.?/'• ;*•*. i" f;" .'•••••• ' ' .*:' ' '* * '.'-. '" ' • <: '.. •-'• 1 » • ; •••'•".' f- - .? . ' ' <' »• • •' ?•. -l %.:*"'*.•>• > : • < , -..»•:•* -••. '.'«;•••"• • •' ~ •< <• *<*•>.. ' \ f •' '• • > - - .t •• • z<-: *• •*«.- ••••'* • n ^ •• ' v-v ^** ; • \ ' ' . ' . " H - i ' ^ ' ' • ? ->• • 1 • • ^ * * •. i ' • < p ' f" tBfi MettEKRT PLAIXBEALEtt, McHENBY, lit. : ^ 6R0WII6 OLD TOO SOON? ? it'. T It'« cold, or overwork may have weak d the kidneys and brought on that backache and sharp, piercing Don't wait! Strengthen the weakened kidneys with Doan't Kidney PClls. Dou'i haw helped tfaow--nda They should blip you. ilk your neighbor! An Iowa Case Fay C. GHMen, 417 E. Lincoln Way, Ames, la., says: "My back got lame and sore and my head ached. I had dlzjiy spells. My kidneys acted too : f r e q u e n t l y a n d there was a sediment In the secretions. Mornings I 1 felt tired and dull. P o a n ' s K i d n e y Pills were recommended to me so I uied some. They fixed me up In mod shape." Oil Deaafti aft Aagr Stan, Me a Bm DOAN'S "p'fAV POSTER -MILBURN CO. BUFFALO, N. Y A Springfield Woman Testifies Springfield, 111.--"When I reached le life my health became very poor and I had •pells of dizziness. I was also in an expectant condition when I commenced to take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription aa a tonic and nervine and this medicine proved of wonderful benefit to me. I had praotically no suffering and my baby was an unusually healthy one. I recommend the Prescription to all women who are ailing."--MRS. SARAH WTLDER, 1616 E. Edwards St. Contains no alcohol or any narcotic. SQUEEZED TO DEATH When the body begins to stiffen and movement becomes painful it is usually an indication that the kidneys are out of order. Keep ibtM organs healthy by taking GOLD MEDAL The world's standard remedy for tidntj, Iw, bladder and uric acid trouble*. Vfexnous since 1696. Take regularly and keep in good health. Ia thre« sizes, all druggists Guaranteed as represented. Leak for th« HUM Cold Madtl <• |at *ad ucapt no WtaUaB pARpira HAIR BALSAM BsmarnDuiarBt-eionBalrfktUai RntorM Color and Boaafty to Gray and Faded Hah Me. tad fl O* at I>rnrrl«t*. WlMioiCtiem. Wfcs.PXcbogf.il. T. kHraaIeNc. tDa.,E ifRanCa aOll RpatNa, 8en s«ure.s» cv.o tot to U* net, makes walking wy. U& by malt or it C •Ma Blseox Cbsmical works, r>tdi«ni X. Grace Hotel Forsake Fifth Avenue Tradesmen Steadily Break Exclusiveness of Noted Residence District of New York. MRS. VANDERB1LT LEADS WW New Exclusive District Expected to 8prtng Up In Section Where Near* 8lums Existed Before--Long Fight for District. * New York.--{Stealthy but steady advances by tradesmen, covering a period of more than twenty years, have virtually broken the residential exclusiveness of Fifth avenue, known tbe world over as the home precinct of the Vanderbllts, Carnegles, Harrimans, Plants, Frlcks and other wealthy families. One by one mansions which housed international personages and gave to Fifth avenue much of Its glitter and fame are surrendering to commercial enterprise, and the rich are seeking homes in new "exclusive" parts of the city. Real estate men, who have watched with Interest this aggression St trade, say that another decade will have wiped out the last bit of residential exclusiveness in the avenue. Mrs. Vanderbilt Moves. The change in Fifth avenue was reflected in the recent purchase of property bordering the East river at Fifty eighth street by Mrs. William K. Van derbllt, Sr„ where she intends to build a home in a section known as Sutton square. This bit of property Is direct ly across from Blackwell's Island, where a city prison is located, and Is almost underneath the Manhattan approach to the Queensborough bridge. Real estate men expect that Mrs. Vanderbllt's migration to the East river will mean a new exclusive district In a part of the city where near-slums existed before. Mrs. Vanderbilt, who a few years back helped to make Fifth avenue history with her brilliant social activities. c:mcAi;o • Jackson itnd Clark St. Rooa>3 with batb tl.ISE and 12.00 p*T day; with private both Ki.tB and |'.50. Oppotit* P»«< IIIM -- Krir All Theatre* ud Btor**. Stock yards cars dlrt'ct to doer. A cotulor table, newly o -.,mM>d hnteL A safe place • - roar wife, dothar or sister brifghf Tomorrow Alriffht Many s»-i ;.M aimed at the pocketbook Instead of the heart. FRECKLES S»» Is the Time to Get Rid of These Ualjr Spots. There's to longer the slisbtest aeed of (oettoa ashamed of roar freckles, aa Othiae _4osbie strength--la (atnntetd to remove ttiese homely epots. Simply set as ounce of Othlne--double Strength--from your draffglet, and apply a little of it atght and morning and you ahoeld soon aee that even the worst freckles have beg"«a to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It ia seldom that more than one ounce is aeeded to completely clear the skin and sain a beautiful Clear complexion. Be awe to ask for the doable etrencth Othiae. aa this le sold ander guarantee el •utaey back If It faila to remove freckles. In handtae out a clipping to be read, be sure it is never over ten lines long. Whenever there ia a tendency to constipation, sick-headaehe or biliousneaa, take a cup of Garfield Tea. All druggista.--Adv. Gray matter Is all right in ita place --and so is the long green. Cfticurs Soap for the Complexion. TTtrthing better than Cuticura Soap dally and Ointment now and then as needed to make-the complexion clear, scalp clean and handR soft and white. Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cuticura Talcum and you have the Cuticura Toilet Trio,-^Adv. ^ - A liar needs a good memory. , Sure Relief INDKrESTKW 3b cans 6 BELL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief LL-ANS 4 N DIGESTION is Its most valuable charm." Traffic and crowds, resulting from the trade invasion, she said, had taken away its exclusiveness. Wage Fight for District. The fight to "save" Fifth avenue has been waged since the late nineties, when real estate men began to get options on property near the magnificent mansions. Members of the Vanderbilt family and others owning homes there expended millions of dollars in buying up property in an effort to stem tbe tide. Much of this property was purchased at exorbitant figures, and after a lapse of years has fallen back for business use. Hotels, banking houses. Jewelry stores, millinery and fine tailoring establishments have gradually crept northward along the thoroughfare. The home which Mrs. Vanderbilt Is forsaking at Fifth avenue and Fiftysecond street will become the site of a trust company. Its sale was made possible as the result of the death of Mr. Vanderbilt In Paris, when the house, owned by his estate, was sold to the highest bidder. The first actual break in the Vanderbilt holdings came when Oen. Cornelius Vanderbilt leased his at Fifth avenue and Fifty-fourth street to a shoe firm. The residence of the late Henry C. Frick, steel magnate, will eventually go to the city for use as a museum. Miners Earn $5,000 a Year. Cardiff, Wales.--Some coal miners of South Wales are being paid as high as $5,000 a year, while wages amounting to $3,500 and $4,000 are fairly com-, mon. Despite this, the government is having difficulty in collecting income taxes from the miners. Last year nearly 15.000 of them were "summoned for non-payment, but only 12 of this number were committed tp prison. Dentist Sent Airplane After Patient. Little Sioux. Ia.--Insisting that William Peterson, fanner, should have dental work done Immediately, 91 dentist of Omaha, Neb., sent an air* pir.ne after hiin ,tp sav$ for t|ie busy, farmed .5,v. x -V'" CITY OFFICIAL ' LOCKED IN SAFE Assistant Treasurer of Philadelphia Has Narrow Escape From Death. CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS UP NOSTRILS SAVED BY MORSE CODE "Ocean of Air" Needs Watching Navigation Lanes May Differ From Day to Day, Says G®*» ernment Meteorologist; DATA MUST BE GATHERED Meteorologists Should Decide, After Study of Air Conditions, WhSt Route and Altitude • Plan* Should Take. Washington. D. C.