Rockford.--Announcesoent Is made of t1* stft of a completely equipped laboratory to Rotikfoct hospital. Springfield.--An attempt was made to secure the appointment by Governor Small of the daughter of the late William E. Mason as congressman at large from Illinois to succeed her lately deceased father. Morrison.--Sterling chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution, will mark the grave of Anna Rush, on Holltngshead Bluff, near here. Miss Rash was a real daughter of the Revolution and did military service herself, it is said, donning male attire and fighting the Indians. Carlinville.--Sobbing fitfully as she held her fourteen-month-old baby In her arms In the Macoupin county jail, Mrs. Catherine Harmon confessed that She killed Roy Harmon, her nlneteenye'ar- old stepson. She said she killed the youth with an ar and threw the body into a well, where it was found by a neighbor who was picking blackberries. Peoria,--Mayor Victor P. Michel has doubled his promise made before election, and has announced that Instead of |50,000 he will save the city $100,- 000. He has discharged eight street foremen as "non-essential," and has notified all city employees he expects . as much work from them as if they were working at their own private business. Washington, D. C.--Population figures for Illinois according to color or ra«e Just released by the bureau of census, Department of Commerce, show the total population of Illinois in 1920 was 6,485,380. The figures for the various races are subdivided as follows: White, 6,299,839; negro, 182,- 254; Indian, 194; Chinese, 2,794; Japanese, 478; all others, 221. Springfield.--Governor Small has signed the cement plant bill, which sets aside $5,000,000 of the road fund for a cement plant and lands containing roal building material. The governor also signed the . bill reappropriating $20,000,000 for construction of the Illinois waterway and the tax ieyy bill to raise $15,000,000 annually for general purposes and $8,000,000 annually for the school fund. Chicago.--A leak in the office of W. H. H. Miller, director of registration and education, at Springfield, through which copies of questions prepared by the state dental board reached the hands of a number of Chicago students several days ago was responsible for the sudden cancellation of examinations here. One hundred and eighty-eight students had gathered to take the examinations when the cancellation order was received. The state examinations for pharmacists and embalmers were also postponed. Springfield.--Physicians who prescribe whisky and drugstore bars received a legal wallop, while the state was made "safe for liquor cellars" by a ruling of Attorney General Brundage, with reference to the new Illinois prohibition law. The attorney general stated that it is not unlawful to keep lawfully procured liquors In one's home for the personal consumption of the owner and his bona fide guests. It was also announced that a permit issued by his office must accompany every federal permit when a physician Issues a prescription for liquor. , Only one such permit can be used by one person in ten days and each permit will be for the purchase Ojf only a pint of liquor. Springfield.--More than $1,000,000 of Illinois road funds have just been contracted to be spent In closing up most of the gaps in the hard-road hlghwhay between Chicago and St. j Louis. When this work Is done, therfe will remain to be built only the seven- I mile Bepue gap in bureau county, a short stretch near Edwardsvllle, and some grade crossings that will have to be cut out, then a quick through trip can be made from Chicago to the little sister city that was "shown," by rail or road. The latest contracts let for good, hard concrete roads embrace 58 miles In 12 sections. They are to I cost under their contracts $1,276,605, I without cement. That Is at the rate I of $22,025 a mile. I Springfield.--Automobile owqprs In I Illinois are Increasing every day. I More than 70,000 additional licenses I were Issued during the last six months I as compared with a year ago. Figures I announced by the state automobile de- I partment show 511,935 passenger car [ licenses were issued since the first of I the year. On June 28, 1920, there were 1441,404. The Increase is 70,591. A I targe Increase in the number of auto- I mobile truck licenses was also shown. I The number now is 67,713. A year I ago It was 55,242, making this year's I Increase 12,471. The total fees paid Ito the department for passenger car, I truck, dealer, motorcycle and chauf- I feur licenses totaled $6,120,175.07, an I Increase of more than a million dolliars over a year ago. I Jerseyville. -- An adequate,.- water I supply for Its citizens is troubling the I city of Jerseyville. The city's water • supply now comes from artesian wells land the salt in the water is constantly I rusting the pipes, making it a con- Itinued drain upon the treasury of the •city to keep the wmtermalns and pipes 1 in repair. I Springfield.