HOW GODDESS OF LUCK SMILED ON HARRY JOHNSON Ocean Island is well named. It la a speck of land about four miles round in the Pacific ocehn. Yet it might have been named Eldorado or Bonanza or Golconda, or any other name associated with fabulous riches, because it is probably the richest piece of land In the world. At one time It was a calling-place for South sea whalers, and one of these casual visitors took away with him a piece of the rock of which the island mainly consists and submit ted it to the manager of a New Zealand guano firm which had an office In Sydney. The manager thought little of it. and used It to prop open his office door. Presently a man named Harry Johnson, an expert in phosphates and other fertilizers, called, and, be ing attracted by the appearance of the manager's door-stopper, obtained leave to take it away and subject it to tests. These proved that the stone was almost pure phosphate of lime. Johnson kept his own council, but, having learned from the manager that the stone had come from Ocean island, he went there. He found the island composed of it! Here was incalculable wealth if only it could be exploited, yet Johnson had great difficulty in financing his project. But the reward was only delayed. There is an almost boundless sup ply of phosphate of lime, and It Is the most powerful fertilizer known. It is used also for match-making and other manufacturing processes. Today about 2,000 colored labor ers, under about .00 white overseers, work the phosphate and ship It to all parts of the world. The total value of the product In sight or eventually available Is estimated at $400,000,000. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong. No alcohol. Sold by druggists in tablets or liquid.?Adv. Query Does the devil wear horseshoes? You know he has hoofs. Children's Coughs Need Creomulsion Always get the best, fastest and surest treatment for your child's cough or cold. Prudent mothers more and more are turning to Creomulsion for any cough or cold that starts. Qreomulslon emulsifies creosote with six other Important medicinal elements which soothe and heal the Inflamed membranes. It Is not a cheap remedy, but contains no narcotics and Is certain relief. Get a bottle from your druggist right now and have It ready for Instant use. (adv.) Finds Relief Jf Safe, All if Vegetable Way f She bad given up f hope of anything but partial relief until abo l learned of famoua all vt-Kctable Nil Tablet* (Nature's Remedy). But now after years of chronic constipation and biliousness?what a change! New pep?new color and vitality ?freedom from bowel sluggishness and in testinal poisons. This all-vegetable laxative gently stimulates tho entire bowel, gives complete. thorough^^^^^MM^^^^^ elimination. o<-t. 25c box. itiUBdlailB All druggists'. T| I ftlC Quick relief for acid indigea I wfVl^ tion. heartburn. Only_lQc^_^ RELIEVE ECZEMA Don't Buffer needlessly. Stop the itching and induce healing?begin now to use IB Resmol flBurpeeSGknttZinnkR | 3PktsforlO< 3 Thr**ht?atlful Olant Mammoth Zlnrlii. I om full -ilea packet each of Scarlet. Yel H low, and Rm? (rerular ealoa 80c) poit ? paid f?r only 10c Bwryee . Oar4m But FHES. World'i rrtilMt sarden rulde dearrtblna all beit flow en and re jet able*. Burpee' i rosrmnfeed ?eecto. Lower price*. Write fw free BOOK today. W. AOm taw C*. VI Bmt Bid... rtlUMtal. PARKER'S HOWIl HAIR BALSAM RwnuTra I 'andnifl Slope Ualr PaDk? Mffa jS Imparts Color wad Boauty to Crmr ud Faded Hair FLORE5TON SHAMPOO - Ideal for un in connection with Parker's Hair Balaam. Make* the hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents hy mail or at drug gist*. Hisoox Chemical Works. Petcbocue. nTx. (Juick rfealinq ^ rou. 7 Skin irritations If vou Buffer with pimples, eczema, rashes, chafings, eruptions or other distressing skin trouble, begin today to nse intlcnra Soap and Olatmeat. Bathe the affected parts with the Soap, anoint with the Ointment. Relief comes at once and healing soon follows. Soap 25c X Ointment 25c and 50c ? Proprietors: Potter Drug A Chemical Corporation, Maiden, Maaa. \VNU?4 3?W I Just ?3$ DORIS HAS ERRED "Darling, let us keep our engage ment a secret." "Yes, dear; but I must tell Doris. The horrid creature said 1 should never find a man foolish enough to marry me."?London Tlt-Blts. Historic Aspirations "What Is your great aim In life?" asked the friend. "To live In history," answered Sen ator Sorghum. "Don't you care for political power?" "Certainly I do. Political power Is largely what Influences historians as to who gets the favorable notices."? Washington Star. Could It Be? "D'you know, Mrs. 'Arris, I some times wonder If me husband's grown tired of me." "Whatever makes you say that, Mrs. Tggs?" "Well, 'e ain't been 'ome for seven years."