Walkerton Independent, Volume 47, Number 6, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 7 July 1921 — Page 6
If You Need a Medicine You Should Have the Best Have you ever stopped to reason why it is that so many products that are extensively advertised, all at once drop out of sight and are soon forgotten? The reason is plain—the article did not fulfill the promises of the manufacturer. This applies more particularly to a medicine. A medicinal preparation that has real curative value almost sells itself, as like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, to those who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says “Take for example Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, a preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent results, as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a •ale.” According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the success of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is due to the fact, •o many people claim, that it fulfills almost every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and bladder ailments; corrects urinary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Root by Parcels Post. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention this paper.* Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores.Opulence. Parke—Well, I've just had a considerable Increase in my income. Lane —Wonderful! Must be a great help. “It is. It has extended my credit so much that my wife can run into debt twice as much as she could.”— Life. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the yyt? Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Try This. To prevent the gloss coming off of your white paint wash it with milk and a little soap. That will be much cheaper than repainting and is effective. Some people expect opportunity to break in the house, go back to the kitchen and cook supper. Zlucky\ vstrikeJ Cigarette To seal in the delicious Burley tobacco flavor. It’s Toasted All Run Down Now Feels Fine Eatonic Ended His Troubles “Eatonic is the only thing I have found to stop my heartburn and I think it has been a great help in nervous spells,” writes G. C. Johnson. An upset stomach may cause lots of suffering all over the body. Eatonic helps in such cases by removing the cause of the misery, because it takes up and carries out the excess acid and gases and keeps the digestive organs in natural working order. A tablet after meals is all you need. Big box costs only a trifle with druggist’s guarantee. $2.00 STARTS YOU IN COFFEE BUSINESS NOW right in your own town or rural route. You can make SIO.OO or S2O 00 a day easily among your own friends. We show you how. and send you a complete outfit for grinding and demonstrating coffee, a neat sample box, and 5 lbs. of our very finest coffee. Send only $2.00. Start NOW Be the one to get Agency in your own town and vlcinitv. Get into business for yourself. H. 3. AYRES & CO.. 338 River St.. CHICAGO. Shave, Bathe and Shampoo with one Soap. — Cuticura Cutiecra Soap is the favorite forsafety razor shaving. MEN WANTED Opportunity to start in business for yourself manufacturing Wonderful Automobile and Furniture Polish in your own home Stephens made 1100.00 within ten days of st artGoodman, aj^e 14. made SJ” *in one after school h- urs PossiMlitb s unlimited Exclusive Richrs Territory Koing fsst Send Si ^0 for Ft ri .ula nrd Complete Instructions LEONARD COMPANY. MD Detroit Savings Bank BMc.. Detroit. Mich PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM in Remove Pan crnffS tops Hair Faillnc • Restore. Color and ■r to Fp’VT? Fa< ^ Ha “ H Pl D E R CO P & S o™. Cal. louses, etN. 8- i s a l r i. r mf< rt U» U e feet, makes • - rr . 1 or at Drag?" pista. Hiscox Chemical VVor ■. 1. i N. Y. SALES MANAGER ee . ag. nev for the «n..st needed auto acc. -sory In tt a rrm.ry. Nattonalle »dv-c -rd Mnatana , -ler. Ah rll.l. M r ^. ( •>., . . x, N. J. I- NL. V\U iNDFJM '■HIM E VOUR MlsH? iVould you mv • s;i in Sy dicato KREMOLi / S
MISSING SHIPS BAFFLES WORLD Mystery of Sea Deepens and Assumes More Serious Proportions. I NO TRACE OF ELEVEN CRAFT Five U. S. Departments Investigating —Theories of Floating Mines, Natural Accidents and Red Crews Advanced. i , Washington, June 23. —The mystery of the sea deepened and assumed more , serious proportions under the investigation of live government departments. \\ hether their loss be due to some mysterious raider of the seas, to mines : carried by ocean currents far from 1 their fields, to some gigantic monster ‘ of the deep, or to a cause not yet imJ agined, the fact remains that all the ships involved have disappeared in a manner Inexplicable to the government officials investigating. Missing ships are not uncommon entries in marine registries, but as pointed out by Secretary Hoover, the evidence which first called attention to the mystery is all opposed to any theory of ordinary loss. And now It is discovered that the losses have been more serious than was first reported. Checking the lists of vessels which since the first of the v"?tr have been solemnly tolled out by the “marine graveyard” bell of the marine insurers as “missing without trace," the bureau of navigation of the Department of Commerce found 11 craft which are believed to have fallen victims of the “unknown" fate. Nearly ail were in the waters adjacent to Cape Hatteras when last heard from, and as the only evidence in the possession of government investigators centers around this spot, the fate of the other vessels is believed to have been settled there. The list as now enlarged from the two vessels first mentioned by the bureau of navigation includes these names: The Italian auxiliary bark Merinek, bound from Genoa to Norfolk. Russian bark Albyn, Norfolk to Gothenberg. Spanish steamer Yute, bound for Dunkirk, France. Italian steamer Montesan Michele, New York to Gibraltar. Brazilian steamer Cubedello, Norfolk to European ports. Italian steamer Esperanza de Larriaga, Norfolk to Reggie. Norwegian bark Svariskog, Newport News to La Plata. British tank steamer Ottawa. Port Lobas via Norfolk to Manchester. British tanker Gymeric, Thameshaven to New Orleans. Included in tiie list also are the American steamer Hewitt and the American schooner Carroll A. Deering. whose mysteries fate was responsible for the investigation. Three theories have been advanced upon which ft is hoped some clew may be later erected to explain the loss of American and European steamships and schooners from charted ocean lanes, unconnected with a sweeping Investigation now under way by government forces. That floating mines constitute the greatest danger to ocean travel is strongly insisted by many. It is pointed out that the mines thickly planted round the British Isles were of the permanent type and are said to be capable of floating for four years and still be able to explode on contact and send a vessel to the bottom. That the ships may have been destroyed by natural accidents, be disabled and broken into pieces and disappear forever from sight is also offered as an explanation, while the mutiny of Bolshevik crews is said to be a plausible explanation. The fact remains that at least eleven vessels are missing and that in only two cases was word of any kind ever received, a message in a bottle telling a strange tale of a kidnaped crew, and a postcard from a member of the crew of another vessel that has dropped out of sight being the only clues yet obtained. — RIOT IN BERLIN REICHSTAG Battle Over Interpellation About Death of Gareis Forces Adjournment of Body. Berlin, June 20. —Rioting forced adjournment of the relchstag session. Communist deputies joined in a massed charge on their nationalist colleagues and a battle royal ensued. An interpellation regarding the recent assassination at Munich of the independent socialist leader, Gareis, caused the fight. Liner Passenger Robbed of $50,000. Cherbourg, June 23. —The theft of jewelry valued at $50,000 from a woman passenger, described as Mrs. O. A. Mann of New York, is reported by wireless as having taken place on board the Cunard <teamer Aquitanla. Dawes to Head Budget Bureau. Washington, June 23. -Charles G. ’ Daw< - the Chicago banker, has been i selected by President Harding for dli rector of ie budget, under the budget law recently enacted by congress. Mr. Dawes will take office July 1. Miners to Operate Pits. j Ottawa. lh June 21. —Co operative I coal mining is b< ing given its first trial In Illinois. Today the G. <Jt J. coal mine at Seneca. 111., began operation under a leas • I mid Jointly by the Arthur H. Dutton Is Dead. San Francisco, June 21. Arthur H. ’ Dutton fifty lx. a lieuten nt in the ■ navy during ’he World war and promi- . nent western newspaper man, died . 'ter m extended illness. He was a
FRANCIS M. GOODWIN. & ' i Cf; ' y . , i - f W ; rw*, JP ! ifflPk O Fl "i W ' - Cl afilgMßawa Francis M. Goodwin of Spokane, Wash., Is a new assistant secretary of the Interior. READY TO MEET U. S. Britain for Disarmament in the Pacific. Premier Lloyd George Addresses Conference at Opening Session in London. London, Juno 22. —Co-operation with the United States is “a cardinal prinI ciple” with Great Britain, declared Prime Minister Lloyd George to the Imperial conference here. “We are ready,” he said, “to discuss with American statesmen any proposal for limitation of armaments which they wish to set out, and we can undertake that no such overtures will find lack of willingness on our part to meet j them. “In the meantime,” continued the premier, "we cannot forget that the i very life of the United Kingdom, as also of Australia and New Zealand, ami indeed of the whole empire, has been built upon sea power, and that , sea power is necessarily the basis of the whole empire's existence. We । have, therefore, to look to measures which our security requires. We aim | at nothing more; we cannot possibly j be content with less.” He made (his statement in his ad- ' dress opening the sessions of the con- | terence of the empire’s prime minis- ! tecs. He referred to the Anglo-Jap- ! anese agreement as “one of the most urgent and important questions before j the empire.” । “There is no quarter of the world • where we desire more greatly to maintain peace and fair play for all nations and avoid competition in armaments than the Pacific and the Far East," he said. “Our foreign policy can never hang Itself In any sense upon differences of race and civilization between East ami West. It would be fatal to the empire,” he continued. WOMAN WIELDS HOUSE GAVEL Miss Robertson of Oklahoma Called to the Chair by Speaker Gillett. Washington. June 22. —For the first time in the history of the American : congress a woman presided over the I deliberations of one of its houses. Miss Alice Robertson of Oklahoma, the only woman member of congress, wielded the gavel while the house of i representatives, at the request of i President Harding and Secretary of i State Hughes, passed a bill authorizing the sending of a United States commission to Peru during the ; centennial celebration in that reI public. The members of the house rose and applauded when Speaker Gillett requested “Miss Alice" to ascend to the chair. When she announced the passage of the bill she was applauded again. During her brief term as presiding officer she made the house behave for the only half hour of recent years. WOODMEN OPEN CONVENTION Five Thousand Representatives of 14,300 Camps Attend Meeting at St. Louis. St. Louis, June 22. —Representatives of 14,300 camps of Modern Woodmen of America, here for the formal opening of ’he nineteenth quadrennial head camp of the organization, were welcomed by Governor Hyde and Mayor Kiel. About 5,000 members of the order were said to be in attendance. May Head New Austrian Ministry. Vienna, June 23.—Herr Schoher, police president of Vienna, has been • requested to form a new ministry by the Christian Socialist party, which : voted unanimously in favor of extend- ' ing the invitation to Idm. Tar and Feather Jitney Driver. Houston. Tex., June 22.—W. Slewart, jitney driver at Goose Creek, was taken into ’he woods near the oil town, whipped and tarred and feathered and directed to leave town before sunset. Workers Quit Canal Zone. ■ Panama. June 22. -A veritable exodus of government employees from . i the canal zone Ims been going on for several weeks. Wholesale discharges ■ for “reduction of force" are going on as a lively pace. Lewis Opposes Gompers. Denver, C</h>., Jm.<‘ 22. — John Lewis, ‘ pre-ident Os the United Mine Work- - ers of America, formally announced I that he was a candidate for the presil dency "j the American Federation of Labor.
MEANT big crop Wheat in festem Canada Has Ex Lllent Start. Germination, in the Rich Soil of That Country, Is Speedy—Farmers on Road to Wealth. ft was on the 18th of May that the writer received a letter frori a triend in Western Canada dated the 15th of the same month. Information was conveyed in the letter that its author had traveled over a considerable portion of Western Canada. He had covered most of the settled portions, and from those he had not covered he had secured information that amplified his own observations of conditions throughout all the vast area of that country. He found seeding of wheat practically completed, and placed in a bed of earth that was in a condition that warranted speedy and healthy germination. This was borne out by evidence that he was a witness of wiieat that bad beeu In the ground four days that was already breaking through, and that which had been seeded for a wtek was well above the ground, the wid being as green as a new pasture plot. Everywhere this condition existed. It will be pleasing information for those who have i friends in Western Canada —in any 1 part of it, no matter where they may be—to learn that conditions have t opened up in such a splendid way, and to be advised that the prospects were never brighter than now. When it becomes known that conditions are so satisfactory, manj’ who were waiting, uncertain what to do in the matter of moving, will doubtless now come to a decision. With the opening of thousands of homesteads, which took place on the Ist of May, there was a rush to take advantage of the opportunity to secure IGO acres of excellent land ■ free, within speaking distance of h railroad. The low railway rates granted by means of a certificate issued by Canadian government agents, located at different points in the ■ States, make ft possible to make a trip of Inspection at small cost. Oat and barley farming are branches that add considerable to the wealth ■ of the farmer who desires tc make > money quickly. That these grains can be grown so successfully, and easily, mnke^ it possible to go into other brandies of tanning Industry, that give stability to It. wherever they are carried on. T hey are dairying and ■ cattle-raising. There Is an excellent i market t<>r the product, and the climate aids materially In assisting it, while the native grasses, as well as cultivated v: rieties, bring the cost of production to a much lower figure than is possible on lands that are much higher tn price, with no better yielding qualities. Then, again, ft is amply shown that fodder corn can be grown ■ with great success, and that sunflowers, which It has been fully proven I are little behind. If any. In food quality, thrive* vA. “ ‘ In fuct, these two fodders, in addition to which may be added that of alfalfa and sweet clover, in which Western Canada farmers are well apace with growers elsewhere, have brought about a period of silo-building which promises to eclipse any effort In this line made ■ anywhere on the continent. In Manitoba alone, one firm is building two hundred this year. In Saskatchewan, many orders have been placed; In one small district In Alberta, where fifty । were erected last year, another fifty will be built this summer. That there will be a thousand silos erected In the three provinces this year seems to be a conservative estimate. To the farmi er In the States, who knows the adi vantage of the silos, who is interested in the fodder to be grown to fill them, what does this mean? —Advertisement. NOT HARD TO MAKE CHOICE Probably Lester Could Have Determined Without the Appeal to His Physical Feelings. Two men passed away. One had been born, and in due course admitted I to the bar, soon ran for office, was elected a continuous Hon. until i last he went to his reward, such at was. And the local paper gave him I obituary as long as your arm. The other man followed in the f< ; > steps of his brawny sire, and became • a maker of harrows. He was industrious and honest, and for years the Hilligoss harrows which he whacked out by hand were known nearly all ever the country as reliable utensils. . By-and-by he, too, passed on. The paper announced his demise in a few lines and spelled his name wrong. Now, tell me, Lester, which of those ' men would you rather have been? Do not say the former, or I’ll slap your 1 jaws for you and not let you go to the picture show, either. —Kansas City ’ Star. Workings ot Lie Detector. ■ When your husband comes home ■ rather late and tells you he had an important business engagement all I you have to do is to try it cn the sphygoma nometer. The sphygomanometer is an invention by William H. Marston of Harvard, by which he asserts a lie can be detected. Professor Marston says that when a person tells a lie, especially if he is under oath, there is an emotional reaction, j affecting the breathing and the blood i pressure. . . . The breathing of ■ married men is seldom affected by a ; mechanical lie. —Syracuse Herald. I Definition of Flatterer. Young Miss Betty, like all youngsters, had found a new word and it ' had to be put into service immedii ately. “Daddy,” she said. “What does the 1 word flatterer mean?” "Flatterer? You want to know what ; flatterer means?” i “Yes.” "Well, Betty, lets see—ls I told your brother he was good looking, what would that be?” “Foolin’ him,” Betty flashed back. I Off. Marcia—"l heard that you were ens gaged to a shilmmy dancer.” Montague , ■ —"l was, but | she shook me.”
