mm •AV^m •*»«««. sirr^l^ aw»* VlnWl «ttnl writ* K. T. CMA iU*Sr»t*l L Mkv«l emocral ,-«_ iwwiw '••• wren- A WTO sell jniaretteeS TIMS «M JTDBBS. wtr ^URMKfWMT «sd sSplhiMiS On ri«ht mas fritetl ftfc glH. A. OMMtand. O Honey 8<H|| Madr-to- Heuarr Ftttl eostum# ilttfe IbA bloomers. Bvery gtr ff»ar. Fox ClMiaent Co., L&naln*, Mich 4&*r#i Huf T. Oollwirtfclr ONW %»!>• r--tor-- the irtHwl «)W; Writ* Hr (IN trial lmttl« iMt It oa -- *--- Unpopular invention. New York man has Invented a lne which he says will tell anj Oman's ace. He's going to be about popular as a make at a laws so -- Iwnirtwt to Mothers XJCamlne carefully every boMa tt STORIA, that famous old remedy 'or Infants and children, and see that It •i Bears the pguttoreof In Use for Over SO Yeers. ildren Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Many British Choke to Death. , w . Leading staHstlctsns of England asi/ fc^giert that more persona annually choke r fito death while imkfli England than re killed oo tha Bngltafa railways. Mm Emm T--imr y( daMSii •>Uejk* n, HAVE TOO A COUCH? Wat lb Vhmm Sap b •! Vital •'f Goshen, Ind.- Taa 'llad and day for a whole year and SsSfcga,/ nauehftah I began to look life hetfo f>- f; from tuberculosis DisuifUj to say _ MM hmt with » was about Medicrf it mads WW & jlAMiyL Whatever yon faal the need ed good haw i^vs felt very grateful , to fir. Piawe."--M». Eliaa Teeter. 413 Middfcbwy ». •-and answer will be returned wfthr cot snaf|» of any kind- t\- ii-'i. ii: •»"«•>» Qflight Alright W. )L U^ CHICAGO, »a 13-1923. Flurry In Senate Ovbr Market Bill-- Xagialstora Are Like Bcheolhaya •Vt-%*1 In. Hurti for Home •; Thursdays. •«£: Springfield.--The r.ommlttee of members Tof the house to Investigate tha Uarfte intne massacre and tlx the r» epoaaftafty for It was named by SpicculrgT ghanahan. It consists of Frank J. McCarthy, lawyer, Elgin, whose resolution for an investigation was passed by the house and who Is appointed chairman of the committee; Michael L. Igoe, lawyer, Chicago, who introduced the original resolution for an Investigation; William L. Pierce, lawyer, Belvldere; Nor man <3. Flagg, farmer, Moro; W. B. Phillips, banker, Mi. Vernon. Thomas Curran, merchant, Chicago, and M. P. Rice, lawyer, Lewistown. Minority Leader Devlne raised "a charge of unfairness because there arc only two democrats, Mr. Igoe atad Mr. Rice, cm the committee. Flare Over Market Bill. A flurry In the Mftate developed among half a donett senators when an attempt was made by supporters Of the Lantz cooperative marketing bill to advance it to third residing. The scrimmage was started when the bill was called up on second reading and^ several amendments were offered. Serious objections were raised by Senators Swift (Rep., Lake), Dunlep (Rep., Champaign), and Denvir, (Derik, Chicago), to a pret^ton in the bill which ties up a farmer for five years when he signs a contract with a cooperative marketing association, without making it possible for a dissatisfied member to withdraw. ; _ Battle'Clouds 8ath«rM|^ Senator Swift's introduction 8f an .amendment allowing farmers to withdraw from a co-operative association any time they become dissatisfied and granting authority to the organization's president and secretary to allow such withdrawals brought opposition from Senttors Lantz (Rep., Woodford), Kessinger (Rep., Kane), and Cuthbertson (Rep., Macoupin). Senator Lantz moved to table the Swift amendment. By a unanimous vote the discussion of amendments was suspended until next Tuesday motalng. It was agreed that all amendments would be disposed of on Tuesday and the bill would be advanced to the third reading. Senator Cuthbertson contended that the five year contract without the privilege of withdrawing was necessary. Like Schoolboys. Like schoolboys anxious to get away from the schoolhouse on Friday afternoons are Illinois legislators in leaving the assembly sessions on Thursdays, when adjournment is taken until the following Tuesday. Thursday sessions usually close by 12:30 or 1 p. m., but some time before the houses stand formally adjourned many members have departed for their homes. The legislature meets at 10 a. m. on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of each week, and each branch Is in session an average of eight hours weekly. This time does not include that spent in holding numerous committee meetings Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. No Changs in Divorce Act. The senate refused to consider an amendment to the divorce act by which insanity would be made a new ground for divorce. Proposal of this uaeodBteot by Senator Dailejr (Rep., Peoria), drew out an emotional debate and ended In withdrawal of various proposals _Ao make divorce easier. At least tiiey are withdrawn until the storm clouds pass over. Senator Dalley proposed that "it shall be an additional ground for divorce where either party has been adjudged insane, according to law, and at least five years has elapsed between the adjudication of insanity and the date of filing application for divorce." Would Kill Death Penalty. Abolishment of capital punishment In Illinois and repeal of the "state overthrow" act, under which William Bross Lloyd, millionaire communist, was convicted, was proposed In the lower house by Representative Mc- Caskrln (Rep., Rock Island). The "overthrow" act was a product of the general assembly during the war. It was paased to permit state authorities to aid the fede-al government in fighting syndicalism and punishing those who advocated overthrow of the government. , • All Arsnnd the ttst« * 1 Springfield.--The senate joist resolution creating a committee of ten to co-operate with officials and civic, organizations interested in connecting the Great Lakes with the Gulf of Mexico was adopted by the house. Waterway legislation now pending In congress Is approved by the resolution. Freeport.--St. Vincent's Orphans' home here will receive a bequest of 100,000 from the estate of Miss Marfeartt Hearton <*f this city, who died recently. " Poutiac.--William Bergen, tale of the Chicago police department, has been appointed assistant Superintendent of the state reformatory here to succeed H. 0. Maynor, resigned, after five years' incumbency. Bergen has been connected with the identification bureau of the Chicago department and, is reearded as an espert In that IlneT RojJiford.--Canoeists of Rockfor£ and vicinity are planning to take pan •In three cruises Ml Illinois waters dining the summer. Memorial day, July Fourth and Labor day bavin? !)»« designate! for the events. i t S t i " if &M to FatiNf to ™ . T™ - MaiUU^L etExteta. ' London.--Adv)c«f v < received tram Buld^l|a|$ Indicate ths|^jiie custom .of humsB aacrttct to ailay fbe wrath of the gOdsHtttil exists in Khodesla. It Is reported that the elders of the Mtawara tribe, alarmed at the drought and the poor crejjs^ csosolted the rain doctor, and declded oa what they claim to be the nevertiklliac expedient of • ;Wi? SUtytofl mm and fikies Back Young Brido. j? . • " • iv*-' - ' " 1 "t ^ FIVE MONTHS QM Wife Wortta In Cincinnati 1l«i taurant to Oet Funds to Use ia" Kffort ttf %Mre Huaband'a ; Whs Bound and Burned Alive. tramsn sacrifice by burning. The lot fell on a native, who, it is alleged, had been Intimate with another native's wife. It was discovered that the Intended victim was the son of the rain doctor, who, however, proceeded with the sacrifice. The struggling man was bound and burned alive. Directly life was extinct heavy rains began. The celebrations of the success of the sacrifice were Interrupted by the arrival of the police. The elated tribe, not aware of having done wrong, showed the police the charred remains of the victim and told them of previous occasions on which stmtlajLJscrtfices bad been equally successful, the last one mentioned being in 1917. They assert that the "rain spirit," Whose name is Mwarl, lives in their district. The local paramount chief Is said to remember 72 natives who had been burned as rain sacrifices. Many natives are reported to have been committed for trial. The scene of the sacrifice Is said to be Chlcangos Kraal on the Portuguese border la southern Rhodssia. Wlllrtsgtisai. O.--Clarence Leroy ttcKbt$tey, Who only a short time ago lift heie fttl the Ohio penitentiary, a ^murderer In the eyes of the law, came Jback. had his Innocence legally and ^publicly proclaimed, and left amidst universal acclaim to take up his life where a twist of fate halted It flv« months ago. With his girlish wife^ who unceasingly has fought for Ids liberation, McKlnney, who served five months of a life sentence in the penitentiary for the murder of Policeman Emery Mc- Creight, a Crime which Louis Vandervoort of Jamestown, has admitted, boarded a train for Cincinnati. He was smiling, and apparently there was no rancor in his heart for the miscarriage of justi.-e. "1 have no ill feelings towards any one here," he told Wilmington people who crowded around him. Convicted despite bis- protests of Innocence of the murder of Special Policeman Emery AlcCreight. at Wilmington February 14, 1922, McKlnney, a huckster, was unable in the eyes of the jurors to furnish a conclusive alibL -•-v Pisa da Guilty to Murder. The same courtroom at Wilmington where McKlnney was sentenced, with the Ssme judge presiding, a boy of 20, Louis Vandervoort, son of a wealthy fruit grower near Jamestown, first arrested on a charge of robbery recently pleaded guilty to the murder of McCreight. He was sentenced to life imprisonment hi the penitentiary.. Walter Bangham, 19, an accomplice, pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was given a one to twenty years sentence in the Mansfield reformatory. Authorities In Green county, which adjoins Clinton county, have been conducting an Investigation Into statements made by boy friends of Vander- WAnrt f>>Q» ha ahA» anH IrlllArff COLUMBUS Put Forward, That Banish Kavigator Landed on the Amerl* , ean Continent in 1478. > ; ^ 1 ' *ti Several months ago Dr. Sofns Laiv. sen of the University of Copenhagenrapovted havinR discovered among old "" and Danish documents, evt- John Scolvo or Scolf. a Danish navigator, reached the American continent and. landed there in 1476, 10 years before Columbus sailed. According to . Doctor I^arsen's account. the Portuguese prince, Henry the Navigator, after his twentieth attempt to reach India by sailing around the lower end of Africa had succeeded, conceived the idea that sMps could reach another part of India by sailing northward across the Atlantic. He got In touch with Christian of Denmark, his brolher-in-law, and asked him to assist in dispatching an expedition from Denmark in sjarch of a northwest passage to Tndia. Christian fell In with the plan and chose John Scolvo, an experienced, competent sailor, to pilot the ship. Finally the ship reached the coast of Labrador In Safety, and found a harbor in what Is now called the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Good fereadmakcrt everywhere prefer it -year-old girl should learn -. Itittoiild be the starting point in tier homi training. "T&htned far free booklet Art of BoJtmgBrc*** Northwestern Yeast Col 1730 N« Ashland Ave^ Chicago Tiig£. ! ROMANCE OUT OF UORXOOR Boston Society Qlrl and Hal Wad Mounted Policeman of Canadian Wilds. to Boston.--A romance that had its beginnings on the Labrador coast became known recently. Miss Rosamond Bradley, society girl and heiress, filed at the city hall "notice of her intention to marry Charles A Rheault, former officer of the Canadian royal mounted police. As a volunteer nurse with the Grenfell expedition to Labrador in 1914, Miss Bradley had occasion to correspond with Rheault, on duty In another part of the peninsula. Last summer Rheault called on the Bradleys and went back to Canada with a promise of marriage from the yoong woman. 5 i TRAIN DROPS ONTO RIVER ICE Passengers of Boston A Maine Rail* road Train Have Miraculous Escape From Death* Orange, Mass.--Passengers en a Boston A Maine railroad train had a thrilling experience and remarkable escapes from serious injury when two of the three coaches Jumped the rails, plunged down a 15-foof embankment and slid out on the thick ice of Miller's river. The Ice supported the cars and the passengers scrambled tb safety. The third car stopped on the embankment. Four of the train crew were slightly hurt. The engine and tender remained on the track. Spreading rails caused the accident,'officials said. Under Auto; filed by Explosion ^ Trenton, Tenn. -- Mount, foreman at a Irby H. furniture factory here, Is dead as the Jesuit of injuries received when the gasoline tank of his automobile exploded. Mount buUt a fire under the automobile to thaw out the radiator. The explosion followed. .»•» « » » 'I • ' • « • .« » I:*1'* * ' 3* Cooking, Man Falia Asleep and CMes. Hammond, Ind.--While preparing supper In the absence of his wtfs, Thomas Glddons fell asleep. The con-' tents, ef the kettle boiled over, extinguishing the gas, and Glddons was asphyxiated; v Car Steve Exptodss; Seers Injured. Pleasant Grove, O.--Twenty persona were Injured, several seriously, when an oil stove on a street car exploded hear here. Fire parsons were taken to a hospital. The explosion tore out the Xront^thecajc. - ^ ^ \ .w H i t' & Watch Cutlcura Improve Your Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear t the face with Cutlcura Ointment. Wash off Ointment in five minutes With Cutlcura Soap and hot water. It is wonderful what Cuticura will do for poor complexions, dandruff, itching j. and red, rough hands.