GUp of Tea Oil the Equator Whole System I Benefited by R«r.& D. Conner of Clyta, Tanlac 0.. Ml Sown to pray the other morning, as usual. Rising, he •aw something green under the stove. Investigating, he found that It was |45 in currency he supposed he had lost several days previous when in an interurban trolley station. He has no idea how the money got un der the store. TRUSTEES Captain George C. Douglas, Brit- & Not Loss Share of Estate. •anrtee In the Werld War Mafctt Op V iir His Failure to Barn $2,800 a Year as Required by Father's Last Testament "SBnneapoIls.--Five years' ssrvtee in the World war, wounded at Yprse in 1015 and again 1817. and a citation for braveiy by Yield Marshal Lord French will Bake up tor the fattare of Qeorge OMnp Douglas to make $2,000 in two consecutive years, as provided by the wOl of his tetter, Walter D. Poaglsi. trustees «f »he estate, vetoed at more than tm$MIOO,"liw agreed th*t th* war hero shall get his m» tlrtrd of the estate, according to State e*»»tw Caries K. Fowter, Ui (wrdian, T>e sttete will b« dtadad- la WoTwHr, im the younger ef the two sons will become thtrty-flve yean old. The father, chairman of the beard of directors of the Quaker Oats company. was drowned what the Titanic sank In 1912. In the following year, after small legacies had been paid, the estate was left to the widow, Mrs. lfartha Dutton Douglas, and the two son% George Camp Douglas and Mr ward Bruce Douglas. Was to Barn $2,500. J(lch of the sons was to earn $2£00 In two succeeding years befors he received his share. The Minneapolis Trust company and George F. Piper were named as trustees, with Instructions to divide it when the younger son became thirty-five years .old. la the meantime Mrs. Douglas has received the income from the estate and each of the sons has received an allowance of $8,000 a year. Before the war Captain Douglas was a defendant. In a suit for alienation of affections, and judgments were secured against him by creditors. The executors protested. and Senator Fowls* was named as his guardian. When the British anajrantt out as gppeal tor men in 101fc Captain TTnugisi enlisted as a private, April 0, Is the Third Signal company of the Third division, and was assigned to duty as dispatch rider. On September 28 of the same year he was commissioned a second Hentenant and frsaafsiied to the reserve Boyal OArrtaon artillery, in 1015 Field Marshal Lard French, commander In chief of the British forces at the front, htm In a dispatch.. He was promoted to lieutenant June 25, 1016, and received his commission as captain December 28. 1017. Captala Dimglas was wounded la the fighting fit Ypros in 191*. aid again In 1016. While serving ta Aden, Arabia, he contracted berl-bert, «nd he was Invalided heme In 1920. Money to Wipe Hla Bremen.--Resentment was aroused In a cafe here recently when an American diner took a thousand mark note from his wallet and coolly cleaned his shoes with It as an exhibition to other patrons In the place. He then hsnded the note to a Walter In pay-* ment for his bill, with the remark £ha* M VPS merely "Gfcra»aa pap sc." Foreolghted. Many a girl who calls a man by his first name haa her eye on his last. Tourists whose route takes them to tropic seas enjoy the luxury of swimming baths on shipboard as they the equator. This group having a cup of tea In the bath are on the steamship Ebro bound for Lima Peru. The lady tI_s M«JTisI_s AtiHkce. rn TDvfVc.t rott '.T-; ^ •; "v. - - .y\:~l"VS•-* -zr^r* i «*• •MwHm Forest Fires ~n--nr-- t--S'?-' ft* . jl," Station Is Interesting United States Department Stow* Boomerang Effeota of \ Sportsman's SHETER Destruction ef Both of These Neeeesary Elements Results In Corre. spending Decrease In the Nun*. < her of Valuable Wild Animals. Washington.