The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 39, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 January 1929 — Page 7

■ .1 The Settling of the Sage ‘By HAL G. EVARTS WNU Servie* Copyright by Hal G. Evarts

WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE <7 At the Warren ranch, the ‘Three Bar," on the fringe of the • “cow country," a stranger applied for work as a rider, Williamette Ann Warren—known to all as “Billie," is the owner of the ranch. The girl's father, Cal Warrfch. had been the original owner. The question whether the territory is to remain “cow country" or be opened to settlement is a troublesome one The newcomer is put to work. Cattle "rustlers” have been troubling the ranch owners. The new hand gives his name as Cal Harris. By his announcement in favor of he incurs the enmity of a rider known as Morrow, rrhe will made by Cal Warren stipulated that half the property Ahould go to the s.on of his old friend, William Harris, under cartain conditions. The new arrival is the man, and he discloses the. fact to Billie. The girl is Auspicious. Slade, a ranchman} with an unsavory rep- * utation ala “bad man,” visits ’ Billie. H(e has long wanted to marry hyit but she dislikes and fears him. > Slade, endeavoring to embrace Billie is interrupted by Harris Harris half jestingly, proposes that the girl marry him and so settle the matter Os the ranch ownership The regular caif round-up is begun. While the riders ere at their evening meal, far ouj on the range, six outsiders joinithem. Billie knows them to be “rustlers.” CHAPTER IV—Continued —7— “Our families must have been real set on throwing us together,” he observed. “1 was cut off without a dime myself—unless I spent two full years on the Three Bar.” She was angry with herself for believing him sincere, for being convinced that be, too, as he had several times intimated, was tied in much the same fashion as herself. The explanation came to her in an illuminating flash. The elder Harris must have nursed a lifelong enmity against her father, who had believed him the most •devoted friend on earth. She had often heard the tale of how her parent had, in all friendliness, followed old Bill Harris step by step from Dodge City to the Platte, to old Fort Laramie and finally to the present Three Bar range. Perhaps the one so followed had felt that Cal Warren was but the hated symbol of the whole clan of squatters who had driven him from place to place and eventually forced him to relinquish his hope of seeing the Three Bhr brand on a hundred thousand cows; that* his friendliness had oeen simulated, his vindictiveness nursed and finally consummated by leaving his affairs in such fashion that his son must carry on the work his trickery had begun. Harris resumed where he had broken off. “And I’d have tossed it off, as 1 told you once, if the Three Bar girl had turned, out to be any except you. You've had a tough problem to work out. girl.” he said. “I sold out my lit- . tie Box L outfit for more than it was worth —and figured to stop the leak at the Three Bar. and put the old brand on its feet.” His calm assurance on this point exasperated the girl. “How?” she demanded. “What can yon do?” She pointed toward the six men near the wagon., “During the time you spent prowling the hills did you ever ccme across those men?” “Not to pal round with them,” he confessed. “But I did cut their trail now and then. They’re not the outfit that’s going to be hardest to handle when rhe time arrives.” “What do you mean?” she asked. “No one has ever been able to handle them up to date.” “Did it ever strike you as queer that Slade could come into this country twelve years back, with nothing but a long rope and a running iron, and he owning thirty thousand head today?” ’ “He has the knack to protect his own and increase,” she said. “They’re afraid of Slade.” I The girl shook her head Impatiently and looked across at the six men who ate her fare. t li * “Look at them,” she flared. “Eating my food; and in a few nights they’ll be hazing a bunch of Three Bar steers toward the Idaho line. Why doesn’t some man that is a man kill that albino fiend and all his whelps and rid the country of his breed? Even Slade lets them put up at his place.” , “If they’re pestering you I’ll order them off.” he said. “And what effect would that have?’ she inquired scornfully.“The effect of causing them to climb their horses off down the country.” he returned. He sprawled on the grass his head propped on one hand as%e regarded them. “Then probably you’d better order them off.” she suggested. “You have my permission. Now’s your chance to make good the lordly brag of helping the Three Bar out of the hole.” She instantly regretted having said it. A dozen times of late she had wondered if she were turning bitter and waspish. if she would ever again be the even tempered Billie Warren with a good word and a "smile for every one. Harris was. as always, apparently omlisturhed by her words. * Far down the bottoms she could see a point of light which she knew for a white sign that read: “Squatter, don’t let sundown find yon here.” The man be fore her had defied these sinister warnings scattered about the range and publicly announced that he would put in hay on his filing, knowing that he was a marked man from the hour he turned the first furrow. Whatever his short comings, lack of courage was not one of them.“1 take that back,” she said, referring to tier words of a few moments t-ef-'e Harris straightened to a sit-

