————— : THE (PATTON COURIER { : FROM ) WORSE »unds — Finally ith by Lydia Vegetable un, ‘After having my st baby, I lost i 2ight, no matter nat I did. Then a ctor told me I ould be better if had another baby, Modern Trusttal Machinery Opens Road to the Ending of All Poverty By DEAN DEXTER 8. KIMBALL, Cornell University. OR the first time since the world began we are in touch with the abolition of poverty through the tremendous output of our prod- ucts. : Regardless of what other factors may have contributed to the stabilization of this prosperity, a large amount of credit was unquestion- an management, for competition ably due to the rank and file of Americ: has been increasingly keen and the margin of profic consequently de- clining. leather with artificial Today we have silk competing with rayon, leather, copper with aluminum, ete, and, furthermcre, manufacturers are sich I did. But I } : Ph 2 78s TIAN t worse, was al- taking over distributing functions, thereby competing with jobbers, and ys sickl : ; , : y y. and some retail stores are doing manufacturing. nt down to 98 unds. My neigh- r told me about dia HE. Pinkham's bgetable Com- er very much, so ng four bottles, I [t has just done can do my house- e Lit of trouble.” , 10004 Nelson ). y should appear, ur heart's desire, hoose? Wealth? The equilibrium between supply and demand can therefore be main- savings are tained under conditions of an increasing production if all invested in permanent capital goods. Since primaty forces are increasing the purchasing power of the masses, the maintenance of this fundamental situation is more important than to overpersuade in the matter of buying. If unemployment can be ASPIRIN The whole world knows Aspirin as an effective antidote for pain. But i's just as important to know that there is only one genuine Bayer Aspirin. The name Bayer is oa gi tablet, and ino < ines unity Ic on the box. If it says Bayer, it’s genuine; and if it doesn't, it is Increasing Lack of Business Opportunity for not! Headaches are, dispelled by Bayer Aspirin. So are colds, | the College Graduate and the pain that goes with them; even neuralgia, neuritis, and trig ite ei rheumatism promptly relieved. Get Bayer—at any drugstore, | with proven directions. Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin; it does NOT affect the heart kept down and wages kept up, there will be a constancy of ever-increasing purchase power. best gift. Health cannot buy and use enough for 3 Vegetable Com- good fairy who 1th. By PROF. WILLIAM ALLEN HUGGARD, DePauw University. FRZD ZF. SUTTon lack of opportunity for college graduates at 7 There is evidence of a the present time. If the situation continues three things are likely to hap By ELMO SCOTT WATSON themselves the plant should be given prevent the accumulation We will have to cancel the debt whether we want to or avin, ring bone OR : . xt : i ¢ . a ons, NCE upon a time a his- pen: First, that only superior graduates will have a chance for desirable Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salleylicacid ’ "is a Api <p: . . . . ipa —— es —————— . orse going sound. oan of Be Aa Fo positions; second, the college will become increasingly restrictive as recards > fen - 0 RE nildly butquickly. rontier set about his task | ; g : : Do : | SCHWEC . Does not blister by listing and describing enrollment; third, the college will be frank to say that it can guarantee | alr ie ea TH JROE pis DEES and horse can be the “instruments of civili- | nothing, but it will attempt to survey the various fields to find wherein op- Our breeders are bred for higls gists, oF postpaid, zation.” He named the | ath lie f it int 1 ti id Ne toh | Was Your NY egg produetion Leghoras, ok 9-8 free. I Re ar ortunities lie for its graduates and vocational guidance will be empha- | 9 4 ocks cds, Anconas. Ey ters ax, the rifle, the boat and Jp | $s | : g I Grandmother’s Remedy Minorcas, Orpington, W yan: 2 ota BY s Se, 1 , diving : | size ore ths 8 a resent. | a wa tt 12¢ and u Al Debbi Bl the horse, and then, having put these | sized on ore than 1s at present ; : For every stomach OE ar tort. Fou me step in instruments ig the hands of a restless | If we could have students who come