HOW WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE May Escape the Dreaded Suf- ferings of that Period by Taking Mrs. Block's Advice 2 M «= *Durin Torry ei 8 after Fi two years. I saw Lydia E. Pinkham’'s egetable Com- {good” results from Xow It has been said & thousand that not one woman in this y natural change without ex encing a train of very annoyi ~~ sometimes painful a oes sar hot 3 spots before eyes, dizzy spell, nervousness, are only hu of the symptoms, Every woman at this age should prefit by Mrs. Block's e - ence and try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound. If you have the slightest doubt thst Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pid wil help you, write to Lydia E. Medicine Co., Lynn, Maass., about your health. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. A arettes 10¢ fi r 10¢ from one GENUINE ‘BULL DURHAM TOBACCO Woareenss SL SSSI 30¢ at all draggiste for the prompt relief of Asthma and Hay Fever. Ask your druggist for i2, 25 cents and one dollar, ite for FREE SAMPLE, Northrop & Lyman Co.,Inc., Buffalo, N.Y, Cuticura Talcum is Fragrant and Very Healthful Seap 25¢, Ointment 25 and 50¢, Talcum 25¢. ELIXIR BABEK A GOOD TONIO Drives Malaria Out of the System. “Your ‘Babek’ acts like magic: have given it to numerous people in my parish Who were suffering with chills, malaria and fever. 1 recommend It to those who are sufferers and in need of a good tone.” -— . 8, Bzymanowski, St. Stephen's church Amboy, N. J. Elixir Babek, all frusyists or by Parcel Post, prepaid, trom 1 & Co, Washington, D. C. Attention Pile Sufferers USE PILE POWDER Ht heals, dries them up. Ths only treatment for Bind, Bleeding, feoning or Protrudin Plies. A hirmless and Jainies fashady. iat oney usrantes at your Ho or matled for $1.06, PILE POWDER 83 PLUM 8T., TROY, OHIO. MOTORISTS, ATTENTION, Use the Motor. Log, the handy pocket case system that gives a diary of trips; a record of costs: a np for care, a measure of service, an fadifputoble tire record, the year round 82.50, postpaid. Motor-Log, Bethlshem, Pas. BEMSTITOHING and PICOTING ATTACH. s works on sll sewing FING ATrAOH. 3.00. Fersonal checks 100 extra. Light's I Order House, Sox 127, Birmingham, Als Now Books—Instructive, Entertaining tian le fortune feller, Jee 25 ¢. Free oa 8 games. Sand mow. Engine Bupply & Pub. Co.. Augusta, Ms * - pet, HAVE, CHHOO ne t, Helghta Clifton # ws Younghusband Gets Permit to Scale Mount Everest, “Roof of the World.” NEVER YET SCALED BY MAN No European Has Ever Approached Nearer Than Sixty Miles From Its Base and Few Travelers Have Seen Its Upper Slopes. New York.—Mount FEierest, Himalayan peak called “the roof of the world,” which Sir Francis Young- husband, the British soldier-explorer, wlll attempt to climb next summer, bas never yet been scaled by man. another land of mystery, the difficul- ties iff even approaching Mount Ever est have been sufficient to baflle ex- plorers, The world's highest peak lies Tibet, north of the British Indian bor- pean has ever approached nearer than 60 miles from its base and few trav- elers have ever seen its upper slopes, Bxplorer Gets Permit. to ascend some of Mount have been made though be- cause access to them through Tie approach to Mount Tibet Nepal, Everest through is said prospects of success than from Nepal side, Sir Francis Younghusband an- nounced that the Tibetan government had granted him permission to at tempt the ascent of the mountain by the Tibetan route. It was Sir Fran- cls,” Who as colonel commanding a British mission to the forbidden eity civilization. Mount Everest, named f George Everest, famous Britésh veyor general of India, is the highest { known mountain Ia the world. Its | trigonometrical altitude is 20,002 feet: its probable height Is 20,151 feet. next known highest of the Himalayan peaks are Kinchinjunga, 28 and K-2, or Bride peak, tude Is 28,101 feet. Duke Holds Record. The intrepid duke of the Abruzzi, who reached the top .of Mount Elias in Alaska (18,024 feet) and who { at one time held the record of “farth i est north” in arctic exploration | to climb K-2, or Bride peak, In 1909 but falled heeause from point of the compass he advanced he could find no way up to attain summit. At 24.0600 feet he and Fe Nn sons) whose alti whatever all the lepers In the country. THE CE and laborious; a thick mist warned them that to go on “would have been | madness,” This achlevement of the Italian ex- plorer, however, Is the world's record for mountain climbing. Bride peak Is In the Karakoram Himalayas. Be- sides it and its two higher sister peaks, | there are In the Himalayas no less | than 76 peaks about 24,000 feet, 48 | above 25,000, 18 above 26,000 feet and | five above 27.000 feet, Mountain climbing Is most ancient as well of the as fascinating Its chilef dangers | are avalanches, landslides, falling! rocks, blizzards, falling ice, falls from preciplees or into crevasses, falls from | Ice slopes or down snow slopes. Some of the notable mountain-climb- | one which the peaks of the various moun- | talns were attained follows: 1744, the Titllis, the first true snow mountain; 1786, Mount Blape's snm- 5 ! i | i 1 | i : i i i i i i i 1812, the Filosteraarhorn: the Zermatt Breithorn: 1820, Pikes peak; 1864, the Wetterhorn: 1855, the Mounte Rosa; 1865, the Mat. | terhorn; 1879, Chimborazo; 1883 the Cordillera; 18588, the Seikirks; 1897, Adoncagua ; 18038, the Bolivian Andes: 1808, Sikkim In the Himalayas: 1900, Mount Ruwenzorl, There have been no pre-eminent achievements hy ex- plorers since the last-named date, i SS — Lights 102 Candies in Contest. London~In a competition at Wal sall (Staffs) a woman lit 103 candles with an ordinary wooden safety mateh, writes a correspondent, She burfed | her fingers In doing so, but no other % DIES POOR, HAS $10,000 TOMB Once Wealthy Art Broker, Who Diss Penniless, to Lie in Stately Mausoleum, Nawark, N. J.—The body of Samuel Collins, seventy-five, who died vir- penniless in a hospital here from pneumonia, will be placed in a $10,000 mausoleum at Stroudsburg, which he built for himself and members of his fumily years ago. Frederick Kerr, a local art dealer, safd Mr, Collins formerly was a lead- time had been engaged by J. P. Mor- gan to collect works of art, During his carcer, Mr. Collins handled art transactions involving nearly $5,000, 000, keer sald, i In a furnished room occupied by | was a bank book showing a | balance of 87 cents. Collins’ body pe- | mained unclaimed at the morgue sev- | eral days. RS i i 4 Have You Seen Anything of a Lost Indian Tribe? $ App Washington, D. C.-—Has any body seen anything lately of the Montauk Indians? At last ac- counts they were llving on Long Island, but they seem to have drifted away and now the ernment is asked to pick up the trall. Chairman Snyder of the house Indian committee, intro duced a resolution to direct the secretary of the interior to in- vestigate and report, gov- Fr rt Be AB BARA A (8 EE a FAA AA AAA AAA A AA pM Keeps Vigil for Forty Years. London.~—In May, 1880, a sailor, two months, left Cardiff in a ship, telling his bride he would re. | turn New Year's day for dinner. | Every New Year's day for 40 years | the woman hag sat down to her dinner alone, with an empty plate opposite | her. She says she will keep the vigil on Po Every Policeman in California University Town Is an Expert - | in Some Line, Science study, where every effort | tse the in crime, & madesto Iatest and most modern meth. | preventing and combating | where there {5 an unusual. ois and A ——————— Each Patrolman in Berkeley Has Mo. tor Car—Entire Force Could Be Concentrated in One Place in Five Minutes. ——— Berkeley, Cal Policing a city as a or less a specialist in some line, where i for Lepers | and the publie, the distinguishing features lice department of Berkeley, city, in which is located the of California, the largest st general are some of | of the po- Cal, This | University udent body in the world, has perfected a system | of policing regarded by experts to be Proud of Police. i Pride in the work of its police ig the | boast of every citizen of this Call fornia city. In forwarding the offi: ciency of the department every po- liceman is provided with an automo bile, that is a combination police ma- Each patrolman Is qualified as a first | ald man, Through the yse of signal lights ana police horns, this ®partment of 32 | men, handling a population of 60.000 Persons, covering an area of nine | man patrolling a beat is at any time | more than a minute away from com- | munication with the station, and the | Beggars Are Barred. Through the method applied by the soliciting of alms by the fake cripple | has been virtually eradicated. Gam- | One feature that has attracted un- | usual attention to the department is | the mapping of crimes, By a pin | with colored beads, which indy. | cate the nature of the offense, the | location is marked on the map. This Gi ous crimes are committed, A general | An- other shows the bad boys of the -— munity, Still another shows the hours of the day on which crimes are com- mitted, Decline of More Than Five Billion Shown in 1920, Corn Leads the List With $1,662,000, 000--Ten Crops Show Gain in Value, Oranges Leading. Washington~~The value of farm crops of 1020 and & the farm and mal products and animals sold and slaughtered, as finally determined by the bureau of crop estimates, United States Department of Agriculture, is £10,856,000,000: or $5,105,000,000 below the total of 1910. The drop Is almost entirely confined to crops, among which the chief declines In value are: Corn, $1,062,000,000; cotton lint and seed, $1,500,000000; wheat, $854,000, 000; hay, tdme and wild, $325,000,000; tobacco, $248,000,000; and oats, $161, po Af fo are oranges, with a galn of $32,000,000, and sugar beets, $24,000,000, Other Items of gain are cabbage, $11,000,000 ; cowpeas, $10,000,000; sorghum cane sold and sirup made, $7,000,000, Small fZalns were made by soy beans, sugar- beet seed, maple sugar and sirup, and onlons. Apparently. the products of the farm wood lot have gained $228. 000,000 In value In the .comparison with 1010, After offsetting sguins agninst losses, below 1019 is $4,868,000,000, while only £237,000000 is found in the total of farm animal products and fartm anil mals sold and slaughtered. The wool decline is as yot unrealized, but it Is reckoned at 437,000,000. Of the ani mals sald and sinughtered, the decline for cattle and calves ls $223 000,000, and for swine, $427,000000. But on the other side of the account, dairy try raised and eggs produced, £160, 000,000. It is the rule that, in the upward and downward movements of prices, farm animals and animal products lag behind crops. So extreme was the Ing in the price of animals and animal prodygts in 1920, on account of the extraordinary fall the prices of crops with a short perlod of time, that the total erop value of 1020 is" reckoned to be only 56 per cent of the” total value of all farm products, In the estimates for a long series of years, this is the first erop value esti. mate that has fallen below 60 per cent of the total of all products, Spain to Reward Mothers, Madrid.~Most of the Spanish prov. inces are organizing fetes for the In. auguration of “Mothers’ day,” a fea. ture of which will be the awarding of prizes to consplelously meritorious mothers. The government and the lo- cnl ‘authorities are providing funds to organize and promote the movement, which aims at the encouragement of large families, : LIKE MILTON. “I'm afraid,” sald the let-him-down- 1 TR. “Do think $07" cried the “What are they?” you jeed, you unetuation employ almost the marks I" London o—— Logical Support, sg support of all the fraternal fers? “Yes, because candidate,” he Is the ——— Going Up. “Jenkins Is geiting to be something of a social climber!” “Yes, why Jenkins world way up an icy stare "Car Back Given Out? Theré’s surely some reason for that lame, achy back. Likely it’s your kid neys, A cold or strain ofttimes congests the kidnevs and glows them up. Thas may be the reason for that naggin backache, those sharp pain, that ted worn-out feeling. Yow may bave head. aches and dizzy spells, too, wilh annoy ing bladder irregularity. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills, They have helped thou sands. Ask your neighbor! A Georgia Case T. A. Hubbard, 208 Third Bt, Al- bany, Oa, BSaAys: “I had little con-~ trol over the action of my kidneys and had to pass the ne- eretions wo often. . My back was so § james and sore, I could bardly straighten up and frequently little col- ored specks would § fioat befors my eyes, dimming my sight I used Doan’s snd six boxes entirely the trouble” + Get Doan’s st Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’ RIDNEY PILLS FOSTER -MILBURN CO., BUFFALD, N. Y. ———————— MANS BEST AGE A man is as old as his organs; he can be as vigorous and healthy at 70 as at 35 if he aids his organs in performing their functions. Keep your vital organs healthy with GOLD MEDAL ama The world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles since 1696; corrects disorders; stimulates vital organs. All druggists, three sizes. for ihe Gold Model bow back a on every W Kidney Pills cured me of seline Reg US Pe. Of V. ONE WAY TO DO IT “I don’t see how you can afford te run an automobile.” “Easysenough, meat.” Nothing Like Style, Bhe'll take a car to ride a block If her dress is mot in siyie But ft her don the latest frock And she'll foot it many a mile -— No Deception. salesman 1 bought these goods from deceived me when he told me the colors were fast” “He told you the truth, for myself how they ran” Natural Method. *I understand you got your hand — “The I con see “Why not? Isn't it ural thing in the on tick?” Contrary Fate. if § ing woman a hand on all her lines?” on foot” Adding to the Costa letters” HE MUST HAVE BEEN THE LIMIT "Where have you been?” “On a pleasure trip.” “Where?” “Through the divorce courta™ The Time to Get "Em. Rickes have wings, And take to fight; I'd like to catoh ‘em When they Nght The Reason. “He impressed me as such a me chanical sort of man” “Perhaps that impression is doe to the fact that in business he Is such a screw and In society such a bore” i $ A Strategic Move. ¢ “1 understand that your wife is do ing her own cooking.” “You are mistaken,” “Dobgorl told me she was." “Oh, that was just for a little while. Dobson was paying us a visit and 1 guess she thought he had stayed long enough."~Boston Transcript, . ; ee The Answer. “Ie asked a lot of questions about the house, He wanted to know In the first place if it was rat-proof.” “Did he get a categorical reply?” A clean counter- irritant for SE aise and REFUSE CHESEBROUGH MFC CO