--Ot Interest ta csnnectlon with many reports of destructive forest fires In several parts of the country is a circular of the biological surrey of the United States Department of Agriculture stressing the ef- Wallace Picks Out the Red-Heads When 200 boys and girls of Maryland, prise winners la their counties In different agricultural club activities, called on Secretary Wallace, he singled oat some titian-haired triplets, declaring he was somewhat of a red head himself. The photograph shows Secretary Wallace greeting Idicjr, Bebecca and JaHe Hyde of Port Tobacco. Md. , , feet of SKh preservation. A fire which any large area destroys not only the birds and other game, themselves, but their food and shelter, and though one rakes little interest In forest-fire proven* tion for the sake qf preserving tree* be may be more tnbreetod In saving the game and fish. Food Goes; So Does Bird. Decrease of one or both of the dements of food and shelter means a corresponding decrease in the number of valuable wild creature#. The be» lief that burning over in certain localities Is beneficial because It promotes new grass ignores the fact that the grass thus obtained does not compensate for the destruction of the trees and shelter and food required by the animals, says the survey. Partridges in particular suffer from forest or brush fires. When their favorite places are burned over and their food and shelter are gone, they are obliged to seek new localities and face new dan- (Cfl* Indiscriminate settlRg of spring fires in the southern states dislodges deer, opossums, raccoons, foxes, squirrels, rabbits and other antmals and endangers ground-nesting birds In the timber, such as woodcock, pheasant, wild turkey and the whlppoorwlll. The woodcock Is in some danger of extermination at the present time, It Is pointed out, and deserves all possible protection. . ^ Invade Swemp Hemes.: r . Da seasons of drought, forest fires even Invade marshy places and drive out fur-bearing animals as well as waterfowl and shore birds, it has been found. Many think that burning results In only temporary Inconvenience to the game and do not realize that the food of many birds Is largely the seed and berries of the year before. Burning brush also eliminates for months ail shelter from natural enemies. Burning of the ground cover in forests of longleaf and shortleaf pins kills the young trees as they emerge and results In thin, straggling growth. The burning of timber and other ground cover which «hould absorb and retain moisture also accelerates the run-off and affects the stream flow at different seasons to such an extent that the supply o£ fi$h m{y be jaateriaHy decreased, Mysterious Ptaoe From WMefe Performers Entertain Unseen Audiences of Thousands. OUTSIDE USES SHUT OUT ARE EXPLORING LARGE CANYON Cleft in California May ftivalXfeto* cade's Show Plao§» . e • finsfce River Canyon Is 7,0*0 Feet Deep and 8even Milee Across the Top-- BMeeeslon of Whirl filial* k'f Cascadee and Falls. ' Waitsburg, - peditlon fro fomia has •est rock cl ooghly expl Snake River canyon, in some more remarkable than the Grand canyon of the Colorado. It is peeper than the Grand canyon and it is practically inaccessible to all but the hardiest and moot well-equipped climbers. There are no trails, and the river Itself csn- ' not toe navigated. The most rugged and deepest portion ef the canyon lies between the Seven Devils range and the Wallawa mountains. It Is from 6,000 to 7,000 feet deep and seven miles wide across the top. At the point there is a sheer Slope from the snow-capped peak of the range 9,000 feet high, to the boiling surface of the 8nake liver. The cross section of 7,000 feet of the earth's crust Is a marvelous Add of study for the geologist The top and thickest layer is basalt; older rocks are mineralised, and contain copper, sliver and gold. lured An estimate of a narrow-gauge railroad up the canyon Involves such tremendous expense that all thought of It has for the present been abandoned. cost machinery have prevented. This portion of the Snake river has never been descended with rafts or boats. The gorge Is a succession of whirlpools, swift cascades and falls. The expedition, taking advantage of the lowest water in the river for a decade. Is following the gorge in the riverbed on horseback and afoot. Dee.- Must Be Thick. Hlbblng, Minn.--Deer must certainly be thick between iere and Duluth, for it Is reported they are Impeding automobiles between here and the Zenith City. The story Is tol<: that an autom» bile driven by Joseph Rooney, former member of the village council, hit a deer while returning from Duluth Sunday night. It U believed the deer became attracted by the bright lights and was drawn animal was only believed. M*n Washington.--A woman fs plon mall handler of the po ice. Miss Nina R. Holme; years old, of the Detroit the Post Office department announces, has set a record for sorting letters recently by <Ustributlng 20y630 In eight hours. Furnishings and Hangings Selected With View to Making Broadcasting Ff*e From Echoes and Interruptions, Everyone who haflllihed to a program broadcast by radio has formed some mental picture of the Interior of the station from which the songs and speeches come. He imagines, perhaps, a room full of apparatus --black panels, polished dials, delicate measuring instruments and the glow of vacuum tubes--as the setting where stands the evening's prima* donna. Were he to enter an actual "studio," however, he would find nothing In Its soft carpet and attractive furnishings to suggest radio, except a small panel on the wall carrying a few signal lamps and push buttons, add on a pedestal a graceful metal object which he Is told is the broadcasting microphone. A well-designed studio begins with a room whose walls are soundproof and which will accommodate comfortably a chorus or an orchestra of 20 persons. Usually Its walls are drapea with some heavy fabric to prevent echoes, and for the same reason Its grand piano, phonograph and tables are kept covered when not In use. Where Artists Perform. Since soloists are used to standing on the hard floor of the stage, a low wooden platform is provided to make them feel at ease, and for the further purpose of discouraging them from moving about the room while singing. This Is a common tendency among artists of strong dramatic Instinct, but it is undesirable because It carries them away from the microphone that Is to pick up their voices. This platform is only one of the many little details that are provided for the comfort of the artists In a well-run station. The studio Itself ie best located where it Is easily readied from the street. On their arrival the performers are greeted In an anteroom by a courteous attendant, and made to feel at home while they wait their torn to "go on." Shortly before each program the studio manager explains the few simple points to be observed-- such as remaining from four to eight feet from the transmitter, enunciating dearly and maintaining perfect quiet while the microphone is "on the air." . At last ths moment comes to begin. In the studio a lamp flashsa, telling the manager that the electrical equipment Is ready. With a last glance to be sure that everyone Is in place, the manager throws a switch which connects the microphone through the set to the antenna, and In a strong, clear voice announces, "This is Station PDQ broadcasting; we will have a solo by Miss B. entitled The pianist begins the accompaniment and the "show" is on. Great Invisible Audience. The curtain has now risen on an invisible audience of many thousand people, but aside from a bright blue pilot light on the wall, nothing has changed In the studio. It is hard for performers to realize that they are not merely rehearsing; and sometimes to the chagrin of tlt^ manager, they In- ... Vt.ttk'+fAV; - terrupt abou* >0; HMB therns«>lve« with a question their atrging or some other Incongruous rc>mar%; One manager relutes with glee how, one day listening at the radio station to a tenor eolo at another local station, he heard the •singer Inquire at the conclusion: "How do you shot this --- thing off, anyhow?" 8uch situations must the studio manager handle "on the minute," and yet diplomatically, for he is dealing with all sorts of temperaments, from the high-strung artist to the busy mar of politics or affairs. He must pnt on one number after another without "stage waits" and his resourcefulness must be equal to filling In gaps as If nothing had gone wrong. Often rehearsals are held, during which the electrical equipment is connected to s dummy antenna. This permits various groupings of perform* era to be tried without disturbing other stations. During these tests and during the performance itself the station, operator must give close attention to Instruments which show the performance of the microphone, the power which its circuit delivers to the transmitting apparatus and the power radiated into space. The quality of the transmitted speech Is observed by listening In with a receiving set. These precautions, coupled with an experienced station operator and first-class radio equipment, are desirable to make sure that you as s radio amateur will hear a program that will repay you for listening in. of frail, and convalescents everywhere testified to the remarkable power sf Tanlac In bringing back their strength and working efficiency. M seems to quickly invigorate the constt* tutlon, and is a powerful foe at weals* ness. Mrs. George CL Owen, ot Salen^ Oregon, says: "My nerves were upset and the Btdfe' I ate wasn't enough to keep vp my strength, so I lost weight and Imiiia so weak It seemed I had no energy at all. Tanlac restored my health COBS* pletely, and I gained twelve pooads Mi weight" There is not a single portion of th» • body that is not benefited by the het^f ful action of Tanlac. It enables tbd stomach to turn food Into healtfcgy blood, bone and muscle, purifies thftr system and helps you back to normal weight Get a bottle today at ang* good dtugglsL--AdvertlsearenC . O Weii Supplied. 1 ' Dr. Samuel McGaughey sends"wfcr MM • "We sre living "hard by" : which hss several chnrdM* Haqr Jpne, our flve-ye&r-old daughter, haa been In several kid entertdtaamts Mi the various churches. The ether dap one of our friends asked her to church she belonged. Her was, 'I am half Presbyterian. Baptist and half Catholic.""--Jp spoils News. CRIMPS, runs MM BACKAEHE St Lotus Woman Refiered fay, Lydia. E. Pmkham's V«f> i etable Compound St. Looia, Mo.--"I was bothered with crampa and pains every moath aad had backache and had to go to bed aa I oould not work. My mother and Hp whole family always took Lvdia E. PtnLham's Vegetable Compound for such troubles and thnr tadncsd me to try ft •Itl aad I can-. my boosework all I recommend yonrVe to ray friends for female troaMse."-- Mrs. Dblla Scaout, 1412 ~ " Street, St Louis, Mo. - DISCOVER A FREAK WOLF-MAN Pinkham's Vegetable Creature Living With Indians Walks on Hands and Feet. Is Wolf In AH Except rdtiflt ifflt 1* SsM to Be About 70 Years Old- Subsists on Meat and Livee in Kennel. w m m C . -- A s t r a n g e w o l f - m a n has been discovered living with the Hesqualt Indians on tbs west coast of Vancouver island, B. C., Canada. So Isolated Is this Island that no effort has been made to give scientific sttentlon to this strange creatv^e till quite recently The wolf-man Is called Kilm-lth-ka. which means wolf-man In the Indian tongue. He is s wolf In all except form and is said i ^ be about seventy years old. He resembles an old iqan walking on his bands and feet; he hss never walked after the human fashion. He cannot make any human sound, but growla like a wolf. He eats Uke one and where human beings have eye teeth he has canine fangs; When the wolf-man sits erect he is four feet and a half-inch tall. He subsists on raw or cooked meat and 'Ives In e kennel in the rear of the houss of s keeper appointed by tbe tribe. ' The keeper feeds him and keeps clothes on him ss much ss possible, and except for occasional disrobings, Rllm-ith-ka Is fairly tractable and accepts semidomestieatlon which Is about his only human trait The ethnologist who Investigated the man learned fr$£> the Indians that In the days when the wolf-man was born wolves were very plentiful on the coast and at times sttacked people. Whether this Is the cause of the man's animal-like state the fact remains that Kilm-lth-ka is a wolf In everything exr>ept form. He ik regarded with great awe by his tribesmen, n common thing among primitive people, who very often venerate any human being different front the ordinary. Veget been in use for neariy fifty prepared from medicinal pi utmost pharmaceutical rior methods. The ' _ combined in the Compoond correct the conditions which cense such symptoms as had been Schola. The Vegetable1 cises a restorative inflneneeof thei desirable character, cot i acting the trea ble in a gentle but efficient nkaanar. This is i \ * w - " after another, of the symptoms. When a man needs help Is when he talks the most about pulling together. PEER WILL REMAIN AN AMERICAN New Viscount Exmouth Passes Up Seat Among Lords. Because the United ttatee Has Been to Him Land of Romance Henry Bdward Pellew Wil* Remain American Cltisen. Washington.--A British peer, whether he will have it so or not, Henry Edward I'ellew, Viscount Exmouth, Is remaining an American cltlsen, because the United States to bim has been a land of romance. The title of viscount has descended upon him but he will lalify or take his Mr. Pellew came to America In the *S0s of the last century. In New York he met and married GUsa Jay, daughter of Judge William Jay and granddaughter of John Jay, tbe famous chief justice of the United States. They returned to England, where their son waa born. In 1868 Mrs. Pellew died. In 1518, Mr. Pellew again came to America and married her sister. Augusta Jay, who remained his constant companion until hir death. Marriage to a deceased wife's sister was then against the law in England, and Pellew's marriage would not have recognized there as legal. Consequi |y he decided to remain In the U: ship papers bound lies were collecting relief from a dozen or more organisations, making from $200 to $300 monthly, which meant luxury In those days. Mr. Pellew promptly pot a stop to that and as s result the Chsrities Organisation society came Into being. This probably will be his chief monument He hss been s pioneer la estsbllshlng libraries, coffee houses and Improved tenements for the poor. Since the death of his close friend and associate In philanthropic work, Theodore Roosevelt, his principal Interests have been In work for the negroes and In building of the Washington cathedral. What He Wanted. A Frenchman and his wife camp to England. She hud relatives at Manchester, so it was arranged that he should take her there, returning by himself to London, where he had business. His request to the booking office clerk was as follows: "Give me, If you please, two tickets to Manchestalre. One for me, to ge snd to come back. One for my wife, to go but not to come back."- Tlt-Blts. Csll not tnat whate*er he suffers, love. wretched wSfc bee a child ta Sure Relief FOR INMGESnOK BKUIANS Hot water EvjrjSuSruorRe Jd Mfe ELL-ANS Si and 75* Packages, EveryeAaiS Ladies LetGuticura Keep Your Skin and Younfj FIND RUNAWAY W ASHCAN 'lips York Boy*e Adventurous Career la Brought to an Snd by Frerteh Felise. 5^^ &Z < 'ff % - ' TlTtfC--When Herman Jasper, fottr teen, ran away from his home in Binghamton, N. Y, bound for a personally conducted sightseeing tour of Europe, he did not visualize his Journey as ending in a garbage can on, the Boulevard des Italiens in Paris. But that is where s policeman found him, wrapped in peaceful slumber at 4 o'clock one morning--and now Hermd Is awaiting completion of arrangements to return l^m to Blng- Iwtnton. The sdventarens youth crossed the Atlantic as s stowaway. He was detained at Antwerp for deportation, ~but escaped and crossed the French -frontier. He was again captured, but once more showed his elusiveness, finally reaching Paris, where be was awaiting a chance to visit the battlefields. four-Year-Old Boy Found Playing With Cub Bears Mrs. Donald Small of near Kane, Pa., missed her fouryear- old son snd was directed to the orchard by his shouts of laughter. She found the child with a bear cub grasped by the back of tbe neck In each hand pulling and coaxing them to the house. Under an apple tree a short distance away was the mother bear munching apples. Mrs. Small called to her husband and her cries alarmed the bears, which ran to the nearby wooda. ft Long Walk to Old Home. Pottsville. Pa.--Daniel O'Brien, a native of this city, arrived here recently after hiking all the way from San Francisco, a distance of 3,500 miles. The feat occupied several months. O'Brien Is the guest of his 'uncle. Daniel Eagen. ' - v .1 f ^ -w • STEPS ON HILL; BEAR GROWLS Lambertnan Feels "Earth" Rise Under Foot--Goes Rapidly Awaf From Thsrf. ft. Francis, Me.---Chartes B. tanea, veteran lumberman, walked upon a real live bear--but he hadn't the slightest idea Bruin was in the neighborhood. He said: "I was looking for spots that would show the lines and corners of a township. I stepped on what I thought was a mound. "When the mound began to rise, and I heard a deep-throated growl, 1 qalckly ended my survey." Attention to Twin Calves. Warren, Pm.--A Guernsey cow owned by Charles Lindmark of Canton street is doing Its bit in the reconstruction work snd aiding all possible In bringing down the price of veal by giving birth to twin calves. The calves wro born the other morning and both are finely formed and indications are that both will live. The animals have attracted much attention. an American citizen were due. more than anything else, to his affection for his. two American wives, the second of whom died only s few years ago. ved in America was in the throes of a financial panic. He started relief for victims of the lndustrlsi distress and discovered Boon thst certain fsmlfeet long doorstep of his home here Monday1 evening. The snake lay colled directly In front of the door, and Carte killed It with a club. It was the largest rattlesnake killed in this* vicinity m the last 20 years. U. S. PRAISED FOR FOOD AID Maxim Oerfcy Writes Herbert Hsover Thst Amsrics's Unselfishness Is drsatsst Hamburg. Germany.--"The charity of the American people kindles the dream of brotherhood among mankind Just at the time when brotherly love and sympathy are very much needed." writes Maxim Gorky in a letter thanking Herbert Hoover and all other Americans for the aid extended during the Russian famine. The letter, given out by the local office of the American relief administration, is dated July 30, exactly a year from tbe date Gorky addressed his telegraphic appeal for assistance to America. The famous writer declsres that la the entire history of human catastrophe he knows none so severe as the misfortunes which have befallen Russia In Its famine, and In history of human kindness nothing to compare with the extent and unselfishness of the assistance given under the direc- k tlon of iieeretary Hoover. Cow Stabs Man to Death Swinging Her Horns at Fly Peter Johnson, sixty-five, a farmhand employed by George McClure at Rlvervllle. near Westwood, N. J., wsi fatally Injured when a cow he was stabling swung Its head to drive away a fly and pierced his abdomen with one of its horns. He died shortly afterward. _ight on the Cat. Wlnsted. Conn.--During a heavy electrical night storm Mickey, a pet cat at the home o< Roger Brown. Is believed to have turned on the electric light In tte room where he sleeps by pulling the cord connected with the lamp. After daybreak Mickey, wooing sleep, was discovered trying to extinguish the electric light by palling the cord a second time. , Too many cooks spoil the broth and too many sauces spoil the dinner. YOUR SHARE 112 LETTERS That la the Per Capita Basis ef United States Mail Total, IV 835,000^00. Washington.--Every cttinea of the United States would have received 111 letters last year If the aggregate letter mail which passed through the hands of the Post Office department had been divided on a per capita basis. A stat! lsticlan in the department has estimated that 11,335,000.000 letters went through the malls last year. Comparing this total with postal records of foreign countries, the department's expert announced that Great Britain had a "per- capita exchange" ot 414 tie*- maay 25 and Italy 24. TO DEATH When the body begins to atMim and movement becomes painfal H is usually an indication that dm kidneys are out of order. Kee* tbsse organs healthy by takiof GOLD MEDAL - • Tkl wcxrldla standard raoMdy lor MdaMki Hvmv bladder and arte add tmOhMK Famous abac* MM. Ms ngelmty aad kMp ta good baahh. In Sne ds% dl Rslics of Confederacy. The cell table used by Jefferson Davis, president of tlie Confederate States of America, while confined aa a prisoner in Fortress Monroe, following the close of the war, is In the collection of interesting relies in the Confederate tnnsfuia In Ilichmendt ItUlt w* Kxp*rHBe* MllMt mini. Xnr Tte cn» DIhtm»SKm>Ri*--STAT*; for r*at MM Ma tiWnM Tl.j usIS very car ow»«r . cmixicoTHi. uximqu W. N. CHICAGO, NO. . t r * 2". m :&T • XiiSI