WOb WO-™
mprjopir
Wadsworth Resigns From the Treasury
Eliot Wadsworth of Boston lift's re
signed as assistant secretary of the
treasury and has decided to return to
private life. He was appointed In
March of 1021 by President Harding
He has been the assistant secretary In
charge of foreign loans and railroad
advances. His miscellaneous activities
have Included supervision of the public
health service and he represented In
192.1 the government at Paris for the
settlement of the cost of the American
Army of Occupation on the Rhine
Mr Wadsworth was born In Boston
In 187fl. He took an A B. degree at
Harvard In 1898, LL. I' at Rochester
In 1921 and A M. at Harvard In 192.1.
From 1907 to lblrt he was a partner in
an electrical engineering firm. Then
for three years he was vice chairman
of the central committee of the Amer
ican National Red Cross. He Is un
overseer of Harvard and chairman • f
the executive committee of the Har
vard endownment fund committee. II** is a member of the board ? Ellis
Memorial and Kldrldge House. He was awarded the D S M and was made
ft commander of the Order • f the Crown by Belgium
Mr. Wadsworth must be nearly. If not quite, a record holder ns a club
member. Anyway his list of memberships includes these: R s: n Tavern,
Engineers, Harvard, Tennis and Racquet, S- erset and < ouutry ; New York—
Harvard and Racquet and Tennis; Washington Metropolitan, Cosmos and
Chevy Chase.
“Garry” Sargent, Able and Picturesque
John Garibaldi Sargent (portrait
herewith), the new attorney general
of the United States, Is by far the
most picturesque figure In the cabinet
of President Coolhlge. He wus born
In 1860 In Ludlow, Vt., where he still
lives. He Is a Tufts college man. A.
B. and A. M. He has been attorney
general of Vermont. He leaves a large
and general practice to become at
torney general. His friends—and bis
opponents—say he Is as able ns pic
turesque. He Is a close friend of Pres
ident Coolldge. Ills appointment, fol
lowing the sensational contest between
the President and the senate over the
nomination of Charles B. Warren f
Michigan, makes him a national fig
“Garry” Sargent, as all Vermont
calls, him, Is a physical giant, stun 1
ing four inches over 6 :'»•«■! and weigh
ing 250 pounds. 11.. t s pipes
He collects clocks and mends them.
He Is an antiquarian. He Is a tinker. He has the biggest •• .• -•ate
of Vermont and externally the plainest. He reads Frencn and ]'
papers. He still drives a pair ->f Morgan horses In a demoerat w
he has three automobiles. He's a fisherman and b>\.-s t -a:: ;• / He- a
gorgeous camp cook—the sort that will get up before dayilgnt rt the
breakfast right and no more can be said In praise of any ; in.
Mrs. Sanders, Wife of Cal’s Secretary
Here Is an up-to-date portrait of
Mrs. Everett Sanders, the wife of the
secretary to President Coolldge. They
are an Interesting couple, she and her
husband. The young people met when
attending the Indlanu State Normal
school at Terre Haute. She was then
Miss Ella Neal of Jasonville, Ind. In
3003, after graduation, they were mar
ried and in 1904 entered Indiana uni
versity. In 1907 Sanders began law
practice In Terre Haute, (letting Into
politics, he was elected to congress In
1910 and staid there. Last year he
was not a candidate for re-election.
At the National Republican con
vention in Cleveland Sanders hud a
narrow escape from being nominated
for vice president; his work as head
of the national speakers' bureau had
given him wide popularity. Now he
has taken the place of C. Bascom
Slemp. His very first job was to per
suade congress not to Include him in
the salary raise. Terre Haute Insists that Sanders knows polltl
as does Slemp and that he Is Just naturally popular with
expect him to prove a great success in his trying and res;
ibfe pn
■. They
sitinn.
J. F. Stevens Awarded John Fritz Medal
John Frank Stevens, once chief en
gineer of the Panama canal, has been
awarded the John Fritz gold medal,
the highest honor bestowed In the
United States by the engineering pro
fession. The award Is given him “fur
great achievements ns a civil engineer,
particularly In planning and organiz
ing for the construction of the Pan
ama canal; as a builder of railroads
and as administrator of the Chinese
Eastern railway.” In former years
this medal has been awarded to
Thomas A. Edison, George Westing
house, Alexander Graham Bell, Alfred
Noble, General Goethals, Orville
Wright, Lord Kelvin and Gugllelmo
Marconi. A total membership of 53.
000 engineers is represented in the so
cieties which Joined in making the
award.
While with the Great Northern
Mr. Stevens built the Cascade tunnel.
13.873 feet long. From 1005 to 1007
he was chief engineer of the Panama canal and In the latter year director of
the Isthmian canal commission. He was president of •several railroads and
Gee president, chief engineer or manager of a group of « thers.
He headed the American Hallway mission to Kussht in 1917 1018. was dl
rector »>f n corps of railway experts In Manchuria, and from 1919 to 1923 was
president of the Interallied technical board, supervising tlae Siberian railways.
Mr. Stevens Is seventy two years old and has been making his home in North
Carolina for the last two years.
Dennis Goes on U. S. Tariff Commission
Alfred P. Dennis of Maryland (por
trait herewith) has been appointed
by President Coolldge a member of
the United States tariff commission
to succeed David J. Lewis, whose term
had expired. He Is a Princeton man
and a Democrat, but the commission
needed a Democrat and the President
and he had become friends back In
the old days nt Northampton when
Dennis was teaching there. The Presi
dent picks many personal friends for
office—men he knows thoroughly.
The new tariff commissioner was
born In Maryland In 1869 and took
the degrees of A. B., A. M. and Ph. D.
at Princeton. From 1891 to 1907 he
was an educator, teaching history and
politics in Evelyn, Princeton, Wesley
an and Smith. Then he stopped be
cause of III health. He then entered
the diplomatic service, beginning with
the post of commercial attache to the
Rome embassy. In 1922 and 1923 he
was a special representative of the Commerce department in investigations is
Europe. He has been a frequent contributor to magazine*.
OUR MAGAZINE
WA SECTION
Interesting Features for the Entire Family_j
miiiuiiiiiitiiiiin
tiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiimiiniMiiiiiiMiiiiMii!
Something to Think About i
Bq F A. UMLKER =
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiimiiiinmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir
HONORABLE DEFEAT
pi: NOT ushwrned of defeat that Is
• lothed with honor. It Is better
by far t<» ho truo to yourself, loyal
to waited prlnflplos, able at all times
to look info your mirror without a
sense of guilt, than to wear tine rai
ment ft ml sit among kings.
If is bettor t" sleep sweetly at night
with a clear conscience than to toss
about in fear of punishment, which
you know you have earned and right
fully deserve.
If Is bettor to ho poor all your days
than to cheat, lie and steal while
heaping up wealth in the frantic chase
that frequently leads to broken health
and groveling age. before the allotted
time of three score years and ten.
If you have preserved your honor
in the hard struggle for existence. If
your heart Is full of Joyous faith when
the sky begins to darken at your corn
ing night, you have within you a sub
lime peace which all the wealth of the
world cannot buy, and which, if offered
you, you would brush aside as worth
less dross.
Be not dismayed if you cannot
spring up In a clap to the heights of
power through chicanery ; hut instead
he filled with confidence, because tlie
years In which you have labored with
out tainting your soul have left you
clean, clear-eyed and hopeful.
It is not for every worthy man to
win in battle; It Is not for every
Your Last
Name
IS IT MANN?
Till', fact that this name Is derived
from the word man, ns it was used
to indicate a servant <>r retainer, ought
not to he objectionable to those who
hear the name. Knight also first indl
■ ited a sonant or retainer and the
i surnames ''hnmberlain and
St.o\ art " St n.irt w ere derived from
: .• !':••— indie.i .tig positions of service.
it bus been pointed out that
M inn was an Anglo-Saxon personal
Haim' »i 1 the surname may have been
taken from It. When man Is found in
r-mpound with other syllables It some
times is used purely by way of de
scription. Thus we have Goodman
and Youngnmn.
Still another explanation Is given of
the name and undoubtedly this holds
true in certain branches of the family.
In this case the name has a local
origin and is derived from Le Mans,
the capital of Sarthe in France. For
instance William, who came from Le
Mans, might have been called William
I.e Mans which eventually would be
come William Mann.
The Mann family was early estab
lished In this country. There was a
William Mann who settled in Cam
bridge. Mass., and a prominent Vir
ginia family of the name. Then there
was n Middle-states family of the
name descended from a German ances
tor of the name of Mann, which Is
even more usual In Germany than in
England.
Horace Mann, born In I79d, the
I'looming rose to he the queen of
roses; It is not for every tree to be un
unk. nor every stream to be h river.
Eneh has its part In the scheme of
things of which we mortals know
nothing; each is playing Its role for
which it was created and Intended.
The thing for man to do Is to learn
humility, patience, charity, chastity,
nnd march ahead undaunted regard
less .<f the sneers of the vain nnd
thoughtless.
Look upward and move on. In storm
and culm.
Follow open-eyed Faith though the
night he dark and the way be rough —
there's a radiancy of sunlight a little
way ahead speeding toward you on
the wings of a new day.
Think of this glorious dawning;
forget your defeats, defects, disap
pointment^ and grh-fs. 1 »o your best
without faltering or bemoaning your
lot, and you will be Joyously happy
In the end that you have retained your
, bv V 'Clur** Nr>wsp»pi?r Syn " «’* )
IT ISN r what makes summer hot
Or what makes winter cold
That keeps us blue or warms ns
through
or makes us young or old.
Not sun nor hall nor rnlm nor cnle
Makes sad or glad the way—
Hut more the kind of folks we find
A round us ev’ry day.
When night Is gone the day tuny dawn
With blue and perfect skies;
Hut, If a word unkind Is heard,
i'hen all the glory dies.
The morn may bring the hall to sting
Hut. if our hearts are warm,
We'll trudge along and slug our song
And never mind the storm 1
Not sun or moon makes night or noon.
Nor season spring or fall;
We give life cheer or make It drear
For others, after all.
God grant your smile lights ev’ry mile,
W hatever road you go!
Make fair the day. make glad the way,
And you will find It so!
I 1 by MrClurn Newspaper Syndicate.)
SCHOOL PAljS
BoV' COOKl *r
mew (
ROOMO *ROH •
Ski! — 1 viON«s^ —
Jo V00 KNOW WKCRt’
AKOtKen. ewAAts- v‘e
CaW> p»t ’'"e~ 1
puice o' V* ,>e’
" KooP TirtE-?
i prominent American educator who
' married a sister of the wife of Na
! thaniel Hawthorne, was descended
i from William Mann who settled in
! Cambridge. Mass. There was also an
1 ntrlish Horace Mann—Sir Horace
Mann. He was born in 1701, and was
i the second son of Robert Mann, a Lon
' don merchant. lie was British envoy
; at Florence and a man of much promi
nence in the diplomatic world.
ATKINS—Sometimes this is from
Adam and sometimes from Arthur
Pritchard. This is a Welsh name, now
usual in England and the United
States, and is derived from “Ap Rich
ard." meaning son of Richard. Con
tracted. Ap Richard easily becomes
Pritchard.
(® by McClura Newspaper Syndicate.)
[ITlotier's Cooi Book]
To make this earth our heritage.
A cheerful and r changeful page.
Gods bright and Intricate device
Of days and seasons doth suffice.
—Robert Louis Stevenson.
Old-Fashioned Puddings
IN ALMOST any family there will he
found some left-over bread which
cannot be thrown away and the prob
lem of working It into the menu must
he thought out. Here are a few sug
gestions for desserts using bread or
crumbs as a basis:
Cherry Pudding.
Mix one cupful of sifted bread
crumbs, one cupful of flour, one-half
ten spoonful of salt and two teaspoon
fuls of baking powder together. Rub
in four tablespoonfuls of butter, add a
well-beaten egg and one-half cupful of
milk, mix all together. Sprinkle a little
flour on one cupful of pitted cherries ;
if canned, drain them and add to the
hatter. Rake a half hour and serve
with a hot vanilla sauce.
Vanilla Sauce.
Mix one tnhlespoonful of cornstarch
with four tablespoonfuls of sugar and
ii little suit, tin’ll pour one cupful of
l.olllng water over the dry mixture and
until thickened nn.l the star.-U
laste Is removed. Iteet en egg yolk
anil the mixture after cooling slightly,
add one teaspoonful of vanilla, u tea
spoonful of butter and sene.
Spiced Graham Pudding.
Take half a loaf of stale graham
bread before It Rets too dry and cut off
all the hard crust, l'ress seeded
raisins into the bread to cover the en
tire surface. Make a custard mixture
of two cupfuls of cold milk, two eggs,
four tablespoonfuls of sugar, one-half
tenspoonful of salt, one tenspoonful of
mixed spices and one-fourth teaspoon
ful of nutmeg. Pour in the milk and
soak until the bread lias entirely ab
sorbed it, turning occasionally to reach
all sides. Put into a buttered mold or
covered pall and steam one hour.
Serve with maple sauce.
Maple Sauce.
Cream two tablespoonfuls of butter,
add one-half cupful of soft maple
sugar or brown sugar with one-fourth
teaspoonful of maple extract and a
few drops of lemon juice. Set in a
cool place to harden before using.
Raisin Saucfc.
Poll one and one-half cupfuls of wa
ter and one-third cupful of raisins fif
teen minutes, add one-fourth cupful of
brown sugar and hop fifteen minutes
longer. Thicken with a teaspoonful of
flour and butter blended with a little
of the water, add a sprinkling of salt
and nutmeg and another teaspoonful
of butter Just as It la served.
Green Peppers on Toast.
Wash, dry ami toast over a low
flame eight medium-sized peppers
anil remove the seeds. Out Into long
strips. Melt four tuhlesponnfuls of
butter, add one-half of a small onion
minced fine and the pepper strips, one
cupful "f - elery cut into inch lengths
j Add one-half cupful of milk, cover
and simmer for five minutes. Then
add three tablespoonfuls of flour, stir
until well blended and add one-half
cupful of milk, one and one-half tea
spoonfuls of salt and pepper to taste.
Heat until smooth and creamy. Toast
six slices of bread, butter, and pour
the pepper mixture over them.
'y[±AJLL-t. ')VU^ vrCiH
((g). 1925. Western Newnpaper Union.)
AS TOLD BY
Irvin S. Cobb
A BARGAIN WAS DRIVEN
IN THE old days a newspaper writer
In Chicago fell heir to n puss good
for four on the opening day at one at
the racetracks. He invited three friends
to accompany him. They made the
trip In a decrepit automobile of an
cient vintage which the Journalist hail
acquired a few days earlier In part
payment of a debt.
At the gate a ticket taker examined
their credentials and permitted the
party to drive in. They were Just in
side the fence when the attendant re
membered he had forgotten to collect
for parking space.
“Hey! Wait a minute!” he called,
and our hero halted the machine.
“It’s one dollar for the car,” said
the man.
“How's that?" inquired the driver.
“One dollar for the car."
“Gimme the dollar,” said the Jour
nalist. “the car Is yours!”
(Copyright by th® Central Press Association )
&
he Young Ladr
Across the Way
1
The young lady across the way says
the automobile is certainly playing
havoc with the street car business and
she sees that congress Is now consid
ering an omnibus building bill.
(©. 1925. McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
Education’* Proper Aim
There are certain duties nnd loyal
ties toward our native land common to
every citizen, and education must have
such a direction as to enable every
citizen to fulfill his duty toward his
fatherland.—Kossuth.
Painful Wedding Ceremony
lu one of the New Hebrides Islands
in the Pacific, part of the wedding
ceremony consists of relieving the
bride of her two middle Incisors by
smashing them with a rock
CONSISTENT
He: That girl's
act is awfully
padded.
She: So's ev
erything about
All Worth Knowing
There is hardly any piece of informa
tion which will not come in useful,
hardly anything which Is not worth
seeing at least once. There ure in
reality no little things, only little
minds.—Sir John Lubbock.
Gives In to Majority
A wise man Is best satisfied when
he finds that the same argument which
weighs with him has weighed with
thousands before him, anil Is such as
has borne down all opposition.
T5fie
AMERICAN
•LEGION*
(Copy for This L.*»partii.<<nt Supplied by ih»
American I.e*K n Niwi flervlo* )
PUBLIC GENEROUS
IN GIVING TO FUND
Marked success is being met with
in the public appeal for the American
Legion $r.,ooo,000 endowment fund for
thw disabled and the orphans of tbs
World war. Legionnaires and the gen
eral public are giving generously of
time, effort and money to the fund
Many posts are raising their local
cpjotas for the fund In a day or two of
effort. At Corydon, Ind . Commander
C. A Keller and Ids post service officer
raised the quota of $554) In two after
noons by their own efforts. Evansville,
Ind., home of State Chairman Marena
S. Sonntag. raised neurly Its entire
quota of more than $l«ah» in three
Indiana was the first state to make
the public appeal The mine disaster
at Sullivan, Ind., In which r»l men lost
their lives shortly before the campaign,
drove close home to the people of that
state the need of such work for the
disabled and the orphans as the Le
gion Is doing and as the fund is In
tended to maintain. Kentucky was the
second state to start the campaign,
following n three night radio barrage.
Westfield. Ind., resorted to an Inter
estlng device In raising Its quota
of $:250. A Legionnaire remembered
that there were precisely 250 pockets
In the machine gun belts used by the
Germans in the war. The belt was
placed conspicuously In a store win
dow. As contributions came in, the
pockets were stuffed with dollar bills.
The quota was quickly completed.
Senator William R McKinley of Illi
nois was the first person to make a
large individual contribution to the
fund. Limit. Wayland Brooks, D. 8. C.,
and Michael J. Cullen, D. S. C., pre
sented the appeal for the endowment
to the senator. They suggested that
he contribute $2,000. He handed tUem
a check for $5,000. Brooks and <"Vi 1
len are members of the Combat Medal
Men’s association of Chicago, which
was the first organization In Illinois to
contribute.
A Chicago newspaper feature col
umn recently ran this:
“ ‘I believe,’ says the ‘I Believe* card
of the American Legion in Its drive
for a $.'..000,000 endowment fund, that
the orphan children of those who made
the supreme sacrifice for America arc
entitled to the same chance In life
which they would have received hod
not their fathers given their lives to
the nation.’ That’s pretty easy to be
lieve But believing Isn’t enough. We
want to do something besides Just be
llevlng Therefore- now watch us
closely. American Legion—we do here
and now gedunk $100 Into said endow
ment fund. Splash!”
Tennessee’s first contribution came
from Canada. It was a check for $50
from Phillip N. Libby of Lemiskaming.
Province of Quebec. Libby is a for
mer member of Hammond post, Kings
port. Tenn.
Many governors and former gov
ernors are interesting themselves ac
tively In the endowment movement in
their respective states. Among the
honorary chairmen chosen are: Gov.
Austin Peny, Tennessee; Gov. Henry
L. Fuqua, Louisiana; former Gov.
Thomas <’ McRae, Arkansas; Gov W.
W. Brandon, Alabama; Gov. Clifford
M. Walker, Georgia. Joint honorary
chairman with Chancellor David C.
Barrow. University of Georgia. Among
the active chairmen are: Gov. E. W.
Morgan, West Virginia; former Gov.
Thomas E. Kilby, Arkansas; former
Gov. Hugh M. Dorsey. Georgia.
Open Coffin to Take
Buddy’s Finger Prints
A coffin was opened recently et
Pueblo, Colo., Just as the grave yawned
to receive it. to get the linger prints of
a former service man to accompany his
application for adjusted compensation.
Friends of John McNlchol, of Durango,
Colo., were grouped about the grave
when an automobile drove up and a
group of American Legion men stepped
from it. They made known their re
quest. which was complied with.
During his last hours McNlchol’s
friends made out his application papers
for compensation. He was so weak
that he could only affix a scrawled
murk to the papers in the presence of
witnesses. At the last minute it was
discovered that his finger prints had not
been obtained and the posthumous fin
ger prints were taken.
To Bar Sectionalism
in Teaching History
At a recent conference of the na
tional executive committee of the
American Legion, the committee en
dorsed the movement for the publica
tion of a popular history of the United
States, which will be non-partisan and
non-sectarian and will have the back
ing of more than 300 history experts.
The editor is Charles F. Horne of
New York university, late of the A. E.
F. The purpose is to do away with
sectionalism in the teaching of history.
Legionnaires point out that today there
are hundreds of histories, and children
in different sections of the country are
being taught history colored by local
prejudice, the versions exactly contra
dicting each other.
For Narcotica Victima
Four Veterans’ Bureau hospitnls
where veterans of the World war ad
dicted to the use of narcotics will be
given treatment have been designated,
according to information received by
American Legion rehabilitation officers
at Washington. The hospitals are
United States Veterans' Bureau hos
pital No. 24, Palo Alto. Cal.: No. 78.
North Little Rock. Ark. ; No. SO, Sheri
dan. Wyo., and No. 100, Camp Custer,
Mich. These hospitals will make treat
ment available to all seeking it.
Will Seek Flag Lawa
A state law to require uniform use
of the American flag, when It is used
in decoration of public buildings, will
be fostered by the Amerlcun Legion In
the Minnesota legislature. The Legion
will also recommend that the Legion
flag code be taught in all schools.
Amias Tike
"If the wurst comes to the wurst,"
muttered the sausage-machine oper
ator. as he linked up the links, "dog
gone!"—American Legion Weekly.
• ■■H i i i-i i i i i i i i"i i i i i i i i i
-• Boy Carries Three
From Flaming House \
Conneaut, Ohio. Leroy ('run
dnII. nine, of East Conneaut, whs ;
• * hailed jir a hero. •1
’■ When his mother. Mrs, B. II y
Crandall. emne to the city, she .
left Leroy In charge of the home \
*! find of his sister. Viola, six. and >>
his twin brothers, Lloyd and
!’ Floyd, three.
•; Cpon reaching here, Mrs. (’ran
I! dall telephoned Leroy and was ■;
y told the children are "having lots !!
of fun.” Next Mrs. Crandall y
‘ * heard a scream. «• j
• • "The whole kitchen Is on fire." *;
*) came next as the receiver ..
•• dropped from Leroy’s hand. ] \ :
1! Hushing to her home In an nil ■<
•• totnohile, Mrs Crandall found
!! that Leroy bad carried the
*■ younger children to safety, pulled ..
.. down and trampled clothing ”
which caught fire behind a ..
kltcl:en sfo\e and w as throwing ] ‘
“ water on the blazing wood box
.. I was scared but I wanted to ”
] j help all I could ' the bo> said
YOUTH FLYING KITE
IS KILLED BY WIRE
Burned to Death When It
Crosses Electric Line.
Tampa, I I IN efforts f *» procure
n kite superior to th.it of any of his
playmates rost the life of Benjamin
Guy Little, eleven years old.
Benny appeared before his play
mates one morning with a kite which
tie told them was the "last word** in
kite making. To Ids kite, Benny had
attached n copper wire.
As Benny's kite mounted toward the
clouds about noon a strong puff of
wind carried the kite over some wires
The wire on Benny’s kite touched a
high-tension electric wire. One flash,
and Benny’s clothing was ablaze, tin*
grass around him was burning and
Benny’s mates were fleeing. Ilia body
was badly burned, lie was rushed to
a hospital, but efforts to save his life
were futile.