---At commencement exer- I rises of the Mooseheart high school, Ideclared by educators to be the most •unique Institution of its kind in the Ignited States, the senior class of 12 •fatherless children received diplomas. I 8pringfield.--A slight reduction in •the cost of cement, which will figure l$475 per mile in the construction of •hard roads was announced by Dlrec- Btor of Public Works and Buildings •MiHer in connection with the opening •of bids on several sections of state-aid •highways. I Springfield.--Thousands of dollars •are pouring into the coffers of the •state daily at the corporation depart- Bnent In Secretary of Stat* Emmerlaon's office in payment of the annual •franchise taxes, which are bo •paid on or before July 31. : . . of oil on a farm Mftr here is |tt»oftsiiil Awora.--Clergymen of this city in (tMNMtt by the periodical prize fights that are being given and have protested to the local authorities and to Governor Small. So far, they claim, their complaints have been Ignored. Plalnlleld.--Preservation of Walker's Grove, the site of Tort Beggs, lo- ( cated south of this dty, has been undertaken, and a fund is being raised to purchase the tract and make it as a public park, and also as a memorial to Rev. Stephen Beggs, to WIMMB it once belonged. Decatur.--C. A. Carroll at JoUet, with a score of 99 out of 100, won the Chicago board of trade diamond badge In the feature event of the Illinois state sportsman's trapshootlng at Decatur. C. M. Powers of Decatur and Charles Young of Springfield, O., finished second with 97 targets. Chicago.--Charges that an Investigation of the Chicago milk situation has revealed that both the consumers and the farmers are being exploited by the middle men were made by the secretary of the city council high cost of living committee. Crlmlnkl prosecution was predicted. Belleville.--Selection of Scott field near Belleville as the borne station of new dirigibles purchased abroad, and as the site for a balloon training schooL, has been approved by Secretary of War Weeks, according to word received from Washington by the Belleville board of trade. An appropriation of $1,250,000 for construction of hangars was approved. It was said. Springfield.--The biys wanted by Chief Fitzmorris of the Chicago police department, giving persons committing robbery with firearms heavier penalties than those using a knife or club, were declared to be unconstitutional under an opinion approved by Attorney General Brundage. The attorney general also held that the TSion bill for the detention and commitment of defectives is Invalid. Springfield.--The way Is now open for Governor Small to dispose of the case of Gen. Joseph B. Sanborn, the sole remaining member of the state tax commission. The governor signed the Meents bill amendatory to the administrative code; it disposes of the old tax commission of three and creates a new one of five members. The law became effective July 1, and Governor Small is at liberty to appoint five new members. Rockford.--State officers elected at file recent "session here by the Illinois department of the Veterans of Foreign Wars are: C. F. Wellman, Danville, commander; Frank Jaycoix, Rockford. senior vice commander; F. A. Burlelght, Sterling, junldr vice commander; A. Greenfield, Chicago, Junior advocate; Henry Gleger, Camp Grant, chaplain; A. J. Fletcher, Danville, department surgeon; D. Summers, Champaign ; E. F. Dickson, Chicago, and Samuel Meyers, Chicago, council of administration. Charles G. Avery of Oak Park was ro-eleqted state adjutant. Washington, D. C.--More than $80,- 000,000 was spent by Illinois farmers In 1919 for labor, according to the report of the census bureau, U. S. Department of Commerce. The six highest states in the expenditure for labor, of which Illinois Is third, is shown by the report as: California, $126,096,152; Texas, $88,002,80S; Illinois, $80,389,710; Iowa, $70,698,960; Kansas, $67,873,484; New York. $64,- 324,931. Illinois paid out $36,308,376 In 1909. The states which reported the largest expenditures for feed in 1919 were: New York, $82,966,321; Iowa, $79,068,535; Illinois, $64,830.483; Texas, $61,087,827; Nebraska, $60,518,- 850; Missouri, $60,171,516, and Kansas, $57,514,522. Springfield.--Governor Small wrecked the machinery for enforcement of the state bone dry prohibition laye. He vetoed the appropriation of $150,000 made to the attorney general for this purpose. The law goes on the books, but there Is no method of making It work. The governor slashed the attorney general's office for a total of $774,000, Assistant Attorney General Mansfield, speaking for Mr. Brundage. said after study of the vetoed Items that the office "practically was a wreck.'