ray*™* enterprise epitome of from from all over ......the edison plant without the prelim-inary...
TRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: RAY*™* enterprise EPITOME OF FROM From All Over ......the Edison plant without the prelim-inary mental teat usually Insisted on for candidates. The French Steamship Company has formally](https://reader034.vdocuments.us/reader034/viewer/2022051510/600184ca730b5e56d235defb/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
AN EPITOME OFLATE LIVE NEWS
CONDENSED RECORD OF THE
PROGRESS OF EVENTS AT
HOME AND ABROAD
FROM ALL SOURCESBAYINGB, DOINGS, ACHIEVE-
MENTS, SUFFERINGS, HOPESAND FEARB OF MANKIND
WESTERNThe postoffice ut Clarksfork, Idaho,
wus partially destroyed by fire and uconsiderable amount of mall mutterwas reported to have been damagedBy water and smoke. Mrs. Flora Potz,
postmistress und her daughter, who
lived on the second floor of the build-
ing lost their personal effects.
A plague of crickets is reported In
Uinta county, eastern Utah, and ad-
joining counties In western Coloradound fanners of the vicinity have up-
piled to the Utah state bourd to helpthem suve their crops. A year ago
there was a similar cricket plague,but prompt action was successful Inkilling off a great majority of the
pests.
Street car fares In Seattle were
ruined from 5 centß to 10 cents cash,with three rides for a quarter, to meet
the municipal rullwuy emergency,under terms of un emergency ordi-
nance pussed by the city council. Thecouncil ulso passed un ordinance by
which the street car fund borrows$125,000 from the city light fund topuy the street cur employees.
With oil production and develop-
ment In Southern Cullforina break-ing records, the Stundurd Oil Com-
pany of California has decided toforego further development und cur-tull production so far us possible, It
was officially announced ut I-osAngeles. The company will extend
Its storage facilities und uwult ubreuk In the murket.
A Shortage of SIO,US) In the funds
of County Treasurer J. K. tlogson ofEureka, Cullfornlu, came to light
three months ago. Experts examinedthe books for a discrepancy und mem-bers of the office force searched everynook und cranny times without nutn
ber but all to no uvull. Suit wifs Instltuted against Hogson's Imndsmen torecover the SIO,OOO. The following
day the missing amount—a packet of
hills of large denomination—wus dis-
covered wedged In a brace In the In-
terior of the treasurer's safe.
WASHINGTONThe first international complication
to result from enforcement of the newship liquor regulations developed when
tlie French embassy took up withtreasury officials the question of re-leasing from customs seals enough
wine to supply the regular ration tot lie crew of the French liner France InNew York harbor.
Tlie Federal Trade Commission litis
ordered the Fox Film Corporation of
New York to discontinue the selling
or leasing of reissued motion pictureplays under titles other than thoseused when they are first shown, un-less tlie new and old titles are promi-
nently Indicated in advertising mate-rial and on the picture Itself. The
commission's announcement of the" order said investigation had shown
the corporation had furnished the ex-hibitors three reissued picture filmsbearing changed titles without indica-tion thereof in the advertising mate-
rial.The principal grain crops of the
country will he smaller this year thanlast, with the exception of oats andbarley, bolti of which have beenplanted on a large acreage than ayear ago, according to the Departmentof Agriculture's monthly report Is-sued in Wellington. No reports havebeen tnude yet of corn.
Director Scobey, of the mint, an-nounced the acceptance of tenders of
J.fIUU.UUO ounces of silver, offeredunder the i’lttman act, Including alltenders up to June !!. The totul ofuccepted offerings under the act wasbrought up to 200,520,000 ounceswhich, It was said, Is expected tosatisfy requirements of the law.
Accompanying the president on Ills
western trip will be three members ofbis cabinet—Secretary of CommerceHoover, Secretary of Agriculture
Wallace and Dr. Work. All three areImmensely popular In the west be-cause of the ai>erlul Interest they haveshown In the problems of that purt of
the country. While with the prealdentthey will gather Information pretnln-
Ing to problem* of agriculture, roads,commerce, water power und parks.
The treasury depratment announced
that It had accepted subscriptionstotaling g158,833,500 to the latest Issue
of certificates of Indebtedness. A
total of $342,- 402.000 was subscribed,bat the treasury's requirements for
the next few months permitted the
•mount of cash offers taken to be
held close to the original estimate ofgI.VMJOO.UOO. Secretary Mellon, how-ever, decided to accept all subscrip-tions for which matured securities
were offered In payment. These
•mounted to f&gMd.UUO.
FOREIGNThe headless Chinese government II
drifting Into a factlonul fight over thes]Mdls of office. President M Yuan-llung, who fled to his home In theforlegn quarter of Tientsin a few daysago with the Chihli Militarists ut hisheels, still Is In seclusion there.
A Joint reply by allies to the lastGerman reparations note Is regardedIn official circles In Brussels as like-ly to be sent, providing the Brussels,I/indon, Purls and Borne governments
can agree upon an Interpretation ofthe term "abandon passive resist-ance.”
Former Premier Stainboullsky ofBulgaria has been killed while trying
to escape. The end of the peasant
leader's career was u series of dra-matic developments beginning withthe overthrow of his government andthe furmutlun of a coalition govern-
ment.A sensational discovery for the
treatment of tuberculosis wus an-nounced by Prof. Georges Dreyer ofOxford university.' The method con-sists of depriving microbes of the pro-tective covering that enables them toresist digestion. Once bereft of this
armor the microbes are easily com-bated.
President LI Yuan Hung, of China,who fled the capital under military
pressure from Gen. Feng Jul-Slang,
was reported safe ut Tientsin underFrench protection. State seals, re-ported uilsslug, which cuused his
train to be held up, have been re-turned to the cubinet, u few remain-ing members of which are still func-
tioning in Peking. The political situ-ation remains greatly muddled. LIbus signed no formul abdication.
GENERALBuilding and loan associations in
the United States have Invested $3,-
000,000,000, the savings of 6,000,000persons, In home building mortgages,
the National Association of Iteul Es-
tate Boards announced in Chicago.
Thirteen thousund maintenance ofway employees und shop laborers of
tbo Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
railroad were granted wage Increasesranging from 1 cent on hour to $1 amonth, effective us of June 15, It wasannounced In Chicago.
The feminine administration of
Thayer, first of Its kind inaugurated
In Kansas, lots returned to civic and
domestic pursuits, and Is content toreturn control of the town of SUO in-
liuhitunts to masculine control. Twoyears ago Abby Howe wus electedMayor und with her elected fivecouncllwomen und u police Judge.
Severely criticizing the Pennsyl-vania system as unfair, unjust anilInconsistent In Its method of dealing
with the shop crafts union In an em-ployee representation election, the
United States Itallroad Labor BoardIn Chicago, Issued Its long expectedpublic rebuke of the currier for viola-
tion of an order directing the carrier
to recognize the shop crafts union.
Thomas A. Edison, who has been
quoted us believing college graduatesto he uninformed und Ignorant "whitecollar'' experts, wits ut Cambridge,Miss., to watch his son, Thomas Mil-ler Edison, receive a degree from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technol-ogy. For this college graduate, Mr.Edison said, there Is a Job waiting at
the Edison plant without the prelim-inary mental teat usually Insisted
on for candidates.The French Steamship Company
has formally asked the French gov-
ernment to send warships to New
York with a supply of wine for
French sailors on board Frenchmerchant ships in New York City, It
was learned from an authoritativesource. It was understood this ac-tion wus taken because French sail-
ors under the French laws must havewine served with their meals. Thewarships may receive their sailing ur-ders Immediately.
Wall Street, in the midst of a many-
sided "clean-up” campaign, directedprimarily at bucket shops, was hit byanother failure —that of Knnutli,
Naehcal and Kubne, a member of theNew York Stock Exchange and of theNew York Curb Market. Boasting arecord of seventy years In the street,
twenty-eight of them as members of
the slock exchange, the supposedlypowerful house, with strong German
connections, was forced Into a re-ceivership with $11,U00,000 liabilities.
With her decks a veritableshambles, the little Bulling vessel MaryBeatrice urrived at New York City
with the story of a terrible fight ut
sou In which nine men were killed and
numerous others wounded. The
bodies of the slain were dumped over-board at the height of Uie buttle. Twoof the dead were white men, twonegroes und five Chinese. The casu-alties resulted In u battle betweencoolies and the crew. According toInformation In possession of theUnited Stale Immigration authorities,
twenty Chinese were being smuggledInto New York for a fee of s.'>oouplere.
"Dry” forces gained the edge on“wet” members In the flgld over pro-hibition in the Illinois Assembly when
the Senate defeated, 02 to 13, the bill
of Senator Marks, Uepubllean, Cldeago, to repeal the state prohibitionund seureli and seizure acts.
The two representatives of thePnotzuku bandits returned to the Paot-zuku camp accompanied by GeneralChen one of the government's dele-gates engaged In the negotiations. Allnegotiations were completed und Gen-eral Chen announced that all the Icaptive* hud been released. j
LATE NEWSFrom All OverCOLORADO
Colorado Springs.—American Legion
Post No. 5, Colorado Springs, pluns to
erect u building.Denver.—An appeul to the Supreme
Court on a writ of error has been maUo
In the Hamrock civil service suit.
Boulder.—Veterans of the Foreign
Wurs of the United States assemble*
here for their annual convention lust
week.
Boulder.—The Kappa Kappa Gum
mu sorority took out u building permitfor s4o,uuu and awarded the contractfor a new home to Allison Stocker ofDenver.
Boulder.—Persons belonging to se-cret societies cunnot attend the Boul-
der high school after Sept. 1, unless
they revoke their membership. Thisaction was taken by the school boardrecently.
Boulder.—Prof. Junius Henderson,
curator of tlae university museum, ac-
companied by John P. llryum, u stu-
dent, has departed for Grand Junc-tion In quest of the skeleton of a dino-
saur reported to be eighty feet long.
Denver.—Adjutant generals of thestates of Oklahoma. Arlzonu, New
Mexico und Colorado, comprising the
Forty-fifth division urea, will meet at
the headquurters of the Colorado Na-
tion Guard in Denver, June JO, Adju-
tunt General l’uul Newlou bus annuuneed.
Glenwood Springs. —The ColorndcLions dubs' district convention will behold In Pueblo next y vuf. The selec-
tion was made at the convention In
Glenwood Springs, Puebio having al-
most no op|K>sltion. Dr. Fred Schein
erliorn of Montrose was elected dis-
trict president.Pueblo—At the annual election »l
officers of the Pueblo Manufacturers'Association the following were chosen.President, M. C. Crum; vice president
Joseph A. llullcn; treasurer, ÜB.Slmllenberger; directors, M. C. Crum.
J. A. llullcn, Buy Jewell, O F. Futb
and L. W. Blele.Idaho Springs.—Col. J. H. (Juke)
Itobeson, prominent In Democratic polItics of Clear Creek county and the
slate for many years, dropp'd dead In
Oklulmmu City while playing billiardswith Dr. F. M. Bailey, with whom he
was visiting, according to word rereived ut Idaho Springs.
Curnrn City.—The laxly of James MHughes, long time resident of CanonCity, wus found on an Island In theArkunsus river, a short distance he
low the Ninth street bridge, und wusrecovered with difficulty by the memhers of the file department, who usedropes and extension ladders In effect-ing a temporary bridge across theswift current of the river ut that
place.Fort Collins.—Maynard Miles, 0
year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. ClarenceC. Miles, of Livermore, was Instantly
killed when the automobile in which
he was riding with his brother, Her
schel Miles, 10, run off the edge ofculvert near lngleslde, aud turned
over. The youth s head W'as crushedwhen la- was caught under the hack
of the front Scut. It ts believed a
broken steering gear caused tlie ueci
dent.
Mullens. —A crazed Mexican, winhas been terrorizing farms and ranches In this vicinity for several dayswas captured and lodged in the count;.
jail at Cortez a few days ago. Tiemaniac, who is said to be a World win
veteran by the name of Joe Cordov.ihas been the object of a country-win.
search by a sheriffs posse. Fundin'-of farmers in tne section have been
keeping on tin 1 hxtkout for the man.armed with shotguns, since the fir.-;
report of his presence 111 the count!
Boulder. —A curiuud of tungsten concentrales, valued at $20,000, wasshipped to McKeesport, l'u„ hy theWolf Tongue Milting und MillingCompuny, Boulder. This wus the secondshipment within a month.
Denver. The American ElectricSmelters and lleflntng Company willbegin construction of un electric smelt-
er at Utah Junction, u few miles from
Denver, In the near future Involvingun ultimate expenditure of $1,500,1 Kid,
and ulready Robert M. Keeney, Indus-trial healing engineer for the Westing-
house Electric Company of Boston isin the field outlining plans for tlie newwork. Mr. Keeney is a graduate of theColorado School of Mines.
Hayden.—The William* I’ark anti-
cline, covering 4,200 ueres, locutedeighteen miles south of Hayden. In
ltoutt county, bus been designated usa producing gas field by the UnitedStates geological aurvey, according toword received by M. D. McEnlry, chief
of the field division of the federal landoffice at Denver. The designation is
effect Iv« May 17, 1923, and the lund la
subject to entry under the provisionsof the federal leasing law covering oil
and gas structures.
Boulder.—A verdict of SIO,OOO dam-ages was given Miss Ida M. Erickson,
ho usslsiutit In the registrars office nt
the University of Colorado, against the
Denver Alfulfu Mills Company. Miss
Erickson was injured Dec. 17, 1921,
when a team of horses owned by themillingcompany rau Into her automo-
bile.
Denver—The treut of picking wildflowers In the shadows of Old Baldy,whose summit is crowned with snowthe yeur round, will be offered pilgrimsto the carnival to he held ut Grand
Luke during Independence holidays
CENTENNIAL STATE ITEMS
Denver—The automobile causedmore accidental deaths In Coloradoduring 1922 than any other to. -nt, ac-cording to figures on accidental deathsIn the stute, which have Just been com-piled by the Stute Board of Heulth forlast year. Automobiles cuused thedeath of 170 persons In the state out
uf a total of 703 who met accidentaldeath during the year. The deaths dueto uuto accidents were practically 40per cent higher In 1023 than in 1021,when 124 were killed from that cause.Total accidental deaths for 1032 wereonly slightly greater lliun In 1031,when the number was 180.
Ix-nver.—All legal obstacles to theconstruction of the Moffat tunnel wereremoved by a decision of the UnitedStates Supreme Court upholding thelegality of the act creating the Moffat
tunnel commission und Us (lowers, und
also the action of the Legislature inpassing the hill providing for the Issu-ance of $0,720,000 In bonds for the
construction of the tunnel. This meansthat with Lite obstacles swept awaythat work upon the longest railroadtunnel In the world will be begun with-in sixty days It will require, It is es-timated, thirty-six months to completeIt and have It In operation.
Denver.—The equity of the reorgan-ised Denver A Bio Grande WesternCompany will be owned equally by theMissouri Pacific and Western PacificBailroud companies within a week, ac-cording to re|nirls from New YorkCity. The plan will likely he an-nounced within a week, it was suldunofficially In New York. The plan Is
to be promulgated by Kuhn, Uieb ACumpany und the Equitable TrustCompany, ucling us reorganizationmauugers. It Is understood all differ-ences heretofore existing between curi-
ous Interests or committees have beenurranged satisfactorily.
Durango.—One of the richest goldstrikes around Durango in the lusttwenty-five yeurs was announced offi-
cially u few days ugo by W. Goff
Black, president of the CumberlandMining Company of Denver. Blacksaid that un enormously rich vein ofore had been tupped in a cross-cut tun-nel sturted lust December in the MayDay mine. The May Day has producedabout $5,00,000, It U suld. George
Steele, Denver attorney, I* a director
of the cumpuny.
Denver.—The Denver Civic andCommercial Association has been In-vited by the Alamosa County Cliumberof Commerce to hold a second tour of
the Sun Luis valley by Denver busi-ness men. The Invitation wus receivedby President E. M. Amnions In a letter
from A. It. Sunde, second vice presi-dent of the Alamosa organization, who
sa.is flint the Sun Luis vulley peopleappreciate the visit of Denver men lustyear und wunt to get still better ac-quainted.
Denver. —Five federal prohibitionagents were confirmed In Washington
reeeully, being those whom B. A. Holl-
ins recommended. They are Charles11. Crooks, Fred Harris, Oscar Vander-mr, Johff C. ltlcliurdson und Karl T.Jlbbs. A sixth man wus not upprovedit this time because of an error in an-
swering one of the questions. Thequestion was If he belonged to any or-ganization opposing prohibition und he
wrote "Yes" Instead of "No."
Union. —A deal dosed recently re-sulted In the transfer of the J. O. D.ranch, ii tract of S.OUO acres neurAroya, from li. Schilling to A. It. Kll-
buin of Kansas City. The purchaseprice was S24U,(Xio. The ranch Is oneuf the oldest stock ranches in Chey-
enne county. Schilling purchased It In
1004 and since that time bus coin criedit into a hog ranch, raising high-grade
hog*.
Loveland. —Henry Guno, 13 yearsold, lost his life in the Buckliorti river,
west of Loveland, making the second
death from the flood in ttie Buckhorn,
Itichard Foote, 10, losing Ids life a fewdays before. Neither of the bodies
lias been recovered.Lyons. —Frances Lyons, 10-yeur-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. But Lyons,
wus drowned wuen her body wusswept down the St. Vraln river us sheattempted to untangle u fishing line.The body was recovered about a half
mile below where the uccldent oc-curred, after residents of Lyons hud
scurchet! for more than un hour.
Glenwood Springs.—Two hundreddelegates und friends of Neighbors of
Woodcraft No. 4, uf Sulidu and Mont-rose, attended the convention of the
order here. The principal address uf
tlie opening session was given hy Mrs.
Minnie Hiner uf Burtlund, Ore., grand
guardlun neighbor.Boulder.—The marriage of Miss Etta
Tnylor, daughter of Congressman Ed-ward T. Tuylor of Glenwood Springs,and Munroe Buker of Denver, wua an-nounced at tlie senior breakfast of thePI Beta Phi sorority at Boulder. Themarriage hud been kept secret for two
weeks.Colorado Springs.—Sund creek, usu-
ally a dry ran, wus a roaring torrent,
400 feet wide, following u cloudburstrecently. A temporary bridge at Jim-my Camp crossing on the Fnrmers'highway, nine mile- east of ColoradoSprings, was wushed out.
Silver Plume.—Figures Just compiled
by the Elmwood Mining Company here,
leasing from the ('lmsfleld Mining
Compuny. show that during the lustthree weeks In May the former com-pany shlpiied out $47,500 In ore from
a streak of solid ore twelve feet wide,ulthougli a force of but twelve menwas employed on the work. This prop-
erty wus originally owned by the luteWilliam A. Humlll, once owner of theTerrible mine, one of the early day
honunzas of the district Uld-tlmemining men of the district believe thatthe boom days are returning.
VOLCANO POURSSTREAMS OF LAVA
TERROR-STRICKEN RUSH TO SEA-
SHORE TO ESCAPE HISSING
STREAMS OF MOLTEN ROCK
30,000 ARE HOMELESSSUBURBAN TOWNS RAZED AS
MOUNT ETNA ERUPTS; QUAKEDAMAGES HOMES
Catania, Italy. —The earthquakeshucks from Mount Etnu cuused panicamong those inhabitants who could notmake tlielr way out of the threatenedregion, but there lias been a subdivi-sion of the luvu stream, und Lingua-
glossa Is considered out uf dunger.
The panic stricken people raisedprayers to St Egidio. patron saint ofLinguuglossa, w ho, according to legend
in 1801 stop|ied the flow of lavu at thevery gutes of tlie town. One report
estimates tliut 30,000 (leople are home-
less in Etnu s stricken ureu.While the town of Linguuglossa Is
about 10,two feet distant froui till- oldcrater, the eruption from tlie new cra-ter was about 1,000 feet neurer, thusmuklng the dunger more Imminent.Luvu thirty feet deep and a mile und
u half wide ruiiie rolling down on tliedoomed villages In Its path, sweepingover orange and lemon groves undburning up forests.
The hamlets of Plccllo, Pulmelntaand Ferro, were completely burned,hut It is thought thut all the inhab-
itants und cuttle escaped.Carbineers, Fascist! und national
militia hastened to the scene of thecatastrophe with a large number oflorries and aided In transporting theInhabitants und their most valuable
household goods. The tnuln body of
luvu wus half a mile from Llnguuglos-sa, having been broken Into variousrivulets by the outstanding spur of the
mountuln on which the people huderected a statue of their patron saint.Tills spur seemed to form a kind ofbulwark, cheeking the udvunce of theluvu.
Catania Is filled with refugees, In-cluding most of the inhabitants of
Llnguuglossu anil many from Itiinduz-zo, Bruntc, Arnncuvllle, Caatlgllone,Glardlnl und Fiutue Freddo.
Koine.—Mount Etna, In violent erup-
tion, laid wuste the surrounding
countryside, according to dispatches.Greut rivers of molten rock, pouring
down the steep sides of the mountainfrom numerous fissures, overwhelmedall before them.
The main crater of Etna, after thefitful displays of a few days ago, sud-denly opened up with a noise like thefiring of a thousund cannon. Therewere subterranean rambles, flames
shot to the sky and the populationsof the little towns about the base ofthe cone fled to the plains.
Five great cracks opened In thenortheastern side of the mountain andfrom lliese mouths, several kilometers
front the old crater, came streams of
lava.Thousands of tons of rocks and
ashes were hurled to a height offrom thirty to sixty feet from bothilie old and new craters and the lavastreams, advancing on a frontage esti-
mated ut s<>o yards, laid waste thevineyards and forests in their pathand progressed ut a speed uf n mileand a quarter an hour.
Isolated houses, left early hy theiroccupants, long acquainted with Et-
na’s habits, were speedily devastated.The Important railway station of
Castlgllone was destroyed.No loss of life has been reported.
Chicago Hottest in 52 Years
Chicago.—Chicagoans began theirannual rush to the city’s bathing
benches a few days ago when n sum-mer sun and little wind shot (he mer-cury to 91 degrees, the highest tem-perature reading this yeur und the
hottest June 18 In fifty-two years’ his-tory of the weather bureau. Threedeaths were said to have been super-induced by the day's heat wave. D.A. Kltch, a salesman, dropped dend inu downtown office building; CharlesCarlson died In the rear yard of Idshome, und William K. Ityun droppeddead In his home.
Fur Thieves Get $50,000Detroit.—Furs valued at between
S4O,(KJO and $50,000 were stolen recent-ly from the Itosenberg Brothers' FurManufacturing Company, located onthe second floor of a building In Jef-
ferson avenue east, the owners of thefnrs told the police. The proprietorsof the company declared entrance tothe store was gained by tunnelingthrough a fourteen-inch brick wallfrom un adjoining office.
Literature Sold, Stats DeclaresLos Angeles.—Taking testimony In
sn attempt to link the defendants withthe circulation of Industrial Workers
of the World literature took up recentsessions In the trial of twenty-seven
men charged with criminal syndical-ism. Investigators testified that theysaw vurinus defendants selling or giv-ing away the literature, copies ofwhich were Introduced in evidence.The defendants, acting ns their ownronnsel, niude no uttempt to have theevidence excluded and read excerptsfrom It Into the record.
SAVED FROMAN OPERATIONfow Recommends Lydia L
Pinkham’s VegetableCompound
Warrington. D. C.-“Ly<anH. Pink-ham’a Vegetable Compound saved me
from an operationwhich s phyaidansaid Iwould have tohave for a very badcase of female trou-ble. Myeyetemwaa*llrun down for twoyears after my little
rri was born. Thenreed of your won-
derful medicine anddecided to try it Icould hardly drag on*foot after the other,
and after taking lixbottles of the Vege*tsble Compound I felt like a new wo-man. 1 now do all my homework, alsowashing and ironing, and do not know
trouble hC My health U toe.and Iweigh 140 pounds. Wbenlttartedtaking it Iweighed 97 pound*. I gladlyrecommend Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vege-table Compound to any one who ia suf-fering from female trouble or ia nmdown. You may urn this testimonialfor Iam only too glad to let sufferingwomen know what the Vegetable Com-pound did forme."—Mrs. Ida Hkwitt,1529 Penna. Are. S.E.,Waibington,D.CL
Such letter* from women in everysection of this country prove beyondquestion the merit of Lydia E. Pink-ham’* Vegetable Compound.
Metal Resist* Tarnish and Corrosion.
Following the discovery of a non-tarnlshable silver, reported recentlyIn the London Dally Mall, comeethe new* of a white metal which re-sists both tarnish and corrosion, andhas a remarkably deep and brilliant
luster when polished.The day appears to have come when
the chemist, by skillfully alloying hismetals, can make them resist the rav-ages of Impure air produced by mod-em Industrial conditions. The newwhite metal, which. It Is Btared, can beproduced at a price within everybody’sreach, has good casting qualities andla both malleable and ductile.
AspirinSay “Bayer” and Insist!
Unless you see the name “Bayer” onpackage or on tablets you are not get-ting the genuine Bayer product pre-scribed hy physicians over twenty-tworears and proved safe by millions for
Colds HeadacheToothache LumbagoEarache RheumatismNeuralgia Pain, Pain
Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin”only. Each unbroken pneknge containsproper directions. Hnndy boxes oftwelve tablets cost few cents. Drug-gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100.Aspirin Is the trade mark of BayerManufacture of Mnnonretlraddester ofSallcylicacld.—Advertisement.
California’s Lemon Crop.The present lemon crop >f the state
of California with one exception, willbe the largest ever shipped out of thatstate. It Is estimated that it will con-sist of 10,878 carloads of 400 boxeseach. The crop of 1920-21 wus slightlylarger.
Lighthouse for Airplanes.
The first “air lighthouse," at Mltchelfield. New York, has been pronouncedn success by army air officers. It willflash In Morse code the first letters ofthe field's name at 10-second Intervalsfor the guidance of night fliers.
Many a man's nervousness Is due tohla lack of nerve.
BACK ACHY?leae and achy in the morning? Tor-
tured with backache all day long? Nowonder you feel worn out and discour-aged! But have you given any thoughtto your kidneys? Weak kidneya causejuat such troubles; and you are likely!to have headaches, too, with dizziness,•tabbing pains and bladder irregulari-ties. Don’t risk neglect! Use Doon'eKidney Pills. Doan's hive helpedthousands. They should help you. Askyour neighbor/
A Colorado CaseO. ¦. -
auto mechanic, 2 af" l iITtaJFlorence* I** 1**
"I'was do'-* 1In* some heavylifting and my IMPhack started to iKMtiMWffwMgpain. Whenbent over I could?hardly get up onLMWBBBri ¦ ItSaccount ofsevere palne ln**es; Wmy back. My kidneys acted freely.J. !V* Onen ¦ Kidney Pills adver-tised In the paper, so I purchased abox- Doan'e cured me and I havenever had any more trouble."
Oat Dean's at AnyStan, Maa Baa
DOAN’S »;javFO«n»-MUJUlUt CO, BUFFALO, It%
the RAY*™* enterprise