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday School ' Lesson' (By REV. F. B. FITZWATER, D. D„ Teacher of English Bible in the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) (©, 1921, Western Newspaper Union.) LESSON FOR JULY 3 THE EARLY LIFE OF SAUL. LESSON TEXT—Acts 21:39; Deut. cf. II Tim. 3:14, 1& GOLDEN TEXT—Today if ye will hear j his voice, harden not your hearts.—Heb. ‘ 3:7, 8. REFERENCE M ATERIAI^Deut. 4:9, 10; 6:20-26; Josh. 4:20-24. PRIMARY TOPIC—When Saul Was a Boy.—Acts 22:3; Deut. 6:4-9. JUNIOR TOPIC—When Timothy Was a Boy.—ll Tim. 3:14-16. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —Jewish Boy Life. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC —Saul’s Early Training and Education. We are now entering a six months’ I study of the life and teachings of one j of the greatest men who ever lived. 1 I. Saul’s Birth (Acts 21:39). His parents belonged to the tribe ot Benjamin and were "Hebrews of the Hebrews,” that is, Jews who have not become contaminated in their ancestry through intermarriage with the Gentiles (Phil. 3:5). 1. Time of. It is impossible to determine the exact year of his birtii, but tiie probability is tiiat it was practically the same as that of Jesus. He was a “young man” when Stephen was stoned (Acts 7 :58). “Young man" may j mean any age from twenty to thirty. ’ About GO A. D. in the Roman prison he calls himself “Paul the aged" (Phi- j lemon 9). This distinction would hardly , be appropriate for a man under sixty. । 2. Place of (v. 39). Tarsus, the cap- ' ital of the Province of t’Hiciu. Repre- j sentative business men came here from all parts of the world. It was a selfgoverning city which made citizenship therein honorable. Besides, it was one of tiie three great educational centers of the Roman empire. God's providence ordered that the apostle to the Gentiles should be born in a city where he would encounter men of every class and nation, making him broad in his sympathy and tolerant in his dealings with others. 11. Saul’s Home Training (Deut. 6: 4-9; cf. 11 Tim. 3:14, 15). He was brought up in a pious home (Phil. 3:5). In tiie passages cited above is given the responsibility of a Jew in tiie training of tiis children. 1. Central truths to be taught (vv. 4,5). (1) Unity of God. “The Lord ; our God is one Lord.” This was ates- I timony against the polytheism existing among tiie Gentiles of that day. He is God alone, therefore to worship an- . other is sin. Tiie word translated I "God” is plural in form, giving room | for the doctrine of the Trinity—Fattier, Son and Holy Spirit. The great need of tiie world is a recognition of the । fundamental doctrine of the unity and trinity of the Godiiead. There can lie , no established order until God is given His rightful place; neither can there be any moral health. (2) Man’s supreme obligation (v. 5). God should be loved with all tiie heart, soul and might, because He is God alone and supreme. This being tiie first and great commandment, we know what is man’s supreme duty. 2. How tiiese truths are to be kept I alive (vv. G-9). The place for God's Word is in the heart. In order that it may be in the heart (1) "teach it diligently to thy children” (v. 7). The most important part of a child’s education is that given by parents in tiie Word of God. (2) Talk of them in the home (v. 7). How blessed Is that home where God’s Word is the topic of conversation. (3) Talk of them when retiring for the night (v. 7). The last i thing upon which the mind should rest before going to sleep should be God and His truth. (5) Talk of them when rising in the morning (v. 7). How fitI ting that God should speak to us the first thing when we awake! (G) Bind them ui>on thiue hand (v. 8). This was literally done by the Jews, even to the wearing of little boxes between their eyes. (7) Write them upon the posts of ihe houses and on the gates (v. 9). >). he us 111. Sam s tuucaaon (Acts 22:3).| 1. In college at Jerusalem. A Jew -h child became a child of the law at the age of thirteen. Most likely at this age he went to Jerusalem to enter upon his course of study. Here he sat at the feet of Gamaliel, one of the most , eminent teachers that ever blessed Isi rael. The course of study here was restricted to the Holy Scriptures. 2. A trade at Tarsus. Perhaps after linishing ills college course at Jerusalem he returned to Tarsus and learned a trade. One rabbi said, “He that teacheth not his son a trade doeth the same as if he had taught him to steal.” The trade he learned was tent making. This came in very good in his later life, enj abling him to support hirnseli while preaching the gospel. Our Trust in God. When we are lost in the great maze of life and wander through the streets i of this world feeling that the familiar path is gone; when we see no land- ! mark of duty, no inspiring light of attractive work, and know not where । we are; then, if our trust in God does not fail us. we learn lessons we should not otherwise gain. We learn sclf- ! direction or humility; we learn to cast i our care on Him who car< s for us; . i we learn to be grateful for every kii di ness that others can do us. ;md . i to respect all forms of life ami call no man common. James Freeman ■ Clarke. t Gideon Is Called. And there came an angel of the Lord, and sat under an oak which was in Ophrah, that pertaineth unto .ba t 1 ; the Abi-ezrite: and his son • I it ui ; threshed wheat by the wine press t>» hide it from the Midianites. Ard the angel of the Lord appeared unto him. and said unto him, the Lord < with thee, thou mighty man of valor. — Judges G: 11. 12.
iEVERYBODYSEESA CKEINFITO Grateful Son Says His Father Looks Like Different Man Since Taking Tanlac. “My father has suffered from | chronic stomach trouble for over i twenty years and has paid out thou- j , sands of dollars for medicines and । doctors.” said G. W. Slayton, a wellknown Cobb County farmer, living a i short distance out of Atlanta, Ga. "We tried nearly everything trying to cure him and he went off to the Springs, thinking maybe the water might help him, but it just looked ! like nothing would reach his trouble. I Then lie tried dieting and lived on | liquid food until he almost starved, I but even that failed to do him any i go<id and he just kept going from bad I to worse. I "1 don’t guess there ever was a ■ case as stubborn as his, and if there j ever was a confirmed dyspeptic he was i one of them, and 1 guess he would ' have been one yet if it hadn’t been , for this Tanlac. “Ihe first we heard of this modi- ! fine was when my father saw an ad- ■ vertisemeqt in the papers from parties I he knew in Tennessee, who were i friends of his and he knew what they i said about it was the ti;uth. so he got it right away and began taking it. : j Well, sir, it acted just like magic— ' । everybody notices the change in fa- ! ther. Why. he is just like a different i | man ami sits down to the table and . • eats like a farmhand. Only yesterday he ate pork and turnips for his dinner ; and ate so much we were actually I afraid he was going to overdo the thing, but he laughed and said nothing hurt him now am! that he was hungry ami expected to eat and make up for lost time. “Now, when a medicine will do things like that 1 think people ought to know about it, and 1 want to say right now that I would not give one i bottle of Tanlac for all the other ■ medicines and health resorts in the country nut together.” Tanlac is sold by leading druggists ? very w here.—Advertisement. Old Penalties Inadequate. "Why don’t you Crimson gulch men I hang an automobile thief the same as I you used to do with a horse thief?” I “We’ve discussed it,” said Cactus! Joe; “but we came to the conclusion that bangin’ is too good for him.” ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine - Beware! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed 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 Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. HAMP’S TIME SURE TO COME Gap Johnson Has It Mapped Out, and It Will Be a Sore Day for the Bluffer. “Hamp Slaughter has an interesting sort of fad,” related Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge. “About once in so often he gets a few drams of bone-dry licker and a high fever, and shows up in the middle of the big road out yur. He flings his hat down in the dust and stomps on it. and yells that he’s a man eater, and such as that, and can whip a certain black-hearted son-of-this-that-and-tuther living not more than a mile from yur. When I go out to inquire which special black-hearted thus-and-so he means he says Zach Flatt, three-quarters of a mile up the road. So there ain’t much to do but to excuse him. Then he goes fricaseeing off to Zach's place and repeats the performance. When Zach wants to know who he is referring to he says it’s me. After that lie rambles around norating that he's got us both bluffed. “One of these days he’s going to ketch me and Zach together, and find out his — yaw-w-w-wu! — mistake.”— Kansas City Star. A debtor pays with sleepless nights, but gets no credit for it. Misfortunes never come singly to married men.
you. Always Get full Food, value For your money wlien you eat Grape Nuts I Each golden granule of this attractive wheat and malted "barley food is rich in nutriment for body and brain. Serve Grape --Nuts direct From the air-tight packet for breakfast or lunch. Crisp - Delicious -No Waste ’ c lhere’s aßeason /or S
COCKROACHES EASILY KILLED TODAY BY USING THE GENUINE Stearns’ Electric Paste Also SURE DEATH to Wat^rhugs, Ants. Rata and Mice. These pests are the greatest carriers of disease and MUST BE KILLED. They destroy both food and property. Directions in 15 languages In every box. Beady for use-two sires 35c and 11.5 Q. U. 8. Government buys it* r^TEr ’ Death only a matter of short time. Don’t wait until pains and aches become incurable diseases. Avoid painful consequences by taking GOLD MEDAL The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles —the National Remedy of Holland since 16S& Three sizes, all druggists. Look for the name Gold Medal on every boa and accept no imitaGon f/ a Box My Picture on Every Package P.D.Q.Wgtf P. D. Q., a chemical (not an insect powder) that will actually rid a house of Bed Bugs, Roaches, Fleas and Ants W with its proper use—impossi- a ble for them to exist as it kills their eggs as well and thereby ' stops future generations. A 3oc package makes a quart. gK | Free a patent spout in every package, to get them in the I hard-to-get-at places. Special Hospital size. $2.50, makes 5 I gallons. Your druggist has it MB or can get it for you. Mailed Wg l prepaid upon receipt of price [gt 'by the Owl Chemical Works, da* Terre Haute, Ind. HA ICY Cl V yil I CDP LACT> anywherb UH Id I rLI ft I LLC n ATTRACTS AND KILLS '-y - ALL FLIES. Neat, f^9 clean.ornamentaLcon- • veuient, cheap. Lasd' Li- all Ah season. Made of Rpitez sil metai. can’t spill or AJc-W ;11 tip over ; will net soil SaZCdaUdljSrY Fit °r injure anything. Guaranteed effective. 1f '5.- \ Sold by dealers, or - T Eby EXPRESS, prepa-d, $1.25. HAKOLD SOMERS, 150 De Kalb Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y. MAKE 6 GALLONS OF LAUNUKY ANU ALL-KOUND SOAP FOR 85c Harmless cleaner to most delicate fabrics. (Cleans all grease spots in and on anything. Send 50c for receipt. FRANK KAPPE3, Box 430. BOULDER. COLORADO. w. N. U„ CHICAGO, NO. 26-1921.“ HER LOVE DREAM SHATTERED Naughty George's Late Hours Respon. sible for the Ache in Heart of Young Wife. The mother of the young husband i went to the bridal nest, and found her . daughter-in-law in tears. > "My child,” she gasped, “what is > the matter? Has anything happened 1 to George?” "No.” sobbed the young wife; “but my heart is b-breaking. He’s taken to stopping out late at night’” “What, already!" said his mother, in consternation. “It doesn’t seem possible. How late does he stop out, dear —very late?” “Well,” said the bride, “you know he usually leaves his office at half- ; past five. The night before last he didn’t get home till half-past six, and last night,” she sobbed bitterly, "last night it was a quarter to seven! What 1 shall I do?” I ! Quite in Order. , ■ W. B. Trites. who has been living in southern Spain for the last year । • or two, said the other day: , ! “Life is very abundant and pro--1 * lific over there, especially insect life. 1 , There was a typographical error in > 1 one of my stories recently, but thia ■ error would have escaped no;ice in . Andalusia, though it excited a lot of ; disgust here at home. j “The error was in the quotation of ; I a hymn, my heroine being made to 1 sing: “ ‘Just as I am without one flea.’ > “A hymn worded like that would i be quite in order in Spain.” And many a man’s bravery Is due to his knowledge of the fact that the , other fellow is a coward. It seems almost impossible to make > ■ any home attractive enough to resist | the pull of the movies.
