The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 12, Number 47, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 March 1920 — Page 2

mbKIIHf - iWMsWfflr, ~., , sS&'i > SHKaWfe* ” 11 i —ateuiusnip Moccasin, former German liner, mysteriously sunk at her pier in Brooklyn. 2 —New Cana- £• dian federal parliament building- recently opened by the duke of Devonshire. 3—ltalian reservists returned to |W America after fighting through the war.

NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENTEVENTS Conditions in Turkey Compel the . Allies to Make Strong Showing of Force. RUSSIA AGAIN SEEKS PEACE Renews Offers to Warsaw After a Severe Defeat by Poles—Supreme Council on Economic Restoration —Another Final Struggle in ..Senate Over the T reaty. " By EDWARD W. PICKARD. Conditions in Turkey have been going from bad to worse until the supreme council of the allies has been driven not only to adopt drastic measures but even, th plan'.for the temporary taking ■ over of certain of the Turkish government activities, Including wtiV 'department. If the Turks behave themselves, better and cease the massacring of Armenians this control will be only temporary. Urged especially by Premier Venlzelos.of Greece, the council is. said to have ordered the occupation of Important points in Asiatic and European ’ Turkey by allied military and naval forces in the belief .that strong showing of military force would bring the Turks around to their senses. If this is not sufficient. it may be necessary to start operations against Mustapha Kernel Pasha, the Turkish commander in Asiatic ' Turkey, and it is believed thelse would be carried out by the Greek army of {IO,OOO men now in the Smyrna region. Since the’ recent massacre in Marash similar outrages have occurred In a number of other places and it is reported that Turks, Kurds and Arabs are besieging Alritab, Ursa, Dlabvkr, Mardin a fid other towns. In all these places there "are American relief workers who are in danger, and many days ngo Consul J. B. Jackson at Aleppo asked our state department, to send a squadron of warships to Port Alexandretta. The French garrisons, however, are the chief objects of attack and considerable French reinforcements have been sent to Cilicia; The.. trouble in- Turkey, which is said to be directed from Berlin and supported by the bolshevik!, is a part of the--general fight being put up in Egypt, Mesopotamia, and other countries by so-called nationalists who are attacking the’British rule. Dispatches from* Turkey assert that Prince Felsal of the Hedjaz kingdom is implicated in it and has suggested a possible union- of Trifkey’, Syria and the Hedjaz. The situation is becoming almost as complicated. ...and difficult tjo understand as that in Russia some months “ What was heralded as a great drive against Poland by the Russian bolshevik! was turned into a decisive defeat of the latter when the Poles took two important railway junctions and a large number of prisoners, including an entire division staff. Immediately thereafter Tchitcherin, foreign minister, sent another peace note to Warsaw, asking when and where the peace delegates bf all the border nations plight meet with the representatives of the bolshevik!. He asked Poland to refrain from further hostilities and; explained that-the soviet operations, on the Lithuanian and White Ruthenian fronts, which the Poles had broken 1 up/were inspired by fear that the- Poles intended to start a drive 'against the Ukraine. President Pilsudski’s position in Poland was greatly strengthened by the victory of his troops -and' the attitude or the Moscow government. | The Roumanians and the bolshevik! are in a fairway to make peace, nb gotiatkjfis now being under way ai Dorna-Watra in Bukowina. As a preliminary the Roumanians demand that the soviet troops be withdrawn from the frontier and that commercial relations be resumed. It now appears likely that Roum&nia will succeed in her

OLD-TIME POMP RETAINED Spanish Court Clings to All the Formalities. Which Were Observed Before the War. Madrid.—The royal house of Spain, despite the democratic nature of the king and people, alone among the remaining courts of Europe, retains all the old-world formalities which up to the outbreak of the war were so rigorously observed in Vienna. St. Petersburg, Berlin and, to an extent, in

