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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE "8—PHE BISMARCK TRIBUN dntered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, | Se D., as Second Class Matter, | 533 sORGH D. MANN - + Editor i Foreign Representatives LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT} Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH W YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. YOMEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED | PRESS Fi | a. The Associated Press is exclusive- x, ly entitled to the use or republi- cation of all news dispatches cre-; dited to it-or not otherwise credit-| eq in. this paper and also the local) news published herein. | All rights of republication special dispatches herein are also served. of! \) MEMBER, AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION NIPTION RATE: IN ‘ADVANCE per year... year (in E PAYABLE | APER. (Established 1873) <> WN J. FRAZIER: HAS COME | BACK i recalling him Jast October, | LY Afte’ 7 heaping abuse uopn him as reereant | to his duty and resorting to every | | “mob hypnotism {numbered 50, and cries of “Lynch | ‘hunting, hypnotic state. | eults and similar phenomena, kind of political billingsgate, the In-} dependent Voters’ Association — has} nominated Former Governor Lynn eum J, Frazicr, United Stites senator up-; © that transplanting of glands to stave | the emotional, chiefly forms of play. off old age was atterapted 3000 or If we ascended from the , monkeys, s‘ago by skilled Egyptian |we haven't ascended far. d, more y doctors. A lot of time has pi but practically nothing has been a complished EDITORIAL REVIEW | eae | MOB HYPNOTLSM | Under the influence of that pecu- form of psychology known as it takes the aver- age person about 30 seconds to throw off the mask of civilization and revert to the lowest ‘form of savagery. The other day in Cleveland, an auto driver speeding 50 miles an hour through congested streets was pur- sued by motorcycle police. Other | auto drivers joined in the chase, like | small boys chasing the fire engine. By the time the reckless driver was arrested on a charge of driving while intoxicated, the pursuing autos | Comments reproduced in_ this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They d here in order that may have both sid t issues which are being digeussed in the press of the d li ALSO WE DISAGREE WITH MR. WEEKS Having vindicated, we hope, the right of commencement. speakers to go as far as they like in shocking the young gentlemen (and ladies) of the graduating class in the case of Sceretary Weeks and the direct pri- mary, we hasten to add that our ex- perience and the secretary’s don’t j qnite jibe. ‘ The direct primary, we agree, pro- duces some undesirable results. But him!” were ringing forth. There might really have been a lynching, if the chase had been long- cr and no cops were present, A mob | transforms quickly into a blood~|porations and the machine used to | dictate every nomination in the con- | vention, and the outcome wasn’t all The atrocities of the recent mine| that it might have been from the re in Illinois were comaaitted | standpoint of the people. would! Also we recall the absolute while | possibility in the days of booze, of | making the saloon. men come within |a thousand miles of obeying “the law. Now that they all favor wines and beer, we can’t see any particu- lar change in their disposition, and we aren't going to favor taking chance with them. This is a land of free speech, es- pecially at commencement. time, and we wouldn't interfere a bit in the ;world with the joy of Sceretary | Weeks. But having fought, bled and | died to get the laws he is denoun- mi hy men who probably never think of committing murder alone, The mob spirit hypnotized them. These fits of mob or social insani- ty happen ina flash by chance. They also come in wayes—epidemics, of dancing, freak fashions, madimen’s | Most of us are reasonably sine— | when alone. | But whenever human ‘beings con-| gate in large groups, something y always happens or is sta-ted. When people swarm together, a we recall the days when the cor-| im-| | a the Republican ballot together; with Governor R. A. Nestos, who defeated him at the recall upon a; so-called “reform platform.” i North Dakota probably stands out’ today as a most remarkable political | < enigma, Senator Porter J. MeCumber, | chairman of the senate finance com-) mittee, a member of thé senate for twenty-four years will retire next, j March to make way for the leader, of the Nonpartisan League who while’ : reviled and spurned last October be-! + comes now a fit running mate for, " R.A. Nestos by virtue of the | strength given him by the bitter en- ders in the I. V. A. ranks, | {Undoubtedly the I, V.