rat.'-* ;*|a ' 1 .• * '* /j -"*? * of School to Women Called Lowering of Last Barrier in Crusade for Equality 4 ;.k^ &&«:*», • v> r;.'/v,('.^V tfS V,A*-S' * <\v 5., ILL. fjf «• •"!/ •>* ^-{loo* ANT Cfte . v»», - if you IMP »"T*%< **\ m FlnUh new walls with Alabastine, die wall coating pardculary adapted for use over plaster or wall board ana is always artistic and sanitary. Redecorate the old hone with Alafastine became it can be applied over any interior surface--new or old. There will be nodi»( «ppointm«^ no expend sive m j$.-.,. -,,f $*•£•••. t*'* *>• V i ' Gives Old Capes Glow of Now Fadslsst Dyas-dytt or flats as yon wish \ without (be would mean last Chanee"for Virgin Farms THINK of what yon could produce on a farm at I harden of high-aaeage coat Think of what 20- to you under these conditions, and of dairying and stock raising on cheap pasture land. Land pays for itself in a few crops--no artificial fertiliser--no heavy investment You have envied the farmer who got his start when land was cheap. Here's mr chance, perhaps your last chance, for the same brand of prosperity. Western Canada-- Special Renter's Plan-- Your Opportunity! Buy ®ut °*Profit* * * To aid and encourace the booeet worker with Weatern Canada la the farmer's land of oppor- perhapa little capital, the Canadian Government tty. Thouaanda of settlers who started not baa a "Ranter's Flan", whereby ooa may worts ay yean aco with little or nothing, are today a new or improved farm--"Try it out" for aerthe owners of fine farma, with comfortable eral years if desired--and buy a farm of hia awn homea and barna. theco'brad atock. dairy barda out of profits --all the marka of proaparity. Yet land ia not •*« mr n dear--only HStoSlO an acre for rich, virgin. pral- Thirty-TWO YeW* to Pay rie coa^tonrihra^Land h »« *ar in For the be^tof tho« wtahto, to b-r tand. a national aoo-proflt ahariac or«anif>k>n--tba i- w; Canada Cokmisaticei Aseodatioa-has been eaia your 4UHU.I...H,. before the best tabllebed. with head office at Winnipeg, and United State* office at St. PauL TMa Aaaociation offers aalectad land convenient to railways --much of it at $15 to 120 per acre--on very small cash payment; no furtbar payment uatil third yean balance aslewlad over thirty yean, but purchaaer may pay up and obtain title at any ticaa,if deaired. Inter. est aix per cent. Q0pQVtttBlt7s Cat atutad. Tana are ,oa land bcoagbt under colti- HTEVY A^BIR^INJ^^TO^»AIUEATS, thereiaaoWatafl. Canada waatawo&e^ It wants Ms land banned--and the fanners, through their maniaipal councils, bavajmctkal i ma i ill nf allheal OB Him Gel die Facts--Costs You Nothing totheaesa* amalkiuuJ tslu a.locatedneareatto you. He Government, authorized gfrarat to be of service to yo«. Mail thm Comgfon M." hook wtt ana, aad free aerrice >t Aaatt ia your territory; also information bow I railway rateacaa be arnnaed for a trip of inspection. C. J. BMUOHTOK. Deek W 4IS, 11« W. Adams St. Chiea*e, IB. J. ft HMLACHUN W, IS MTum Ave., K. Detroit, MIA, Ffaoo Homoot--da SL^JSggT KMalMss. Can .^^BBSaaa^^^ aaa «ariesimj-»o Fassparta cLACHULN. >» / (t i ; •• ' f ' - ^ mm mr fk«« book m I - Fishes Cr>owd the Sea. Pishes In the sea of Ualllee are In : the habit of going about In shoals of * more than an acre In extent and so s closely packed that It is Impossible for ,s4hem to move freelv. Largest Bull Moosa. One thousand live hundred pounds Is said to be the weight of the largest bull moose ever weighed In this country, and the greatest known ham spread Is 78 Inches. Growing Children on often troubled with Peverishnea^ Constipation, Haadacfack Stomach troubles, Teething disorders and Worms. At audi tiaaa thousands of Mothers use MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS for CHILDREN and they give certain relief. Thegr to break up colds. Cleanse the ach, act on die liver and bo give healthful aleepi Easy4o to take ay bowels •togivfe and and Accept lor ovarM. SafegtMale far Paiygamy "Has Beooma Thing of l»ast and Liberty Is Equal to Western Olators*--Naceasitles of W . areufht Bmoneii Constantinople. -- Tradition, by prejudice, doubtless causes many people throughout the world to regard the status of women tn Mahometan countries as the same aa that portrayed In the Arabian Nights ttnd to picture the Turkish woman as the alave of a polygamous husband, ignorant end illiterate, imprisoned tn a harem, with nothing to do but to >ounge upon cuahiona, raaoke a nargt Seh* and minister to tha pleasures of her lord and master. This la fallacious and unjust. There la hardly any polyamy In Turkey today. The average Turkish woman la the only wife of her husband and la comparable la education and personal liberty with the women of moat other ianda. This latter fact has now been emphasized by the adxnlaalon of women and girls as students to the medical school of Constantinople university.. The first official attempts to secure the admission of women to medical Studies and to the exercise of the profsaaion were made In 1917 by Dr. Raselm Ferld, then sanitary director of Constantinople. He gained a favorable vote from the superior council Of health and a demand by the ministry for the elaboration of an enabling act Champions Woman's Cauae. For many years Beaslm Omar Pasha, professor of the obstetrical clinic at the faculty, the founder of the Red Crescent, rector of the university, has championed the cause of women In the Ooundls of the faculty and university. In 1911 Beaslm Omar Pasha Inaugurated for women regular lectures at the university on the question of hygiene. This was the first step. A short time after, In 1914, a feminine university was founded which, during Its five years of existence, has awarded 43 diplomas. But, despite Its title. Its teaching did not go beyond secondary studies. A little later, In 1019, women were admitted to the University of Stamboul, first to the faculty of science and letters, then to the faculty of law, while the faculty of medicine still remained closed to them. At the beginning the women followed special courses distinct from those of the men, then the aamratlon between the aexes was abandoned. Prom year to year the number of women Increased. Today ISO are students In the university. The necessities of war brought about woman's intellectual emancipation. In the Balkan war of 1912 a school of nuraea waa founded. Until then the Red Creecent had employed only men as nuraea. Later women took part In the administration of the Red Crescent. Finally, during the World war, the dtfflcnltles of life, the high coat off food, the prolonged absence of heada of the families and the necessity of feeding the children, compelled women of a family to share the work of the men In commerce, administration and Instruction. By her work woman has acquired the right of Independence. She has come out ef the harem and ever more concerns herself with the outside world. In the home many women and young girls have adopted European habits and toilet, and you could not distinguish a Mussulman salon from a Christian aalon. The most advanced families have assumed habits of life copled from the French, and the husband, at the side of his wife, receives at table his Invited guests, men and women. The pleasure and charm of life have thereby assuredly gained for the Turks and for the foreigners who visit the country. Morality has lost nothing thereby. The Turkish spirit has been modernlied. The emancipated women have the right to apeak and the right to write. ' ! v Money Brands" Should Not Tempt You--Use CALUMET }he Economy BAKING POWDER That's What Mllloas " •••aewlToa Do ^rJ'M V?" . •%'S 4i. 64S nake King" C. ; Dead at 71 Years Natural Death Comes to Man Who Handled Thousands of Poisonous Reptiles. RM k WHOLESALE BUSINESS Ballachelt Was Wont to Declare That the Rattlesnake Was Much Misunde* steed i Unless Molested It Would Not Strike Ordinarily, . San Antonio, Tex.--Julius B. Ballachelt, slveuty-one, known to the world of the circus and museum as "The Rattlesnake King," is dead at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Emma Braun, in San Antonio. Although he had handled literally hundreds of thousands of snakes'In a long career, his death waa a natural one. Batlsehelt waa a native of Germany but came to Texaa when a young man and at first engaged in farming. It was purely by accident that he started In the snake business, it is said. A medicine show was in Helotes, a small settlement In Bexar county and off^ed $2 for a rattlesnake. BaUscbelt never Cross-Country Guides of Shriners Capt. Bernard S. McMahan (left), and J. W. Brooks of the American Highway Education bureau, starting from the aero milestone In the shadow of the White House for their trip to San Francisco from where they will guide the thousands of Shriners to Washington for the big convention in Juni had caught a rattler, but going out with a long stick at the end of which was a forked prong he soon^found a large snake, pinned its bead to the earth, then picked It up, threw it In a sack and carried it to the show man. From that day forward Ballachelt caught rattlers for a living and literally has caught single-handed thousands of the reptiles. The rattlers are one of the great natural crops of southwest Texas. Becomes Wheleeale Dealer. Aa the "Rattlesnake King" beeaas better known and his snakes were more In demand among circuses, medicine shows and museums, he became a wholesale dealer, as well as a retailer, and Mexicans In the off season when farm work was slack frequently went snake catching. VVhen they made a catch they were certain to find a market with "the Snake King" Mr. Ballschelt was wont to declare that the rattlesnake was much misunderstood. Unless the reptile was molested it would not strike ordinarily, but would escape from the vicinity of threatened danger. If a rattler Is startled it will strike and in the akinshedding season, when the reptile Is blind, anything approaches at its peril, for the snake lashes out at every noise. Belonging to the viper family, the rattler's young are born, not hatched as In the case of many other reptiles, and references to rattlesnake eggs, sometimes seen, are due to mistaking the eggs of some other snake for those of the deadly rattling viper or to nature faking. The female gives birth sometimes to litters of as many aa a doien vigorous little reptiles In the early spring, and they emerge Into the world fully equipped with poison sacs and fangs, capable of slaying man or beast from the day of their birth on. Warns Bsfore Striking. Tha rattlesnake Is a gentleman. He always gives due warning before he strikes," Mr. Ballschelt explained recently. "In shedding season when he cannot bunt because of blindness, his hunger and sightlessness makes the rattler a mean customer. Sometimes he will sound warning, but generally not. and he will strike at any noise during that period," Mr. Ballschelt was not afraid of rattlers and the larger they were, and therefore the more dangerous, the better he liked them, for rattlers sell by the pound and not by length as the uninitiated might imagine. While many of the snakes sold by "the Snake King" went to the purchasers with their poison fangs intact, the majority had th'elr fanes extracted before they were shipped. *• • ~ i I yum v «Onawsn* % hp "I.? "* ^ 'i --They know tna«.^ Good Baking Powde|r can't be sold for less-- V; that "more for the mon- % f ^ ey" means bake-day fail- , ^ j ores, waste of time and * J money--that Calumet ' V?|; ,means eqogomy* •?: _ ^ - ' i S f y , ""-V BY TBST over 150% greater than 1 that of any other bak~ ing powder ^ \V'*4„ J •'I'T't 'I THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAtCING POWDI01 jm There ire many disputes which reason can never decide; where much must be done and little ga|rt. WHY AKE " ,-\ j LAXATIVES? -------- 1'A-W Diaoevery by Science H#t Replaced Them. PUls and salts give temporary relief from constipation only at the expense of permanent Injury, says an eminent authority. Science has found s newer, better way--a means as simple as Nature Itsell In perfect health a natural lubricant keeps the food waste soft and moving. But when constipation exists this natural lubricant is not sufficient. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natural lubricant and thus secures regular bowel movements by Nature's own method--lubrication. Aa Nujol is not a medicine or laxative, it cannot gripe and, like pure water, It is harmless and pleasant. Nujol is used In leading hospitals. Get a bottle from your druggist today.---Advertisement. No man is as Important aa MSiltijte would like to think he is. • DYED HER BABY'S COAT, A SKIRT AND CURTAINS WITH "DIAMOND DYES" ORDERS NAVAI, AIR TRAINING -- -#K:r^ " i Denby Teds Plant for Scouting r from New Design Navy Crews ef the Future to Be Ae •killed in Handling of Aircraft^As They Are in Operatirp Qreat War Monsters. ^ Washington.--The battle fleets of the AtneiScan navy of the future will have crews aboard who will be as skilled In the handling of aircraft as they are in the operation of the monster floating engines of war, Secretary of the Navy Denby discloses In a special article on fleet aviation published in the National Aeronautical number of Aerial Age. The naval secretary calls attention to the general order recently Issued by Admirial Hilary P. Jones, commander- in-chief of the United States fleet, calling on all officers to participate in clasaea on aviation subjects. This order Is regarded by Secretary Denby as highly significant. "It means," he said in his Aerial Age article, "that fleet aviation Is certain to have a very Important effect in a future naval campaign." ^ "One of the first duties which will be required of fleet aviation in future wars," Mr. Denby said, "will be to carry nut reconnaissaucJ over enemy bases. "If we are to reconnolter enemy naval bases It muat be done by airplanes flown off aircraft carriers. "At the present time our navy has but one aircraft carrier, the Langley, which Is the remodeled collier Jupiter. "By knowledge gained from the comparatively inexpensive Langley we have been able to design an efficient type of carrier by remodeling two of the giant battle cruisers under construction, which were at first intended to be scrapped under the terms of the limitation of naval armament treaties. Under these treaties we were allowed to convert the battle cruisers Saratoga and Lexington. "Their speed, which is developed by electrical propulsion, is equivalent to 39 miles an hour on land. The peculiarities of these ships are the completeness of radio Installation for sending and receiving messages; the elevators for lifting aircraft to and from the decks and the storage space below; the cranes for hoisting outboard and Inboard heavy reconnaissance planes; the methods of ventilation and removal of exhaust gases from the smokestacks, and the maneuverability of such huge ships in 4 way." ' '. • Geta Coffin and Death Threat Clarksburg, W. Va.--Antonio Muad, who on December last reported to the police that he had been flogged by a band of masked men five miles from the city, awoke to find a coffin on the front porch at his home Pinned to the coffin wa* a bit of paper on which had been ^ritten "You are next." Musci sought protection from tha sheriff, and was promised aid. * i Twitch of Eye Saves Life of Man in Coffin A twitch of bis eye saved Henry Hlser, fifty years old, of Noblesville, Ind., from going to his grave prematurely. As an undertaker was about ^to place the body in the coflin'he noticed a muscular contraction of one eye. A physician was called and Hiser was soon on the road to recovery. The apparent death waa caused by paralysis. Tutankhamen Had Embalmed Beef Eats Four Pounds of Meat Daffy. Washington.