> l#.,. *^3p r<i!l. . rfsl :^l M F ^ \:i^ *VS* •-"7"./ . ••: VeahkbtbeM* stVah-; able WYo« Haw Mich.--""Some yean wf I with km of appetite sad soreaad i .Imtreiedd tth e best Could hew of, and aho wwlil pat-np wudktom. bat nothing «Bd mm «ny Mod. Some physicians «ud it M my peart; aome said pt urns my tftwch: MMk others aald it «ii my serves. I ot so bad {could not work very steady. when a (Head cane to see me and " upon my trying Dr. Pierce's Me*ka!l)ian>v«y. Iwasdh- 1 but tried it anyway, and ft%'V •• !y^.# Chemist Becomes Best-Known and Most-Faro*. Detective in f, aAka •--«• *» «*a v•u vwr-n av MM w MCCM DOW ft tm 1 then bought afac bottles . the 'Discovery* amd my rightfully named *GcAdk» Dkcovfjy.' I would iccom> nit who need such a medi» E. Backus. druggists, tabteta or liquid; «r 10c toDr Pierce's Invalids' Hotel iffalo, N. Y., for a trial pkg. A „ '& Homestopper--When In Roma did ' p>u do as Romans did? v' . 6 * 5Benabroad--Nope! They wottldit • - «it me peddle souvenirs and' act M |h!de and graft on the tourists. ELLANS AND 75t PACKAGES EVERYWHERE rnMret te* Was Your Grandmothers Remedy for every stomach *#nd intestinal 111. xhls good old-fashioned herb home remedy for constipation, stomach ills and other derangements of the sysso prevalent these days is in even iter favor aa a family medicine a in your grandmother's day. f : f o?iv.n. > KEMP'S ^BALSAM; Cutieura Soap -- SHAVES -- Without Mug > •73* Estonia. yon w Invitation cSS favorable allmata ^ the State aaff to «r™ " . attractive aesQdanasa, •mI trfiM i Writ* us and tecMMrimi. Jbor mi €>•• wsi, AttflML •. -J-- f - POVOUSUfFERraON ASTHMA ? CHHJA«0,NOimmjst HEiisEssaamncmos QNm t4tnUMMili«at*tt» jPersoiial- Ity e» Pl Initliala or TSftlr Paycfcology. twt Watfcs With >M*a«artal Thin* - ' chemist of reeenrjedis haa become the b^t-known detective In France. Edmond Bayle is a small, dark, quiet man; he works In a modern- equipped laboratory In' rbe Palais -de Justice; he Is feared by criminals of all classes, and his ultimate faiae promises to surpass that of Alphcue Bertflllon, the French finger-print e*» pert, who died In 1914. Doctor Bayle Is dilef of tfce (whH» cal bureau of the Parte police department. Here all th3 criminal information of the republic Is concentrated, classified and studied. From this bureau the expert chemist and physicist gives directions In the field of criminal detection. So successful has he been that the ignor nt criminal clashes have come to regard him as a_worker la tteck angle. - - Study His Method*. . His unique methods have been studied by the police department of New York city. Doctor Bayle rarely gives much attention to the personality of criminals or their particular psychology. He works rather with material things. His workshop consists of many rooms and passageways equipped with all the paraphernalia of a big industrial laboratory, and Includes a photograph gallery. He has spectroscopes, microscopes and X-ray machines by the dozen, each fitted for a special purpose, such as examining blood spots, forged documents, counterfeit money, pow "er^burned clothes and the wreckage that la picked up on • criminal's trail. Doctor Bayle'a study Is lined wttb books on science,, ind cata'ogue records of bis work. In the records of his bureau there are registered no less ..I. mi > • jVi 'iiiiity m than. 8,000,000 names of persons involved in crimes, past and present. Crime Detection Different. -Tl»® detection of crime today Is something very diff rent from the popular conception," said Doctor Bayle. "The Sherlock Holmes and Arsene Lupin stories of great criminals and their feats are no doubt n.ost entertaining. but that Is all I can say for them. From my point of view, there Is no crime that cannot bo det& ted, that does **ot leave Its traces behind, at least theoretically. For one t. Thygsiiidniiinfl man fraud. "My methods astound tbo Ignorant erbpiMls. and they Kavt come to fen* ms^jipn I enter th* cwts. so-called IwllIHgPnt profesataw «rttslnnl* MMi lo have begna tn try to dram* >^-|» a small wns. Nowlidaya they ssdsnvsty by wearing not to leave finger prints hehlnd, but we have reached the point wtlMt their finger prints through gloves din be detected. "Crime la really not very mystert» otis. The curious point to me is that the crimes which Interest me*most do not Interest the public. "There has keen very great progress made In the detention of crime during the last six or elgbt years, particularly through the application of chemistry and photography to detection." Wi MEN LIKE JelHsd desserts made with Plymouth Rock Gelatine are very popular with the men folks. One package will make several different kinds of desserts, enough for three or four meals. The variety of recipes in every box makes It easy to please everybody.--rAdv. Beyond Repair. Jim--Yes, he was e wild Mrd. Bat he began to reform in bis old age. Jam--Well, well, and that w as about as futile as putting a bad egg In cold storage. r"- Cutieura Soothes Itching Scalp. On retiring gently rub spots of dan* drutf and itching with Cutieura Ointment Next morning shampoo with Cutieura Soap and hot water. Make them your everyday toilet preparations and have a clear skin and soft, whits .--Advertisement Qualified to Speak. "Do you believe two can tfn ii cheap as oneF *'No, I don't I'm the father of twins."--Boston Transcript ana Trappers a! Gran Marais Get Programs Broad- «a«t by ALL BREHIS ARE RBKESEKTED Colony No Longer Shut Off From Out- WorM by Winder--4ladlo, IS Building Up the Coo»> mumty Spirit » i I I i ^ i i l i ' i i i i • • • • tte«yt>o realise what a won. derfully progressive age we aro living InT See what the radio la doing for these peopl*. Duluth, Minn.--The wlxardry of the wireless now awes the Indian and delights the trapper and those other hardy souls of the winter isolated community of Orand Marais, Minn. Originally a Hudson Bay trading post. Grand Marais lived on after the rich pelt harvest had seen Its day; became a logging community, and still holds on--principally for the sake of housing men and their families, who FOR OVER 40 YEARS? RALLS CATARRH MEDICINE has b««n used successfully in th* treatment, of Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE consists of Ointment *hich Quickly Believes by looal applk-AttoR, and the » --:y>, - .... . Interna! Medicine, a Tonic, which acts make it (feelr summer business to take tllc " faces, ttir.u rediK inif the Inflammation. Trinity Opens Hundredth Year The ancient ceremony of matriculation day was observed recently at TMhity college. Hartford. Conn., which celebrates the hundredth anniversary of Its founding nest June. New students signed their names in a hook con* tatnlng the signatures of all Trinity men since 1856. This photograph shows Stimpson Hubbard of Brooklyn, N. Y„ a member of the freshman class, enrolling himself in the same book in which his father. Dr. William S. Hubbard of Brooklyn, g trustee of Trinity college, signed his name when he entered Trinity in 1884. President R. B. Ogilby of Trinity stands directly back of him holding a r-aper In his left bandt-r "\ * out pulpwood butts and in winter, after the big game season, to lay a line of traps. Naturally, In such a geographical location, nelghborllness and community spirit must prevail throughout the long, bitterly cold, semi-dark winter. Parties at homes, "movies" and winter sports had constituted almost the entire means for entertainment for the people of Grand Marais. Then rsino. this fall, the strange thing. Community Wireless. A community wireless receiving set, bought and paid for through a general subscription, it was said, has been installed. Tall pine "sticks" spliced to give fhem height, reach Into the cold sky, and from them swing the highflung aerials. Below and In the largest meeting hall in the town the doubleamplifier set has been tested out and found good. Evening; a cold, gray day followed by a blasting wind from off Lake Superior; snow, snow, snow--tunnels through the drifts, all leading to the meeting place. The Scandinavian, the Montenegrin, the Indian, the American, the Canadian--all breeds that could bo found In larger cities or greater ports-- foregather at the shrine of the wireless. As they come they bring their log for fuel and they deposit It beside the roaring fire In the open hearth. Assembled, the company waits, .breathlessly, whispering their com- • ments, tlielr expectations. Before the mysterious box the operator takes his place. Silence. Then, ont of the sky--out of the great beyond, so It seems to many--• a clear soprano voice begins to sing; beautifully, harmoniously. Frenchmen and their wives. Italians and their wives, cross themselves, lower their beads and literally drink In the sound. Indian Is Skeptical. Suddenly there Is a rush t An Indian, sophistry shining In his black eyes, dashes out and behind the building. He has'gone to catch, red-handed, the woman who Is singing from behind th* building! He comes hack, crestfallen, to receive a spatter of laughing criticism. Yet he does not believe. He asks to see what Is back of the partition and stand where the radio set Is housed. He 16 given a look. He takes his seat and watches, half believing only. The light-hearted Scandinavians, Swedes, Norwegians, swing their reddened hands In cadence with the voles that comes from whence they know not nor care; they are enthralled, they aro happy.. "Nev' mind where she come from," said a Frenchy, "she one fine gal--1 bet ma*" • nJ> Sold by ali drufrgi»t«. W. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo, Ohio, EARLY MARRIAGES ARE A FAILURE Girl, 13, and Brother, 16, Prove > Parents Were Wronf, • "Marrying Burches" of Kansas City, Advocates of Eariy Unions, Ois- :?..-4tmeiensd by Experieiw&.njL - Two of Family. , j* ( Kansas City, Kan.--Early nirrfage is toeing one of Its greatest supporters, the "marrying Burch family" of this city. Mrs. Burch says that times are changing and maybe It Is better to wait longer. Her four married children all went to the altar before they were sixteen, but two of the weddings have turned out unhappily. Goldle. who married last year when thirteen yfears old, is home seeking a divorce, and John, who Is sixteen, and mar rled a thirteen-year-old girl, is also suing for separation. It was a bard blow to the early marriage theory of Michael and Rhoda Burch, who eloped when Rhoda was sixteen, fund it is believed thut the experience will hold back the marriage of the younger children. Michael Burch, minister and stone-mason, whose home Is also built to be used as a chapel on Sunday, had considered his children of marriageable age when they reached their teens. Fidssle, oldest daughter, married wlien fifteen years old at the altar In the home chapeL She has several children, and like Pearl, who married at fourteen, has been very happy. Their parents have pointed with pride to these examples of the success of early matrimony. Then, John, sixteen, and a neighbor girl, thirteen, were married. Goldie, thirteen, said she wus old enough to wed, too, end she became the wife of Jerry Hlnes, twenty-one. But these two marriages did not endure like those of Flossie and Pearl. Goldle. not yet fourteen. Is home with her baby because she could not live happily with her husband^ and John blames bis wife's relatives for his marital troubles. CORELESS APPLE DISCOVERED Variety of Fameuse Fruit Shown at Fruit Grower's Meeting at Montreal. Hsiitrial. Que.--Much vL-na syoked at the fall meeting of the Pomologlcal and Fruit Growing so* clety of the province of Quebec by the announcement of the discovery at Abbotsford of a seedless and corelesS variety of the Fameuse apple. Prof, F. C. Sears of the Massachusetts Colv lege of Agriculture, who was present, examined every essential detail. H< said that If it could be produced 1 would prove of great value. The seedless apple was discovers by accident and the exhibitor had n Idea It was developed. He believes, however, that the variety could M perpetuated by grafts. Many an otherwise good man nmji make a poor husband. » EVADES POORHOUSE BY DYING Long Island Resident Aged One Hundred and Six, Dies an Hour Before - / Ttanefor His Removal. vi; Patchogoe, t. I.--Death at ffwiige of one hundred and six years prevented Joseph Vercento from being taken to the Suffolk couuty almshouse. It also freed, temporarily ,at least, his aged wife of tne necessity of going to the same institution, against which she, as well as her husband, had been fighting during the last years of a long life Joseph Yercento *ed" with his wife, ninety-six years old, and his son, Joseph Yercento, Jr., seventy-six years old, in « shanty at West Hempstead. Up to three years ago he had beeo able to earn a pittance by doing odd fobs. When he could work no longer, 'he son became the sole support of the family, which he supported on earnngs of five or six lollars a week. Recently -A. C. Still, overseer tfie .oor, has been allotting the $8 a month out fund for that purpose, but several days ago told the elder Yercento that he would be more comfortable and better cared for In the almshouse and ought to go there. Vercento at first refused to go. but gave his '-onsent reluctantly recently on the condition that his wife should accompany lilm. The aged couple were to have been taken there. When Mr. Still called to take them to the almshouse he discovered that the husband had died an ffour before his arrival. The son said he believed he would be able to -nqctttbis mother with some slight asshnlpw Mr. Still agreed that the townsbip 'i|puld do Its purt toward her support and charitably inclined residents of Pafefcogue, when the circumstances became known to them, volunteered to supply any deflciency that might be lacking. ~ Moslem to Rebuild Towns. London.--One hundred of the richest Moslems In Constantinople recently were Invited to visit Gen. Rafet Pasha, the Turkish governor of the city, informs the Constantinople correspondent of the London Dally Mail. He proposed that each should "adopt" "-S; » VV-r-.5 Castor OH Is Punishment Handed Communist Chiefs Nice, Italy. -- Reports from Yentlmiglia to the Eclaireur de Nice state that the Communist leaders at San Remo, Pigna and Alainrio Wine arrested by Fascist!. It Is declared that the Fasclsti made them swallow s strong dose of castor oil and that let them go. • • I'M > • I an Asia Minor village and assist tc rebuild It from the ruins was, . 3**. rich Bach agreed. ' • HsjW' • Villages Raided for Gease. Berlin.--In anticipation of Chrlat-f mas a gang of goose thieves have? p raided 51 villages in the State of* Hanover. Hundreds of fowls have d*s-< appeared as a result of the raids. A combined fojee of police and civilian* Is attempting to trace the thieve* A Dangerous Variety. "Alice may be a gossip, but I be- Beve she tells the truth." "My dear, the truth is frequently th« worst form of gossip Imaginable.** Important t» Slotbom •gamine carefully every bottle ef CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bears the with the ^ v W* * Cjiu- J ess of r resh r ruil Signature of fa Use for Over 80 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Cutoris Longsr Skirts. "TN'111 silk stockings be wornT* "Yes," rejdieil Miss Cayenne, "but they will not, as heretofore, constitute of the costume." Alfalfa $8; sweet clover, S& for sale and rent on crop paym'ts.* J. Muihall, Soo City, la.--Advertisement Every time a man borrows trouble he gets the worsf of the transaction. If a rolling stone likes to roll, It doesnt care for moss. HERE'S a new package oi Sun- Maid Raisins that yon will want to try--* dainty, tender, juicy, seeded fruit-meats packed is tins. The tin keeps sll die flavor in. No matter when or where you buy them, these raisins have the freshness of fresh fruit Especially delicious so a cake or pie--and all ready, too. Try them next time you buy raisins. See how good they are. Mail coupon for free book of tested Sun- Maid recipes. '-Mi Sun-Maid Raisins San-Maid Raisin Oman Mtmkrtk* 13,000 Dept. N-$41-29, Ftans,OdL laid! Seeded Raisins in blue-labeled tins should cost you no more than the following prices: 12 oz. tin, 20c; S ox. tin (cupful sine), 15c. Sun-Maid Raisins tn pscksgea should cost you no more than the following prices: Seeded (in J5 •s. blue fkg.), 20c; Seedless (in 15 as. red ISc; Seeded or Seedless [11 ss.), l5c. COT THIS OUT AND SBND IT | Sun-Maid Raisin Grswwrs, Dept. N-541-29, Fresno, California. Please send me cony of jog^ lift ksok, "Recipes with Rskinhr NSMW |l II mmmmmmmtm SlXBRU Crnr_ 10 Csnts Gives Charming New Shade to Old Lingerte PUTNAM FADELESS DYES--dyes or tints as you SURELY WAS BRIGHT YOUTH, DISCOVERED ERROR TOO LATE Sut Possibly Schoolmaster Had Some Idea of Conveying a Delicate Hint *o Dad. Secretary Mellon said at a dinner in Pittsburgh: •/ "Some of the hints thut our former allies drop about their debts to us remind tne of a story. "A Hoosler schoolmaster was giving a gawk; country lad a lesson In mental arithmetic. . " 'Now Peieg,' Ite Mid, 'suppose your father had eight hnms hanging In his •moke-house, and In tuy ceUar J^ere Were none. Got that?' . v" "'Yes, sir,' said I'eleg. "'Now suppose your father %ave me one-eighth of his entire stock of hams --how many would there then be tn my cellar, and how many would remain In your father's smoke-house?* "'One and seven,' said I'eleg quick as a flash. "'MarvelousI Excellent 1' cried the school inn ster. Ton are entitled to ten good marks for that answer. Tell your father so when you get heme. Repeat the problem to him, word for word, so that he may see what a flnw, bright boy he has in bis little Pelee.'" It Depends, Doctor Copeland says that people are In better health when they ire well dressed, because, they hold their heads high snd Inhale more freely. Nevertheless we've seen well-dressed men scrooge down Into their collars most unhygienically when they met the tailor they still owed for the glad rags. --Boston Transcript. Laugh at other people's jokes. It is the most tactful compliment--and good-hearted. Rash Husband Jumped to Conclusion as to the Meaning of His We** Muttering*. BROKE BOTH THEIR RECORD Whan It Came to Bible Readini Comer "Pu$-tt All fti. His Friends. Greenberry Low«t. settlen^nt d| In the stste auditor's office, and statchouse friend one day were < G »v. Kphralm Morgan of West Virginia was talking at , a dinner about certain coal-mine complications. "Well." he said, "let us hope nobody 1 cus«lng their early religious familiar does aii3'thlng rash. Rashness--but [with the Bible. One had read the B£i_. perhaps you have not heard the story < through once and Imd committeait of Rol^fid. I memory a catechism. The other had "A certain man got married, and not learned the catechism, but had one night on the honeymoon he was | read the Bible through more awakened by the voice of his young bride talking tn her sleep. " 'Roland,' she sighed, *Rolsud-- Roland.' Over snd over, you know, like that. It was terrible. "The man grew wild with Jealousy, for his name was Ilank, not Roland. and seising the poor girl by the throat, be pui an end to her then and there. "A rash deed, believe me," for Hank learned afterward from her family that Ids wife had worked for several years In a cafeteria, and the "Roland* he had heard of her dreaming lips was really 'Roll and,' meaning, of course, an order for 'Roll and butter.'" The Modern Phaaft "Ton say she's intellectual 1" "Very." "In that case I'd better memorise a little something from Shelley and a little something from Keats. It might help If the conversation lags.'* "You are behind the times. You'd better con a page or two of synthetic psychology." -- Birmingham Age-Herald. jJt Waant for an Ice Palace. fv. ' "If you've got your building permit srhat are yon waiting fori" "A weather permit.'* tjiii once. "I read the Bible through beforn K was fourteen," said the friend. "Yes, but I read It through betinre I was twelve." said I*owe. It seemed to be a draw, all points considered, when Lewis Johnson, audit clerk, came along. The two, aascrating a holier-than-thou attitude, told Johnson of their early Bible readbg records. "That's nothing," said Johnson. "My father read the Bible through to an long before I was able to land n word.* --Indianapolis News. Forests Pay. Twenty-eight states are about <^fcave their treasuries enriched by from the United States gover which are derived by timber ariM% grazing permits or other sourcia^if revenue for the last year in the operation of the national forests. H» SUM aggregates about $1,000,009. CaMsv> nla, where the national timber lands ; last year returned to the gewermnss* ,$528,765, leads the list and will recetva^Mi*- #157,191 for the school hard road fsndi4; and $628.76 for national forest r«*dKs|, and trails. Oregon is second, Idaho, Arizona and Colorado follow in?;.;> the order named. & * Off to school on a winter morning .^l^a^-fresh «wl rosy--or pinched and chilly? ISTbat'a a matter for Mother to decide. Children, as well as grown-ups, need hot mealtime beverage that is wholee, invigorating, and free from harm- " after-effects. ? Coffee is known to be harmful--especially to is why so many thqpghtful mothers give their as Postum. This wire cereal beverage gives . vAwnmuh and comfort, has delightful flavor and aroma, and •• free from anything that can injure the health of children ^ J" Your grocer sells Postum la two forms: Instant * *fln gas) prepared instantly in «bs cup by the addition %offing water. Postum Cereal (In packages) for those wh# fesfer to make the drink whila tha aaeal is being pnfsiWjj by boiling fully 20 minutes. stums ^•4 i * ^There's a Reason" v ^r- ^ by Postum Cereal Company, Inc. Battle Creak, Michigan