Dies of Starvation
as Father Seeks Work
New York. Flrmo Celiegrino, h
blacksmith out of work since Christ
mas, visited the Fifth street police
station recently on an unusual errand
He asked the desk sergeant if the city
would not provide free burial for
George, one of the Celiegrino twins,
three days old. George died at Belle
vue, where physicians said death was
due to the mother having been under
nourished.
Celiegrino was perplexed. It was
the other twin. Telio, who had been
111. The twins were born prematurely.
When Telio was ailing they took both
babies to the hospital. The father
went to inquire for Telio and was In
formed that he was still ailing and
that George bad died.
What makes the case still more dlfll
cult for Celiegrino Is that there Is an
other baby. Giuseppe, nine months old,
at home and nothing in the cupboard.
Mrs. Goorgianu tVllegrlno, the mother.
Is in bed. suffering from lack of food
and grief over the death of little
George.
Meanwhile there Is the burial to at
tend to. Telio ma.v die any moment
Giuseppe hasn’t any food. Celiegrino
is a willing worker, and If there is a
Job available says he would appreciate
the opportunity to earn enough for
those surviving and to bury George.
Mad Tiger Kills Trainer;
Killed in Audience Leap
Manila.- -(.'rushing through the steel
bars that separated It from the girl
performer who was putting the animal
through its tricks, a circus tiger at a
Manila carnival show Instantly killed
the young woman.
A quick minded Filipino detective In
the audience shot and killed the blood
maddened Jungle beast. Just ns It was
leaping from the stage on which It had
ended the girl's life Into the midst of
the crowded seats encircling the ring
side.
So quickly did the killing occur that
circus employees had no opportunity
to come to the girl's rescue.
The shot felled the tiger as it
hurtled through the air toward the
audience and quelled the panic which
had started.
Grabs Rope in Midair
After Fall Out of Window
I.iiwlon. Okia.—B. K. Moore, 11 rnr
penter working on the new hospital
building at Fort Sill, Okla., qualified
as a movie stunt performer. While he
was working on the second story of the
building he lost his balance and fell
backward out of a window. As he fell
he grasped a rope which ran through
a pulley at the top of the building. The
other end of the rope struck him in
the face as he descended. He was
also successful In grabbing the loose
rope, retarding bis rapid descent, stop
ping Just as bis feet reached the
ground. Aside from minor Injuries to
bis face he was unhurt.
Lost With Barge
Boston. -Captain Mosher of Provi
dence. It. I., Ids sixteen year-old daugh
ter. and a crew of three men were lost
when the coal barge Janies M. Hudson.
Norfolk for Boston, foundered off Bos
ton Light recently.
Cow Tottet Man
I Columbia. Mo.-—While in a playful
mood, n cow owned by Fred Broaddus
; nosed her head under the spring seat
of bis wagon, pitching him to the
ground and breaking his neck. He
lived but a few hours.
Horae Kicks Boy
Kingsley, Iowa. — Chester Little,
three, was near death here after be
ing kicked in the head by one of bis
father's horses. The animal became
frightened at a passing road-dragging
machine.
Hat Fish Jam
West Swnnzev. N. H. The Home
stead woolen mills here were com
pelled to shut down recently because
the water at a gate leading to the wa
ter wheel was shut oft by a Jam of
fish More than a ton of fbh. suckers
weighing from one to two and one-half
pounds, were raked out.
Bobbed hair Is shown on a waft
painting in an English parish church
which was built In 1380. The picture
is reputed to be as old aa the church
Slur. WUMtN
ATTENTION!
Read this Remarkable Testi
mony Regarding Results from
Taking Lydia E. Pinkham s
Vegetable Compound
Norfolk, Virginia.— If ym* only
knew how many women and girls nave
taken your medicine
by hearing my testi
mony, it would seem
wonderful to you.