for the pure love of learning, un- and intestinal ill ai Mere er a Eine race of me » starte 3 otae . ? | his Oo, ashe rite today for ick Book. 0% of men, ho, of ried , the blotag | moved by the thought of any bread and butter return, we would not need | This good old-fash SCHWEGLER'S HATCHERY, 215 Northampton, BUFFALO. N. ¥. ee) | N onists of his tale on their epic of wil- . : . : el ioned herb home Soro b § derness-breaking. That historian was to worry about this new problem. But as long as our colleges draw their remedy for consti- Vi I L Y H a Emerson Hough, and the book was i students largely from families of very moderate means it seems to me | pation, stomach ills I0lin essons in our ome “The way to the West.” teh | ] : iy 11s . en | g 5 oi jeautifu r azing new metho Nar the West, published by | that the college has a vocational responsibility—at least it should inform | and other derange- solos in just a@ attle King the Bobbs-Merrill company of Indian- | z a . | ments of the sys- to so many horses apolis. BRAY MASTERSON | the students concerning this important vocational system. | tem so prevalent these days is in even stroyed 4,000 of A quarter of a century has passed The opportunities for college men and women have decreased only | greater favor as a family medicine | CHICAGO E" ew ] and another histori: f » frontier es : than in your randmother’s | Re ar, I. W. Phillips uldn’'t sell them fod aac Soran, 0 the frontier | in the last ten years. It has always been customary to regard college | —° 3 your gran day 620 Adair, BORistral Chicago, Minois. heh to keep is, 1s added one more to the “instru- 5 | > , . : ans { : EE ments of civilization” which a later men and women as the hope of the future, and the belief was common '‘Boschee’ S S Fup Ii : race ef restless men nsed in winning at anv bov wl ) ollege could become nothing less tha senator ney Kidman, the Ing that any boy who went to college could become nothing less than a senator hy 55 It the West, after their fathers had Gro? OF QD -T2r 15" COWBOXRS > en Bo > o 4 | has been relieving coughs due to colds 0 f Australia. He Ph Ee a oe piel 3 ¥ | or financier whose word controlled the policies of some enormous business for sixty-one years. On your investments. Secured by Real 1 teamster at $2 : va) y S was the | . , Estate. Guaranteed by reliable Come 3 six- or it seems particularly : ; .. | enterprise. In fact, ten years ago the world was all before us; where to | S th th Th t istate. Guard d by : wns 30 ranches ix-shooter "and it Seems partic ularly | Sutton one night at a dance to save | President Roosevelt on one of his vis- | ter] SE . | 00 £5 [2] roa pany. Principal and interest returm- 30000000 acres Son: ne Lat oe are | the life of the notorious Billy the | its to Oklahoma City by the veteran | choose was our pleasant privilege. At present, however, there is evidence | 100sens the phlegm, promotes expecto- | able monthly or as desired. Purticw- \ als > shers “Hi s Up l— > “ : * rh : ie el : - . rat oRs irht's : ars free \ 1 00,000 cattle and iso the publishers of “Hands Up! Kid, “not solely for the reason that | Billy Tilghman, as follows: “There's | cf a relative lack of opportunity for college graduates ‘tation, hives = good nighrs vest free | lars free, Gommerciotiiondd Mofitgse amels and thou- Stories of the Six-Gun Fighters of | | knew him well but simply that 1] one thing that always counts in a | ; 2 | Buy i aE nd: oo hotass | Co. Buh) Nag Deweil Mich Dept. Py he Ol i West.” as > Fre : » ef 4a hs nt as ? as uy it at your drug store. G. G. Green, d sheep. be 2d ye, Hosts a told di could not see a man murdered from | fight of that kind (between a peace Inc, Woodbury, N. J. EARN MONEY in Spare Time Sewing. We a i 0 on and written down by A. B behind,” as he explains i B for \flicer " a . . 7 ale} | . . . Be - 1 all naterials and trim- y as xplains it. But for | eflicer and a bad man, equally skillful . TIRES J > N a diate! Mac ala x > lp} Vantaa i ; | C « ’ immediately Argument MacDonald. As the title _ indicates. all that he saved Billy from being | on the ‘draw’)—the man who knows | Splendid Pr ogress Made by Sclence 1n the | Bunions Annex Bidg., rs inte a discus. this book deals with the final phase | shot in the back, the author of “Hands | he is right always has a shade on | Prolong ation of Human Life 5, Fula, Pa : : of the frontier era, the days when | Up!” has r illusions about that | the man who knows he is wrong.” | “ | Quick ‘relief from Pah, on for truth and civilization, as exemplified | I I as no illusions abot ¢ an 10 knows he is wrong. { Prevent shoe pressure. ¥ibat man who argues r Hane ye Se p : ie ; y Tu young outlaw. “If ever a man de jut that was not all, according At all drug and shoe stores bornels 20 plover fee Sadioss ingese desires only to lefinitel oy = ie. man, had § served killing, 1t was Billy the Kid. | to Sutton, who explains just how | By DR. FRANK BILLINGS, Rush Medical College. DrScholl’s nf Kennels, Bra ntario, Cans ’ > ly SPOSTesse re ¢ « : x . | 3 ~ a os American Maga- : a i : bo i vine red man, | pe says, “He was a human tiger, the | these peace officers handled their six- i Pp Put one on—the L ADIES MARE ID IO S30 Weng established a home of sorts in the | most pitiless killer of that period. | guns, and in doing so he does a lot of { ar h Vivsts ¢ known rational Aino-pa pain is gone stamp brings full particulars. A, B Hn recently-conquered wilderness and | In his short life of twenty-one years | much-needed debunking of the Wild | last fifty throug 1e application of known ratiomna Sot No 335, Andereon. Ind. ; set about putting its own house in | pe killed twenty-one men, and the | West, as it is presented by the mo- 1eans of PRRs of disease and especially the ‘modification of mor- er | 3 Staple; Learn of Prafits3 rder. i113 sd: : ‘ : touip s > . i opportunity; get fact® or Influenza 9 ger, cil : ; most of those killings were murders | vies, Sutton got his information | ality of infants the averace Curation of human ‘life has been increased Hanford’ S Balsam of Myrrh 2, De Ronde, rep- , lake Laxative : nsoiar 3% Some meme TS of that | done in cold blood.” | first-hand, for he once saw Wild Bill ; alc aE 3s to 57 or B58 vears: or about 22 vears | Since 1846 Has Healed Wounds and | Tose. New York ty. OS and \oisehold found Jit difficul to break Thus this old-timer shows a refresn- | demonstrate the secret of his lizht irom approximately 20 years to o¢ or od years; or about <u years. { Sores on Man and Beast va TE aCe Fy i ve. 30c.—Adv. away from certain lawless habits ac- | ing lack of maudlin sentimentality | ning-like draw and various other mat- | Motherhood has been relieved of its chief terror. Now the danger Money back for first bottle if not suited. All dealers * ii en quired while what Theodore Roose for those kiilers which colors the rs of C i rer plained : : : : 2 irs : : 1 = s siilers 1 > | ters of Colt technique were explained | ¢ . 4: ia dur hil . 3 ; > lerably t whe ally appreciate 3 a aracterized a a ca: ¥ of septicemia during childbirth is minimized so considerably that when . . ‘© oly Appreciated velt hus characterized as the “rough | writings of others who have chron. | to him by such masters as Bat Mas. | pticer Gi bats Lid Italian Fascists Get How One New Woman” s good architec- work of conquering a continent” was | icled their dark deeds, the same type r Silly Di i { occurs at a 1s traceable either to accident or ignorance. : F t 1¢ : eds, > St ype | terson, Billy Tilghman, Al Jennings. | hab H C dd eine or of ob be ; 5 | elped Out Dan Cup: going on, the task of law-bringing | of misplaced sympathy which saves | and others. He learned about this | Modern or aseptic surgery has permitted the development of great Chance to See World p P oe - was done in a primitive fashion. Su > ks of & anv urderers asf 3 sy fir aa | : 3 : . : A voung Italian who lately finished | “I am learning to he a womanly RAs pa SE 5a the necks of so many murderers to- | when, as a boy, he first arrived in! 4.hnical skill surgeons and by experiment and experience has made Rs a ) ’. u | an’ Patriels said. *becauscil Mi — perfluous forms were dispensed with day. He knew many of them—Jesse | Dodee City. Kan in the old days | v z . ! his university course and means to | woman,” Patricia said, ‘because 1K€ { ‘ es v ’ . » yr tlle J . : 1 1 pL g . . LR) +3 : i . . p: 3 er to { legal technicalities ignored and the | James, Cherokee Bill, Bill Doolin | when “there was no Sunday west of | it possible to invade all parts of the human or animal body with much | take up architecture as a profession | te be abreast of the fashion, and 1 une» ’ fi dealing out of justice was, in the | (réscent Sam, Belle Starr, the Dalton | Kansas City and no God, west of | less risk to health and life than ever before. has been one of the first to benefit by | certain that “a true, sweet woman’ il light of present-day procedure, appal ,Q » JOoRRinos oano \nrv Starr Ro Smith? ic ms tnke vl “ . . v . Mussolini's rder that every Italian will soon be all the © Mind you sh Out I ! or I i y are, ap] boys, the Jennings gang, Henry Starr Fort Smith,” and was taken under | This has led to the saving of thousands of lives and has given us Olin. S: Orde it ever) wis ; gl : y ii lingly simple and direct. For in most Blacked-faced Charley and Arkansas | the wing of such frontier notables as merchant ship should reserve two | it is much easier to learn to do with- . } . = ® 5 t a { 4 . fear a hie afbvi dar A ier hes 3 = . | 1 Poison | cases Old Judge Colt was the final | Tom—and, knowing them and the en- { Masterson, Luke Short, Wyatt Earp. | better knowledge of living disease through a study of living morbid | berths free on every voyage for young | out stays (corsets) than to accustom: i arbiter, and from his decisions there | vironment which shaped their desti- | Chalk Beeson and Robert M. Wright, | anatomy visible during a surgical o pe ration. Formerly a surceon could Italians desirous of seeing the world. vourself to wearing them, so I have was rarely an appeal. nies, he ct account for what they | : » adde is % Nedee i ut | . : : They can choose their route and the | bought a pair, and I wear them for ts or Bindder a : Hs apa ies, he can ac ou t 0 J 1 e) and he added to his knowledge in that examine only a dead body. R y ey ate a1 ong” 1 ; ne 4 1g oF : | Mention the word “gunman” and | were and what they did. But he does | turbulent period when Isaac C. Parker v . | extent of the journey, paying only | half an hour every day. The first day » Begin | one naturally thinks of the gangsters | pot glorify their crimes. He may | was the “hanging judge” at Fort | tt a ——_, | about 18 or 20 lire a day. This [ I had them on, a man came to lunch- alts in our big cities of today. But as | have admired them for what good | Smith, Ark. and the ouilaw gangs. | > . 5 “le 5 brings *the grand tour” within the | eon, and I had no time to change, and we Emerson Hough long ago pointed out | qualities they did possess, but he ad- | such as the Daltons, the Doolins and | National I olicies I rove Inadequate to Meet | reach of the professional classes and | in the middle of lunch I fainted dead 5 hurt and your (in his “The Story of the Outlaw”). | mires more the type of gunman who | others, were making their last stand | Nand will surely serve as a liberal educa- | off. v | ic: : po 2 : | OOS A 9 oy 2) ba LV x get scared and | it is exceedingly unfair to the gun drew his six-shooter in the cause of | in what is’now the state of Oklahoma. | Needs of Ameri can 1 Ag riculture tion. ““When 1 came to, he was helding r stomach with ! man of the Old West to compare the | law and order. “Nearly all those The sum total of Sutton’s observa. | “Book and rifle make the perfect | me in his arms, and I murmured, *Oh, cite the kidneys { killer of today with him. “The one | peace officers of the old frontier were | tions. as set down in- the. pages of | By GEN. JOHN J. PERSHING. fascist,” Mussolini often reminds his | please, slit my stays!” and the most ‘e urinary tract. is an assassin, the other was a war | likable men, but there was nothing | Lis book, is a paraphrase of the old young followers, and now he adds the | wonderful look came into his face, and clean like you | rior; the one is a dastard, the other | maudlin or irresolute about them saying that “they who take the sword ; * : 3 traveler's compass to the emblems of | he told me later that 1 was the first san, by flushing | was something of a man,” said Hough They knew that death was the only | shall perish by the sword.” For, as It is obvious even to the casual observer that something is wrong in excellence.—Chicago Journal. | woman to remind him eof his dear. harmless salts | who declared that the nature of | penalty that would curb those wild | he puts it, “The six-shooter ended the | the adjustment of industry to the complex conditions of the present day. | ei | dead mother. He went all tender and 3 Ig i- | £ J » crimes committed by o » i > ‘der, ¢ ‘hen i vas | lives of nine-te 8s of & s aws v : iy : . : . | foozly, an ince ) as e the body's uri ome of the crimes committed by the | men of the border, and when it was | lives of nine-tenths of all the outlaws | \y are forced to the inevitable conclusion that our national policies Needs No W inding | foozly, and since then he has done lates them to { modern type of *gunman would | necessary to inflict it they did not | of the Wild West.” And it was al y . . { A clock isoperated in the Polytech | nothing but beg me to marry him.” "— The function cause a hardened desperado of the hesitate.” says Sutton. Such were | most equally true of those others have not been at all adequate to meet the needs of Anu rican agriculture, | nic institute of Zurich, Switzerland. | Prom * ‘Gin and Ginger,” by Lady Kit filter the blood. West to blush for shame. And in | Wild Bill Hickok, whom he character- who took up the six-shooter in de | especially im this postwar period. Unless some way through national ef- | which does not need to be wound. Its ty Vincent, 1 ain from it 500 that opinion Fred Sutton, who knew | zes. as "unquestionably the fastest fense of the law. Of the four most | gov ic found for raising the level of prices on our hasic products sufficient- | running power is provided hy a mech- | re er artnet aste, so we ean some of those old-time desperadoes | Md surest man with a six-shooter | famous peace officers whom Sutton ¢ 2 . anism set in motion each time there Sons of Rest he vital impor- intimately, seems fo concur. In his | that the ,West ever knew.” Bat Mus knew, three went down before a ly to meet production costs and give a margin o profi that will enzh le | is a variation in temperature of two The only exercise some loafers ever cidneys active. chapter on “The Border Code” is an | terson, Pat Garrett and Billy Tilgh- | smoking - six-shooter. Wild Bill's | the actual producers to hold their land and provide for its constant im- | fegrees. get £8 to run riot when told to zo te rater—vy an’ | inating e siti he un man. It was men of this type who ‘ie areer as “prince istol- Wor : x + : » water—you can't luminating exposition of “the 1 1 t was men of this type who |-brief career as “prince of pistol-| |. pent, then the small farmer is doomed. ate work —Burvt and Fireside. 0 get from any written law of the Old West, which | used the six-shooter as an “instru- | eers” ended abruptly in 1876, wlien he : pe s ; . Soil in a forested” area absorbs a r ounces of Jad gave to every man a chance.” One | ment of civiliza jon.” was shot down from behind in During the war we insisted that the American [a rmers should ¢ more water and holds it longer than Only way to profoundly enjoy riches ental in a glass instance is typical: “Fill your hangs, was the remark Deadwood, Gi D. Nearly a quar pand their efforts to the utmost to feed our armies in the field and i j soil in an open area wwmprotected by | is to be very poor in one's earlier thst ean miom- Wj a 'trelahiery camp at Wamon-Red | thal, Wild Bill nade wien se “got the ior of a cenpuly sites Pat Garrett had | 1y0i0g and civilian populations of the allies as well. With. the war's | vegetation. years, nd your kidneys Springs two men quarreled. and after | drop on” a bad man from Texas who | killed Billy the Kid, he himself was : : ; ne : a ee —- cl Gu his famous salts . { they were separated and all of us | had come up the trail to Hays City. | shot and killed. After fifty-one years | end, we failed to consider that there was a certain responsibility upon A of graves. and | 5 i ue { Kan, where Bill was marshal, with | as a peace officer Billy Tilg ghia} us as a nation to aid the farmer to escape from the disastrous i ot Hihia iw em, A na Jack, sho 8d { Se = 3 wn inillinG He EEC 4 3 . with lithia, and the other without warning. We formed | the announced intention of spilling | “went out” as he had hoped to do | Saat ob oxtestive production and. commelitia y 2? . v : 3 “i : ; . ellects of excess pI uction an mpetition, rs to help clean what was called a iack-rabbit court. | the Hickok blood. For the border in smoke and with his boots on. 1 Sinepes also A ye on ira) Toy his ite | code extended to Siig S3ponenis of | He was shot in an Oklahoma oil boom — { To Be Well the Kidneys Must Thoroughly By is 5 s in the system n our guil 3 a « | law and order when they set about | town in 1924 by a man whom he had | . Ww P i i ife but the executioner. just before ! 3 } ! ad | ay Sota : aste Poisons from the Blood. a source of irri- Jie ed BS trigger. rebuked him | arresting a desperado and made them | arrested and was taking to the police Release Allied I owers of Indebtec ess to | TB | : : | elieving bladder with “give the other fellow a chance, even | station. Only Bat Masterson, who America Under C ondition 2 i OES every day find you lame, stiff and “Yo it as decent, even, as a > \xceedingly dangerous of Wi /e SATS. Ae : J : S [ : sax ig ons een eiore ft | When it was exceedingly dangerous to | left the Wild West years ago to be. | “ Ay achy? Do you feel tired and drowsy isive, eannot in- : : do so.” One of the reasons they were | come .a New York newspaper ian | Yi —— | suffer nagging backache, headache and i Sorvossent 1s this same code which caused ! willing to do so was explained to ! died peacefully “with his boots off. By UNITED STATES SENATOR COPELAND, New York. | dizzy spells? Are the kidney secret®ons vhich everyone Tos . oe a oe TE — ne ee — scanty and burning in passage? n to he keep | ; : . . Sv ia +2} a : : nd active, Try Pl shoots. When these new shoots show | clarify the water and care must be ex- | We will never collect the money which the nations of Europe owe us. Sluggish kidneys allow paisons : Do Not Force ants ercised to | to remain in the blood and upset water drinking, 11 wonder what ley trouble and MAN BALSAM rl 8t., N. Y.. City if a plant has been growing thrift- fly for some time and then begins to go back, it probably needs a rest, and no amount of forcing will do any per- manent good. It will, says Nature Magazine of Washington, do a definite harm. During the resting period a plant is better if left entirely alone | pool water is very effective. but it is | Companion. “In higher altitudes.’ Y iz Plans . E33 in a dry. cool cellar. It will of its own | more expensive to install and main- | adds the caustic commentator, “house. would release the allied powers of their indebtedness to America providing A Stimulant Diaretic to the Kidneys necord. and without any attention of | tain than Sone other methods, An | wives probably put it into the refriz | they release Germany of her reparations and agree together upon a pro- At all dealers, 60c a box. Foster-Milbumn Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y. > ti sor 1 new green | eflicient filter must be provided to | erator to boi.” ’ A y W - any kind, begin to put out ® P . : gram of disarmament and cancel preparations for future wars. — a thorough watering, a repotting if necessary, and brought up into its place in the sun, After it is growing well it may be given fertilizer, Water Purification The use of the ultra-violet ray treat- ment for purification of swimming: of scum or sediment in the apparatus, #3 this renders the treatment inef fective. Cooking Secret “At sea level water boils at 212 de- grees. At 5,000 feet it boils at 201 degrees,” says the Woman's Home it now, and by doing so restor2 the prewar status of Lurope, iree commercial interchange regain what we may lose lation ? I would have a United States with those of England, commercial ers and Germany conference of repre not. Why not do and through through the cancel- sentatives of the France, Italy, the other allied pow- I would bring about some adjustment by which 1 Doar’ the whole system. b: Doan’s Pil®, a stimulant diuretic, in- |&: crease the secretion of the kidneys and thus aid in the elimination of waste im. |} purities. Yoan’s have established a nation. | §t ¥ wide reputation. Ask your neighbor! s Pills |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers