mATi Mrl nx f . "i \i •-ANS W and 79* Packages, Every*** »; •:<•, '* D0NTDESPAIR '** % It yoa are troubled with pains or aches; feel tired; haye headache, indigestion, insomnia; painful passage of urine, you will find relief in Ik COLD MEDAL itw«grid'< standard r»m«dy for UdMfi flvwr, bladder and uric acid troubles and National Remedy of Holland atee* 16M>* Thntc dtN, all drnggitfts. teM M(jpt^oMi wteofenMtoli.•i iBwBi ltlLiOt CeSoMi MLC'C A won(l«r BOOKLET. aa. e. w. atwrr ca^aara wiMii *<>•••. KVikeKdK nYow B OwXhi t* complexieotnc.. AH wfiounodTeMr- Army in Need W m W< W" m of More Flyers Secretary of War Says United States Is Lagging in March of Aviation* -mm? AVUT10M IN Mitchell Reports Raault of Monthaf Investigation Abroad wMLoqlslatlow Naadad ##ng Inspection of Airplane*^ PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM nwaniim iiHtmrihirMiiai ItMtftMft Color tad HINDKRCORNft Mk et«-, *top» all pala. •suturea tvmV Mi make* walking MKT. Mo. ' ' MM*. HiimCbwilalwata,] ITS TOASTED W% toasted. This •no extra proeoss gives s delightful quality that can not bo duplicated indispensable among mules SPOHN MtOiCAl CO. GOSHEN.iND. U.S.A. Legion Poat in Korea. .. x?'An application has Just been received for a charter for an American Legion post in Korea by the Legion's national department. There are 15 persons eligible for membership In Korea and the application bears ail the names. The local post will have its post in Korea, and is being organlied by M. L. Swinehart, treasurer of the Southern ^Presbyterian mission in that country. In his letter accompanying the application for a charter. Mr. 8winehart said: "Please have the application acted upon as quickiy as possible, as we have good reason for jprsntlng to get busy and get the post, SBganixed into a going concern." English Daily for Jerusalem: Jerusalein soon is to have a daily newspaper published in English. It Till be owned and edited by an American woman, Mrs. Catling of New York, who has spent several months In Palestine studying local conditions: Mrs. Gatiing has pc ' $250,000 for a tqila.ng to be used for her venture. ®se presses and cifecr mechanical equipment for the paper are now on tkeir way oat from Hie United States. friendship can be n't ask a good deal.' that If you're •sick enough you'll bo too tp be frightened. >. mi / Morning N For the time being at ft* United States is lagging betbe march of aviation progress. •Tills te, however, a condition which jnn»t and will be remedied If Secre- ,t|iy at War Weeks has anything to W to the matter--and he has. 1 The secretary of war lately declared thai the European nations, particularly those of tbeni like Great Britain and Fixnce, that bave attained the utmost decree of efficiency in the fly* Jug art on the military as well as oil the commercial side, are spending much more money in the development of aviation, are developing superior types of machines and in general are cuite a few steps tn advance ef the United States. ' Studied Aviation Abroad. The secretary of war is making s study of the status of aviation hero and abroad with a view to putting the United States in the forefront of the march. He received lately from >Brlf^ Gen. Villlam Mitchell, assistant chief of the aviation service, the result of two months' investigation the latter hna made of conditions In Bo* rope. Incidentally MB Mitchell, one of the veteran flyers of the country, told the secretary of war of a unique experience he had the other day In the vicinity of Detroit when making a flight from Chicago. General Mitchell ran into a thunder cloud which had a length of at least 120 miles. General Mitchell had never In his previous experience ran into a storm of this size. Thunder clouds, always S deterrent to aviators, usually meas- .ure about twenty miles and by' IJylng on the edge of them the aviator can -gat into tao open In short time. After skirtinc the edge of this cloud for some eighty. miles General Mitchell found that it extended still forty miles. Discussing his visit with General Mitchell, who had jest completed a trip from McCook field, Dayton, 0„ to Boiling field. Secretary Weeks said that General Mitchell believes that stricter examination and licensing is the great prerequisite to the development of commercial aviation in the United States. Before the general public can feel assurance regarding commercial air routes the secretary said there must be legislation that provides rigid inspection of airplanes and the licensing of pilots. Federal regulations are deemed the most appropriate, as these would e msd e«e< |e discrepancies In-laws Encourage Commercial Aircraft. W'Froin the standpoint of the War department the development of commercial aircraft should have every encouragement 'or the reason that It wouid- provide for the army a great reserve of competent pilots and, officers in any national emergency. At the present time there Is no law providing for the inspection or regulation of pilots or their machines when engaged in commercial service, and this fact, the secretary of war believes, has given rise to many of the accidents that have occurred In the past. As an example of the degree of safety which may be attained n commercial flying the secretary of war instanced the fact th#t one commercial line operating between ^lanii. Fla.. and Nassau has carried 50,000 to 100,000 passengers without an accident. The same company that operates the Miami-Nassau'route is now interested In developing an air route between Detroit and Cleveland by way of the lake. / Boston No Hub; , sU-Sif Declares an* [x umatism and BUR,E0 H,s w^l in Wiunr Dyspepsia Art Soon Ended •.«- Gedlbgfca! Survey Pfates tertter of Country in Smith County, WASHINGTON OUT OF PLAGE Capital of Country Should Be Located Thousand Miles Inland From Present Site--Locate Cenfear of Alaska. Washington.--Boston, Mass., is S very Important place to a great many people, but, so far as the United States geological survey is ^concerned. Boston as a "Hub," as it claims to be, doesn't amount to a row of pins. Boston, too, prides Itself on being tire "Hub of the Universe," but the survey ranks it at the bottom i>f the list of hubs, or centers. f For the geological survey thinks that a city Is a nub only when it Is the center of *he land, geographically Smashers of*Aviation Records speaking, and points the finger of scorn at ,the Massachusetts city for not even being the center of the state of which it happens to be the capital --much less of any universe. Honor for the Smiths. The survey has received a lot of letters of inquiry from persons wanting to know "where they're at," where the geographical center of the United States is, or the center of their own state. The survey has taken great pains at locating the, various geographical centers around the continent. The center of the United States, according to the coast and geodetic survey, is at exactly 39 degrees 50 minutes north latitude, and 98 degrees 35 minutes west longitude. It may be said that point Is in northern Kansas, in Smith county, in fact Trurt the Smiths to be there. The Ideal "hub" of population, gov* eminent and industry, should also be the geographical center, the survey believes, but that is true In few. If any cases. "Hubs" Just grow up regardless, and the center of population In this country Is yearly moving -weet wsrd. Washington Out of PIscs. • Even Washington, the nation's cap! tal, is wrongly situated, from the geographer's point of view, and should be at least a thousand miles Inland from Its present site to better approach the geographical center of the country. St. Louis, Denver and other cities have been mentioned at various times as more fitting sites for the center of government The geological survey of the interior department has fixed the approximate locations of the geographical centers of each state. I The geographical center of Alaska Is | difficult to determine, for the outline j^nf the territory is very Irregular, but | if the outlying Islands are Included In 1 the determination It Is not far from a polht 05 miles south of Fort Gibbons, In latitude <18 degrees 46 minutes, longitude 152 degrees 20 minutes. , - ^ ; of stomach tronbMr rheumatism often find that when their stomach is set In order, the rheumatism disappears. Thousands of people everywhere have testified that Tanlnc has freed them of both troubles simultaneously. Mr. Robert Trotter, 148 State St., St. Paul, Minn., says: "About a year ago I began to go down hill. Sour stomach and rheumatism In my arms and shoulders kept me in misery all the time. Since taking Tanlac all my aches and pains have gone, and my stomach Is tn fine I shape. I'm glad to a»dorse such s fine medicine." Rndly digested food fills the .whole system with poisons. Rheumatism and many other complaints not generally recognised as having their origin In the stomach quickly respond to the right treatment. Get a bottle today at any good druggist.--Advsrtiao- • ment • ' Enterprising Twins. Oust a f and Wilheun Dyresen, twin • brothers,* were bom In Sweden on March 26, 1850. They entered the Naval academy when of age together and ever since have been running neck and neck for naval honors. Each haB held nearly every important post in the Swedish navy. They are now vice admirals and have only one more rung in the ladder to climb before reaching the grade of admiral. Wo!l-to-Do Frenchman Played Odd Joks on Friends With Whom \ He Was Displease^. As Ingeniously malicious will led 16 an action tried In the French courts ten years ago. Jean Laurent, a wellto- do bachelor, who died in 1903, used to keep a diary recording with painful minuteness every Incident of his dally routine. At the end of each year hl« records were richly bound, labelc l "lllstorle de ma Vie," and lent in turn to four old friends, none of whom ever glanced at more than a few page*, although when returning the volume euch professed to have read it through and enjoyed it. Eventually the old man discover ^1 their professions to he false, arid, pique^ at this lack of Appreciation wrote his will on page 047 of tlje volume for 1901. He divided his whole estate ftmong his four friends; butthey remained in Ignorance of their good fortune, although they had ample opportunity of learning It, so when Laurent died he was deemed intestate, and a distant relation took possession of his property. Ten years later the will was found, and after a costly lawstilt the real heirs recovered about $20,000--less than half the amount originally bequeathed. MOTHERS w DMIGOTtES Road Tldb Letter from Mnb W. S. Hughes Greenville. DeL--"I was under tfce nprssshm that my eldest dangfatar had someintsnudtroebie ss«frer since the first FBEEDp FROII ' - . LAXATIVES plecevsry fey Scientists Has Replaced Them. ' Pills and salts give temporary rolief from constipation only at the expense of permanent injury, aays an eminent medical authority. Science has found a newer, better wtty--a means as simple as Nature Itself. in perfect health a natural lubricant keeps the food waste soft and moving. But when constipation exists this natural lubricant is not sufhi-ient. Medical authorities have found that the gentle lubricating ui tlon of Nujol most closely resembles that of Nature's own lubricant. As Nujol is Dot a laxative it cannot gripe. It Is In no sense a medicine. And like pure water It la harmless and pleasant. Nujol Is prescribed by physicians; used in leading hospitals. Get a bottls from your druggist today.--Advertisement. MUCH LIKE THE DAYS OF OLD Whadsmsan, "Absent-Mlndedf' "Flappers in Floppers," is as neat a headline as we've seen this season. By the way, n correspondent Sends us the following, which he found in the writings of Jonathan Swift: "Absentminded people always kept a flapper in the family as one of the domeettca." --Boston Transcript. f-- A man generally has a long face when he Is short. 1 Skill of Ancient Tournaments Exer. oieed fo a Modified Form in Tw* ? Southern States. ; ' "."V _ & Ahctent tournaments in which mailed knights jousted with lances for the fsvor of a fair lady, are perpetuated in a modified form among the descendants of the early settlers of Virginia and Maryland. Horseback tournaments with lances are u feature of almost every fair and old home day in the country around Washington. Instead of driving his lance against his antagonist to unhorse or disable him. the modem knight of the tournament attempts to pick three rings suspended from crosspieces over tha» course, on the end of Rts lance, wfeH,> galloping through the course at a pre scribed rate of speed. If he picks all three, two white clad pages, usually pretty girls, ascort him back past the Judges' stand. Sometimes a dozen tests are necessary before one knight shows his superiority over the others. He then is permitted to pick the queen of the tournament, who Is the belle of the ball, which always &4lewg the event. to quit school coco for a week. Iahraja take LydiaE. Pinkham's vegetable Compound mvsetf so I gave it to her and she has received great benefit from it. 1 ou can use this letter for a testimonial if you wish, as I cannot say too much about what your medicine has done for me and for w daughter."--Mrs. Wk. S. Bnm~ Greenville, Delaware. M others an> j of ten ti ires grandmothers have taken and have learned the vahie of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cosapennd. So they recommend the modicine to others. The best test of any medicine is wlmt it has done for others. For nearly fifty years we have published letters from mothers, daughters, and women, young and eld, recommending the Vegetable Compound. Tbev know what it did for them and are glad to t.e)l others. In Eur own neighborhood are women who ow of its gr^at value. Mothers--daughters,wtty not tcy fcf Cuticura Soap -IS IDEALFor the Hands Sms ZSc, Oistascnt 25 adi SOc, Takmi St ,4 / Melodious Irony. "Why Sid the tears come Into your eyes when the band played "Hall, the Gang's All Here?" • "In view of the factional fights we've been having," replied Senator Sorghum, "the tune sounded downright ironical." • . •' Faint heart may sometimes wtn s fair lady, but It takes a stout heart to hold her. The man who makes hay while the sun shines seldom gets a sunstroke. CHICAGO, NO. 39-1922. Anticipatory Peopia. "1 really dislike 10 talk to her; slMI has such a habit of finishing one's sentences for one. You know the kindf* "Yes; they listen faster than yon can talk to them."--Boston Xrafie-, script. • ' f"' SH'4 m The women who always tsQi Sir' truth tells aboi.. nine unpleasant onsa out of s possible ten. Why Is a woman always young* than a man born on the same day? Here are the aviators who at McCook field broke two world's records. They attained an altitude of 24,206 feet, and one of them dropped 24,206 feet In a parachute. They are left to right: Lieut. Leigh Wade, pilot of the ship; Capt. A. W. Stevens, chief of the photograph section, who made the parachute drop, and Roy Langham, observer. Found Bones of Giant Mexico City, Mex.--The department f agriculture has received 'from an gent on Tilmron island. («v>lf of California. the skeletou of a />rlmltive man more than ten feet tall. It was found a few days ago. Other bones of similar size have been encountered. The science medicine began la ages previous to the records of history. WOMAN NOW LEADER OF INDIANS Mrs. Alice Davis Fir& Feminine Chief in History. Only Woman Congressman Qivss Roses *£ Mother Who Obtained Qreat .^ Wonor Through Hard Woi^ for Her People. t . Muskogee.^Okla.--The first woman chief In the history of the North American Indians Is Mrs. Alice B. Davis, who recently was Installed as leader of the SeminSie tribe. The Seuikioles were among the first to be civilized. No Indian ceremony In the last 20 years was as elaborate pa^Mrs. Davis' inaugural. The courtrotAu a^&Iuskogee was filled to capacity tot* the event. Tribal leaders from all parts of the state gathered to pay honor to the only woman chieftain in Indian history. There was added sentiment to ,the ceremony when the only two Alices of their kind met. Miss Alice Robertson, the only woman member of congress, presented Mrs. Alice Davis, the only woman Indian chief, a bouquet of roses following the inauguration. Mrs. Davis is a member of the Tiger clan, which has supplied, with bnt one exception, every chief of the Seminoles. She is the mother of seven daughters aud four sous. Five of the daughters and three granddaughters witnessed the ceremony at Muskogee. BIRTHS FEWER; DEATHS GAIN Census Buresu Reports Shrinksge In New Arrivala in First Quarter ef Yssr, , Washington, D. C.--The Wrttt rate is declining and the death rate Increasing, according to statistics made public 6y the census bureau covering the first quarter of the year. • The birth rate in the states from which comparative figures are available shows an average, of 23.3 for each thousand of population in the first three months of 1022, compared with 25.3 in 1921, ifchile the mortality average in the registration area In the first quarter of this year was 13.7, against 12.6 In the same period last year. North Carolina, with 29.2^ reported the highest birth rate for the first three nxufths this yeur, and the state of Washington, wkh 16.5, the lowest. The District of Columbia "tiad the highest mortality rate, with 17.6, abd Wyoming tl»e lowest, with 9.6. - - ' Tackle Everest Again, ; v • "t^iTMon.--The Geographical Jottfirial, the organ of the Geographical society, suggests that another expedition, with the object of climbing Mount Everest,, may be organized next year. Better Get Some New Ones. The man whose habit it is to propound conundrums would be more entertaining sometimes if he would only get some new conundrums.---Somerville Journal. MOVE BLIND ACROSS TURKEY Niar East Relief Workers Send 100 ^ Children From the Amariefgt if;'; . -- School to Syria. 1 #. ^ Aleppo, Syria.--One hundred Mtttf children from the American school for tb< blind at Harpoot have asrived here safely after a 500-mile hike across the Turkish interior, during which they passed through' mountains Infested with bandits and over long stretches of desert where camels carried water and provisions. The children are from seven to fifteen years old. The Irregular pilgrimage Is part of the plan of the Near East relief to remove several thousand Armenian orphans from Asiatic Turkey. The journey from Harpoot took a month to complete. On the last 20 miles the children floated down the Euphrates on barges. They now are housed it. the re-established school in Aleppo, which is the capital of Syria under the French mandate. Wr%o-1wS-- Wife Kills Self When Husband Kicks Kitten her husband kicked her pet kitten, Mrs. Rone' Sipos shot herself and died a few minutes later In a hospital at Cleveland, O. Sipos was fondling the kitten when It scratched him. Mrs. Sipos became angry when be kicked the animal and fired a bullet Into her own abdomen. •«r# Crows Onion-Strawberry. Warsaw, lnd.--Strawberries With an onion flavor will .be produced next year by A. E. Gunt^r, Kosciusko county farmer. An experiment this year proved that the production of such a berry Is possible. He fertilizes bis strawberry field with tops taken from his ouion crop and says that he expects a big demand for the berries on the . part of lovers of onions. There is but one method of attaining •soaUeajce/aad that b hard labor. -rf SWORDFISH INDUSTRY BOOMS Rivals Manufacture ef Steal st Caps . Brston Ports--Shippsi(| . \ / to Boston. ' V /'• ' Montreal. -- Swordflshlng' out of Cape Breton ports bids fair to become a rival as an industry of the steel manufacture in Sydney, according to record-breaking shipments of swordfish to Boston during the season now commencing. 1 Last season the shipments from Loulsburg to Boston alone amounted to well over 1,000.000 pounds. It has been said that the people who engage 1b the swordfisheries In Cape Breton outnumber those employed by the steel plants. The fish are caught, cleaned, iced, boxed and shipped in a special fleet of refrigerator cars by the most direct route to Boston. Today's Wise Word. "Given a good cook, a good flgnrs, a good temper and a good bank account, and a woman can outmarry all the sirens of song, story and history.' •--Helen RowlaaC ' Some More-Truths. v ijjp- ^ "^yOULD you use a steam shovel to move a pebble? Certainly not Implements ; are built according to the work they have to do. f| Would you use a grown-up's remedy for your baby's ills? Oertainly jm& :"7 Bemedies are prepared according to the work THEY have to do, ^4^ ^ All this is preliminary to reminding you that Fletcher's Castoria was sough! out, found and is prepared solely as a remedy for Infants and Children. And lei this be a warning against Substitutes, Counterfeits and the Just-as-good stuff that: may be all right ior you in all your strength, but dangerous for the little baba» ! All the mother-love that lies within your heart cries out to you: Be true tf ',:-- Baby. And being true to Baby you will keep in the hous» remedies, special!^ prepared for babies as you would a baby's food, hairbrush, toothbrush or spong* ^ j -'h Children Cry For tet Contents 15 Fluid ALCOHOL-3 PER GEMt , A^cfablcPrcparationfcfAs- J| sumlatiogthefood ty * lin^thcStoaiadcandBciwdsdr -- A doctor in the house all the time would be a good Idea. Yet TherebyPromQung cant afford to keep a doctor in the family to keep baby well or pre#-^' vent sickness. But you can do almost the same thing by having a| ~r I Cheerfulness and RwtGoclMB neither Opium, MorpWae w* Mineral. NotNahcotic j^^ffMnrXAMULaiJ* rJW |r^t>n^ibefeflro»a-inl^n<y Simile, sqntfnre0* 'mil i jjpmioiiCa®®® Banct Copy «# Wnjft* Are You Prepared? % hand a bottle of Fletcher's Castoria, because it is a wonderful retnedv for indigestion, colic, feverishness, fretfulness and ail the ether dia*, ; orders that result from common ailments that babies have. Fletcher's Castoria* is perfectly safe to use. It is a haxmleaa aa stitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. ChAdre* ' cry for Fletcher's Castoria, and mothers recommend it because they * hare found it a comfort to children and a mother's friend. * *^>v If you love your baby, yon know how sweet it is to be able ta help baby when trouble cornea. Tou cannot always call upon a doctor* But doctors have nothing but good to say of Fletcher's Castoria, ba» . Va , I cause they know that it can only do good--that it cant do anT harm - and they wouldn't want you to use far baby a remedy j%u use for yourself. MOTHERS SHOULD REM) THE M0KLET THAT IS AKNM0 EVERT BOTTLE Of n£TOtt« €£5^5* - GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of TH« CINTAUN MMMNV, Nl« VOftK «IT¥ 110 Cents Gives Chaining New Cotsr Teas te Bid Sweaters "*•" '*:£• if: