% i ^ f »;•/ •' v^T* ^TP-^n -,i'- "" *"' ^ ?; '• 's'< - y"' , V/> **- " ^ ' j. :^ llrnman, Its Capital, Once Philadelphia, Ancestor of All Mod- 'V- , «rn Philadelphia#, k ^ ,y« »y • -• Washington.--"Wnether the nffwwt Arab state to have Its independence recognized be called by Its Western title of Transjordanla or by Its Eastern name, Kerak, It seems hopelessly out of touch with things American," •ays a bulletin from the Washington headquarters of the National Geographic society, in regard to the land Immediately east of the River Jordan Over which Emir Abdullah rules. "Perhaps It will bring the newly Independent but very old country closer," continues the bulletin, "to realize that Its capital, now Amman, was once Philadelphia--the greatgreat- great-grandfather of the halfdozen or more Philadelphia!*, great and •mall, that are to be found In our postal guides. Ancestor of Modern Philadelphia*. "But it was only a mere matter of twenty-odd centuries ago that the city took the name of Philadelphia front its new lord, Ptolemy Philadelphus. It had existed as Rabbath Amman, chief city of the Ammonites, almost from i ls*er Che days of Lot, from whom the Ammonites are said to have sprung. It was after a victorious battle with these same people of Amman that Jephthah, according to the Biblical story, returned to the fatal meeting with his daughter. "When Transjordanla Is described as stretching from the Jordan and the Dead Sea toward the Interior of Arabia, one Is likely to call up the picture of a hopeless desert. But much of ttie region Is steppe land, a high plain supporting some flocks and even capable ef tillage. Nomadism has long held the region in Its grip, however, and it Is as a sort of 'chief of nomads' that Abdullah Ibn Hussein finds It hecesaary to rule. He holds his 'court* not In a palace but In a group of tents which he moves with the seasonal "This land, now given over largely to nomads. Is capable of development along stable lines, as is shown by Its past Importance. After Alexander's Eastern conquests the cities to the east of the Jordan became Hellenlzed and the seats of prosperity and culture. In the Second century before Christ, Ptolemy Philadelphus built in the city which was given his name an extensive acropolis which. In the Amman of today, is only a mass of fallen columns and ruined walls. "Rome's sway over Philadelphia is shown in Amman by the rains of a huge amphitheater which seated 7.0Q0 spectators. In the sleepy Eastern town of today goats browse among the foundations of temples and public buildings, Arabian coffee shops lean against once-proud wails, and the Eastern species of the village lounger sits on overturned marble pillars. Emir Abdullah is showing some Interest In the ancient structures of his capital, however, and is having the fairly well-preserved amphitheater cleared of debris. "Amman is not inaccessible. Five hours by automobile over reasonably good roads through the sizzling valley of the Jordan suffice for the trip from Jerusalem to the capital. The Jordan forms the boundary line, and across it is an iron bridge. Aman is only about thirty miles from the river and. as the crow flies, is hardly more than sixty miles from Jerusalem. The Hedju fatlway, connecting Damascus and Ma* dlna, runs through the town." Death Penalty for Cannibals Frarlt^ft&ues Orders Intended to Extirpate Practice in African Possessions. Puis.--Albert Sarraut, French minister of colonies, who was one of France's representatives at the Washington naval armament limitation and pacific conference, has Just signed two decrees Intended to extirpate the practice of cannibalism In the French African possessions. The death penalty is imposed on any one killing or trying to kill human beings for the purpose of eating their flesh. Imprisonment of from one to ten years and a fine of from 100 to 1,000 rrancs are to be the punishment for complicity in such crimes or for eating human flesh. Cannibalism survives, M. Sarraut says, principally under the form of ritual rites or acts of sorcery. Discussing this subject in Le Journal, M. Fernand Hauser writes: "Doctor Cureau, formerly a colonial governor, assured us some years ago in a work on the primitive peoples of equatorial Africa that cannibalism, as Disturbing the Rest of Pocahontas practiced there (and It Is practiced, even In regions rich in food resources of all sorts, vegetable and animal), is not due to privation or famine. 'It is simply a matter of taste,' he said, *a predilection for a certain kind of meat.' Cannibalism Called Instinct. "Cannibalism Is then, according to Doctor Cureau, an Instinct, It is a custom. The man who Indulges in It is not necessarily ferocious. 'He may be a man who Is gentle, gay, cheerful and friendly in his ordinary relations' --at least with those about him. "Doctor Cureau added that he bad several times seen evidences that certain tribes make prisoners of war or buy slaves to hold them In reserve, and then kill them and eat them in accordance with their needs. "Pere Martron, who also made a close-range study of the African negroes, declared, on the contrary, that the cannibals did not hunt men to satisfy hunger. They eat, he said, only the bodies of enemies killed in war and, more rarely, the bodies of those on whom they wish to wreak a terrible vengeance. * "However that may be, Pere Martron and Doctor Cureau both stated that cannibalism Is dying out. Coming Into Intercourse with more civilised tribes. the cannibals feel a sense of shame and soon refuse to admit that human flesh is eaten by them. Reports for Many Years. ' "These are reports dating back some i years. M. J. Brevle, chief adminlstra- ! tor of colonies, director of political and administrative affairs in the government of French West Africa, says, i In his 'Islamlsme contre Naturlsme au Soudan Francals'--a penetrating essay ' on native psychology which he has published--that many blacks still praci tice cannibalism, less from any real j need than from an attachment to tnclent rites, which, divorced from their i primitive significance, appear unintellijrlble to us, and which they them- ! selves can no longer explain. j M,We are dealing here,' he declares, i 'with human sacrifices. Intended to dls- ! arm hostile spirits, or to produce a i sort of physical and moral transsnb- ! stanlatlon from the person sacrificed --to the person who eats, the latter thus assimilating the former's strength and qualities.' " But whatever may be the reasons which have kept cannibalism alive, the French government is now determined to make an end of It. Edward Page Gaston of Chicago, with Canon *iedge, the blind rector of St. George's church at GravesenU, England, turning over the first soil li th^eearch tor the bones of Pocahontas, who was buried in the churchyard in 1618,.. Works English Mines 75 Years, London.--Claiming to he the oldest working miner in Great Britain. Peter Stark has completed 75 years of work at Holytown, Lanarkshire, where he has been employed since he was nine years old. Stark, hale and hearty at Algfaty-four, still works in the mines. SLAYS GIANT GRIZZLY, x- NOTORIOUS CATTLE THIEF Oklahoma Hunter Kills Bear That Ruled Range for Years. Oklahoma City, Oklju--"Old One •Toe," king of the grlzgllea, killed .yearlings on the cattle ranges id northwest Wyoming for twenty years, from now on, however, his stuffed pelt will stand lifelike In the natural history museum at the University of Oklahoma, at Norman, and silently assert ibis claim to the title, "biggest Of all tears." The greatest of them all, "Old One Toe," measures 6ft feet from nose-tip to tail-tip, and weighed between 1,200 land 1,300 pounds. The bear, which lost the other four toes on his right hind jfoot In a trap in 1902, fell before the automatic rifle of Arch A. Campbell, contractor, of this city, who spends tils annual vacation hunting tttg gams and catching rainbow trout In the vicinity of Dubois, Wyo. His conquest of "Old One Toe" was unplanned up to the moment that Campbell stumbled on the tyrant of the cattle range, ravenously devouring the carcass of a calf. From the first encounter to the kill was twenty-four hours. "Old One Toe," made wary by his setto with a steel trap and grown gray in the two decades he had outmaneuvered cattle men, was a foe worthy of any hunter. Campbell trailed him all day, after the first shot, before he was able to come up with him tog the final battle, which was of short duration. Campbell's progress out of the woods was a triumphal march, as all the cattle men wanted to see the carcass of the bear which bad caused them heavy loi Spot cash isn't always spotless. Spurned Love Causes Boys to Turn Pirates Ten boys, led by a youth fifteen years old, captured by the police of Chicago In a "pirate" cave along the lake fron*, admitted they had committed four recent robberies netting them nearly $10,000 In money and merchandise, part of which was recovered. The leader of -the band turned "pirate," he said, after his "best girl threw him down." Others in the gang also admitted unfortunate "love affairs." FENKMBERSAT ASSEMBLY'S END Seventeen Senators and Less Than Third of RepresentariP "fives Preset • TWENTY BILLS ARE KILLED Avoid Watermelon Loss in'*Transit £2 ttfe Guard Save* 732 Swimmer*. New York.--Alfred Read, a life guard at Long Beach., recently received the congressional medal of honor for life guarding. Be has rescued 732 persons from drowning rfnr. log his careers . 1 *** faithful Lower Carries Girl to Wedding Altar * Sin Francisco.--A broken back did- Hot deter pretty nlneteen-year-oltf iJean Strang from eloping. Confined to a hospital for more than •a year. Miss Strang was permitted to ^go for an automobile ride. Her faithful sweetheart, George C. Franklin, . also nineteen, who since the automo Jbile accident In which she was Injured ^ !has haunted her bedside, carried hei to his machine. Two hours later they had not returned and Mrs. Rebecca Strang, becoming worried, asked the police to find them. The police failed, ^ jbut the next day Mrs. Strang was notified that her daughter and Franklin had been married at Redwood City. o*.. The bride, her back encased In a wooden brace, was carried to the al- » , tar by the bridegroom and a chum. VAST YANK TO RETURN Bfveuty-flve, years ago the foreign commerce of New York and of New .Orleans was practically tke same. good many months ago to help Uncle 8am. He is a machinist Von der Helde married a German Red Cross nurse while in the service. He is the last American soldier to arrive home from overseas service. I it- Turtle, Forgotten 12 Years in Box, Lives Culpeper, Va.--An unusual instance of enforced hibernation Is reported from Orange county. Twelve years ago a man there caught a small turtle, and, for an experiment, placed It In a box, closing the lid tightly. He Intended to open the box within a week, but forgot It. It was opened recently. The turtle was still living, and was practically of the same slxe as when placed In the box. Von tier HeiUe of CSlcago, who just arrived home from the Rhine and has taken up the work he left a Japan has a coral Industry,>4*^ ih* Fifty-third Assembly Adjourns Without Taking Any Action on the Report Submitted by the Herrln Investigating Committee. Springfield.--The Fifty-third general assembly of Illinois adjourned without taking any action on the report submitted by the house of representatives committee investigating the Herrln mine massacre, which held Adj. Gen. Carlos E. Black and his aid. Col. S. N. Hunter, responsible for the tragedy. When the house met for its final se» slon just bjefore receiving the governor's veto messages, and adjourning sltie die, Representative Frank McCarthy of Elgin, 111., rose to read the Herrin committee's report. "Mr. Chairman!" Representative Thomas Curran of Chicago cried out, leaping to his feet, "I object to any action on the report because there Is no quorum present and we cannot under the law take any action on any matter." It dld«not require a roll call to show that the required TT members were not present and the chair sustained Mr. Curran. A motion that 25,000 copies of the report be printed was likewise killed on objections of Mr. Curran. The committee's report was therefore placed on file without being read. Important New Laws. Seven of the bills signed by Governor Small are now laws of importance, as follows: The omnibus bill appropriated $17.