. i vy jnptavi imwt % Tak* •Cssslnfesr Preposition PnvMinf far Inrri of Two Senators, Two Hop- . } .. rsssntatlves and Five Citi- ' sons Passed by 8ensts. • Springfield.--The Alplner bill, which provider for the repeal of the entire public utilities act, has been deferred for consideration until Thursday of this week. A strong party vote In the Illinois house has delayed final action. Meantime a final effort is to be made to reconcile differences between Governor Small and Mayor Thompson's lieutenants upon the terms of the* mayor's transportation district bill and the bill carrying home rule to Chicago over public utilities. • if a compromise can be reached, the committee bills will be ready for report to the house Thursday morning and be ready for consideration before the Alpiner bill for repeal can come to a .vote. The senate passe* Senator Kessinger's bill creating a state plan commission, to be composed of two senators, two representatives, and five citizens, appointed by the governor, to prepare a system of state improvements and report to the next legislature. Without argument or speech-making, the house of representatives adopted Frank J. Ryan's resolution for recognition of the "Irish republic," -by a vote of 101 to 11. Aotion of Mr. Ryan in calling up the resolution, provoked no comment whatever from the floor. Speaker Dahlberg has announced that the house would hold a session Friday because of the late start this week because of elections Tuesday. Marriage licenses procured in any county in lllnois would be valid in any other county in the state if a bill introduced in the legislature by Representative C. E. Flack of Macomb Is enacted into law. , Bills introduced in the fifty-second . general assembly now number well over the l,ix)0 mark. No date has been set for the "dead line" on Introduction «T bills. Provision for a deep water harbor In Lake Calumet In Chicago la made In a bill introduced by Representative J. W. Ryan. < Possibilities of navigation of the Big Muddy river In Union and Jackson counties will be determined by the state department of public works and buildings, if a bill offeied by representative Mooneyham is passed. The bill appropriates $10,000 for the purpose of making surveys of the Big Muddy. Following Senator John T. Denvir of Chicago, Representative Frank ' Ryan, andtfier Chlcagoan, has placed * bill before the legislature to legalize 'horse-racing in Illinois, under the sefeu lations of a racing commission. The bill permits the use of pari-mutuel be* ting machines. Representative Pierce . of Belvidere lias a new industrial bill to provide an eight-hour day and a forty-eigth-hour week for women employed In Indus- ' tries in Illinois. Protection, not only for painters and •window-washers, but for pedestrians, ' Is offered in a bill introduced by Representative E. A. W. Johnson of Chi- ' cago. It requires all persons working on swinging platforms to wear safety belts. Legislation grapting authority to the city council of Chicago to sell to the United States government land adja **>ent to the government pier is provided In a bill offered by Representative Joyce. Pensioned school-teachers, returning to their profession after receiving pensions, would be required to refund to the pension fund amounts received • during their temporary retirement un der the provisions of a bill Introduced by Representative Charles Curren. Representative Blppus has a bill providing that the salaries of members of election commissions shall vary with the cities in which they are located and not be regulated by the counties. Overcrowded conditions in the state hospitals for insane in Illinois were brought to light in the introduction in the senate of a bill creating a home for the rehabilitation of World war veterans. Senator Mills introduced the measure which was advanced to first 'reading without being sent to committee. Dormitory quarters In many of the Institutions are so overcrowded that patients are sleeping upon the floors, It Is said. Of the 17,973 insane per sons who were patients in the state hospitals on April 1, last, 800 were World war veterans. Terrene Amendment Is Vetoed. Governor Small vetoed the Blppus bill. Introduced originally as a Chicago city hall measure, amending the Torrens act so as to provide that all records of unpaid special assessments or other taxes shall be entered upon the Torrens records in the office of the county recorder. The bill slipped through both houses as an administration measure and did not alarm any- ' body until last week. The Torrens System Protective association detected Its possibilities, they asserted, and appealed to Mayor Thompson. J ! Plenty of lee in Illinois. * ^ / •Failure of Illinois' crop of natural lea. upon Which may people in northern and central Illinois have depended, will not* occasion any suffering this summer, according to announcement here by President Bismarck King of the Trl-State Ice Manufacturers' association. Manufacturers, Mr. King said, have made necessary additions and improvements In their ice plants, sufficient to supply all demands. Ice fdr household use will generally be at the same prices m H»ym wtth- 4 oat increase. bidding on gba .. en by M eaat«*cM » *« j M|ap>, and euae Ifcr fc-nw gsavi--r *bMawhfc*we«n rejeetid, ««ases «ab- "W t* • department ot ptfbik worts-atad bondings show. 8Mb* Mto w*S Js»re than 25 pfr opt lower than tllMs Which were rejected. Lowest bidders on the bridge work are: Section 17B, Alexander and Pulaski counties, Northwestern Bridge and Iron company, $36,689.20; section 17C, Alexander and Pulaski counties, Northwestern Bridge and Iron company, $14,281.93; section 26, Ogle county, Continental Bridge company, SS.S7&40; faction 27, Whiteside couaty, George Sheldon company, $183STJ0; -section 2B. Perry and Franklin counties, General Construction coaipany, $20,719.10; section 4B, Franklin county, Northwestern Bridge and Iron company, $45,391.80; section 4C, Franklin county, Decatur Bridge company, $25,583.00; combination A, 2B and 4B, General Construction company, $69,840.00; section 11B, Jefferson county, Northwestern Bridge and Irpn company, $19,- 325.30; section 12B, Jefferson county, Riley & Bailey, $11,764.77; section 13B, Jefferson county. H. B. Cay wood, $22,31420; combination G, sections 11B, 12B and 13B, Riley & Bailey, $56,000.00; section 11C, Jefferson county, Rochester Construction company, $7,503.53; 11C and 13C, General Construction company, $24,500.00; section SB, Effingham county, G. Sheldon company, $74,414.65; 4B, Franklin county, General Bridge company, $33,791.10; section 11B, Franklin county. General Bridge company, $13,543.70; section section 13B, Williamson county, W. A. Shons company, $8,110.00; sections 11B, 12B and 13B, General Construction company, $62,900.00; sections 12B and 13B, General •Construction company, $23,500.00. Some of the lowgrading bids are: Section 2A, Perry and Franklin counties, Harrington Bros., $22,215.53; section 4A, Franklin county, Fred A. Jones, $93,790.55; section 11A, Wqshlngton and Jefferson counties, J. "A. Campbell, $30,681.81; section 12A, Jefferson county, J. A. Campbell, $28,133.30; section 13A, Jefferson county, Keating Brothers, $19,- 109.58; sections 4A, 11A and 12A, Franklin county, Cameron, Joyce & company, bids separate $59,507.50, $47,007.90, $33,365.90; section 13A, WiUiamson county, Schwertzer' JBctiS,. A Taumer, $23,264.10. State's Birds Well Cared Per. ' The executive mansion grounds have become a bird sanctuary since bird houses, designed to attract all classes of song birds, were erected there early In the spring under the difectlon of Gov. Len Small. In the trees and arbors are homes for swallows4 chickadees, golden-winged woodpeckers, wrens, martins and others. There are also food houses and drinking fountains and bird bathe; in fact, everything that Mr. and Mrs. Bird need for their housekeeping. Governor Small has always been a great lover of birds and his farm home in Kankakee county has long been a bird sanctuary. When he moved to the executive mansion he Baw an opportunity in the trees and shrubs of the mansion grounds to provide for the feathered tribe. The bird houses were designed and erected by Joseph H. Dodson of Kankakee, president of the American Audubon association and and noted all over the country as a bird lover. In his ArtW and Bird Day proclamation, setting aside April 15 and October 28 as Arbor and Bird days, the governor pointed out the importance of conserving the song birds of the state. "The Immediate appeal made to our feelings by the beauty of the trees and birds is apparent enough," the Governor said, "but the influence of such beauty on our minds and characters as they form and develop Is by no means generally recognlied. Even on the practical side, the economic value of the trees and forests and the importance of the birds as true guardians of our growing crops are the objects <£ an appreciation not yet universal or complete." Building Graft Board Idea. A permanent commission to investigate graft .lu the building industry In Chicago will be among the recommendations to the legislature soon to be made by the Dalley joint legislative committee now carrying on that inquiry. "In the short time that we have beep meeting," said Senator Dailey, **we have uncovered such a mass of evidence, Indicating a widespread system of graft throttling construction work, that we are convinced we can only scratch the surface before the present committee will die in June with the adjournment of the legislature. To root out the evil there will have to be a permanent commission appointed by the legislature to carry on the ^investigation after this committee dies. It will take many months to accomplish the task set Before June this committee also will have made recommendations for legislation to aid In correcting the present - situation through prosecution tad to prevent a repetition. Wage Commission Bill Killed. The hill for a minimum wage commission for Investigation of pay for women workers died In the house industrial affairs committee, when, by a viva voce vote, it was referred to a subcommittee from which it will be reported unfavorably late In the session. The action followed a five-hour fight led by Miss Jeannette Rankin of Montnna for the bill and offset by a delegation representing manufacturing interests of the state. It Is predicted no action will be taken to revive the measure. • ~ ~ -.VH'] New Boxing Bill on Way. , Boxing bills of all descriptYoris which have been presented to the fifty-second general assembly are to be tossed into the scrap heap and a new one framed, which, it Is the general understanding, will l^fcelve the necessary support in both branches. The new bill will call for ten rounds, no decision. The measure has been framed by a subcommittee of the house license and miscellany committee, which has been making observations and sounding oat members of both hsnsss and swats for several days. *marirand»slgnorst wrltsp a Mew Torit fashion correspondent, have taken their places ibqrand for all aa Hmsts in the fenia of fashion. Abroad one bean the women «f tufcion sightagty any, *0*. It only 1 eovld have on* of tboae American «®H»--or one of those ftwknii something else!" We are producing here tome conspicuously beautiful creations, ones that are distinctly the expressions of our own pefsoeialitief. They accuse us of disartng all alike. Well, If we do, that is because die American women have refused to open their eyes sufficiently to the possibilities, of these American creations, for they are not all designed alike by any manner of means, and any sameness in our dressing cannot be laid at the doors of tbe aritsts who are working so hard to set the pace along distinctive American lines. The fashion shows this spring, presenting strictly American-made fash- Ions, have been a treat to the eye. i he crudities which once were apparent are fast disappearing, and one delights in a showing of American gowns as much because of their fine points of design and construction aa because of their utter suitability to the figures which they are meant to adorn. There Is nothing which we do so well oor wear so well as the street suit tor women, and there Is nothing, really, which we like so well. When i•'"48* ; -S-- .SJS® r j v,;/. This Model Haa an Interesting Trimming of Blocked Linen, a Part of the Pattern of Which Is embroidered. one returns from abroad having seen all (he styles in the world, one's eyes are overjoyed at the sight of the American suit', so beautifully cut and fitted, so artistically worn. An American woman needs a suit in her wardrobe and, if her circumstances are such that she can have nothing else, then she, somehow, makes that suit fit in with every occasion demanding her presence. Our sport clothes, too, are a national expression which has nowhere else been equaled. Our designers have combined grace and beauty, In this direction, with utility, and we have at the disposal of our buying capacities the best selection of outdoor costumes that have anywhere gathered together. We have woven special dlka iorthepaiMM.' We have Imported woolens and nh«V ed them to our use. Simplicity of Line. The day dresses for this spring season produced by American designers1 are lovely in the simplicity of »heir lines and In the general way In which the materials have been handled. The coat dress is something which has received the stamp of approval from' American women, and there are some new styles In this street frock which hre very beautiful. Our afternoon clothes and some street dreesee are' partial to the use of canton crepe, a! heavier and perhaps more durable1 version of crepe de chine. There are; lovely colors in this fabric, and they! have been used with great success, the trimming being very much re-1 strained, so that the lines of the frock; have every chance to tell their beauty to the world. Gray is surely the color for Ameri*! can wear this season. Everything isj done in gray from hats to shoes. And' If the creation Is not all in gray then' some part of it Is sure to be. Blue capes have gray linings or gray col-! lars. Blue hats have gray trimmings. Reddish tones of trimming are applied to a gray foundation. Gray suits are the order of the day. Gray stockings are worn with black shoes, unless gray shoes are used. Always there Is gray somewhere in the oidng and, since there are many tones and shades of this one color, every one of every complexion can find something in color that suits her general make1- up. Skirts here are short. Yes, they are very short, and there seems no sign that they will Increase in length at present. If we adopt the longer skirts we will do It in another season, that Is all thetje Is to it, for now we are delighting in the freedom of being able to walk about without having the slightest restriction about our ankles. There are absurdities in this length of skirt, Just as there ate apt to be absurdities connected with any leading fashion. s Circular Skirt la Now and again among the newer American showings the circular skirt Is seen. It is the only evidence we have of any widening of the skirt, but when it is circular It has the greatest amount of fullness used In its making. There are so many capes among the spring wraps, and these are so graceful, that they cannot be passed by unnoticed. They are made in every fashion, from the cape of heavy homespun to that of the airiest and fluffiest of taffetas for evening wear. The cape coat has been forsaken in smart dressmaking circles for the cape on strictly cape lines, which sometimes Is left severely plain, and again embroidered . or heavily trimmed in some way. One of these is made of heavy black satin with Its lower edge embroidered for some distance with an arrangement of gray angora wool embroidery. It 'has a triple flounced collar that Is* In Itself almost another cape. Taffeta dresses are very much in favor for spring street wear. In fact, they vie with those of the canton crepe. They have, usually, fuller skirts, being made over lines that suit their texture best Each of the couturiers In Paris, It would seem, has outdone himself In the creation of gowns for this latest season. The collections have been unusually large and the examples are more vivid than was expected. And the various types of gowns, it may be encouragingly reported, are thoroughly adaptable to the uses of the American woman. Skirts Are Longer in Paris Skirts are longer in Paris--that one point Is an established thing, but, Just to prove that there is never one rule to govern tbe French couturier, Jehny has made all of her frocks and suits with skirts as short as ever they have been. To be sure, here are the youthful types, and, at any rate, tboSe among the American women who now are rejoicing in very short skirts Lave Jenny to uphold their choice; they cau refer to her decision if their Judgr ment should hang in the balance. Potret, on the other hand, has dropped his skirts to a point below the ankles and he is making them as full as can be, with positive puffs out over the hlpline. All of the other couturiers range between these two levels; Catlot likes them shorter, and some one else likes them longer, so there Is st least A choice, and every woman has the privilege of choosing the thing that becomes her best Skirts are fuller, too, than they nave been. A few of them are circular In cut and another few plaited. Even the straight skirts that follow the line of the figure are allowed a little mere tbe throat roominess than they have had recently, though those for suits and street dresses ana kept fairly conservative la width. The Length of Slssvsa. As foe sleeves, they are not extremely short, nor can they be said to be long. They reach a line Just above the elbow when they are on more normal gowns, and there are many sleeves that are long, with wide armholes and wide cuffs, no attempt being made to hold them tightly to the wrists. Necklines are subject to great latitude --there are high-necked gowns which are beautiful In the simplicity and the really great comfort with which they are constructed. This newer high neckline is a folding, wrapping, snuggling sort of line that can only be -called easy. No one would object to the soft folds of satin and wool which are now called high collars, and which, at tbe call of a whim, can be slipped from their loosely held buttons a^d allowed to swing carelessly away from Full Length Skirt Coming Paria Pecreee Simple Linee and Lees Qeoolletage--Only One Shsaldsr , f . • Bars. Short skirts, says u i'aris correspondent. "are on their last legs." Little birds are whispe*ng that the new shirts are to be not half or threequarters, but full length, In extreme cases covering the ankles. Already at the opera, the Russian ballet and the exclusive picture galleries the long skirt has appeared; and before the coining of tbe first swallow It Is prophesied |hat they will reach the boulevards In force. Captain Molyneaux, the English dress designer of the Rue Royale, confirmed the news. "The shortest skirt making for the spring Is less than a foot from the ground." he said, "and the majority are even longer. There will be very few plaits or panniers-- simple, graceful lines, that is the new skirt." Be explained chat the calves art to be hidden lu the daytime, and that the decolletuge of evening dress is to be much less marked. Dressej are promised-- or threatened--with one shoulder bare and one covered. Backs are still to be bare, but not so much. The shape of the decoUet&ge may be square raaad, oval, oblong or boat shaped. wmMWI II V » f: J0, • vl' fk ?•? m Exposed to Police by His Wife, Cripploff Yjtforan Tries to •" f Tt. End Hii Lifei'S ;* f 'Jtt v. , -V- .V : IS CAUGHT IN HOLDUP Escapee From Prison, Qeee to Chleafs fta Neet Hie Wife aitd Pinda • a tectiwes at Rendezvous 'iV-v Instead. ? Chicago.--Overseas they called him "the gamest man of a hard-boiled regiment." In tbe midst of the terrific artillery bombardments st Toul and San Mihlel he drove his team and (died his shovel and never faltered under fire until he dropped. Roy Little, top sergeant of company B of the forty-fifth engineers, came home from the war to Chicago with his left arm and side paralyzed from shell shock. He was abie to work but little. His government pension didn't come. He was cheerful withal. He could battle with life and win- against all the hard knocks, he said. Then he fell in love. After a while they were married and took up their home near Twenty-eighth street and Cottage GroVe avenue. A few months --and discord. ^ Little was broke. His pension still hadn't arrived. He,was crippled, and no one wanted a crippled employe. He was discouraged and desperate. This was in September, 1919. Meets Tempters, Falls. About that time he met two men who gave the names of Philip Hurt and James Walsh. They told how easy money could be gotten; they professed great friendship for him. They proposed, finally, s trip to Milwaukee. Little went. The trio held qp a jewelry store, were caught, and sentenced to seven years each In Waupun prison. Little, crippled, was sent by the Wisconsin authorities to the prison hospital at Mendota. He became a trusty and escaped. He went first to Duluth, thence to St Paul, Kansas I ••11 M i l l l l l i '1 nil Directoire Influence. With the increasing talk of the directoire Influence drapery, effects are found nearly everywhere. The salient features of the directoire costume which really may come In strongly are wide revers and high-stending collars on cutaway coats, which are worn with vestees, showing several inches below the waistcoat. The coats In the back extend Into long coattalls. Knotted Thread. When in sewing your thread becomes knotted, pull it toward the needle end it will usually unmtat without any further trouble. Lay In a Widening Pool of Blood. City, St Louis. He came back to Chicago on Friday. Wife Traps Him. He telephoned his wife that he was here. "I'm going straight" he told her. "If I hadn't been blue and desperate, I wouldn't have gone crooked before. But now I'm through. Will you meet me?" She did--Friday afternoon. Little's pension of $90 s month had been granted finally and was coming to her regularly. Friday night she said she'd meet him agate* at Cottage Grove avenue and Twenty-eighth street. Instead of Mrs. Little, Detective Sergeants William O'Connor, Charles Egan, and Thomas Burke accosted him. Little fought them with his one good arm until they locked him In cell No. 1 at tbe detective bureau. "Who betrayed met" he- asked. "Wat it my wife?" That evening he was found in his cell with his withered arm hanging limply on the floor in a widening pool of blood. He had torn the handle from a tin cup and severed the arteries In one wrist. He then lay down to Meed to death. ^ ^ 7 , ' , , + His Name Wss "•o«e.»' Excelsior Springs, Mo.--Suspicion rested on s stranger ih Liberty a few days ago when he stepped into a restaurant and asked permission to leave his grip a short time. Officers of the law In the restaurant suspected the man and the grip Immediately and decided to keep a watch for results. On lifting the bag was found ft be heavy. After sniffing it. one sleuth declared It contained beer beyond a doubt, while the other held out strongly for wine. When the owner returned he was immediately. put under arrest. "What have you In that grip," asked the officer, and tremblingly the man returhed "Only Booze." Whereupon be opened his baggage willingly and out hopped a little pup 'py wfce answered to the name, f t, 7, John F. Hyaltt, of Albany, N. It Relieved of Se» ww Attack- of Rheuma* of Many YearsF Standing. •1 am now seventy-two year»-«l« and am Just getting rid of a fifteen, year case of rheumatism that had me so crippled up I could not walk,* said John F. Hyatt 227 Pearl St, Albany, N. I, in relating his remarkable experience with Tanlac, recently. Mr. Hyatt was chairman of the committee in charge of building the Albany County Courthouse and was four times elected a member of the County Board of Supervisors. At present Mr. Hyatt Is Assistant Superintendent of the Albany County Courthouse, with offices In the building. "I don't believe," he continued^ "anybody could have rheumatism any worse than I did, and my case was of such long standing I didn't expect to ever get over it I was unable to walk except for a short distance, supported With a cane, and even then the pains struck me every time I took a step. My legs, hips and ankles hurt something awful and my Joints were stiff snd achy. I couldnt cross my leg without having to lift It up with my hands, and to turn over in bed, why, the pains nearly killed me. "My appetite was gone and the sight of food nauseated me. My stomach was out of order, and I had a sluggish, heavy feeling all the time. I was weak, off in weight and discouraged so that It looked Uka I might as well quit trying to ever get well. "I had no idea Tanlac would relieve my rheumatism when I began taking It last Spring. I took it because I saw where it would give a fellow aa U7 JOHN F. HYATT Pearl St., Albaay, N, Y. appetite. Well, sir, I was the moat surprised I ever was in my life wbdl the rheumatic pains began to ease upu I took seven bottles in all and, it's a fact I didn't have an ache about mst was eating fine and simply felt liks I had been made over again. "I have been In the best of hesllii ever since, with only a slight twlnga of rheumatism at intervals. I do net need my cane now, but as I had bean unable to walk without it for several years, I got Into the habit of carry* Ing It and so still take it along. I am enjoying life and health once inota and can conscientiously recommend Tanlac as the greatest medicine I have ever ran acroes In all -my d| perience." Tanlac is sold by leading dru&iali everywhere.--Adv. KNEW FEATHER WAS THERE Young Lady Altogether Unnecessarily Worried Over the Appearansa at . 8trange Old Gentleman. One day while In a railroad station in New York, I was sitting, waiting for the time to pass for my train. There came In a well-dressed and rather old man who had a bright burnt-orange feath*r In the ribbon of his felt hat. It being my first trip Bast and not knowing It was the custom for men to wear a bright-colored feather in their hats, I walked up and said: "Pardon me, sir, but you have a feather In your hat" He was quite deaf, so I found I had to speak in a loud voice In order to make him hear. I repeated the statement three times until I saw everyone near me smiling. The old man laughingly said: "Oh, that la the style, miss." I was so embarrassed that my train did not come too quick for me.--Chicago Tribune. White, hut Not With Years. Instances where some terrible experience Gas whitened a person's hair in an hour or two are by no means uncommon, but we know of only one case of such a change happening in the movies. It was during a rip-roaring screen comedy, too. "What in the world has happened to you, Jim?" asked his friend, as they came down the balcony stairs. "Did the picture give you a fright T" "Fright, nothing!" ris the other's reply. "If I'm white-headed it's because of a couple of girls who sat behind me. They were eating marshmallows, and every time they laughed they blew powdered sugar over my head and down the back of my neck."--Boston Transcript. So It Qossl "Twenty years ago you could get a ticket around the world for 9290." "Now that will hardly take you to the next town."--Louisville Conrlsr- Jouroal He who is wedded to act should have a model wife. WHEN THE HORSES LAUGHdf A,# Possibly the Animals Had Their Om ' Opinion About That Utile ' f "Swapping" Episode. "Hello," says ha : •; <tfi t; "Hello," says V ' I never seed the BMUrafM*"" < "Swap?" says ha.' , i "Dunno," says L /•Vx "Mebbe, mebbe, I aWt • § "The bay," says he. | "The gray," says L *V-vi£| "Swap?" says he, aad both alp hitched. f "Fine hoes," says he. . f "Of course," says L _ $ And in a moment we M flmdni "Giddap," says be. "Glddap*" says L And both them horses staod aMHt' Still. "He's baikedT' says % f 1 | •'Gosh, yes," says he« ^ | "Mine, too," saya L'«ai>lfeN(iid:W kllL . ;» af; "Good day," says he. • £ "Good day," ssys L |; "Best joke, b'gosh, I ever ssa."--4Ht> : change. |; HASTENED WITH GLAD NEW* FOetman, Reasonably Felt Ho Hi#' ;*t Something of Importance to Cam- * f' municats to Employer. ^ Miss MacSwiney, Che sisier of tfe \ ' late lord mayor of Cork, relaxed enoapi - at a dinner in New York to tell a stoqf about the Irish earl of Dunraven. "The earl of Dunraven," she sal& "hss a magnificent country seat, Don* raven castle, and Lord Lyons ones sent him there a gift of a pair at emus. "These emus were nimsd after their giver, and, as they were rare birds, a great desire prevailed at Dunraven castle that they should prop%-« gate. This desire ran from the e# on down to the very stable boys. « "One day the earl was giving aststely luncheon when a footmqft* rushed in, wild with excitement " 'Your lordship--oh, your lordshife* . he panted. "Lord Lyon haa laid aa Ml I Schoole in Palestine. Jerusalem.--There are In Palestine 128 Hebrew schools in which 12,740 pupils (80 per cent of the Jewish school population) receive Instruction from 564 'eachers. Eight gymnasiums (high schools and academies), forty eight elementary schools, four music and art schools and thirty-six kindergartens sre under the control of the Zionist board of education. The annual expenses for the Zionist schools amount ta $515,00^ 10 per ten* of which Is contributed by Jews manmi , he was lost, but He turned £ie corner | 1s own home ! 3 ? v ; Do many, troubled with dis* » Curbed nerves and digestion . . due to cofFee drinking, Kelp has seemed a long w&y oiL but they found izx POSTUM CEREAI at the corner groccrjr It delicious, satisfying table drink that makes for health and comfort. "%ere's a. Reason if llM Ppscum Made by % fWi