mm sSfei jsSifiilsS'MlsS £S£fc„,: j t t f ' " ' »«» •!;,«.• »• V ..;,;jj^<s,»« V .J- %E McHENRt PL AIKDEALEK, McHENBT, ILL Wh«t Would I "You Do? FACED W the m>Miiy of providing lot yourself, «4at wonlJ--wk«t COULD-- you do? Hnndreda of women eater on.eongenial. ill-pud tm^oyment because they lack ntiur «9«nMM #r eapataL Notker is necenary to euceen under the liberal •profitel* aring plan tkrouf'S which Franco-American toilet requintM, preferred by particular women for more thaa thirty yean, can be sold to your neighbors and personal friends. Your Chance! If ydfe long for iadependeaee and are willing to devote energy and enthusiasm to tbe work, write at once lor full details concerning our "Retailer's Plan." If not already represented in yon* community we can offer you a generously paid position in which any woman may win success. $ 7TU Pvmnum Xmw'iM 3f--ia) CmW> •sti'nw Trwtmmt BP*, for xiiktr +» norma) or oiTjr tltin* Mtt faftulmr mmd rffwtrr* »/ tviht traatnuntu { . . Franco-American Hygienic Company 13 th Street, at Irfin Atmw CHICAGO ILLINOIS Hair Coming OufS Doubles Its/Beauty^ First in America TRINER'S American Elixir r.. .r -• r"••* Bitter Wine Brought to the Americas market 30 years ago as the first Bitter Wine. It is still first and second to none. Unsurpassed (or. poor appetite, headaches, constipation, flatulence an<|, other stomach troubles* At ail drug stores and dealers in medicines. JOSEPH TRINER COMPANY ISSS-4S1 AIHmiJ AifctCycm,!. , Oo«! KMal flruAMs #(1 Ban FnuieiMO MM t.KOW WITH THE WKtiT--Subacriba to the Kosers-Burke Service, Tucson, Arls., II.(X yearly; Bulletins mailed jou weekly. Wise men are like sponges; they seek to absorb all they can. BOCHEE'S SYRUP A Harmless Soothing, Healing Remedy for Coughs and Colds. Here Is a remedy for coughs, colds, bronchitis, throat Irritation, and especially for long troubles, that has been sold all over the civilised world la many thousands of households for the last fifty-four years. Its merits have stood this test of time and use, and surely no test could be more potent er convincing. It gives tbe patient with week and inflamed lungs a good nlgbfs rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration In the morning. Try one bottle, accept no substitute. For sale by all druggists and dealers la medicine everywhere.--Adv. - Confidence Is the champion of success. C«fe*a Oark* II salve QaleUr Rtttm* and heals burning. Itching and torturing •kin diseases. It instantly stops the pain of burns. Beats without scars. 26c and GOc. Ask your druggist, or send 2Sc to The J. W Cole Co.. Rockford, 111., for a pks.Adv. Art Is not a thing separate and apart--art is only tbe beautiful way of doing things. WWE S32'^SESfc £>••. If they Ttre, kch. Smarter Burn, if Sgc% Irritated, Inflamed or Granulated, use Murine Refreshes. Safe for Infant or Adult. At all Druggists. Write fog free Eye Book, fcktlphaiyft.fMll • •'-> {v A few cent* buy* "Danderlne." Aft tar an application of "Danderlne" yoa can not find a fallen hair or any dandruff, besides every hair shows new life, rigor, brightness, more QtgQpjtad thickness.--Adv. TURN OUT 13,000 'SHIP OFFICERS Merchant Vessels Gain Many Recruits From Newly Established United States Schools. Where Vanderbilt's Remains Rest PUI 10 . EXTBD smn #, Tokens of Honesty, At some of the London docks, when two men make & trade agreement, they exchange black beans as tokens of honesty. This Is regarded as more binding that a written and signed contract. Get instant relief with "Pape's Gold Compound" Don't stay stuffed-np! Quit blowing and snuffling! A dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" taken every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks up a cold and ends all grippe misery. The very first dose opens your clogged-up nostrils and the air passages of your head; stops nose running; relieves tbe headache, dullness, feverlshne8s, sneezing, soreness, stiffness. "Pape's Cold Compound" is the quickest, surest relief known and cost* only a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance. Tastes nice. Contains no quinine. Insist dn Pape's i Ad. Misleading. "You call her a fair sample ot the beauty of the place?" . "We so consider her." "How can she be a fair sample when die's a brunette?" MOTHER! "California Syrup of Figs" Child's Best Laxative / Accept "California" Syrup of Figs only--look for the name California on the oackage, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harmless physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love Its fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must say "California."--Adv. These Days. Knickers-Was his death ural causes? Bocker--Yes, an automobile over him. oatran Cuticura Comforts Baby's Skin When red, rough and itching with hot baths of Cuticura Soap and touches of Cuticura Ointment. Also make use now and then of that exquisitely scented dusting powder, Cuticura Talcum, one of the indispensable Cuticura Toilet Trio.--Adv. Catty. "What a high color Grace has." ' "Of coarse it's high. She won't use any of tbe cheap kinds." •Tim's flUptpsii" Cornets Sfofiicl "Pape's Diapepsin" is the quickest, surest relief for Indigestion, Oases. Flatulence, Heartburn, Sourness. Fermentation or Stomach Distress caused by acidity. A few tablets give almost immediate stomach relief and shortly the stomach <• corrected so you can eat favorite foods without fear. I>arge case costs only 60 cents at drug store. Absolutely harmless and pleasant. Millions helped annually. Best stomach corrective know a--AdY. Bather In the Art Gallery. "Statue of Julius Caesar. bald." 'The next one Is Baldur.**--Lsnls- Yille Courier-JournaL Catarrh Can Bt Cored Cktarrh Is a local disease greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treatment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of t h e S y s t e m . H A L L ' S CATARRH MEDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease, gives the patient strength by improving the general health and ' " nature in doing its woMt. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo. OhiOw Love Is blind to the best Interests of the gas companies. Elbow grease Is the ssssntlsl efl of lipping Beard 8uggests That Shore Stations Be Established Where Me*) From All Parts ef Com* try May Be Taught ashtngton.--More than 1,300 merchant marine officers have been graduated from the shipping board's traln- .ng schools since their establishment three years ago, and 72 per cent of tbe graduates have been licensed for service at sea, records of the board's' recruiting service show. Officers for the government-owned merchant marine are trained at Camp Stuart, Va., San Francisco, and Seattle. Four wooden ships operate on tbe Atlantic coast as combination training ships and cargo carriers. Each has a capacity of 200 apprentices and 1,200 tons of cargo. On the Pacific coast one wooden ship carrying 1,800 tons of cargo and 115 apprentices and a new 1,800-ton steel vessel with space for 140 apprentices operate on the triangular run between Seattle, the Hawaiian islands and San Francisco. Plan Extended System. Extension and development of Its system of training Americans to command the craft of the merchant marine Is planned by the shipping board. It is suggested that shore stations be maintained where men from all sections of the country can be assembled and given instruction in seamanship, boat drill and other preliminary work. The men woo Id then be sent to *ea In modern steel freight ships, which of the magnificent mausoleum In the little Moravian cemetery at S. In whert the body of "William K. Vanderbtlt was laid to rest beside those of William EL Vanderblit, his father snd Commodore Cornelius, Ms grandfather. ' would be utilized ss combination cargo carriers and training vessels, carrying about 125 apprentices. It is planned to place these ships In a trade which would insure a voyage out and return in about 00 days, four vessels on the Atlantic and two on the Pacific. Concurrently- with the sea training the i#crultlng service plans the establishment at colleges and universities near the principal American ports of a maritime commerce course which would Include accounting, business correspondence, business principles, eco noniics, elements of statistics, markets, transportation, principles of foreign trade, exports and Imports, languages, railroad and maritime rates, business administration, business law, Iralty law, advertising, ship operan and other basic subjects. The year would be divided Into four three-month periods, the first one or two quarters to be spent in college work, and the subsequent quarters In practice under competent supervision in the offices of steamship companies and on board ships. The men would be paid for their services while employed in offices and on vessels and thus would be able to obtain their education without financial cost to them. It would be sought to so arrange the course as to extend over a period of four years with a degree upon completion. Shipping board officials believe this would build up and leave many other well-trained men in all branches of maritime commerce. John D. Lives Like a Richest Man in the World Longer Interested in Making Money. No M PLAYING Responsibility for the Future Cars ef the Rockefeller Fortune Is In the Hands of John D„ Jr« and Selected Trustees. New York.--The richest man In the world is no longer interested in making money. . More than that, he Is not overly concerned with what becomes of the greatest single fortune ever accumulated, although he hopes It may he ssed for good purposes. John D. Rockefeller, now traveling toward his eighty-second milestone of life. Is a hermit. Surrounded by a few faithful servants, the man who has piled up millions upon millions until today he is worth a billion of dollars •--a thousand millions--finds no hai>- piness In money or the retention of It. His chief joy in life !s playing golf --and he indulges that pleasure from an hour and a half to two hours every day the weather permits. Secluded In his Pocsntlco dills (New York) estate, with only & few intimate cronies to chat with st infrequent intervals, and never seeing s casual caller, the man who was oil king--for he no longer wears the title --has turned contemplative, philosophical and disinterested In worldly affairs. No Longer Interested. He no longer devotes himself to the worries incidental, to possessing such a vast fortune--the responsibility today for tbe future care of the Rockefeller fortune Is upon the shoulders of John D., Jr., and selected trustees. But this change In direction and control of the Rockefeller wealth is due In no sense to the age, mental or physical incapacity one might link with so aged a man as John D., Sr. "Mr. Rockefeller, Sr., is not senile," stated Ivy Lee, publicity director for the Rockefeller Interests. "Ells health Is excellent. But he simply has withdrawn from the world. "He does not care to see visitors. "Mr. Rockefeller reads quite a bit And spends much of his time In reflection. He has become philosophical, but his Interest In things of the world has waned. "Naturally be Is Interested in his bequests to various projects he has fostered, such as the Rockefeller Foundation snd other broad constructive work. He is far more Interested in that than In scqulrtng further money. "But he is not so wrapped «p Id "ASPIRIN X WARNING I Tte name "Bayer" Is the thumb- * print which identifies genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 20 vears and proved safe by .million^ || •••UU' f.. i "'Xl SAFETY FIRST! Accept «nljr an "unbroken package" af genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," whfch contains proper direo* tioos for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumy tism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and for pain generally. Strictly American! Bandy tin boxes of 12 tablets coat but a few cents--Larger packages. AsaMa Is the trade mark of Bayor MaaaftwCars eC Kono*<M.Ue««ldMtar of SaBcyUaatfB ' Modest Apprehension. "That audience cheered you for st least half an hour." "Yes," replied Senator Sorghum; "1 began to suspect that' the folks would rather listen to their own demonstrations than to hear me speak." DYE_RIGHT Buy only "Diamond Dyes**, ? the details of his benefactions at yon might Imagine. "For Instance, members of the Rockefeller Kducatioq board, comprising fifteen of the most eminent educators In America, held a meeting at Lakewood, N. J., where Mr. Rockefeller has a summer home. The edn cators thought their benefactor might attend a meeting, so extended him sn invitation. He ignored It. All he wished to know was whether the work was going ahead as intended snd, realising It was In capable hands, declared he was not Interested In details. But he did Invite a couple of the board members whom he had known personally for many years to a round of golf with him. . "Mr. Rockefeller shrinks from further publicity. 'I Just want to be left alone to my own thoughts,' he explains. 'Why should the world bother about an old man like mef "Mr. Rockefeller realizes he bas only a few more years to live, snd he wsnts no father trouble with snybody." Old "John D." hss hsd s quiet though enjoyable summer at Pocsntlco Hlllfe, occasionally taking auto rides with attendants. He attends church regularly every Sunday. He Needed That Kiss. Bluefield. _W. Va.--If ever s man needed a kRs, it was Sam Johnson. Sam said to his wife: "Kiss me, Liszie, it'll cost me money If you don't." Sam's wife swore out a warrant for him, after he had slapped her. Then they made up. She begged the judge to drop the case. The Judge wanted both brought Into court to make sure all was well. Skm thought the kiss would fix things with the 'Judge~ It did. *Women Learn How to Cast Their Ballots At Republlcsn state headquarters in New York city s school for women voters was opened and the fair pupils went through sll the motions of casting their bsllots Just ss they will In the polling plsce* ' Wore Only Shirt and < Lantern to Flag Train Wlnsted, Conn.--When Thotnss J. Doyle of Wsterbury, a New Haven railroad brakeman, stood on a grade crossing in Torrington with a lantern In bis hand and nothing but a shirt on his back, some one notified the police and Doyle was escorted to the police station by Patrolman Hurlbut Then he cursed. in court Doyle ssld he was \ in the caboose changing his rain- *0 soaked clothes and that before * he bad a chance to put others ' on It became necessary for him * to run to tbe crossing and slg- 0 nal tin approach st .a locomo- | Uv* France produced more than 9,400,- 000 metric tons of Iron ore las| year, of which 91.2 per cent came from the IrfOcralne basins. PLAN RAIL PROJECT Line to Connect Pacific Ocean With Amazon River. Ecuador Orants Concession to Big Syndicate to Develop Resounssa of Fertile Lsnd. Santiago.--Construction of a railway which would connect the Pacific ocean with the Amazon river, serving the republics of Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela on the north, and Peru, Bolivia, and Brazil on the south. Is Involved In a concession which has been authorized by the Ecuadorean government Authority for the construction of the railway, according to a Chilean weekly, was obtained from the government at Quito by Ignaclo Leon, former Chilean diplomat, for a syndicate capitalized at $25,000,000, members of which Include many prominent Chileans. Hie route would start from Port Bolivia on the Pacific and run to Port Borza on the Amazon. The proposed railway, in addition to serving a zone bordering on what is said to be among the best petroleum bearing districts In Peru, would afford a means of connecting the four large and isolated provinces of southern Ecuador, with 500,000 inhabitants, with the rest of the country. An article recounting .the details of the project quotes Senor Leon as saying: "Apart from the establishment of inter-oceanic communication, of great future Importance, the railways penetrating East Ecuador, combined with the navigable riverways. will enable the exploitation of an enormous extension of extraordlnsrlly fertile virgin territory which will constitute the most admirable Of wealth for Ecuador." A recent Invention !s a Testpwfcet adding machine which is guaranteed to juggle with figures up to 50,000. - Bach package of "Diamond Dyeseon tains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dye worn, shabby skirts, waists, dresses, coats, gloves, stockings sweaters, draperies everything, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, new, rich fadeless colors. Have druggist show you "Diamond Dyes Color Card."--Adv. No Favoritism Allowed. "How much are the life guards paid at this bathing resort?" "From $40 to $60 a week, 1 understand^ "A soft Job, eh?" "Not especially. They has* to shosr is much alacrity in saving a fat man or elderly spinster as they would • beauty in distress." CASCARETS "Tliey Work while yea Adaptability. •Of course, you are In favor of votes for women." "Of course," answered Senstor Sorghum. "A man who hopes to hold his own In politics must do his best to be In favor of anything that anybody wants."--Washington Star. Do yon feel all "unstrung?"--bllioos, constipated, headachy, full of coldf Cascarets tonight for your liver andi bowels will have you tuned up by tomorrow. You will wake up with your head clear, stomach right, breath sweet, and skin rosy. No griping-- no Inconvenience. Children lova Cases rets too. 10. 25. SO cents.--Adv^ The Reason. "Vvhy do the lawyers try so much hot air on witnesses?" "Because they want to pump them." Kill.That Cold With CASCARA t? QUININE AMD CaMs, Coagks La Griff Neglected Colds are Dangerooa IMheaa.tlaalWSS. Keep this standard remedy handy fer . Breaks up a cold In 24 hours -- Relieves , u<y: '*V Orippe In 3 days--Excellent for Heedsche , 1,' Quinine In this form does not affect ike hasfl CSsoaia is hest'Yoa!s: Laxative--No Opiate In Hill's. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT ;I§J GIVING NATURE FAIR CHANCE WHAT THE TEACHER THOUGHT Sluggard Satisfied rle Hsd an Admirable Excuse for Refusing to >• \ Up and About. "Arise!" we said in a tone admirably adapted for declamatory purposes, addressing the sluggard, who was still slugging at an unconscionably ate hour. "The lark Is up to meet the sun. The bee Is on the wing. Remehiber tbe manner In which the experienced school boy read aloud the admonition to Lucy. He had been tanght that when he encountered two letters of the same kind be should pronounce them 'douhle-o* or whatever they might be, instead of 'o,' 'o.' So he sternly recited, but "Double up, Lucy! The sun Is In the sky,' and so forth. Why do you not double up, and to your tasks away?" "That Is a very good story," replied the sluggard, "but it does not move me. We are told that nature does most of her repair work on us while we are in bed. It Is my intention to lie here until'she fixes me up so that I feel like going to work."--Kansas City Star. Best Weather Sign. Those who live by the coast do not want a better weather sign than the gulls, which In the various winds that will bring the rain collect in big flocks over the larid. wheeling and screaming uneasily. They will not come In on a false alarm, and none need fear they will make a mistake. Comment That Took a Whole Lot of ; Conceit Out of One Small Boy** - Daddy. 2'iA "The world Is full of fault finders." remarked Professor Prltchard at a dinner recently, "and one of the most common targets Is the modern educational system. No more common expression than. 'Well, they used to really teach us something when I west to school.' "1 have a friend like that but the other day he told me he was through. It came about in this way. He used to help his little son with his home studies. One evening, as they were about to begin, he asked the little chap what his teecher said regarding his home work. " 'She says rm getting rtupidsr every day.' replied the lad, and froos then on he had to do his home lessons alone." Feet .ti dream you bathe your feet notes trouble in collecting money which Is due you. To dream of large or deformed feet foretells a journey which will cost you many tears. To scratch the bottom of your feet denotes treachery and flattery. To have no feet at all Is an evil omen; It foretells some great calamity. Cold foot foretells a quarrel with a friend. Even in the "fatherland" they speak the mother tongue. TRe Blended Flavors . of wheat and malted barley, fully developed by twenty hours baking make Grape«Nuts The Ideal Cereal Ideal not only from a taste standpoint tut because of easy digestibility, full nourishing worth, economy and ease of service. At Grocers 'Everywhere •h -a J A r Y * i^ ri i - i^ t- i i • ft'