--More meat was consumed In the United States last year than In any previous year, the Department of Agriculture announced. The total consumption was estimated »t 16,333,000,000 pounds, which amounts to 149.7 pounds per person, or approximately four pounds daily. The per ^capita consumption showed an increase of six pounds over 1921 and six and IWO-ho 11 nniinHa Atror 1 QOfi > A ~ ) * j k - * * \ r^ ^ "• -t, ' '"4- '} v;t \ ^ ^ • -fy'h ty.rY- > I 1 BMh package of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple any woman can dye or tint her old, worn, faded things new. Even if she has never dyed before, she can put a new, rich color into shabby skirts, dresses, waists, coats, stockings, sweaters, coverings, draperies, hangings, everything. Buv Diamond Dyes--no other kind--then perfect home dyeing is guai^ anteed. Just tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye is wool or silk., or whether, it is linen, cottoa, or ®!»i gooda. Diaiteond Dyes never streak, •pot, fade or run.--Advertisement. H, - The rights of hSysy people ire not recognised by loafers. Pretty and Inexpensive Deeeerts. Plymouth Rock Gelatine desserts can be made without eggs and without cream if whipped with egg-beater just as about to set. A splendid way to use up left-over preserves -- strawberry, cherry, peach, etc. Use ordinary teacups for molds.--Advertisement. He knows not the value of who never studied botany. So to Spaak. "He's an optimist. Even Jokes ah si his asthma." "Lets out a few alussso aa It were."---Louisville Couriersjooe* nal. * Afirv. Martha Strayer ; iiy *- ARE TOD A , w4 SUFFERING W0MAR! Health b Most l^ortant to fm Iinoohy Nebr.--"At one Has f became very miserable with from which women suffer. I all the time. One of my urged me to take Dr. Pkteeb ite Prescription because it had et of «jmii» svmDtoma. ao I to toy it. The first towe mademeMtao much better, I took tour more, aidOMl certain that in thai TSvorite Prescription' the operating table geon's knife. Two years when the turn at lira ett took the 'Prescription' result that I came tlinuft Strang 1 healthy and am stffl maintainftifoSfrs' ful health."--Mis. Msrtho flfcavov 218 So. 19th 8k Send ldc to Dr. Pierce's, BsflUag H. Y., for trial pkg. PrescriptiontdMMi GREEN MOUNTAIN ASTHMA COMPOUND quickly nUmt the 41mnet# ing p»roaraasja. OMdSt 6S yaan MM raaatt OF Mas wpertaeea ta INSMBI M BOX, Traaltaa i »t dromriata. J ITomSbok,! IIAB-OtD >), with FOB SAUB--1SS • VIOUN (fin* tase), vso* cue. Will ship C. O. D. Ita ea Bumlnatlon allowed. Addreaa ace House. 1(6( Madison St., FKKS--SEND FOB fCXI CATAUOO. InatrucUve. Bo* able crop#- Forty vartetlsa (am farmers' prlcf« Funk Farm, Bl< HARDWARE AND IMPLEMENTS tMBtrCoa#4 *680 % tit ..,'A v,,- J ThePracticalMat^s Car The quick success of the Chevrolet Utility Coap£ proved how accurately its designers gauged the trano* portation requirements of the average buoy man. This fully equipped, modern car combines day-by-day reliability, remarkably low operating costs and the|i%3f lowest price asked for a Fisher Body automobile. The mammoth rear compartment ia ^*p*w'«*ny attractive to the man who is always moving tools, --rr»p*«y cases, repair parts for farnf machinery, and luggage of all sorts. Any Chevrolet dealer will bo glad to obow yoa •;if sptional engineering features. ^ J ' yfcr Economical Tron 1/HtslkS' Natives are shown here carrying embalmec; i-e» ? or w i;; - g<nyally known In military circles as "Canned Willie," from the tomb of the ancient King Tutankhamen of Egypt. Forty packages similar to those shown in the iWt f Prices F. O.B. Flimt, Michlpm I SUVRKIOR Two in OaedsNr . • S5 • SUFgRlOK Rw - - • SUPERIOR Two SUPERIOR Four 8UPER10R Five Pa SUPERIOR Light Delivery <wr-3r f * m 1 t$S X * " ^ )!r Rv* Pas--BS« r Tueihia . . 51 ~ ~ UdkrCnw* M n l i n h n j o r q t n l r o n f m m t h e k i n g 'a tnmh , •-•"V u ~~r" - j\- ., TT ""' '• '* •" ' * - v »' - * **4 ' y *\ , Chevrolet Motor Co., Detroit* X>rri«i«s •/* Gwrml Motors C»rp*rmti*m W.' A,',.#"' " rt\|. ar'»" * '• -V ' '•' ^ ^ •' •V"-" i