?London Advertiser. A Duplicate "And so," said the magistrate, se verely, "this Is the fifth person you have knocked down this year?" "Pardon me," said the girl motor ist, with dignity, "the fourth. One of them was the same person twice." ?London Tatler. VOICE OF EXPERIENCE Literary One?The race Is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong. Oldsport?You said It; them sports Is generally framed. Safety First Ambulance Doctor?What hap pened to this fellow? Policemnn?He climbed up this "Safety First" sign to see what It said and the blooming thing fell on him.?Brooklyn Dally Engle. Poor Social Quality Edith?Is Mrs. von Good an enter tabling conversationalist? Louise?Perfect dummy 1 If she can't speak well of a person, she says nothing. Precise Two friends met; one was garbed * i widow's weeds. The Other?My dear friend 1 How I pity you?a widow at twenty-live! The Widow?Pardon me, twenty four!?Cleveland Record. Live Ad Man Guide?That volcano Is always smoking like that Ad Man (to helper)?Take a pho tograph of It, Bill; we'll say It smokes our "Pipe Dream" brand and finds It delightful.?Brooklyn Eagle. Pose Artless?What Is behind that Mona Msa smile? Knowall?Nothing unusual, 1 claim. She was merely sitting for her por trait nnd trying to look pleasant? Louisville Courier-Journal. Going Down I "What's the cause of falling hair?" Barber?Gravity, sir.?London An swers. YEAR AFTER (v YEAR OF DUAUTY Merry Time at Popcorn Ball Entertainment That Can Be Made Thoroughly Enjoy able at Trifling Financial Cost and Little Labor in Its Preparation. In these days, when financial prob lems are so generally harassing, there Is a tendency to curtail In en tertaining. While this seems a nat ural result. It Is, nevertheless, to be deplored. It Is when spirits are low that the heartening of congenial com panionship Is most needed. These social events that do not drain, or even strain, the purse, are actual In vestments In good health for host and hostess as well as guests. It has been demonstrated that good cheer promotes well-being, and when a per son Is well he or she can best com pete with problems. So let us not cut down too decidedly on the pleas ant means of promoting health and success. In order to do this with no reac tion In the thought of too much money spent which would come on the persons entertaining If It was done too lavishly, let me suggest a new party, the Popcorn Ball, which can be given at trifling cost. The word ball suggests evening dress, or at least dainty frocks. These add glamor to an occasion, yet no one need get anything new. Before the event, the hostess pops corn, dips some kernels In vegetable dyes of different colors, wires a few kernels with one color, edging them with green," and makes two nosegays of similar colors, and as many nose gays as there are guests. These she arranges In two little baskets. From these she presents boquets to the men and the women. Matching boquets secures partners for the first dance. The music can be on the radio, a vlctrola, or by different per sons whom the hostess asks before hand to play for one dance. The cost | of musicians should be eliminated. Ths hostess supplies needles and strong thread, and great bowls of popcorn, which can be ready or be ? popped as part of the entertainment, s The players gather around the tables having these bowls on them, and at the sound of a signal they start stringing popcorn chains. At another signal, each player passes his or her chain to the person next on the right, who proceeds to string on this chain. When the final signal Is sounded, the man and woman whose chains measure most nearly the same length become partners for the next dance. Of course, players do not know of this beforehand. The hostess scatters the remaining popcorn over a cleared space in the center of the room, and at a signal ?ach person picks up one kernel at s ime In the effort to gather the targ et quantity. The man and woman Those popcorn kernels count up most <; learly alike are supper partners. 1 Popcorn Is the chief edible for the 1 ?efreshments. Popcorn balls and i sweet cider or a fruit punch may be i :he whole menu. Or make an orange 1 gelatine. Top each portion with ] whipped cream, sprinkle lavishly with < popcorn first put through the food 1 grinder, using smallest blade. Serve ( with rolled oats wafers. Have salted popcorn instead of salted nuts, and large kernels of popcorn dipped In chocolate coating for bonbons. Sprin kle around popcorn Instead of minced Kp tinea ts over chocolate frosted cakes. ?. Bell Syndicate.?WS'U Service. Recalling Time When All Turkeyi Were Wild Entrancing are the accounts of the turkey farmers' modern methods. The "production in line" of more and better turkeys is astounding. It ap pears the Incubators are set at work at the precise moment to bring tbem to maturity at Thanksgiving, and later ones for Christmas and New Tear's. From pen to pen the gawky bird makes his progress until he Is ready for shipment. No doubt, along with the methods of standardization, in cluding branding the turkey with In delible ink, or trademarked like the citrus fruits, they now load him with an endless conveyor belt and whisk him through the dressing processes with elaborate heed to scientific man agement Now let the Idaho turkey farmers read of what our ancestors saw when the world was young. Felix Walker, coming into Kentucky, narrates: "So rich a soil we had never seen before. Covered with clover In full brown, the woods were alive, abound ing in wild game. Turkeys so numer ous that It might be said there ap peared but one flock universally scat tered In the woods." Let the mass production experts beat that if they can 1 Those who bandy the name of Bril lat-Savarin, connoisseur of the pleas ures of the table, to shame our Amer ican bill of fare would do well to quote his chapter on the American turkey and how he Is hunted and cooked.?Cincinnati Enquirer. Handling "Dead" Letters The man who mails a letter inad vertently leaving both the address of the person to whom it Is sdbt and bis own address from the envelope no longer will have to wait six months for the letter's return. A new system of handling dead letters and pack ages, of course, provides that all first-class post offices will handle their own dead letters immediately, opening them to find the name of the sender if possible. Second, third and fourth-class offices will forward such undeliverable matter to some fifty odd dead letter offices provided for in new instructions. A delay of only 48 hours will be required under the new management.?Washington Star. MANY AND VARIED ARE THE BELIEFS COMMON TO MAN The total number of superstitions Is large and they vary with locality. But some of them are almost univer sal. Everybody knows It Is bad luck, while walking tinder a ladder, to step Into a coal hole in the sidewalk. Everybody knows bad luck may be averted If you knock on wood after making a rash statement. Every body knows that It is unfortunate to see the new moon over the left shoul der?and lucky to catch its first beam over the right shoulder. Terhaps not so many, even of the cautious ones, know that an umbrella should never be raised in the house, nor should one rock an unoccupied rocking chair. Entering a room by one door and leaving by another is unfortunate. Something is almost sure to happen. Since the horse has almost retired from the scene, the good luck found in picking up a horse shoe has doubled. One should never pass up a shoe on the pavement now. Few experiences are more valuable. And speaking of umbrellas, it Is exceptionally bad luck to leave one In a church vestibule during the services. Probably such an act would be equally unfortunate If com mitted In the vestibule of a movie theater. Recently a magazine published a score card by means of which you might learn Just how superstitious you were. You put a cross in one of the squares when you recognized your own superstition. Some of the readers ran up as high as fifty. It is often an omen of bad luck when some one leaves a cake of soap on the stairs, or when you miss the nail that is to be pounded and connect with the thumb, or when the children leave their little go-cart In the passage way you start through wrapped in thought. But apparently the worst of all luck is to be born under the wrong star. What is the use of struggling, when the stars in their courses fight against you? And yet, by the way, did you ever hear of a person with a decidedly bad horoscope? As a rule the stars do very well by us.?A. J. R. in the Minneapolis Journal. Wise Welsh Pony Believed to be the oldest equine worker In the world, Sergeant, a thir ty-four-year-old Welsh pony, has com pleted 29 busy years In a coal mine at Mountain Ash, Wales. He knows his Job so well that he does not need directing in any part of it. i graham! mcnameeB ? FROM V FAMOUS RADIO ANNOUNCER says: ''I'll announce to the world that THE EDISON is a great Hotel" >25i HOTEL EDISON V "" / 47th ST. w*st ?* rway NEW YORK tOOO ROOM* LA CM WITH EATH, RADIO A MO CIECULAT1MO (CI WATtR PRINCIPLE VS. INTEREST A man In the "Near" East who had luite a reputation as a skinflint lost lis pocketbook a while ago, with $200 n cash in It. He put an advertlse nent In the "Lost" column in the iaper but a month elapsed and he lad heard nothing on the subject. He had about given up all hope of iver seeing his $200 again when a farmer came in and returned the locketbook. The skinflint looked In - ^^===========^= the pocketbook and found the money was all safe. The farmer thought perhaps the capitalist might give him a slight reward. On the contrary the skinflint gave him a sour look and said: "The money's all here, but Where's the Interest?" Reminder Note to parents: You were that same kind of Idiot at sixteen and look how well you turned out?Los Angeles Times. If you want to GET RID of Constipation worries Science says Today use a LIQUID Laxative 1. Control intestinal action exactly?no "purging" 2. Measure to suit your individual needs to the drop 3. Banish Bowel Fatigue and the laxative habit Here's Whys Any hospital oflers evidence of the harm done by harsh laxatives that drain the system, weaken the bowel muscles, and in some cases even affect the liver and kidneys. A doctor will tell you that the unwise choice of laxatives is a com mon cause of chronic constipation. Fortunately, the public is fast returning to the use of laxatives in liquiaform. A properly prepared liquid laxa tive brings a perfect movement. There is no discomfort at the time and no weakness after. You don't have to take "a double dose" a day or two later. In buying any laxative, always read the label. Not the claims, but the contents. If it contains one doubtful drug, don't take it. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a prescriptional preparation in which there are no mineral drugs. Its in gredients are on the label. By using it, you avoid danger of bowel strain. You can keep the bowels regular, and comfortable; you can make constipated spells as rare as colds. The liquid test: This test has proved to many men and women that their trouble was not "weak bowels", but strong cathartics: First. Select a good liquid laxa tive. 2. Take the dose you find is suited to your system. 3. Gradually reduce the dose until bowels are moving regularly without any need of stimulation. Syrup pepsin has the highest standing among liquid laxatives, and is the one generally used. It contains senna, a natural laxative which is perfectly safe for the youngest child. Your druggist has Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Here's Quickest, Simplest Way to Stop a Cold ITake 2 Bayer As- / Drink full glass of water. 4 If throat is sore, crush ? P?r?n Tablets. J imrn Repeat treatment in 2 iJa and dissolve 3 Bayer hours. Aspirin Tablets in a half glass of water and gargle ac cording to directions in box. Almost Instant Relief ? FEMALE WEAKNESS ? Baltimore, Md. ? "My nerves were on edge. I was weak, lacked energy," said Mrs. Ruby Heinegger of 2205 Maisel St "But Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion gave roe wonderful relief from feminine weak ness and that tired, ner vous condition and head a cues. rtu uruggisis. New size, tablets 50 cts.; liquid 51,00, l*r*e size, tablets or liquid, 51.35. "We Do Oar Pert.** Indicated as an Alterative In the Treatment of RHEUMATIC FEVER, GOUT, Simple Neuralgia, Muscular Aches and Pains At All Dragffiats Ju. Bafly & Sob, Wholesale Distributors k Baltimore, M d. Cooperate with your dentist in striving for dean gum-grippedkem to dwtijts Evurrwxuii M (For Coughs duo to Colds,Minor I Bronchial and Throat Irritations I JA8. BAIL! a BOW. Baltimore, Md.J in this Way The simple method pictured above is the way doctors throughout the world now treat colds. It is recognized as the QUICK EST, safest, surest way to treat a cold. For it will check an ordinary cold almost as last as you caught it. kin a Ask your doctor about this. And when you buy, sec that you get the real BAYER Aspirin Tablets. They dissolve almost instantly. And thus work almost instantly when you take them. And for a gargle. Genuine BAYER Aspirin Tablets dissolve so completely they leave no irritating par tides. Get a box of 12 tablets or a bottle of jgj^ ?r $*5=^7/ does Nor ham / we heart ? With sour milk%v Baking Soda forms the perfect leaven ing ... be sure to use it when baking cake ... a pinch brings out the natural color of fresh vegetables . . . cleanse your preserve jars with a hot solution of it. . . sprinkled^on^ a damp cloth it HHHHH cleans bath tubs and washstands DD-7 _ //kS> 1EASE SEND ME FREE ROOK S \ _ m _ _ _ (?*' M J OESCRIRING USES OF RAKING ROD* "VA \V ... as a paste it is a first aid for burns i#iQL and iff W"-'?DS M quickly relieves ^ > sunburn . . . keep Arm & HammcT and Cow Brand \\ 11 ? ^Tn) * Baking Soda serve many useful \t mio II _ _ . ->i - purposes outside the kitchen. \\ II a package downstairs ... a package " 7M$ _ R^^="? * "" bonate is required. Send the \Xgv~ . ? V AWn 1 a ? 1 1 1 Economy Coupon for Free Book upsteurs^I^Jjy ... obtainable everywhere mia?,ofco^BWc^ I ... for a few cents ?8P... in sealed containers Bu*m~ ~^uw \ M>^ latMyNi ISM