--The "ocean of air" which followers of aviation believe some day will be filled with great air liners, plying their way on regular schedules, must l>e studied froui a alesaid when she purchased the Enst . tetiological standpoint and the whims river property that Fifth avenue had and fancies of the element must be "lost Its residential atmosphere, wMek 1 reduced to easily understood data be- Starving Chinese Sell Children H, N, U, CHICAGO, NO. 10-1S21. This Chinese i*sasant, starving with hJs family la tlie great famine sweeping China, is taking two «f his chlklree to market to try to sell them for enough to keep life in friippeitf rest of hie family. fore the dream of world-wide commercial aviation can become a reality, according to C. LeRoy Meislnger, government meteorologist here. Mr. Meislnger in a paper discussing the effect of air conditions on commercial aviation says that meteorology la the mainstay of aviatiou, regardless of the confidence a pilot may have In his motor and in his plane. The "ocean of air," he says, constantly Is changing and does not contain steadfast currents, such as the Gulf stream and the Japan current, which are found in oceans of water. Must Gather Data. tsecause of the constantly changing condition of the aerial routes through which the air liners of the future would travel Mr. Meislnger declares before big commercial aviation companies can operate on a large seal*, great masses of data on air conditions at all times of the year, In all places and all circumstances must be gathered. He suggests placing consulting meteorologists on the stalls of ail aviation companies to study the air as It affects aviutloQ and to decide daily what altitude and what route a plane should take froiu one city to another. Air conditions are so changeable, Mr. Meislnger says, that a plane traveling between the same two points might have to take a different route almost every day In order to make the trip with the least danger. Also, a plane flying from New York to Chicago might find a certain route the best, while one traveling from Chicago to New York on the same day might find an entirely different route more favorable. Things to Consider. Some of the things which airplane dispatchers will have to consider, he says, are the speed and direction of the wind in the area to be traversed, the frequency of low clouds nnd fop. the frequency and Intensity of thunderstorms, the vertical temperature dis tributlon, the normal values of precipitation at flying fields und the effect of atmospheric pressure on aerial instruments. particularly the altimeter The changing conditions in the make it impossible to gather the n«< essary Information In a single path finding flight over an area, he co« tlnues. hut by gathering data ia n u merous flights at all times of the ye and in all circumstances a system of averages could be devised which would aid greatly in dispatching planes. Signaia Tapped on Door Heard by Might Watchman--Clsrk Covers 14 Miles in 20 Minutes to Release Prisoner. Philadelphia.--His knowledge of telegraphy, the presence of the night watchman at an opportune time and a mad dash of 14 miies In 20 minutes by the only other man who knew the combination of a bank safe, saved Arthur D. Brenner, assistant city treasurer of Philadelphia, from possible death after he had been accidentally locked In a tiny vault for many hours. It was late In the afternoon when Brenner stepped Into the small vajilt. A messenger had just arrived from Harrisburg, Pa., seeking Information of a certain warrant. It was an Important mission for the state treasurer and Brenner went In person to fulfill It The hour was 3:30 o'clock In the afternoon. < Locked Into 8mall Vault. A few minutes later Brenner heard an ominous clicking. The heavy doors tumbled Into position. "Wait a minute 1 Hold on there!" he shouted. / There was no answer. Instead, the lights within the vault were snapped off, leaving him In darkness. Then Brenner took counsel with himself He thought he might be able to survive the night. George Morrison, the chief clerk, the only other man who knew the combination, had gone home early in the afternoon. He lived 14 miles from the city hall. Brenner reatlsed that no one could hear his voice, so he tried to sleep, knowing that the best air was near the floor. He used several bank ledgers as a cushion. When he awoke he realized that the air was bad and that his situation was serious. "~ It was about 9 o'clock. Brenner thought of the night watchman coming on duty, and he had an inspiration. He began to signal by tapping with a key on the steel door of his prison. The Morss System. Brenner finally received the reply he was waiting for. The night watchman formerly had been a messenger boy for ilu Western Unloi he T$Hs How to Get Quiek Relief from Head-Colds. It'a 8plendldl In one minute your clogged nostrils will open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, blowing, headache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your cold or catarrh will be gone. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply little of this fragrant, antismtic, healing cream In your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the Inflamed .or swollen mucous meinbnpne and relief comes instantly. ^ It's just fine. Don't stay stnffed-np with a cold or nasty catarrh.--Relief comes so quickly.--Adv. Personal magnetism accounts for more friendships than similar tastes. KILL RAT8 TODAY Pi>ter the Great had a passion for riding about In a wheelbarrow. ELECTRIC PA8TK Tbe (a&rmnteed •'tiller" for bu, Mle*. OotknuMa Ants nnd WaterboifR -- tfc«» greatest known lllltan fnim 1 he halldin* f r r ind fresh KEADT FOR UKK BKTTER THAlf ' Directions In 1& l&D<p>*ge* In vrerj bos. 3&e and fl.50. Bnongh to klU a to M (7. 8. Government tmjra it. Shave With Cuticura Soap The New Way Without Mug " !:«l FIKS VOIR BOSH, lit independent. Make •ixty dollar* weekly demonstrating DIVIRI • Mid MALCOMS HOME-A-OLOW mantle lamp. City brightness for oil lamp wn> Folks glad to have you brighten their home*. Free advertising over your name will fGltnsh leads. To secure guaranteed eowg right*, free Information address ARTnum MAI.COM, T95 Baltimore Bldg., CHICAGO. CARRY 115,163 BY AIR No Liyes Lost in the Commercial Service. Rsoords Show a Total of 3,'CAJM Mileage--Many Minor Accidents and Forced Landings. JNe«[ ifork.--A total of 115,163 passengers flew 3,136,550 miles In commercial airplaues during the last twelve months without the loss of a single life, the Manufacturers Aircraft association announced here. These iigures are based on tbe performance of 423 planes, and it is believed that the number of passengers and the mileage would be doubled If the figures of the 1,000 commercial airplanes operating In this country were obtainable. "In the absence of any federal system of registration, air laws and government methods for tabulating tbe ownership and performance of aircraft, it has been found difficult to trace the total number," the association stated. "The totals are based on questionnaires distributed by the association, but, due to the itinerant nature of much of the flying, it has been difficult to trace and record more than half of these. This one hnif, bjr eighty-seven companies, or individuals, are permanently located in ail parts of the United States. "Much of the mileage was made on short flints of ten to fifteen miles, for which an average fee of $12JV) was charged. An increasing demand for aerial transportation between the cities has been noted, the average charge for this service being 65 cents a mile. On practically all intercity (lights baggage or freight was carried, the quantity limited only by the capacity of the craft. This business aggregated 41,390 pounds. "There were accidents and furced landings, but according to.the si gnat reports from the eighty-seven companies, In the 3,130,550 miles flown, not a single life was lost. There were 222 forced landings and thirty-eight accidents. There have been fatal accidents In other instances, hut they occurred in the course of stunt or exhibition performances or under circumstances indicating that undue risk had been taken." Boy Given Life Sentence. Wheeling, \V. Va.--Life Imprisonment was the sentence passed upon slxteen-year-.old Samuel Blevens, formerly of Little Rock. Ark., in court here, after the hoy hod pleaded guilty to a charge of murder. The lad was accused of having killed C. F. Grandstaff, a car Inspector, in a shack near Wheeling last October. Arm Venice Court Attaches. Vienna.--Swords are now worn by court officers for protection at the ordfer of the president of the Vienna criminal court, because of the many at> tacks upon judges and witnesses recently In court rooms. LIZARDS MAKE AUTOS SKID Plague Afflicting Towns and Villages Which border on Prairie LnMs of Canada. v Winnipeg, Man.--A plague of II*- srtfs Is sfllicting tbe towns and villages which border on the prairie lakes and sluices of Canada. At Ninette 2,000 lizards were shoveled -out Of the basement window shaft at the government sanatorium. In the doctor's quarters 60 were counted. Motorcar drivers have to keep skid chains on their cars, as the roads are made slippery by a surface of living lizards. Many of the people keep Indoors rather than venture out because of the (lipagrveuble sensatlon of crunching a lizard underfoot. The lizard Is more treacherous than banana peel. The little reptiles, which vary, from four inches to eighteen Inches in length, travel by night only, and are now on their annual trek from the lakes to find suitable crevices in which to hibernate. Father Eloped Same Day Two Daughters Ran Away A triple elopement Involving three members of one household, none of whom knew of the 01 h er's Intentions, was disclosed with the announcement that William M. Chase of Atlantic City. N. J., retired New York clfy manufacturer, and his daughters, Edith and Evelyn, had married their respective mates within 2-1 hours. Each of the three was surprised to find that the habit had spread throughout the family. BLIND IN ETERNAL TRIANGLE Hooch Blamed for Theft. San Antonio, Tex.--"Too much hooch!" said Judge Buckley as he levied a $50 fine on George iiarrison for having stolen a forty-two-year-ola monkey from a carnival show and then disturbing residents near tbe show grounds by ringing their door bells and trying to aell the monkey. Husband, Wife and Alleged Affinity, Sightless All--Men in B«ttlt / Royal. Atlanta, Ga.--That love is blind has Just been proved in police court here when a blind man, his blind wife, and her alleged affinity, blind also, were arraigned for trial following a battle royal between the two men, after the' husband had come home unexpectedly. Martin Strone, the husband, told the recorder that while peddling religious tracts in the streets a friend had warned him that a rival was paying court to his wife and that he bad better go home. On his arrival there he said he found Sam Stewart enjoying a chat with the wife. Then the fight started. Most of the furniture in the room was wrecked, but tbe combatants suffered less in- Jury, due to their inability to get at each other properly. "One day In a dark call i*i the police station for Stefrav*," void tba judge. ii Began to Signal by Tapping With a Key. knew the Morse systemA Brenner himself had been a telegnWter at one time. The assistant tgA^surer then signaled his predlcamc It did not take the watehpnan long to send word to the chief clerk. Morrison broke all speed records In making the 14 miles to the city hall In Just 20 minutes. But the worst came when Brenner arrived home. The first thing his wife said to hiin was: "Where In the name of sense have you been?" "I was In the office," Brenner replied. "No, you weren't," flashed his wife. MI telephoned you and could get no ^nswer. Now, where were you?" FINDS LONG LOST CHILDREN Father Sees Daughters After 25 Years of Searching--Taken Away in Infancy* •Burlington, Ia.--W. E. Irwin, « traveling salesman, returned home from Washington, D. C., where he said he met his two daughters, now married. Whom he had not seen since August, 189®. when the girls, then three and five years old, were, he alleged, taken away by their mother from the family home in Oquawka, 111. Irwin said . he had received word recently that one of his daughters was living in Washington, and going to that city said be had found her. ending a twenty-five year search. She is Mrs. Reba Darrell, wife of a Washington newspaper man, Irvin said. The other daughter, Mrs. Mariam Fitch, lives In Lynn, Mass. Finds an Honest Thief. Sioux City.--F. D. Hass, railroad" yardmaster, who was robbed of $12 recently, declared that he had dlfc covered an honest thief when he received the following note: Tm the fellow who robbed you. 1 was broke and out of a job. and my wife and kids were going hungry. Byt I got a Job here and as soon as 1 get a little money ahead I will return what I stole from you." Hass said if he knew who the man was he -tt-nuiri give him another $12 for being LulU-st. ot fontents 15¥hiid1 (iGTiTtllWIHSl > LCOHOL-3 PBR GljMt. i tln(VtheStna>idks»gi^Bqw^rfj ChcctfutocssandB^Catf«^ neither Opidm.Morp®to« |mKT^T£ahc°TIC £* jESsm fit f^dFeveristoe^ •wrWYpBf^ Exact Copy of Wrapper. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castor^ Always. Bears tbe Signature ' Is Use or Over Thirty Years CASTORIA '^1 VHC ECFFTMIIT eetfl;»AIIY, i DIDN'T WORK BY SCHtDULt Impossible for Rural Postman to Tell Just When the Next Mail Would Go Out. mmm--m *V' A day of mist and rain ancl drlvftjg wind, and over (ho turn of the hill « man's figure making his way, the only human being that had been seen for iln.vs. He tanie straight into the house with his posthag, and kindly smite- He h<id a military hearing and spoke like a schoolinuhter with a university educatlou. lie explaiued how l>;j had come round that way and expected to carry hack letters ready for the post. A rush was made nnd what could be put together was hit rusted to him. "What about tomorrow?" was the question asked by those unacquainted with' the ways of . the rural post. "When does the post go out?" A iRlow smile gathered on the postman's face. "Ah! that I cannot tell," he said, shaking his head. "It depends entirely on when it .comes Jn»"--ClurUtian Sfttoaca Monitor. . I Can't Pleaae a Woman. "Was the o|<eration successful i* asked one physician of another. "It was brilliantly so in the facts It demonstrated. Only one person did not seem pleased with the results." returned the second physician. "And who Mas that?" inquired tbe first. "The patient's widow." DtHlltU, PLEASURES OF TABLE Great Jockey Had to Sacrifice Much t# Maintain His Position w> .Klna . ' of Riders. . . I' Fred Archer, the famow fengffc4| Jockey, had to employ heroic mtuk ures to keep his weight down. |- The story Is told of bow, on one oO> casion, he was the guest of a very Imm| pitable host. % From the kitchen came the perfunaN^ of savory meats, nnd at dinner S sturdy, rosy-cheeked man-servant inndi his api>earance, his back bending as# der the weight of a great salmon on 9 lordly dish. l'oor Archer's face, as he surveyeJ the Initial preparations for the evenlna meal, was quite piteous to watcha Then, with a shrug of the shoulders and a sigh, but Ill-concealed by a cynlf cal remark, he left the table, an# shortly afterward his host saw pass the window on a hack, galloping toward the training grounds. f Later on he partook of a tiny glas^l of champagne and a biscuit, playing one game of billiards, ami retire*! bed. --. - 741* Fatal Mistske. * (Situation: Rurglar caught red-hand** ed arraigned in court.) Woman--"Th#i sorce o' the feller! 'E pretended ttt be my 'nshand and called out: 'it's aU§ right, darlln'--It's only me.' It wa4 the word 'darlln' * wot give *ln> away."' --London i'unch. I M Children May Share the health drink-- INSTANT POSTUM This pure cereal beverage Is made of prime wheat bran ana molasses. Satisfying, pleasing.aiid in it to do harm Instant Postum has a rich.coffeelike flavor. His economical and convenient Postum comes in two forms- •*. - " > Postum Cereal Cin packages) is made by boiling a full twenty minutes. „ Instant Postum (in tins) made instantly in the cuj> i» the addition of hot water. "There's a Reason" Sold by grocers everywhere ftade by fWtum Cereal Co, hoc, Batik Creek,Mkh. 4*