Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Jun 1925, p. 9

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w THE McHEKRY FUDtDBUmt. MeHENRT, IIX. ^Jlllf on Own 5F-* ° tlw pathway of tte home dressmtikei has been strewn with roses ever sjjince the day that the chemise frock took Its place In the sacred circles of the mode, and Its partial eclipse this Reason, observes a fashion writer In the New York Herald-Tribune, has (occasioned many reproaches and dubious glances on the part of this thriftily inclined lady. The mantie Of the chemise, however, has fortunately fallen on the athletic shoulders of the jumper frock, whose construction is almost as simple, and the nimble-fingered lady can settle down to at least another season of complacency. - The first maxim of the French home dressmaker Is this: Always eliminate Unnecessary trimming, think first of your line, study your figure, look at yourself In a long glass--if possible one with wings, so that you can examine your outline from every viewpoint. If you are slim and straight the .Iworld of fashion Is at your feet. You have only to run op a little Jumper 'iinnd put a group of knife plaits on Neither side of your straight crepe de . chine skirt to match and Paris could do little more for you. Making Plumpneaa a Vlrtufc If an unkind fate has endowed fob with a little more than the necessary, plumpness, your problem Is more difficult and calls for more selective discretion. It is ji truism that the large woman mast avoid horizontal styipes Method of Trimming Plain Materials With Two-Color Border. and trimmings, yet how unfortunately often she chooses them. If you are what the French call roundelette, remember always to put some little touch into your dress that gives length. It may be a narrow panel down the center front--for Instance, you can choose a printed cotton voile In a straggling flower pattern, making it up so that the long lines run from neck to hem. A printed voile model recently seen Is particularly adapted to the average embonpoint figure, as Its flower design runs up and down, giving a perpendicular striped effect. The narrow, plain panel In front, with its row of buttons and fine pin tucks on either side, also gives length. It Is the same color as the ground of the material and is edged with a tiny frill of the color of the design. Both colors edge the short straight sleeves. Though both back and front are each cut In on? piece, the effect of a separate skirt and bodice is given by merely adding a gathered flounce at a longlsh waistline In front. Be sure to arrange the fullness of the flounce more in front than on the hips, for, though the latter arrangement Is charming for the slender demoiselle, her more plump sister must avoid emphasizing the hip line. The back of this dress Is made straight and in one piece. You will be quite in the swing If you give a two-piece effect tn front and show a straight, unbroken line at the hack-- ao many dresses in Paris carry thl# deceptive appearance this season. */'• Ingenious Trimming Effects. If your flower design is printed on a beige or pink ground you will make your center panel about three Inches wide, of beige or pink, cut on the straight of the material. It la beat to draw a thread each side, to be su*e to get It perfectly even all the way down. You may trim It with three fine hand-sewn pin tucks running all the way down on both sides, and as a further decoration put a lirfe of small buttons matching the design of the flowers In color down the center. Edge the panel on each side with a tiny frill or piping the same shade as the buttons. Then your dress will have all the trimming It requires. Put In small, straight sleeves about five Inches long and edge them with a twocolor band, half an Inch In the color of the ground and half an Inch In the shade of the buttons. Don't go In for puffs. Leave them for the slim girl, as they widen the silhouette. You can add a slx-lnch-wide sash of the printed material, with a picot edge or finely bordered with a bias band. If you like, but It Is not necessary, as the beltless dress shows to greater advantage on the stout figure. The Insertion of Godeta. The nimble-fingered lady who la abla to essay something a little more complicated can insert godets to give a little variety to her summer skirts. These should he curved at the hem and generally fall a little below the straight line of the skirt Itself. You can either have a godet Inlet on each side or one In front as well. In the latter case It is better to make the front godet higher and put In the aide ones on a lower level. No article on home dressmaking can be complete this season without reference to the jumper frock which plays such an Important part In every woman's wardrobe. There are long jumpers that are almost tunica, and these you may embroider with a large motif or a complicated monogram. Or they might be adorned with a scarf collar, its ends faced with a contrasting color to match the accompanying skirt. You may make the sleeves long or short, inset bands of a contrasting material and trim the hem of the skirt In the same way. The short Jumper that reaches tha hips is an even more useful model, but It ought not he made to wear with any old skirt. The jumper of today has Its own skirt to match and la worn with no other. It forms a petite to be complete. The only diversion you may permit yourself Js a check and a striped Jumper In perhaps blue and white, to wear with the same blue plaited skirt: but the blue of the skirt must be of the same material and exactly the same tones as the stripe or check of the two jumpers. Inasmuch as It Is better to have the stripes run horizontally this particular model should be limited to the slender type. Frills and Flounces for the Over-Slender Miss As for the girl who really is a little too thin--she does exist, even In these days of narrow lines--fluffy frills and flounces are their salvation. Her corsage can bo made with the lines of the material going round the figure, and she should always be careful to put In a few gathers on the shoulder seam In front. Nothing Is better for any figure, and the very thin girl cannot do without them. She should blouse her dress slightly and pouch It over a sash that can be tied In a puf/y bow at the side. Her skirt may be made with the lines of the design going up and down, but It should be decorated with five or six little frills, cut on straight lines and finished with a piece of picot edge, gathered all round, with most of the fullness concentrated on the hlpp. Short puff sleeves are smart this year and would be charming with a little frock of this type. They can be made with small handkerchief ties knotted or tied In a bow on the outer arm. An appropriate frock made along these lines Is a printed chiffon model, with the design running round the figure. Its puff sleeves are finished with bow ties and the sash will give additional fullness to the thin figure. The little frills are cut on a straight line, picot edged and gathered onto the skirt at a low waistline. The floating panels that are ao fashionable this season are a boon to the home dressmaker, they are so simply made. The foundation should be a simple straight-line frock. The skirt should be 15 or 16 Inches off the ground, and It would be wiser to give it some fullness, especially over the hips. You can then cut long strips of the material, each about six Inches wide. Some of these should be long and others short. An attractive arrangement Is to have alternate long panels reaching the hem or a little below and shorter ones which reach to either two-thirds or half the length. Or to Introduce variety you may have alternate plaited and plain panels. This last suggestion is particularly appropriate for the many printed materials that are enjoying such a vogue this season. f******************* t Repeating Slander aa | Bad a* Starting It J Atlanta, ' Ga.--"Tale bearer® * are as bad as tale makers," ^ thinks the Georgia Court of Ap- * peals. This statement was Many Novelties Are Being Shown in Near Jewels No Bast Indian, or lady from South Sea Isles, was ever more gorgeously bedecked than the smart American who displays the latest thing In near jewels. The tinted pears are now offered In sets, a choker of the beads In rainbow tints, with earrings to match as heretofore, and now the bracelets. Some are In still serpentine spirals, others are flexible, to close with a Jeweled clasp, the "jewel" being also an Imitation, oftenest Just a bit of colored glass. In the tantinted smaller *'pearls." three or four strands are made Into a dog collar, held In shape by several slender clasps. These 1 strands are made into dainty and really becoming bracelets, and when the finer quality of manufactured pearls are used, with a clasp set with brilliants, It Is difficult to distinguish the real from the Imitation. Much jet and cut steel is being used in dog collars and chains, and for those women who like to express individuality in these matters many antiques are shown. One aeea quaint cameos, beautiful Intaglios of moonstones. Quarts, agate, the Jadea. coral, Egyptian scaraba and all the aemi-precious stones. This season there Is a vogue for the Oriental Jewelry of finely wrought gilt and silver, in which the delicately patterned Etruscan and old Spanish necklaces, chains and bracelets are k«im much worn. 8 Use Leather Thread for Your Chic Sports Hats Crocheted leather thread makes lovely sports hats. Some models are all in stripes of about one inch and In very soft hues. A cap la re-embroldered with bast dots, and a bast butterfly hovers on the top. Another cap crocheted of blue and white thread! has blue woolen dots on a white ground and a little woolen pompon on the top. Smart hand-knitted goods often show very large designs, sometimes in gorgeous colors and sometimes In pale blendin&s. judgment in the Stephens Superior court. In which $2,000 was awarded in a suit alleging repetition of slanderous remarks. The court held that even though the original slander started with a third party and the repeater bad accepted the statement In good faith, every repetition was a willful slander. l l WOMAN DIP TELLS » OF HER THRILLS Fascinated by Excitement of Going Into Pocket*. New York.--Mrs. TUUe Port, Brooklyn. who declares she became a pickpocket when eight years old, will ask clemency when she goes before Kings County Judge McLaughlin for sentence. She in In the Raymond street jail, having pleaded guilty of picking the pocket of a woman in a Brooklyn department store. She took <10.30 and was caught by a store detective. At the jail Mrs. Dorf gave an exhibition of her skill by extracting a vanity case from the pocket of a woman reporter. "I have done that since I was right years old," Mrs. Dorf said. **I began with relatives, and I have kept it up ever since. It gives me a thrill I can't get In any other way, but thrills dont count In the end. Sometimes I go straight for months. Then my fingers begin to tingle--I want to see If they can do again what they have so often done. - & "As I grew older I began to think how many pocketbooks there were In the world, and how easy It would be to open them. I began to operate In cheap stores and on the sidewalks. After my marriage I promised to reform, but I was unable to break rayaelf of my habit. I have no excuse to offer--I just can't help it."-' Capital Investment Needed Where Two Litters Are Raised. Mundane Fire No Treat to Miss Spore's Spirits New York.--The familiars of Marian Spore, psychic painter, failed to apprise her that rubbish had begun to smolder In the ground floor hall of the former Delmonlco's at Forty-fourth Btreet and Fifth avenue, on the second floor of which Miss Spore has her exhibition. The apparition that suddenly materialized at the doorway of the studio yelling, "Fire, beat It !** was plain flesh and blood. And It wore spate. About thirty persons who were watching Miss Spore's methods of painting or staring at her plump and colorful canvases, obeyed the warning promptly, joining the rush on the stairs from a golf school on the third floor, which met at the street level the exodus from a real estate' office. Miss Spore, however, who depends entirely on spiritual guidance, knew better than to flee. She began swathing her paintings In canvas to protect them from smoke, which already was drifting Into her studio in everthickening wavea. Ail the time the smoke rolled blacker and denser up the stairs and into Miss Spore's studio. All the time Miss Spore, with never a glance out of window or Into the hallway, coolly wrapped up her pictures In canvas. There were 175 of them, and by the time she finished the Job the last firemen were picking up their hose. Miss Spore missed the fire completely. His Teeth in His Lungs Send Man to Hospitals New York.--Attacked by a violent spell of coughing. Conrad Wlmler, 187 Thirty-second street. Brooklyn, swallowed his upper teeth. His wife took him to Norwegian hospital, but physicians there were unable to locate the plate and suggested that Wlmler return home until later, when an X-ray could be taken gfad the teeth removed. He returned home, but the pain became so Intense that his wife took him to the Brooklyn Eye and Ear hospital. Physicians there said the work would require specialists and advised him to go home and wait until 9 o'clock. Wlmier did. At 0 o'clock he again appeared, so weak that he was put to bed while the pulmonary region was X-rayed. Late that night the plate with a full set of teeth was removed by Dr. John Auwerda, fourteen hours after Wlmler had swallowed them. Neither the plate nor Wlmler's throat were Injured. (Praptnd br tha United Statea rpmiiMH of Afrtenltun.) Hog production costs are lower when two litters of pigs are raised each year than when only offe litter is raised. Adding fall pigs to the production plan means a slight Increase In feed and labor costs for each 100 pounds of pork produced. Other costs, however, are decreased chiefly because It la easier to save pigs at weaning time In the summer than In the spring. The economy of producing two litters a year is also shown in a lower necessary capital Investment Maintenance costs of the breeding herds are slightly higher when two litters are raised, largely because sows are on the farm for a longer time. On a monthly basis there is practically no difference. Interesting Lights. These facts and many other Interesting lights on hog-production costs are brought out by the Department of Agriculture In a study recently completed on hog raising In Iowa and Illinois. Farmers In Henry county, Iowa, and Warren county, Illinois, co-operated with the department representatives In making exact records of their hog-production costs in 1921 and 1922. Theae conntlea are large producers of corn, hogs and cattle. Although the actual cost figures obtained In this study are out of date now, the methods of efficient practice that were revealed and the light thrown on sources of loss In the hog-raising business have permanent interest. Besides demonstrating the'superior efficiency of the two-Utter system, the study showed that there is a regular Increase In corn consumed when pigs are fed heavier weights. In other words, it took oh an average less feed to produce the first 50 pounds of pork than It took to produce the second, and less to produce the second than the third, and so on. Thus, to raise a herd of pigs averaging 125 pounds In weight took only 294.3 pounds of corn for each 100 pounds of hog. When hogs were raised to the average weight of 275 pounds, the amount of feed necessary to produce each hundredweight of hog was 405.2 pounds. Although the Investigation did not entirely bear out the theory that the meat-producing power of feed declines In a steady proportion as animals are raised to greater weights, It did confirm the generally accepted idea that it progressively takes more corn to increase the weight of hogs as they approach maturity! Effect on Profits. Reduced costs of production have obviously the same effect on profits as an Increased sale price. This Is strikingly demonstrated by the department in an analysis of effects of production costs on priflts. Production costs, varied widely on the farms studied. The cost In 1921 ranged from $3.07 to $13.55 per 100 pounds of hog. Profits In the lowest cost group averaged ($3.03 cents) for 100 pounds, compared with a loss of $5.27 per 100 pounds in the highest cost group. In 1922 the range of costs was from $4.86 to $10.02 per hundred pounds of hog Farmers in the low-cost group made a profit of $2.96 a hundred pounds, whereas those In the high-cost group suffered a loss of $2.04 per hundred pounds. It was shown that each Increase in costs means a distinct decrease In profits and a decrease In the return for each bushel of corn fed. For farms raising two litters a year, the spread was smaller although considerable. No fewer than 31.5 per cent of the pigs farrowed In the spring of 1921 were lost before weaning time. In 1922 the proportion of loss before weaning was 40.3 per cent. Average losses before weaning out of the total number of spring and fall pigs farrowed In both years was 3S.4 per cent The number of pigs that died before and after weaning was 41.4 per cent of the total number farrowed. Severe weather In the spring of 1922 Increased the death losses. Cost of Pork. The 1921 costs were gathered from 44 farms producing 1,033,744 pounds of marketable pork, or an average ef 23,494 pounds per farm. The net coat of this pork was $5.42 a hundred pounds. The 1922 costs were obtained from 39 farms producing 1,004,003 pounds of marketable pork, or an average of 25,744 pounds per farm. The net cost In 1922 was $5.86 a hundred pounds. In general, better feed and wise management showed a saving In that more and better pigs were produced, even though sometimes the Increased care meant an Increased cost of maintaining the breeding herds. The producers who raised the largest number of pigs per sow had a great Initial advantage in the effort to keep production costs down. Some hog raisers made little effort to save the pigs, and others who tried were not thorough In their sanitary methods and failed. Feed constituted the largest item of coet, amounting to 64 per cent of the total In 1921 and 75 per cent la 1922. Labor charges were the second largest Item, constituting 8.4 per cent of the total in 1921 and T.1 per cent of the total In 1922. Coat of equipment was the third largest Item. Where fall pigs were produced the cost of equipment for each hundred pounds of hog raised was below the cost of equipment on one-Utter farms. Equipment valuations on the farms varied In 1922 from $152 to $1,909. The average waa $571 per farm. It was shown that the use of expensive equipment did not always Bean more economical production. GIRL RESCUED t WHILE DRIVING - OWN DEATH CAM Heroic Officer Killei While Answering WonpeiX'M Call for Help. Memphis, Tenn.--Forced to take the wheel and drive her own death car, the automobile in which her divorced husband was taking her to a woods where he intended to kill her and himself, Miss Dorothy Reese, twenty-one, was rescued by a policeman whose heroism cost him his life. The tragedy occurred on one of the main streets of the city during a quiet afternoon. Miss Reese, given the right to assume her maiden name by the court after she divorced her husband, Carl Rogers, was riding in an automobile with her sweetheart1 Enoch Gregg. Poultry Manure Is Very Valuable as Fertilizer Poultry manure is an excellent fertiliser If property used. However, It Is very rich and must be used with caution. It contains about 20 pounds of nitrogen, eight pounds of phosphorus and 15 pounds of potassium per ton, as comapred with about ten pounds of nitrogen, two pounds of phosphorus and ten pounds of potassium perton for average horse manure. In view of its richness, poultry manure Is likely to have a burning effect on plants If used In too large quantities. If used at all. It should be scattered very thinly. Properly used. It is a valuable and quick-acting fertiliser. In order to prevent loss In poultry manure. It should be properly stored. A good absorbent should be used on the dropping boards or under the perches. Since the fertility Is quickly lost by leaching and fermentation, the droppings should be stored in a dry condition In well-covered bins so constructed that air can circulate through the manure Poultry manure can also be kept well In barrels In which holea are bored through the sides. Good Recipe for Making Ordinary Lime-Sulphur To make ordinary lime-sulphur Blake 40 pounds of high-grade stone lime (90 per cent or more calcium oxide) in an iron cooking kettle (never use brass or copper) and carefully sift in 80 pounds of flowers of sulphur and stir to a uniform paste, breaking up all the lumps that form. Add enough water to make 50 gallons. Bring to a boll and boil briskly for one hour. Add more water from time to time to keep the volume always aa near 50 gallons as possible. Remove to a tank or barrel to permit the sludge to settle. Dip off the clear liquid, strain and place in air-tight casks. This is then kept aa a stock solution and diluted at the rate recommended far various purposes. Good Calf Suggestions 1. Avoid overfeeding. This Is the cause of many of the digestive disorders In our calf herds. Underfeed rather than overfeed. 2. Feed milk (either whole or skim milk) at about 100 degrees Fahrenheit Cold milk Is a frequent cause of scours. 3. Be sanitary. Keep stalls or pens clean, well bedded and sunny. Keep pails and all feeding utensils clean. 4. Feed grain, whole or ground, as soon as the calf will eat It. Corn and oats make a very satisfactory grain ration. Opened Fire. Suddenly Rogers leaped Into the machine, thrust a pistol Into Miss Reese's back, and ordered her to drive to a woods, where he would kill her and rommlt suicide, the girl later told police. Miss Reese drove on until she saw Policeman T. B. Knox and then she icreamed for help. Knox leaped from his motorcycle and ran to the car. Rogers opened fire, and the policeman, mortally wounded, pumped two bulleta Into the body of his slayer and then died. Tried to Kill Self. Rogers tried to kill himself, but two other officers arrested him and took him to a hospital. Miss Reese, who also was wounded, was taken to another Institution. Rogers will live and will have a speedy trial for murder. Miss Reese, wounded in the knee, will recover but probably wlU be crippled tor life. "I was paralyzed with tear," Mlsa Reese told police. In describing her ride to death. "My tongue was dead. There were hundreds of people all around and I knew my former husband Intended to kill me--but I could aot call for help until I saw the policeman. Then I saw flames In front •f me and men shooting pistols. I don't remember any more. I was In the hospital when my senses returned." Woman Tramps Country 2 Years Dressed as Man 8t. Louis, Mo.--How a woman has been tramping throughout the country In the guise of a man for two years was revealed here last night when several transients sought shelter at a police station. Close^ questioning revealed that "he" was Grace Crow, formerly of White Eagle. Okla., *rho roamed in men's clothing, because It helped her obtain employment. Dressed In an old suit tattered shirt worn shoes and cap, and with her hair cut short, she said she had readily passed as a man since the death of her parents several years ago. Find* $120 in Old Sola Holyoke, Mass.--An old sofa formed a part of a load of waste dumped near the Beech street grounds recently, and within a few minutes the excitement In the neighborhood was comparable only to the discovery of some part of the world.-* In fact that particular part of the world was never found to be so well supplied before. One of the workmen uncovered $120 In Mils In the sofa, which apparently had been used as a safety vault by a former owner. The finder denied he plans to make a tour of the worl<L CALF FAILURES ARE RAPIDLY _ BEING ELIMINATED BY FARMERS Help That Achy Back!, la backache making you miaenvbk! Are you tired, nervoua, blue"--utterly played out? Have you inspected your kidneys? Your kidneyB are the btoodfiltcrs. Onae they fall behind in their work, there's slow poisoning of blood arid nerves. Then is apt to come backache, headaches, dizziness, and other annoying kidney irregularities. Don't wait! If jour kidneys are slugging help them 'with a stimulant diuietic. Use Z)ou»'« Pillt. Doan's are recommended tha world over. Ask your neighborl An Illinois Case Mrs. E. Groves, Stewart St, Rosav i n e , 1 1 1 . , s a y s : " D u l l , s t e a d y pains caught me across my back a n d w h e n I stooped a sharp p a i n t o o k m e !&c*oss my kldneys, making: it ^ d i f f i c u l t t o Btraighten. I felt Jtlred and worn •out. My kidneys Bwere weak and disordered. T used Doan's Pills and they eased the backache and made my kidneys normal." DOAN'S t18 STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS FoaferJtfilbon. Cfc. Mi*. Om, Beflaio. N. Y. **% If You Are Sick When old Dr. Yernest was klUed at the age of 104 by falling from hit hone, there is no telling how long he might have Uved to prove that he had re-discovered the ancient secret of prolonging life. » ;v He proved that the secret of goo# health--the secret of prolonging life-" was to replenish waste tissue wlt% pure and wholesome food, which coni# only be done with a remedy that helps digest your food. His remedy made of Roots an# R Herbs he called "ESSENCE OP LIFE,* % for It seemed to restore vltaUty anflr strength to all who used It If you have pimples or Impure bloo& frequent headaches and dtoy spellifc feel nervous and cannot sleep, If youtf appetite Is poor and you need som» . remedy to regulate bowels and heljl digest your food, remember one thin£ iv. "ESSENCE OF LIFE" will do It You may secure a free trial bo# (now made in pill form) by sending ... -fl his picture to M. R. Zaegel & Co* Chemists, 630 8th St., Sheboygan, WlSfc ^ Ventilation, Sanitation and Feeding of Importance. Failures In ralalng calves are largely being eliminated by New Jersey dairymen through giving closer attention to ventilation, feeding, and sanitation. They have found that cold drafts must be avoided, feeding must be regular, the stalls kept clean and well bedded and the barn well ventilated. A growing practice Is to paint the new-born calfs navel cord with Iodine or Iodoform and then allow the calf to suckle the dam. The calf Is kept on the cow 36 to 48 hours. For the first week after the calf Is weaned, five to seven pounds of milk Is fed per day at a temperatifre between 90 and ^00 degrees Fahrenheit. The feeding Is done at regular Intervals and thoroughly cleaned pails are used. The milk is Increased to from eight to ten pounds In the second W CJarl B. Bender, assistant dairy husbandman at the New Jersey State College of Agriculture, New Brunswick, states that on the third week any good calf gruel can be used to take the place of some of the milk. By Increasing the gruel and decreasing the milk a seven-weeks' calf will be receiving two pounds of milk and ten pounds of gruel in addition to clover or alfalfa hay. From ten weeks to four monthf of age a calf will consume about 13 to 15 pounds of the gruel dally In addition to a small amount of dry feed Immediately after the gruel. A good dry grain mixture for calves Is made np of equal parts of Unseed meal, ground oats, cornmeal, and bran. After the calves are four months old they can be fed exclusively on the grnln mixture and good clover or alfalfa hajr. • , Now we'll wait their corn seed. see who tested Unless a need exists, nothing useful will be perfected. Yon can skip the can't dodge the loss. spray bot yon Potato spraying should begin early and continue late. Plan accordingly. • * • A community club for most anything has Its main value In ttos word 'community." • • • To get high-grade results from your chickens you mu»t expect to give thwu high-grade attention. a • a Swine consume 40 per cent of the United States corn crop, horses 20 per cent, and cattle 15 per cent, the federal Department oL Agriculture estimates. • • • National forest week Is Dm for stirring up interest but care of the woodlot the year round is what wili pay interest Widow's Mite Returns; to See Girlhood Home New York.--Laura Julietta Gottlieb, seventy-seven years old, an inmate of the Denmark Home for the Aged, In Brooklyn, will leave for her home in Copenhagen, which she left 55 years ago. When Constantln Bran began his twenty-sixth year as Danish envoy, the Danes in New York begged for the privilege of giving him a reception and a memorial of his services. He agreed to the reception, but he refused any gift Instead of spending the money for him, he asked the Danes to create a fund to send back to Denmark some old person whose declining years were heavy with homesickness. The committee selected Mrs. Gottlieb. She was one of the first to work for the home to which misfortune finally sent her. She gave In order that the aged might not be without comforts. She was made aecretary of the group which brought the Denmark Home for the Aged into existence. Eighteen years ago Mrs. Gottlieb's husband died, leaving little money. Then It was that Mrs. Gottlieb became a home inmate. On June 23 she will leave with a roundtrlp ticket In her hand. A whitehaired woman, certain to be amazed as much by the changes in Copenhagen ! as was the young, hopeful bride by the wonder of the new world when she came here 55 years ago. I Counterfeiter* Busy | Mexico City.--A gang of skillful f counterfeiters who have flooded Mexico and parts of the United States with expertly made counterfeit currency of various denominations has been found in a remote village in the state of Guerrero, southern Mexico, according to Information received recently at the American embassy. Their arrest and expulsion to the United States will be made in a few day a, It was said. Alright JUNIOR!- Little Mts L One-third tha np> liar doMi Mad* of • tm« ingredients, than candy coal For children and adnlta. ISOLD BY YOUR ORUOOWT, After Others Fafl PETERSON'SOINTMENf Big lux 35 Cents The mighty healing power of son's Ointment when eczema or terrible Itching of skin and scalp tortures y<* Is known to tens of thousands of people the country over. For pimples, acne, rough and red skin, ulcers, old sores, piles and *H blemishes and eruptions It is supreme ly efficient, as any broad-minded gist will tell yon. j Never Failed Her In 60 Years **Bccch«m'a Pills have been a byword in a?< home tor over 60 vean, and wen la a* Mother's home in England, Now 1 ata V , •ear* old. ™ have never Kuuwu Beechsm'i Pills to fail - H relieve tha worst headaches and con- . •Spation." Mia. G. Russell. Pltnbursh, h. For FREE SAMPLE --write B.F. Allen Co., 417 Canal Street, New Y««k Bvyinxn your druggist In SS and fM feoaae r Far comstiparion, biliousness. sick fcmfachw other iifotivc aibnaui taJt* , Bee cham'i Pills Rows Cause Tragedy Atlanta, Ga.--In the presence of a throng of shoppers, Charles S. Benton shot and killed his wife in a grocery store here and turned the -revolver on himself, inflicting wounds from which he Is expected to die. Xks shooting was due to family rows. Two-Legged Colt Independence, la.--A two-legged colt was foaled on a farm here. The body and bead were of normal size, but the animal waa minus both forelegs. Baby Loves A Bath With Cuticura •BasiL Soap PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Raatorae Calar and |Bs«Wtcr atnsdG (1n wi «ata D4raFnstuMa. lhk| tm H Ti HINDERCORN3 luaass. <«4, itiit all pata feat, ankaa mftttt eaar. flaw. JHaaaB AiaW Ifc

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