ting position tn his surprise at this impulsive retraction, and as he smiled across at- her she divined that this man, seemingly so impervious to her sarcasm, could be easily moved by a single kind word. “Thanks, Billie," he said. “That was real white of you.” He rose and sauntered toward the wagon and Billie Warren felt a sudden clutch of fear as he halted before and she realized that he had her words llteraily and intended ordering them off. “I’ve beerr-made temporary foreman of Jhe Three Bar—just so the boss could try me out on that job for an hour or two,” he remarked conversationally. “So I’m putting in a new rule that goes into effect right off. When you boys ride away, in a few minutes from now, you can tell folks that the grub line is closed as far as the Three Bar is concerned.” Lang took a half-step toward him. his ®face reflecting his gathering rage as his slow hrain comprehended the j' / J, They Ascended the First Slopes. fact that this speech was but another way of announcing that he and his men would find no welcome at the Three Bar from that moment on. Harper caught his arm and jerked him back. The albino was an old hand and could rightly read the signs. “The gentleman was remarking to me,” he said to Lang; “not you.” He turned to Harris. “There’s no law to make you feed any man.” he said? “From now on we’ll pay our way—as far as the Three Bar is concerned.” His tones were casual; only his pale eyes, fastened unblinkingly on Harris’ face, betrayed his real feeling toward the man who, notwithstanding the roundabout nature of his announcement, had practically ordered him to stay away from the Three Bar for all time. “But even in the face of that.” he resumed, “we’ll welcome you any time you happen to r ide down our way.” Every man within earshot understood the threat that lay beneath the casual words. “Then I’ll likely drop tn some time,” Harris said. “If you'll send word where it is. And I’ll bring fifty men along.” The albino motioned his men toward their horses and they mounted and rode off down the bottoms. Harris walked back and resumed his seat near the girl, who sat looking at him as if she could not believe what she had just witnessed. “You see it was just as easy as I’d counted on,” he said. “It’ll be a considerable saving on food.” , “But how did you know?” she asked. “Why is Harper afraid of you?" “He’s not,” Harris said. “Not for a single second. But he’s an old hand and has left a few places on the jump before he came out here.” “And be thinks you know It!” she guessed. “He don’t care what I know; It’s what he knows himself—that the wild bunch is always roosting on the powder can even when it appears like they’re sitting pretty—that counts with him. You thought 1 was taking a fool chance of outguining him. In reality I was taking almost an unfair advantage of him, providing he had the brains he must possess to have lived to his age.” She could find no ready-made an swer to this surprising statement. “Don’t you know that the albino will kill vou for that?” she asked “Not unless he can stage it as a per sonal quarrel." he said. “He’ll never follow it up as coming out of what happened today by taking it out on me as temporary foreman of the Three Bar—for ordering him off There’s a good majority of folks that don’t relish seeing Harper’s bunch

u*»*n*»#«*s#«*»*s*»*«*n*»#««j*tt*tt*c*»*«*»*s*n*»*»*a*s First Letters Sealed With Odd Substances

Sealing a letter Is nowadays the work of an instant. How was it accomplished before the invention of gummed envelopes? The first seals consisted of a ring affixed to clay and later to chalk or a mixture of pitch, wax and plaster. The use of wax did not become general until the Middle ages. Beeswax yellowed by time was the first variety of it used, and after them came sealing wax, mixed with a white sub- . stance. Red and green wax came in the Twelfth century., and 100 years later the list of colors was supplemented by nearly ail those now to be found in wax. During the First empire the French began to use wafers brought from

ride up—that feed them through policy. But whenever you make it plain ttfea man that he's compelled to do a thing whether he likes it or not it’s ten to one he’ll balk out of sheer human pride. If Harper kills the Three Bar foreman on the grounds that he refused to feed all his men—why then, right off, every foreman and owner within a hundred miles starts to resenting the possibility that maybe the albino feels the same way toward him. Harper knows that." “But if your theory had been wrong’” she persisted. "What then?” “Then," he said, “then there’d have been h—l and repeat I wasn’t lust acting as me. a personal affair, hut. as I look pains to remark aloud, as the foreman of the Three Bar. Every Three Bar man would have gone into action the second Harper made a move at me. You know that — and Harper knew it.” She realized the soundness of this statement. The one unalterable code of the country, a code that had been ■ fostered till it eclipsed all others, decreed that a man should be loyal to the brand for which he rode. The whole fabric of the cow business was based on that one point. “But now they'll work their deviltry all the stronger against the Th'ee Bar.” she predicted. “They could wreck us if they tried. You couldn’t get a conviction in five years. Not a man would testify against one of Harper’s outfit.” ‘Then we’ll put on a fighting crew (and hold them off,” he said. “But that’s not the layout that will be hardest to handle in the long run. Slade is the one real hard nut for the Three Bar to crack. He can work It a dozen different ways and you coujdn’t prove one of them on him to save your soul. He’s one smooth hombre —Slade.” Harris rose and headed for his bed i roll and the girl sought the shelter | of her teepee for a rest. Her mind ; was busily going over the events of ; the day. She reflected that Cal Bar | ris was at least possessed of self-con-fidence and that procrastination was certainly not to be numbered among | his failings. It came to her that his interests for the present were identical with her own. As half-owner in the Three Bar it would be as much to his advantage as to her own to build it up. Waddle’s warped legs prevented his acting as foreman on the job and it might be that the oth- : er man would find some way to pre- I vent the leak that was sapping the life from the Three Bear. His naifownership entitled him to the place. Billie Warren loved her brand and her persona) distrust of Harris was submerged in the hope that his sharing the full responsibility with herself might be a step toward putting it back on the old-time plane of prosperity. She fell asleep with the crooning voice of the nighthawk drifting to her ears. It seemed but a few fleeting mo- | ments before Waddle’s voice roused her. “Roll out!” he bawled. “Feet tn the troughl" There was instant activity, the jingle of belts and spurs and in five minutes every man was fully clot-ned and splashing at the creek. It was showing rose and gray in the east when the meal was finished. When most of the men were mounted Billie urged Papoose over near Harris’ horse. “Do you know how to throw a circle?” she asked. “After a fashion,” he said. “I’ve • bossed one or two in the past.” “Then we’d better be of,” she suggested. “Since you’re the Three Bar foreman its for you to say wirnn. “1 only pre-empted that job for ten minutes or sb,” he explained with evident embarrassment. “Yon surelv didn’t think I was trying to boost myself into the foreman’s job for keeps?’ “No," she said. “But you re halfowner—and you can handle men. I’m giving you free rein to show what you can do.’’ Harris straightened in his saddle and motioned to the men. “Let’s go!” he ordered, and headed his horse for the left-hand flank of the valley. They ascended the first slopes, picked a long ridge and followed it to the crest of the low divide between that valley and the next. As they reached the head of the first draw that led back dow’n into the valley Harris waved an arm. ■ “Carp,” he called, and a middle-aged man named Carpenter, abbreviated to Carp, wheeled his horse from the group and headed down the draw. A ha!»f-mile farther on they reached the head of another gulch. "Hanson!” the new foreman called, ■ and the man who repped for the Halfmoon D dropped out. One man was detailed to work each draw and when some five miles up the divide there were but half the crew left. The fore- I man led the way to the opposite di- i vide and doubled back, sending a man down every gulch. (TO BE CONTINUED.)

Italy by the soldiers of the French army. These wafers were cut with a punch from a thin leaf made of flour.Finally gummed envelopes began to replace the sealing wax and wafers. The first of these envelopes were i made in England about the year 1840. Legal Distinction In law, flotsam, or floatsam. Is derelict or shipwrecked goods floating in the sea, while jetsam is goods thrown overboard which sink and remain un- ! der the water. ■ " I ——— ■- Expression What can be expressed in words ! can be expressed in life.—Thoreau. <

the svp ArrsF .mrRNU

THE GORGEOUS EVENING WRAP; ON JUVENILE SPRING PROGRAM

IT IS a mistake for the doting father and husband to grow prideful in the thought that having presented handsome daytime fur coats to daughter and friend wife, his duty is well done. According to the by-laws of the evening mode, one or as many us you can afford, evening wraps must be included in every wardrobe of the fair one who moves “in society ” Which meaps that the bill which reaches father’s desk for “a pale yellow chiffon party frock” will, if fashion’s orders are carried out, also itemg

Z* ■*’ '' • ( / -FJtfeii;

Two Striking Models. , Ize "one orange yellow transparent velvet wrap.” For in the smart set : the rule is being observed of liar j monizing the color of the coat to the ■ frock so as to subtly convey the im pression of an ensemble. if one does not choose a colorful transparent velvet wrap, such as is so I highlighted by the mode, then fancy ! -very likely will turn to the strikingly j gorgeous models of metal brocade, or that which is even of a more dazzling beauty, the sequin embroidered coat. , Note the one in the picture on the standing figure, it is a stunning at j fair, patterned all over with sequins in soft paisley shades, the deep black i fox fur cuffs making an effective con trust. The tailored cut to ’he coat is characteristic of many of the evening wraps, this season. Young girls are especially, wearing coats tailored of silver or gold cloth. The other wrap pictured is of ex | quisite peach-colored rayon brocade. I It is collared with fox fur which is dyed with a peach tinge. The satin <i frock exploits the new and much t>e-

iKrXi * 1 Jr, ? 4 * •» w • WOk. > * ■"Nj | J For the Juvenile.

I ! loved eggshell tint. This charming 1 costume carries out fashion’s favorite i theme, that is. the satin dress is of : classic simplicity, while the wrap em phasizes the elaborate note, the en tire blending into a harmonious color : scheme. i In regard to the graceful capes of sheer velvets, which lend such en chanting color to every evening picture. The collars of these wraps are always intricately designed with shir ' ring and cording and other artful i manipulation. They stand very high J up around the head in a most becoming manner. Most bewitching are these velvet wraps. Many women are buying velvet and a good pattern ami making them at home, that is if they New Neckwear Last year’s frock, with its collarless neckline, can ”be changed into this I year’s more feminine frock by the | addition of a lovely set of alencon lace collar, cuffs, and jabot, in a deep shade of tan. Monogram Pin* Exceedingly new are monogram • pins made of brilliants and colored I enamel The designs are quite different. consisting of birds, triangles j am) other odd shapes.

cannot afford to buy the adorablej models which the best shops are dis playing this season. Speaking of the family sewing, why not get it out of the way? That familiar adage, “make ’ ay while the sun shines." loses its appeal as far as being housed in with a sewing machine is concerned, on a spring i day. when all out-of-doors coaxes ami i teases to come out into rhe sunlit open. Rather does it seem wiser to ; sew and sew and sew while yet the 1 snow flies and all the landscape looks «

dreary and uninviting For then, and then only, can one experience that grand and glorious feeling of having the family sewing out of the way. in time to yield to the persuasions of budding, blossoming spring.. So taking it for granted that the wise-minded have at this moment the household sewing camfihign well un dec way. a few suggestions in regard to new washable fabrics for children s dresses, for instance. It seems from all indications that printed pique is to prove one of the most popular materials. Imagine anything in the way ot a child s ensemble so clever as a frock of printed pique with a coat of solid colored pitjue. Well, that is just one of rhe many happy thoughts for spring. f Printed pique and printed dimity are charming for school frocks. Mak« them up very simply like the one in the picture. Most of the patterns call for unbelted straight, effects from shoulder to hem. ns shown here. Very short, too. continues to be the rule. The use of contrasting materials tsapparent in the styles coming in for spring and summer A favorite idea is to combine piques, ginghams and such with dainty organdie. You have no idea how pretty the effect until you have tried it, of trimming a gay patterned heavy washable weave with little rutiles of organdie in a plain color Have the edges of the ruffling picoted instead of hemming on the

machine. Not only is the effect far more charming, but when picoted the little ruffles iron out easily and exquisitely. Pockets, collars, cuffs, belts and in sets ot organdie on piques, ginghams linens and the like are part of the coming season’s styling plans. Jacket =. ensembles combining a heavy material with a thin one. are worked with extreme cunning A gav plaid gingham plaited skirt is topped with a tuck-in blouse of solid colored linen or organdie.- To this is added a coatee of the gingham. The idea may also he carried out with printed linen with a handkerchief linen blouse. JULIA BOTTOMLEY ((c). 1929 Western Newspaper Union. > Negligee of Velvet and Fur A negligee which is both beautiful and stately is made of velvet in a beautiful shade of orange, lavishly trimmed with white fur. The long train, a feature of this year’s loung ing robes, gives height to the lucky wearer. Color on Black Frocks Newer than the all-black dress is black with touches of color. A Pa quin copy in black crepe is show with turquoise blue.

........ . . o ! LEADING RADIO! PROGRAMS a H (Time given Is Eastern Standard’ subtract one hour for Central and two hours for Mountain time.) N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Jan. 27. 1:30 p. m. Peerless Reproducers. 3:(M) p. m. Dr. Stephen S. Wise. 4 :(Mi p.‘ tn. Dr. S. Parkes (’adman. 5:30 p. m. Acoustican Hour. 6:00 p m. Stetson Parade. • 7:30 p. m. Maj. Bowes Family Party 1 9:00 p. m. David laiwreuce. 9:l‘> p. nt. Atwater Kent. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 2:00 p. m. Roxy Stroll. 3:00 p.m. Young People s Conference 5:30 p. tn. Dr. Harry E. Fosdick. 6:30 p. m. Anglo Persians. 8:00 p. m. Enna Jet tick Melodies. 8:15 p. m. Collier’s Radio Hour. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Jan. 28. > 11:15 a.m. Radio Household Institute i 8:00 p. m. Firestone Tire Co. i 8:30 p. m. A and P Gypsies. I 9:30 p. tn. General Motors Party. ; 10:30 p. m. Great Northern. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK ■ 10:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. ! 12:00 m. “Farm and Home Hour.” 12:15 p.m. U. S. Dept, of s Agriculture 12:30 p. m. “Farm and Home Hour.” ; 7:30 p. ni. Roxy and His Gang. ! 8:30 p. m. Automatic Duo Discs. 9:30 p. in. Real Folks. N. B C. RED NETWORK—Jan. 29. ! 7:00 a. m. Tower Health Exercises, j 10:45 a. m. Fleischman’s Yeast; 11:15 a.m. Radio Household Institute. ; 4:30 p. m. Auction Bridge Games. 7:00 p. m. Voters’ Service. 7:30 p. m. Soconyland Sketches. ‘ 8:30 p. tn. Prophylactic. 9:00 p. m. Eveready Hour. 10:00 p. m. Clicquot Club Eskimos. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. *11:00 a. m. Forecast School of Cookery 12:00 m “Farm and Home Hour.” 12:15p. m. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture 12:30 p. m. “Farm and Home Hour.” 7:00 p. m. Edison Hour. ; 8:00 p. m. Stromberg Carlson Sextette j 8:30 p. ra. Michelin Tiremen. 9r30 p. m. Dutch Master Minstrels. 10:30 p. ni. Charles Freshman. .—■ N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Jan. 30. 10:00 a. m. National Home Hour. 11:15 a.m. Radio Household Institute. 7:30 p. in. “La Touraine Tableaux.’’ 9:00 p. m. Ipana Troubadours. 9:30 p. m. Palmolive Hour. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. in. Copland Hour. 11:00 a. m. Forecast School of Cookery. 1 12:00 m. “Farm and Home Hour.” 12:15 p.m.U. S. Dept, of Agriculture 12:30 p in. “Farm and Horae Hour.” 7 :(X) p. ra. Jeddo Highlanders. j 7:45 p. m. Political situation in Washington Tonight. 8:30 p. m. Sylvania Foresters. 9:00 p. m. Smith Brothers. 9:30 p. m. Aunt Jemima. M. B. C. RED NETWORK—Jan. 31. 11 :15 a.m. Radio Household Institute 7:30 p. tn. Coward Comfort Hour. 8:00 p. m. The Song Shop. 9:00 p. m. Seiberling Singers. 10:00 p. m. Halsey Stuart Hour. 10:30 p. m. “Iso-Vis” Orchestra. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 •• m. Copeland Hour. 11:00 a. m. Forecast School of Cookery. 12:00 m. “Farm and Home Hour.” 12:15 p. m. L T . & Dept, of Agriculture. 12:30 p. m. “Farm and Home Hour.” 8:00 p. m. Lehn and Fink Serenade. 8:30 p. m. Champion Sparkers. 9:30 p. m. Maxwell House Hour. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Feb. 1. 10:00 a. in. National Home Hour. 11:1." a. in. Buidio Household Institute. 12:00 m. Teeth, Health, Happiness i 5:00 p. m. Florida Citrus# Growers. | 6:30 p. m. Raybestos Twins. | 7:45 p. m. Moorman Cost-Cutting ; 8:00 p. m. Cities Service Hour. | 8:30 p. m. Schroeder & Son. Inc. 9:00 p. m. An Evening in Paris. ! 10:00 p. m. Hudson-Essex N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 11:00 a. m. R. C. A. Educational Hour. 12:00 p. m. “Farm and Home Hour.” 12:15 p.m.U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. 12:30 p. m. “Farm and Home Hour.” I 7:00 p. m. Great Moments in History. , 7:15 p. in. Squibb s. 7:30 p. m. Dixies Circus. s 8:30 p. in. Armstrong Quakers. 9:00 p. m. Wrigley Review. ; 9:30 p. tft Philco Hour. IM. B. C. RED NETWORK—Feb. 2 ’ 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:30 p. m. White House Dinner Music. B*lo p.m. National Orch.—Dainrosch. 1 9:01) p. m Interwoven Entertainers j 10:00 p m. Lucky Strike Orchestra N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK I 1:30 p. m. National Republican Club 2:30 p. m. R. C A. Demonstration. | 9:00p. in. Works of Great Composers The following is a list of stations I carrying the above programs: National Broadcasting company Ren Network: WEAR. New York. WEEI Boston WTK’ Hartford W.IAH Prov- : dence: VVTAG. Worcester; W<’SH Port : land. Me.; WLIT and WEI. Philadelphia' WRC. Washington: WGY Schenectady; WGR. Buffalo; VVCAE Pittsburgh; WTAM and WEAR. Cleveland: WWJ Detroit: WSAI Cincinnati; WGN and WLIB. Chicago; KSD. St Louis: WOC Davenport’ WHO Des Moines: WOW imaha: WDAF Kansas City: WCCO-WRH4 Minneapolis-St. Paul: WTMJ Milwaukee: KOA Denver: WHAS Louisville: WSM. Nashville: WMC Memphis - WSB Atlanta: WRT. Charlotte; TVOO Tulsa; WFAA. Dallas’ KPRC. Houston: WOAI. San Antonio: WBAP Ft. Worth- WJAX. Jacksonville. National Broadcasting company Blue Jetwork; WJZ New York; WBZA Boston WBZ. Springfield: WBAL ‘ more. WHAM. Rochester: l$bKA. Pittsburgh; WJR. Detroit; WLW Cincinnati. KYW and WEBH. Chicago: KWK St. Louie: WREN Kansas City: ■> WCl’O WKHft. Minneapolis-St . Paul; ! WTMJ Milwaukee: KOA Denver: WHAS Louisville: WSM. Nashville: WMC Memphis; WSB. Atlanta: WTB. I Charlotte; KVOO Tulsa; WFAA Dallas- KPRC Houston- WOAI. San Antonio; WBAP. Ft. Worth; WVRA. j Richmond: WJAX. Jacksonville. Farm Instruction by Radio i Tiiat the farmer is coming in for | more direct programs than probably I any other profession is demonstrated by the fact that more than thirty programs exclusively for the farmer I were broadcast from the Chicago j studios of the National Broadcasting i company during the month of Decemi ber alone. The United States DepartI ment of Agriculture is depending more I and more on the radio for the rapid dispatch nt its special crop and deI partmental reports.

A Sour Stomach & In the same time it takes a dose of soda to bring a little temporary relief of gas and sour stomach, Phillips i Milk of Magnesia has acidity completely cliecked, and the digestive organs all tranquilized. Once you have tried this form of relief you will cease to j worry about your diet and experience a new freedom in eating. This pleasant preparation is just as ■ good for children, too. Use it whenever coated tongue or fetid breath signals need of a sweetener. Physicians will tell you that every spoonful of Phillips Milk of Magnesia neutralizes many times its volume in acid. Get the genuine, the name Phillips is t important. Imitations do not act the same! PHILLIS’S of Magnesia RHEyMATISM TRUSLER’S RHEUMATIC TABLETS HAVE GIVEN RELIEF All Two Sites, 50c and SI.OO. Trusler Remedy Co. . Cincinnati, O. Sunlight in Every Light Fundamental studies in biophysics j indicate that sunlight has definite ef- | feet on tissue specialization and may bear some relationship to nervous stability. Major prophets in this field predict a future when the sunlight—the ultraI violet rays lost to man when he came i indoors —will glow from every incan-. | descent bulb. They predict a brownI skinned race of men with a much I more stable nervous system; less given to emotional upsets and thereby less susceptible to the degenerative diseases.—Morris Fishbein in the Yale ■ Review. VkiZZ Cold Worry You This Winter? Some men thro.w-off a cold within a few hours of contracting it. Anyone can do it witli the ard of a simple compound which comes in tablet form, and is no trouble to take or to always have about you. Don’t “dope” 'yourself when you catch cold; use Pape’s Cold Compound. Men and women everywhere rely on this amazing little tablet. —Adv. Sign Language Weddings The first double wedding of its kind was celebrated at Allentown, Pa., when four deaf mutes were married. The officiating clergyman.was asslst- ’ ed by Edward W. Karcher, a senior at the Lutheran seminary at Mount Airy, who on his graduation and ordination will become the first deaf and dumb Lutheran pastor In the United States. All questions and responses at the wedding were in tiie sign language. I | A crowd of dudes might appropri-' ately be termed a vacant lot. Have Kidneys Examined By Your Doctor Take Salts to Wasft Kidneys if Back Pains You or Bladder < , Bothers Flush your kidneys by drinking a quart of water each day, also take salts occasionally, says a noted authority, who tells us that too much forms acids which almost paralyze the kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish anef weaken? then you may suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To help neutralize these irritating 1 acids, to help cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body’s urinous waste, get four ounces of .Tad Salts from any pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and • . lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for years to help flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys; also to neutralize the acids in the system so they no longer irritate, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot Injure and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink. Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother’s Remedy

For every stomach and intestinal ill. This good old-fash-’ ioned herb home . remedy for eonstiI) pation, stomach ills and other derangements of the sys-

tem so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother’s day.