| A. will not! support Nestos’ league running mate, but will switch their support to J.’ F. T. O'Connor in accordance with a well laid plan made possible by the neglect of the McCumber man-| agement, a most: bungling organiza- | tion, to force an’ understanding at! Jamestown. O'Connor has. been the! , I. V. A. organization candidate ‘from! the first and whether Theodore Nel- son can cleet a Republican governor i and put over a Democratic senator) as part of the same. political, deal! : will be one of the intcresting: poli- = tical developments of the November, campaign. mt It would seem the impossible how- The nomination of Nestos and] on ier would under ordinary cir- ces insure their election and! ss will in this instance, al- though the defeat of McCumber is bound to bring bitterness and poli-! tical reprisals... oo It would be probably unfair to charge I. V. A. duplicity to Gov.! =Nestos whose vote is a splendid en- dersement of his administration. North Dakota evidently \has faith! that he will, work out the problems in a safe and sane ’way and every- one interested in the upbuilding of the state regardless of the rancor “that may result from the treatment of Senator McCumber should wheel! into line and attempt to end the bit- ter political warfare that is militat-| ging against the best interests of the, ing, we point with a degrée-of -sat-] faction to the fact that anybody | who undertakes’ ‘their "tepell ‘ha Via | job on-his hands.—Kahsas City''Star.! mysterious psychic current is gen- erated and, by hypnotism, leads. them to do queer things. Thus you see quict, respectable people make bie fools of themselves in cabarets. Al, CHALLEN dignified person at a dance some-| E TO SENATOR JIM Sometimes one distinguished sena- times catches the fever and begins! to. will challenge another distin. cutting up like a lunatic. Jokers | pyished -sofator to | utilize this principle to get men ata) ong say ite t tA) and say it! banquet to wear absurd tissue-naper | dunce hats, And the wearers seem | to enjoy it, though wear the hats for $100 except under “the spel? of mob hypnosis. ing (sged for} slandert-that: it had, failedi'to tell the truth about the! | tariff because. of the pressure of the; |New York department store! adver- | tisers, has now challenged Senator, |Jim to repeat his statement outside ‘the senate chamber. “If he will,” |says the Times, “we shall make The tendency that people have, of making asses of themselves . when they get together in large groups, may exjflain why we do so many fool things when we get together in the form of government. 5 |reply to which he will be compelled As voters. we back community or! to pay attention.” national projects based on principles! The gallant Senator Jim should that none of us would think of coun-/ not miss this unsurpassed opportuni: | tenancing in our private lives. ty for publicity. The Times will give Mob hypnotism is what makes a) him the benefit of its large circula-' man, who is a genius of economy. and! tion very gladly if he will only “come_ practicalness in private life, “fall outside .and Say it.’ Moreover, a! for” visionary and impracticable pro-' showdown with. the facts as to the jects whert serving in, public office./ alleged ¢ontrol by department stores | “come outside | (Copyright, 1922, by NEA Service.) Is it m human gland: Laws are proposed at the next:s sions of two state of Illinois and human gland transplantation. | Physicinns and surgeons all! over | the country are beseiged by men and women secking the fourtain of 4 In spite of Dr. Victor D. Lespinasse’s | denial that Harold McCormi cago millionaire, underwent, operation, hé is the subjec inquiries. y © wrong to buy, and sell jrepu ple THEY DIFFER ABOUT GLAND OPERATIONS biologist snd’ professor of zoology, ‘Tufts College, Boston: “Gland transplantation is a subject that should be left in the hands of ble physi However, I sce nothing unethical or objectionable in buying and selling, human glands. ‘ircumstanees are different in indi- vidual As I understand it, the experiment ‘has been unsuccessful ‘un- der certain, conditions; the tions should govern all such t ions.” ‘ Andre, Triddm, noted psyeho-an Gland cages are beinge reeiflda an a uty, ihe ines oe aidyyon under) of newspapers that criticize the| discussed, ‘notably tha¥: in whfeh al stand why, the Jargegirthe popula-| pending tariff bill would clear the animal gland was grafted oW-frvin tion grows, the worse’ the. govern-! air and make McCumber, Watson’ & Bacon of Atlantic Ci ise ment becomes,‘ China, for instance. | Co, look like a fire and water sale— ha lhe s ——_—. 