- 705,000 to run the state offices under the control of Governor Small for the next two years. The new Illinois medical code takes the place of one passed Jby the iast legislature and knocked out by the Supreme court. It has already been discussed. Ticket scalping is forbidden under penalties of imprisonment and fine# as high as $500. The superintendent of public in- The superintendent of public instruction is allotted $177,500 to run his office for the next two years. An extensive revision Is made of the state fish and game laws. Subject to approval by the voters of the presidential election next year, the old Illinois and Michigan canal can be leased for ninety-nine years. To pay awards against the state approved by the Court of Claims $203,000 Is appropriated. Uses Veto Against Brundage. Governor Small vetoed salaries for four of the attorney general's assistants In Chicago, one at $5,0O<> a year, two at $4,000 and one at $3,500. A total reduction of $33,000 for the 1)1- ennium was made, cutting the bill to S3.5S2.300. In a message accompanying his veto of the four assistants' Jobs, Governor Small said: "Appropriations to the attorney general are used, wherever he has an opportunity, in a wasteful and extravagant manner and for partisan and political purposes. Whenever he has a chance to use public money to build up a partisan political machine, the attorney general of this state loses no opportunity to do so." Vetoes Short Ballot; Governor Small has vetoed in all 20 out of the 358 measures passed by the Fifty-third general assembly and he has cut sums out of two other appropriation bills. Of his latest vetoes one kills a plan to shorten the ballot at presidential elections by eliminating the names of 29 electors in each party column and permitting the electors to vote directly for candidates for president and vice president. The other would have allowed school janitors to be paid out of the school fund for buildings and grounds. The final sessions in both branches of the legislature were brief. Seventeen of the fifty-one senators attended the funeral ceremonies conducted by Lieutenant Governor Sterling In the senate chamber. In the House leas than one-third of the 152 representatives were in at the finish. Pay Rolls Out of Sight. Governor Small vetoed the hill which would have required the auditor of public accounts to publish pay rolls and all other state expenditures annually, so the people could learn where their money goes. The bill provided $40,000 to pay for the work of publication. 'This Is an unnecessary expenditure of public moneys," Governor Small said. "Taxes are so high that there can be no justification in expending $40,000 to satisfy idle curiosity." Stem-End Rot Fungus That Brings About Decay Still Is Important Factor. (fnptrtd by tha United States D*rutmnt of Avrlcultur*-) Watermelon growers should give serious consideration to their responsibilities in (Connection with prevention of losses in transit, advises the United States Department of Agriculture. Examination of carloads at destination has shown that, provided shipments are properly loaded In clean, well-ventilated cars, and delivered within a reasonable length of time, any losses experienced usually result from the shipping of: (1.) Melons affected with bad anthracnose pock murk*, (2.) Severely sunscaled at Stale fruit. (3). Melons that carry cuts and bruises as a result of careless handling, <* • (4). Melons, the stems of which have not been recllpped and treated tor prevention of stem-end rot Rot Coming Under Control. The stem-end rot fungus, which not only causes stem-end rot, but also brings about decay following bruises and outs in the rind, has been a source of heavy loss In the past, and is still a factor of great Importance. In 1919 • campaign of education concerning methods of control for this disease was Initiated In the Southeastern states, the United States Department of Agriculture and the state extension services co-operating. As a result of the interest taken In this work by fanners, distributors, and railroads, stem-end rot Is coming under control. This conclusion is borne out by records from the food products Inspection service, whVch indicate that in Georgia shipments losses from stem- Peculiar Idea of Card Playing. In clden times card playing was r£ garded as essentially a Christian pastime, and a statute of Henry VII forbids card playlngjiave during the Christmas holidays. 111 * Real Pleasure In Life. The truest pleasure comes from simple things. The art of living is mainly the art of enjoyment. It Is no use being a millionaire and able) to own palaces If one has lost all pleasure except that of adding to one's millions. A Pity. Some people take so much pleasure in telling what the£ know {hat It is a pity they know ao little.--Boston Evening Transcript Park's "Golden Gate." The rocky pass called the Golden Gate In Yellowstone National part owes Its rich color and Its name to the yellow lichen covering Its lofty walls, and the indescribable hues of the great hot-spring ^terraces arise mainly from the presence of mtaute plants flourish* ing^in -jtte water that overflows them. end rot have been cat from 144 per cent in 1920 to 8.3 per cent in 1921, and 6.2 per cent In 1922; and In Florida shipments from 16.0 per cent in 1920 to 10.1 per cent in 1921 and &3 per cent in 1922. Timely Suggestions. In order that stem-end rot and losses in transit due to other causes may be reduced, farmers should make every effort to carry out the following suggestions at harvest season: (1.) If possible avoid working while the vines are wet. (2.) Never permit labor to handle rotten melons In the field and then work with fruit for shipment (3.) Never permit clipper to handle or to touch knife to rotten melons in the field. (4.) Never permit* clipper to cut into melons while pushing knife through the stem. (5.) Never permit clipper to stand melons on end to mark them in the Add. '(6.) Insist on careful handling by the tote boys and wagon men, (7.) Pad wagons thoroughly in order to avoid nail or splinter punctures, cuts, and bruises (8.) Load on the day melons are clipped. In clean, dry car, the walls of which have been papered. Use dry straw for bedding. If possible, pad ends of car, although not In such a way as to obstruct ventilators. These should be fastened open. j (9.) Handle carefully whetf unloading melons from wagons ' and packing. Do not allow labor to stand or sit on melons. (10.) Reject melons that do not have a firm, greon stem, or that show sunscald or bad anthracnose marking. (11.) Apply stem treatment as described In Farmers' Bulletin 1277, recllpping stems to firm green surface before .applying the disinfectant paste. Flaxseed Production Will Show Increase Prices Fluctuate to Disadvantage of the Growers. (Prepared by ttas United Btates Department of Agriculture.) There is an Increasing spread between the production of flaxseed in the United States and the demand for home consumption, according to the United States Department of Agriculture. Until 1908 tills couutry produced, on an average, more than it consumed and therefore waa able to export a surplus In nearly every year. Beginning with 1909, however, our production began to decline, while our requirements began to increase with population. Net Imports consequently have increased. The reduction in consumption In 1917 and 1918 was due to war restrictions, and that in 1920 and 1921 to business depression. It is fairly certain that the figures for 1922, when available, will show an Increase In consumption. As the United States changed in position from an exporter to ap importer of flaxseed, the farm price of fiax increased materially. In 1907, when a surplus of over 4,000,000 bushels was exported, the farm price of flaxseed on December 1 averaged 96 cents a bushel. In 1908, when production and consumption were practically equal, the farm price of flaxseed was $1.18 a bushel. -In 1909, when 4,957,000 bushels were imported, the farm price rose to $1.53 a bushel. In many localities a comparatively small volume of flaxseed is marketed; and because the price fluctuates widely, flaxseed usually is bought oa a wide niargin, and the grower often does not receive the full value of his crop. This condition could be improved if several growers of flaxseed in such localities would combine their deliveries and thus market a carload or more at one time. Clear Moss From Fruit Trees by Proper Spray Moss can be quite readily cleared from the trees. The solution of strong bordeaux Is one of the best sprays. The old formula of lime, sulphur and •alt. where the same weight of salt is used in the spray as of lime and sulphur, namely 15 pounds to 50 gallons of the concentrated spray, is also very efficient In removing moss. But a substance which is very good to use Is common lye. The lye can be used straight by dissolving In plain water, or It can be used in the Ilrfie sulphur spray. The rate to use is about one pound can of lye for every six or seven gallons of spray. It cleans off the moss quite readily, seems to soften the bark and gives it a clean, bright appearance. Soy Bean Hay Good for Dairy Cows and Sheep Soy beans answer the hay question very well, particularly for dairy cows and sheep. Yields of soy bean hay are generally from one to one-and-a half tons of hay per acre, but the hay is of excellent quality and stands weathering better than most bays. The time to cut is when the leaves begin to turn yellow. The best hay varieties Include the Peking, Wilson and Manchu, although the Manchu will produce nearly as much hay. Birds Are Not Numerous Because of Insect Pests The chief reason birds are not more numerous and that insect ,pests consequently increase so rapidly is that suitable places are not provided for nesting with protection from vermin. Cleaning out fence rows and -corners beautifies the premises but ruins the birds' homes. Building bird houses and putting them on poles will help to replace the natural homes. But better than this Is to leave some small thicket'. at different spots over the farm. Farm Implements Should Be Placed Under Cover The average farmer does not get full value out of the most of the farm Implements that he buys for at least two reasons. One reason is that he has Ho place to house \them, hence they weather--that Is, they get wet and rust or decay. Having Implements lay out in the weather a season is worse on them than one season's use. In too many cases the writer has seen farm Implements such as plows, cultivators, binders, and many other implements setting In the field where last used, and many times, the shovels of cultivators are even left in the ground. Before using these implements the next season the shovels of cultivators and the various bright parts of the implements have to be scoured with sand rock before using. This not only takes off a layer of metal but requires a great deal of time. If one will Just think a moment he will know that the work of scouring the Implements and getting them ready for use Is much more work than to have cleaned and greased these bright metal parts with axle grease and painted the wood anc other metal parts when through using the Implements. By doing this the air and water is kept from the metal and wood, hence, the implements will fare well even If left out In the weather.-- By W. H. McPheeters, Extension Farm Engineer, Oklahoma Al and M. College. Pea Aphis Will Attack ~ Three Important Crops The pea aphis is seriously infesting the entire cannery pea section In Stanislaus county, Cal., and a lighter Infestation extends over the Santa Clara valley, according to reports received by the United States Department oi Agriculture. This Insect Is also doing considerable damage to alfalfa In the vicinity of Topeka, Kans. The Kansas Infestation is over a region where the growing of garden peas Is rather extensive. The association of alfalfa and peas is suggested as being favorable for the multiplication of this Insect. Infestations by this pea aphis were so serious on spinach In the Santa Clara valley, Cal., that seven canneries ceased canning this vegetable this spring. The damage was not so much the Infestation of the aphis ss the presence of such enormous numbers of the syrphld larvae which prey upon them from the spinach In the washing process. Fattening Steers Show Fixed Desire for Salt Animals fed large quantities of rich nutritious food, such as fattening steers receive, shew a strong desire for salt, and this craclng^should be reasonably satisfied. The form in which salt is supplied to steers Is merely a matter of convenience. It la probably best to keep salt before the cattle at all times, though some secure excellent results when they give salt only once or twice a week. Dairy Cows Should Have Liberal Amount of Salt In some studies made by Doctor Babcock and Professor Carlisle at the Wisconsin experiment station they state that cows in milk should receive at least an ounce of salt a day and heavy producers still more. The plan fol- Ipwed by many dairymen Is to mix onehalf to one pound of salt wltb each 100 pounds cf concentrates, and in addition to provide salt so the cows can have access to It and take all they wish. MRS. UNDQU1ST TELLS WOMEN OF MIDDLE ME What Lydia E. Pinkhanfo Vegetable Compound; Did for Her Kansas City, Mo.--"I was left in tr serious condition after ehildbirthl land no one thought EC:, t . I could ever be any? .,^1 I better. Then the 'Change of •> and I was not . pared for what I Mdfi * '\c ' .y* • to suffer. I had toff ' ^ go to bed at times to. /j be perfectly quiet as.,< 1 could not evenfeffes-i,, stoop down to pickG i t anything from thai „ ' • floor. I aid not suffer* anv pain, but I Waa ~ ' f' decidedly nervous and could not sleep. - ' For nearly two years I was this wajr.v,// and the doctor was frank enough to m ' me that he could do no more for me._ Shortly after this I happened to see for n newspaper an advertisement of Lydiat E . P i n k h a m ' s V e g e t a b l e C o m p o u n d . l a p . • a few days the medicine waa in thft house and I had begun its use and I tooktfv it regularly until I was well. I recom-r mend the Vegetable Compound tootherflr (,* f when I have the opportunity. "--Mrs.; May Lindquist, 2814 Independenco i Ave., Kansas City, Mow " "' -it mm J*s if- , - !'4sT' .#1 Map Sea Floor In Contour. The first successful contour map oC a deep sea zone has Just been com»; pleted by liydrographers of the United , i States government. It shows the sub* : merged hills, valleys and 'Iffs ovet *' 84,000 square miles of the bed of tht -4 V Pacific ocean. •' -f CHILDREN CRY : FOR "CASTORIA" • it* Especially Prepared for Infant! - and Children of All Ages ; ^ Mother! Fletcher's Castorla haf* been in use for over 80 years to rellev# * babies and children of Constipation^ Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrheal* ~ allaying Feverlshness arising: ther«^ from, and, by regulating the StomactU and Bowels, aids the assimilation o* Food; giving natural sleep without tplate*. The genuine bears signature , ^ - . Vf •, .Js: ' ? h • * Too Expensive. .»'j( , '"li "Does your wife object to your noh. - 5 tag?" "Yes; she says we caaft ham> afford to do it" Just What 8he Wanted. ^ "Bella married a house painter." "She always talked about wanting ^ a man she could look up to." Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION '>** -Ifi BELIMNS V . Hot water s ^ ^ Sure Relief ELL-ANS 25* AND 75* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE: Improper Feeding Cause of Droopiness in Chicks Droopy, dull chicks, with long wings and short bodies are the result of feeding too soon, overfeeding and allowing feed on the floor or ground to become spoiled, overheating, chilling, damp floors, and from the effects ef lice and 1 mites. If chicks are droopy, correct the cause. Skin Tortured Babies Sleep Mothers Rest After Cuticura Smv ZSc, OhtaMt 25 S*c,Talc«i 25c. 16799 DIED in New York City alone from kid* ney trouble last year. Don't allow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Gttard against trouble by LATHROP'S HAARLEM Oil. The world's standard remedy for kidney, fiver, bladder and unc acid troubln. Holland's national remedy since 1696. All druggists, three sixes. Guaranteed. Look for th* nam# Gold Mtdtl on boa and accept no imitation m 'Ym« Do Your Feet Hurt? When shoes pinch or corns and bunion* ache, get a package of Allen's Foot* Ease, the antiseptic, healing powder t« be shaken into the shoes. It takes thg sting out of corns, bunions and callouse% and gives instant relief to Smarting, Adding, Swollen feet At night when youf - ^ *£?' feet ache and burn from walking t# V dancing sprinkle some Allen's Footjp Ease in the foot-bath and you will solv% your foot troubles. Over 1,500.000 pound! • of powder for the feet were used by 0UI ^ Army and Navy during the war. Soil everywhere. ^ FRECKLES Don't Hid* Them With a Vail; R--iv# Tkam With Othine--Do«W* Strmttk This preparation for th« tr»»tm«at ol freckles 1* u»u»l!v ao aucreaafttl In rewerj»a freckles and a. clear, beautiful eoM^- ptextoa that It 1> sold ttn<Ur gaaraat** tt refund the money If It f%iia Don't htrte your freck!f» w3*r a *#fl{ ret an ounce of Othine and remove them. Even the flret few applications shouKl alio* a wonderful Improvement. *orrt» of lM lighter freckles vanish In* entirety. He sure to a*k the dr**irf*r f*>t tfkS double-stren*th Othtne: It Is thf» that W •old OB the mon»y-ba.ck cvtaraatee. J ( .. *•_> „ *-• 9, ' . 'y - -V