.' No funds are left for an attorney for any of the state boards or commissions; to enforce the prohibition or the blue sky act; to represent the state In many Important cases in the Supreme court of the United States, or to prosecute Inheritance tax cases. The total cut from all appropriation bills was $7,092,012, which is more, probably, than the total vetoes of all the previous governors of the state. The aggregate from which he started, however. Is nearly $40,000,000 more than the largest aggregate of appropriations of any preceding general assembly. The state tax rate probably will be between TO and 75 cents, the figure being at that mark because of the balance of between $12,000,000 and $13,000,000 that is now In the state treasury. The twenty-five vetoes were sent to the general assembly Just before it adjourned sine die. Thlrty-s'x more bills remained before the governor. Urbana.--With an enrollment of more than 2,000, the regular summer session of the University of Illinois is under way. The enrollment for the present summer session is the largest In the history of the State university and exceeds that of last summer by about 700. Rockford.--Plans are being vigorously promoted here for the reception of the grand commandery, Illinois Knights Templar, in its annual conclave opening In Rockford on August 15. Ten thousand Sir Knights and 3,000 ladles are expected. Springfield.--The tax levy bill and the bill that kills the Juul law of 1901 were signed by Governor Small, and the revenue program of the administration Is completed. The former bill calls for a tax levy to raise annually a general fund of $15,000,000 for state purposes. Springfield.--Governor Small signed the school tax bill, establishing a rate of $2, an increase of 100 per cent over the old rate. The bill provides eight cents of the $2 tax levied In Chicago for educational purposes shall be .used to purchase text books. „• the French Population in Recently Occupied Section on Bight Bank j Sullen and Aloof. ' V WONT UNDERSTAND LANGUA6E 8ervs Sow Wine to SoNHsrs In the Restaurants--Women 8een With Uniformed Men Are Marked for Reprisals. Duesaoldorf, Germany.--The snttoccrrpatlon sentiment is much stronger In Duesseldorf, Ruhrort and Duisburg, the cities of Rhenish Prussia recently occupied by the French, than in Mayence, Coblens and Cologne, which also have been under foreign occupation for more than two years by the French, Americans and British. As one crosses from the left bank of the Rhine and enters recently occupied territory the mood of the population becomes more sullen, .their behavior more aloof and their hatred much more pronounced. t^re Like Military Rule. The reason may be that the French are occupying that part of the right bank of the Rhine that they hold near the Ruhr in real military fashion and the occupation is much more severe than that on the left bank. The hatred of the population is directed more especially against the French, and children are being brought up in a constant terror and undls* guised scorn of the occupying forces, which gives but little promise that the real brotherly love between French and Germans will be achieved with the coming generation. The absolute refusal to speak French, even by persons well acquainted with the language, is one of the most common ways in which the Germans show their dislike of the French military men. The correspondent walked into a cigar store the other day while a French officer was attempting to make the woman in charge understand the brand of cigarettes he wanted. She seemed absolutely at a loss to understand him. The correspondent translated the officer's request In English. After the officer had departed she told the correspondent In purest French: "I understood him the first time, hut I would not give him the satisfaction." "Boycotted" by Women. Few women in Duesseldorf, Ruhrort or Duisburg will he seen in the company of a uniformed French soldier or officer in the streets. The few who transgress the unwritten law are promptly catalogued at the German dty headquarters, and are marked for reprisals. In some cases the difficulty is avoided by the accompanying swain adopting civilian clothes, which seems to be satisfactory all around. Ib the wine cellars of the most fashionable restaurants of Duesseldorf there' is a corner called "the occupation corner." There are deposited all the bottles of wines that have been refused by the German customers aa having soured, owing to defective coMn. When a party of French oincers put *ln an appearance they are always served with two or three bottles of the special wine, which they promptly reject, as a Frenchman's taste for wine is infallible, but by the time a real good bottle of wine is reached "the French cannot taste the good of it," as oue headwalter put it. His Motor Called. Bellalre, O.--Recognizing th* punr of a motor, John Shunk waited until a yacht landed and recovered a motor which had been stolen from him at Whelllng, W, Va., six mqnths before. John Hall of Whelllng, W. Va., who was driving the yacht surrendered It and the boat when Shunk proved ownership. He explained how he had purchased It, TOTS LOCKED IN CLOSET 90 J10URS, Aged Man Keeps On PressMnt Topeka, Kan.