The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 April 1931 — Page 3

Tlie Plains of ABraliam

THE STORY With his English wife. Catherine, and son, Jeems, Henry Bu- , lain. French settler in Canada in 1'49, cultivates a farm adjacent to the Tonteur seigneurie. As the story opens the Buiains are re- . turning from a visit to the Tonteurs. Catherine's wandering brother. Hepsibah, meets them With presents for the family. To Jeems he gives a pistol, bidding him perfect himself in marksmanship. Hepsibah fears for the safety of the Buiains In their isolated position. Jeems fights with Paul Tache. cousin of Toiilette Tonteur. whom , they both adore. Next day Jeems calls at the Tonteur home and apologises .for brawling in front of Tbinette; The Tonteur* go to Quebec. Four years pass. War between Britain arid France flames.

CHAPTER IV—Continued —9— This recalled an important matter to his mind. Toinettt* had entrusted him with a letter for Jecius. Boiling ,<>ver with his own selfish tie had forgotten it. He hoped it was an invitation for Jeems to come to the seignetir+e. He had often told his girl she should he more friendly with the lad. Jeems took the letter and went off by himself. It was the first recognition from T<’incite since the day of the levee. He had not seen her and had tried not to think of her. Alone, he read the words, she had- written him. ' With pitiless coldness am! brevity, they called, him a renegade and a coward. • • • + • • • <>n a S««ptember morning some days later, .leetns Stood watching his unde us he disappeared Into the frost-tinted woods of Forbidden valley. It seemed to him that Hcpstbah’s suspicions am! guardianship of tfig. valley ha<| greater with the growing he" s of J reach triumphs in the south which so positively assured their safety, only yesterday Tonteur had brought the fatcst word from Dieskau. The <;ermaahad bqpn on the eve of smashing str William Johnson and Mg mob «.f Colonials ami Imliuns when his messenger had left. By this time the event had probably happened. Jeems tl’ought. ’Yet Io- undo, was going into Forbidden valley with ft look in his face which puzzled him.'’ Restlessness poss<-ss»*d' Odd after 1!< | - ,n' lad ■ gone. !“a’ss;.ng years were beginning to leave their' mark on the dog. He was growing content to watch life with Jeems Instead of ceaselessly pursuing it. He was not old. and yet he was no longer young. There remained one thing! which did not fail' to stir in him the tense ■ fierceness of h.s youth. Tills was the Indian smell. He always fold Jo. !i s w ;,> n .• ■' t fi.Tr w ildert ess. visitors was near, sometimes many j 'minutes before the tutvage appear-1 i from the woods. .And he never tired of watching Forbidden valley. In the dawn be faced It. At midday he dozed | 1 toward It. In the evening he sniffed its scents. Yet he did I*ot go-down ! Into I Jeems or Henri was With- hint I Hiring the morning, d-ld-s Aineiisl- ; ness began to reflect itself in J«*ems. Soon after noon, be left his work and toid las Mother he was going in the « r.-t .- »:> ■• ■! u <i him trough the young orchard and up • the slope. >< '. , r bad >!>■• a.•. •! more beautiful to jeems. His father was right - this i mother of. his w< ul I always be a girl, i I rom above the. orchard, standing' on j M little plateau that overlooked the Bulain farm, they called to Henri, who was in his turnip field, and waved at him. Jeems stoo l for a few mo. .ments with his arm about his mother. ■ Then he kissed lor, add Catherine I watched him until he was lost to her ’sight in tlf Big f-re-t. Jeems did not have tfie desire to hunt, nor dlfi <h!d. Unexplainable impulses were pulling at them both. Odd’s restlessness was unlike his master’s. Whenever Jeems, paused, the <!<>g tjinie! and sniffed the air of their trail, facing Forbidden valley in an attitude of suspicion and;doubt. Jeems observed bls companion s enigmatic actions. Odd was not giving the Indian signal. It was as if something without form or substance, a thing bewildering nnd-unintelligible. lay behind them. They came to Lm-san’s. nine mih-s from their home. Since I.ussan > departure. the place i . and lb those five years the wilderness irg<!y reclaimed what man had taken from it. Jeems stood where he had fought I*aul Tache. and ghostly whispers crept about him In the stillness. Then came a feeling of dre.i I. almost of fear. He turned back tb the house, and to the open, where long ago he had stood with Toinette j and all b> r lowliness so negr to. him. , The sun had set and dusk was gath- j ering <>v< r the land before he drew himself away from the gb—ts which I haunted Lussan’s place. Night could | add nothing more to his gloom. I Odd whined frequently in his eagerness to reach home. Sometimes he showed impatience at his master's slowness by running ahead. Jeems did not hurry. He unslung his bow, which was the only weapon he had brought, and carried it ready in his hand. Yet if Od|d had hinted of danger he would have paid no attention to the warning.' Danger was miles away on the other side of Dieskau and his men. It would come no nearer and he would never have a chance to meet It. In Toinette’s eyes he would always remain a renegade, and a coward. Night thickened. The stars came out. IVepening shadows lay about ■ them as they climbed the tallest of the hills, from which they could look over the ridges and woods between them and Forbidden valley. Because from this hill it was possible to see over the Big forest which sheltered their farm from the north winds, Jeems and his father called It Home mountain. Odd whined as he climbed it tonight. He went ahead of Jeems, and

-e By James Oliver Curwood © by Doubleday Doran Co., Inc. WXU Service. when he gained the crest ,his whining changed to a howl, so low that one would scarcely have heard it at the foot of the hill. Jeems came to him and stopped. For a space, there was no heating of a heart in his breast —nothing but a stillness that was like death, a shock that was like death, a horror that could confe only at the sight and the feeling of death. Rising from the far side of the forest into which Hepsibah had gone that morning was a distant glow of fire. Nearer, over the rim of Forbidden valley, the sky was a red illumination of flame. And this illumination was Wv IJ f f" Jeems Stood for a Few Moment! With His Arm About His Mother. not of a burning forest. It was not a scorch of burning stumps It was not a conflagration of dry swamp grass r»-'’-:.ng it-elf ‘ against a mooiib s* !•c- n. It was a tower of blazing light, mu-liriMtming a£ it rose, tlattening its.-ls in a sipi-'er s-arlet r.oiintu'i* umh-r the donda. dripping at its • .-• < into colors of silver and gold and blood. •His home was burning! With the cry thfit caine from his lips, there leapt madly Into his mind the word- that Hepsibah had spdken to him a last time that morning: "If ever I'mi off then* and you see a tire lighting up the sky by night, or smoke darkening it by day, hurry to the seigncurle with your father and mother ns fast as you can go. for it will mean my hand has set the heavens ng t<> y-u and that the peril ©’ ' death is near.’’ 9 ' CHAPTER V For a space Jeems could not move ' . s ■ . . ‘ ■■ - • ntc-v'ii sky. US ■ ■'m t have de:i<!vne<} tiim with .horror. ft- , , ' : e bib it, j i he World did not end because a house burned. But there were two fires—and the other, farther on, reflecting itself dimly and yet more sond>eriy. I / Z' I I Iw. d rto :i. ■' returned. , • j and in every muscle and line of t|j-‘ I .? clearly written. / 11- -_rt off at a run down bill, and as he ran bushes whipped at his face ami • -had'-.vs gathered under In- f.-et and long arms ( >f gh—m reached out front * amot g the tree-. to hold him back. He could not come up with Odd. Like, two shadowa in a playful, iught. one ■ Meij t'-ir- ,t:.g tl.e other, they ran until Jeems' breath began to break ! from his lips in gasps, and at the end j of a mile he fell back to a walk. Odd lessened his.-pace to his master's. They climbed a lower hill, and once more Jeems could see the glow of fire. In the upper vault of the sky it was fading to a ghostly pallor against the swtsj ing arc of the Milky Way.

Trace Mass Production to Wisest of Monarchs

Do joil sometimes wonder how Jt, < ever happened that clothes became : < standardized?- Why is it, for in- | stance, that when you are looking for I your wife or fiancee, or any other certain specified woman, amongst a crowd in a department store, or hotel lobby, or at the station, and you feel sute j you can recognize her anywhere by a I glimpse of her hat. you become hopeI lessly confused over the bevy of bat* I around you. every ohe of which you [ would swear was the very Identical hat jour fair lady was accustomed 1 to wear? : Here’s how it came about. Solomon. I { that intrepid husband of a thousand i women, was out * walking one fine | spring dfty with a certain favored wife of Ids. one of the cuddly, teasing, coaxing variety, with such a vivid personality that he could even remember her name. ; , Whet) they reached the business section, and were strolling past a millinery shop, the petite one went Into raptures over a Little beige felt hat on display in the window. “Ob, I must have that darling bat, Solly dear. Isn't it adorable?” And

Winter Feeding Expensive The winter feeding of big game animals is an expensive project. The federal bureau of biological survey found that it required 825 tons of hay to take care of the elk herds at the elk refuge In Wyoming from February 6 to March 26 and It costs over $25 a ton to get hay Into the refuge. Without this winter food the animals would have a hard time through the winter.

They ran on, and the spirit of hop< began to fight for a place in Jeems brain. This ray of light gave I force to the arguments with which hi now made an effort to hold back tha grimmer thing. His home was burning. But It must be an accident, nothing that should fill him with fright. The other fire—off in Forbidden valley—was no more than a coincidence. probably a conflagration j started by a careless Indian or a I white man’s pipe. “ He paused again to get his breath, and Odd stopped with him. His shaggy body was trembling with the pentup emotions of ‘suspense and passion which possessed him when he caught in the air the deadly poison to his nostrils —the Indian smell. Jeems struggled not to believe the evidence which he saw. and told himself that if by any chance there were Indians at his home they were friends helping to save what they could from the tragedy of the fire. , ’ ; Out of the silence Jeems heard a sound which rose above the pounding - of his heart. It was so far away, so indistinct, that the, stirring of tba leaves had kept it from his ears. But Jeems had heard. He had* heard the firing of guns. Over the hills and forests the sound had come to him from the direction of the Tonteur selgneurie He did not wait for the oaks' to drowse again. Odd led him in their last heartbreak-, ing race into the Big forest. Leaden weights seemed to be dragging at his feet before they ivere through it. He i had run too hard. He stopped and sagged against a tree, with Odd growling in a low and terrible way close to his knees. He was not trying to prove or disprove matters now. A catastrophe had happened to his thoughts with the firing of the guns. Taking the place of hope, even of his fears, was the one great desire to reach his father and mother as quickly as he could. His exertions had beaten him when th-y «ame to the edge of the forest f ami he could 4 ha ve run no farther without falling. Before them was the slope, a silvery carpet of the star- j light. At the foot of it was what had been his homeThat it was a red-hot mass without form‘or stability, a pile out of which flame rose lazily, its fierceness gone.\ added nothing more to his shock. He had unconsciously looked .for this. The I barn was nils* a heap of blazing embers. Everything was gone. Even this fact was not the one which began to break down his reason, which he had struggled so hard to keep. It was the stillness, the llfelessness, the lack ' of movement and sound that appalled him’ at first and then closed in about I him. a crushing, deadening force. The ■ fires lit up the bottom land. He could see the big rock at the spring. The ' paths between the gardens. The bird . ’ .hi- s' in tlie nearest oaks. The mill. But he could see nothing that had been saved from the burning house. He could not see his father or his i mother or Hepsibah Adams. Even Odd's heart seemed’to break In these moments. A sound came from 1 him that was like a sob. He was half ' crouching, no longer savage or venge- 1 fill. But-Jv'ems did n»>t See. He was trying to find some force in him that j could <ry out his mother s name. His Ups wt*re as dry as sticks, his throat to respond. The slleoce-was I terrific. In it he heard the snapping ] I of an exploding ember, like a pistol : going off. He could hear no one talk- i ■ mg. no voices calling. < I’ear, the repulsion, of flesh . and I i nerves to danger, was utterly gone from him/ He was impelled only by . i thought of his father and mother, the mystery of their silence, his desire to call oi*t to them and to hear their voices in answer. He not fit an arrow to his bow as he walked down through the starlight, his feet traveling a little, unsteadily. What was .there or was not there could not be changed by an arrow. Unexpoi tedly. he came upon his I father. Henri was on the ground near one of Catherine’s rose bushes, as If asleep. But he was dead. He lay with his face turned to the sky. Firelight played.upon him gently, now Increasing. now fading, as the embers flared or died, like fitful notes in a strain of soundless music. 1 (TO BE CONTINUED.)

| she gave his arm an affectionate squeeze. ‘You'll buy It for me, won't you. ; dearie? AU the neighbors will, envy j me. Just imagine how stunning it will look: I wa-ti nt-It." Os course they bought the hat and the little favored wife wore it home, j The next morning a downcast, pitiatde wreck of a once- i powerful man. who looked as though he had had a thousand stormy inter- ’ I views, hobbled into the millinery shop, | ■ holding in his trembling hands a tiny beige.felt hat. and thundered, “1 want | to place an order for V 99 hats exactly I like this one.” -I And so it was that mass production 1 had its beginning.—Kansas City Star. ' : —. ■ . > i From the Latin ' From “mors,” the I-atin word for 1 “death.” comes an old English word I ' “mort." meaning both “death” and ' '•dead.” “Gage” is equivalent to 1 “pledge” (as in the phra<e “gage of 1 battle”); so “mortgage" means “dead i pledge.” The idea behind It is thus explained by Str Edward Coke, attorney general to King James 1: “It see meth that the cause why it is called mortgage is, for that it is doubtful whether the Feoffor will pay at the day limited such summe or not. A if | < he doth not pay, then the Land which j Is. put tn pledge upon condition for the payment of the money, is taken from him forever and so dead to him." —Kansas City Times. Interesting Trees North Carolina has more than a dozen living trees that have witnessed , or taken part in histories* event*. >

