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Stonnacli Quit of Fix? 'Phone your grocer or druggist for a dozen bottles of this delicious digestant, a glass wi.h meals gives delightful relief, or no charga for the first dozen used. Slaivar Ale lURE DIGESTIVE A ROM AT ICS WITH S.HIVAR MINERAL WATER AND GINGER Nothing like it 'for renovating old vcrn-out stomachs, converting food Into rich blood and sound flesh. Bottled and guaranteed by the cele brated Shivar Mineral Spring, Shel vr , S. C. If your regular dealer cannot supply you telephone WEST FLORIDA GRO. CO., Distributors for Pensacola. EASE THE PAINFUL RHEUMATIC TWINGE' Sloan's Liniment will Bring Comfort ing Relief Quickly. Ncvtr breaks faith. Sloan's Liniment loesn'1. Just penetrates without rub irvK ind eases the external rain and icht , rheumatic twinges, lumbago, neu ralgia. Bciatlea. lame, sore, strained mm :let. bruises, sprains. For ::S" years it has gone ahead winning new fiien1s. holding: oM ones, etrengih ning ts reputation as the World's Lin imtnt. Clean, effective in relieving .th ehes ind pains of men and women, this o! I family ttandhy can be relied upon to do its work promptly and surely. Don't hje without a bott:e another day kt ex 1; handy. " , Ail druggists 33c.. 70c, $1.40. mm t RndsStubbornCouahS in a Hurry ft T,r rent rfTertUrnrnn. t?i? old rc liome-naI rfmty baa io rinit. You';l never know how quickly a bad eoiih can be conquered, until you try this fimous old home-made remedy. Anyone who has ' touched all day 'and nl! nifit, will say that the immediate Telief ;;iven is almost like ma;ic. It takes mt a moment to prepare, and xc;lly there is nothing better for couch. Into a pint bottle, put 2 ounces of Pinex; then add plain granulated sugar ivmp to .make a full pint. Or you can -tie els rified molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup. Either "way, the full pint saves about two thirds of the money usually spent for n'ouch preparation, and gives you a mere positive, effective remedy. It keeps per fectly, and tastes pleasant children Lke it. Yoii .'an feel this take hold instantly, toothinr and healing the membranes in 1I the air passages. It promptly loosen a dry, tight cough, and soon you will riotice the phlegm thin out and then disappear altogether. A day's use will usually break up an ordinary throat or ehest cold, and it is also splendid for bronchia's, croup, hoarseness, and bron chial asthma. Pirex is a most valuable concentrated compound of genuine JCorway pine ex tract, the most reliable remedy for throat and chest ailments. To avoid disappointment, nsk your druggis; for "23 ounces of Pinei" with direction and don't accent anything else. Guaranteed to cive alwoute ssitis f;iction or money refunded. The Pinex Co- Ft. Wayne, Jnd. Cafe San Carlos A restaurant of peculiar excellence with a metro politan atmosphere. All the delicacies of the Season properly prepared and served. IMusie by the Glacier Parle Orchestra at lunch eon and dinner. Dinner dances Wednes day and Saturday. Afternoon tea in the Shantung Tea Room Fri day afternoons, 4:30 to 6. FRESH POTATO CHIPS 13c per pkg. 2 for 25c Women and Events Phone 38, between 10 a. m. and 6 p. m. CALENDAR OF j FUTURE EVENTS I M ' TUESDAY Tuesday Bridge Club, hostess, Mrs. Marion Hyer. Monday Bridge Club, hostess, Mrs. E. F. Bruce. Women's Missionary Society, First Methodist church, installation of officers. WEDNESDAY Music Study Club, hostess, Mrs. -Paul P. Stewart, 11 a. m. Dinner Dance, San Carlos, main cafe, S p. m. At Home, Captain and Mrs. II. II. Christy, naval air station, I to C p. m. United Daughters of the Confed eracy, Bivouac, 3:30 p. m. THURSDAY Miscellaneous Shower, hostess, Mrs. Marco White, hon oree. Miss Anne Mooney. Shakespeare-Browning Club, hos tess, Mrs. John Pace, leader, Mrs. H. S. Mcllwain, 3:30 p. m. Five Hundred Club, hostess, Mrs. Ernest Lusk, 3:30 p. m. FRIDAY Afternoon Teas, San Cir- los, mezzanine floor, 4:30 to 6 p. m. Parents-Teachers Association of School Xo. 6. 2:30 n. m. SATURDAY Dinner Dance. San Car-! los, main cafe, 8 p. m. ' . O&O DAILY THOUGHT. He lives best and most who gives God his greatest opportunity in Him. If we only knew how to live and move and have our being in Him. to be scious of this every instant, we should oe sausneci, ior we snoujd then awake ; in His likeness. JUDGE AND MRS. W. B. LAMAR MUNOR GUESTS AT DINNER. ine ioiiowjng taken rrom the Allan-i in the nite time, January 11, this yere, with in informal dance on Wednesday ta Constitution will be of cordial in-I which is leap. Come in your poverty ! evening at her home, 1026 E. Cer tcrest to the many Pensacola friends ' close. I'll give yer a prise if yer looks i Yantes-st. of Judge and Mrs. William Bai'.ey La-';der cutest, to the girls) Some fella j r " mar: , 'will be a calling fer to fetch yer .Mr. and Mrs. John Marshall Slaton ' entertained at an elegantly appointed .-t-iiuij u.l nivir nuiue on Peachtrc-e-st, the distinguished guests ot honor. being Judge and Mrs. Wil- liam Bailey Lamar, of Washington, D. C. Who are in Atlanta en route to i their winter home in Florida. guests gathered at the home of Miss short stay at Tallahassee. The table was decorated with ' a ' Hazel Jacoby Sunday night for the OO graceful French basket holding coral poverty party given by her in honor W. M. Pylo, first class electrician, U. plants and ferns. Encircling this were of Rabbi and Mrs. William Ackerman, S. X., has returned to the Philadel silver candlesticks holding white who not long since returned from phia navy yard, after spending a few tapers. The other appointments wero their honeymoon, and a group of vis- days in Pensacola with his parents, in silver and white. The place cards ' jting -iris in the city, Miss Fannie En- Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Pyle, 912 E. of each guest was marked by the card sie, of Charleston, W. Va., guest of Gregory -st. of tho hostess monogrammed in silver. Miss Lois Oppenheimer, Miss Jeanett j OiSO Mrs. Lamar was gowned in cloth of Starr, of Louisville, guest of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Karney, of Rock Port, silver heavily brocaded in orchid-j Mrs. B. L. Gundersheimer and Miss Ind., is spending several weeks in Pen colored flowers, and trimmed with sil-j Julia Frenkel, who is visiting with Dr. nacola as the. gue.n of lv r sister, Mrs. ver lace and rhinestones. Mrs. Slatonjand Mrs. M. A. Lischkoff. ill.' M. Pyle at her home on E. Greg- was gowned in white satin. I The rooms were bared and boxes ory-st. Covers were laid for Judge and Mrs. were the only chairs to be had Big. Ofi-O Lamar, Mr. and Mrs. Slaton, Mrs. black and white placards adorned the; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. White Frances Whitten. of Wilmington, Del.; I walls, "God Bless Our Home." "Don't leave tonight for a three weeks visit Mr. and Mrs. John E. Murphy, Mr. and Stel Xothin," "Theres no place like in Xew York City, stopping in Cin- Mrs. John W. Grant, Mrs. 'William D. ; Grant, Mr. Homer Hunt and Judge H." M. Reid." OvfO ROYAL NEIGHBORS OF AMERICA TO ENSTALL OFFICERS. Officers will be installed and new members initiated at the regular meet ing of the Royal Xeighbors- of Amer ica at the Odd Fellows hall this aft ernoon at 2:30 o'clock. A full attend ance is expected. 0;Y-0 INFANT DAUGHTER MR. AND MRS. CLIFFORD POIDEVANT CHRISTENED. The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Poidevant was christened with j the pretty name of Tholma Louise, at j Christ Episcopal church Sunday aft- ernoon by Reverend John II. Brown, ! rector, uou-parents ror tne little girl : were Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Poidevant. oo PARENTS-TEACHERS ASSOCIATION SCHOOL NO. 41. The Parents-Teachers Association of j School Xo. 41 meets at the school building tomorrow afternoon at 2:43. A full attendance is requested. OO MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER FOR MISS MOONEY. In honor of Miss Anne Mooney. one of this season's winsome bride-elects, Mrs. Marco J. White will entertain with a miscellaneous shower at her home on X. 14th-ave, Thursday eve ning, her guests to include about forty of Miss Mooney's friends. A number of pretty ante-nuptial courtesies have been planned for Miss Mooney. On of the loveliest of next week's will be the shower and lunch eon with which Mrs. C. C. Hartman entertains in her honor in the Shaun tung room at the San Carlos on Wednesday week. 00 REV. AND MRS. HERBERT RICE ANNOUNCE BIRTH OF SON. Tl'e manv Pensacola friends of Rev erend and Mrs. Herbert W. Rice, form erly of Pensacola, but now of Mobile, 210 State-st, are cordially interested in the announcement made of the birth of a little son to them on Sun day, January It. Young Mr. Rice will be a junior. Reverend Mr. Rice dur ing his stay in Pensacola was pastor of the Gadsden Street Methodist church. 