--Advertisement. The Supercilious Schoolman. I recently had au amusing Illustration of the yawning gap between education and life when I sought to purchase an outline map of Europe. The only ones available appeared to date from about the time of the Franco- Prussian war, and the young man In charge of the school supply department tartly replied to my inquiry: "You know, the schools don't recognise the new European boundaries." I asked him if the schools with which be was familiar recognised the existence of the late European war. but he refused to see anything funny laT his own rethark.--Edward P. Warner | In the North American Review. Panacea. The Boy (to the plumber)--^Oh! have you hurt your finger? Walt a minute an' I'll get mother to kiss It well. Meteors by Millions It has been calculated that act leas than 20,000,000 meteors, each large enough to be visible as a "shooting star," enter our atmosphere daily. '-V Manning of Eurep* Dtflned. The name Europe signifies a eon try of white complexion, so called because the Inhabitants were of a lighter complexion than thoee at Asia ai Africa. But It doesn't rain very hard on the unjust If he Is roosting under s stolen umbrella. - A SK your local dealer to reo» ommend a practical deo- • girvi orator. If you are unable to secure one you can do the work yourself, tinting and stenciling your walis to give beautiful rcsaks. • ( niiilxmlliH Instead ofKahomtne or WaUPafm Bur Alabastine from your local dealer, white and a variety of tinafc Kaaf to ana with bold water and apply with a rotable bruah. Each package hsa the cross and tirck printed in red. By intermixing Aubsatiac tints you can accurately match draperies sad tugs and obtain Individual treatment of cadi room, fPrffr/hr ssfat tugge$Hnm etti latut color combinatiem ALABASTINE COMPANY wri 10 Cents Gives Charming New Shade to Old UngeriS PUTNAM FADELESS DYES--dy** or tlnti as yw iWi "We!!* We All Have Our TreuMss," Hs Said Calmly. man Elvas Matthews in Xenia in December, 1982. Vandervoort was Implicated In the McCreight murder by friends, who declared he had boasted of his prowess with a revolver, claiming that two notches cut In the butt of his pistol represented dead policemen, after he bad been arrested for robbery. Warden Imparts Glad Howe. Summoned by Warden P. E. Thomas his office, from the penitentiary loom mill, McKlnney received phlloso* phlcally, the announcement that ha was to be freed. "Well, we all have our troubles,'* he said calmly. "I've always had a feeling that I'd get out. I haven't felt so very bad because I knew -I wasn't guilty. Fve felt more sorry for my wife and my mother than tot myself--the humiliation was hard oi them.** McKlnney said his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles McKlnney, reside on a farm near BiufFton, Ind. His wife, te whom he- was married a short time before be was sentenced, has been working in a Cincinnati restaurant obtaining funds to be expended (B an effort to free her husband. I Thousands See Raacus In Mid-Air. Chicago.--With traffic blocked and thousands of persons looking on breathlessly. Earl Wagner, an eleo- IMCian, was rescued from bis perilous position a hundred feet above the street at a Chicago theater. Wagner was hanging to a rope which had twined about (me foot as he fell fronl a swinging chair. He hung head downward for 15 minutes until rescued by flrauen. - Bull Fasts for 36 Days tn Old BSin. BerflSU, Mont.--Locked in a deserted barn Cttr $8 days without food or water, a bull owned by Earl Burke was r®»- duced to a skeleton when found. Tha bull wandered Into the barn and the wind blew tha door shut, tmprisoolng the animal. Dancer Gets $25,000 for Lost Beauty. New Terk.--Alleging loss of beauty as a result of plastic surgery 0a her face. Mile. Florence M. Gloveff opera dancer, won a suit for $25,000 dame jgoi ... . _ * M4* * \ " SURELY HAD A BUSY DAY Mtvelist Must Have Been Kept Fully Employed, Judging From' the Result of His Labors. "English novelists are effete. They go in too much for style. There's a Isck of red blood In their work. *V s dinner in a country Inn where we were staying together, I said one evening to an English novelist: H 'Well, I dashed off 8.000 words today. Wha did you dof H<Oh, I was Immensely busy,' said he. 'I corrected the proofs of my new ess^y.' "'Make any changes?* I asked. " '1 made one very Important change,' ha said. 1 took out s comma.' "I couldnt help giving a disgusted laugh. M 'And Is thst sll you did all dsy,' I said--1lake out s comma f •"Oh, no,' said he. After deep reflection 1 put the comma back."* Ireland's New One-Pound Note. A new Bank of Ireland £1 note Is now In circulation, which is of the same size .as the £1 treasury note, and It Is claimed that it cannot be forged. In the center is an oval green panel, from which branch. In mlnUte cbaracteis, "One ~jund" and £1." and on the reverse. Instead of the houses of parliament, Is the figure of Erin with her harp. HOLD CONVERSE BY SIGNS A gentleman who calls another gen* tleman a liar is no gentleman. Honesty never has to crowd anybody In order to make a living. How English Weavers Make Themselves Understood Amid the Deaf* " enlng Din of Heavy Machinery. Among Lancashire weavers there Is a soundless system of communication which has been In use for generations. Anld the crash of the machinery when no human voice could be beard, the worker^ converse easily with one another by means of lip movements ar* signs made by the hands. Knowledge of the weavera' language Is a necessity to the craftsman and the little "tenters" study it along with l.".eir lessons in weaving. Usually the first thing learnt Is the time of day. A forefinger (rooked and held up, then four fingers held up. signifies a quarter to four. If the crooked finger moves to either side It means a quarter past four. The pupil watches the movements of the lips. At first he can only comprehend their meaning «hen the words are simple and the movements are exaggerated. In a surpri: Ingiy short time, however, be la able to talk to his fellow workmen with perfect ease, during the Inte.* vala when the looms do not ilged all of hie attention. S ' . What He Meanfc Ida--Jack Nervy-tried to. hug ine last evening. May--Oh, that's what he meant when I saw him hurrying toward your hguse. He told me he had a pressing engagements--Boston JSvaaing , 9taanscrlpt. The trouble with the map who knows nothing is that he is always the lest one to find It out. For the Man of the Equipping an electrical dan for tha man of the house Is a project that will not require as much money one may think. These are aome af' the things that go with It: An Uedlh log fireplace, an electric cigar llghtSf; a humidifier that clears and peifn^ the air of every taint of tehainea:' smoke, and even In these days tha' electric cocktail mixer cannot be looked. Other articles for tha are a clock that never haa to wound, and an immersion -- which may boll water for a hot drink or for shaving in ten minutes. couch ean be fitted with an electHe " comfort which covers it entirely, a softly shaded reading light surely be a most welcome rompsg|1^'4>|rjg| at his shoulder. t " . JX , J ' * ' • " ' -t °i , i j •>-£. %j*S& •'M' Ji Bird Statistic* Some species of ducks and geeae i other water birds, together with < tain land birds, are decidedly est Hp increase, while others appear te |H^ steadily decreasing. The trumpSMT swan, Eaklmo curlew, Caroiina parf; quet and ivory-billed seem to be rapidly decreasing fea bers and may be on the varga afa^» ' tinction. On the whole, IwiiMm. bird population in the United MifcMt i s o n t h e i n c r e a s e , a c c o r d i n g t o a » • > ' - J " port made by the chief of the bursa*?'- of biological survey. " ^ One or the Other. « ^'"•^tiiles says he haa a hen that 420 eggs last year. Some layer; aM6?" "Either that or her owner is soma it's pleasanter to be hopeful; thaflp nhy ao few of us are pessimistic. a SBVE 11 .i L i.m if f ust think what youve been missing TV/rANY P°°Ple deny themsehres^ the comfort - IVl of a hot drink with meals, because they. find coffee and tea detrimental to health. For many, the drug element in coffee and tea irritates the nerves, retards digestion and often prevents natural, restful sleep. If this fits your one, try Postunu This pof» cereal beverage supplies all the pleasure and satisfaction that a hot mealtime dritok can give--• invigorating warmth, fine aroma and delicious flavor. And you can enjoy it in the full assurance that it cannot harm healtt|. ~:i, -- 'Y , v 4 - ^ t » v fOStUIll FOR HEALTH €'€T' here's a Reason*- Toet gtocef sslla Pussuui in twofetma: Inatus Posses* (Itf tins) prepared instantly in th» cap hp tbe addlttuu of bailing wattr. Postasa CeresA (hi packagee) for tbosa who pttfiMs * m*k« th* drink whil* the omI is b«ing pea> pared; made by boiling tally 20 niiiiulnn 'te* a Cnsht' -*jK *f. " 1 - •