eee tet eee nn. sets Maret IN FAVOR; Ss APPROVAL e fabric in several colors. r children but for grown- , a styling wherein color 3 color is being linked up 's of coats and dresses for ing little coat in this pic- if you please, bears a carries out the new color- nst attractively, Kor this 'olored wool velours is in- foundation of red wool coats of twill or flan- lency is to exploit fabric ornamental way. For in- t of navy charmeen-has a collar and cuffs of lighter , Scalloped along the ovel are the develop- line of thought of fab- trimming. One cun- is bordered all around, 1d cuffed with a hand- f three strips of the I of a different color. er pocket also in this e, bric incrustations are ‘orm of scalloped side leep scalloped yoke to y navy coat interprets in that it is slashed 0 as to reveal a lining , bandings and insets ontrasted or blended en they are apt to be for gay plaidings are TY popular for spring 3. Plaid taffeta used ne of the popular A coat of suede ar, cuffs and pocket arming for the lit- h color exploitation novelty woolen ma- re often made in narrow belts of S apt to be a collar kin, Quite a sophis- be sure, for youth 1s it should ‘be for ¢ general tendency "ate grown-up fash- \ BOTTOMLEY, Newspaper Union.) = EE REE — ! SRE Sn FA I ... —— Shreveport, La. sill shortly approved by the supervisors of Caddo county. have to be provided with an iirplane. dedicate a unique combination jail and courthouse, plans for which were | The jail is on top of the building and, to escape, prisoners will | Ultra Violet Ray Picks Good Liquor | Dr. Donald C. Stockbereger of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is shown above with the ultra violet ray apparatus, with which he has gtartled the scientific world by showing that good whisky can be told from “poison hooch” by means of the ray. Found Fortune in Junked Safe i A farmer who did not give his name sold an old safe to Joseph and Frank Hyer, blacksmiths of South Keyport, N. J., for junk. When the Hyers opened the safe they found in it $75,000 in cash, jewels and bonds. In the picture, left to right, are Clarence, Frank and Mrs. Mabel Hyer, with two of thelr friends. Latest Model in Lightships The new Royal Sovereign lightship, seven miles off Kastbourne, England, equipped with a powerful electric light, submarine oscillator, wireless and | a larger crew than the old type lightship that was taken off duty. Typewriters’ Many Uses Modern typewriters do a number of labor-saving tricks. By means of spe- clal attachments they insert forms in the proper place, align them correctly and shift carbons at the touch of a lever. The machine that adds and subtracts has revolutionized book- keeping. The typewriter has multi- plied its uses and in the portable form has gone to work on the battletield, above the clouds and in the remotest reaches of the world. Beauty Quest World-Wide All women use cosmetics of some sort. Japanese geishas paint little red spots on their otherwise chalky | white faces; the Mongol women fix their hair over frames after greasing it; Turkish and Persian women, scorn- ing rovge, darken their eyes with kohl and dye thelr hair and the palms of their hands and soles of their feet with henna, and fashionable Bedouin women tattoo blue marks on their skin and cultivate their eyebrows WOMAN EXECUTIONER | Hardwick, a former farmhand of her | father's farm and now owner of a bar- | | ber shop and restaurant. { employed as a waitress in the restau- | Mrs. Mary Bell, a pioneer | feminist movement, who has been &ap- | pointed chief magistrate and lord | proyost of Glasgow, Scotland, the first time a woman has been: chosen for the dual office. In accordance with custom the new appointee must | assist at all executions. NICARAGUAN ENVOY Alejandro Cesar, the new minister from Nicaragua to the United States, representing the Diaz government which was recognized by President Coolidge. INHERITS FORTUNE Ynddrw sad § PR LL LALIT) Miss Nellie Walsh, twenty-eight, clerk in the veterans’ bureau in Wash ington, has inherited over a million dollars from the estate of her great- The valized grandfather. estate, at $1,400,000, was willed her by Jarad Porter of Brownsville, Pa. Miss | Walsh's home is in Uniontown, Pa, | her sweetheart, rant. Late one night Willie Nafus, twenty- | three years old, of Sanish, N, D., way- | laid Alice while on her way to her | lodging from the restaurant. After- | ward Nafus returned to the restaurant | and spoke slightingly of the girl in the | hearing of Hardwick, | | ber shop she secured a revolver, | lowing | jerked the revolver from her coat and in the Headache 12 Years; Surgeon Forgot Needle Cedar Rapids, lowa.—Alvin Volderbing of Reinbeck has no headache today for the first time in 12 years. He blew his » nose. and found a half-inch piece of needle in his handker- chief. Twelve years ago, when a sol- dier in the Philippines, Volder- bing was kicked in the head by a horse. A surgeon operated and presumably left part of a needle in the man’s head. Re- cently physicians diagnosed his affliction as brain abscess and forecast his early death. GIRL SLAYER HAPPY; SWEETHEART LOYAL | Waitress Wronged Twice Kills Her Attacker. | Stanley, N. D.—Shooting to death | the man who attacked her and boasted | about it, Alice Holtz, twenty vears | old, a pretty waitress, is happy in | jail here awaiting trial because her tragedy has not shaken the faith id Alice was engaged to marry Jack | Alice was Hardwick did not believe the story was true, but cautioned Alice about be- | ing friendly with Nafus. Unnerved, the girl cried for hours. Then she be- came desperate. In Hardwick's bar- Fol- billiard hall, she Nafus to a shot the man through the heart. She is now being held on a charge of murder while prominent citizens are urging authorities to dismiss the case. But no matter what her fate is standing by her. “I don’t want to talk to anyone ex- | cept my folks about this,” she says. “I was afraid I would break down, but and | His love now Jack still believes in me loves me, so I am contented. | is all that counts with me.” | “I didn’t believe Nafus but I believe in Alice,” Hardwick says. Dog Braves 40 Below to Carry Plea for Help | Little Squaw, scribbled note from two miners crip- | crossed a 3,000-foot pass in the Brooks mountain range at night, with the mercury 40 degrees below zero, to his master's cabin here, have arrived here. Oscar Ottersoniz, Little Squaw min- | er, was awakened at 2:30 in the morn- { ing by his dog, Nigger, whining and | scratching at the door. A note on | the husky’s neck read: “Come, both seriously injured. Explosion.” { Ottersoniz had lent the dog to J. S. Shaw and C. Dunlap, who were min- ing on Tobin creek, a sled and a team of dogs, found Shaw and Dunlap badly injured by the explosion of a box of detonators. Dunlap was blinded. From the Little Squaw radio station, established December 13 by the United States signal corps, 90 miles north of the Arctic circle, word was sent to Fairbanks, Alaska, to rush an airplane to take the patients to a hospital. Decides to Live While in 175-Foot Death Leap Philadelphia.—Half way down in a 175-foot drop from the center of the Delaware river bridge to the water is no place to change your mind, in the opinion of Walter B. Church, who at- tempted suicide from the span, “1 wanted to end it all,” he said in | a hospital here. *I thought my life was useless, “When I was in the air, half way | down. I changed my mind. ut 1 | was in a bad place to change my mind. “lL was a good swimmer and had | no fear of the water. I remember hitting the water, I went under, I| don't know how fer, It was just a repetition of the fall. Down, down, down, then everything went black. I | don’t remember being picked up.” | Pie and Pastry Hurlers Smear Lancaster Store Lancaster, Pa.—Five men with a grudge against one another entered a | store operated by Andrew Cogley and | purchased his supply of pies and pas- | trigs. Lined up on opposite sides of | the store, the men began hurling pies, ladyfingers and buns. Many of the | missiles missed their marks, landing on the walls. Cogley summoned the police. arrived before the ammunition exhausted and arrested the ants, Michael and Ralph Staffiere Richard Dommell, Lewis Foernstei ind Moses Haldeman. Having spent all their money, the prisoners were They was combat committed to jail In default of bail tc wait a hearing on a charge of dis orderly conduct. | and Alaska.—Carrying a | The injured men beyond the pass. | Two men, hurrying over the pass with | SURVIVOR TELLS OF CANNIBALISM ADRIFT AT SEA Fisherman Makes Compact With Comrade Who Died in Helpless Craft. Los Angeles, Calif.—Eli S. Kelly, sixty-nine-year-old fisherman, gaunt and feeble, told a coroner's jury a stark story of adventure at sea. He was exonerated of responsibility for the death of his companion, James 8. Mec- Kinley, sixty-three years old, with whom he made a cannibal compact to | sustain life when the two drifted more than eight days in a 21-foot boat. The vounger man died of thirst and ex- posure, Kelly, himself near death, was | picked up on Santa Catalina island, where his boat drifted three days after McKinley's death, and taken to a hos: pital. His clothing hung loosely on his big frame, fer he had shrunk | from 210 to 120 pounds since he and | McKinley set out on their first and | last fishing trip together. Engine Dead, Storm Breaks. His son, Kelly testified, purchased the yawl, which had been a lifeboat aboard the yacht of Zane Grey, novel- ist. With McKinley's assistance, a mo- tor was installed, a license obtained the two embarked December 8 from Redondo Beach. When they got 16 miles from shore the engine went dead and they were never able to start it again. A storm | “] Had to Fight Him.” pled by an explosion, a malamute dog | which developed several waterspouts on Santa Monica bay broke over them before they were able to hoist sail, ana huge combers deluged the small craft. “McKinley was a clumsy man—a big fellow, and he couldn't handle himself very well,” Kelly said in explaining how his partner had fallen in the boat and broken one of the gallon water jars. “T knew our life ! little water we had in those jars, | continued, “but I couldn’t convince Mc- Kinley of that. He drank on the first day out all but one pint of the water | we carried.” One Drinks Salt Water, Goes Mad. Kelly described the that fol- lowed and said McKinley insisted on drinking salt water. He added: “On the third day the old man went stark mad. I had to fight him—not to : hurt him or anything, but just hold his hands—try to keep him from hurt- ! ing me. Twice he was washed over- | board, but I reached him and pulled him in. “After that I guarded the little pint | of water which I had saved. my finger down into it and across my lips. pretty bad then. I put him in cabin and lay down on some sacks, “After four days of storm we were out of sight of land. idea that I was going to rob him, and I had to fight him off some more. He the ” he depended on days with the sail&.” The Agreement, compact that the one who died first should provide food for the survivor. | Kelly said the two stood in the little | cabin and shook hands solemnly in | agreement. “T lost the next five days.” Kelly con- tinued. “It seemed to me later that we had been out seventeen or eighteen days in all. McKinley died on the morning of the eighth day, T think. 1 had put him in the cabin, and lay down beside him. [I couldn't throw him overboard because he was my friend.” “Yes,” Kelly sald In answer to a question, “I carried out our ment." Kelly could not continue his narra tive after reaching the point at which island. Robbers Are Peeved Buenos Aires, —Oswaldo ‘alled at the nearest here recently and filed a *hat burglars had entered his ind left without taking anything. They urned his P~use topsy-turvy, he sald, nd then made sneering remarks about his belongings. house, for screen doors which is quickly ad- justed and keeps the screen from rust- | at a lower temperature at high alti- ing. cotton in my son's loud speaker and | | Send now to 372 Pearl St, N. Y. I'd stick | rub it | The other man was | the | tion.—Johnson. | | In Later Years of Life | Good Elimination is More Than Ever Important. AS we grow older, there is apt to be a gradual slowing up of bodily functions. The kidneys are the blood filters. Proper function cleanses the blood stream thoroughly. Slug’ gish function is apt to permit some retention of uric acid and other poisons. This tends to make one tired, listless and achy —to have drowsy headaches and dizziness and perhaps a toxic backache. That the kidneys are not functioning properly is often shown by scanty or burning passages. Elderly people recommend Doan’s Pills in this condition. This tested diuretic is endorsed the country over. Ask your neighbor! Doan’s Pills timulant Diuretic to the Kidneys 60c all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N.Y. _. wr It takes much longer to cook foods in the mountains, because water boils A new invention is a “raincoat” | { tudes. SPECIAL FREE OFFER ON Spohn’s Distemper Compound We will mail free to anyone writing for same one of our free sample bottles. This is a special offer—good for a short time only—and offers a great oppor- tunity to try our excellent remedy for Distemper and Colds among horses; Distemper among dogs; Roup and similar diseases among poultry. Write today. SPOHN MEDICAL COMPANY, Dept. X, GOSHEN, INDIANA The man who smiles when every- thing goes wrong soon finds that things are not as bad as he thought. Simple Cure Hampden— Have you ever tried stuf- fing cotton in your ears to relieve earache? { pn Sloan—No, but I've tried stuffing | Muffs were once worn to keep the hands warm. How about using them | for the legs? that works just as well. CASTOR Ni MOTHER :- Fletcher’s Castoria is especially prepared to relieve Infants in arms an Children all ages of Constipa- tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Port Zid bsolutely Harmless — No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it. Almost all human life turns on prob- | abilities,— Voltaire. BE A SCALP SPECIALIST—Give scalp treatments. Learn the SELBORAL SYSTEM free. Sure results, 100 treatment kit, $6. | SELBORAL, Worcester, Mass. “DANDELION BUTTER COLOR” RADIO. AMBITIOUS MEN, WOMEN WANT- ED to distribute custom built radio sets of | nation-wide fame at amazingly low prices. Inquire CHENANGO RADIO SALES cO., Ninety-first Street, BROOKLYN, N. Y. A harmless vegetable butter color | used by millions for 50 years. Drug | stores and general stores sell bottles of “Dandelion” for 35 cents.—Adv. 377 PERSONAL—SAVE MONEY BY MAKING | your own Beauty preparations. Circular sent free, for stamp. Address HOMETTE BEAUTE SHOPPE, Box 995, South Bend, Ind. Thinking about his thoughts instead of his shoulders makes a man stoop- shouldered. Picture All the Presidents from Washing- ton to Coolidge Also “THE ROCK OF AGES.” Art finished size 16x20. Price $1.00 | for the two. Pay when received. The Picture | Man, 4112 Hartford Street, St. Louis, Mo. Anoint the eyelids with Roman Eye Bal- sam at night and see how refreshed and strengthened your eyes are in the morning. Adv. 4 | MAKE TWO $7.50 SALES TO MERCHANTS —Your profit $10.00. Write WARD'S SYSTEM "54 Loretta Street - = Pittsburgh, Pa. Show is not substance; realities gov- ern wise men.—Penn. Talk is cheap, but advice often proves expensive. No man was ever great by imita- A word to the wise guy is wasted. McKinley got the | got better after that and helped me | On the fourth day they made their | agree | he sighted the rocks of Santa Catalina Pizzurno | police" station | complaint | SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unless you see thé “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Accept only ‘‘Bayer” package which contains proven directions Eandy “Bayer” boxes af 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100--Druggists. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Masbufacters of Mcnoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers