Lay oak right over the old === worn floors. Woodwork is not disturbed except the quarters rou; with OAK floors at slight expense. Oak very room like ne heasy 0 keep clean. Write for - complet e fr OAK FLOORING BUREAY 4293 Builders’ Building CHICAGO SALE BE SINESS PL. A ES FOR ‘ iT SHOX $7,000. PLOT For price In $5,000 busines ment; p > on main atiple te equip- re for quick sale 500. File J-2118, MACHINE 10P- DIE WORKS In large N. J. city; est, 8 yrs.; same owner; sales over $75, 000 yr: large net profits; mfrs. all kind dies; bldg. 7,000 sq. ft.; ets; price for bus. and r. e. are buy “ile J- TIONERY yi: est. 20 yrs. “equipped and equip,: price incl, .) $5,600. File J-502. AN in popular N, J. $16,000 yr.; comple tel fce cream mfg, (subrented $40 ced; rms. Main thorofare parking space; bldg. 36x price incl. bus. and r. HEM N S Tei Summit, N. J.; est. 3 ner; $2,000 yr.; no compe titic ; eompl. equipped; low rent; price $3,000. File J-2701. TEA ROOM in one of most popular resort cities in N, J.; across sir. of yacht clu nothing equal to it in v ity; seats 56; best clientele; price incl. 2 rms. $15.000. File J-2302 HOTEL-DINING ROOM On main highway nr. Philadelphia, good ocean beach rn ; est, 14 yrs.; up-to-date and best fur. : $7.000 yr.; price incl, a and r. Fi J-1704. APPLE-C on, E Philadeiiin Office Detroit Odice i oursy 1324 Walnut St, 1001 Transports ation Bldg. SEND Us YOUR ( OL D GOLD, PL ATINU 1, Teeth, Old Coins. Chec k sent by return mail, H + BY VON Building, 719 Hippodrome Cleveland, Ohio. Plane’s Lure Was Strong Mrs. H. P. Coupe of Los Angeles, Calif, tracing the report that her nine-year-old daughter, Betty Lou, had been playing truant from school, discovered that Betty had hecome n stunt flyer's mascot. Jetty played “hookey” in order to loop the loop with Ray Solomon at Callies field there. In the course of a littie ques- tioning Mrs. Coupe found that the episode in question was one of sev- eral times that Betty had “taken the afr.” Headaches from Slight Colds Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets re- leve the Headache by curing the Cold. Look for signature of E. W. Grove on the box. 30c.—Adwv. Meanies Intuition is a man’s word for any reasoning more accurate than his own. —Woman’s Home Companion. A Benefactor A physician who reaches out to benefit humanity leaves a record behind him that is worth while. Such a man was Dr. R.. V. Pierce. His study along medical lines, and his knowl- edge of the ities of herbs and plants led to the discov- ery of his won- derful herbal remedy, Doctor Pierce’s Favor- ite Pres scription, It is just the quired if a woman is borne down by pain and sufferings at regular or ir- regular intervals, by nervousness or dizzy spelis, headache or backache. Favorite Pre can be had in tablet form as well as liquid at your neighborhood store. “Cutting teeth is wisde easy” MRS. WINSLOW'S i SYRUM hie Infants’ and Children’s Regulator At all druggists Non-Narcotic, Non-Alcoholic Oakland, Nebr., Feb. 28, 1920 | Anglo-American Drug Co, Gentlemen: Iam more than glad to tell of the experience an from your wonde: riul B Eo Medicine. Our second baby is now seven months old and has never given usa moement’s trouble, The first and enly thing she has ever taken was Mrs. Winslow's TD. as four teeth i g and ade easy by Wi i s Syrup. (Name on request) ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO. 215-217 Fulton Street, New York | | ve - nd — 2 | 9 > Boschee’s Syrup nas been relieving coughs due to colds | for sixty-one years. Soothes the Throat wusens the phlegm, promotes expecto- ration, gives a good night's rest free from coughing. 30c and 90c bottles Buy it at your drug store, G. G. Green, | (ne, Woodbury, N, J. | \STOR KOENIGS| ad 2 9 Epilepsy Nervousness BA PRICE $150 “AT YOUR DRUG STORE Py gl 0) ID Booklet LO, MEDICINE o1 8 Leb BR RR CHICAGO. TLL, tonic re- | Alaskan THE PATTON COURIER ss NN HEY, PoP! LOOK! | FQUAIP A LOST BALL! @©Western Newspaper Uplo Teeteteatoeteetootectoctoetooteateatostoctantont. TET “World's Biggest” Pie Has Ton of Apples Yakima, Wash,—Heralded as the “world’s biggest,” an apple pie weighing more than a ton and requiring a specially con- structed oven and a derrick for handling was baked in Yakima recently. Four bakers, wielding rolling i pins 15 feet long, rolled the dough for the erust. Fires were started a day ahead in the huge oven to assure the proper heat. Yeetentectoatesont oto tt 8. BUT ARE YOU SURE | “HIS (6 A LOSY BALL SR La AS \S // A SEE FOUR MEM OVER THERE ARE STILL LOOKING FOR 17 Fortune Telling By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, University of i Illinois. | | HERE is a window sign that flaunted itself in my race every time I walked down the long street in Provincetown during the month of my vacation : “Spiritualistic Readings By Appointment.” I knew very well that the whole thing was a fake and that the last two words on the placard were mere ly for psychological effect. There was no crowd rushing in to obtain a reading. In fact, I never saw anyone entering the house, though | passed it two or three times daily for weeks. There was no necessity of making an appointment; one could have had his future and his past laid before him any time he was inclined te call. The sign interested me, however. | won dered what the reader would say if | snould go in. 1 had curiosity, but | still had a trace of judgment left, so REX remedial qual- | I looked and passed on. It is strange how much we like to be told what we are and especially what we are going to be. The newly arrived guest at the inn who sits across from me at table told me at luncheon today that 1 had a psychic hand, and then she looked wise and made a few other personal remarks about my possibilities. Now, I don’t know whether a psychic hand is a de- sirable possession or not, but | judged from what she suggested that it is. A clever man who depicts character from looking at a few lines of one’s handwriting came into the office a few weeks ago and predicted our fu- ture for us. He told me . was impul- sive and tender-hearted, and a lot of things that anyone with half an eye could tell by looking at m2 even if he had never come within a hundred miles of my handwriting. Of course it pleased me. Jim was sitting at the desk with his | head on his hand indulging in an ex- citing spell »f the blues. He came into the game and deposited a speci- men of his chirography before the expert. “You are ‘easily discouraged,” the interpreter of penmanship said. “At che present time you are in love. and the ohjeet of vour affections feel as warmly as you would desire. You are (hangeable, and havirg tried one job, vou are likely soon to give it up and attempt another.” Jim was amazed. “How do you suppose he does it?" rhe hoy asked. ut see it isn't so difficult as it seems If you keep your eyes open. There are wonderful ways of read ing che future and of looking into the past—tea grounds and earls and the lines on one’s hands. Ir is unbeliev- able what a palmist can tell you if you only let her hold your hand for Toes not Yoo a while, and most of us like what are told, especially if isn't true; scorn what we are told, it feeds our pride esteem, vet after could read the future, have the courage to do it. (© by Western Newspaper Union.) we we know it and though we laugh to |e, all and our self- But 1 wonder at times if we really or have it done for us, and find out what is in store for us and when, if we would I doubt it. Apples we 2,100 pounds were precoot in a cannery. The pie was of the open-faced variety, with strips of crust criss-crossing over the vast sur- face. The baking of the pic was pre- liminary to celebration of Apple week. Two thousand school children, each of whom had been promised a bite of the pie, milled around the large outdoor oven while it was baking. SeeTeetooteetootoetoo teeter tect ee fant onto tt 8 ETT Til} Teeteoteoteotoetoeteetooteotertoateateutostct 3 8 TIT T Teatentaotereoteotosteetostontout onto t 0 0 0 8 Leeleatentuutontend to 00. TTT I I TT iT PRETTY FROCK IN GREEN AND VELVET ot ote £3 ote oo oe oe oe oe Stone Lillies Found Stockton, Calif.—Stone lilies 150,000,000 years ago, head of the geology passed the summer. A fossil fish tooth, stone, which had been kicked rock,” is one of the most specimens on display at the college, HIS RECORD MARRED DIPPING INTO SCIENCE doofeofeferfoeferfeofenfenferfonforfortocfontonfecfertorfecfortecfects Human Circulation System The circulation of blood is di- vided into three systems, each one having a special mission. The first system carries the blood through the body, the sec- ond through the lungs, and the third through the liver. These IT IT IT Ti) Leeteeteoteotootoetoeteutoatenton tact 0.0 DR which allows the heart to pump a drop of blood through the en- tire hody in half a minaot SaaVacioefectucl three form one great system Most of Them Fall New York.—Pearl Doles Bell, nov elist, frequently said she knew too much about love to succumb to it. Now she is on a honeymoon with Gil- bert E. Rubens. sfesferfenfeasdeaforfeidedonfesfertesfentete ded ese 30 30 330 Washington.—If the liefs, traditions and customs of the Indians are not to go the way of those of so many other native American tribes and be forever lost to human history, ethinologists will have to work double time in the next few years. This is the warning brought back from an expedition to the Yu- kon by Herbert W. Krieger, ethnolo- gist of the National museum under the Smithsonian institution. Mr. Krieger found that the younger Indians bgge become ‘Loroughly Americanize For them the pot- latches—once ceremonial events of great importance for the propitiation of those spirits who could insure good hunting or good ftishing—are merely opportunities for a good time. They have forgotten their own magic and their tribal folk lore. Only the old pecple remember these things, and if they are to be preserved these old people must be interviewed before they die Traces Eskimo Sites, Mr. Krieger's expedition was car- languages, be- ried out with aid from the Joseph tenry fund of the National Academy 20003053030 eof foe 30 Zo 30 Be fof se af oe of o eon oe feof fe fe fl fe of oe foe of Sciences. Its main purpose was to fellow up certain archeological and ethnological leads uncovered by Dr. Ales Hrdlicka in his survey of Alaska under the Smithsonian institution last year. Doctor Hrdlicka traced old In- dian and Eskimo sites which might throw iight on ancient man in Alaska and so help the solution of the vexed problem of man’s origin in America. As a result of Mr. Krieger's excava- tions at LConasila and his investiga- tions at Anvik, Helogochalk, Shageluk Slough and elsewhere along the Yu- kon, he believes that any archeologi cal evidences of ancient man in the interior of Alaska are going to be very hard to find. though there is much of later date to be uncovered. Mr. Krieger's most interesting dis- covery was made far from the mouth of the Yukon; ft comprised examples of the carvings of a coast tribe un known before last year when both Doctor Hrdlicka and the Canadian archeologist, Doctor Jenness, found specimens of these carvings, indicat- ing the existence of the tribe on St. Lawrence and Nelson islands. They are done in cld ivory and are Royal Cat ‘Making World Tour Here 1s Siam, once ewned py the king ot Siam, as he appeared on his The royal meow just returned from Europe following many airplane flights, New York and perhaps tour the country, New York. which Included arrival in au visit He planned to look over gots 0 eododeoiodletode folegodedols examples of an art unlike anything else known from Alaska. The modern natives dig them up from o'd graves and recarve the old ivory for com: mercial purposes, thus destroying many important specimens. Evidence that a uniform stone cul- ture ‘prevailed at one time from the Yukon down to southeastern Alaska was uncovered by Mr. Krieger. He found certain stone implaments, chief- ly a type of ax, common to the entire are. The places visited by Mr. Krieger on the lower Yukon represent the fu- sion points between the Eskimo and Indian cultures. Although the ,in- terior is now entirely Indian territory, Mr. Krieger found pottery. masks and other ohjects which typify Eskimo ecul- ture. The Indians there have many traditions of battles with the Eskimos. Follows Trail to Idaho. On his way back from Alaska Mr. Krieger continued earlier explorations for the bureau of American ethnol- ogy along the Columbia and Snake rivers. Last year he succeeded in tracing a single prehistoric culture characterized by semi-subterranean cir- cular houses and cremation burials from British Columbia through Wash- ington to Oregon. This year he fol- lowed traces of the same culture down the Snake river into Idahs, hoping that it would lead him into Utah and the northern outposts of early Pueblo culture, thus connecting the prehis- toric peoples of the West from Cana- da to Arizona. But he lost the trail in the Snake river canyon of central Idaho, the tra- ditional home of the Bannock and other Shoshonean tribes. , (©. 1927, Western Newspaper Union.) aol ey RN tp yh YN A Na} feciorierioriovioiociorioioioirioriosiocioriorionfecesfonfectes) BEEELEE IEEE J oe Ye oo #4 Indians Losing Tradition = ; oe . Teste 7 70 oe se se 0 oe oe S003 ogee ofeofuofesfenfeofesfeofusfesfe fe sfeZeofooorfeofenfesfunfeste sfefosforfiate sf sg sgeofeateofoofoofeofe sfuofeofe Je ofeofeofe ogee ole se afesfe seo ode ote ofeoge sg af ogo of eof of ofieadede YIITITRR PET The photograph shows Ralph W, Welch, clever Texan playing with Purdue. Welch was an outstanding star in the Harvard-Purdue game, when Harvard was defeated, 19 to 0. However, in the Chicago-Purdue game Welch's fumble cost his team the dating hack to the Tower Devonian age of are among the fossil specimens brought to the Col- lege of the Pacific by Prof Joa H. Jon- department, from fossil quarries in Iowa, where he 135,000,000 years old, buried in a bit of coraline lime- about for 15 years in a barnyard as “just a valuable saree L'his attractive and seasor: ble frock ‘s of green and black velvet. The long smock edged with beige fox fur is a new vogue of the season. The lower kirt and cuffs are of black velvet, whiie the smock is embroidered in dark green. New Methed Cleans Rusty Water Pipes New York.—Rust-choked iron water _pipes in a 353-story New York office building have been cleared by a new acid solvent, and the vast expense of repiping the whole structure avoided. The process, worked out by F. N. Speller, E. L. Chappell and R. P. Rus- sell of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is expected by engineers to become a very important factor in building management. It has long been known that a solu- tion of hydrochloric acid in hot wa- ter will dissolve rust, but the draw- back has been that it will also dis- solve iron and steel, so that it has never been considered practicable for use on a large scale. The three Mas- sachusetts engineers, however, added an organic “inhibitor,” which has the effect of preventing the acid from cor- roding the metal while still permit- ting it to attack the rust. In order to carry out their opera- tions with the least possible incon- venience to the tenants they divided the plumbing of the building into sec- | tions, attacking these one by one on Saturday afternoons, so that the seclu- tion could get in its work and be flushed out of the pipes before the re- sumption of business on Monday morning. True to Form Bayonne, N. J.—Fred and Stanley uth, twins and painters, are in a hospital each with a fracture of the left ankle. They fell together 25 ) feet TRERERXHRK REEEEEXEFXEXEREXEER KR LHH RRR HH London.—George de Gasenko crossed the English channel from Boulogne to Dover in 20 minutes in his Sea Flea, which looks like a cross between 1a submarine and a seaplane. The queer craft averaged 93 miles an hour for the trip, and the inventor was so cheered by his success that he predicted a similar craft, holding 100 passengers, could easily be built to cross the Atlantic in 40 hours. De Gasenko’s craft embodies the prineiples of water hugs. It draws only three inches of water, although 35 feet long and 18 feet high. The hull is of mahogany two-thirds of an k¥x KEXEEEXXEERAXXELEREREEXREE XR ELRE LR EEX R ERR HE ERHK REL ‘Sea Flea” Speedy FRR RRR RRR RRR RRR HET inch thick. With a load weighs only 2,000 pounds. of fuel it With two small wings and an air plane propeller, the Sea Flea at low speeds skims the surface of the water, but when it approaches its maximum it almost lifts it into the air, and like a flying fish flits from the crest of one wave to the crest of another, meanwhile maintaining a perfect bal- ance, insuring against seasickness. In May, 1926, after several short but successful tests. De Gasenko se! out from Marseilles for a trip across game, 7 to 6, from a scaffolding. S ’ One of Life’s Hardest Moments MEBBE HE USED ON he BILL AINT TH LITTLE Ur up SURE-SHOT HE YUH — ( LUSTER WUZ,\SE] SMART LrEnpEe ALECKS/ WAGON TO BRIN HIS GAME HOME Ei the Mediterranean and along the Afri can «coast. but rhe oropeller wus splintered by a heavy sea and the in- ventor was obliged to put in at Saintes Maries, near Arles. SIGK WOMAN SOON RECOVERS By Taking Lydia L. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable nd “A neighbcr advised me to try Lydia BE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which she said had helped her so much. So I bought a few bottles and tried it out. It sure helped me wonderfully, I felt much better. My work was no longer a dread to me, IfIhearofany one who is troubled the way I was, I will gladly recom- mend the Vegetable Conoound to them and I will answer any letters in regard to the same.” Megs. BERTHA MEACHAR, 1134 N. Penn. Ave., Lansing, Mich, “I had been sickly ever since I was fifteen years old. After taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound 1 got so I could do all my housework and I am in good health.”—MRgs. MARIE K. Wirriams, Ketchikan, Alaska. From Michigan to Alaska, from Maine to Oregon and from Connecticut to | California letters are continually being written by grateful women recom- mending Lydia B. Pinkham'’s Vegetable Compound. The Compound 4s made from roots end herbs and for more than fifty years has been helping to restore run-down, over-worked women to health, Are you on the Sunlit Road to Bet- NS | | | | | . ter Health? FOR INDIGESTION BELL-A ne “EATING OR ACUTE INDIGESTION. pce 75 cE 75 CENTS __¢ : ar No More in Gas, Sourness, Heartburn Sick Headache, Dizziness after eating or drinking 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Sold Everywhere YN OTICE! To Livestock Owners If You Own Any | Horses, Cattle, Poultry or Hogs, by All Means Read This. Safeguard your stock against the costly ravages of quick-spreading dis- ease. Nature has provided wonderful health-giving roots and herbs which have proved unfailing in thousands of cases. These are combined in a time- tried, reliable remedy, Porter's Pain King—the standby of hundreds of farmers in this community. They rec- ommend it highly for sores, colds and distemper in horses and for soreness of the udder, caked teats, and bloat in cows. Every day chickens are becoming better money-earners, and there is an increasing use ef Porter's Pain King by careful poultry raisers everywhere. It is a positive relief for gapes, roup and parasitic growths. Sick hens are not good layers. Use Porter's Pain King at the slight- est sign of trouble. Just follow the directions with each bottle. It may save you several hundred dollars. Your dealer guarantees satisfaction or money back. Made and guaranteed by The Geo. H Rundle Co, Piqua, Ohio, since 1871. WHEN CHILDREN FRET It isn’t right for the little tots to fret and they wouldn't if they felt right. Constipa- tion, headache, worms, feverishness, bad Breath; any of these will make a child fret. They need the pleasant remedy—MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET POWDERS. They regulate the bowels, break up colds, relieve feverishness, teething disorders and stomach troubles. *RADE MARK Used by Mothers for over 80 years. All drug- gists sell Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders. Ask today. Trial package Free. Address THE MOTHER GRAY CO. Le Roy, N. Y. Gone are the BiLious DAYS Biliousness disappears when you follow this sound, honest treatment. First: Eat simpler foods, allowing digestive system a onan to im- prove. Second: Stimulate better digestion and howel regularity by takin Chamberlain's Tablets of for a week, They arouse heaithy (8 digastion, get results quickly. 50c or 250 pocket sizes at your § druggist. For free pele write Chamberlain Med. Co., 503 6th Ave., Des Moines, towa. CHAMBERLAI N'S TABLETS Sta weit De Gasenko is a native of the Ukraine, but was trained in Germany. To Cool a Burn Use HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh All dealers are authorized to refund your money for the } The ancients first bottle if not ruited. be- lieved that kissing a pretty girl was a sure cure for head- ache After all, theie is nothing like the old-fashioned remedies. Scare for Wives Hoboken, i. J.—Three wives whom their hushands wish to be scared must appear in court. They have been tak- ing a vacation together on the rent money, No _r. mn nausea. KEL) IF used when retiring relieves smarting scald~ ng sticky eyes by noting HOXSIE'S Fy REMEDY FE-SA OF CHILDREN 50 cents at he 01 LS CO., NEWBURGH, N, ¥X. REN A tt Lire A A low # LE, AA nD extol By ELMO SCOTT HE issuance Thanksgiving by Presiden calls the 1 that the fir of any sort the hands President w: ing proclam issued by George Wasl President of the Unite tober 8, 1789, in New the capital of the nati from {its importance | “historical firsts,” thi had a romantic histor; was issued it disap more than 130 years were known. Jersey Man S The story of how ti came to be issued is : ing ere. On Friday, 1789, Elias Boudinot took the floor of the sentatives, and declar sion of congress shoul out offering an opport zens of the country to thanksgiving service, cause the adoption of guaranteed their futn and pursuit of happin upon presented the resolution : Resolved, that a joi both Houses be direct the President of the I request that he woul the people of the Unif of public Thanksgivin be observed by ackn grateful hearts, the ma of Almighty God, espe ing them an opportun establish a Constitutio for their safety and hq Strange as it may (ution preeipitated a Aedanus Burke, a South Carolina, decls not like this mimickir customs where they mockery of Thanksgiy nations at war frequ Deum” for (he san though to one it was to the other a defeat. Tucker, a Federalist Jina, declared that th Rats Scientists say that a between the black an raging. These two ct fighting for centuries, gle between individu every ten years a wi tween the masses. A scientists say, the bre most exterminated th recent years humans’ whole tribe nad distur
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers