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i‘lere Is a Fine Laxative - For a Little Baby Millions of Mothers find Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin safe for infants WHAT young mother has not often asked herself the ques- tion, “What is the best thing I can E" my baby for constipation?” It a very important question, as con- stipation is the basis of most ills of infancy and childhood. Give half a teaspoonful of a com- bination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin. You can obtain it at any dn? store under the name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Itisa mild, gentle medicine that children willingly take, and a bottle that costs e only sixi ceg;u is em:lugh tt:hhlt an S average family several months. : Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin has been TRY IT FREE e Dot bavn tebd s Aras aRpe o Sahnn el ol et ty years. It is the same p%e.crlpdon a free :n‘al L‘.f'u.d( of’v:: . B. Caldwell, who is now in his82nd . Pepsin. Add: used in his extensive practice for %'qgm ST . well, 513 If a century. It is the largest selling Washi Se., M 3.'3 liquid inxative in the worid. Cast Yeareight Iinots Eomsbor msog million bottles were bought in drug stores. then needs a laxative, and You can make no mistake in giving Dr. it is well to know the best. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin to your baby. WRITE ME TODAY. w Btam Boyé’_ _Club News RUARY > BY AND IN TH ERSON, Editor., J. KERELEFJZ A, Asst. Kditor. B. HU PROPER TRAINING Jou want to be successful, you Keep yourself in a condition will enable yeu to do vour best, | would not expect to win a foot or he a factor in winn a. Rev. Henry W. otball zame, or in any other test | hoys on the subject il1, strengin or endurance, un- | Good." you are in proper training for Wodnesday—The tove, it is unreasonable to | )..\eiball team played win and be successful in score, Worthington 30, B. C. years to come unless you keep It in At condition, physically, ally and morally. indoor baseball team played the B club Monitor indoor baseball t score, T. M. L.. 15, Monitors 22 movics of proved to the automobile in- be wvery interesting. Maier addressed the of “Making Our dustry Boys’ club Band Worthington e B. Thursday—Band senior basketball team played Boy Scout Troop No. 10 the cleanest and most exciting game we ever had, score, Troop No. 10 14, Senior Band 13. tev. John L. Davis will address the boys Tuesday evening at 8 p. m. CARPENTRY. e carpentry class this season has uch larger class and is doing better work than has been mplished in the past QLAY MOLDING e clay molding class this increased in membership about r cont over last season. Some fine work is being turned out s department. OoUT OF ORDER “The next one in this room who speaks above whisper will be put out,” exclaimed the angry judge “Hip Hip Hooray! shouted the prisoner as he rushed for the door. O WONDER.” little year a J ES DURING . WEEK iday-—-Bristol Boys' club Juniors played the Comets. Score, Bris- , Corhets Band Junior playedt the Walf Cubs, score, | Junlor team 11, Wolf Cubs 10. : ‘The Little Mothers league = THE PAST brother ?" “How old is inquired Willie “He's a year old,” “Huh! T've got a a year old an' he can well as your brother.' ‘““That’s nothing Your twice as many legs.” your replied Tommy. dog home who's walk twice as dog’s got VPSET STUMATH Sourness Indigestion Heartburn Flatulence Palpitation crclests FVAPORATED MILK Just-as soon as you eat a tablet or two of Pape’s Diapepsin all the stom- mch distress caused by acidity will end. Pape's Diapepsin alw; sick, upset, acid stomachs in order at once. Large 60c case—drugstores. Cough Quick! a Double Treatment HAYES' HEALING soothe and not theory, that every drop of rich, nourishing 1 Scott's Emulsion IT IS FACT | for a HEALING rength - | ) that | ary WITH OWN WEAPONS Racine People Will Gombat Soap | Box Oratory With Same Wis Feb. method Racine, 7.—Believing effectively | bolshevism, I. the other revolution- Rroups by meeting them on their own grounds with ‘“'soap-box versus soap-box" and soap-boxer versus soap-hoxer,” the Constitution- Defense League of Racine has d here the world's first Soap University Students are being | to mect the revolutionary with all of his own weapons, and is planned to turn out an alumni of propagandists who will able to counter every move of so- cialist agitation by their knowledge of the socialist »ag of tricks.” The university is the outgrowth of the experience of a group of ex-serv- ice. men who formed the Constitu- tional Defense league more than a vear ago in order to vigorously fight socialism in Wisconsin. They say they realized at the beginning that much of the propaganda that has heen waged in the past against social- ism has been wasted. For one thing, it hasn’'t reached the audience that the socialists talk to; it hasn't been founded upon a knowledge of the psychology of the radicals. The Constitutional Defense league, under the leadership of Jack O'Brien of this city, decided to tryv a new theory. They would imitate the so- cialists’ methods. They would go out on the streets as soap-boxers, and zive Americanism to the crowds in- stecad of revolution. They would challenge the socialists to debates on all occasions and hoist them before the public on their own fallacies. Mr. O’Brien and his staff carried out the prozram In Racine, Sheboygan, Green Bay, Manitowac, Wausau and other Wisconsin cities, he soon be- Zan to capture socialist audiences. But there was one difficulty which was increasingly evident to the league. And that was the lack of anti- revolutionary propagandists; the lack of men who understood the socialist philosophy well enough to combat it on tha soap-box. the only of combatting socialism, W. W..ism and is al establish Box trained agitator it be Out of this realization, grew the Soap-Box university. The league de- cided to train agitators for the Amer- icanization cause. In Racine, class sessions are held. For the benefit of those outside of Racine, a corre- spondence school is maintained. The correspondence school is open to all who wish to prepare themselves to combat socialism, either from the platform or individually. And is free, even the text-books and the postage are furnished free. Since the first announcement was made, the league has been flooded with appli- cants from all over the country. To strengthen the university, Har- old Lord Varney, magazine writer and 1 who was for many yvears national leader in the T. W. W. and socialist movement, has been engaged to have charge of the correspondence school. The course is divided into twelve lessons and covers such sub- jects as the study of the American form of government and the Marxian economics and its loopholes. it wcturer §£50,000 FIRE LOSS. Eight Cars Used by Trolley Company Destroyed at Windsor Locks. Windsor Locks, Feb. £50,000 damages wa 7.~—More than caused by a fire of undetermined origin which yester- day consumed the store shed of the Hartford & Springfield Street Railway company and destroyed three closed | passenger cars, one open passenger car. two work cars and a sifjyw plow. The store shed is one mile south of Windsor Locks on private right of way near the main road to Hartford. It was used to store cars operating on the west side of the river. The watchman, at 3 o'clock Sunday morn- ing heard a crackling noise and investi- gated, suspecting burglars. Instead, he found flames in the center of the shed. He immediately called the Wind- sor Locks fire department, but even be- fore they arrived the blaze was beyond control. The value of the shed was small, but the passenger cars were valued at approximately $6,000 apiece and the work cars and snow plow at approxi- mately $3,000 apiece. Cars used on the east side of/ the river are stored in n larger shed at Warehouse Point. a TOITERING ALONG. Neither Harding Nor His Houscboat Show Any Signs of Speeeding Up. Ormond, Fla.., Feb. behind her schedule the houseboat Victoria with President-elect Hard- ing's party aboard, was put on a leis- urely schedule again today and prob- ably will not complete her cruise up the coast to St. Augustine until noon tomorrow. The Victoria spent last night at an- chor 20 miles south of Ormond and although her skipper thought he could reach his destination by nightfall if no stops were made, the vacation party decided a forced run was un- necessary and arranged to come ashore here for a game of golf. A short stop also was made at Daytona | to pick up mail and telegrams. 7.—Already far Gee, it’s a winner! ‘ LU ClG AR in air-tight packages. Also obtainable i: round tins of 50, vacuum - sealed. Loprnigunsioatd blend ca and the MEXICANS SEEK MEN WHO BOMBED HOUSFS| | Residence of Archbishop of Mexico ! | Now and Ncarby Structure Damaged By Explosions. Mexico City, Feb. 7.—Police au- | thorities and government secret serv- ! ice agents were engaged today in col- lecting evidence which might lead to the arrest of men who bombed the residence of the archbishop of Mexico and the building occupicd by Juer- gens and Co. in this city yesterday morning. Four mean are under ar- rest but it is known several others were implicated in the two crimes. The residence of the archbishop was badly damaged and the entire street frontage of the Juergens build- ing was wrecked. The upper story of the factory was occupied by the families of the owners but none was injured. Information gathered by the police would seem to indicate that four men did the actual work of setting of both bombs. Radical activity has been ing in Mexico City recently and news- papers here say two communist con- gresses will be held this month. The newspapers also have received word of the arrival during the past week of a number of agitators, two of whom have been characterized by El | Universal as being “delegates ksent to Mexico by Nikolai Lenine to work among laborers in the interests of the third internationale at Moscow."” Carlos Rehg, manager of the Juer- gens factory, declares radical agita- tors have been exceedingly bold at | mothers, increas- | his plant, having several times sta- tioned themselves at the entrance to the building and threatening the 200 employes with violence if they dared to enter. This aggressive attitude je. ADOPTS CHILDREN TO FOOL HUSBAND Her Secret Is Out, But Mrs, South Will Be Perniitted to Keep Sizeable Family. T.—The family of Mrs. by Atlanta, Feb F. E. A. South threc, but six children in the last fourteen years still remain All of the children secretly adopted by Mrs. love of babies. Mrs. South, who is old, ‘“‘faked'’ the birth New Year's Eve, but failure to register a it was learned that the were in reality the babjes of and had been born in a ma- 3, 5 and 10. hos- has been reduced “‘born’’ to her were fifty-two yeary of triplets on owing to her birth certificat ternity hospital on Dec. They have been returned to the pital. The other six children wili be Kkept. South, a grocery clerk, agrecd to this after denouncing his wife's deception and threatening to send the others away also. The ‘‘twins’”, Ruth and Jewel, were born four years ago. Be- fore that, Mrs. South had announced the birth of another set of twins, who have since died, and four other chil- dren, all of whom she wanted to bring up. Mother love and an offer of her church to educate as missionaries the first triplets born to a church member | prompted Mrs. South to adopt three babies and pass them off as her own. She has promised her husband, how- ever, that she will be content with her present family of six children. Whemwthe mother fi con South . - South because of her SING SING CUTS ITS PRICES. i GOI i‘r\w‘m," Bag mander Rogers foi Prison-Made Goods Drop 10 to 45% —Wages Still 115 Cents a Day. Ossining, N. Y., Feb. 7.—Sweeping reductions were ordered today in the| prices asked for goods made by pris- { oners in the manufacturinz depart- ments of Song Sing and other State | prisons. Some articles, including shoes, v ch will sell for about §3 a pair, are back to pre-war prices. John P. Joyce, Superintendent of In- dustries at Sing €ing, has been di- rected to cut prices of brushes, cans, mattresses, shoes and Kknitted goods from 10 to 45 per cent. The cut was ordered by the state committee, to keep pace with reductions in the open market. Wages jn prison remain at the same-—1% cents a day. After somj ! Harry Jocks Post, Ame! James Rogert] rall committ bachelors w committee be Februar Arch street a harmonic ba { cert ' while bachelor ' gefj with orders g the dancing, be contin bachelors® ® the followin Curtis _ Shelf Harry Jacksi Hoar, Frank] William Gl Robert Vang Robinson, I.q tini, Frapk Frederick En and Walter MEXICAN CONGRESS MEETS. Mexico Cit; Feb. 7.—Members of | the Mexican congress met in extraor- dinary session here today expecting to dispose of many ifems in Presi- dent Obregon's reconstruction pro- | sram before adjourning. Legislation providing for new petroleum taxes, { the division of large estates into small farms and the granting of in- demnities to persons who suffered damage during revolutians were to be | considered it was believed.