The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 13, Number 29, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 November 1920 — Page 2

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NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENTEVENTS Japan Working for an Amicable Adjustment of the Dispute With United States. OKUMA VOICES DISCONTENT Armistice-Day Celebration in the Allied Countries —Eminent Men at Geneva for First Meeting of ) \ League of Nations Assembly—Developments in , Near East. By EDWARD W. PICKARD. • Takashi. Hara, premier of Japhn; Baron Shidehara, Japanese ambassador to the United States,, and Boland Morris, American ambassador to Japan, all are hopeful, even confident, that a better understanding! between the two nations will soon be brought about and that international relations are in no grave danger of being overstrained. Marquis Okuma, former premier, is by no mean§ so optimistic since the Californians indorsed their anti-alien land law. In an address before a general meeting of the Japanese Immigration association last week in Tokyo, Okuma said: "It is strange how cool the Japanese are towards a problem deciding the fate of their brothers in America," Thle antt-Japanese' movement in the United States, he asserted, endangers only between Nippon and AmericaJ.bnt also between Japan and other "Germany,” he said, “was reduced from leadership among nations because she ignored the principles of I justice 'anti* humanity, and- now America, ignoring them, is setting an example that Canada and Australia will probably! follow. _ "Must we, one of the five great powers, remain silent when others act inhumanely and unjustly towards! our nationals? That is not the way the welfare of humanity is promoted).” Premier Hara regards the California agitation as sectional and not) representing the country at large, and believes that if 'the thinking people in both countries are careful not |o let the Agitation go to extremes, sound judgment eventually will prevail and the matter will be satisfactorily adjusted. Undoubtedly it will be left to the new administration and the new senate to make the adjustment, which may take the form of a new treaty. The plan faVored by Japan is that Japan shall undertake to prevent further Japanese migration to the United States aqd that our government shall undertake to safeguard the property rights of the Japanese already in the country. Tokyo would prefer to have this in the form of a strengthened “gentlemen’s agreement,” but Governor Stephens and other leaders of opinion in California maintain the Japanese question never will be settled permanently until the "gentlemen’s agreement” is abrogated. Jap-anese-excluded by statute and Japanese property-holding rights restricted, as contemplated by the California referendum measure. Armistice day, the second anniversary of the ending of the World war, was fittingly observed by all the allied and associated nations. The cerenjonies in London and Paris were especially, impressive. In the presence of King George, the" heads of the government and the relatives of missing soldiers, the body of an unknown warrior Was interred in Westminster abbey, this being the highest honor England can pay to one of her dead; and in Whitehall the king unveiled a permanent . cenotaph dedicated to “the glorldiis dead.” The "French took the body of an unidentified soldier from the cemetery at Verdun and interred It beneath the Arc de Triomphe. President Milterand and Marshals Foch, Joffre and Petain took fart in the ceremony. Then the

UNREST SPREADS IN MEXICO Growth of Communist Ideas! Among the Workingmen Increasing*— Hard Task for Obregon. Mexico City.—At a stormy meeting Bf the Communist Federation of Mexico 17 unions voted to call a general Strike In Mexico City. During the meeting a delegate from Vefa cruz stated that President de la Huerta had promised that the government would permit the strikers to

heart, of Gambetta. who brought France through the terrible days of 1870, was deposited in the Pantheon. In the United States there were no ceremonies of- a national .character, but the day was generally observed with parades, memorial exercises and patriotic meetings. Former service men held a great - gathering' in New York and were, addressed- by General Nivelle, the defender of Verdiin. Crosses and medals were presented to American naval by the navy department. The Red Cross' tobk advantage of the day of celebration to start its drive for a vastly increased membership, and the response to this call was immediate and general throughout the country. AU preparations were made last week for the first meeting of the assembly'of the League of Nations in Geneva November 15. Whatever maybe accoqrplished at this session, it will be a notable gathering of great men. Every nation member of the league has sent eminent men to represent it, among them being Arthur Balfour, H. A. L. .Fisher and George Barnes for Great Britain; Leon Bourgeois and Andre Tardieu for France; Tittoni for Italy; Hypaans for Belgium; Paderewski for Poland; Branting for Sweden ; Barons Hayashi, Ishii and Megata for Japan; Motta, Ador and Usteri for Switzerland, and accomplished statesmen for each of the Latin-Amer-ican republics. The countries not represented at tfie Geneva meeting, because they are not members of the league, include Germany, Austria, Bulgaria, Turkey, Russia, Mexico and the United States of America. Statesmen and publicists of France have been especially active since the election of Senator Harding in discussing the probable revision of the treaty of Versailles and the chances of forming an association of nations which the- United States would join. Ambassador Jusserand will soon return to Washington, after' spending several months in Europe, and it is believed he will bring, the latest views of his government on the subject of recasting . the league covenant. Through him, Franck may renew its efforts to have the senate ratify the treaty guaranteeing protection to France against exterior aggression. Developments of the week in the Near East were not especially favorable to the allies in several instances. First, and most important, was the news that Armenia had concluded an armistice with the Turkish nationalists, whose seat of government is in Angora. The Turks had captured Kars and Alexandropol and were moving toward Erivan. The Georgians being threatened, were mobilizing on their frontiers and hoped to save Batum. This action of the Armenians opens the way for direct junction of the nationalists and the Russian soviet forces and creates a serious condition .for Great Britain, France, Italy and Greece in Asia Minor. Kemal Pasha’s armies are still intact, because the allies cannot get far from the sea coasts, and his government is going ahead regardless of the fate of Constantinople and the sultan. Its authority is supreme in Anatolia and it is probable that the Turks there will elect a : new sultan after separating the sultanate and tKe caliphate, and that thereafter a new caliph also will be chosen. 1 . The nationalists Insist that the treaty of Sevres must be revised and that Smyrna, Cilicia and part of Thrace must be returned to Turkey. France especially would oppose this, fearing that Germany would take it as a precedent and ask modification of the treaty of Versailles. . The Turkish treaty has not yet been signed, the Porte having said the time for such action was unprbpitlous. News of Baron Wrangel’s desperate struggle against the Bolshevik armle# in southern Russia is a trifle confused, but on the whole not very encouraging to his well-wishers. Dispatches from Sevastopol said the soviet forces had broken through his outer works at Perekop, but • that • the situation was not considered as serious. French military observers with Wrangel said

takeover the wharves. He added that longshoremen in Havana and Corunna, Spain, had agreed to refuse to unload shipping from Mexican ports. The delegates demanded a vote to ask the government to apply article 33 (deportation) to newspaper correspondents who misrepresented the Strikers’ attitude. The vote was unanimous. During the meeting two Russians spoke, demanding an Immediate strike, and they also demanded the Mexican Communists obey th® orders pf the

THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL

he had fallen back into the Crimea and that tlie retreat had been conducted with notable success, the morale of his troops being unimpaired. He hopes, with proper material, to maintain his position until cold weather brings about the disintegration of the soviet armies. The Moscow government says its troops east of Perekop have crossed the Sivatch river into the Crimean peninsula. At last Italy and Jugo-Slavia have come to an agreement in -the Adriatic dispute. It was said the settlement of the Istrian frontier is in favor of Jugo-Slavia, though Monte Nevaso goes to Italy; Flume is to be independent. with territorial contiguity to Italy ; the Italians get the islands of Cherso, Lussin and Unie and suzerainty over territorial pact would be accompanied by commercial and political agreements. Premier Lloyd in an address at the inauguration of the - new lord mayor of London, took occasion to warn Ireland again that the British government was determined to put an end to the campaign of assassination, and that there will be "no real peace in that island, no real conciliation, until this murder conspiracy has been shattered.” He warmly defended the work of the police in Ireland, saying: "They are getting the right men. They are dispersing the terrorists. If the police need more power they shall have it.” The Irish republicans, seemingly, have accepted 'the challenge, for the murders of policemen and soldiers continue, and preparations are being made to- meet the emergency '.of the threatened closing of the railway and mail systems of the island. Committees are organizing to provide food and fuel to the towns along the railroads. Some fool friends of the Irish, in this country, sent, to the British chief secretary for 'lreland a threat of reprisals . against/Englishmen resident in the United States, "if there are any more reprisals in Ireland on and after the fourteenth day of November.” The British embassy in, Washington has called the attention <of the State department to this and it is understood the department has started an investigation. The Walsh congressional committee which for more than a /ear has been investigating the operations of the shipping board and its Emergency Fleet corporation stirred ui> a horhet’s nest last week when i .it published the report of A. M. Fisher and J. E. Richardson, who had conducted inquiries for the committee. This makes broad charges of corruption of officials and employees of the corporation, graft in purchasing supplies for and in repairing government-owned merchant ships and the use of political and other influence in obtaining construction contracts and the allocation of vessels to operating companies. The board is accused of gross waste of the government funds and of failure in co-opera-tion. In his testimony before the committee, however, Mr. Richardson said his report did not purport to fix any illegal act on any person. Charles Piez, director general of the corporation during the war, before being called before the committee entered a general denial of the charges of corruption and graft. Commander A, B. Clement, executive assistant to Admiral Benson, chairman of thfe board, told the committee the only- real ground for criticism of the board's administration was the lack of .perfect co-ordination between the different departments. Representative Walsh said. Admiral Benson probably would be Called ‘on to testify. There was considerable criticism of the committee for making public, for the second time, charges against the shipping hoard without first giving the organization a chance to defend itself. An interesting development of the baseball situation was the decision of the eight National, league, clubs and three of the American league clubs to form a twelve-club league, and the offer of the chairmanship of the new board of control to Judge K. M. Landis at an annual salary of $50,000.

general soviet The meeting was representative of the extreme radicals In Mexican labor unions. The Mexican Federation of Labor was not represented. After the meeting a Communist newspaper was distributed, named "New Life,” and carrying a letter from Ricardo Flores Mangon, written in Leavenworth jaiL Judging by the spread of Communist ideas among workingmen, President: elect Obregon will face a difficult task when he takes office,

MOST MPORfflfT NEWS OF WORLD BIG HAPPENINGS OF THE WEEK CUT TO LAST ANALYSIS. DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN ITEMS Kernel* Culled From Event* of Mo» ment In All Part* of th* World— Os Interest to All the People Everywhere. Washington Secretary of State Colby plans to sail for South America on his visit to the governments of Brazil, Uruguay aud Argentina* between November 20 and November 25, it was announced at Washington. ■ • • » : * President Wilson issued his Thanksgiving proclamation at Washington, saying that "In plenty, security and peace, our virtuous and selUreliant people face tlie future,” • and setting aside Thursday, November 25, for the usual observances. * • * .Home brewing was brought actively under the prohibition lutn'.when it was learned that enforcement officials at ■Washington had ruled against the sale of hops and malt to others than bakers and confectioners. ♦ * * Approximately 554,000 Victory medals had been issued by the War department at Washington, up to date. .01 applications had been filled, but the mail brought requests for 6,000 more. 1 • • • A Washington dispatch says the United States has definitely informed both Great Britain and France that it will not, under any circumstances, participate in the blockade against soviet Russia. * ♦ • Secretaries Daniels and Colby conferred at Washington regarding Mr. Colby's contemplated trip to South America. The naval secretary formally tendered the secretary of state the use of a warship for the trip. • » • Telegraphic orders were sent out by the War department at Washington to recruit the Second division to full strength at once. No explanation of the order was given. < x * » • Domestic The New York State Waterways association in convention at Buffalo, N. Y„ expressed “unalterable opposition” to the proposal for a lakes to sea waterway via the Welland canal and the St. Lawrence river. • * * v , 4 A record corn, exceeding the previous largest Crbp by 75.000,000 bushels, was announced by the Department of Agriculture at Washington, placing production this year at 3,199,192,000 bushels. • • • Three men in an automobile held up the bank at Kingston, 0., in a daring robbery and escaped with $4,000 in currency and bonds of undetermined amount, shooting fight and left as they sped through the town. * ■*. * Wage reductions of 25' per cent, effective November 29. were announced by the Dan River and Riverside Cotton Mill corporation at panville, Va., one of the largest plants of its kind in the South. ♦ ♦ ♦ Charles Young, declared by Omaha physicians to be afflicted with leprosy, has disappeared from the Madison county farm in Nebraska, where he was placed by the state board of health. * • • They Pennsylvania Railroad company announced at Philadelphia that notices have been issued dropping from the pay rolls of its shops, 1,305 men, or approximately 15 per ’cent of the total force. ♦ ♦ ♦ Interrupting his vacation at Point Isabel, President-elect Harding made an Armistice day speech at Brownsville, Tex., before a large gathering' of Americans and Mexicans from the lower Rio Grande valley. •♦• . . ' Sixty-one undesirable aliens, traveling in two special cars heavily guarded by Immigration officials, arrived at New York from Chicago and the Far West and were taken to Ellis island for deportation. * * *. Announcement ■ that he would complete the raising of. a $23,000,000 fund for starving and underfed children of Europe was made by* Herbert C. .Hoover before he left home at Berkeley, Cal., for Washington. Three women will sit in the Kansas legislature at Topeka this winter. All are Republicans. ♦ * ♦ Chief of Police John J? Garrity was removed from office by Mayor Thompson of Chicago and Charles C. Fitzmorrls. secretary to the mayor, was immediately appointed to the place. » • * The Clothing Manufacturers’. association of New York has announced that-its shops cannot be reopened until employees agree to new working and wage conditions. ** * , Mrs. Harding landed a tarpon five feet nine inches long at Point Isabel, Tex., after a half-hour struggle. * * * H. R. Woodcock, head of the H. R. Wbodcock & Co. bank at Macon, 111., died from six bullet wounds mysteriously inflicted. * * • k Mike Konoff and Tony Martin were sentenced at Peoria, 81., to serve 18 months in the federal prison at Leavenworth when found guilty of moonshining. In addition Konbff was flned $1,350 and Martin S6OO.

Maj. Robert Wilson McClaughry, once chief of police of tliicago.Torifler warden of Fort Leavenworth and. Joliet penitentiaries, and one of the well-known'criminologists in the coun--try, died in Chicago, i. •« - • A bid of $10,000,000 for the Hog island shipyard, made:by J. N. Barde .of. the Barde Steel Products corporation of New York, has been rejected by the shipping’board at Washington. » ♦ » The majority report of the revenue committee, which would leave the legislature free to enact tan income- tax law, was adopted by the Illinois . constitutional convention at Springfield. ■ • • Fifty planes .already- have been entered for lie Pulitzer trqphy airplane speed race at ilitchel field, neat New York, on Thanksgiving day. • W • Politics Representative Hull Os the Fourth congressional district 6f Tennessee, was defeated for re-election by a ma; jority of 390 by W. F. Clouse, the Republican candidate, according to the official count, says a Memphis dis« I patch. * . * * Personal Mildred Harris Chaplin was granted a decree of divorce from Charlie Chaplin at Los Angeles. Cal. James A. Perry of Georgia was elected president of the National Associa- ! tion of Railway and Utilities CommisI sioners 7 for a one-year term at AA ashington. ■ - Rear Admiral Thomas B. Howard, sixty-six years .old. United States navy (retired), died suddenly at his apartment at Annapolis. Md. Heart disease was ascribed as the cause of death. * General Pershing, accompaniel by a United’ States naval squadron, will visit Brazil late in November, according to an announcement by the minister of marine at Rio Janeiro. . » * • Sporting The National and American baseball leagues settled their differences at Chicago and agreed that Federal Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis shall represent them jointly in all interleague disputes. Judge Landis accepted the position and told the magnates that he is ready to assume his duties at once. He will reta'n his office as federal judge and will receive a salary of $43,500 per year from the American and National leagues. An additional SIO,OOO per year will be allowed for traveling expenses. * * * Leaders of the 21 'minor ball leagues voiced objection to the selection of Judge Landis as. chairman of a new national commission at their meeting at Kansas City, Mo. Foreign The French government at Paris is unalterably opposed to the admission of Germany to the League of Nations at this time, it was stated at the foreign office. According to London Morning. Post Frank Griffiths, brother of Arthur Griffiths, vice president of the Irish republic, has been arrested by orders from the British government. * ♦ ♦ Charles Edouard Guillaume Breteuil, head of the international bureau of weights and measures, was awarded the Nobel prize for 1920 for physics by; the Swedish Academy of Science at Stockholm, A Berne dispatch says reports from official Ukrainian sources assert that the Russian soviet government has formed a special army of 80.000 men to suppress the Ukrainian insurrection in the Kiev and Odessa districts. The Polish delegation to complete the peace terms with soviet Russia left Warsaw for Riga., ■ It was headed by M Dombski, -who was chairman of the delegation that signed the preliminary pact. - While the coal miners in the central district, who have been on strike, have resumed work, as announced in reports from the region, 40,000 men are still out in t|ie Charleroi region in Belgium. ♦. * ♦ The Irish home rule bill passed the house of commons at London on its third reading after a motion for rejection of the measure proposed by William C. Adamson, the opposition leader had been defeated by 183 to 52. ’♦ • * A Rome dispatch says Dr. Francisco Orlando, son of the former Italian premier, inflicted two wounds upon Lieutenant Costamagua in a duel. The em counter was brought about by a quarrel between the two men. * • • Resolutions definitely breaking with the Moscow Internationale and expelling Joseph Frey and Franz Rothe from the party were adopted at a meeting of the social democracy at Vienna. ♦ ♦ • The hunger strike of the nine Irish prisoners in the Cork jail was called off on the ninety-fourth day of the strike. • * The secretariat of the League of Nations received Austria’s formal application for'admission to the league. Former King Ludwig HI of Bavaria is dead at the age of seventy-five vears, says a Munich dispatch. ♦ ♦ ♦ An armistice has been signed between the Armenians and the Turkish nationalists, it is announced in an Armenian communique dated November 7, received at London. The duchess of Marlborough, formerly Consuelo Vanderbilt, daughter of W. K. Vanderbilt, was awarded a decree of divorce from the duke of Marlborough atJLondon.

SEES WEAK POINT Old Man Sykes Recognizes Flaw in Optimistic Armor. Little Run-In With His Better Half at the Breakfast Table, However, Showed Him the Road to Victory. Old Man Sykes has become enam ored of the cult that enthrones mine over matter and. teaches that a man’s happiness or misery in the world is determined by his ' mental outlook Sykes reaps happiness from the mere fact of telling himself that everythin; ,1s all right whether it is or not. We fire all, of course, merely having a little run-around here on earth-.be-tween the cradle and the grave, and we are sure to meet with much unhappiness. Knowing this, and that nc matter what happens in the meantime we shall all make the same earthlj finish, one might as well be good natured about it ifnd get all the joy out of existence cop.«istent-with the laws of health and longevity. So Sykes is probably quite light about it, Glenn M. Farley writes in the Seattle Post-In-telligencer. From a peevish and irascible individual, exceedingly sensitive to contact with every small unpleasantness, lie has acquired au elephant hide for trouble. He knocked down by ah automobile tlie other day, -.sprawling on a „mudUy crossing, and picked himself up blithely, remarking smilingly to the careless driver that it was a beautiful day, but that it would probably rain before morning. The driver thanked his stars that'the man,was a nut and (Rove on. Sykes has passed through many of these tests and concluded that he had his armor all on. . , ■ : But one morning the coffee was a bit off and Sykes remarked upon it' pleasantly:..Mrs. Sykes let him have the whole coffee pot. in the neck. Her stomach has been bothering her lately, and she was - in no mood for levity. And the regrettable part of the whole business was that Sykes let go of himself and swore fluently. Mind stepped out for a few .minutes and matter reasserted itself.. It was an awful fall I But it taught Sykes a lesson. He sees now that f lie can do nothing with the mind-over-matter theory unless he leads Mrs. Sykes along the same path, and it is hard to argue with her when her stomach is not working right. She often comes to breakfast feeling that she could bite a spike in two if she had it; and then Sykes springs'his mechanical smile and rids hitnseif of some persiflage, and if there is anything handy she throws it at him. •Sykes is now intriguing craftily to get her ofi a- bread-and-milk diet and slip in a few charcoal tablets, feeling that she will have one of the sunniest dispositions in the world when her stomach is-right. So the happiness of the Sykes family is tied up to the possibilities of bread and milk and charcoal tablets. ' J Upon snch /rifles as trfese httng the happiness and convent of whole nations. Preserving Forest of Marmora. Two Englishwomen, Oxford forestry students, pay a work Jone by the French irTtKeprbtectorate of Morocco durjng the last nine years. The very valuable forests of Marmora, which is the largest and most' productive. known forest of cork oak, has been surveyed, divided into compartments, they report, and fire-breaks have been made in it, which are used as motor roads, the first roads in the protectorate. Destruction of the forests by natives fighting for possession, by fires, and by indiscriminate charcoal burning has ; been stopped. Gangs of native-charcoal burners have peen. organized under French . foresters, and native opposition conciliated by monthly grants of charcoal. In the Mogador and Agadir district. :he forests of Argan, trees resem-, bling the olive and bearing a similar fruit, yielding oil, were suffering from inroads of sand. These have been stopped by plantations of tamarisk and Aleppo pine. In the treeless districts been planted in end near tlm towns for ornament 'and shade. These included eucalyptus, mulberry, plane, Aleppo pine and young poplars. Anachronism in Stamp. An interesting addition to the recent issues of British Colonial postage stamps is the new issue just put into circulation for the islands of St. Christopher and Nevis, forming part of the Leeward islands in the West Indies. For many years both of these islands have had their individual issues of stamps, but recently they have been combined, the stamp being inscribed St. Kitts-Nevis, the former name being the popular term for the Island of St. Christopher. The pew issue is practically twice as ,arge as the former stamps, bearing two distinctive designs in oval frames, one being the portrait of King George and the other that of Christopher Columbus, on the deck of his ship gazing through a telescope'at the distant land. It makes a picturesque anachronism in the history of philately, for the telescope was not invented for more than a century alter the discovery of St. Christopher Island by Columbus. The. stamp is also the first in the combined issues for these two islands which has borne the portrait of King George. * Starving Rats Rout Cats. Hordes of rats made savage by starvation —a means instituted by quarantine officials to eradicate them — have attacked and put to flight a large cat family, it was learned today, and otherwise played havoc aboard the steamship Leviathan, formerly the German liner Vaterland. Since the Leviathan has been tied up at a Hoboken pier, her rodent population nas multiplied into legions. After the feline army was gone, the rats attacked the ship’s furnishings, luxurious leather cushiones, panels and other fittings being gnawed beyond repair. Quarantine officers say. in their battip for «fe, the rodents win soon'destroy one another. —New York Times. I ' ■>

GREEN’S-AUGUST FLOWER ’ Th* Remedy With a Record of Fiftyfour Year* of Sui-pauing Excellence. Those who suffer from nervous dyspepsia, constipation. Indigestion, torpid llver K - dizziness, headaches, coming up if food,, wind on stomach. palpitation and other indications of fermentation and indigestion will find Green’s August Flower a most effective and efficient assistant in the restoration of nature’s functions and a return to health and happiness. There could be no better testimony of the value of this remedy for these troubles than the fact that its use for the last fifty-four years has extended into many thousands of households all over the civilized world and no indication of any failure has been obtained in all that time where medicine could effect relief. Bold everywhere.—Adv. / - \Cradle Boards. There are nine p different kinds of cradle boards used by the various tribes of North American Indians. The Eskimos did not us* such a board. The baby was wrapped in the hood of the mother’s fur coat. In the most southern tribes the baby was-merely bound to the mother’s back by a strip of cloth long enough to hold it. FOR COUGHS AND COLDS Use a Remedy That Can Be Depended Upon. No one can afford to neglect a cough or cold.. Neglect often causes serious results. The best time to doc- | tor-is when the first indications of a I cough or cold appear. Coughing weakens the delicate membrane of the ’ throat, bronchial tubes and’ lungs. This makes a fertile field for the development of germs. For 60 cents you can get three ounces of Glando Pine. Mix ’ > this with enough syrup or honey to make a*pint and you have a safe and reliable remedy to use. It takes hold of a cough in a hurry. The first dose opens the air cells and makes you breathe deep and easy. It strengthens the membranes and destroys the cold, grip or tonsllitis germs before they begin to develop, Glando Pine is easily prepared. Directions accompany each bottle. It tastes well and can be given to young children. ■# Don’t be careless, but begin today to safeguard yourself against Coughs and colds. A dependable remedy at | hand means a great deal to any family. Remember the name Glando Pine. You can get it of your druggirt, or it will be sent you by the Gland-Aid Co., Fort Wayne, Ind.—Adv. A Discovery. “I have discovered what will totally destroy a man's memory.” “Alcohol. I suppose?” “No.” “Tobacco?” » “Certainly not I” “What, then?” “The loan to him of the ten-spot n& will certainly not forget to return on the following Saturday.” ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine pAVEm Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre- ■' scribed by physicians for twenty-one years and proved safe', by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer Package for Colds. Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark, of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacidester of Saiicyencid.— Adv. Daddy Was Poor Company. Little Dot did not like the idea of being left home- with her father, who was more interested in reading than entertaining her while her mother went to church;' She was in quite a troubled way when mother and aunt returned this Sunday and said: why don’t you and aunt take turns going to church, one go Saturday and the other Sunday, because your little girl is lonesome to stay in the house alone with just Tier daddy?”WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT •- ' ■ Thousands of women have kidney' and bladder trouble and never .suspect it. Womens’ complaints often prove to he nothing else but Sidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidnefs are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased. Pain in the back, headache, loss.of ambition, nervousness, are often times symptoms of kidney trouble. Don’t delay starting treatment. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a physician’s prescription, obtained at» any drug store, may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions. . Get * medium or large size bottle immediately from any drug store. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for * sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. New Style or Ignorance. Mary had, a new .“fallow” and at the breakfast table members of the family who had given him the once over the evening before, were not backward about making comments. Father said: “Mary, why does the yeung man wear his hair so long?” Mary replied: “To tell the truth I don’t know; it may be a new style or It may be just plain ignorance.” His Business. /‘That man is such a pushing sort* "He has to be. He manufacture* electric buttons."