teeth gaped in skulls, and In one lonely place, in a. cluster of grass, an aged hyena, whose last hunting was done, crouched, belly flat against the ground, with open chops, and simrled in its dwrepltude. Winton hurried on. trying to make the end of the valley, where he thought some pass might exist, before darkness held him a prisoner. He had nearly crossed this desolate region when he caught sight of a tiny twinkle of fed light on the cliff above him. He stopped, hardly able to believe it true. Another light appeared. Then came a series. Winton realized that these were sparks blown from a campfire upon the summit. His heart began to thump wildly. He stumbled forward over the hones. Darkness had fallen by the time he reached the narrow trail at the vaK ley's end. and he had many narrow escapes among the boulders with which the way was strewn. On each side of him the cliff rose vertically, and the pass itself, hardly wide enough to permit a horse to ascend, seemed like a fissure in the mountain side made by "some natural cleavage of the rocks. He had ascended to within a few feet of the summit when some instinct halted; him abruptly. Then a sudden drflt of smoke toward him showed IDinton ’U R&S hurried on ' j||S. him that the camp-fire was just at the crest. The sound of voices reached his ears. Crawling slowly forward upon his stomach, and pulling himself to the level top of the mountain. Winton peered out from behind the cover of a mimosa tree, and saw a party of yellow Hottentots seated about the blase. There were six or eight of them, and behind the fire was a tent, which Winton knew con<-ealed De Witt. The fear that Sheila was there, in the man’s power, tempted Winton to ru-h forward. He had to use all his' judgment to give no sign of his presence as he crouched flat behind the little tree at the edge of Ute precipice. Some movement must have alarmed one of the Hottentots for he leaped to his feet with a guttural exclamation and hurled his kuobkerrie toward the spot where Winton lay. It was fortunate that the party had no dogs with them. The missile, whirring past Winton’s head, crashed against a boulder and dropped to the valley below, striking from rock to rock in the course of Its descent. The native, who had advanced to recover bls weapon, stopped as the sound of the fall showed that it was irrecoverable, and went back to the fire. Wlnton'a fingers relaxed on his resolver butt. Another instant and he would have fired —and lost Sheila irretrievably.

HOW BIRDS ARE TAUGHT TO FLY

. Have to Be Instructed by Parents Much the Same as Children Learn to Walk and Talk. Birds do not fly or sing. nor do fish j ewlm entirely from Instinct. They : have In many eases to .he taught by I their parents, much In the same way ms children are taught to walk ami I talk. A falcon files around a bough in wide | circles to show her family how it Is done. Then she pushes one of the youngsters off with her wing, being directly under It at the time, The next day. when the little falcons have learned how to float in the air. the mother follows them as they fly. driving them up against the wind, then round in graceful curves. Young ducks enter the water without being urged, but geese have to be shown their way. The old birds urge them on from behind, gabbling continuously. At first the goslings are allowed a very short swim, but the lesson is lengthened from day to day until the little ones learn to go into the water alone. tAmong all animals the most careful teachers are * weasels. The weasel teaches her young to run. climb, jump and measure distances. She goes through each performance first and the young are induced to imitate her. Day after day the training goes on and then they are led off on a real hunt Watch a eat with her kittens. As soon as they are big enough t» nme

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

He Ijpy flat In the grass, watching 1 the light of the fire play upon the fierce faces about it. Already the moon was rising. He could neither ■ advance nor retire without Immediate discovery. Desperate plans chased each other through his head in swift I succession. Each , turned upon the feasibility of a rush, the snatching up of a spear after he had fired his remaining bullets, and a hopeless fight with the object of at least killing De Witt. ■ Each plan was hopeless; but then ev- • erything else was hopeless. The minutes seemed lengthening Into hours. At last Winton's plans had simmered down to this: he would not risk discovery until he was assured that Sheila was in imminent danger. For the present she was probably safe. He felt sure she was not in De Witt’s tent. Where, then, was she? As his eyes traveled from spot to spot they lit upon a recess In a wall of rock‘at the summit of the moun- ■ tain. The leaping flames of the fire t illuminated the interior of what seemed a little cave. Aud somehow Winton sensed that Sheila was within that. It was iome thirty yards away, and he saw little thance of reaching it unobserved. There was a fringe of grass through which he might crawl for the greater part of the journey, but for the last few feet be would have to traverse bare rock, within a few feet of the fire. let he began his task, and it was infinitely arduous and slow. It was a matter of inch-long movements —first oif then of the other, then of thl- corresponding lower limbs. The drk blades of grass crackled under the sH#lftest movement. The natives were dozing over the I fire. Winton had gone perhaps six feet when one of the Hottentots raised himself suddenly to a kneeling position and thrust out his head toward him, peering intently through the. grass. Winton, perfectly motionless, stared for at least five minutes into the yellow face within a few feet of his own. The man knelt like a statue, the eyeballs gleaming in the moonlight, the fingers encircling the spearshaft. Suddenly the sight faded. The moonlight was cut off abruptly, plunging the land into immediate darkness. Then a few drops of rain began to fall. In a minute a torrent was descending. It was the characteristic beginning of ortp of the seasonal thunderstorms. As Winton crouched near the cave, preparing to cross open space, there came a flash of lightning that made the world as bright as day. ft showed him die form of the Hottentot, motionless where he had been watching, the fingers still about the spear. But it showed him another sight that l drove the Mood from his heart. He saw De Witt crossing from the tent to the cave. So momentary was the flash that the man’s attitude, his gesture, and the movement of his body and limbs seemed caught as on a photographic plate. He was halfway to the cave, hurrying with head bent down to shield > his face from the rain. But Winton could still see the look of anticlptition on his features, and It was that which gave him, for the secund time, the i lust for murder. It was borne in upon him then that ; by n.> possibility could J»e Witt and he live in the same world together. , The flash, which had given Winton his final clue to Shellah’s hidingplace, had shown him the topography of the mountain cleft. The place was a natural fortress. The only apparent approach was the narrow neck along i which he had come. Beyond the, mountain dropped In a vertical cliff. | and beyond that was the stony desert I where no tree grew and nothing .could i live. In the interval between two sne- ' reeding flashes Winton crept noiselessly across the open space in front of j the cave and crept forward Into the; darkness of the interior. As he gained i the shelter of the projecting wall, and i

aixeit she will play with a ball or bit of paper as if she herself were a kitten. She thus teache* her little ones to use their teeth and claws, add when their early lessons are over she brings a real mouse or bird for them to ‘play" with.—Cincinnati Enquirer. The Hasty Oenarture. Ethel had been warned time and again that she must not keep company with Tom Jones, a young man with a questionable character. But It so happened on this particular night that Ethel’s father was the-one who greeted the young man as he entered the vestibule of his sweetheart’s home. He no sooner had passed the time of the day than he found himself seated In the middle of the street, assisted by the foot of Ethel’s angry father. Ethel, Just having completed her toilet, came downstairs and asked of her father what had become of Tom. “He just went out," replied the father, gruffly. “Gone out? How soon will he be back*’ asked his daughter. "Well." replied he, with sarcasm, “if he cames back as quickly as be went out he's due here now." A fool tries to get square with others, but the wise man spends his time In blocking the attempts of others to WI-rewithMm. Recollection Is the only paradise from which a man cannot be ejected.

crouched behind it, hidden alike from the sight of the Hottentots without and from those within, he heard Sheila speaking, and knew that his search was ended. * CHAPTER XVI The Passing of De Witt. “Yes, I am in your power, but do yot think he will not avenge the wrong you would do m??*’ she asked. “Sheila, listen to reason! We've both fought for you, and I’ve won. You’ll never see him again. He can’t find the Way here, and even if ho knew where you are he couldn't cross the desert. You’re in my power—and I'm l offering to marry you. Can 1 be fairer?" “To your own wife?” asked Sheila scornfully. “That happened years ago. Maybe she’s dead. I haven't heard of her in five years, and nobody will know about it where I’ll take you. You shall have your fling In Johannesburg and live with the best people. She Eu. 1 love you—” “If you loved me, Mr. De Witt, yov would scorn to threaten me.” ■“l’m talking plain sense. You’re in my jwwer—absolutely. If you’ll sax the one word you shall be set free and we'll strike across country to get her. If you won't —well, you know —” “No. That’s my answer. You’ve had it before. No.” “You’re mighty proud of that whiteblood of yours. 1 suppose,” sneered ; De Witt. “Suppose I was lying In i court to get even witli the old judge, i Suppose you’re half-nigger still. How j about Garrett, then?” “You told the truth,” answered Sheila. “What do you mean? Suppose I tell i you it wasn't tlie truth?” “But it was the truth,” cried Sheila, “for I have always felt it Blood tells, , and mine has called out to me that 1 was white, white, ever since I was a child in the village. I clung to that belief in spite of everything.” “Well, it was the truth,” said De Witt grudgingly. Then his tone softened. “Sheila, I’ve got you now, i and. by Heavens, I won't let you go!” i he said. There was a struggle in the cave. The girl uttered a cry. And at tliat moment Winton bounded forward. The second cry that came from Sheila's lips was drowned in the roll ' of the reverberating thunder that followed a vivid lightning flash, in that instant Winton saw De Witt standing, | one arm grasping Sheila to him, while his eyes dilated as he recognized her : rescuer confronting him, revolver in hand. The darkness and the echoes of the thunder seemed interminable. Sheila broke from De Witt with a ery and ran to Winton. He felt her arms about him, but he thrust her gently aside. “I have you covered,” he called to De Witt. “If I hear you stir, ur if you cry out, I fire.” No answer came. Winton waited, tense, his revolver aimed at the spot I where he Imagined De Witt to be. i The next flash showed the outlaw , standing with his back against the wall of the cave, a dozen feet distant. The flash and De Witt’s shot were almost simultaneous. Winton saw a chip fly from the rocky wall beside him. He sprang for De Witt, touched him. lost him, and stood fainting for the next flash. It came, and the two shots rang out together, though the sound of the discharge was lost in the rolling thunder . and the flattering rail. Both missed, j Winton tired again and missed again, j |le. realized that his last bullet was ! gone. He must catch De Witt at the ! next flash and overcome him before !he could fire. But he could hear ! nothing, and lie lost Ms bearings in the complete darkness. j j In the light of the next flash Winton I ; savx* that De Witt had disapf>eared. He glared furiously about iiim. Then : ; a bullet whipped his cheek, he heagd a faint crack from one side of him. I and he saw. before the light vanished. ;De Witt’s hand emerge apparently ■ i from behind the solid wall at the back of the cave. A series of flashes illuminated the i entire interior. Now Winton could; see a narrow opening in the wall at | ’ the back of the recess. De Witt did . not fire—perhaps he thought that Win- < | ton had him covered. Winton leaped | ! forward, found the opening, and I stopped. Some instinct of caution held | Ihlm rooted to the spot. . The thunder peals were deafening i The rain was driving into the cave. ■ which was ankle-deep in water. Suddenly Winton realized that the rivulet • at his feet was feeding a waterfall. ' And then he understood his situation. He was standing upon the brink of a | deep crevice. A single forward step j would have hurled him to destruction. The same warning instinct that had . stopped him at the edge taught himto spring back behind the ledge of the protruding rocks. He had just regained this refuge when another flash showed De Witt standing on the oppdedte brink, less than six feet distant. aiming at where Winton had been. With horror Winton saw that Sheila stood in the line of fire. She was standing motionless, staring after Winton, horror and anguish on her face. The sight of her peril electrified Winton. He leaped into the darkness. He heard the shot ring out. hut his onset had deflected his enemy’s alm. And this time he had De Witt in his arms, pinioning the hand that held the On the brink of the abyss the two fought for their Hvee.

KTIUHEA ffi <£). Waneiu .•.K.p.per WEEKLY MENU SUGGESTIONS As the spring draws near, green vegetables will be coming into the market and the garden suppyling fresh green things such as green onions, radishes, spinach and lettuce. Lettuce is grown in such abundance now that it may be purchased the year refund, in mogt markets, very reasonable in price. v SUNDAY Omelet, muffins, doughnuts. Dinner: Rdast of beef, franconia potatoes. Supper: Bread and cheese sandwiches, lettuce salad. .MONDAY—Breakfast: Griddle cakfes, sausage. Dinner: Spoon bread. Supper: Cheese custard. TUESDAY— Breakfast: Oranges, poached eggs. Dinner: Veal stew with dumplings. Supper: Potato soup. WEDNESDAY — Breakfast: Oranges, corn flakes and cream. Dinner: Round of beef en casserole. Supper: Milk toast. THURSDAY—Breakfast: French toast. Dinner: Cream of spinach soup. Supper: Macaroni and cheese. FRlDAY—Breakfast: Poached eggs on toast. Dinner: Fried fish. Supper: French fried potatoes. SATURDAY—Breakfast: Omelet. Dinner: Apple pie. Supper: Baked beans, fresh rolls. Franconia Potatoes. Parboil, for ten minutes, potatoes of j uniform size, then place around the j ! roast, rolling them in the fat and i turnipg occasionally so that they are well browned. j Spoon Bread. Take two cupfuls, of sweet milk, add one cupful of cornmeal and cook Until i It makes a smooth mush; add two I cupfuls of buttermilk, half a teaspoonful of soda, one teaspoonful of sa’t, three well-beaten eggs, mix xvell ard bake in a pudding dish. Serve from : the dish. Cheese Custard. Spread several slices of bread with I butter, lay in a buttered baking dish. ’ make a custard of a pint of milk, two eggs, salt and cayenne to taste, pour over the bread and bake until the i custard is set. Serve hot. Round of Beef en Casserole. Put one-fourth of a cupful of suet in a hot casserole, add one cupful sach of the following: celefy. carrots onion, and chopped ham. Cook’ the vegetables until brown, lay in a slice ; of round steak and cover with more of the same mixture. Cook until the vegetables are tender, remove the vegetables, spread over the meat a > layer of raisins and continue cooking another hour and a quarter. Give me the money that has been spent tn war. and I will clothe every man. woman and child in an attire of which kings and queens would be proud. I will build a schoolhouse in every valley over the whole earth. I will ctown every hillside with a place of worship consecrated t6T the gospel of peace.-:—Charles Sumner. A FEW COMMON DISHES It Is thi? ordinary, every-day food which we .'serve so often thu. is of

the most Interest to us, and when we can, with a little manipula- , tion. create something very tasty from the common foods, something worth while.

Uli

Braised Beef.—Try out two thin dices of fat salt pork and remove the i scraps. Wipe three pounds of beef ?ut from the round and sprinkle with * salt, pepper and flour; brown the surface in hot fat. turning carefully not" !‘o allow the* juices to escape. Place ma trivet in a deep baking pan and surround with these vegetables: une’ourth cupful each of onion, turnip, cel»ry and carrot, all cut tine; add one-half I ‘easjKJonful of peppercorns and salt. Cover with three cupfuls of boiling water, cover closely and cook at slmI Hiring temperature for four hours. Baste the meat every half hour and t turn It after the second hour. Serve with a brown, sauce made from the liquor in the pan. Date Puffs.—Take cream puffs and ; 111 with a mixture of Chopped dates, i : < teaspoonful of lemon juice and sweet- i sued whipped cream. Fried Salt Pork. —Cut the salt pork ‘ into thin slices and score each rind j four times. Dip into flour ami corn- , meal—two parts cornmeal ahd one i part flour. Pup into a greased, hot : frying pan and cook until crisp and i trown on both sides. Remove the t i pork and strain th3 fat. Put one and one-half tablespoonfuls of fat into the pan, add two and one-half tablespoon- ' fuls of flour, one cupful of milk, salt \ I to season and a little pepper, one taI biespoonful of butter and one and onehalf cupfuls of tot boiled potato cubes. Cold Slaw.—Slice firm cabbage and put into a dish of cold water to crisp. Drain and pour over the following I dressing at serving time: To two well j beaten eggs add one-half cupful of sour cream and cook over hot water ; until thick; take from the Are and add two tablespoonfuls of vinegar, one-half teaspoonful of salt and a dash of rayenne. When the dressing is cold add to the well-drained cabbage. Novel Cork Puller When we are In a hurry In the kitchen the corks of the extract and other small bottles often become obstinate and must be dug out with a fork. Buy gome small screweyes and fasten one in each of the corks. They can be changed as the bottle is emptied and you will be pleased at the time and trouble saved by this novel cork puller. Speed and Speech The average deliberate person will talk at the rtte of 76 word! a minute.

IWRIGLEYSI

aftw every meal ■! Cleanses mouth and I teeth and aids digestion. I Relieves that over- B eaten feeling and acid I month. Its 1-a-s-t-l-n-g flavor I satisfies the craving for B sweets. Wrigley's Is double value in the benefit and I pleasure it provides. Sealed in ite Parity tB z\ u' flavor lasts fe ForThisFme 6-in. Double Action REVOLVER For TARGET Only STSOVX or small Postage I — GAME Prepaid ■ 22 and 32 Caliber Six-inch Barrel, Blued Steel or ( Nickel Plated Belt Revolver pYj Special Target Handles. Has narrow frame and perfect alignment; is neat, shapely and well proportioned, J* jl The barrel is of the octa- / gan type, well rifled and / well finished. AJI working parts are drop f 'rged and case hardened. THE BIGGEST Order BARGAIN ever offered. No. A-18 SEND NO MONEY, pay on arrival, our bargain price of only &7.50 Order today—NOW r FREE FREE PURITAN SALES CO. Fort Wayne, Indiana Attention! Homeseekers j Low round trip fares, five ur more on one ticket, from Cincinnati, Louisville or St. Louis TO THE SOUTH Tickets sold on first and third Tuesday of each month. April 1 to December 2, inclusive. Return limit 21 days. Splendid opportunities for money-making ! orchards, dairy, truck and general farms at low cost. Home and factory sites. Long crop seasons. Short, mild winters. Good markets. Write: W. A. BECKLER W. H. TAYLOE Puss. Traffic Manager Pas«. Traffic Manager | • Cincinnati, O. Washington, D. C. XOUTHERN RAHWAY STSTE't

Drug addicts sometimes contract lockjaw as the result of infection from the hypodermic needle. Cuticura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retiring in the hot suds of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub in Cu- ; ticura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. This is only one of the things Cuticura will do ifSoap, Ointment and Talcum are used for all toilet’ purposes.—Advertisement. Misery loves company. That is why some bachelors and spinsters marry.

i Is Your Work Hard? Is your work wearing you out? Are 'you tortured with throbbing backache—feel tired, weak and worn out? Then look to your kidneys! Many occupations tend to weaken the kidneys. Constant backache, headaches, ditziness and rheumatic pains result. One suffers annoying kidney irregularities; feels nervous, irritable and worn out. Don’t wait! Use Doan’s Piils—a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys. Workers everywhere recommend Doan’s. They should help you, too. Ask your neighbor! An Indiana Case Chester H. Do'- ■' lan. 323 E. Court r+.ss Avenue, Jefferson- /JyJ? MMBvk ville, Ind., says; "My kidneys wereMaag- fe disordered and got down with m back so I had t, stop work I had*T?Bl»' " 'wQBBHjRi a s t'e'ady. dullx ache in my back <.< .J Z-jf and felt as though . zW A V It were My kidnevs acted irregularly I used Doan's Pills and they rid me of the aches and sains and my kidneys were regulated.” DOAN’S p, i LS STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS * J Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Cheat.. Buffalo. N. Y. Kill All Flies! dTiSySvMLL®. .nd kills •« Nrat, of meteJ. Zb'U’ig can’t i>pil I or tip owr; will not sod or injure anything. Guaranteed. FLY KILLER Bt yocr dealer or HAROLD Brooklyn. N. 1. Pesky Devils Quietus P. D. Q. Wgj P D Q.. Pesky Devils Jui'etus. is the name of the tew chemical that actually •nds the bug family. Bed Bugs W . Roaches, Ants and Fleas, as ■ ; P. D. Q. kills the live ones and their eggs and stops future ; reiterations. Notan insect pow- » ler but a chemical unlike any- ! thing you have ever used. S 3 A 35 cent package makes : Mie quart and each package :■ contains w patent spout, to get the Peskr Devils in the cracks and crevices. el Your druggist has it or he fIH can get It for you. Mailed pre-, paid upon receipt of price by the Owl Chemical Wks, Terre Haute, Ind. A woman always thinks that she Is better than other women, and a man thinks that he is no worse than other men. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION iCXaSCW water Sure Relief Bell-ans 254 AHD 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE