12
f 5 HARMLESS LAXATIVB
z ! AH Children Lovelta
/ I ft C Pleasant Taste
I 'I * *
fjy l' Mother!
' Iffi' When Yout
gZ Needs a Laxative
Give “California Fig Syrup’’
If your little one is out-of-sorts, Millions of mothers depend upon
won’t play, seems sick, languid, hot this gentle, harmless laxative. It
natural—suspect the bowels! A tea- never orampis or overacts. Contains
spoonful of delicious "California Fig no narcoties or soothing drugs. Sav
Syrup’’ given anytime sweetens the "California” to your druggist and
stomach and soon moves the sour avoid counterfeits. Insist upon gen
fermentations. gases, poisons and nine “California Fig Syrup” which
indigestible matter right out of the has directions for babies and chil
bowels and you have a well,' play* dren of all ages plainly printed on
ful child again. bottle.
. . :t . . . . . -
; ■- . i - ,I. -r
Do You OWN It—Or
Just “Live In It”?
8 8
The place where you hang your fl
hat at the end of the day is what o
we mean.
Do you own your home, or does it
belong to some other man and you
simply pay him your good money for n
> the privilege of “living in it?” o
H-O-M-E takes on a broader
meaning when you can say, “It’s my U
own home.” ‘ Q
g. ■ o
u n
o It is not a hard proposition to own
your own home in this day and age.
After., the.. first payment is made
(which in many cases is as low as
$500), the balance is just as easy as
paying rent, and at the end of a few
years you will be free from debt and
have something to show for the o
money you ordinarily would spend
for rent receipts. , 1
Turn to the Classified Sectibn and
S pick out the house you have been n
“ wanting. Let your rent money buy g
your own . home. If you don’t see
just what you want listed there to
day—watch that classification every
day from now on, as the list changes
every day.
g . »
O I o
MOTHERS OF SKINNY, FRAIL
KIDDIES NEED WORRY NO MORE
——-
Hypo-Cod, Improved Cod strengthen little weak, frail and
‘IT ‘tu',*?** ‘ £ b °& on t. cod uvor on.
phltes Tablets Guaran- Hypo-Cod Tablets contain the com
teed to Build Strong, ed . hypophosphites of lime, soda
<*K,wlv anrl Chai ? nd ,ron to purlfy the blood and
Oturdy and neaitny unil- increase Strength and vigor; qui
dren. hine, manganese and strychnine to
- aid the stomach, heart and nerves,
t besides the of all blood
of mothers will wel- enrlchers, peptonate of Iron. It’s
come the news with delight that Pj® very same formula which has
Cod Liver OU can now be taken in brated” Earle’s in* UquM
tablet form. Hypo-Cod in Tablet form. Competent doctors agree
Form, the improved compound Cod that there is no better formula
Liver Oil tablet contains an abun- known to rebuild weak systems
dance of this greatest of all known Give thin, frail, scrawny kiddies
health and fltsh builders. It’s not a fighting chance in life, and start
the kind of Cod Liver Oil that kid- them today on a bottle of Hvno
dles despise and fight not to take, Cod Tablets. ■
but it’s just the extractives of. cod Recommended in Washington by
fish livers—that part of the oil Peoples Drug Stores and other good
which really contains the million.? druggists everywhere, who guaran
of vitamines that build up and tee satisfaction or money back
EARLE’S HYPO-COD
■ •' \
oST^- Gri pp«T I
Influeiwal
Jftwumonia^l
THE WASHINGTON TIMES ♦ ♦ Th« National Daily • • - • WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5,1924.
,1.1.1.. ■ . . , ■ . | ~ , , ■ 1 -1.1 I I ... , I
With The
Alibi Artists
A Cross Section of the
Daily Grind in Judge
Mattingly’s Court.
Read ’Em and Weep.
By DONALD M„noUOAL.
A Hard Task.
“At ten-thirty Wednesday night,
your honor, we had a look-out
Tor a stblen car. About two
hour* later, I spotted the mo
chine at Twelfth street and'Mary
land avenue, and ran him to the
curb at Eighth street. He said
he was fourteen years old. but
he. didn’t have any birth.. cer
tificate with him and I took him
around to Number Nine.”
The court: “How old are you,
boy?”
“I!J1 be fourteen next January,
your honor." ' ' ’
Just oht of curiosity we drifted ‘
around to the Juvenile Court th
see how'they handle traffic cases
there, as follows:
into my. Dodge coupe about ten
fifteen Wednesday night, your
honor, when a friend of mine
called, ‘Hello. W 1 turned
around to reply, and I didn’t-, see
my coupe again until ten o’clock
. the next morning, at Number
Nine.’
“Was your oar
“No damage, your honor?’ .
Defendant: “Guilty." - .• .
“Why did you take a machine
that did not belong to you?"
•'“I wanted to see if I could op
erate a gear-shift car.”
“Do you know how to operate
a gear-shift mop—the kind that
has the gear-shift on the side of
a pail?” - .
■i “No, ma’am.”
“They have several out 'there
at the Industrial Home School.
If you learn to operate one per
fectly within ten days, you won’t
have to take a three months’
course In wood-splitting.”
(Exeunt seven assorted relatives,
all with the sniffles.)
After Adjourment.
Alibi Man: “Do you have many
scenes like that here?”
"We have them all day long—
and this is a comparatively peace
ful one. The man’s car wasn’t
damaged, and he is kindly, sym
pathetic, and ready to co-operate
with the court, as too, were the
boy’s parents, if they did have
the snifflee. The boy was straight
forward and apparently repentant
—if he mops floors and shovels
ashes for ten days the repentance
may be permanent. But some
times we have heart-breaking
scenes here.”
‘From what I saw whle I was
waiting for this case to come up,
it wouldn’t be a bad idea to have
One' of those gear-shift mops here.
You must have some very un
pleasant moments. What is the *
average life of a juvenile court
judge? I remember that for sec
ond lieutenants during the war it
was twenty-eight days ”
“That was a temporary condi
dition. But for troublesome chil
dren and unfortunate parents,
there is no Armistice Day.”
I; "Sometimes the troublesome
child makes - the most- worthy
citizen—l was a troublesome child
myself."
“So was I.” And what do you
suppose was the great longing,
the heart’s desire of Judge Sellers,
when pig-tails were in flower?
I She wanted to throw a cobble
stone through a plate glass win
"dow —a cobblestone tied up tn
green silk ribbon. With a big bow
knot on it. How’s that for 100
per - cent feminism? We’ll give
her about 90 on it-'-she’U have to
throw the stone and miss before
she gets the other 10 points.
But she never got that far.
She knew it was wrong, she
said, and so she overcame the
impulse. We used to sidestep
things like that because we knew
they were wrong, too, and be
cause we knew a' good fat licking
was waiting for us at home.
Our ambition was to hold a
kitten up by the tail and hear it
spit—and watch its paws wiggle.
But we never did it because we
were too tender hearted —we
never could bear to see animals
Suffer. Once we climbed a sleet
covered tree to rescue a scared
kitten, and got scratched on the
nose byway of thanks, and fell
and hit our head on a rock.
We’ve never been the same since...
Once we were really overcome
by temptation—we saw the
loveliest kitten for swinging pur ?
poses—but when we went to pick
it up, it was a Manx kitten and
didn’t have any tail. There sure
is a destiny that shapes our ends.
Traffic court must have ad
journed by this time—all the
exciting cases are cleaned up
anyhow. Guess I’ll go home and
see if I can write something
sensible.
DAMAGE SUITS FOLLOW
VETS’ BUREAU PARTY
NEW YORK. Nov. 5.-Frank J.
Cummins, the New York sub-dis
trict manager of the Veterans Bu
reau,* who submitted to Major Gen
eral Frank T. Hines, director of
the United States’ Veterans Bureau,
certain charges against Major W.
F. Lent, which caused Lent to be
temporarily relieved from his duties
as district manager, bnmght suit
in the Supreme Court todty against
both Hines and Lent for >20,000
damages alleged to have been sus
tained as a resylt of the - manner
in which the investigation turned
out. . , /
Among the charges made against
Lent was that liquor had been taken
in ambulances to a dinner attended
by officers and' employees of the
New York office held in a hotel.
On January 2 last. Lent preferred
charges against Cummint., and as
a result, Xlummltis, according to
his complaint, was wrong! ully found
guilty of untruthfulness.
Mr. Cummins declares that the
reports he made to Hines were
made in the expectation that they
Would be treated confidentially, but
instead, Lent heard of it and made
charges against the plain .iff, Which
charges he denies.
WHO WAS K
TJHE UNKNOWN?
•OUR LITTLE ORPHANS
SEARCH FOR MOTHERS
Four little girls, each eight years
jld, went out in Search of their
Bothers yesterday. They wandered
he streets all day, and were picked
up finally by police of the First
■necinct and taken back to St.
John’s- Orphan Asylum, Twentieth
ind F streets northwest, where they
spend their time while their mothers
are at work.
The little girls, May Bletcher,
Ruth Anderson, Thelma Garner
md Joy Keeling, were found about
I o'clock by the police. They con
sented to go back to the asylum
S an^as O wn
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and not to try to leave again. The
fathers of the children are all dead.
UNDERWOOD SEES PARTY j
VICTORIOUS IN 1928
BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Nov. 6.
“The apparent overwhelming Re
publican victory does not mean dis
aster for the Democratic party. It
will come back in 1928.”
This was the statement made by
Senator Oscar W. Underwood, today
in commenting on yesterdays elec
tion. The Alabama Senator attri
buted the landslide to a “spilt in
the Democratic ranks.”
HUNTERS FIND BANK r
SAFE IN WATER TANK
PAWHUSKA, Okla., Nov. B.—An
abandoned safe, stolen from the
Citizens Bank of Atlanta,- Kan., on
October 80, and containing >IBO,OOO
in securities and a like amount of
notes has been found in a large
water tank seven miles south of
Foraker, Okla., by a party of duck
hunters, the police announced to
day.
When the safe was opened it
was found that the bandits had
taken >1,600 in cash, leaving .the
securities, which were non-negoti
able. The notes were water-soaked
but legible.
HOLD-UP Man CAUGHT
‘ " IN ACT BY POLICEMAN
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 6.—When
a hold-up took place in an alleyway
near Gideon and Wood streets. Po
liceman Sharp, hearing the cries of
the victim, jumped on the back of
the highwayman and subdued him.
He was slated as Alonzo Dun
more, colored,- Darien street above
Vine. The victim, Robert Roun
tree, of 1229 North Sydenham street,
came from Boston a few days ago
he told police. He said the high
wayman dragged him into the alley
as he was passing and took |l.lO.
,F iiW A
MLONaMTHIIFELLOT *
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