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s REGULATIONS FOR brain ks like a with three walks— Many tines have the rule ulations been come: ed und herewith are the out the h with be raised or lowered by ical appliance. at night enemiy. | out active brain must e pure blood, not oned with products digestion—or liver kidney laziness. Sale of Any Medicine in the Warld here. In boxes, 10c., 25c. Th to to trail Th low Nag bres Oy = ) and T A THEORY s a fact that the use of hol even in moderate s as taken in tonics is habit-forming in effect. oTT’S SCU LSION basily assimilated tonic- ent supplies the body with elements that contribute to strength. Free from alcohol or any other harmful element,. Scott’s builds ctrengt [\ &y nourishment. $oott & Bowne, BloomSud, N. n Whe hoist w it walk at at W W W blue the the W he nai w ropes Hope /n Amerrc TRAIN OF TANK CARS 18 OKLAHOMA TWO THIRDS OF THE WORLD'S Let No Indighfi& Bie‘Heaped Upon sons a | never be used as a whole, or part of ! ment. nding until it parade, chould always be flung to the should be placed upon the flag except | DISPLAYING FLAG : National Golors and re il National i there 1 the frequently resarding 1ed, but quest that they be reprint- ent publi sar rules. as the national arters of of Veterans : ¢ flag should be raised at lowered at suns 1t should @ briskly but retired slowly and dignity. The flag should never Ny mechan- | not be left fire of an ! sunrise | he uld undey 1t st unless e flag should never be allowed | nuch the ground, or permitted to in the duat, or on the floor. ¢ flag should Hever be placed be- on sitting. The flag should . Charle the worl Dempecy be ow in A 1ould never with a gavel or other instru-, When used as a badge, the ! should bec worn over the lu(l[ stume. The flag a in parac . other i diemorial Day the flag should | place of isplayed at half-mast until noon. ! carried at the k from noon untij sun- j precedc W ; is displayed at half- raised to the peak and | Jowercd one breath of the lowering the flag it is to the top and then rctired. hen the flag is passing on pi 1 review, the spectator should, if ing. halt: if sitting, rise and stand tention: men and boys uncover. hen the “Star Spangled Banner™ ved or sung same siz i1 The a whit m b Stripes When ade | [l HE be allow hen the flag the rem it should never be furle When flag sho staff. T flat draped. i acros { displaye running { Gl hen used as an altar coverir i field should be at the presiding officer, aund bhidle 2 ‘hen placed over a bier or casket, union, blue field, should be at the d When can b d on 1 trade advertisement can bhc pl nor can it Le used a it the unic is “carried | per corr it ‘hen the National fla PETROLEUM CUMES FROM AMERICA 8y FRANCIS H. SISSON, /ice President Guarantv Trust Com-| pany of New York. LI survey ip preceding arti- cles of the present resources nnd producivg power of the prineipal European Allies fail 1o tnpr v re-establis O with iheir ability scotute life Iu 1ts Lroadest vutlines Uie e ecgnowic 1ask of reconstruction is that of utilizing effectively he cap of peoples of tiese countries to produce marketable comnunlities One of the chiel problems confront- 10 1dusLrtes grons out of shortage of s of mauufacture and the buyi of U Vhien exchange s eoustitnte handicap e same purchases of uirerials ded o round out the industria Blant by construcasiu i sowe cases aud repairs iu othery We have noted thag in near countries there i~ preun sote < A Lrue of all the nueh duced dependence u aulside sources for food supplbies. Law uwidterials will witimately be provided w greater \ul- wine (row domiestic sour: At pre: ent. luwever. Bu st 0ok Lo the outside largely fur ials aud fur warkets for i1s wanufactur 11 1s furtuuate tiat there is prow. of 3 Jdevelopwent iu the relatively uv- wceupied regions of the 4 which may be expected Lo dlay an linportaot 't o further pr 8 of Lhe wore v tudustrialized nations sult of the war there will be an eveu ater stimulus tu the settle- went of uew countries thau prior to 1914. The war, it should Le remem- Lered, was wmainly betneey e wost highly industrialized uations, peoples whose wapufacluring Lad been must exieusively develuped. Such natlo | | | ORE | CONVEYOR AND LeACHING™\S TANK “aT AN \\ ARIZONA COPPER i MINE - AMERICA { REFINES 80 RER CiENT OF THIS METAL. OF THE vely largely upuw oulside sovurces for'ergy ravw materials of wanufacture and fur feodsius ‘I'be extraordiuary sure which will Le put couutries for the fullest poss:ble out- put from their factories in the perivd of 1ecoustruction should eucourage the: exploitativn of uatural resources throughout the worlid If complete recuvery (rum the had to be accuinplishied immediately it would be illogical tu vely esteusivelr {upon the exploitativn Virgin ce sour n distaut places, for tie is required tu reap the full results of the sible 1u war | fight promoter. hurch per statuté or in deco should