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

GRAY WITH NAVY IS SMART COLOR SCHEME FOR PRINTS

OXE spots at a glance the prints which haveathis-seasonlook. In the first place, their color schemes are so entirely different. There’s something strikingly original in the alliance of gray with navy, with black, with green and with brown which occurs in the really new prints. This presence of i gray is made an outstanding feature throughout the print program for spring and summer. Then, too, there is a clarity and a -Simplicity of design about this sea- i

i \ jKfl! (AflVjKLii . r zl JMauggwrWT a _ One of the Striking New Prints

son’s prints which individualizes them. The motifs are made to stand out very definitely against their backgrounds—silhouetted as it were. This is due, to a great extent, to the fact that for the most part the florals and figures are widely spaced, one from another. It may also be ascribed to the-, tendency to print in solid single color or rather, to be explicit, to print the motifs in flat rnondtones. One of the striking new prints fashions the dress in the picture. It has a navy blue background with leaves in two shades of gray, and flowers in cherry color. Flying'squirrei trims the siceses of the wrap-around jacket. This costume is a symphony in gray and navy even to the hat which is of goft gray straw, its trimming of gray, pavy and cherry velvet riblam draping gracefully around the crown, over the back, eliding in a small flat bow at tlie nape of the neck. Tri color com-

b Ab Av j _

" on / I JI p-J. f Chic "Millinery for Spring. binations such as achieved with the velvet as described are outstanding aumiig Note the handsoiac necklace which adds a fine finesse to this handsome costume. It is an exponent of the new crusader costume jewelry, which being in Swedish silver accents the graynote in a most flattering manner. As to Millinery. Brim or no-brim —to which the answer is that every correctly equipped

Hints of the Mode for Women Who Care

Narrow belts of ribbon mark the. waistline on summer cottons. The plain capeskin glove, simply stitched, is always in good, taste. Loose bows of fancy ribbon 5 are used as a background of corsages. Bright colored ribbon bows are liked as trimming on organdie frocks. Girlish charm and freshness—pink, mauve, white or crushed strawberry organdie or dotted Swiss evening gowns.

wardrobe of hats will include as many of one as the other this season. Smart millinery goes from one extreme to another In this matter of brimmed and brim less, a fact which-the group pictured confirms. Sans brim means according to the modern interpretation of jbgKterm, especially from the standpoint of the smart Parisienne. as tiny a chapeau as fancy might picture. It must be worn just right, too—set way back on the head at a jaunty angle, showing lots of hair. You get the idea

. very well from the little satin toqua shown below to the right in the picture. i The charming little green knitted ■ straw toque at the top of the group > is also an original model from the French capital. To the other extreme goes the hat with a brim, for when milady's hat i is this season it is apt to be very, very brimful, and likely to grow more so with the advent of summer. The two broad-brimmed models i Shown here foretell the trend of brims i to picturesque effects and to wide- > wider, widest dimensions. The girlish straw body centered to the left has the'typical shallbw crown ' which lifts the graceful broad brim , from the forehead, revealing a charmingly arranged coiffure. This rough • ligot weight straw is‘in pale green! and it is handed with a ribbon to match. Big lacy black straw hats are noted

In the best shops even at the present moment, although their vogue will not be in full swing until later on. As will be seen by the model illustrated at the top to the right, they ave extremely sheer ami lovely. As a matter or fact, modish brims are no respecter of widths. There is this about them, whatever a brim may happen to~ lack in width. It makes up in : . • ij and _-■: soils inampulation. A point which the majority of the new cunningly devised brims have in common, is that they are made to lift from the face, their bandeaux f<>r the bandeau hat is outstanding, giving them a lilt and a tilt which is especially true of the piquant Watteau type*, the demand for which is widespread. The hat in the oval is of this genre' and is easily one of. the most popular types selling this spring. CHERIE NICHOLAS. <E. I»ll. Western Newspaper Union.)

Soft femininity — floral chiffons with draperies and lace trimmings, formalized pajamas with flattering lines. Sportive spirit—flying scarfs of plaid, double breasted coats of navy with wide flaring revers, youthful suits with peplum. Quiet efficiency—black or navy blue canton or heavy crepe with white pique collar and cuffs, monotone or flecked woolens discreetly pleated.

Improved Uniform International Sunday School. 1 Lesson' (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D., Member of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) g <©■ 1!!1, Western Newspaper Union.)

Lesson for April 12 ' THE PRODIGAL SON LESSON TEXT—Luke 15:11-24. GOLDEN TEXT—Likewise, I say ante you, here is joy in the presence of the tcegels of God over one sinner that ' repenteth. PRIMARY TOPIC—What to Do When We Do Wrong. JUNIOR TOPIC—What ro Do When We Do Wrong. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—The Father's Welcome to the Wandering Son. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—The Church and the Repentant Sinner. The center of interest in this parable Is not the prodigal nor his brother, but the "certain man who had two : sons.” He who fails to see the heart ■ of our Father God will miss the purpose of . the story. I. The Son’s Estrangement From the Father »(v. 12). There is every indication that this 1 was a happy home, but a demon en- ] tered it and stirred up discontent in the heart of the younger son. He became tired of the restraints of home. His desire for freedom moved him willfully to choose to leave home—to throw off the restraints of a father’s rule. Sin is essentially the desire to be free from the restraints of rightful authority and for selfish indulgi ence. At the request of the son "the ! fhther divided unto him his living.” Man is a free being. This freedom Iwas given unto him by his Creator. God committed unto man his own ! destiny. 11. The Son’s Departure (v. 13). 1 Having made the fatal decision, tie went posthaste to. the enjoyment of his cherished vision. He quickly got ' his goods in portable shape. Having thrown off the restraints Os his father's rule, he eagerly withdrew from his father’s presence. -This is always the 4'ay sin works. Adam and Eve after they had sinned hid themselves. The son could not now stand the presence of his father so he hastened away, having "gathered all together.” 111. The Son’s Degeneration (vv. 13. 14). He had a good time while his money lasted, but the end came quickly. The indications are that his course was soon run. From plenty in his-father's house to destitution in the far conn- ; try vias a short journey The sinner is ’ soon made to realize the famine when ' such pow ers as ministered to his pleftsi ure are burned out. IV. The Son’s Degradation (vv. 15, 16). J Having no friends to, help httn when his money vv;is all gone, he was driven I to hire out tb/a citizen to feed swine. > It was a tragic change from being a | son in his father's house to feeding swine in the far country. It is ever i so. Those Who will not serve God are i made to the Devil’ to do his bidding (Romans 6:16). How vividly this portrays the history of many men and women about us. and yet it is the ( picture of the inevitable consequences of sin. a . V. The Son’s Testoratidn (vv. 17-24E . 1.. "He came to himself" (v. 17). • Upon reflection he was itiade conscious that though he had wronged | his father and ruined himself, he was still a son of his father. In the days of his sinning he was beside himself. The sinner continues In his -sin because he is insane. The world calls the sinner who leaves oft his evil ways crazy, but in reality he has just become sane. ' 2. His resolution (v. 18). His reflection ripened into resolution. The picture of his home, where even the hired servants had a superabundance, moved Ijiitn to make a decision to leave the faricountry and go home. 3. His confession (vv. 18. 19). He acknowledged that his sin was against heaven nd his father, that he had forfeited his right,to be called a son. and begged to be given a plac • ] as a hired servant. The sinner m>t' ■ only should make a resolution —he I should confess his sin. 4. His action (v. 20). Action was needed. Resolution will ■ not avail unless accompanied with action. When the *onfession is ' action will follow. Good intentions will not avail. 5. His reception by his father (vv. I 20-24 ). i The father had not forgotten hisj son. His unchangin o love followed.the son ail the time he was away, and longed for his return. He must often j have looked for him, for he saw him ( when he was! a great way off. So anx- ! ious was he for him that he run to meet him and fell upon his neck and kissed him. So glad was the father that he did not even hear his confession through, but ordered the tokens i of honor to be placed upon him. receiving him back into a son's position. Nearer Home i ’ If we learn to take each day fresh ! from his hand we shall live under his eye. desiring above all things to secure ; his approval, and subordinating every ] Interest to the securing of his honor. And each evening shall find us “a day’s march nearer home.’’ —J. Stuart Hol- | den. - j Our Truest friend As It Is with a true friend on earth, so it is with our truest friend in heaven. When we go to him and open our hearts to him in quiet communion; how wonderfully do we discover that we have really cast our cares on him! -Georgy H. Morrison. * When the Soul Is Touched When the Spirit of God touches a soul, like an unlit candle, it begins to glow; .and from It the blessed spark may pass from heart to heart, and church to church, till an entire continent may blaze itb heavenly fire —F. B. Meyer.

Head ache When you feel a headache comingon, it’s time to take Bayer Aspirin. Twa tablets will head it off, and you can finish your shopping in comfort. Limbs that acne from sheer weariness. Joints sore from the beginnings of a cold. Systemic pain. The remedy is rest. But immediate relief is yours for the taking; a pocket tin of Bayer Aspirin is protection from pain wherever you go. Get real aspirin. Look for Bayer on the box. Read the proven directions found inside every genuine Bayer package. They cover headaches, colds, sore throat, toothache, neuralgia, neuritis, sciatica, lumbago, rheumatism, muscular pains, etc. These tablets do not depress the heart. They do nothing but stop the pain. Every druggist has Bayer Aspirin in the pocket size, and in bottles. To save money, buy the genuine tablets by the hundred. Don't experiment with imitations..

■ ■* — — ft —* Dunning Methods Condemned Letters issued by collection agencies which are misleading because of their likeness to a court summons have won the disapproval of the Wisconsin Bar association. The commission decided to start a campaign against use of tlfese letters and has warned that prosecutions may follow .if the abuse is continued. '■ --

FOR" COLDS—ALKALINIZE YOURSYSTEM Doctors everywhere are prescribing this new treatment for colds: ' Begin when you feel a cold coming. Take a tablespoonful of Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia, morning, noon and night, the first day. Do the same second day. Then only at night. Colds reduce the alkalinity of your system. That's what makes you feel achy, feverish, weak, half-sick. Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia is alkali in harmless, palatable form. It checks the symptoms of colds Vx restoring the alkalinity of your system. Relieves sour stomach, indigestion,

gas, over-acidity. All drugstores. Such Language! Two girls.* pupils in an Indianapolis high school, were walking home —which happens occasionally. “Say, dearie,” said 1 one. “what’s the difference between! auction and contract bridge?" “I'm not sure,’’ was the reply, “but the new game makes father swear more!” —liidianapolis News.

. Without Poison 4 JVew Exterminator that Won’t Kill Livestock, Poultry, Dogs, Cats, or even Baby Chicks K-R-Ocan be used about the home.barn or poultry yard with absolute safety as it'contains no deadly poison. K-R-O is made ofSquill, aS recornmen ded. by U.S. Dept, of Agriculture, oven-dried under the Connable process which insures maximum strength. Used by Count y Agents in most rat-killing campaigns. Money-Back Guarantee. Insist upon K-R-O. the original Squill exterminator. All druggists.7Sc.tlgs.s2XM). Direct ifdealer cannot supply you. K-R-O Co., Springfield,Ohio K"R s O 'KILLS-RATS-ONIY

Big Irrigating Project The Coolidge, dam is located across the Gila river, about nine miles south of San Carlos, Ariz. It will store water for the’ irrigation of 100.000 acres of land —50.000 acres in the Gila river Indian reservation and 50,000 acres in Ping! county, Arizona. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are the original little liver pills put up 60 years ago. They regulate liver and bowels. —Adv. At Least A New York society finds that the average girl who leaves home is eighteen. No ’statistics are available. but just offhand we would say that the average girl who stays at home is ninety.—Life.

Stomach Troubles Headache and Dizziness If your stomach is sick, you are sick all over. If you can’t digest your food, you lose strength, get nervous and feel as tired when you get up as when you went to bed. For 10 years Tanlac has restored to health and activity many thousands who suffered just as you do. < Mr. Daniel Vmciguerra, of 6200 Stiles St., Philadelphia, Pa., says: “I have not had a dizzy spell or a headache since taking Tanlac. My neryes are in better shape and I can enjoy a good night’s sleep.” Let Tanlac help you too. It corrects the most obstinate digestive - troubles —relieves gas, pains in the stomach and bowels, restores appetite, vigor and sound sleep. Tanlac is made of roots, barks and herbs. Co&3 less than 2 cents a doee. Get a bottle fropi your druggist today. Your money back if it doesn’t help you.