The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 20, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 12 September 1929 — Page 3

L| ggflKgEg99| IVIOST people depend on Bayer A Aspirin to make short work of headaches, but did you know it’s just as effective in the worse pains from neuralgia or neuritis? Rheumatic pains, too. Don’t suffer when Bayer Aspirin can bring complete comfort without delay, and without harm; it does not affect the heart. In every package of genuine Bayer Aspirin are proven directions with which everyone should be familiar, for they can spare much needless Buffering. Aspirin ia the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture at MonoaceUcacidester of Salicylicacid Women are saying: “Pinkham’s Compound keeps me fit to do my work.” “I was nervous and all run down. Now I eat better and sleep better—”. “It helped my thirteen year old daughter.”—“l took it before and after my baby was born.” —"I am gaining every day.” Nor Measles Teacher—Can you define heredity for us? Jimmy—Er, yessum. It means if your grandfather didn’t have any children, then your father prob’l.v wouldn’t have any, and neither would you, prob’ly.—Montreal Star. Ask for “TACK-UP” AEROXON Fly Catcher Leading Catcher t)Cl? VfUionally oAdvertised WAa mt. na. <*. lais Get rid of pesty flies. Hang up original AEROXON (pronounced A-Rock-Son) Fly Catchers with Thumb-Tack Attached. No fuss —no trouble. They will catch thousands of flies for a nickle. Insist upon getting AEROXON Fly Catchers from your dealer. Sole ImportersandDistributorsforU.S.A. GRAEF & SANDKNOP, Edina, Mo. Tragic Picnicker (to officer) —What a calamity! My poems have been blown over the cliff! Officer—Well, 1 suppose you can write ’em again, can’t you? “Oh, yes, but my sandwiches were wrapped up in them.’’—Humorist. Snowy linens are the pride of every housewife. Keep them in that condition by using Russ Bleaching Blue in your laundry. At all grocers.—Adv. Speeding the Guest Motorist —Is there any speed law here? Native —Naw, you fellers can’t get through here any too fast for us. A girl may be both pretty and ignorant, but she is never ignorant of the fact that she is pretty. fix Ho Makes Life Sweeter Children’s stomachs sour, and ne> an anti-acid. Keep their systems sweet with Phillips Milk of Magnesia I When tongue or breath tells of acid condition —correct it with a spoonful of Phillips. Most men and women have been comforted by this universal sweetener —more mothers should invoke its aid for their children. It is a pleasant thing to take, yet neutralizes more acid than the harsher things too often employed for the purpose. No household should be without it. Phillips is the genuine, prescriptional product physicians endorse for general use; the name is important. “Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. S. registered trade mark of the Charles H. Phillips Chemical Co. and its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875. Phillips r Miik. of Magnesia

America’s Most Exclusive Bathing Place i ■■ . ■ • £ ♦, a,/ > •"' s -• • J* lan in* miiiiiillMi I* lAirililßjWMgOwi -iai An excellent air view of the most exclusive bathing place in the country—Bailey’s beach at Newport. Note the magnificent mansions and estates surrounding. The beach is at the little isthmus in the center.

Gotham Is City Os the Missing

More Than 23,000 Persons Disappeared in New York Last Year. New York—More than 23,000 persons were sought as missing in New Yofk city last year, according to the annual report ot the missing persons bureau of the police department made public recently. This is the highest number of cases reported by the bureau since its inception, according to Inspector Joseph Donovan, temporar ily in charge of this phase of the police work. The figures for the current year, however, point to the establishment of a still higher record for 1929. bureau officials said recently. More than 12. 000 persons have been reported miss ing so far this year, they said. An analysis ot the report shows that ot the 23,147 actual cases reported for 1928. 22.420 eases were successfully concluded. This gives the missing persons bureau the excellent record of 97.02 per cent average of success. Inspector Donovan pointed out that the average rate of success in this work usually comes near 99 per cent. 17,050 Are Located. The recapitulation ot all the cases in the report divides them Into those originating within New York city and those coming from other cities. On this basis the 1928 report reveals that 17.458 men and women from the five boroughs vanished. The missing per sons bureau located 17.050 of these in various parts of the world. The remainder of the 23.000 for last year were handled either as unidentified dead or were reported to the bureau from out of town police departments Os the 844 unidentified persons found dead within the environs of New York last year, 713 were identified. The missing persons bureau located 4,657 persons who ran away from homes outside of this city. A total of 4,745 out of town cases were turned over to the bureau during the year. This leaves only 88 unaccounted for. The actual work of the btireau is handled by Capt. John H. Ayers with

Decided at Last $ Girl Meant “No” ❖ San Francisco, Calif. —Sam Rocco is a hard man to discourage. but after three trips to jail ❖ here he decided that possibly £ Miss Betty Herman’s “no” ❖ meant just exactly that. * Rocco, according to police re- ♦ ports, went to an apartment * house to visit Miss Herman. He rang her doorbell. Miss Herman apparently didn’t want see him. Sam tried to break in: ❖ Glenn Daft, manager of the house, protested. Sam pulled a ❖ gun, according to witnesses, and I;, fired at Daft He missed. He ♦ was still trying to’gain entry $ when police arrived. At the * city prison he furnished SSOO 4. bail and was released. Undismayed, he returned to 4> see Miss Herman. She called police. Sam was arrested again ❖ and once more furnished bail. He started for tb e place a ❖ third time. Police, however, * succeeded in persuading him * that Miss Herman meant “no.” 4.

VIENNA EASILY LEADS IN THE LOW COST OF DYING

Funerals Less Expensive There Than in Any Other Large City in the World. Vienna.—To live in Vienna is expensive, especially if one is a foreigner; but to die here is quite another thing. Funerals cost less in this former seat of the Hapsburgs than tn any large city of the world. No funeral costs very much unless something especially elaborate and extraordinary is specifically ordered. Most funerals cost only a little more than sl4, and the average for all funerals Is only a few cents more than SSO. Vienna is ruled by a Socialist government, which Its opponents say knows more about ways and means to keep the population poor than any other city government anywhere. Regardless of finances during an Individual s life, however, the city fathers

a staff consisting of 37 men and 6 women detectives, Captain Ayers as sinned charge of this work in 1918. Since his induction into office he has handled more than 200.000 runaways Trailed 200.000 Runaways. The totals in the report do not in elude criminals and fugitives from justice who are being sought by the police department on various charges. The persons in whom this bureau is interested are criminally inoffensive. The police interest in them is limited to merely locating them for harassed relatives and finding out why they ran away. Inspector Donovan said. “Many of the runaways have tried to get away from their poor environment,” Inspector Donovan pointed out. ‘They are in many instances children who have rebelled against a too rigid discipline by their parents or forced to flee overcrowded housing conditions of the poorer sections of the city. In about 60 per cent of the cases they return of their own volition, having found that paddling their own canoe in strange waters was too severe a task. “The summer months always show a higher number of runaways. The heat probably stirs their wanderlust. In the case of runaway children, the parents are often at fault because they forget that children require a certain amount of liberty.” Has Pony 47 Years Old Marysville, Kan.—An Indian pony believed to be forty-seven years old is owned by Michael Reuger, a farmer near here. The animal is said to have been one of a herd purchased in 1885 by Charles Phillips. Although it cannot corn or prairie hay, the pony still eats oats and alfalfa. It is used to drive cows to and from pasture. New Woe for Flapper* Dodge City, Kan.—A new type of grasshopper plague has reached Kansas. Young women return from motor trips with holes in their stockings which they attribute to the big hoppers that fly into the cars.

Cornstalk Can Now Be Harvested - Mechanical engineers of lowa State Agricultural college have perfected a machine which is expected to revolutionize the harvesting cl cornstalks for making paper. Hauled by a tractor, the machine cuts the stalks and carries them by a conveyor to a receptacle at the rear where they are baled ready to haul to the factory.

make dying a bit easier for those thoughtful persons who in their last hours worry over the sacrifices which their loved ones will have to make in order to bury them decently. The shadow of no conscienceless undertaker hovers over the bed of a dying Vienese to make his demise yet more painful. Os each death tn -Vienna the authorities must be informed immediately ; and within six hours after the death the body of the deceased person must be removed from the house to a municipal mortuary. No kind of death watch or wake is allowed tn any home. On the day of the funeral a municipal motor hearse is provided to transfer the body to the cemetery for burial or to the crematorium. Private undertaking establishments exist, but they are compelled to keep their prices down in order to get any

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Revolver Shots Spur Hens, Farmer Discovers Stockholm.—To make his hens lay twice as many eggs as usual, a Swedish farmer has found that nothing accelerates the process more than a couple of good revolver or rille shots fired close to the henhouse. He came upon his discovery by a strange incident. A road building company was blasting rocks near his farm, and while the noise was enervating to him, he found that it had another influence on the fowls; as long as the dynamiting went* on. I.is 150 hens laid exactly double the number of eggs as before. When the excavation was finished, the egg crop immediately decreased to its normal low level, wherefore the observant farmer let his trusty shotgun serve instead, and every morning took a couple of shots at nothing in particular. The hens responded with a record number of eggs. Largest Scoop Shovel Takes a 20-Ton Bite Marion, Ohio.—An -'Electric shovel, weighing 3.200.000 pounds and capable of scooping up 20 tons of earth in one bite, will soon be placed in operation in the “open pit” coal fields of Illinois. The shovel, the world’s largest ex- ; cavator, required 18 months to piece j together and 50 freight cars for shipment to Illinois. The huge machine is almost twice as large as any now in use. Engineers of the local concern which constructed the herculean monster said a person could step from the top of the “boom” —the highest part of the shovel—to the roof of an 11-story building. It will be capable of moving a halfmillion cubic yards of x —th in a month, engineers said. /_ 63 Raw Eggs Eaten to Save Railroad Rule Eland, Wis.—Philip Szutkoski. railroad employee, here, acted “according to Hoyle” by eating 63 raw eggs in ■ 29 minutes to save them from spoiling when they were found cracked and; broken in shipment. Szutkoski explained his act by stat- 1 ing that the railroad book of rules calls upon every employee to exert; every influence to protect shipments handled by the carrier.

business at all. By far the greater part of the 75 daily burials are han died by the Socialist municipality’s establishment at the price of 100 Austrian schillings (less than sls) each. During rhe last 12 months the municipal motor hearses covered a distance 23 times that between Vienna and New York. * ************************** * New York Village * Outlaws Airplane j- * Pelham Manor, N. Y.—The * board of trustees of this village * has outlawed the airplane. * The board passed the follow- * * ing ordinance recently: * “The construction on or use * * of any property in the village * * for an airport, aviation field or * * other similar project or for the * * commercial development of air- * * planes, seaplanes, dirigibles or * * other flying devices is prohib- * * Red.” ♦

RADIO PROGRAMS N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Sept. 15. 8:00 p. m. National Sunday Forum 6:00 p. m. Lehigh Coal Company. 6:30 p. m. Maj. Bowes’ Family Party. 8:00 p. m. David Lawrence. 8:15 p. m. Atwater Kent. 9:15 p. m. Studebaker Champions. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 12:30 p. m. The Pilgrims. 1:00 p. m. Roxy Stroll. 2:00 p. m. Friendship Hour. 4:30 p. m. Twilight Reveries. 5:30 p m. Whit tall Anglo-Perslans. 6:30 p. m. At the Baldwin. 7:00 p. m. Enna Jetticks. 7:15 p. m. Collier's Hour. 8:15 p. m. D’Orsay. 9:15 p. m. Light Opera Hour. 10:00 p. m. Amos ‘n‘ Andy. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 3:00 p. m. Symphonic Hour. 3:30 p. m. Hudnut Du Barry. 4:00 p. m. Cathedral Hour. 6:00 p. m. Fox Fur Trappers. 8:00 p. m. La Palina program, 8:30 p. m. Sonatron program. 9:00 p. m. Majestic Theater of the Air. 10:00 p. m. Arabesque. 10:30 p. m. Around the Samovar. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Sept. 16. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 7:00 p. m. Voice of Firestone. 8:30 p. m. General Motors Party. N. 3. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:30 p. m. National Farm and Home. 6:30 p. m. Roxy and His Gang. 7:30 p. m. Whitehouse Concert. 8:00 p. m. Edison Recorders. 8:30 p. m. Real Folks. 9:30 p. m. Fio-Rito’s Hotel Orchestra. 10:00 p. m. Amos ’n’ Andy. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 11:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen. 8:00 p. m. Grand Opera Concert. 8:30 p. m. Ceco Couriers. (Musical.) 9:00 p. m. Physical Culture Magazine. 9:30 p. m. U. S. Navy Band. 10:00 p. m. Robt. Burns Panatelas. 10:30 p. m. Night Club .Romance. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Sept. 17. 10:15 a m. Radio Household Institute. 6:30 p. m. Socohyland Sketches. 7.30 p. m. Prophylactic. 8:00 p. m. Eveready Hour. 9:00 p. m. Clicquot Club Eskimos. 10:00 p. m. Radio-Keith-Orpheum Hour. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p m. Montgomery Ward Hour.1:30 p. m. Nat’l Farm and Home Hour. 7:00 P m. Pure Oil Band. 7:30 p. m. Michelin Tiremen. 8:00 p m. College Drug Store. 8:30 p m. Dutch Masters Minstrels. 9.00 p. m. Williams Oil-O-Matics. 9:30 p. m. Freed Orchestradians. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 a. m. Grant League of Thrift. 11:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen. 2:45 p. m. Theronoid Health Talk. 8:00 p. m. Sergei Kotlarsky and Mathilde Harding. 8:30 p. m. Flying Stories. 9:00 p. m. Old Gold, Paul Whiteman. 10:00 p. m. Fada Salon Hour. 10:30 p. m. Story in a Song. 11:00 p. m. Jesse Crawford. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Sept. 1& 9:00 a. m. National Home Hour. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:30 p. m. LaTouraine Concert. 7:00 p. m. Mobiloil Hour. 7:30 p. m. Happy Wonder Bakers. 8:00 p. m. Ipana .Troubadours. 8:30 p m. Palmolive Hour. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:30 p. m. Nat’l Farm and Home Hour. 7:00 p. m. Yeast Foamers. 7:30 p. m. Sylvania Foresters. 8:30 p. m. Forty Fathom Fish. 9:00 p. pi. ABA Voyagers. 9:30 p. m. Stromberg Carlson. 10:00 p. m. Amos ’n’ Andy. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 11:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen. 11:30 a. m. Talk on Interior Decorating. 8:00 p. m. Hank Simmons’ Show Boat. 9:00 p. m. United Symphony Orchestra. 9:30 p. m. La Palina Smoker. 10:00 p. m. Kolster Radio Hour. 10:30 p. m. Dixie Echoes. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Sept. 19. 1015 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 7:30 p. m. Victor Hour. 8:00 p. m. Seiberling Singers. 9:00 p. m. Halsey Stuart Hour. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour, 1:30 p. m. Nat’l Farm and Home Hour. 6:00 p. m. University Presidents. 6:30 p. m. United Reproducers. 7:00 p. m. Lehn and Fink. 8:00 p. m. Veedol Hour. 8:30 p. m. Maxwell House. 9:00 p. m. Atwater Kent. 9:30 p. m. Around World with Libby. 10:00 p. m. Amos *n‘ Andy. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10.00 a. m. Morning Merrymakers. 10:30 a. m. In Many Lands With Theresa Martin. 11:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen. 11:30 a. m. Du Barry Beauty Talk. 2:45 p. m. Theronoid Health Talk. 8:00 p. m. Daguerreotypes. 8:30 p. m. U. S. Marine Band. 9:00 p. m. True Detective Mysteries, 9:30 p. m. Gold Seal Program. 10:00 p. m. Buffalo Civic Symphony Or. 10:30 p. m. Voice of Columbia. 0 (Musics.!.) N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Sept. 20. 9:00 a. m. National Home Hour. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 5:30 p. m. Raybestcs Twins. 7:00 p. m. Cities Service. 8:00 p. m. An Evening In Paris. 8:30 p. tn. Schradertown Brass Band. 9:00 p. ”m. Whispering Tables. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. Mary Hale Martin. 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:30 p. m. Nat’l Farm and Home Hour. 4:00 p. m. LaForge Berumen Musicale. 7:00 p m. Triadors. 7:30 p. m. Gillette Razor. 8:00 p. m. Interwoven Pair. 8:30 p. m. Philco Hour. 9:00 p. m. Armstrong Quakers. 9:30 p. m. Armour Hour. 10:00 p. m. Amos ’n’ Andy. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 a. m. Grant League of Thrift. 11:00 a. m. Ida Bailey Allen. 11:45 a. m. Radio Beauty School. 7:30 p. m. Howard Fashion Plates. 8:00 p. m. Hawaiian Shadows. 8:30 p m. Wahl Program. 9:00 p. m. True Story Hour. 10:00 p. m. Light Opera Gems. 10:30 p. m. In a Russian Village. N. B. C. RED NETWORK—Sept. 21. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 6:30 p. in. Skellodians. 7:00 p. m. All-American Mohawk. 7:30 p. m. Laundry Owners. 8:00 p. m. General Electric Hour. 9:00 p. -m. Lucky Strike Dance Orch. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:30 p. m. Nat’l Farm and Home Hour. 5:30 p. m. Gold Spot Orchestra. 6:45 p. m. Dr. Klein. 7:30 p tn. Marvin Radio Tube Co. 10:00 p. m. Amos ‘n’ Andy. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 8:00 p. m. Sorrento Serenade. 8:30 p. m. The Romancers. 9:00 p. m. Graybar Electric Program. 9:30 p. m. Temple Hour. (Musical.) 10:30 p.m. Jesse Crawford’s Melody Hr. Largest Daily Network Broadcast Farm Program The most extensive network in the history of radio for the use <tf a daily feature is employed in broadcasting the National Farm and Heme period, sponsored by the National Broadcasting company in co-operation with the United States Department of Agriculture and leading farm organizations. From Monday to Friday inclusive, thirty stations covering every crop belt east of the Rocky Mountains bring this service to racio listeners.

Delinquent Jap Youths Trained to Be Sailors A floating prison for the sole confinement of Japanese juvenile delinquents has just been opened, the inauguration ceremony being attended by Minister of Justice Hara and other high judicial officials. It is anchored off rhe coast of Tokyo, near Yokohama, and from time to time will go out on short cruises. This prison ship formerly the warship Musashi. was remodeled with a view to providing sofne practical method of curing young lawbreakers by giving their minds and bodies healthy occupations. The crew will be selected from various juvenile detention houses. Each boy taken cn the ship will be kept for six months and given the training of a regular seaman. About fifty boys are to be kept on the ship at a time. Half of them will range from fourteen to years of age and rhe rest from eighteen to twenty-three years. When they have served their terms the boys will be able to ge‘t work on merchant ships and thus earn an honest living, it is pointed out by the judicial authorities. School Observatory Is New Idea in Education The city of Oakland. Calif., maintains a unique institution as a part of its public schrol system. It is Chabot observatory, a astronomical and meteorological observatory situated on Leona heights in the suburbs of that city. It is maintained for popular instruction in the sciences relating to weather, climate, and the stars. It is also affiliated with the United States Weather bureau and with the college It has a large telescope through which visitors are permitted to view the wonders of the heavens, and it is free and open to the public day and night In addition to the school children ot Oakland, many thousands of tourists call at the observatory every year. It is. perhaps, the only institution of its kind in the United States main tained as part of the municipal pub- ! lie school system. On Three Wheel* Three-wheeled trucks are being extensively introduced in London for the delivery of freight and merchandise. They are much more mobile than the four-wheeled kind and seem to answer most purposes. A car can almost be turned in its own length and the pliability of the truck m congested parking is wonderful. The three-wheeled truck was tried here years ago, but was never able to make a hit. It looked too much like a motorcycle with a side car. But they are worth looking at anyhow.—Los Angeles Times. Tearful During a rehearsal of plays at the Writers, in Hollywood, the noted actor who was staging the play turned on one of the novice performers saying: “You must infuse more expression into your voice. Why, I remember an actor who could so read a menu and make the audience weep.” There was a moment’s awed silence and then Rupert Hughes, who had been watching the rehearsal from the sidelines, chuckled: “I’ll bet he read the prices.” Splendid Marksmanship The tine marksmanship of Francis McClure, a farmer living at Belfry, Pa., saved the life of his son David, eighteen, when the latter was about to be gored by a bull. The father, a big-game hunter, calmly planted a bullet in the brain of the enraged bull as it charged upon the exhausted youth, powerless to escape. The animal fell dead two feet from his intended victim.—lndianapolis News. Helping Shipbuilders At the Brooklyn Navy yard tests are being made with the shipping board vessel Ellersley to determine how long it takes a ship to go down with a specific amount of water aboard. The results of these tests are expected to be of the greatest value to naval architects and shipyards, for they will make it possible to design compartmenting and bulkheading of known utility. Hopeless Trial A psychic gentleman in New York is trying the experiment of broadcast ing thought waves, using ordinary radio station equipment. He may be disappointed in the results, because, much as we hate to admit it, many of the people he is sending thought waves to haven’t anything to tune tn with.—Spokane Spokesman-Review. Wedding Note Long on Way A letter congratulating him on his marriage and mailed 21 years ago has just been received by Mark Hambourg, a well-known pianist of London. It was dispatched from the Savage club of that city on March 19, 1908, and was recently readdressed to him at the same club from which it had been sent. The housewife smiles with satisfaction as she looks at the basket of clear, white clothes and thanks Russ Bleaching Blue. At all grocers.—Adv. And Lost Money Flapper.—And have you ever made a mistake that had serious consequences ? Specialist—Just once. I cured a millionaire in two consultations.— Judge. * Even a blind man is able to discover a fault

Is assured if you use COMFORT a Cuticura Preparations rLLr fn - "} Z '' n every day. For baby’s daily bath always VAX use the Soap; it is pure and refreshing. The medicated Talcum soothes and com✓y»l I forts his skin after bathing and also pre|l®HE2Sl| 111 \\ vents chafing and irritation... Little skan II n Ulf v and scalp troubles may be prevented by If rll Uit: 1- . - Soap 25c. Talcum 25c. * Z?V / ' ---■ Ointment2sc.andsoc. J fl MfNCMttLITDIIH A * Dept- 87, (\J| P ÜBITy Malden Mass.

FAMILY DOCTOR ii LEARNED THIS ABOUT ; CONSTIPATION J ' too iEIKw Dr. Caldwell loved people. His years of practice convinced him many were ruining their health by careless selection of laxatives. He determined to write a harmless prescription which would get at the cause of constipation, and correct it. Today, the prescription’he wrote in 1885 is the world’s most popular laxative! He prescribed a mixture of herbs and other pure ingredients now known as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, in thousands of cases where bad breath, coated tongue, gas, headaches, biliousness and lack of appetite or energy showed the bowels of men, women and children were sluggish. It proved successful in even the most obstinate cases; old folks liked it for it never gripes; children liked its pleasant taste. All drugstores today have Dr. CaJdweM’s Syrup Pepsin in bottles. For Barbed Wire Cuts Try HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh All dealer* are authorized to refand your money for the tint bottle if not inited. DOVT ■ss iTvgHi,# HIAJKOISEi t JB IN BACK OF CARS- INSERT M IN nostrils.... EAß OleZn Descriptive folder on request. A. O. LEONARD, Inc. 70 Fifth Ave., New York City Every Church Should Use the For only $lO we will send polished Aluminum Tray and 36 Xg£jjß&~7 , ~ I.™ R.asses, Bread Plate, and Collection Plate, postage paid. Satisfaction guar. Folder free. 60,000 churches use. Thomas Communion Service Co., Box W-N, Lim , Ohio Learn Beauty Culture

We teach you to become a real beaut’’ operator in ninety days. You do not have to pay high powered salesmen to enroll. Established 9 years. Write for terms and catalog No. 5. Betty Jean School of Beauty Culture Fort Wayne - - - - Indiana.

Are You Happy? Do ybu know how to at* tract what you desire? Don’t waste your life! Send stamped addressed envelope for information. Al-Ray. 1947 Broadway. N. Y. We Sell Inventions, patented, unpatented. Write SERVICE. Box «71. Bangor, Maine. AGENTS It w"l pay you to investigate our proposition. Something entirely new. Every home your prospect. Particulars free. J. DEEGAN St. Albans - . - - - Vermont Health Giving AH Winter Long Marvelous Climate — Good Hotels — Tourist. Camps—Splendid Roads—Gorgeous Mountains Views. The wonderful desert resort of the West P Write Cree A Cha tfey , <ilni UpringW CALIFORNIA PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM RemovesDandruff-StopsHairFalling Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 60c. and SI.OO at Druggists. Hiscox Chem. Wks. Patchogue. N. Y. FLORESTON SHAMPOO— IdeaI for use in connection with Parker’s Bair Balsam. Makes the hair soft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at .druggists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. x. The Deputy “Who is that pretty girl?” “A deputy marshal.” “I wouldn’t care if she had an. attachment for me.” Most of Us Do “What kind of music suits your taste?” “Well, I’m not particular. I like it either rare or well done.” Early Use of Cork It would appear that cork was first used for bottle stoppers about 1700. As some fast ones see it, the only employment worth while is breaking records. Men frequently organize .to be crooked, but no one needs join anything to be honest I/ChildrenGy V for 1 I CASTORIAJ i A BABY REMEDY /E A APPROVED BY DOCTORS /fc kl FOR COUC.CONSTIRRTION.DIARRHEA /fcr W. N. U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 36 -1929.