0iO MEETING PRISCILLA CLUB POSTPONED. The called meeting of the Prisell'a noon at 3 o'clock with Mrs. John Caro Club of the First Christian church, las hostess at her home, 1320 X. which was to have been held this aft-( irth-ave. All members are expected ernoon with Mrs. R. L. McCaughn, to be present as the annual election been postponed until later on aeeount of officers will be held and other ini of illness in the. family. 'portant business transacted. BLUE RIBBON TALKS Desserts are the most important thing about your meal ahey must be just rigl;T, Take care in getting your , Extrat. Use Blue Ribbon anilla 1 and &NcCf 'b desserts are a certainty, j fxir: mvSACOLA JOURNAL, TUESDAY MORNTKG, A. V. CLUBBS PARENTS-TEACHERS ASSOCIATION MEETING POSTPONED. The meeting of the Parents-Teachers Association of the A. V. Clubbs School to have been held today has been postponed until next Tuesday, January 20, when it will meet at the schoolbuilding at 3 o'clock in the aft ernoon. O-O MEETING MISSIONARY SOCIETY METHODIST CHURCH. The Woman's Missionary Society of the First Methodist will meet this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, at the church. All members are urged to be present as at that time committees will be appointed and plans made for the entertainment of the delegates who will attend the Alabama Confer ence of Woman's Missionary Societies to be held here from February 10th to 13th." . oiO ANNOUNCE BIRTH OF A SON. Mr. and Mrs. William Nichols, 31" W. Garden-st, have announced the birth of a son on Sunday, January 11. o-;.-o OAK GROVE NO. 4 WOODMEN CIRCLE. Oak Grove Xo. 4 Woodmen Circle will install officers for the year at their mpptins this eveninc at 7:30 I o'clock. Officers and members taking part in the installation are requested to wear costumes of white. Following) the installation and transaction of j business a social hour will be en-1 joyed and light refreshments served. J0 (FIRST AID CLASS Dr. Warren Anderson will meet con-'with his Tirst aid class tonight at 7:30 ' at the community service headquar- ters. O-O-POVERTY PARTY. "I's a po lil gurl" but I's goin ter heV a partie ter my house Sunday eve'n here!." (To the boys) "I want yer to; fetch that girl ter th party, won't j yer 7 rer ner quicK, ljemme no n yer (kin come or no." j in response to the above invitation ; written in blue and red pencil on liirm-n wranninL' naner about fortv ti home ef it ain't morgiged," "We' a po folks but youse wilcom to our home," home they will visit in Baltimore and etc. One placard before the inscrip-j Washington, D. C. tion "We welcom here with prid the I OiSO preacher an his brid They hev our J Friends of Mrs. J. C. Long will be bes respecs." j glad to know that she is convalescent The guests came in most original .after having been quite ill. and comical costumes. Dr. Ackerrnan O&O , and his bride vere a typical country) Mr- ohn II. Wilson is reported as preacher and wife in their best and rapidly improving after having been most elaborate costume. As they en- Quite ill. tered with a formal bow and speech,) . T , . Dr. Ackerman presented the hostess ' 1 "ends of Mrs. R. L. McCaughn with a large red rose tied with green ; wn reSrtt lea at she is con j,,., fined at her home by illness. Mr. Sidney Dannheisser, as an old i soldier back home, jyhs very clever, I Misa nuth Dannheisser was dressed , in a green siik, more than a century' old with crownleps hat. Miss Vivian Levy won the girl's prize for the most original costume, a Raggety Anne Rag doll. She wore a plaid gingham, made in tight princess style and full skirt, red stockings and white shoes and a Jmost picturesque hat. Simon Wagen- neim won the boys prize, a corn-coh pipe, and tobacco. m His trousers were of cornsack, shirt of flour sack, "Charlie Chaplin" derby with stringy, artificial red hair. Jennings Hersko vitz was a typical country swain. Other costumes were laughable and original and all took their parts to nprfcetinn. Am on or snm p of Ihft rlpvpr ones seen were those worn by Miss Hilda Bear, Miss Lillian Kutrt Jacoby. Miss Bertha Fried. Miss Lois Onnen- Miss Lois Oppen- Engle, of Charles- I heimer, Miss Fannie ton, Miss Bertha Lichten, Miss Julia Frenkel, of Houston, Miss Esther Gu genheim, Miss Sylvia Jahn. After the fun from the costumes had subsided Smut was played. All those receiving smuts cut for the prize, which was won by Dr. Ackerman, a doll of Fairy soap and wash rag. Th'? party was serenaded by some colored street musicians, who were brought-1nto the house to play for dancing later in the evening. A spec ial solo dance was given by Emanuel Gugenhe:m in knee breeches and M!ss Jeanette Starr, in gingham apron and curls. In the early part of the eve ning peanuts, popcorn and candy balls were served from a small barrel and later hot individual oyster loaves and cold drinks. i" OfoO DORCAS SOCIfci r TO MEET WITH MRS. JOHN CARO. , The Dorcas Society of the Knox I Presbyterian church meets 'this af ter- &ko MRS. ERNEST LUSK HOSTESS TO FIVE HUNDRED CLUB. TKe Five Hundred Club that plays for the benefit of the Old People's Home meets on Thursday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock with Mrs. Ernest Lusk as hostess at her home, 919 E. Moreno-st. AGED TWINS WANT fa. X f - a " . "KM-! o 0 ' : e 'X Amanda and Amelia Ksferbrook, 86-year-old twins, express, as the?r great ret wish, a desire to die together. They have become re-united in the Oak Forest Infirmary, Chicago, after yrars or separation. They were born in Chalatiquaro., X. Y., mid were inseparable until marriage. Roth are widows and have had children. Their names now are Mrs. Amanda Young and .Mrs. Amelia Marsh. ! DANCE FOR VISITING GIRLS. Complimentary to Misses Ola Spruce, of Washington, D. C, and Flor ence Barnes, of Seattle, Wash.", two charming visiting girls in the city, Miss Lysle R. Cooper is entertaining ABOUT PEOPLE WE KNOW. Hon. and Mrs. John S. Beard return after a cinnati en route. Before returning o-so Friends are welcoming home Lieu- tenant llver ' 'rston, U. S. A., who ; f A Department A Teachers of Small Children (By Julia Wade Abbott, Specialist in Kindergarten Educa tion, Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior.) With the approval of the depart-j ent of state and the United States hureau of education, an3 the coopera- lreau of educatio on of the French t;"'1 VL ",c x xnwn uumsiry oy euuca tion. there will be operated in the tion- there wiU b United .States, b eginning with the school year, a Xational Bureau of French-American Education Corre spondence, to be located at George Peabody Col'ege, Nashville, Tenn. The new bureau will promote correspond ence between hundreds of thousands of pupils in France who are studying English and the pupils in America who are studying French. The bureau will obtain from each teacher of French in the United States the list of pupils recommended for correspondence. Similar lists will be obtained from the teachers of English in France. For each pupil there will be given personal data as o age, sex. preparation, and main interests, so that the bureau may select the best equipped correspondents for each in dividual pupil. Boys will correspond with boys, and girls with girls. Frin the bureau, teachers in America will receive a list of carefully selected French corre spondents, so distributed in all the representative French and Belgian centers and the war area that there will be maximum benefit for the class as a whole. For French and Belgian classes, there will be a similar repre sentation of American centers. The plan is that the French and American correspondents exchange I weekly educational letters, each writ ing first in his own language and later in the language of his foreign corre-1 spondent. Linguistic training will not be the only educational end served, j Along with the letters, there will be a 13, TO DIE TOGETHER is spending a week's leave with his mother, Mrs. Frank Marston, before going to his new post of duty at San Antonio. Lieutenant Marston is just back in the United States after six months overseas duty. OO F. E. Osgood, of Toledo, O., former ly a Pensacolian, is in the city calling on friends and business acquaintances. OZ-O The Misses Eleanor and Elizabeth Ray, Will Ray and Gordon H. Perkins, have returned from DeFuniak, where they spent the week-end. . oO Mr. Jake Cohen, son of H. Lewis Cohen, of Milton, left Saturday for Virginia. He will " return with his bride, shortly. SHORTEST MONTH HAS FIVE SUNDAYS February, aside from being a vari able month in the number of its days days also varies in the number of Sun days. In 1920 there are five, but for the next twenty-seven years four is the maximum. 'When the first clay of February comes on Sunday the last will also comes on that day, providing it, is a leap year. The last previous February with fivts Sundays v.ts in 1S92, and the next will be in 1948. The Best Cough Medicine When a druggist finds that his cus tomers all speak well of a certain preparation, he forms a good opinion of it and when In need of such a medi cine Is almost certain to use it him self and in his family. This is why so many druggists use and recommend Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. J. B. Jones, a well known druggist of Cub run, Ky, says: "I have used Chamber lain's Cough Remedy in my family for the past seven years, and have found i it to be the best cough medicine I have i ever known." Adv. for Mothers XTT fine exchange of historical, artistic, geographical, manufactural, commer- cial, and home-life matpml ami in. iormauon, cuppings, picture postals, kodak views, etc., leading up to the deepest exchanges of human svmpa thies and ideals, that will reinforce in ternational good will. -tiu me corresponaence coming to the members of a given class will be kept on a bulletin board for the bene in oi teacner and class. At general exercises in the schools, the foreign language classes may present the most interesting phases of the corre sponaence to the entire school. The bureau will issue bulletins to the teachers, showing how to direct the pupils In this correspondence. Colleges and universities, private classes and clubs, as well as high schools, are in cluded in the plan. George Peabody College for teach ers, Nashville, Tenn, will furnish the housing and general administration. It is planned, if funds permit, to estab lish within a few months, also, a Spanish-American bureau for all schools where Spanish is taught. Through the cooperation of the French ministry of education all the schools, lycees. colleges, and universi ties of France are responding to the movement, so that many lists of French correspondents are already be ing received. Any institutions in America where French Is taught or where there arr .suidents who can read French, as well a- all private classes, clubs, or study circles, will be served by the bureau. Literature and en rollment blanks will 'be sf-nt through out the country. Any institutions or classes not otherwise reached mayf write to the burc! JAKUAKY r 1 - m HI 1920 I'M SO GLAD I DIDN'T TAKE NASTY, SICKENING CALOMEL oason's Liver Tone" Makes You Fed Just Grand arid you Can Eat Anything and Not Be Salivated c : Calomel salivates! If you feel bil ious, headachy, constipated. If your skin Is sallow, your breath bad, your s.tomach sour, Just go to any druggist and get for a few cents a bottle ot Dodson's Liver Tone, which is a harm less vegetable substitute for danger ous Calomel. Take a spoonful and if it doesn't start your liver and straight en you up better and quicker than Remember the Name, TaKe a good looK'at'tHc SacK andayAtoxour Grocer- RISING'SUN 44 The Flour that Guaranteed the Biscuits " He'll Know! Nashville Roller Mills1 Th Rd Mill NABH VlllC TENN. This beautiful musical instrument plays all records and provides dance music at any time. Other Victrolas from 25.00 to $300.00 Reyaalds Music Moose 21 South Palafox Street coldiuornii nothing is more appetiz- in arid satisfying than a disKofwarm 3 These superior cornflakes art3 always crisp, but in cold weather many prefer to tie at them in the oven Tor a few ininutes.: A delightid dish results. Madeby Pes rum Cereal Co. Battle Creek, MIchA Slat. n a yf "J ijH" nasty Calomel and without making you sick, you just go back &nu get your money. If you take Calomel today you'll be sick and nauseated tomorrow; besides, it may salivate you, while if you take Dodson's Liver Tone you will wake up feeling great, with a hearth' appe tite, full of ambition and ready for work or play. It is, harmless, pleas ant and safe to give to children. Ml In Oak, S3 J4 I "V,