pat uggish eling f right with nature by n-a-mint. Works mildly ly in small doses. Modern ientific. For the family, (a0us Mg, ramint ASK FOR ORIGINAL @ Mg, ° n-a-mint hewirng Gum KATIVE e But the Mint hew It ke Gum OW TRE. GEMINNE DNSTIPATION THAT _/COUGH the safe easy way before worse troubles follow. Take 'S HONEY HOUND AND TAR ie remedy for breaking eving throat troubles; oothing — quick relief nd hoarseness. t all druggists »’s Toothache Drops 'E TO STOMACH SS are suffering from Indi- S. Sour Stomach, disorders, send TOMACH REM- blet giv *8 1 > available to ever cess in his private prac- nly. Satisfaction guaran Jor large box and eet e ODUCTS LABORATORY E., Cleveland, Ohio. VAS CURED! ISK 10¢? Send me 10c packing and I will | treatment of medi- me permanent relief, V. DEAN Benton Harbor, Mich, meee —————— nported Flower ellias thrived in some ardens of the South, at some of the first to America are still ir Charleston, S. C. plant is somewhat 0 the tea plant and een named in honor + Kamellus, a monk, as BRASKA FARM rmer killed 103 rats K-R-0O (Kills Rats t made by a special an ingredient highly “the U. S. Govern- death to rats and ess to dogs, cats, aby chicks. K-R-O s most widely used erminator. Sold by ey back guarantee, ps Days ding secretary of a he do?” le hours of the last indsor Castle it 360 clocks and or castle, including itch ever made.— ‘Robust ‘Health depends upon Proper food ion. Keep IVE Pro - tive with Nore P 1G LAXATIVE" earl St., N. Y, City. jured? v for BINE endableliniment , threaten lay-ups. 1ation and guard 3 a quick healing dons strained by 1 to this 38-year- ters—no lost hair eal economy All ttle W.F.Young, Springfield Mass © £444 rr Long ‘emost Desert Resort imate— warm sunny —dry invigorating gorgeous mountain ideal winter home. Charfoy RINGS nia Scandal Gang Preys on Women Police and Stool Pigeons in Ring That Collects 5 Million a Year. New York.—A vice ring so power- ful that it does not need nor permit the aid of corrupt magistrates and so well organized that it card indexes its women victims and collects $5, 000,000 a year has been uncovered by investigations sifting the by-products of this city's municipal graft, it was learned recently. The ring, according to information being investigated by Isidor J. Kresel, who has charge of the appellate di- vision’s inquiry into the Magistrates’ courts, consists of stool pigeons, some members of the police department, certain court attaches, lawyers, and bail bondsmen, The ring preys upon.indiscreet wom- en, some of the victims being of prom- inence, it was charged. Married wom- en, show girls, night club hostesses— any women with money or jewels or lacking either but having beauty—are likely under certain circumstances to find themselves *‘framed” on charges of immorality, Story Told by Stool. The disclosures concerning the vice ring came at about the same time that a Special Sessions court was reversing the conviction of Mrs, Emma Ham- merstein on a charge of vagrancy or immoral conduct last June before Mag- istrate Earl Smith, Mrs. Hammerstein had been found guilty of improper conduct on the tes- timony of a policeman. The widow of the impressario had insisted all along that the charges against her were framed, Her case had been un- der investigation for several months. The story of the $5,000,000 vice ring came from a Broadway “stool,” whose name has not been revealed, but who is called “The Dove” among night life initiates. A woman known as “Madame Ad- ler,” who is said to own three estab lishments, one in midtown, one in the 70's and another in the Harlem black belt, is mentioned as a leading character in the easy morals-easy money racket, “Madame Adler” is said to have disappeared and the in- vestigators are conducting an under- cover search for her as a witness, “The Dove,” stool pigeon for the po- lice at a flat salary of $60 a week, told the sordid inside story of the vice racket for reasons not yet revealed. He was found recently in a midtown hotel, where his comfort was looked after by a butler and a man servant. “The Dove” told Kresel, it was learned, that for fifteen years he had served the police vice squad. The $60 was just coffee money, the investiga- tors learned, for “The Dove” had an arrangement whereby he received $10 for every woman turned over to cer- tain members of the vice squad. Not all of the details of the vice racket were made public, but it was said “The Dove” had amassed at least $500,000 for his work and that he also had received splits from ‘attorneys, bondsmen, and court attaches. How the Racket Works. The vice racket, as “The Dove” is said to have explained it, works like this: He or one of his mob invites a woman to an apartment or hotel room, A little later the vice squad arrives. The woman is arrested. The man in the case vanishes. The bail bond com- pany is called. Then a lawyer ap- pears. Finally the case is quashed with the aid of court attaches, Then comes the shakedown. In one in- stance, it was revealed, a woman paid out $1,500 to the ring. If the woman has no money she is permitted to put up her jewels. If she has neither money nor jewels, but is attractive, she is turned over to the ring’s “hostess” to earn enough money to “pay off.” As the result of evidence obtained by the investigators, it was learned, subpoenaes have been sent out to a score of women who have been vie- tims, Military Training and Industry Merged Moscow, U. S. S. R.—Under an amended law on military service, thousands of young men will serve their terms in Soviet industrial en- terprises, combining industrial with military training. Men assigned to this military-Indus- trial division will be under regular army discipline and subject to the usual military rules. After the com- pletion of their terms they will be urged to remain in the industries. It is hoped in this way to develop a large class of skilled labor and admin- istrative personnel for the growing Soviet economy. Cult of Laughter Disbanded by Police Budapest.—A new religious sect has come to grief in Debrescin, Hun- gary. The cult of the sect was laugh- ter and members were encouraged to roar with mirth when they attended services, Unfortunately the excellent tonic values of this new religion failed to find favor with the police and the sect was disbanded for irreverence and general lack of seriousness, 0 THE PATTON COURIER POOOGOOOOOGOGOOOOOOIPODS > Bolt Hits Parsonage, 4 $ but Misses Women @ Loxley, Ala.—Injured by a 4 lightning bolt which struck the < Methodist parsonage here, Mrs, 4 John Menery and Mrs. J. P. Holmes today were recovering 4 from severe hurts, while twelve 4 other women, guests in the home at the time, are expressing WINTER FEEDING NOW NEGLECTED wonder at their narrow escape. The women, members of an arts & : : ) » class meeting with Mrs, C. H. S Equipment n Poultry House & Carpenter, wife of the minister, Often Lacking. were in the middle of their in- : i struction when the bolt struck 2 Quite frequently poultry owners at- the house, almost demolishing tempt to go through the winter with the living room and slintering & insufficient feeding and watering er ni . mm i De the June The Sblinters > equipment in the poultry house. $ struck Mrs. Menery and Mrs. Weeks of bad weather during the Holmes. , winter make it hard to care for the flock adequately unless attention has been given to feeding needs. . . With the advent of mash feeding, 71,000 Indian Children flocks being fed in many instances on Being Educated by U. S. a mash ration alone, mash hoppers ‘inte use become practical- Washington.—With the opening of ja igi Highse Lemme iii school this year 71,000 Indian chil- ° a ue : Dhers 3 : be large enough to care for the mash dren throughout the United States NOoY. oF the flock: for at least two rol or classes. : = ; Is Surhie 1 ig 000 are in pub weeks, to save labor by less frequent ; 3.3 : B .pud filling. A good rule to follow in judg- lic schools, the remainder being edu- tne ie flock needs for a definite time r 3 Is » ( « i > > cated at government schools located is to allow for a consumption of cari 3 \ ra ti Q © § on the various reservations, and at about three pounds of mash per bird, missions and private institutions in per month. One foot of feeding space he country. : eo iin the « ry 5.60 : should be allowed for every ten birds Approximately 5,600 children are in the flock. The hopper should be living at their homes and attending Sri sad in ter oe ae ang § & ne t government day schools on the reser- b oat 0 the top vations. These schools are largely for ea sorateti.or: fnisifed. it should smaller children and constitute the be tod In the litter. tha: In the first Sep in the educagion vf fhe In house or in the scratch shed or room. dian child. Boarding school is the To facilitate the feeding of thi iin acilite eding s grain, next step, where, at the expense of a storage DOE In one ond or corner of the federal government, a more ad- . vanced training is given. | the house that hold enough - : s serate rg or a mo inte The 71,000 Indian children now be- a on gon RO A hh of Ye ing educated in United States schoolg I1€€ding Will I be a vauahe : a sme investment. Boxes s represent those who are physically and small jn : Boxes should also be provided and kept filled with and mentally able to receive learn- i y shell thr I int i i i grit & she roughou ew er. ing. An effort is being made to enrol} A STit and she t the winter, 3 A rinki untai ¢ 8 the remainder, about 9,000, who are Any drinking fountain that can be either married, ill, or defective. | easily cleaned Is good, Automatic | fountains, if they meet this require- | ment, are to be m2commended and if Married Women Holding | a self-heating fountain is available that can be kept well cleaned, it will Jobs Alarm Germans aid in keeping up egg worodnction Berlin.—The German cabinet, it is through the cold winter months. reported, now is considering curtail- Birds should never he forced to arink ing the married woman's right to work | fce water, even though suck =suto- outside the home. The cabinet's eco- matic heating equipn is not in- nomic advisers view with alarm the invasion of the labor market by mar- ried women. They claim that it is a factor immediately contributing to un- employment among men, stalled in the house. Select Breeding Stock Early in the Season Poultry raisers who contemplate . | hatching their own baby chicks should Statue of Gen. Herkimer have the breeding pens or flock mated Is Disarmed by Boys | at least three weeks to a month be- Herkimer, N. Y.—The disarmament movement led some one to deprive Success in raising the baby chick Powdered Her Nose, and Walks the Plank fore the eggs are saved for hatching. | | | | | | { Gen. Nicholas Herkimer, victor at flock Is in a large measure estab- Oriskany, of his sword. lished before the baby chick is A statue of the famous warrior | hatched. Vigor and vitality naturally sitting astride his horse at the en- | Ome from parent stocks that gre trance to Myers park, is believed to | strong in these qualities, says 0, C. have been disarmed by school boys. Utfora, eXtension Donliry Specialist, Colorado Agricultural college. “One should use only males that are vigorous, ature and well-de- | veloped, When possible, secure these | males from breeders who can furnish First Mate Eloise Pickrell powdered her nose during the annual “pirate cruise” of 350 members of the Long Beach (Calif.) Council of Campfire Girls, and so she was condemned to “death” via the plank. She is pictured above bravely striding the plank as Capt. Frances Willis (left) superintends the “execution.” pp them from high producing hens. A male from high producing stock should never be used, however, unless he has vigor and vitality. land Reds, ete., A very good ti horn chicks is d of March or the to hatch or buy Leg- ring the latter part first week in April. ter than May 15 are table.” Chicks hatched | very seldom pre fl EE Poultry Facts ee NNR NH HNN VERRAN RRERRLRRE Candle the eggs on the seventh and fourteenth days. * * * The estimation of a bird's prospeec- | tive breeding vilue is the acme of the breeder's skill. * * . Inbreeding to make an establish- ment of any point should always be approached with caution. * * * Cock birds usually produce excel- lent quality chicks, but sometimes give poor fertility early in the season. * x ® If a farmer keeps chickens at all, he can afford a comfortable poultry RRR MACHINE AGE THREATENS MAN WITH DESTRUCTION @ Fosdick Says Unless Social Sciences Advance With Other Sciences, There's Little Hope. New York.—Has man a chance to survive the machine age he has cre- ated? Or is he changing his physical world so rapidly that he will be an- nihilated as were the saber-toothed tiger and the mastodon? Raymond Blaine Fosdick, writer on political and social problems and a brother of the Rev. Harry Emerson Fosdick, declares that unless the so- cial sciences are advanced to a place of equality with physics, chemistry and blology, there isn’t much hope, “We have utilized our growing ac- quaintance with the laws of nature to harness new forces and transform the physical world about us, but the sci- entific study of the human being, of the springs of his conduct, and of hu- wan relations, has not been pushed with anything like the same eagerness, and with little of the same technique,” Mr. Fosdick says in Golden Book Magazine, “In spite of his new weapons and of his increased powers, man himself re- mains as he was and always has been —irrational, impulsive, emotienal, in- herently conservative to change, bound by customs and traditions which he will not analyze, the victim of age-old conventions and prejudices. “Except for a certain urbanity, the good nature and good temper of the herd, modern man is probably not far removed from his paleolithic ances- tors. Science hss exposed this paleo- lithic savage, masquerading in modern dress, to a sudden shift in environ- ment which threatens to unbalance his brain.” Among current ideas that must be scrutinized and revalued, Mr. Fosdick says, are the conceptions of patriotism house. The old poultry house may be remodeled and made more com- | fortable at very little expense, | * * * | Fowls infested with round worms and of industry. “Once patriotism was a unifying force that brought or- der among small conflicting groups,” he declares. ‘Today, in the world- | pounds. The medicated mash should wide society of mankind, it has be- | be fed for four weeks. come a disintegrating force.” | 2 8a may be treated by feeding them dry mash containing one pound 2 per cent nicotine tobacco dust in each 50 He believes industry has upset the | 10 secure the best flock fertility, scale of human values, for it no longer | Mate such breeds as the Plymouth Rocks, Rhode Island Reds, Wyan- is one element of life, but the whole : of life. “Industry was made for man, | dottes and Orpinztons with one male not man for industry,” he says. | to’ every 12 to 1) females. For the Mr. Fosdick sees the way out in “a | Saller breeds, such as the Leghorns, fundamental reappraisal of things that | ©0€ male to every 12 to 15 females have hitherto been regarded as more | aD be used. or less sacrosanct” and in a Dublie | opinion “conscious of the growing dis- | y proportion of civilization and eager to | Intermediate encourage creative work in the sphere of human relationships.” * - » Most varieties of tapeworms have That is, a por- tion of the tapeworm’s life is spent in the body of an insect or grub and the tapeworm gains entrance to the chicken’s body only when the chicken eats the intermediate host. . - . » In dealing witl hosts. Advance in Heating In Philadelphia, many years ago, Jenjamin Franklin and his friends tapeworms, as with basked in the warmth of the stove he | round worms, prevention is better had invented—the forerunner of the | than cure. Thorough daily cleaning and careful disposal of the droppings will prevent the insects from becom- ing infected sc that they will be harmless for the chickens to eat. central house-heating system. This was the only marked improvement ig heating until the advent of radiator heat 75 years later, — eee ee ee “Hatch Plymouth Rocks, Rhode Is- not later than April | | | Possibly Other Wives Will See the Fitness A charming young Santa Barbara matron recently purchased an aig- | plane and went in for flving. Inas- | much as she was but following in the footsteps of other members of the fashionable colony, her act caused no particular comment until, on the occasion of her first solo flight, her friends noted that the plane was named after the lady's husband, “That was a charming compli- ment,” remarked a friend. “l didn’t intend it for a compli- ment,” snapped the wife indig- nantly. “Then why in the world did you name it after him?” “Because my plane and my hus- band are so very much alike. They both smoke, can’t be depended upon, and half the time they are both un- manageable.” Airplane Employed to Plant Hawaiian Forest Hawaiian foresters planted 298,- 650 trees in the territory's forest reserves last year, according to a report of the Hawaiian commission of agriculture and forestry just re- ceived by the forest service of the United States Department of Agri- culture. One hundred and forty- seven kinds of trees were planted, ash, oaks, and paper bark leading, and the California coast redwood coming fourth with 23,392. Over 623,800 trees, grown in the commis- sion’s nurseries under a co-opera- tive agreement with the United States forest service, were also dis- tributed for forest planting on pri- rately owned lands. A large eroded area was sown to a mixture of tree seeds by airplane, a United States army plane broad- asting 1,689 pounds of seeds from an elevation of 2,000 feet. Crows Frightened From Field by Loud Speaker Electricity is making its way on the farm. The loud speaker of the radio is replacing the scarecrow. It was a lonely farmer in Germany who first perceived its value. The scarecrow in his field, however hand- somely hatted, had no terrors for the birds. They made friends with it and went on picking up grain, But when the farmer fixed a loud speaker underneath the scarecrow’s tattered coat and turned it loose, the birds flew away in terror. Whether it was Herr Professor Teufelsdrochk delivering a discourse on the children’s hour, or whether it was Fraulein Vogelgesang's top-note, seemed to make no difference. The birds fled from either. Holds That Apologies Are Due Phone Girls Don’t we owe the telephone girls an apology? We used to denounce them for wrong numbers. But who doesn’t give himself wrong numbers now when dialing a phone? When we reflect how often mem- ory slips, even between looking at the hook and twirling the dial, how can we blame the girls for their er- rors at the switchboard in earlier days? If all the telephone users for the last 50 years who condemned the girls were to pass in review, it would take 50 more years for them to apol- ogize enough for their unjust cranki- ness. Let us hope they damn them- selves now for the same- mistakes. —Des Moines Tribune-Capital. MONARCH QUALITY FOODS Sold and Recommended by a 50,000 Independent Merchants to Get the Best N ONARCH canneries are located in many States, East and West, always in those districts where Nature produces the finest fruits and vegetables—where rapid growth assures tenderness and delicate flavor, Monarch Vegetables—Corn, Peas, Tomatoes, Asparagus, Spinach, and many others—are picked when ripe, not too soon, not too late, and canned as soon as picked. The time that elapses between picking and canning is hours (sometimes days) less than ree quired totransportvegetablesto market You will find Monarch Canned Vege« tables excel at every point of quality, Their cleanliness, purity and wholes someness are guaranteed, their fresh flavor is unsurpassed, with size and color all that could be demanded by the most critical. If you paid a dollar a can you couldn’t buy better vegetables than Monarch Quality Foods More than 250 items including: Peaches, Pineapple, Pears, Apri- cots, Cherries, Strawberries, Red Raspberries, Fresh Prunes, Peas, Tomatoes, Green Beans, Lima Beans, Asparagus, Beets, Spin- ach, Cocoa, Catsup, Chili Sauce, Mayonnaise, Soups, Salmon, Pickles. . and the famous Mon- arch Teenie Weenie Specialties. . Monarch. REID, MURDOCH & CO. (Established 1853) Chicago New York Boston Pittsburgh Wilkes-Barre Tampr St. Louis Los Angeles San Francisco Jacksonville Send One Dollar, we will Ry Syndicate Seeking More Participating. Mem- razor blades for a y 3 ing 3 i development 1.460 acres type, best steel). Bank re gold ms famous pro- tion Blade Co.,44 Tth Av g . backed by govt. re- — - — - nry se, 551 6th Ave., New York, FLORIDA 3, Choice grapefruit, send enough (Gil te | k to nce oran half box delivered. Christ Stockings; authorized hos- mit money order. G, C. M whatever: slenderiz- - ilk, picot top, new- X SAVER ON THE M!/ value $1.90: state pair, it. Guild proven, Fits almost Products, 27 W, asily installed. $1.00 complete, York City. Box 716, Los Angeles, Calif, | — Invest in Te 100 Acres in Agents. Get in bus Every home and | Lee County v pay large profits; a custome profits, Trial | interests sel each: send your and particule Milrc Products check now, Thrall, Texas. Front St., Philadelphia, Pa. | — - - | Dovettes; non-rust many use garm Cactus & Rare Plants for Xmas bowls, | attractive colors: popular pr 111 log (500 kinds) Mc 3 for $1. Money order or chee Rt. 3, San Diego, n Co.. St. Augustine, Fla. of whom are far away, but all of whom, through frequent communica- tion, keep in touch with the old home- stead.—Pasadena Star-News, May Employ Radio to Link British Colonies In the momentous process of weld- ing the colonies and dominions of Great Britain, far-seeing wisdom is evident among the plans and proc- esses brought forth by the states- manly leaders in London and in the capitals of the colonies and domin- ions. One of the proposals before the imperial conference in London was the erection of a radio broadcasting | station capable of reaching all Erit- | ish colonies and dominions. Such : Fish With Only Half-Tails Trout caught this Loch Enoch, in Scotland, are reported to | The no bottom half to their tails. season in The most feasible explanation is that the fish have been swimming at the | lake bottom, which is an intensely hard granite, and wore off part of their tails on the hard stone, air service should be potent in draw- ing and holding the empire more Dog Given Honor closely together in all of its integral Chinook, famous sled dog which parts, It would transform the rela- | died on the Byrd expedition, has tions between the various parts of | the empire into an adjustment very much like the family relation among all the members of the family, some been honored in New Hampshire, his home state, The road from Tam- worth to Wonalancet has been offi cially designated as Chinook trail. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers