Walkerton Independent, Volume 29, Number 33, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 28 June 1922 — Page 2

North Liberty News Published Every Thursday by THE LNDEPENDBNT-XEWB CO. Publisher* of the fcFAUCEBTON INDEPENDENT NOBTH LIBEHTY NEWS LAKEVILLE STANDAM THE ST. JOSEPH CO. WEEKLIES Clem DeCoudre*. Business Manacar Charfe* M. Finch, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Tear.... • ••...mm-m. ...... Six Months...*»® ^Three Months. TERMS IN ADVANCE Entered at the post office at Walkerton, ilnd., as second-class matter. {INDIANA! j BREVITIES; Marion. —Miss Hessel Conway won first honors in oratory at the annual commencement exercises of the schools of Green township, held in the M. E. church at Point Isabell. Frank Swackhaner won the honor for receiving the highest grade, 92. Diplomas were pre- | sented to 13 graduates by A. 11. Hall, county superintendent. The graduates are: William H. Grim, Glenn O. McGraw, Zola Marie Eckelbarger, Dorothy Aliene Eckelbarger, Myrtle Harriet McGraw, Bessie Florence Hofferbert, Sallie May Lamb, Frank A. Swackhamer, Aubrey Hamilton, Helen Elcis Leisure, Ray Ertel, Fred Echelbarger and Hessel Ruthine Conway. Elkhart. —Apropos of the opening of the fishing season, Mel Stewart, a painter, whose farm home is on the banks of the Elkhart river, rises to remark that the “still” fishing is unusually good out his way. When he discovered a loaded raft against one of the banks. Stewart put out in a boat to investigate. On the raft was what appeared to be a big boiler, but closer Inspection revealed a still and when it was opened out poured 20 gallons of moonshine. Noblesville. —The stockholders ot the Wainwright Trust company at theii annual meeting selected the following board of directors: J.’ C. Jones, J W. Smith. John C. Craig, C. C. Curtis W. H. White, Fred Heylmann, R. O Morris, C. B. Ward and L. B. Hoile man. Officers elected were: L. B Ho.leman, president; R. O. Morris, J W. Smith and C. C. Curtis, vice presi- । dents; Frank Baker, secretary; Roj Helny, assistant secretary, and J. E Owen, trust officer. Terre Haute. —Through co-operation of the Indiana State Normal school and the public schools of Terre Haute, stu-dent-teachers from the Normal school are to be placed in the city schools for observation work and experience in teaching. For this privilege the state institution will pay SI,OOO a month intc the treasury of the city schools. The new agreement will be effective at the beginning of the fall term of'the city schools. Indianapolis.—lndiana has a tota of 817,788 persons of school age this year, as compared with 772,471 pupils fast year, figures compiled by L. B Job. assistant state superintendent ol public instruction, based on an enum eration reported officially from eact county in the state, excepting Steu ben, shows. The Steuben county enumeration statistics were obtained unofficially. Rockport.—Under the supervision of the state, the M. & P. Contract com pany will build a reinforced concrete bridge on the Grandview road, north of Rockport, at a cost of $30,000. II will be a combination bridge for th€ state highway and the Evansville & Ohio Valley Railway company, which operates traction cars. The bridge wii: be 49 feet 6 Inches wide and of 50-foot span. Seymour.—Gus Sapkaris of Bedford received a verdict for $2,500 against the Meridian Fire Insurance company in the Jackson Circuit court. House- J hold goods owned by Sapkaris and insured for $3,000 by the defendant were burned about a year ago. Settlement ; was delayed and Sapkaris brought suit In the Lawrence Circuit court to re cover damages. The case was sent tc ; Jackson county for trial. Monticello. —White county schools including the consolidated schools ol Monticello and Union township, made a record attendance average of 96.7 f per cent for the past year, according to a report by A. F. Galbreth, county attendance officer. The Plain View school of Cass township won the prize for having the best attendance of the year. The total enrollment in the county was 3,875. Columbus. —R. S. Thomas, a soy-bear expert of Purdue university, will give | a soy-bean demonstration August 8 or the farm of George W. Thompson of Cliffy township. Mrs. Thompson is cultivating four varieties of soy beans in different plots. The object of the demonstration will be to determine which of the four has made the best growth and which will be best adapted ; to the soil of Bartholomew county. New Albany.—Temples of Pythian Sisters in Districts 11 and 12 iu 16 counties of southern Indiana were represented by 125 members at the annual convention held with Mistletoe temple. ’ Mrs. Fay Tyson of Butler, grand chief; M. Easterday, grand senior, were present. Mrs. Verna Keithley of Georgetown, district deputy, presided over the i sessions. Shelbyville.—The Shelbyville high I school budget board, which has charge of all finances of the high school, submitted its report for the last school year and turned over $1,400 to the treasurer of the school hoard. The money epresents the net receipts from : athletic events held at the Paul Cross Memorial gymnasium. Wabash.—A suit for SI,OOO damages ■filed by Amos J. Wilcoxson against Charles Axton, former superintendent of White’s Manual Labor institute, was compromised after a trial had been started in Circuit court. Axton agreed to pay Wilcoxson S2OO and the costs of the case. The suit followed a fight between the men. Richmond.—The largest class in its history was graduated from Earlham college, diplomas being granted 71 students. Walter Jessup, president "f the University of lowa, delivered the comB meneement address.

A Gulf That Disappeared By H. IRVING KING (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) Rocco thought that he had never seen such a delightful vision as the girl who came floating into the tea- ; room of the Hotel Megatherium beside Miss Caroline Highby* And being a waiter in a fashionable hotel, Rocco was not easily impressed. Miss HighI by was known to him, even by name, for the restaurant of the Megatherium ' was one of her favorite resorts. She | could not afford it, to be sure, nor the I expensive clothes she wore, but Caroline belonged to one of those families i not uncommon in New York who manage to live within their incomes and half as much again year after year without the slightest difficulty. As for the young lady who accompanied Miss Highby it may be stated that she was a country cousin of Caroline’s, Masie Landers by name, and possessed of a fresh, wholesome, “corn-fed” sort of beauty exceedingly refreshing to look upon. When the tall, handsome Rocco approached the i table and offered his services with a graceful bow Masie immediately beI gan to think of various heroes out of the novels she was so fond of read- : Ing. But what hero, even in romance, ! could wear evening clothes in broad daylight with such a grace as was displayed by Rocco? “Masie, for heaven’s sake, don’t stare at Rocco in that absurd manner,” warned Miss Highby. “Do you think he is a prince in disguise?” “He —he looks like it,” sighed Masie. “Well, he isn’t,” retorted Caroline; “he is simply one of the best waiters in New York. As to looks—they have । to be good looking to hold down a job here. I’ll say that for the managei ment —if the prices are outrageous and the tea weak.” “Is he Italian?” asked Masie. “How should I know?” snapped . Caroline. “His name is Rocco and. , therefore. I suppose so. Just look at ; that woman over there —what a hidj eous gown!” As Masie arose to leave the place she dropped a little “vanity I bag”—did she do it accidentally?— and Rocco picked it up and restored I it to her with a graceful bow and an admiring glance which, in spite of his training, he could not restrain, to be rewarded with a heavenly smile and a “Thank you” in the sweetest of possible voices. The two expensively dressed young women swept out of the restaurant and Rocco sighed. For the rest of the ■ afternoon his conduct was such as very nearly to cost him his job. He , spilled hot tea on Mrs. Poppletoni Jackson's new dress and broke a tea- ' cup in the serving room. The head waiter concluded that his hitherto impeccable assistant was coming dewn with the grippe and advised him to go home and send for a doctor. But it was not medicament for the body that Rocco needed. It was a realization of the impassable nature of this gulf which took the heart out of Rocco. Rocco desperately recalled accounts he had seen in the newspapers of heiresses marrying their coachmen and chauffeurs, but he also recalled .the tragic, or at least highly unsatisfactory, consequences of such matches. His desperate resolve cooled, but not j his love. Two other visits did Masie and her cousin make to the Megatherium restaurant in the course of the week, and upon each occasion Rocco waited upon his divinity with an assiduity and delicacy which did not escape the notice of Miss Highby. “Well, really, Masie,” said the lively Caroline. “Rocco seems mightily taken with either you or me. Do you think my new hat is becoming? Isn’t it absurd, the impudence of these waiters?” “Why, I think he is very respectful Indeed,” replied Masie. "Respectful?” cried Miss Highby. “He’d better be.’ From overhearing the conversation between Masie and her cousin on the occasion of their last visit to the restaurant Rocco learned that on the morrow his hopelessly adored one was to i eturn to her home “up state” and that the name of her home town was Catlinburgh. Oh, such a sweet smile 1 as Masie gave him as she left the restaurant that day I Rocco sat thinking long into the night. By morning his resolution was taken. He gave a month’s notice and announced that his career as a waiter was at an end. He had begun that career when a mere stripling as “busboy” and the years which had since elapsed had been profitable ones. A river of tips, as rich as the waters of Pactolus, had rolled toward him and, though still a young man. he had a | comfortable bank account and real estate in Hoboken. Rocco had rather l hazy ideas as to just what he would I do when he had closed his career as a waiter, but ambition had been awakened by love and he was resolved

. FIND “SERMONS IN CUT STONES”

American Architecture Has an Uplifting Influence Which Is Beginning to Be Felt. In this country travel is necessary, I but it Is also an ideal. Any sort of . railway station will serve as a place ! to buy a ticket or board a train, and until recently almost any kind of barI racks did serve for those purposes, i Rut the haphazard building could not express our delight in travel, our enjoyment of distance and speed and punctilious arrivings and departings. John Erskine writes in the North ' American Review. The pleasant cas- । ualness of the stage coach and the roadside in exotic moments; our religion of travel is uttered in the Pennsylvania station in New York and in other such structures fast rising throughout the country, where the dedicated atmosphere produced by carefully selected elements from the buildings of antiquity, have little to do with buying your ticket anti a great deal to do with the* American spirit.

> I to achieve such fame and fortune as I | should place him socially on an equal- ’ ity with the girl who had captured his affections. The end of the month for which Rocco had given notice came. Before doing anything else he resolved to visit Catlinburgh to gaze once more, perchance, upon the fair Masie. Catlinburgh was a small town with a big, barnlike hotel, for it was b railway junction and a market town and travelers and farmers furnished hotel patrons in plenty. The hotel was supplied with waitresses from the ranks of farmers’ daughters and village girls. Rocco arrived in town late at night. He was the first guest in the dining room at breakfast time. A trim waitress approached and began the recitative employed by waitresses at such times and at such hostelries. She got as far as “hamaneggs” when she broke off with a “Good gracious!” Rocco wheeled about in his chair. Masie Landers stood before him. There they were, waiter and waitress —the gulf had disappeared. He called on her that night and explanations followed. Masie worked in the hotel to support her widowed mother. The fine clothes she had worn in New York had been forced on her as a temporary loan by her cousin,* Caroline, lest she should appear “dowdy.” I Rocco's name was really John Henry Perkins —born in Flatbush. So they were married and John Henry bought j the Catlinburgh hotel, which he and I Masie still prosperously conduct. Getting Evidence of the Bumps. There is a new kind of device called a vialog which records uneven spr- i faces on highways and shows where they are most in need of repair. The record is taken on a roll of i paper sufficient to make a graph for eleven miles of road. A new record can be put in in a moment and thus i the status of each eleven-mile strip may be filed for future comparison. The recording is done 4>y a sensitive needle, self-inking. It is the seismograph in a modified form. 1 ersonally one takes the record in his own anatomy on a rough road and : when his head goes through the top 1 of the automobile he knows exactly how rough it is, but the vialog iu- । scribes the notes more imperturbably and accurately than one would with a paper and pencil. Moreover, the vialog says nothing audible about It. But we should like to see the “graph” of the vialog after it has passed over a corduroy road. We’ll bet it would be out of ink. Writing to Indian Princes. A letter sent to a native prince In India is a very elaborate affair. The paper is specially made for the purpose, and Is sprinkled with gold leaf. Only the last few lines of the somewhat lengthy document contain the purport of the letter, while the remainder Is made up of the usual roundabout and complimentary phrases. It Is folded in a peculiar way with the flaps outwards and placet! in a muslin bag, and this latter into one of crimson and gold tint, with a slip-knot of gold thread, attached to which Is a ponderous seal, i The address, written on a slip of parchment, is attached to the outside bag. These details are very important for polite letter-writing in India, and If any of them were omitted it would Insult the person addressed. Government in Isle of Man. In the Isle of Man, an assembly having both legislative and judicial pow- ! ers, composed of 24 principal commoners of the island, is called the “House of Keys.” This body was originally self-elective; but in 1866 election by the people, every seventh year, was established by act of parliament. The j house of keys is one of the two co-or- ' dinate branches of the general assembly called the court of Tynwald, the j other branch consisting of the lieuten-ant-governor and council. A bill is separately considered by each branch, and, after being passed by both, is transmitted for the royal assent. It does not, hdwever, become a law until it has been promulgated in 1 both the English and Manx languages on the Tynwald hill. Applied Scripture. “I’m mighty thirsty, pa.” said the farmer’s boy, as he paused a moment in his hoeing. “Well, keep on and I never mind about that,” answered the I horny-handed son of toll. “Remember the good book says, 'Ho, every one | that thirsteth.’ ” —New Haven Regis- | ter. The Hush of Wonder. The atmosphere of Poetry Is the hush of wonder; and that is why there i can be no humorous poetry. Verse, j felicitously turned, beautifully ex- | pressed. Yes! But not humor and | poetry at the same instant! You may ; often have a set of verses in which Pierrot and Columbine flit in and out. You feel the flashes of poetry reaching into you. Suddenly you laugh. Why, ' it is Harlequin again, and there is the 1 Clown. But the hush of wonder is gone.—Oliver C. de Ellis. I

We breathe more freely as we enter them and enjoy the space and the height; our instinctive comment is, “This is something like! - ’ as though some part of us had found expression. And if this success in architecture is aS yet in the field of business and travel, among our public buildings, the reason probably is tiiat in those fields we know what our aspirations are. In ecclesiastical .architecture, by the way of contrast, we .are less clear. We feel that if the Woolworth building is I so lovely it is but respectable to improve the appearance of oar churches, so we put up very wonderful Gothic chapels and cathedrals —only to find, perhaps, that they are a sort of weight on our conscience rather than an expression of our desires: we sometimes try to cultivate the religion that produced them, in order that so eloquent ■ a language may have more content in • its words. » — : Pineapples at times attain a weight . 17 i»uunda.

WTX I IB? hB IV * fa- : * a, /| / I—Francis1 —Francis Scott Bradford, wounded veteran who was in “Pershing's own” regiment, who has won the $3,000 Prix de Rome. 2 —New Hetch Hetchy dam of the Tuolumne in California where 12-mile lake has been created for San Francisco’s water supply. 3 —Alsatians celebrating the recovery of the province in the Place de la Concorde, Paris.

NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS — Bulgarian Revolution Alarms All the Other Nations in the Balkans. M. STAMBOULISKY IS KILLED Chancellor Cuno Working on Compromise Proposition to France—President of China Is Ousted—Ford’s Alleged Plan to Throw Election Into the House. By EDWARD W. PICKARD — . — I I • TTOW would you like to see • A the presidential election । • next year thrown into the house ' । of representatives? This may । result if Henry Ford carries out j । his reported plan of running. i not as head of a third party, but i as an independent with a ticket i of electors in each state. J /^NCE more the Balkans, the hotbed of European wars, are ablaze. Bulgaria Is in the throes of a civ!! war; Jugoslavia, Greece'and Rumania have rushed troops to the Bulgarian borders, arfd Hungary has called three classes to the colors so as to seize whatever advantage may be offered. The conflict may be confined within the limits of Bulgaria, or it may spread over much of central Europe ami ultimately Involve some the great powers. Reserve officers of the Bulgarian army, with the assistance of the active army, carried out a coup d’etat by which Premier Stamboulisky and his agrarian government were ousted and a new ministry Installed headed by Prof. Alexander Zankoff. Some of the ex-ministers were arrested, but Stamboulisky fled and at once began arming and organizing the peasants for the purpose of recapturing Sofia and overthrowing the “usurping” government. Thursday evening he snrrendered at Elesdick on condition that his life be spared, but a few hours later he was shot to death. The offi- ■ J cial report was that armed peasants ; attacked the automobile in which he was being taken to Slavovltza and that he was killed by a guard while trying to escape. Probably it was the application of the “ley de fuega” so familiar in Mexico. Stamboulisky had angered the old war party —mostly pro-German—by । his persecution of Macedonian au- ' t.onomists, his attitude at the Lausanne conference, his concessions to Jugo- ■ slavia and his failure to obtain a corridor to the sea. The new adminis- ’ tration says the actual crisis was brought on by his recent demand on King Boris that he be appointed dictator. After his flight, it is said, huge sums of money were found in his villa. The king is believed to have been privy to the plot by which the government j was overthrown. Though Premier Zankoff’s first act ! was to visit the Jugoslav embassy and । give assurance that he would respect the old government’s treaties, the Serbs are suspicious that he will en- { courage and aid the Macedonians in their demands on Jugoslavia, and this probably would bring on hostilities. The Serbian foreign minister is reported to have said that Serbia was willing to force the new Bulgarian government to observe the treaty of i Neuilly and the stipulation of the Nish j conference, which obligated Stam- | boulisky to oppose the Macedonian । movement. Part of Macedonia is held ; ! by Greece, and both Greece and Ru- • j mania, as members of the little en- ' tente, would be bound to stand with Jugoslavia. npHERE Is not a great deal to be said concerning the Franco-German situation. To date Belgium has been unable to bring the French and tne British so into accord that a joint allied note could he sent to Chancellor Cuno. Poincare will not recede an inch from his demand that German passive resistance in the Ruhr must first be officially ended. Curzon and a minority of the BRANDS WOMEN AS INFERIOR | English Physician Is Outspoken in His General Condemnation of the Gentler Sex. London.—Half the miseries of the western world are caused by women fighting against men, declared Dr. JoBiah Oldfield, eminent British physician, kiwyer and author, in a recent London address. In spite of countless ages of experience, he added, women had failed to excel even in cooking,

' British cabinet sympathize with him, I but Premier Baldwin and most of his ministers are determined that Great ! Britain shall not be put in the posi- । tion of appearing to approve of .the French adventure in the Ruhr. German Foreign Minister von Rosen- : berg is said to be trying to work out a | ■ compromise proposition. His government would express its willingness to drop passive resistance during the opening of negotiations with France .if assured the French would evacuate the j Ruhr when satisfactory terms were reached and if amnesty were granted political offenders imprisoned or expelled by the French. Under the plan the German railway men in the Ruhr would resume their duties and the workers in the Rhineland would do their work under supervision of the ! French engineers. It is admitted in Berlin that the passive resistance is weakening because living conditions In the occupied region are becoming im- , possible. Meanwhile, stimulated by the nationalist societies, the Germans in the Ruhr ar? renewing their campaign of sabotage and violence. Within a week they have killed three French soldiers and wrecked several trains. Tne natural result is the sterner application of restrictive measures ky the French. Eleven Germans have been killed for disobeying orders; some of them disregarded the curfew hour established in various towns where there j was disorder. A MERICANS interested In the Ches**ter concessions have learned with some dismay of a combination designed to control trade with Turkey, signed at Lausanne by Rustem Bey, representing Leslie Urquhart and a group of British banks, and Sherif Bey, representing a new Turkish syndicate. The con.bination, which is capitalized for SIO,OOO 000, will begin operations as soon as peace is signed, and its Turkish charter is so broad it can embark in any business. The Urquhart group embraces most of the big London banks, which have bought control of the Anatolia railway from the GermanSwiss interests, and most of the British corporations engaged in business in Turkey before the war. The financial backing of the group is aimost unlimited. TX7ITH impressive ceremony the * world court established by the League of Nations opened on Friday ! at The Hague, in the Carnegie peace i palace. It publicly proclaimed its independence of the league, but for the present its clerical work is being done by men and women sent from the i league's headquarters in Geneva. Three cases were on the agenda for the session. The first is the dispute between Finland and Russia concerning the autonomy of East Carelia, but Russia has denied the court's competence, saying the affair is an internal matter. The second, concerning the expulsion ■of German nationals from Poland, 1 probably will not be contested by the j Berlin government. The third case involves Germany's right to bar from the Kiel canal, in March, 1921, a British ship which was carrying French I war munitions to Poland at the time of the Russian attack on Warsaw. IT WOULD take more than a Philadelphia lawyer to figure out the situation in China and make clear its complexities. After his cabinet quit him, President Li Yuan-hung fled to Tientsin, where soldiers held him prisoner in his train until he formally resigned. The functions of the government at Peking were undertaken after a fashion by representatives of five ministries who requested Premier Chang to return and resume his office. 1 Li was virtually driven from Peking by Feng Yu-Hsiang, the “Christian ; general.” All the foreign . captives of the . Chinese bandits have been released ! and are again with their friends. By ; the compromise agreement with the outlaws 2.000 of them are to be en’rolled in the army and they were paid $85,000. FOREIGN Ships coming to America now* enter our ports with only enough liquor for medicinal purposes, . in accordance with the decision of the ' Supreme court and the regulations of the Treasury department. But there is so much dissatisfaction that the j government at Washington is trying to 1 I yet they set up as competitors of men in all walks of life. “Far more homes are made miserable by envious women.” he argued, “than by dominant or brutal men.” “Women,” continued Doctor Oldfield, “have been ‘tinkers’ on the mandolin and piano through all the ages, but it is among men that the creative musicians are found. “Women are imitative and not creative,” said the English critic. “If search is made in Westminster abbey for records of the great women of

. ’ find away out. Already it has been ; I informally suggested that treaties be I made with each foreign nation by • which the United States would be ' I given the right of search within twelve miles of its coast in return for modifi- ■ cation of the dry ship rule. What i would be the attitude of other governments toward such a proposition is not • ; known, but the comment of the British “ press is decidedly unfavorable. Anyhow, it is admitted in Washington that ' । this plan does not offer an early solu- ‘ tion of the problem, for senate ratiflea--1 tion of the treaties would be necessary and the senate does not convene until 1 i December. A/TR. LASKER, retiring chairman of the shipping board, received the ' O. K. of President Harding for the trial trip of the Leviathan with its GtK» invited guests, and the Republicans who decried the affair as a useless and expensive junket have fallen silent. : Not so the Democrats, however. Their ■ national committee already has fulminated against the trip, and probably it will be kept alive as campaign material. There, if anywhere, lies its ' inadvisability. TN HIS final report to the President, -*■ Mr. Lasker recommends the crea- ' tion of eighteen subsidiary corporations, each to control one of the consolidated ship routes, as the basis of government operation of the federal merchant marine in case the efforts to transfer the ships to private operation finally fail. The government must as- ‘ sume complete control, Mr. Lasker declares, the system of operation agents , having proved in his opinion a “vicious one,” resulting in the placing of its "terminal facilities ami the good will of its lines” in outside hands. Ue expresses the opinion, however, that government operation should always be with a view to ultimate sale to private owners. The chairman numbered among the , material results of his administration: Settlement of claims aggregatj ing $200,000,000 for “12 cents on the dollar” and. reduction of current deficit from $16,000,000 to $4,000,000 a month. At the end of the fiscal year, he says, the board will have $125,000,000 on deposit in the treasury against $4,000,000 when he took office. This sum is believed to be sufficient for the board construction financing, the report says. i . Y TENRY FORD, it is now reported, : is going to make the race for the presidency all by himself instead of as the head of a third party ticket. He is quoted as saying: “There will be four tickets in the 1924 election: The Republican ticket, the Democratic ; ticket, a third party ticket and the । Henry Ford Independent ticket. No candidate is likely to get a majority of the electoral vote and the election j probably will be thrown into the house of representatives.” j There are 531 votes in the electoral college, and if the two old parties are fairly evenly matched in the 1924 eleci tion and the third or the Ford ticket i won one large state or two or three smaller ones no candidate would have ! a majority and the election would be thrown into the house of representatives of the Sixty-eighth congress. In I this case the Constitution provides that ’ the house shall choose the President from the candidates, not exceeding three, receiving the highest number of ■ electoral votes. In making this choice, j however, the house is required to vote ■ by states, each state lielegation hav- i ing one vote, determined ny a majority jof the members of the delegation. A quorum shall be one or more members i from each of tw’o-thirds of the states, ( and “a majority of all states shall be necessary to a choice. xhus at least j 25 votes would l>e required to elect. I It happens that in the next house there are only 23 state delegations whose majority is Republican and 20 | state delegations whose majority is i Democratic, while five delegations evenly divided between Republicans and Democrats would not be able to cast a vote. To effect an election it would be necessary for members in ' pivotal state delegations to repudiate • j party affiliations or absent themselves i I from the balloting. If there were a deadlock, and Ford were one of the , three highest in- the electoral college . i vote, he might conceivably be chosen j ‘ by the house as a compromise. England one will find a few actresses I and courtesans, but none worthy of I commemoration as poets, painters, i sculptors, inventors, world pioneers or world benefactors.” Having charged w men with neglecting the most sacred duties of motherhood and with selecting the doubtful pleasures of politics and public life, I»octor Oldfield concluded by saying that there would be no peace in life I until women w- re . : to become affectionate junior comrades in the copartnership of the sexes.

SAVED FROM ANJPERATION Now Recommends Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound — Washington, D. C.—“LydiaE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound saved me

from an operation which a physician said I would have to have for a very bad case of female trouble. My system wae all run down for two years after my little girl was born. Then I read of your wonderful medicine and decided to try it. I could hardly drag one foot after the other,

11111111 EL IK BF- mi life

and after taking six bottles of the Vegej table Compound I felt like a new wo- . man. _ I now do all my housework, also washing and ironing, and do not know what real trouble is. My health is fine, and I weigh 140 pounds. When I started taking it I weighed 97 pounds. I gladly recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to any one who is sufi sering from female trouble or is run down. You may use this testimonial j for I am only too glad to let suffering women know what the Vegetable Com- | pound did forme.”—Mrs. Ida Hewitt, 1529Penna.Ave. S.E.,Washington,D.C. Such letters from women in every section of this country prove beyond question the merit of Lydia E. Pink, ham’s Vegetable Compound. Shake Into Your Shoes And sprinkle in the foot-bath Allen’s Foot-Ease, the antiseptic, healing powder for Painful, Swollen, Sweating feet It prevents blisters and sore spots and takes the sting out of corns and ounions. Always use Allen’s Foottase to break in new shoes and enjoy the bliss of feet without an ache. Those who use Allen’s Foot-Ease say that they have solved their foot troubles. Sold everywhere. Trial package and a FootEase Walking Doll sent Free. Address Allen’s Foot-Ease, Le Roy, N. Y. Plan to Preserve Eyesight A nation-wide campaign of eye conservation Is planned by the Eyesight Conservation Council of America in an effort to prevent blindness in thiscountry resulting from avoidable causes. Co-operation in the movement has been promised by the federal bureau of education, the bureau of standards, several universities and various civic organizations.—Popular Mechanics Magazine. American Tires in Barbados. Practically all automobile tires used In Barbados are of American makes. The total number of passenger cars is about 1,000; in addition there are about 50 trucks and 50 motorcycles. Nearly all cf the automotive equipment also is of American make. Each motor vehicle requires four tires per year on the average. Three repair shops do vulcanizing and retreading, for which American equipment is used, Consul John J. C. Watson reports. Feline Amenities. “How kind of you to call! I’m so sorry to have kept you waiting.” “Oh, don't mention it. I’ve not been at all bored. I’ve been trying to imagine what I should do to make this room look more tasteful if it were mine.” —Boston Transcript. BACK ACHY? Lame and achy in the morning? TorI tured with backache all day long? No wonder you feel worn out and discouraged! B'ut have you g!»’en any thought to your kidneys? Weak kidneys cause just such troubles; and you are likely to have headaches, too, with dizziness, । stabbing pains and bladder irregularities. Don’t risk neglect! Use Doan's Kidney Pills. Doan's have helped thousands. They should help you. Ask your neighbor! An Illinois Case Fern Ev e 11. —- n ’ miner, 105 Olive A < St., Carterville. *1 J 9 111., says: “My, j ’ back was stiff and I sore and ached • nearly all the JoFi Uda time. Sometimes it was a dull ache and then! again it was sharp. cutting-J^y!*"?^^ ^ I one. The kidney "' —c- ' | secretions were highly colored. I heard about Doan's Kidney Pills, so I purchased some. They fixed me up I O. K. and I have never had a return of the trouble.” Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’S “p'JHV FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. FRECKLES Now Is the,Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots There’s no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Othlna , —double strength—is guaranteed to remove I these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of Othine from any druggist and apply a little of it night and i morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It Is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain, a beautiful, clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double-strength : Othine. as this Is sold under guarantee of money back if it falls to remove frecklea Salesman Wanted Spare or full time. Easy sales Pleasant work. Big commissions. Satisfaction guaranteed. Represent us and name your own Income. Any kind of monument furnished In Granite ! or Marble. One of our men in Virginia made 1318 00 last month You. too. can share In these big profits Our proposition is a big money-maker. No experience needed. Write today for full particulars about our plan. ETOWAH MONUMENT CO. ; (Capital $100,000.00) Atlanta, Ga n < ICV C! V fll I CD PLACED ANYWHER3 UAIoT iLT MLLtn ATTRACTS ANDKIIA ALL FLIES. Neat dean.ornamental.convement. eheap. Lasts S r-' all seas n. Mate cf k i-t-S ’,’, . | metal, ean’t sp-L’ or tip over : will n t soil " ■■i. or ir.jcre smrthing. Goat ar. teed eftectiva. ’ > „ ElSold by dealers, or W % ,Wl sby EXFRESS. prepad. 11.25. sujIE&S, I^o De Kalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y Shave, Bathe and Shampoo with one Soap. — Cuticura Cuticura Soap the favorite for safety r»x or Ting!.