--The Rev. Philetus Beverly of Burllngame, one hundred and four years old, has just been given a renewed license to preach at the district conference of the Methodist Church here. Reverend Beverly, in spite of his years, seldom misses a Sunday in the pulpit i< • ' , * - ; . . . ' * Playmate Innocently Shut Them tip and Forgot to Tell- Searchers About It #sie*son. N. J.--Missing for 90 titnrita, Stella Weiner, five years old, and her playmate, Harry Barber, seven, were found, suffering from hunger and exhaustion, in the clothes closet of s vacant apartment in which they had been imprisoned. After they had been revived, the children explained they entered the closet while playing hide and seek, but had not closed the door. Soon afterward, they said. Ethel Beillnofsky, another playmate, slammed the door, ahd they did not realise they were sealed up until after she WOULD 60 FROM '>?} '^1 m TT". African Wilds All Alone She Makes 1,000-Nlile Trip Across Desert to Explore the City of Kufra. WELL RECEIVED BY TRIBES Reaches Sacred Oasis City Where Only 9$l Juropean, an Explorer of ^ 40 Years Ago, Hss E#* -, Be4n Before, London.--England has ceased'to be thrilled over the^p&stacle of a woman M. P.; now a womai/explorer is claiming public attention. She Is Mrs. Rosita Forbes, chic. Making Homes of Ammunition Boxes Near Eberswalde, Germany, the building shortage is being met through the erection of unique homes--unique because of the material being used in their construction. In place of bricks, now very costly and hard to get, the Germans are using old munition boxes, filling them with concrete and setting them In the framework, , • • r > « ; ^ vivacious and charming, who has just returned to London after traveling 1,100 miles across the Libyan desert it Africa to explore the city of Kufra, headquarters of the Seuussi tribe, a fanatic and hostile group whose military adventures recently have caused anxiety in Egypt. Traveled Alone. Mrs. Forbes, wearing the native costume, was alone in her daring adventure. She Joined a native caravan and, riding a camel, finally crossed the Egyptian frontiers and reached the sacred oasis city where only one European-- an explorer of 40 years ago-- has ever been before. Here she was well received by the tribesmen and given a safeguard back to civilization, but throughout the Journey she was surrounde^ by hostile natives who would have killed her had they known that she was a white woman. The start of the trip was made from Benghazi, the Mediterranean end of the ancient caravan route from the central Sudan across the Libyan desert. She had previously arranged • >r a form of passport from the Senusm, but this was of little value, as the n'lbes through which she passed did • ot recognize their sovereignty. Spies urrounded the caravan and at the sacred city of Taj the entire party was placed under arrest and thrown into a native prison. After great difficulty they were released and a Ho wed to proceed. C Welcomed by Chiefs. At the osases of Kufra the chiefs welcomed Mrs. Forbes and told her of ihelr plans for political power. On the return Journey she again had trouble with the natives and was at one time forced to disguise herself as a man. Mrs. Forbes made a survey of the country during her Journey and collected much valuable information about the national aims of the Senussl tribes, but concealed a small kodak under her flowing native robes and made snapshots through a hole cut In the dress. Returning to London, she has now laid" the results of her explorations before the British government and was received by th king. The Senussi are becoming a powerful force In ATrica, and when during the war they allied themselves with the Turks, Egypt was fortified against them at a cost of $300,000,000. the Partly Conscious Fsnm |f His Little Sister. 1 had left the room. Ethel, whf is only four, either forgot to mention thst she had closed the door, or else did not realize they were in the closet. When the children failed to come home to supper, the distracted parents began an exhaustive search for them. Police and neighbors combed the vicinity, but found no trace of them, A few days later Jacob Weiner ana Samuel Miller visited the vacant apartment for a game of cards. Strange noises from a clothes closet startled them and they opened the door. On, the floor Weiner saw the partly conp sclous form of his little sister, and huddled In a corner wa/s her boy play? mate. Doctors summoned soon revived the children. The fact that th# closet door did not fit closely, thuf permitting a slight circulation of aiiv saved their lives, the doctors who atf tended them said. Tennessee Farmer Wants to Off' From House to House and TeH Everybody About S Tanlac. ' ' ; J 1 not so A^'lflll farm work I would go from house t#* 1 : house and tell the people about Tan» , * lac," said A. J. Livingston, a known farmer, living near City, Tenn. ' "I had stomach and kidney troubfcf and suffered torment with my back and side. The doctors could do nothing for me, so I wrote to a frieitd of mine in Nashville about Tanlac, an4 he advised me lo try it, saying be hall heard so many favorable reports about < it and sent me a bottle. "After taking the first bottle 1 fett so much better that I ordered another bottle myself and the result Is 1 aS» a well man. I told a friend of mlosabout It and ordered a bottle for hlsfc and be had good results. 1 can eafc> anything I want and it don't hurt m€w: and can sleep like a log. To tell yawl the truth, I Just simply feel like a new man and have more strength and energy than I have had in years. It fcB* simply the grandest medicine in thsworld. I would like to see all of tny~ friends and get those who are suffef1-- Ing to try It, and 1 hope you will reaafe" them through this testimonial, whichk I have gladly given." Tanlac, the celebrated medtdns^ -which accomplished such remarkableresults In this man's case, is a wonderful tonic, appetizer and invlgoranC It builds up the System, creates si healthy appetite, promotes digestlbn and assimilation of the food aodg makes you feel strong, sturdy aa#T well as nature intended. Sold by leading druggists-, a»ejJK'. where.--Advertisement. , ' ,. ;, J Old Ed Howe's Neiohbcr. v 'r If you want to talk blue talk; business all gone to pot; country facing the worst time in Its history; havent begun to see the hard times yet; prices going lower and half the merchants are* going to fall; two-thirds of the farms will be foreclosed, and all that line of conversation, don't come around and; talk it to the Times. In the first place we don't believe It, and in the second Silace it makes us feel bad and nervous or a while.--Clay Center Times. • r 41','--?sr- : : : G= HUNT FOR RARE EGGS NEAR POLE Carried $1,000 in Silver. Seven Miles and Won It William Jalo of Hurley, Wis., painter by trade and gambler by profession, bet $1,Q00 he could carry 1,000 silver dollars in a tag on his shoulder without faltering to Bessemer, Mich., seven miles away. He accomplished the feat and won. Cured After Talking Three Weeka. Spokane, Wash.--A case of sleeping sickness, during which Mrs. George Banby, thirty-five, of Wilbur, Wash., talked incessantly for three weeks, except when under the influence of opiates, was reported here by physicians," who announced her discharge from the hospital as cured. Although education is compulsory In Abyssinia for all boys more than twelve years of age, there Is practically only one school in the country. Strange Errand of McMillan Expedition to Arctio. Savants Will Make Special Effort to Locate Nest of the Blue Goose. Bostonw-~A hunt for the egg of the blue goose will be one of the odd errands of the Donald B. McMillan expedition to BafHn Land this year. The adult, blue goose, a varietr with a grayish brown body that gets Its name from the blue gray of Its wing coverts, is not uncommon in the United States, but its breeding haunts have been a subject of much speculation among bird lovers' and its nest and eggs have never beei observed. An announcement by Doctor McMillan that on his last trip to the arctic he lmd noticed fledglings of these geese •roused the interest of students of bird life, with the result that one of the scientists who will accompany the present expedition will be commissioned to keep an especial lookout for blue-goose eggs. The price that one of these eggs would command has not been quoted, but Judging from the enthusiasm displayed In natural history societies over the subject, the goose that laid the golden egg will have nothing on this bird. Baffin Land is believed to be the greatest breeding place of bird life In the Far North. In its 150,000 square miles of Interior unexplored by white men are lakes which the Eskimos describe as being at least 100 miles In length and abounding in wild fowl. © The McMillan expedition will leave here In July in the schooner Bowdoln, specially built for' the purpose, and will pass probably 14 months In a study of Baffin Land a.ong various scientific lines, ... -M • SAYS HIDDEN TREASURE IS FOUND Texan Claims to Hsve Discovered $73,- 000,000 in Cave In Mexico. bars, 4,400 silver bars and $7,500,000 of octagonal Spanish silver pieces. 8sb Antonio, Tex --Application has been made to the Mexican government by Adam Fisher of this, city for a concession to remove gold and sliver bars and Spanish silver dollars, to the value of approximately $78,- 000.000, from a cave hi Saddle mountain, which overlooks Monterey, Mexico. , Fisher said he discovered this hidden treasure recently after a .search which covered several years. He said he was led to take up the search by the discovery of an ancient document among the government archives at Saltillo, which showed that In 1810 a great -fortune of gold and silver was hidden In Cavillo Blanca by government officials during a revolution. He even went so far as to count the bullion and money when he discovered it He saVl it consists of 8,046 cold TOBACCO SACKS YIEU) $1,325 Msn, Eiflhty-Two, Thought Penniless, .Hfprds Small Fortune •*' \ Sleeps In Box. Rorttford, Hi.--Walking frtrin Danville, III., toward Dixon, III., Where he expected to pass the summer, Samuel I'ortner, eighty-two, found lodging in an old dry goods box in an alley, where a policeman found him asleep. Portner was taken to the police station. A stick, to which was attached a gunny sack containing morsels of food and a tin can In which Portner had occasionally prepared coffee, was thrown into a corner of the station by the officer* The aged traveler was so eager to retain possession of the sack that officers examined it. They discovered two tobacco sacks filled with paper money and securities. Including two $30 bills and a government pension check for $150--the amount totaling $1,320. "S. 4> Kid Big Hawk Swooping Down on School Children Saranac Lake, N. T.--Attacking a' motorcar full of little school children near here, a huge hawk, long hunted by farmers and campers in the Wadhams section of the Adlrondacks, was killed by the driver. # Nab Bandit Who Killed 100. Puebla, Mex.--Tacho I'lacido, a fcandlt with more than 100 personal assassinations and many other crimes, 1ms been captured in the mountains above Puebla and has been brought here for trial. Piacido never was a rebel against the federal government, but Is alleged to have pursued a gen eral marauding care* « GIRL SWIMS FLOODED RIVElt Indian Maiden Travels 40 Milea to Iteach Lover Waiting for IHpi • . | on Colorado Ranch. T . Durango, Col.--Undaunted by the 40 miles which separated her home on the reservation from the ranch on which John Miller, her Navajo lover, worked, an Indian maid, ward of the United States on a reservation near Durango, Col., walked the entire distance, leading a goat as gift to her betrothed. When she reached the La Plata river it was out of bounds and there was no bridge for many miles. She staked the goat in a grassy plot, removed her" clothing and swam the river. The Navajo and" his dusky sweetheart were married on the Willard Wyatt ranch after the employer of the Indian had secured a marriage license fyr the pair. a|ff r jigtefrrrrf rr~r * • Mother Mouse Built Her Home With Greenbacks While plumbers were laying a gas line into the S. W. Kiser restaurant, at Speocervllle, O., they found in the corner of a dark closet a large greenishlooking paper ball.« Investigation proved It to be the home of a mother mouse and her brood. Closer examination showed the ball to be made up of greenbacks of denominations from one to ten. Part of the bills were chewed up, but three one-dollar and one five-dollar bill can still be redeemed. | Morrmi r........... .Miwwof Dove From Train Going Mile a Minute Pana, 111.--A negro passenger, believed to be the Rev. F. E. Clark, of Hope, Ark., leaped head® foremost through the window of a coach of a passenger train, running 00 miles aa hour, east of here. He was picked np unconscious but without Spy broken bones. Man's HeadfOffered as Evidence. Orlando. Fla.--The head of George Bryant, severed at the request of the prosecuting attorney, was offered as evidence in the trial of John RBryant, son of the dead man, and charged Jointly with his wife with murder. Pedestrian Still Hikes at 82 Years Old Rosendale, N. Y.--Although 82 years old, Edward P. Weston, the aged pedestrian who once walked across the continent, still walks about 12 miles dally, according to his neighbors near here. ASPIRIN' ; Name "Bayer" on Gennint Warning I Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for twenty-oois years and proved safe by mlilloas. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer package for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of" Monoaceticacldester ef Salicyeadd» n Helping Nature. Lady--Why don't you feed that ddf Small Boy--I want him to be a grayhound. 1.1 Envy is llae a fly that passes sll ft body's sounder parts and dwells up«fc the sores.--Chapman. Do you know why it's toasted? To seal ||| j; the delicious Burley flavor It's toasted. V - •'"Hi X'A ' >./) A: V! -rf. J- * Vs -j ' -TV Eloped With Husband's Brother. Springfield. Ill.-M^luirging that his wife, 48 years old, and his brother, 20, had eloped, taking with them^ his seven-year-old daughter, Louts Ash, of Burlington, la., fs seeking police aid |0 them Ik this ctty. Saved My Life, With Eatonic Say* Nmw Jwamy Wommj* "I was nearly dead until I found" Eatonic and I can truly say it saved my life. It Is the best stomach uiedldne ever made," writes Mrs. Sift Smith. Acid stomach causes awful misery which Eatonic quickly gets rid of by taking up and carrying out the acidity and gases which prevent good digestion. A tablet taken after meals brings quick relief. Keep# the stomach healthy and helps to prevent t\e many Ills so liable to arlaife from excels acid. Don't suffer from stomach miseries when you can get a big box of 19atonic for a trifle with your druggist's guarantee. '•&y 4.J n'A .t" s .' > ?