Every day and every
chance I have I au
viae some one to try
it It was in June,
1904, when I had
given up to never get
well, that I wrote
to vou. My husband
went to tho drug
. - store and brought
the Vegetable Compound home to me.
in a few days I began to improve and 1
have often taken it since. 1 am now
passing through the Change of Life and
■till stick by it and am enjoying won
derful health. When I first started with
your medicines I was a mere Hhrniow.
My health seemed to bo gone. Ilw
last doctor I had said he would give me
no more local treatment* unless I went
to the Hospital and was operated on.
That was when I gave tho doctors up.
Now I am a healthy robust woman. I
wish I could tell the world what a won
derful medicine Lydia E. I*inkham s
Vegetable Compound ia. I will be only
too glad to answer letters from any
where. I wish all sick women would
take It’’-Mrs. 3. A. JONE3.817 Collej
Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia.
on't take chaocM of /out homes or males
ntiw laid up with bUtemper, Influrni*.
Ink Eyo, Larrnf Ittw. IIaatw, Cook ha or
uldfc tilro "RTOUN'S” to N'lhthr. alck
rul tha well one*. The
it 80 jream. Citre “KPOfTCft" for Do*r IM»
tmper. SO rente and $1.20 at dru* storm.
POUN MEDICAL CO. OOSIIEN. IND.
Which Class
Are You In?
Doctors know that eight
out of ten people are
•uffering from Anemia—blood
starvation. And the first result
of Anemia is lack of energy
lessening vitality.
The test above will show you
If you are one of the eight. Press
the thumbnail firmly . . . un
less the blood comes rushing
back rich and red, it indicate*
Anemia.
Gude’s Pepto-Mangan has
been restoring and rebuilding
the health of run down bodies
for thirty two years. Easily as
similated by the blood, it sup
plies the cells with the iron arid
manganese they lack.
Thousands of physicians pre
scribe it. In liquid or tablet form
st your druggist.
Gude’s
Pepto-Mangan
Tonic and Blood Enricher
Means of Approach
"Do you know how to approach a
girl with it past?" "No, how?" "With
a present."—Wuco Daisy Chain.
Only man who really "didn’t rare
what people say” was Robinson (.Yu
Get Back Your Health!
Are you dragging around day after
day with a dull backache? Are you
tired and lame mornings—subject to
headaches, dizzy spells and sharp, stab
bing pains? Tnen there’s surely some
thing wrong. Probably it's kidney
weakness! wait for more serious
kidney trouble. Get back your health
and keep it. For quick relief get
Doan'8 Pills, a stimulant diuretic to
the kidneys. They have helped thou
sands and should help you. Ask your
neighbor!
A North Carolina Case
H. C. Mabes, Box
170, Spray, N. C.
says: “I suffered
from an attack of
backache. caused
by the disordered
condition of my
kidneys. I was
much distressed by
the shnrp pains
through my back. 1
had headaches, too,
and my kidneys
didn't act right at
all. being sluggish. I used Doan's
IMlls nnd a couple boxes cured me
of the attack.”
DOAN’S^
STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS
Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chcm., Buffalo, N. Y.
Liniment That Soaks in
Best for Animals
AN IRRITATING, burning ~
liniment uuuld hove aggra
vated this case. Mustang /.mi
; ment brought prompt relief
L because its omsicing healing
powers are quickly absorbed by
the skin. J
To do good, a liniment must work
Into the blood. This Is especially Im
portant In overcoming sprains and
aches In animals.
Make this Blmplo test with any num
ber of different liniments and decide for
yourself the one that is most effective:
Rub the liniment Into your palms.
Then wash thoroughly. A few hours
later you will notice the odor of Mus
tang Liniment In the urinary secretions
—proving that tt has been absorbed
into the blood. What other liniment
passes this test? Now you know why
Mustang Liniment Is spoken of so
highly everywhere.
25c—50c—$1.00 at drug & general stores.
MUSTANG Liniment
KEEP YOUR SCALP
Clean and Healthy
WITH CUTICURA