fly to the ~ BRITISH P s B. Cochirane the who hopes st @'s title bout between Jack aud Georges Curpenticr. is | mevica. In the picture above | or the When should or crossed with slate gs, 1L sheuld be given honor on the right with many fis it them. de. nmore na- ou fhe two or hould be zs of splaved, the ffs, or halyards and on the ot e, level c Cross on 1 which Stars and grovnd raiscd above the the unveiling oulid not ound, bLut flag is used monument. cd to fall to t} arrvied aloft to wave out inctiv featurc during ginder of the ceremony, in displayed uld hang e fla ot o preferably from should alwa be hun, ling, never festooned ¢ The 1l may be suspended street as a “"baunecr When d in this manner streets .north and south union norih in the ithe flag is portrayed, the staf we viewed from % on should bhe in ti ner as onc faces it, only. up- one side e 1izht but if hung / PHOTOS 3 R ERLE NORLD'S ouUTRUT I waking these o But reconer bot wen countrie: vaw waten fur the . and meauwl Iy by workshops thi 1 be in course conuection 1l the max . Luited States following E J e luwed o period of n arently 1 situation s3ion this fundawental vutlay of capital and en-| Hun | zontally n il be able to as % Do 1ls but by providing preducts of Eurcpe’s of of econom ROMOTOR HERE he -is shown presenting pentier with the Gant had won from Joe Be London rinz. The pi made at the Oxford the after in cup. lett senlafion ater . the was cides. of rom boil at the right can b the unio: hould the buildir dete same direction When the s0 it be s the building. displaycd hovi- it can is the only as if viewed from mion should e ner, thus plac the z it if hung so it can b from hoth sid the at the rizght of the huilding When he flag is portrayved. the shouid be the feft with the to the rizht i onld never excepl, as a signal of distress A worn-out flaz bevend repair lias in the s ic lhiould trom the staff and framed for preservation. When Jonger fit isplay privately cstroyed on e staft at falbric be reversed at it removed under 11 honl burning. n no T for JUDGE SCO Froll (¢ WIDOW, 4 9 S srked b meney lavishiy Mulligan honor am his life to his funeral™ said when a oxpen She n widow :s of her W allowed £ D A I {EAT FIELD ONE RAISEC IN THE ANA - WE 15 € corbed Into | 1 f il Hepubli wost of s sverty; the sysiew le pe literal uatlou wones h was depreciated 2h iy debt « re 1iling; at of wore th of industr there folloy 300000, 000 Georges Car- | he | nined by facing the | ‘POWDER EXPLODES ~ ~ 1000 Tons in Du Pont Works Near Uniontown Gocs Of—Oune Injured Slightly. Pa.. 7.—Approxi- pounds of powder. stored in the truck shed of the Du Pont Powder Co. plant at Fairchance. Uniontown exploded rly today and totally destroyed the : here were only four men in the vicinity when the blast and three escaped unhurt one. an engineer, was sl injured.” The cause of thé explosion has not been determined. The explo- | sion was so terrific that windows in Uniontown and throughout the imme- : diate region were shattered. The ' shock of the blast was felt d inctly of Fayelte ¢ 1ty and a : Maryland and West Vir- zinia reported disturbances similar to ~iight carthquakes. Uniontown Jan i 1.000 miles from prov I must expect have #ar sale In Mew Britain by The DI, Crewell's Drus Store, 204 Matn 8t Frass o After ed to almost no 10 ba deaf. MRS, JOHN KITCH 1IN, shore drnggists using two bottles of m. to be de LrONARD EAR OIL RELIEVES DEAFNESS. STO! HEAD NOISES It is not put in the ea: but Rubbed Back of Ears” and “Inserle. in the XNostril Has had a Success- ful Sale since 7 I Will Forfeit 31,000 if the Folow- ing Testimonial Is Not Genuine and Unsolicited: Nov 1919, Leunard Bar Uil my hearing has’im- 1 condition As I Years old, all said bui thanks to Ear Oil T don’t am 7 Leonar 3%th S, Oakland. Calif. Drug Co. 188 Maim 8. Froof of Suceess will be given zem by ‘Tos This Signaturs en Yellow B and on Hottle = Buite 005, 10 Fifth Ave. New Feek cuy in the left upper cor- | union should be | on | iron Will That great strength of mind and bedy, that exhaustless energy, that IRON WILL that make a famous merchant out of a humble clerk, a millionaire out of a penniless im- migrant, a Lincoln out of a woodchopper— often come from red blood—rich in iron. stamina? your strength? ‘Do you lack power of decision, energy, and Arc your ambitions greater than You need not be discouraged,” says Dr. James Francis Sullivan, formerly of Bellevue Hospital York, and Westchester County Hospital. New (Out-door _Dept.), “By feeding the blood pure organic iron—Nuxated Iron—many ‘a weak, run-down, discouraged man has changed to a red-blooded American, full of force and energy that win success.” Nuxated Iron is used and endorsed by former United States Senatprs and Members of Con- gress, and by such world-known men as Pader- ewski, Premier of Poland. It often increases strength and endurance in two weeks’ time. Used By Over 3,000,000 People For Red Blood, Strength and Endurance. UNITED STATLS. HUGH MAGNETS STACKING STEEL RAILS ~ WE PRODUCE an 40 PER CENT OF THE WOUTLTYS MORE THAN HALF THE WORLD'S COAL RESERVES ARE of e f ctalts Leanspurtation m tial b usiness, { currency |from war to pes |downward trewd i | rising cost of labor—indeed, uot even factlo IRON AND the provision lines. for of foriwed asis It in e crucial per thie inflation prices, the combination of all fou Iproved able to stay sa reuiarkable in- dustrial expaus | The new wor ing o the out o ind £ the var which ustrial pr iv the comiug | 'Che FOURTH eup sEn tndustiy of was | ple s 8 wass uotes ; but there was a pub- sloy ek ] oulgruwsih of the gpread of traunsporlalior ageuncies H Tue gross volume of the coustry’s; Lusluess multiplied turee-fuld in the y-vear period belween 1860 aud’ With the exception uf a slight, recessiou 1o 186, there terrupted gaiu uwul the | chigery ecllapeed under (L depression. But afler tiree yeau s recovery began spd was exceedingls rapid. i Aud tdhavely, coudition pirrevadiug | that vorld No sort of political wachine: ever. can suc wdefinitely if whicl bave beeu tbe chief provocation of war 1o the past are left uumodific t promising € ide desire lu! rest causes urla. a bus cau oue o ;of the tiwe is the world minate armed sirlfe, But it (s LetmYed w social rden of rifve. We are tu say they ueve! eed in pres: the ecouviui ¢ the wes tNege ecouowil unrest Lhr I otinued growth | d the war did vot pre-| |veut, or in great weasure vetari | developueut. reCunslrue nur the loug vor U pulitieal order grow- t ended ewbodics econowie pussibilitie | whicl promise to coutribuie @ ress of supperliig military and vaval establishuenis has Ilong heen recusni: | econom as ¥ tremendous nut | ing peac wfluence. atena disasle? pean nations. In Russia, at any rate, it wiil probably reyuire 3 comparative- lly long tme to restore order. And jthere way se prolouged disorder iu other parts of Europe. [F'ood aud eru- ployment have apparently offered the | surest safeguards azainst classes of ubrest, particularly the uuns rest that is wost tareatening today. The way to protect social order in | Europe, therefore, would seew to be to get industries goitg and people ewu- ployed aud to imcrease the oppor- ! tuity for freedowm of economic action |ou the part of individuals, as well as tv accord to the iudividual a larger share ip the profits of industry. America stauds in a position of pe- ‘uliar respopsibility respecting the work of recomsthuction in Europe. ‘The situation Lhere, without reference Lo our uational iulerests iuvolved in (he receut svar, calls for Awericas Lielp. We have a great fumd of loan- able wenlil, and Europe has ueed of !the credits and materials which we {ean suppls. ! went is much greater than before e war, and its proper utilizatios Wi solve a distinet reeognitiou of the present ueeds of the peoples w_ho sac- |rificed more thau we ip winning the common vietors. Stupendous as are Europss fluap- burdens, titantic as are ils ece- vemic tasks, oue of ils paramouut proble Qur productive equip-* is esseutially psychological. | 1 order o recover rapidly fromi the & effects of the wary Eurepe needs, quite utly as it rvequires machinery v waterials. a revival of indus- trizl will power, We should remember that. in the fival analysis, the products ©f the wines, fields und factories wou | (e war, avd that they alone can win | tire grewter victory of peace. 1t ix for the purpose of cnsbling Europe 10 cb- talp sufficient quantities of these vilal products ard to regain uer industrial will power that we wus. do our full ! quty iv the preseut crisis. As a result of Lhe war we hare chauged from a3 deblor to a crediter uation. And Laviug lcaned Lo belliger- euts before America became a party to the war, when those uatious were us- ing this eredit for destractive pur- poses, we can scarcely refuse crediis a sub-| such test of ueither shifting, the of constructiou aud resioratiou. The United States Is abundantly eyuipped to perform its proper fanc- tivn 1 the peace € ‘This country produees 20 per cent. of the world's supply of geld, 25 per ceut. of the {world's supply of wheat, 40 per cest. as j coslly ceut. of worli's silver, B0 per cenl. of the world's zing 52 per cent. of the world's sluminum, 60 per ceut. of the world's cotton, 66 per ceut of the world's supply of &1 aud 75 per cent. of the world's corn. This country re- ! fues 80 per cent. of the world's eopr per and operates 40 per cent. of the world’s railroads, But, wost vajuable lus which Lhe dire 7 ities of war pplied Awerle iuventiveness, rosucliveness, eour- dyeuture constitutes ualional asset which uct euly trap- \is of waterlai compu- ¢he boldest im- re all. the suwma- o uartersj scends the b tatiou. #at i fur the ipdustrial life of seme Lurde|aginatiou. P * of the world's irou and steel. 40 per & that now are to be used for purposes ¥ . certainig