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ery Healthful du-‘hm“ system against Grip Influenza by taking .fly the Grove’s Laxative Bromd Quinine tablets which destroy germs, act as a tonic laxative, and keep the system h‘l‘ thnG;o tmwlofl attacks Colds, P - fluenza. Be sure you get ROMO .udne bears this si, mm Exhibition And Demonstration Of Modart, Bon Ton, Redfern and Royal Worcester Corsets ON LIVING MODELS Tomorrow And Wednesday, March 15 And 16 Many were present today to witness the exhibit of fashionable corsets and correct corsetry and were well Every woman should see plea sed. this demonstration. It’s to your advantage. BESSE-LELAND CO. STYLE HEADQUARTERS EASLES may be foliowed by serious cold mblnc use nightly— “CASCARETS” TONIGHT ary3 | FOR CONSTIPATION think! A pleasant, harmle Cascaret works while you sleep and has your liver active, head clear, stomach sweet and bowels moving as regular as a clock by morning. No griping or Inconvenience. 10, or 50 cent boxes. Children love this candy cathartic too. ASPIRIN | Name “Bayer” on Genuine Just 5 “Bayer ‘Tabiets of Aspini . gen- ulne Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for over twenty years. Accept only an un- broken “Bayer package” which con- tains proper directions to relieve Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neu- ralgia, Rheumatism, Colds and Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger “Bayer packages.” Aspirin is trade mark Bayer Manufacturer Mono- :cnueadde!nr of Slllc)fle‘l"d. One Pie FREE At your grocery—see coupon Queen Real Lemon P, The makers of Jxfl{}tfl nov make Jiffy-Pie. A real with real lemon. Also Chocolnu Pie. We want to buy you one ple this week, if you use Jiffy-Jell it as our trea Jiffy Lemoa Pie brings you all the ingredients — the sugar, cg yolk, powdered milk, corn star: pioca. The lemon essence of Pies ie made for you ~—derived from lemon peel—comes in liquid form in a bottle. Simply add water, cook a l(me and fiE your pie, Think how long it takes to make lemon pie in the old way. Here experts make it for you, and you simply add the water. So with Jiffy Chocolate Pie. A perfect pie is made with a mo- ment’s trouble. We pay for it We want users ol }Ifly Jdl to know these new 8o if you will buy 3 Ecb‘u J:fly—]ell we will buy a Ji iffy-Jell from your grocer Lvon you like. These real lnm flavors scaled in 5 are GOOD FOR ONE PIE - glass, you know. Then present this coupon to your grocer and he will give you a Jiffy-Pie, charging the price to us, Cut out this coupon and present it at once. Get this free Jiffy-Pie. ——mane | HOW TO * T COLORS. ! Before making gingham house |dresses and children's school frocks i the color should ! and the ma- | terlal shrunk. Sctting the color will | take shrinking, | that process really does all ’ up e set care of the too, so one the work. alum dissolved in of water is used to set light pink, green, lavender, red and purple. Let the fabric stand in the water for half or three-quarters of an hour. A strong solution of salt water may be used to set dark blue, gray and yellow. Black cotton should be put into ! boiling hot suds and allowed to stand till the water is cool. Menu for Tomorrow. Breakfast—Oranges, walffles, coffee. Luncheon—Potato and cheese soup, brown bread and butter, pickles, gin- ger bread, tea. Dinner—Sauerkraut and with dumplings, mashed | cherry pie, coffee. My Own Recipes. If the sauerkraut is cooked {oven there will be little odor. |is an excellent dish to serve for many reasons. It's cheap, it's nourishing land it's appetizing to those who like it and stimulates a jaded appetite. Potato and Cheese Soup. Three cups milk, 1 small onio 1 1-2 cups mashed potato, 1 table- spoon salt, 1-4 teaspoon paprika, 1-3 cup grated cheese Scald onion with milk. fon and add potato and seasoning. Melt butter, stir in flour and add the | hot milk slowly, stirring constantly. Cook 5 minutes. Add cheese and cook till dissolved. A little minced pars- ley may be sprinkled over the top to serve. Two ounces of a tub blue, sirup, weiners potatoes, the | This in { Remove on- Ginger Bread. One cup molasses, 1 1-3 cup shortening. 1- water, 2 1-2 cups flour, soda, 1 teaspoon ginger, salt. Add water to molasses. Mix sift dry ingredients. Combine tures, add shortening, softene not melted, and beat well. Pour a buttered shallow pan and bake or 30 minutes in a moderate oven. (Copyright. A) cup sugar, cup boiling 1 teaspoon 1-2 teaspoon | and mix- but into TEXTILE INDUSTRY IMPROVING. All But Two Plants in Central Berk- shire Work Full Time. 14.—The | industry All except | nd Dalton, are runnifg Pittsfield, Mass.,, March | central Berkshire textile shows signs of recover | one plant in Pitts d | employing 3,000 hands, full time. Officials company, which Pontoosuc Woolen was organized in 1826, say the business depression | which began November 1 and now apparently ending was the worst and longest in its history. of the ox 6 years- a safe and wholesome £ et ) nounced | dozen | ton PACKERS WORKING, | AWAITING RESULT 100,000 Men Afiected Are Work- | ing on Wage Decreases 14.—While mediation result of a strike vote. the packing cago and other centers in the middle west had decided to go to work today under the reduced wage scale an- by the five leading packers which gzoes into effect today. More than 100,000 men are affected by the reductions of 15 and 12 1-2 per cent in the hourly rate and piece work rate respectively, with time and half for overtime only after hours. At Chicago, March await- ing the outcome of plans and the ployes in em- A | | plants of Chi- aj ten mass meetings held in half a! packing cities yesterday the workers ‘were advised to remain at work until the e vote was com- | pleted which it was d would be about Friday. Union leaders suggest- ed Friday, rch as the date for thy proposcd yonference in Washing- of reprefentatives of employers afld employes with James D. Davi secretary of labor. According to re ports here Secretary Davis has as vet | received hut one official responsc from the packers to his mediation proposal. Wilson and Co. uagreed to send two representatives. In a drastic shake up of the police department Captain Wesley H. West- brook was on duty today in the stockyards police district because of his ability to cope with labor troubles, Chief of Police Fitzmorris said. “Our cut in wages is small when ! compared to other firms.” said a tatement from Armour and Co. “We have a list of 21 other firms reduc- where the decr,ases ran to 33.34 per cent. The stockholders of Armour and Co. could not dodge the fact that we are losing money. That is why wages are re- duced. “Any assertion that we are at- tempting to establish a ten hour day is wrong. The guarantee of extra pay for overtime after 54 hours in any one week makes this impossible.” Thousands of packing house em- ployes marched in the rain yesterday and later listened to leaders who urged them not to start a ‘“runaway” strike.” Packing house employes in Fort Worth, Kansas City, and Sioux City, also decided at mass meetings yester- day to go to work today pending com- pletion of the strike vote. Fmplo\'r-q 'CASTORIA For Infants and Children InUse ForOver 30 Years l ! i *nnuun( the value of E +ish 1 and were | shouting in the Omaha plants planned to hold | ZION a meeting tonight to discuss their action. The wage cut will be delaye: until April 11 in the plants at t Louis and St. Joseph, Mo., because of a state law requiring 30 days’ notice. TI-JEWISH FIGHT RAGES IN VIENNA Serious Disorders Threaten, But Police Finally Succeed In Quelling Disturbances. Vienna, March 14 (By Associated Press).—Anti-Jewish disorders which broke out here last evening threat- ened for a time to develop into a seri- ous situation but the police late in the eveninz succeeded in scattering crowds on the streets and in prevent- ing possible loss of life. Shops owned by Jews were damaged by stones thrown by riotous crowds and in a few cases Jews were beaten. The disorder began at the cong of the Austrian Anti-Semitic associa- tion which was addressed by speakers who urged radical measures. . They advocated pogroms and the organiza- tion of Christians in Austria. While these things were going on large crowds assembled in the Rath- ahuse square where similar addresses were given, speakers declaring that the Jews constituted a menace be- cause of profligate living. Two Jew- students were found in a crowd beaten and driven away. At dusk the meeting broke up and a great crowd swept through the streets singing German songs Away with the Jew The crowd moved steadily toward a Jewish quarter of the city but large torcea of police had been summoned to bridges across the canal over which the crowds must move. The rioters were turned back but there was more or less rowdyism and street fighting before the police succeeded in dis- persing the mob. et VWilbur's Use this cooking purposes. chocolate and j BEER COP TASTES First Time Twenty-Three Years, But It Is His Line of Duty. Zion City, 11, March 14.—Theo- dore Becker, chief of police here and a member of the Christian Cath- olic Apostolic church in Zion, tasted beer recently for the first time twenty-three years. “I had to taste it CITY in order to test he explained. “In my opinion contained more than onc-half of per cent of alcohol.” The beer, according to the chief, s found in the home of R. McCon- {say who has been watched closely by | the police since he was arrested |some time ago for smoking tobacco on the street in violation of the city’s anti-tobacco ordinance. Chief Becker said he found a two quart jug near full of beer in McConsay's home. it 1t ROBS HOME IN PROVIDENCE. { Thief Enters While Family Is at Din- ner—Gets $12,000 in Jewelry. Providence, R. I., March 14.—The homa of John R. Gladding. director in several large. concerns here, was entered while the family twas at din- ner lasi night and robbed of jewelry ! valued at more than $12,000. The robber entered by a perch win- down on the second floor. He only looted one, bureau draw. Had. he gone through the others, it was said, he would have found considerable more. s TO HAVE VAUDEVILLE Forcign War Veterans to Give Bencfit Performance March 27. The Private Walter J. Smith Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars are plan- ning to give a benefit performance at the Lyceum theater, Sunday after- noon March 27. There will be a pro- gram og high class vaudeville and motion picture plays. g in | BIG FIRM BA) Greck-American Concel ficeg in Near East, Milan, March 14.—D ers, a Greco-Armenian branches in the Near York city were declai day with debts estim 000 lire. The assets 130,000,000 lire. The ¥ are said to be Italian: banks. The bankruptey wal vorable exchange rates eral fall in prices. &. X N . It Spills ¢ Howling § turn the ,‘ There’s a every wing- clusive In which pre: Dealers ev: India “the little umbrella wit] Made by ROSE BROS. Baking Chocolate for all Its rich smooth flavor is a delight. Its quality cannot be surpassed. Recipe book on how to use Wilbur's Cocoa and Bakinge . e Chocolate sent free on request. /7?‘7 Baki Choco