Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 1, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 4 June 1925 — Page 2

Walkerton Independent Published Every Thursday by THE IND EPKND KNT- N EWS CO. Publishers of the WALKERTON INDEPENDENT NORTH LIBERTY NEWS LAKEVILLE STANDARD THE BT. JOSEPH COUNTY WEEKLIES Clam DeCoudres, Business Henagar Charlaa M. Finch. Ed 11or SUBSCRIPTION RATES Ona Tear ....11.60 Six Months 90 Three Months »>«» •0° TERMS IN ADVANCE Entered at the post office at Walkerton. Ind., as second-claae matter. ■ Seen and Heard: In Indiana Indianapolis.—Harry Webster, of the Webster Detective Agency and superintendent of the protective department of the Indiana Bankers’ association, announced that two men and two women have been arrested and positively identified by L. I*. Cox. cashier of the Farmers National Bank of Wadesville, as members of the robber gang that, on the night of Maj’ 11, forced him and his wife to aid them in an attempt to loot the bank. The four persons are charged with highway robbery. Those under arrest are Loren Commeans and his wife. Jeanette Commeans. of West Frankfort, Ill.; Charles Clayton, of Benton, 111., and Mary Sislock of West Frankfort. Greensburg. — Modern medical science has enabled Orel Mclntyre, twenty-three years old, who a year ago was committed to the state hospital for the criminally insane, to start life anew. An order for the release of Mclntyre has been given by Judge John W. Craig of the Decatur Circuit court on testimony of physicians that Mclntyre’s mental and physical condition again was normal. After Mclntyre had made a confession a year ago of starting 13 fires, causing losses of thousands of dollars, he was tried in the Decatur circuit court and found to be insane. Indianapolis.—Appointment of members of the new Indiana library and historical board in accordance with provisions of an act of the recent legislature, placing the control of the state library, historical commission and legislative references bureau under a single body, was announced by Gov. Ed Jackson. The appointees are: William M. Taylor, Indianapolis; Mrs. Elizabeth Claypool Earl, Muncie; Dr. William P. Dearing, president of Oakland City college; Charles N. Thompson, Indianapolis; Mrs. Frank J. Sheehan, Gary. Evansville.—Life triumphant Is in evidence where two months ago death and destruction reigned. Five hundred farmer folks gathered on the farm of A. J. Nesler, less than twc . miles from Griffin, to commemorate the turning of the last furrow In the vast rehabilitation program undertaken by the Indiana farm bureau and in which 415 farms were plowed. The farm of Mr. Nesler with Its 160 acres, was the last of thousands of acres to be plowed in Gibson and Posey counties and great ceremonies attended the turning of the last furrow. Martinsville. —With the jury sworn in. opening statements, presented by counsel for both defense and state and one witness placed on the stand, the second trial of John Thomas Shaw, negro, twenty-four years old, charged with the murder of Mrs. Helen Hager Whelchel, on the night of November 27, 1923. got under way in the Morgan Circuit court, with Judge Joseph Williams presiding. Hammond. —Contracts for the pavement of Indianapolis boulevard, the bottleneck which leads from Indiana Into Chicago, will be awarded during the week, it was announced by the state highway commission. The road for years has been in poor condition and full of traps for motorists. The specifications provide that the widening and paving must be completed by October 1. Hammond.—On a tip furnished by an unknown informant, the home of Ed Beverly, gunman, who is said to have shot and fatally wounded Elijah King, in an East Chicago soft-drink parlor, was surrounded by policer and Beverly captured while hiding under the bed. He made no resistance. King was shot in the back five times and Is paralyzed. He cannot live. Indianapolis.—The Indiana Supreme court issued a writ of prohibition against Everett O. Danson of Brazil as special judge of the Clay Circuit court, prohibiting Danson, as judge, from taking steps to oust William B. McQulrk from the office of trustee of Harrison township, Vigo county, or from punishing McQulrk for failure to leave the office. Madison. —Mrs. Wesley Reldel, age forty-six, was killed and Mrs. Gladys Shipman, Miss Nina Reidel and Mrs. Clarence Grebe were seriously Injured when a car being driven by Mrs. Reidel plunged over Dugan Hollow hill, near this city. Columbus. —Mrs. Elmer Hansen, who lives eight miles west of here, was arrested by the sheriff after he had raided her home and is alleged to have found four quarts of grain alco- I hoi, each quart of which was hidden I under a sitting hen. he said. Logansport. — Fire destroyed the j Good general store, the post office and the Pennsylvania station at Lake Cicott. The damage will reach $25,000. Indianapolis.—The appointment of Russell B. Rothrock of Mount Vernon as a member of the state board of pharmacy was announced at the office of Gov. Ed Jackson. Indianapolis. —Judge Robert C. Baltzell in the United States District court dissolved the temporary injunction granted to prevent interference by officials of the miners’ unions with cooperative mining projects in Indiana. The ruling. It is said, will put an end to co-operative mining in the state unless an appeal from the decision is taken. South Bend. —The Rev. Timothy Mahar, age ninety-five, postmaster of Notre Dame and for more than twenty years secretary of Notre Dame university, is dead.

OCXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXDOOOC HOW TO KEEP WELL DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of “HEALTH” OCXDOCXDOCXDOOCX^^ by Western Newspapsr Union.) THE BREAD OF LIFE DR. E. V. McCOLLUM of Johns Hopkins Is probably the leading authority in this country on foods and diet. At a recent meeting of the American Bakers’ association. Doctor McCollum was asked to talk to the convention on bread. He said that bread of some kind has occupied a prominent place in the minds of people In all ages and in all places and that bread made of refined white flour was now universally eaten in America and Europe. It has a prominent place In the food of all parts of the world except regions of excessive rainfall, where wheat will not grow. Then Its place is taken by rice. Yet bread alone is by no means a complete food. This is true of all cereal grains. Thej- must be supplemented by other foods whether the cereals are used whole or only in part. So no matter whether white flour or whole wheat flour is used, bread alone Is not a perfect food. It is lacking In some important food qualities and can only be used in company with other foods. White, bolted wheat flour is of value as a food mainly on account of the starch It contains. Its proteins are of a poor quality, it has not enough of the mineral salts and It is lacking almost entirely In vitamins. So it is necessary, if wheat flour is used for food to any considerable extent, to combine it with other foods which will make up for its shortcomings. Doctor McCollum’s position regarding white vs. whole wheat breads evidently is that as wheat alone Is not a complete food, bread whether white or brown, must be supplemented by other food, and as our present milling and flour business is organized on a white flour basis and as American people are used to white bread, they might as well eat white bread and make up for its deficiencies by eating other foods, particularly milk and fresh vegetables which contain the qualities which bread lacks. He says: “The fact that white flour is deficient in several respects does not justify the conclusion that white bread should not be eaten. The point I want to emphasize Is that it must be supplemented with such foods as make good ■ Its shortcomings. But no return to । whole wheat flour is possible. The white flour industry hus come to stay.’’ He urged the bakers to Improve the । quality of their bread by putting more milk in it. This advice to bakers is also good advice to housewives. Put enough milk In your bread to make it better food. Then give your children all the bread and butter they want with plenty of fresh vegetables. NEGLECTING SCHOOL CHILDREN’S EYES THE United States public health service recently examined a large group of children for physical defects. The examination included 9.245 native white children between the ages of six and sixteen. In South Carolina. Maryland, Delaware and New York. Especially interesting are the results of the eye examinations. Sixty-three per cent were found to : have normal sight in both eyes. Os the remaining 37 per cent moderate eye defects were found in 27 per cent. The remaining 10 j er cent, or one out of every ten of the 9,24.5 children examined had only one-half or less of normal vision. That school life and conditions were responsible for part of this is shown by the fact that the number of children with marked defects of vision at sixteen years of age was four times as great as those at six years old. In other words, ten years of school life had increased the eye defects to four times as many as when the child entered school. The most striking part of the report, however, is that which deals with efforts which have been made to correct these defects. Even among the older children, those from fourteen to sixteen years old, only 23 per cent of those needing glasses had them. Os the children having one-half vision or less, only 10 per cent had any kind of glasses. Os children having as low as .3 vision or less In both eyes only 22 per cent had glasses. It is not strange that these children ■ appeared dull and had poor records as pupils. A child who can only see onethird or one-half of what he should see would hardly be expected to be a brilliant student. Yet these children were all probably being blamed and scolded by parents and teachers for being “stupid,” “dull,” “lazy” or “vicious,” when their poor little eyes couldn't see enough to get their lessons. Sending half-blind children to school । is expensive and stupid. It is just as much the business of school boards to ; find out if the child can see as It Is to build school houses and furnish seats and desks. , Regular eye examinations of all school children each year would sort I out the children with defective eyes, i School authorities should then Impress parents with the seriousness of negj lecting lefective eyes, so that all children needing glasses would have them. Postscripts About 8,000,000 acres of forest land In the United States is every year swept by man-caused forest fires. The custom of lifting the bride over the threshold of her husband’s home originated in Scotland, where it was believed some mishap would befall her if she stepped on the stoop. Tons of dried flies used in the making of paints, are Imported to England from Cuba and Mexico. They are really cochineal insects and yield acarlet and crimsonlike dyes.

Vitamins Grown in Our Gardens

, Advantages of Vegetables for Family Needs and Likes Are Many. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Closely associated in our minds with । the vitamins they supply are the vegetables that can be grown tn al- ; most any home garden—spinach, cab- : bage, lettuce, carrots, string beans, peas, rutabagas, tomatoes, all the leafy vegetables known as "greens,” and man> others. We also obtain 1 necessary minerals from these vegetables— iron, calcium, phosphorus—and depend on them for bulk, or “rough age.’’ But our first thought is apt to ’ be—vegetables for vitamins! Advantages of Vitamins. The advantages of growing vitamins In our gardens are many and obvious. To begin with, there Is the matter of freshness. No matter how near the market may be to the home, it Is usually a long way from the farmer who produced the vegetables. Garden products that have been carried over a dusty road, and perhaps exposed for hours before they were sold, cannot be compared In desirability of flavor or condition with those Just off the vine or out of the earth. The vitamin content of vegetables Is also dependent to some extent upon freshness. Again, when the vegetables are actually at hand in the garden, waiting to be gathered, the chances are that they will be used oftener, and in I larger quantities, than when some one has to go to a store to get them. The price often Influences the quantity bought when the housekeeper goes to market, but when she steps Into her garden she is apt to bring in as much as she believes her family will consume. The convenience of having a garden frequently leads to a beneficial change In the proportions of the family diet. Vegetables are served more abundantly because they are available, and they satisfy the craving for bulk, lessening the desire for other foods which may lack the necessary vitamins. Almost automatically the garden tends to Increase the use of vegetable*. The garden must, of course, be carefully planned so that it will yield an adequate supply of the kinds of vegetables the family likes and needs, both for table use and for canning or storing. If some sort of record la kept from one year to the next to show the quantity of each vegetable j grown and the use made of It, a garden budget can ne eventually worked [ out. Fruits Are Important. Fresh fruits are also important ' sources ot vitamins, and should be

CHOICE OF TRACTOR FOR FARM WORK WILL DEPEND ON NEEDS

Several Suggestions Made to Use as a Guide. Before buying a tractor most fanners want to know what kind will meet the need of their farms. Because of frequent requests from farmers for help in this matter tiie engineering staff at the New Jersey State College of Agriculture, New Brunswick, has drawn up a group of suggestions which may be used hs a guide to prospective buyers 1. Choose from the ranks of those which have been tried by years of use. from the manufacturer who has a local : representative with a stock of repair j i parts near at hand. 2. A reasonable amount of service 1 should go with a machine of this type. See if your agent is in the habit of following up his sales to see that he has satisfied customers. 3. A belt pulley controlled by a friction clutch Is usually desired. Study the size and location of this pulley. 4. A mechanical governor is very desirable for belt work. 5. At the present price of gasoline it is economical to have a tractor that will operate successfully on kerosene I at any load. 6. An air cleaner is essential to Missouri Apple Varieties According to a survey of commercial orchards taken by federal and state authorities in Missouri, the Jonathan is now the leading apple of the state. The Delicious, Stayman, Winesap, Grimes Golden and York Imperial are rapidly replacing the Ben Davis, Gano and Ingram. Winter varieties constitute about 67 per cent of the bearing trees; fall varieties make up about 28 per cent, and summer apples are classed as 1 per cent. Clover Improves Soil Sweet clover is a very good crop to improve the land. That is, where sweet clover grows well. It will not do well on acid or sour soil unless the soil is limed. Better crops of grain j or corn can be expected after a good j crop of sweet clover. It Is not difficult to get rid of sweet clover. Buckwheat is a good crop to plow under to improve the soil, but not nearly so good as sweet clover because it is not a legume. Rape on Sour Soils When land is too sour to grow I clover or alfalfa, one of the best forage crops for hogs that can be grown । I is rape. While rape will grow on poor । sour soils, it will not grow as much forage as It will on good sweet rich < land; but it will most likely pay to I grow some of it for hogs. It would probably make more growth If you would plow the land first, and then । work it down well with a disk before , sowing the rape.

« considered In connection with the garden plan. Many orchard fruits and berries grow well In all sections of the country, and others are best suited to certain localities. While the citrus fruits—oranges, lemons, grapefruit—are among the best sources of vitamins, Tomatoes are comparable with citrus fruits as sources of vitamins, and when the latter are lacking, tomato Juice, either fresh or canned, may be used instead. It goes without saying, therefore, that It is a good thing to Include tomatoes in every garden plan. “Flushing” Recommended for the Breeding Ewes Preparation for breeding is the beginning of the direct work for the harvest of lambs hoped for the next spring. The period of gestation in sheep Is 147 to 150 days. The mating, therefore, should begin practically five months before the first lambs are wanted. The ewes should be gaining In condition at the time of mating. Such a condition will cause more of the ewes to come In heat quickly and to settle at the first mating, as well as a larger number of twin lambs. Changing the ewes to especially good pasture or giving a little extra feed beginning ten days before the breeding ! season, will serve to bring about this desired condition. This extra feeding whether from extra pasture or additional feed given. Is called "flushing.’’ It has been recommended and followed by successful shepherds for generations and carefully controlled experiments have proved that good results do follow the practice. Trim off the excess wool around dock of all ewes. Neglecting to do this is often the cause of many ewes failing to get with lamb. Pears Gaining in Favor Pears are now a year around fruit in the market and growing slowly In I favor as a fresh fruit while their popularity as a canned fruit for use in various desserts is increasing steadily. The pear has an interesting history as It invaded the United States from the northeast and southwest corners of the country in the days of the early settlers. Get Chicks on Ground Get the chicks out on the ground as soon as you can. Even while the weather is cool, let them have access to the grass and ground, but provide a runway so they can hurry back to the brooder stove when they get cold. Chicks will come to the heat when necessary If the runway is opened for i them. I

long life of the engine if used in dusty fields. 7. A magneto with an impulse starter provides as nearly as possible sure ignition and ease and safety in cranking. 8. it is very Important to see that the tractor hitch and implement Iptch are suited to each other in height and lateral adjustment. 9. Most working parts should be inclosed, and run in oil. 10. A tractor pulling a two-bottom plow would suit most New Jersey farms on winch a tractor can be profitably used. Some might need a threebottom outfit. Only a few would require a larger one. Collecting Broomsticks This is a good time to start collecting broomsticks from all your neighbors. Tin y are ideal stakes for heavygrowing plants. Grab anything that looks like a neat stake and store It, for stakes never come amiss in the growing season and usually there is a dearth of them when they are most needed. Stout stakes for tomatoes will be needed. f^nnHmK a ,t.i l nr,nn.Kri.n..nT l !T l n l nrT', , ^~ Successful farming is planned; It doesn’t just happen. • • • Don’t be afraid to try something new this year, but don't try it too hard. * • ♦ Sow celery seed for winter celery, and sow* cabbage seed for late crop. ♦ * * Heavy feeding and no exercise on Sunday is equally bud for horses and men. • • • Farming may not be financially so profitable but there is a "heap o’ living’’ in It. • • • Better seed and better machinery are not expenses; they are productive investments. • • • Peat is far more valuable as a place for crops to grow than as a fertilizer for upland soils. • • • Long row’s in gardens are best. Beds suffer more from drought and are harder to cultivate. • • • No vegetable is easier taken care of or returns more for the labor expended upon it than asparagus • • • Fertilizers are plant food, not merely stimulants, and should be given in properly balanced rations. • • • Well made soy bean hay has about the same feeding value as alfalfa hay and one or the other should be used whenever possible.

I THIS WOMAN’S REMARKABLE RECOVERY Entirely Due To Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Forest City, lowa. — “My first child lived only a short time and I was sick

for a year after. When I bent over and raised myself up again I could almost scream with pain in my back. One day I was so bad that I had to leave my washing and get ready to go to the doctor. He gave me medicine but it did no more good than if I drank just water.

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Once when we had been in town a little book telling about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was left in our car. I have taken five bottles of the Vegetable Compound now and I do all my housework and help with the milking and taking care ot chickens and garden. Besides I have a fine baby girl eight months old, just the picture of health and I am reeling fine myself. You may use this letter as a testimonial and I will answer any letters asking about the Vegetable Compound.’* —Mrs. Oscar F. Borgelin, Route No. E. Forest Citv, lowa. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is for sale by all druggists. Indispensable AS a safe. toothing and healing dressing forcuts, scalds, burns, roughened, drv and charred skin and for alt common akin troubles, “Vaseline** Petroleum Jelly h^a been Indispensable Co medical men and mothers for over half a cenCun’. Keep a jar or a tube handy. j Izxk for ths tmd^FMrk “ V<i»Uns” It is yoar prutsetwn. CHESEBROUGH MFC COMP ANT 17 Bute Street New Tort Vaseline rrraouuaa jmJ Sv^selin®' u (»<ilter—Th) line has given w- nderful result*. A physician a yrmcripttun. aafe an 1 rehabie. Writ* f»r free in form at ton. Th* Horne Hem* edy Lab.-ratorh * N Inc, Burhanan. Mich. Miarpen %ll •Mifrfj -Jinsor llhuieo ■ 1 to 300 shaves fr « h b a Price 11 00 postlaid Guaranteed M*r tl n raz r used Tews Specialty Sales, 91H N. (’rawford. Chicago. Bo) a and <»irl* Sen ’ no money Your name Hell and re’ it and gft free handsome fountain pen Murton. 1711 Portland. Minneapolis Just Ahead "What is the happiest day of one's Hfer "Tomorrow.”—Boston Transcript. A new process by which any textile fabric, whether wool, cotton, or silk, cac. be made waterproof has been discovered In England, it Is asserted. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION ft Nd ' SiS) INDIGESTION/ r ‘AjySaJr 23 BELL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief DELL-ANS 25<t AND 75<t PACKAGES EVERYWHERE And Sprinkle in the Foot-Bath ALLEN’S FOOT=EASE The Antiseptic, Healing Powder for tired, swollen, smarting, sweating feet. It takes the friction from the shoe, prevents blistersand sore spots and takes the sting out of corns and । j bunions. Always use Allen'. Foot-Eue to break in new shoes. Sold everywhere. Trial package Free. Address ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE, Le Roy. N. Y. How to build up your Weight TO BE under weight often proves low fighting-power in the body. ■ It often means you are minus nervepower, minus red-cells in your blood,

minus health, minus vitality. It is serious to be I minus, but the moment you increase the nun> ber of your redblood - cells, you begin to become plus. That’s why S. S. S.. since 1826,

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has meant to thousands of unflerweight men and women, a plus in their strength. Your body fills to the Free Booklet ! point Os power, Send name and your flesh becomes c^m*s. 3 a a firmer, the age Bid’s.. Atlanta, lines that come oa. for special , lines mat come booklet on the . from thinness dis- Blood. appear. You look younger, firmer, happier, and you feel it, too, all over your body. More redi blood-cells! S. S. S. will build them. ’ 0 S. S. S. ia sold at all good jf drug stores In two sizes. The larger size Is more economical. C C C ^Worlds Best J, Jl' ^lood Medicine — ■ "I '■ Have Good Hair /^^^.^And Clean Scalp Cuticura JJ ^^JSoap and Ointment 1 Work Wonders Try Our New Shw-Hng Stick. ,

KITCHEN 1 ■ CABINET ! L j Western Newspaper Lmon ) Who will say the world Is dying? Who will say our prime is past? Sparks from heaven, within us lying. Flash and will flash, till the last. COOL DRINKS — Many delicious summer drinks may be bought already prepared in bottles

and with these . and horn e-p re- ; pared grapejuice I and shrub one has quite a good j variety; but at times when en- • ter t ain in g one likes something a I

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little different from the ordinary. Fruit Punch. —Take one cupful each of the following fruits cut fine: Pineapple, raspberries. bananas and ■ j skinned grapes, if in season. To the . . . juice of four lemons and eight oranges add a quart of freshly made and cooled ; tea. To two quarts of cold water add j enough sugar sirup to sweeten. Mix j all together and let stand until ready to serve (in the ice chest), then add j two quarts of charged water and ice. Garnish with maraschino cherries. Fruit Punch No. 2. —Take one can ' of grated pineapple and three cupfuls ; of water, boil together twenty min- . utes, then strain through a jelly bag. i pressing out all the juice. Co<»l and I add the juice of six lemons, ten oranges, one quart of strawberry juice , or currant, or grape juice, three cup- | fills of s’jgai sirup, one cupful of : freshly made tea; cool and add four quarts of water and one bottle of charged water when ready to serve. Both of these punches serve two dozen people. Punch a la Paris. —Take one quart each of ginger ale and grape juice, the j ■ Juice of three lemons and three j oranges, one cupful of sugar—more if needed—two tablespoonfuls of grated I cucumber rind. Serve in tall glasses. ’ Serve iced coffee with whipped ■ cream and powdered sugar; iced tea I with any acid fruit like a slice of lemon, orange or pineapple. Prepare chocolate, using four squares of chocolate, grated, to one ; pint of boiling water; melt the chocolate over hot water and cook in the boiling water ten minutes. Add one pint of scalded milk, one-fourth of a ; tetispoonful of salt and a teaspoonful I of vanilla with one-half cupful of i sugar. Beat well, chill and serve I topped with whipped cream on which ' Is sprinkled a bit of grated sweet | chocolate. Combination Ale. —Take one quart of grape juice and ginger ale, chill. I serve with ice and three-fourths of a cupful of maraschino cherries cut fine. • Ginger ale served In tall glasses J with a spoonful of lemon ice on top of each is delicious. Seasonable Dishes. Ice cream Is so much enjoyed that j it is a satisfaction to know it is good ; for us. When made at i

home and eaten at mealtime it is the best of des- i serfs. Maple Parfait. — Heat one cupful of maple . sirup to Just below the I boiling point. Beat four \ egg yolks slightly, con , tinue beating and add I

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the hot sirup slowly. Cook over hot I water until the mixture thickens. ; Strain and cool, add one pint of heavy . cream whipped with one-eighth of a 1 teaspoonful of salt. Place in a chilled mold, cover with waxed paper | ' and pack in ice and salt, two pdrts i !of ice to one of salt. Allow to stand > three to four hours. Coffee Mousse. —Soften a teaspoon- । ful of gelatin in two tablespoonfuls of water am! dissolve in one-half cupful ।of clear, black coffee. Allow it to cool and. when beginning to thicken, fold |in two cupfuls of whipped cream which has been sweetened with threefourths of a cupful of sugar; add onefourth teaspoonful of salt and mold and pack as for the parfait. French Pecan Ice Cream.—Put one- | third of a cupful of sugar in a saucei pan to caramelize; when amber-col- | ored add three-fourths of a cupful of ; hot water and allow to stand until dis- ’ solved. Scald two cupfuls of milk, add slowly to the yolks of eight eggs, cook slowly until thick, adding the caramel sirup, one cupful of sugar and one-fourth teaspoonful of salt. Cool I and add two and two-thirds cupfuls of ’ thin cream and one cupful of crisped | pecans. Put the nuts into the oven 1 until crisp, break into small pieces and freeze the whole mixture as 1 usual. Casserole of Oxtails. —Brown two oxtails cut into two-inch pieces in ’ three tablespoonfuls < ' fat. Sprinkle i t with flour, salt and pepper; add one 1 ! small onion chopped, one stalk of cel- * ery, one carrot chopped, three cloves, a tiny bit of bayleaf, one cupful of tomato and one cupful of hot water, ! salt and pepper to season. Cook cov- » ered very slowly for about three and r I one-half hours. Sauted Brains.—Place the brains in 1 cold, salted water and let stand onehalf hour. Peel off the membranes, wash and cook slowly in salted water for fifteen minutes. Put into cold water, and when cool keep on ice until ready to use. Cut into pieces the size of an oyster, dip Into egg and crumbs and brown in hot fat. [ South Carolina Took Lead South Carolina was the leader In ’ advocating and fighting for the doctrine of state's right. It was the first state to secede from the Union, December 20, 1860, and it opened the Civil war, April 12, 1861. The Way of the World Beau Nash, the English arbiter of fashion in the Seventeenth century, in his prime gave large sums In cßarity, but when in old age he suffered from actual want, no one came to his aid.

WRKIIYS after every meal ’ Parents’- encoaraAe the children to cure for tnelr teeth f Give them Wrigley’s. It removes food particles from the teeth. Strengthens the ^ums. Combats acid Refreshing and beneficial! TIGHT / A KEPT f ft RIGHT 11! AH II Wj ‘‘Breakfast n COCOA A I QUALITY A^l ® Reid. Murdoch SO )■ Zilabbshed W 3 [J Wl Chicago-Borrow — Ml prrrsburgh Success ever has to listen to the cavIlings of Failure. Because of its great dependability, Champion X has been standard equipment on Ford Cars and Trucks for more than 13 years. ChampionX for Fords 60c. Blue Box for all other cars, 75c. More than 95,000 dealers sell Champions. You will know the genuine by the double-ribbed core. Champion Spark Plug Co. Toledo, Ohio Windsor, Out., London. Pari* Miy — What a boy can’t understand is that anybody should want to sell a ! <lOg. ■ Z- ~ Wear the Heel that Combines Comfort and Long Wear Rubber Heels A Better Heel to Walk On Urtf for the beet ehoe eole you ever hed^ USKIDE —th© Wonder Sole for Wear United States Rub^er^Compar^ WE WILL SELL GHRMANGOVBRNMBNTTREASUKYB-15i | 1V23. We offer these GOV BBNMBNT BONDS I SnONH MILLION MARK lots at 13.00 per Mil- | I Hon. 5 Million 113.50.10 Million 12X00. cash witn I order. Bonds shipped Besistered Mail. REPUBLIC TRUST COMPANY (Incorporated) Fort Worth, Texas g Don’t be annoyed by ugly blemishes.when red. irritated, blotchy skins can be quickly cleared by 'Resinol ~ W. N. U , CHICAGO, NO. 22-1925.