7 Springfield Republican. ‘ HOOKWORM | * Can hookworm, the “laziness dis-/ INDUSTRIAL WAR IN CHICAGO ease,” be cured by carbon tetra-| That industrial war ‘is not too chloride? It seems so, according strong a‘term to apply to the strife evidence from Ceylon and the Fiji)in Chicago is evidenced by the fact Islands, where thousands of hook-|that through an aggressive. and! worm cases have ,been treated. with | highly financed .citizenst committee, success in nearly all eases. |ereated by the Association of Com-, Research work along this line was | merce, a: tonsiderable portion of the{ started “by the discoveries of an) army of building journeymen | in! American—Dr. Maurice C. Hall, of| Chicago are being told that their the Department of Agriculture. | trades, hitherto unionized, can never Part of the honor goes to a con-/again-be carried on as union trades demned criminal ‘in the Bogambra/ in Chicago. ‘The martial character of prison at Kandy, Ceylon, who was) the situation is also evidenced by the first volunteer as,a subject'for the fact that the country is being experiments. A post-mortem after| combed by that committee to recruit his execution showed that the hook-| men to come to Chicago to take the worm cure in his case was complete.| places of those journeymen, by the Carbon tetrachloride is very cheap. | fact that bombing of certain jobs ap- If it proves to be a real cure, Hall’s| pears to have occurred, by charges The Tribune, through, today presents: opinion phase of human gland barteaing giv: en by physicians, clergyman, woman publicist, biologist, wonfin novelist, and psycho-analyst. Gene ‘Stratton Porter, hovelist and illustiftei? loft City, Ind.:! : “Primarily if seems that no Jada being should be: mutilated: Headingt surgeons say a gland transplantation opération, doing no damage to giver and a preat .beneft eto receiver iffy every way, is purely a personal mate ter. If without dinger-auman can re! ceive fora gland the pridelef ah and -educatioa for, his family, that is his affair. Io law will stop, two men so agreed. If agreed updiy,: the buy’ ing and selling of human glands is all right. Let the giver be pifid the \ remembered Estate. [Millions of people have hookworm. discovery will be of infinite value.| that the recent murder of two po-| _,. The rank and file: of voters are’ “through with the league as such, : however they may cling to state = ownership as a matter of _po- litical principle: They _ believe: 3 that vernor Nestos will conduct the affairs of state efficiently and give the mill and elevator a fair trial. eating and the second floor for ‘a! Terrorist Fire,” While The Tribune is opposed to, } the operation of state’ enterprises and believes it only a question of time when the issue will be fought out squarely for or against social-| ism, the voters have decreed to! make the investment: by way of ex-| periment and nothing remains now, but to carry out their will-as ex-| } pressed so emphatically at the polls Wednesday. Many regret exceedingly that the state is to lose, the services of so excellent a statesman as Senator MeCumber. The McCumber machine : stood behind Nestos as the vote; *clearly discloses, but the I. V. A./ henchmen were obdurate in their op-| position and McCumber is retired} and North Dakota loses a most com-| y»manding position in the councils of * the nation. But such is the way of polities. Lynn J, Vrazier has staged a remark- able come-back, thanks to the I. V.A.| machine. While Nestos 1S | nominated upon a platform that op-; , posed everything that Frazier stands| * for except the farmers program, the| chief spokesman of the regime re-| pudiated last October is given the] Republican senatorial nomination. In any event friends of Frazier, «will say that he is vindicated while| the supporters of Nestos will with equal vehemence see in his endorse- ment a repudiation of the league.! The primary certainly a most wonderful institution and moves in} . 4 mysterious way its wonders to 3 perform, What will be the next political miragle? GLANDS + A “secret operation” is performed son Harold F. McCormick by Dr. Les- pinassee, the lean of gland trans- planters. The operation excites public curi- posity, for gland transplanting is an effort to prolong youth. That is *something we all yearn for. Lurk- ing in the back of our brains is te hope that gland transplanting will! prove successful so we can try it licemen was due to recalcitrant la-, Wag an by.-wholesale raids upon' oa abor headquarters and arrests of ‘ _ CRAMPED {labor officials. The tension is also! London finds its smallest house,|indieated by the irresponsible and opposite Kensington Palace Gar¢ens. partisan activities of the press. For Its street frontage is only six feet./example, the Tribune, in « two-inch The owner uses the ground floor for headline across the front page, an. a shop, the cellar for cooking and| nounced one morning a “$230,000 and followed it by a colored column of stupidly or misdirected statements Others act like it. | bedroom and living room. | highly Is this the sort of domicile that | false civilized congestion is heading the | charging/the fire to labor, The next majority of us toward? Steadily | day another paper disclosed the fact mounting land values imprison us in that lapparently_ the. fire. resulted smaller and smaller metropolitan | from ‘bonfires started, by children cells, Yet it is only a few genera- Constant press rajteratiin appears al- tions since nearly every; one could | 8°. of the alleged insttaction fyom the affordia'large yacd, chief of police to patrolmen to™shoot Before the cells get motheringly |t0 kill” in caso ‘suspects fail to halt small, the airplane may break up the | ".demand.—Gcorge E. Tooker in the cities. | New Republic, Mah | ey COUNTRY o> tg The country furnishes the most|| POET'S CORNER | successes says Gary, the steel king. | ¢ et bred Yo, ted rh } BUY AT HOME! ace ith your home town merchant ; e's paying his taxes, too, but it should be’ Remember the ti arr Uneih youre Remember the tim He “advises every young man to get his start in the country,” which! Trade w “gives him a better chance.” 5 I It is good advice, directed at parents. leaves home, its environment is selected for it. Forgetting this, in h the mad seramble for wealth, 18 ri, teugers could tell quit ; His ledgers could tell qui story; parents’ greatest sin. \ e hi a . ‘A youth spent in the country is a", Ue has been a good friend to you. Then why should you send, legacy. In the city, it often is curse and a ball-and-chain that ne-| When you're flush, my friend, Wee sGant be ehakan Ore | For a gown to Kalamazoo? | —Huldah Lue! The price of wives has increased xl SPEND LESS THAN YOU EARN. much in Zuzuland, that wives are, In the school room of life being bought on the installment! ” On the black board I’d write plan, , |An large letters this sentence so trite This interesting economic report is, For the scholars to learn beaut to America by Olaf Linck,! Wheresoever th turn; anish explorer, lubearn' tore ittle le ae plore at se Migiscaek| Lear to spend little less than you standing must maintain at least) 9“ eight wives, The price of a wife is| To the young men and women two oxen down and an ox a year—| As they're leaving the -home, ae buying books on the installment! Anxious waiting the wide world ty an, The Zulu system will shock the |moral standards of many. Zulus, i however, inflict the death penalty for jflirting with a married woman. On| the average, maybe Zulu morals! stack up close to the white man’s. | For the world is half filled are | With the misfits who've spent ie, every once in a {© roam, | I would say as they turn: For your welfare I yearn, Therefore spend little less thax you earn! s an Jack DempEMPSEY icses ie EVCTY nickel and dollar and cents trainer, Teddy Hayes, This creates | TOF ephemeral pleasures and tin- more talk among Americans than yenceeamite p camet ee the fall of an European cabinet, | 4nd they mournfully rue and this les- ¥ ourselves. & Following the work of men like Lespinasse, we marvel at the won- ders of modern surgery. But do not expect too much. Dr. James H. Breasted, of University of Chicago, discovers in old manuscripts son they've spurne¢ Better spend little earned! —Huldah Lucile Winsted. The incident is believed to hold political dynamite, in the sporting world. More rumors start, of a split | between Dempsey and Kearns, his manager, | Our problems are mostly intellec-| tual, but attention usually centers on | calm.ng and soothing the nerves. i s than you've When he has cheerfully carried you ! full price of the’ benefits accruing to the receiver. Fifty thousand .dollars is not too much.” The Rev. Dr. Mark ‘A, Matthews, former moderator, general assembly, Presterian church and pastor, Fi Presbyterian church, Seattle, Wa “No man has a legal, and certainly not a moral, right to sell his body or any part of it. Whether there arc statutes prohibiting such sale or not, it is wrong from every fundamentel principle of law. No one would at- tempt to sclf his body or any part of it unless he had fallen lower than the, beasts of the field and were viler than’| the vile. No one, would attempt to buy a human, body or any part of it ‘unl e were devoid of all moral aid and leg he were devoid of all moral and legal respectability. Both are contempti- ble, vulgar, disgusting and unworthy of the respect ‘of all virtue-loving Ye yple, The whole sugsestion poxal, illegal, repulsive and offer sive.” | Dr. Thomas W. Edgar, physician and surgeon, pioneer in study of glands, Who performed the operation in the famous Irving Bacon glandula, case: « “Gland transplantation is no long. er an experiment, but 4 reality: It is not at all immoral. It is within the law to sell one greative gland, but ef course only the rich can reap the benefits of such barter. It would be better if laws were passed, as I have been advocating for two years. viding for a ‘central hospital where the glands, and also. the bones and tissues, ‘of healthy young persons killed in accidents might be refrig- crated and used for transplantation for the bMefit. of the human race.” Mrs. Mary Wade Dennett, presi- dent of the Voluntary Tarenthood Lengue: Regarding the buying and selling, of human glands, L can speak onl from the humanist point of The question of gland transpls jis so new that final wisdom possible. geientists menting, but from pri my instinct is motgll ing the sale of a vial part of the human body. It different with blood tr: siona because ‘the body ‘constant new blood and the damage is a’ gland is removed surgi does not make new gland | be guided b; ¢ nt knowledge against allow- tect unwis \ they are willing to. s Amethysts have the reputation of glands.” Professor Herbert Vincent .)Neal, and gthor: “Why should gland transplantation Kbe considered wrong? Buying and selling hunian glands js, not morally ned for the humen race by making it egally possible to refrigerate healthy glands of persons meeting’ violent deaths and making them: avait: ble for transplantation. It should be that such’\aiigland jis beneficial riot only in a creative way but /means the régcticration of the whole body and of the intellect.” THE ELTINGE. Obtaining equine stars’ that are camera-wise and will act naturally is a difficult task, Benjamin B. Hamp- ton'found twé extraordinary ones for “When Romance Rides,” founded up- on Zane Grey’s widely read western novel “Wildfire,” released ‘by Gold- wyn, which comes to the Eltinge the ater, Friday and Saturday. “Tt. required many weeks of, the most: painstaking work \to train’ thy horses,” s. Mr. Hampton. “Every seene in which the h appear represents days of worry and sweat- ing on. the part of the entire: pie- ture organization” ; “Of course the animls were afraid of the glare of the Klieg lights,” wrong if it helps, somehody, though | Ly believe greater boncfits ‘might. be! pat THE MOVIES | ; MRS. GENE STRATTON PORTER, THE, FAMOUS NOVELIST (ON LEFT), BELIEVES IT) PROPER TO A fhe New York Times, RUyY AND SELL. HUMAN GLANDS UNDER CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES; MRS. MARY WADE’ DENNETT, noting. eae Jim, Watson's charge presiDENT OF THE VOLUNTARY PARENTHOOD LEAGUE (RIGHT), ‘OPPOSES SO DOING. they wouldn't | O” the Bloor of the wenate—where @ ARE HAROLD F. MeCORMICK (LEVF) AND IRVING BACON rate y can say anything: without GLAND TRANSPLANTATION SPECIALISTS.‘ BELOW , WHO -#IGURED “IN OPERATIONS BY men he said Mr. Hampton. . “They shied, backed away and’ were in a high state of nervous excitement because of the lights alone. The click of the camera added to this*fceling of ner- vousness, Many of the scenes were gone thyough in rehearsal to the sat- isfaction of everybody concerned, but just us soon ag the cameras began to click the horses forgot directors .and trainers and watched the lens like an extra doing his steps before the camera.” THE CAPITOL William Fox, who, has produced i mpres= on: the sereen with sin several of Zane Grey’s stit- ring. stories of ‘western life and ad- |venture—notably “Riders of the Purple Sage” and “The Rainbow Trail” with William Farnum— has You don’t have to go in swimming to have a shark pull your leg. 3 home-if he is staying away. Health hint: s that are not stopped often live five years. Cunean 4 Most saxophone players have an ill wind that blows no good. Young, millionaire who says he ‘leads a dog’s life may mean lap dog. Many a wife wonders if hubby is ata summer. resort catching | speckled beauties or freckled beau- ties. These Mt. Everest climbers ought to try some “fivver glands. By 1950, all a man will have to do to disguise himself as a woman will 'be to get a shave, We would hate to be Babe Ruth and have people laugh at us because we didn’t keep on being famous. saver. It will go 40,000 miles on one can of grease, : Wonder what the man who names race horses thinks about. them after he gets sober again? . You seldom see a veil these days. When they don’t want to be recog- nized they wear long skirts. Our idea of being out of work is having a job figuring what is made by cussing the weather. The gyroscope stops the rolling of ships. Nothing seems to stop the | rolling of cigarets. “Taft Sits on London Bench”— headline. Maybe the chairs were too weak looking. Everything goes. comes to him who} | Kansas City man killed a doctor who said he needed an operation; but it is a bad habit. There is so much killing we aro getting to be shock absorbers. Every now and then you see a! ;man. who. could get more miles out of his car than in it. Fe | Tf. money: is a curse there is ‘a| cussing. shortage. filmed another of this famous au- thor’s,stories. “The Last Trail,” di- "roeted’ By! the well-known; Emmett J. Flynn, will be presented as a special production: at; the Capitol theater, opening ‘on Monday. ‘The leading male role is assumed by the stalwart Maurice Flynn, recently made a star, while thé dainty Eva Novak has the femine lead ,and the statuesque Rosemary Theby gppeats in a promi- nent part. The story of “The Last Trail” is built upon theoperations of a lone bandit known as the “Night Hawk,” and contains intensely dramtic situ- ations, thteaded by a love romance untsual in its development. The great climax at the close of the story involves the criminal breaking of a big dam on the mountain and the consequent flooding and destruction of a village far below. The making of these sereens—for which beth vil- lage and conerete dam were con- structed—is said to have been a task involving large expenditure of time, labor and money. : “The Last Trail” will be here for two days. i ON ALC THE OF PLENTY — MY YOUNS FRIEND, WHAT KIND OCF A HORN Do You CA THAT YOU'RE PRACTICING THAT'S A CoRNET. were, T CALC IT THE HORN F A GREAT i 1 laid me down and slept; 1/ awaked; for the Lord sustained me, I will not be afraid of ten thou. sand people—Psalm 3:5-6, Sleep, that knits up the ravelled sleeve of care, The death of each day’s life, sore! labor's bath, | Balm of hurt, minds, great nature’s _ Second course, Chief nourisher in life’s feast. —Shakespeare, —— o | TODAY’S WORD | gsi niece hlty © Today's word is RAPPORT. 'S pronounced—ra-port, wi accent on the second allabree ms Tt mean: s—an intimate or harmoni- ous relation; ’ an accord; -a mutual and especially a private understand- ing. When .used in reference to the hynoptic state it means a menta. condition in which the subject is es- ally susceptible to the influence |of a particular person or particular persons. It was borrowed into English from the French, “rapporter,” meaning “to bring back, to refer,” but comes orig- inally from the Latin, “reportare,” a combination of the prefix “re,” mean- ing “back,” especially “back to an original or former state,’ and “por- tare,” meaning “to bear or bring”— thus, “to bring back.” 3 It's used like this—“A close rap- port exists between the present rul- ers of Russia and ultra-radicals in other parts of the world,” or “these scattered clements are in rapport,’ or, to follow the French style more strictly, ‘ten rapport.” CORNS Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little “Freczone” on an aching corn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then eshortly you lift it right off with fingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, suf- \ficient to remove every hard corn, saft corn, or corn and the. calluses, or irritation, A man can be happy without aj A porch swing is a great moncy | locked up. | Jack Frost had no more right on the Lift Off with Fingers: between the toes, without soreness | UFFERERS from chronic indigestion will find quick relief from a few doses of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin: [I It gives you artificially the pepsin nature may have de- rived you of and the lack of which causes dyspepsia. You will find it much more effective than chewing tablets and flavored candies, DR. CALDWELL’S SYRUP PEPSIN THE FAMILY LAXATIVE Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin con- tains ingredients eftective in dyspep- sia and constipation. It is. a combin- ation'of Egyptian’ Senna and other simple laxative herbs with pepsin. ‘The formula is on the package. It has been successfully used for 30 years. Try it! Onebottle will proveits worth. HALF-OUNCE BOTTLE FREE Few escape constipation, so even if you do not require a laxative at'this moment let me send you a’ Half-Ounce Trial Bottle of my ] Soup Pepsin FREE, OF CHARGE so that | you will it handy when needed. Simply ‘send your name and adress to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 514 Washington St., Monticelio, UL. Write metoday. By Olive Barton Roberts Nobody ever. heard | shooting-star and rode away. | But Mr. Peerabut, the-Moon, is still on the job. decided the old way was the best way, to change the Moon a little | bit each night, and in that way every | person in the world was sure to be | pleased at least part of the time. ple who sent them, marked | opened.” do, but one can’t be driven to his | way—no matter what happens. | After that was settled, | Sprinkle-Blow, _ the | Gust Land, where he was and things. : Also he’d have “to sec to it that all | the Nuisance. Fairies were securely It was late spring and earth than a Christmas-tree at fireworks-show. The dream-fairies and the chim- ‘a they had nobody to steal the nice little dreams they made. Wiigk and Blind hugged each other and did a little dance. They sang a song, too! i “Oh, happy young fairics are we! We're happy as happy can be! We slide down moon-beams, With such wonderful dreams, That the children all love to picees, it seems, And with us to Dreamland they flec.” us * Nancy and Nick said goodby to || Mr, -Pecrabout, who promised ‘to let “thert now if he necdet! them again, then ‘they slid down ‘a moon-beam, too. - They were ready for ‘another ad- venture, {To Be Continued) AMERICAN WOMEN ' ARE CARELESS Women are too apt to overestimate their strength and overtax it. When feeling well they take unnecessary chances, which inthe long run cause much pain. and trouble. Wet fect, exposure to cold, lifting heavy bur- dens and overwork will often devel of troubles which cause no end of sut- fering. Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the unfailing remedy in such cases. Thousands of American women will testify to this fact who have regained health and strength by its use. If you are suffering it will pay you to give it a fair trial—Adv. there’s dandruff in my hair, Forl can feel it itching How much longer are you going to suffer from dandruff —and endure’ the agony of itehing scalp? Use Youth Craft and get rid of these two scourges — pleasantly, quickly and per- manently. Start right —to remove «the scale of dandruff—Youth Craft is a proved remedy pos- itively guaranteed to remove dandruff and relieve itching scalp or your money back. Keep away from prepara- tions full of alcohol, coloring matter—oils and grease. Al- cohol burns your scalp and dries out the natural oils— grease and coloring only gum up your hair and streak it. The first treatment with Youth Craft will clean the dandruft our— used regularly it will keep your scalp clean and healthy. Ask for It—Insist On ui Craft Besitivaly removes Dandruff. Relieves ieching Scalp or Your PESTO Ee i ‘FRIDAY,’ JUNE 80, 1922 ~ Some dull pcople wear smart clothes. > = y y ‘ N “Book Salesman Robs ° Cellar’— ADVENTURE Ok | ‘headline. A real dry agent. THE TWINS | > > of Comct- Legs. again after he hopped on his the Man-in- He He.told the Twins to gather up all the complaining letters from the | wood-folk and water-folk and mead- | ow-folk and return them to the peo- “un- It. wasn’t exactly a polite thing to wit’s ends by a lot «of complaining people who are never satisfied any- Mr, Weatherman, | said he’d be going home to Bluster- sadly needed ‘to attend to his rain-barrels 4 ney-fairies had a fine time of it, for with Comet-Legs out of the road, Copyright, 1922, NEA Service) ‘ t -