great purpose of annexing, or recovering, Bessarabia. The supreme council of the allies, taking note of the distressing state of the world in general, has Issued a memorandum on economic conditions that is welcomed by all serious mind-, ed persons. For the preservation of civilization it urges, as might be expected, the early arid complete restoration of peace conditions, with normal economic relations, reduction of armies to a peace footing and limitation of armaments; the encouragement of larger and better output by workers everywhere; the suppression of extravagance, and deflation of credit and currency; and assistance for countries that are now unproductive for lack of raw materials. Without any suggestion of mitigating the treaty terms it is stated that Germany and especially Austria must be enabled to obtain foodstuffs and raw materials in order that they Vnay recover enough to pay the Indemnity demanded of them, and it Is declared that the total of the reparation must be fixed at the earliest possible time. There is even a suggestion that Germany should be allowed to raise an international loan to meet her immediate needs. In this proposed line of conduct toward the vanquished nations the supreme council is facing the facts with business calculation, not with sentimental feelings. If there had been any tendency toward treating Germany with more tenderness it probably would have been dispelled by the many attacks made last week by Germans on army officers and others of the allies in the country on official business. outrages took place in Berlin and several other cities and were deliberate and seemingly planned. The. Berlin government deplores them and promises to punish the offenders, among whom is Prince Joachim Albrecht, cousin of the former kaiser. Minister of Defense Noske has been telling correspondents how scrupulously Germany has been carrying out the terms of the treaty by reducing her military and naval strength, but there are other tilings the government has not done yet. Among these is the application of the promised penalties for the outrages suffered by officers of the "interallied commission of the Baltic states during the German evacuation of that region. The conference of allied ambassadors has sent to Berlin a firmly worded note demanding that this pledge be carried out at once. At frequent intervals the opposing forces in the senate have entered on what is described by the Washington correspondents as the decisive struggle over the peace treaty of Versailles. At this writing" they are engaged in another of those combats, and the prospect is that this time it really will be decisive. Early in the week President Wilson, rather than to confer with a representative of the compromisers, wrote a long letter to Senator Hitchcock in which he reasserted his old position regarding the treaty, condemned the reservations as a nullification of the League of Nations covenant and pleaded for consideration of the needs of humanity instead of “special national interests.” He demanded that article 10 be accepted unchanged and asserted that to refuse to accept the moral obligation required by it would be a breach of good faith. If the United States cannot enter the league with full responsibility, he said it should retire gracefully from tl great concert of powers. Article 1' said the ‘president, represents the re nunciatlon by the other great powers of their old imperialistic ideas and aims, and its doctrine is the essence of Americanism. He continued: “Militaristic ambitions and imperialistic policies are by no means dead, even in the councils of the nations whom we most trust' and with whom we most desire to be associated in the tasks of peace.” And then he added the surprising statement that the militaristic party of France which was prevented from getting the upper hand during the peace conference is in control there now. In evident allusion to Vincent Grey’s letter, he says he is “not willing to trust to the counsel of diplomats the working out of any salvation of the world front things which it has suffered.”

London, Rome and some of the smaller capitals of Europe. King Alfonso, after receiving in the throne room at the palace in the morning, jnay rub shoulders with jockeys, bookmakers and the general run of race goers at the track in the afternoon, but when he returns to the palace in the evening he resumes, as it were, the crown. It is generally reported in the capital that to him the afternoon, free from conventionalities. Is the happiest part of the day. The strict formality of the court w«s

THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

Quite naturally, Mr. Wtilson’s references to French policies annoyed the French government and enraged the French people. It was reported that Ambassador Jusserand had been instructed to ask our state; department for a more explicit explanation of the meaning. That the president’s letter sounded the knell of the treaty was the general opinion, for while there were some further feeble efforts at compromise, the senators prepared themselves for a final fight in Which it was believed enough Democrats would be rallied to_the support of the president to prevent ratification with reservations, provided the “irreconcilable” Republicans voted with them. The insurgent Democrats, most of whom are up for re-election this year, are inclined to think Bryan was right when he said the party could not afford to go before the country on the issue of article 10, yet that is the prospect that confronts the ; Democrats. And if that is made the issue, it is predicted that Mr. Wilson (will be compelled to reconsider his reported decision not to seek a third term. Os the administration Democrats who are after the nomination Attorney General Palmer Is the only one who is trying to capture instructed delegations, and of course if his chief determined to run again, Mr. Palmer would have to stand aside. The others, like McAdoo, have been contenting themselves with keeping their names before the public and advising the sending of uninstructed delegates to San Francisco. Manj? of the Republicans welcomed the chance to make article 10 the issue of the campaign, the irreconcilables especially being pleased. The situation served to boost the stock of Senator Hiram Johnson considerably. Two of his colleagues, Kenyon of lowa and Norris of Nebraska, promptly announced that they would support his candidacy. “The president has made the issue,” said Kenyon. “It is article 10. Let the fight come. Let the Democrats nominate Woodrow Wilson under the white flag of Internationalism and the Republicans nominate Hiram Johnsop under the Stars and Stripes of Americanism." So far, however, the main contestants for the Republican nomination remain as before. General Wood and Governor Lowden. Both have made considerable progress and also their managers have succeeded in stfrring up a good deal of bitterness in some states, notably Illinois, where the Lowden men thought the Wood forces were trying to trespass on their preserves. When Frank Hitchcock became actively engaged in the Wood campaign it was believed this would assure for the general the support of all the southern states, where Hitchcock built up a smooth-working machine when he was postmaster general. But this idea received a jolt last, week when the North Carolina state convention indorsed the candidacy of Judge Peter C. Pritchard. Herbert Hoover has done something to make clear his political affiliations. In a letter to a California admirer he says it is well known that he was a progressive Republican before the war, and that he is now an independent progressive. The president’s commission for settlement of the coal mine labor troubles was unable last week to formulate a unanimous report as Mr. Wilson requested, but one was forwarded to the White House, signed by Peale, representing the owners, and Robinson,, representing the public. White, representing the miners, refused to concur. This disagreement was over the question of hours, Mr. White holding out for a seven-hour day while the others insisted on an eight-hour day. The majority report was that the bituminous miners should be given a 25 per cent Increase in wages, this including the 14 per cent increase granted them when the strike was called off last fall. The Supreme court of the United States dealt the national treasury rather a severe blow last week when it decided, that stock dividends of corporations are not taxable as Income. The government will be compelled to return a huge sum—maybe as much as $100,000.000 —already collected. Many corporations that have been accumulating big- surpluses have been awaiting the decision to “cut melons."

observed at the banquet and reception given to the diplomatic corps a short time ago when for the first time since 1914 the representatives of all countries had been invited to the same function. Queen Victoria, in a dress of cloth of gold, a wonderful diamond tiara on her fair head, two great diamond necklaces reaching to her waist, was a stately and dazzling figure. The queen mother was equally resplendent in pearls, of which she wore a collar of six rows, a tiara, two necklaces and* many clustara.

■K. I J | ( Happenings of the World Tersely Told Washington The bodies of about 50,000 of the American dead in France will be returned to the United States, while be-1 i tween 20,000 and 25,000 will remain ; permanently interred overseas, Secre- . > tary Baker informed Chairman Wads- j; worth of the senate military commit-1 tee at Washington. The house at Washington approved ; the section of the army reorganlza- ; tion bill which gives relative military rank to army nurses. A bond issue of $2,500,000,000 to pay adjusted compensation to former service men “might result in disaster," Secretary Houston told the house ways and means committee, which is considering soldier relief legislation at Washington. A representing the South 1 western Millers’ league called on Chairman Payne at Washington to protest against the preferential now existing in export rates on grain. * • * An investigation of the United States Grain corporation was ordered by the senate at Washington. » « « The department of justice at Washington will proceed against all corporations alleged to be trusts, regardless of the recent decision by the Supreme court in the steel corporation case. • - * * A 25 per cent wage increase for bituminous coal miners is recommended in a majority report of the commission appointed by President Wilson at Washington to settle the coal strike. ♦ ♦ ♦ An authorized peace-time army of 289,000 enlisted men and 17,820 officers was approved by the house at Washington, which by a vote of 79 to 25 refused to amend the army reorganization bill so as to fix the maximum strength at 226,000 men and 14,200 offi-; cers. The loss to the government as a result of the supreme court’s decision declaring stock dividends not taxable as income will be nearly half a billion dollars, according to an estimate by Commissioner of Internal Revenue Roper at Washington. The allied governments will receive no further loans from the American government. Secretary Houston announced at Washington. Loans made to the allies to date total $9,659,834,649.94 of the $10,000,600,000 authorized by congress. • * * Rupert Blue, former surgeon general of the public health service, and Joseph H. White, senior surgeon at Washington, were nominated to be assistant surgeons general at large In the public health service. • • • Domestic Damage estimated at $1,000,000 was done in Pittsburgh. Pa., ainl vicinity by a seventy-two-mile wind that swept over the district. Thirty derricks in the gas field were wrecked. Many persons were injured. Safe blowers opened two safes on the seventh and eighth floors of the Weightman building at Philadelphia and secured $410,000 worth of bonds. * * * The Ward line steamship Esperanza, which went aground off the coast of Yucatan, Mex., has been floated and arrived safely at Progresso, Mex., according to a message received by the line at New York. ♦ ♦ ♦ The American steamship Balabac. ownM by the United States shipping board, was destroyed by fire at Port Said, Trinidad. The cargo had been discharged and it was awaiting orders. ♦ * » .' Wilbur Smith, a negro, and a former soldier, was shot to death by six men near Legrand, Ala., after his arrest on a charge of attacking a fclx-year-old white girl. ♦ ♦ * A boxing exhibition staged by Columbia university students at New York resulted In the death, of Milton Stemfield of Albany, a former United States army lieutenant and 1 post-graduate student. * * * The American Legion at New York has received a gift of $500,000 from the Y. M. C. A., which has recommended that the income from the fund be used for the benefit of men disabled in the service. ♦ * ♦ Mrs. Stanley Blomski was Sentenced at Rhinelander, Wis., to serve 20 years at the state prison at Waupun for the murder of her six-year-old son, Albin. Her husband, tried on the same charge, was acquitted. ♦ ♦ * Six persons were killed when a “jitney bus” in which they were riding was struck by a passenger train at a crossing at Bremen, Ind. . Eleven persons were killed and many Injured in a storm at Melva, Taney county, Missouri. Glenn Shockey, cashier of the South Side bank, located at Thirty-ninth and Main streets, Kansas City l , Mo., was killed during an attempt by four banjits to hold up the bank. • * * Federal agents at Waterbury, Conn., seized tons of literature and locked up 204 persons In radical raids in that city. Fire partially destroyed the plant of the National Brass and Copper company at Lisbon, O. The fire caused a octiTTinlftd nt SIOO,OOO.

Thomas T. Brewster of St. Louis chairman of the coal operators’ scale committee in the central competitive field, asserted the price of coal would be raised if’ the 25 per cent wage increase be granted, as recommended by the commission appointed by President Wilson to settle the coal miners’ strike. • • • • Indictments charging conspiracy were returned at Indianapolis by » federal grand jury against 125 operators and miners. The indictments are drawn under sections 4 and 9 of the Lever act and section 37 of the criminal code. •' • ■* Diamonds valued at $40,000 are to be sold at New York and the proceeds given for Armenian relief, by Mrs. Andrew D. White, widow of the former president of Cornell university. • » » Three persons were killed and 15 injured when a switch engine dashed into an interurban electric car near Kansas City, Mo. • • • Ripe olives and olive preparations In glass containers are barred from Montana and their sale prohibited by order of the state board of health at Helena. • * • John Bloom and Andy Thompson died at a lumber camp near Marquette, Mich., after drinking “moonshine” whisky. • • • Mrs. Helen C. Statler, granddaughter, of the late Governor Woodbridge, announced at Kalamazoo that she would be a candidate for the Republican nomination for congress In the Third Michigan district. • * • The senate at Charleston, W. Va., ratified the federal suffrage amendment, 15 to 14, ending a warmly contested fight. The house of delegates ratified the amendment a Week Ago, 47 to 40. . • • • Personal General Pershing will leave Washington about March 25 for the Panama canal zone to inspect the inilltary defenses there. • • « Julius Kayser, eighty-three years old, manufacturer of gloves, underwear and hosiery, died suddenly at his home at New York. He was born and educated in New York. A widow arid two daughters survive. * • ♦ President Edmund Janes James, head of the University of Illinois for 15 years, tendered his resignation to the board of trustees at Urbana. • • • Foreign In a note dispatched to London from Berlin, Germany tells the allied supreme council she cannot Consider the allies’ reservation giving them the right to alter sentences which may be imposed upon German “war guilty.” The note states the German supreme court at Leipzig, which is now preparing to try the accused, will be aided by German law, not by “foreign demands.” Fully a hundred thousand Mexican laborers are prepared to emigrate into the United States through the, four principal border towns within the next 60 days, according to reports printed in the leading newspapers of Mexico City. * ♦ * Bolshevik troops have cleared the hostile forces from the entire peninsula of Yeisk, in Circaucasia on the Sea of Asov, it is announced in a soviet official commuiiique received from Moscow. * * * Thirty thousand nonbolshevik Russians, after cutting their way through the bolshevik forces in Siberia and marching 2,000 miles, have arrived at Verkhne-Udinsk, according to a dispatch received at London. * * * In accordance with its threat to shut down its plants in territories where labor continued hostile, the United States Steel corporation announced at Pittsburgh, Pa., that the Wheeling plant will be scrapped first and the Ohio plants will follow. * ♦ * > The special trade union congress, in session at London, voted overwhelmingly against the strike policy and in favor of continued efforts by constitutional means, to effect the nationalization of mines. v * * * The French revenues from taxes during February amounted to 794,000.000 francs, an Increase of 215,000,000 over the budget estimates, and 340,000,000 over February, 1919, says a Paris dispatch. • « « Several hundred persons are dead and thousands are homeless as a result of an earthquake which destroyed Makhlt, Grakall and other villages within a radius of 60 miles west of Tiflis, Transcaucasia. * * * A wireless dispatch from Moscow announces that the Russian soviet and Ukrainian governments have informed the allies that they are ready to negotiate peace with Poland immediately. « * * Dr. Karl Helfferlch, former minister of the treasury, was at Berlin found guilty of libeling Mathias Erzberger, former vice chancellor. * * * Bela Kun, the former Hungarian. communist dictator, has been removed from Steinhof asylum at Vienna and interned with his associates. * • « Two American Methodist mission schools In Corea have been ordered closed by the governor general, according 40 dispatches received by the Tokyo newspapers. A Madrid dispatch says snowstorms continue throughout Spain, and there Is much suffering because of the lack of fuel. • * • Minister of Transport Farrari at Rome announced that the would assist all persons desiring to go to Russia on business.

—i —TT TAKE TIME I TO 1 The Superior Air. “Is your boy Josh settling down to work ?”• “Not so’s you cah notice it,” replied Farmer Corntossel. “I'm willin’ to bet that after the prodigal son got settled back in the old home he soon had the old folks kindo’ worried an’ shamefaced because they didn’t smoke his brand o’ cigarettes an’ couldn’t name the really pl’cher stars.” A Sincere Compliment. His Wife—What did little Mr. Peck say when you showed him that portrait of his- wife? Psmear, the Portrait Artist —Not a word. The boob just looked at it in silence. His Wiffe—Good! It was so lifelike he didn’t dare to speak in its presence without permission. Quite Fetching. “That Mrs. Giddersleigh is a stunning looking matrofu" “So she is, and I Jieard a cynical bachelor pay her a fine compliment the tfther day.” “What was it?” “He said she was so good looking it was still safe for her to heave a little sigh and exclaim. 'Dear me! I'm getting old and ugly!’ ” His Opinion Not Fixed. Lawyer (examining prospective juror in criminal case)—Mr. Juror, have you any fixed opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the accused? Juror (empfiatiesilly)—Naw, I ain’t got no doubt but the guy's guilty, but they ain’t nobody fixed me. No Longer an Instructor. “You haven’t suggested ‘a campaign of education’ recently:” “No,” replied Senator Sorghum. “I don’t dare. The folks out my" way are getting to think they know more about politics than I do.” It DESCRIBED. “Pa, what is thrift.” “Thrift, my boy, is what a man has to practice so that his wife may be extravagant.” Progression. The bolshevist in accents glad Each discontent will nurse, Remarking, “Things are going bad; Let’s try to make ’em worse!” Frank About It. “So you are engaged?” "Yes.” “How romantic. Is he your ideal?” “No,” said the girl, candidly, “merely the best offer I could get.”—Come Back. Preliminary Training. “Where are you going, Geraldine?” “To court to hear a breach of promise case tried. It’s the fourteenth I’ve attended so far.” “I'm surprised at you.” “Well, I never expect to have a breach of promise suit e>f my own, but if I ever do I’m going to show just as ' .much quiet self-possession in the courtroom as the judge himself.” Running True to Form. Debs—He’s got a wonderful collection of old curios. It’s worth while to see them. Gebs—Yes, I know it is. I met his wife at the dance the other night and I think she must be about the oldest curio he has. < i . - Hypercritical. “Do you care for these movie.‘closeups?’” “No,” replied the esthetic person. “They] give you a fine chance to study the expression on the star’s face?’ “Maybe so, but I can’t admire even the most beautiful woman when her face looks like a full moon.”. At a Disadvantage. “I fear that lady candidate is going to beat me.” “Why so?” “She’s giving reliable beauty hints to wimmen voters. What chance have I got with my piffling talk on hog raising and wheat?” Sensitive. “Poor thing! She’s so afraid somebody’s making fun of her.” “I know it. Why, she’s so sensitive that when she goes to the zoo she always avoids the Laughing hyena.” The New Order. “Were you there when the rich factory owner was trying to get enough hands to run his works? > < “Yes, and it was a painful sight to see that. lioor, down-trodden millionaire obliged to submit to the insulting sneers and harsh domination of the haughty workingman.” Looked For. “There is a fortune awaiting the man who can invent—” "Invent what?” "A noiseless flivver.”

1.-./ ’ A WELL-KNOWN INSTITUTION. Probably no institution in America is more widely known than 'Doctor Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y. Although established many years ago it is today a modern sanitarium, having all the latest facilities for the correct diagnosis of diseases and their successful treatment through medicine or surgery. It was Dr. Pierce, its founder, who over 50 years ago gave to the world that wonderful stomach tonic and blood purifier, “Golden Medical Discovery,” arid that famous nonalcoholic medicine for women, “Favorite Prescription.” In his early professional career. Dr. Pierce realized that every family, but especially those who live remote from a physician, should have at hand an instructive book that would teach them something about First Aid, Physiology, Anatomy, Hygiene; how to recognize different diseases, how to care for the sick, what to do in case of accident or sudflen sickness, etc., so he published that great book, the “Medical. Adviser,” an up-to-date edition bf which can be procured by sending 50 cents to Doctor Pierce’s Invalids’’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y. Later, Dr. Pierce added another link to his chain of good works by establishing a bureau of correspondence to which any one can write for medical advice, without any Expense whatever, and if necessary, medicines especially prepared in Doctor Pierce’s Laboratorywill be sent by parcel post or expressfor use at home, at a reasonable cost. Thus those who have symptoms of disease need not suffer mental agony fearing that they have some serious ail- I ment. but can have a diagnosis made I free by ‘a physician of high proses- ( sional standing. Write to Dr. Pierce / relating “your symptoms if you •need f medical advice for any chronic disease.. .. All letters regarded as confidential.

/fipACTS Off \ OttUi STOMACH, 'iSBnX aoweL i That’s Right, Say “I Want CELERY KING” Take a cup to regulate your bowels, co purify your blood and make you strong so you can withstand art attack of grippe if it happens to ('nine ilong this winter. It’s one great vegetable laxative and it won’t cost you jut a few cents to find it out. Children. like it. UNCLE SAM a SCRAP chew in PLUG form MOIST & FRESH Ladies Let Cuticura Keep Your Skin Fresh and Young Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c. SQUEEZED TO DEATH When the body begins to stiffen and movement becomes painful it is usually an indication that the kidneys are out of order. Keep these organs healthy by taking COLD MEDAL V s i#m<is*t The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles. Famous since 1696. Take regularly and keep in good health. In three sizes. AU druggists. Guaranteed as represented. Look for the name Gold Medal on every boa and accept no imitation Children Who Are Sickly | When your child cries at night, tosses restlessly in its sleep, is constipated, feverish or has symptoms of worms, you feel worried. Mothers who value their own comfort and the welfare of their children, should never be without a box of Mother Cray’s Sweet PdwdersforChildren i for use throughout the season. They tend to Break up Colds, relieve Feverishness. Constipation, Teeth- fiBT yjffi ing Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and yLa f destroy Worms. These jy- Lt, powders are pleasant to take and easy for parents to give. They cleanse the stomach, act on the Ltver Trade Mark, and give healthful sleep Don't accept by regulating the child's any substitute, system. . ' Used by mothers for over 30 years Sold by all druggists. Sample mailed FREE. Address. Mother Gray Co., Le Roy. N. Y. Be sure you ask for and obtain Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children. 2—LJLL2—II—X N. N. U„ FORT WAYNE, NO. 12-1920.