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WLDOUGLAS •^^SHOESJÄ? teto-aix yarn. T»" " 1-ïHrS Mb of Ufa obooid marna mmIMm to you whao you Md aboaa and ara k»km* faTü» bart atoa valu» for KL^UOAS ^f BSBgXMg |2?Snra world. HUmät)er Ou kifkttl uamderd o) çuehly alike lov ml pottiOù test. Jm, »am* ami prtet w plaâUp iltmped en ikê tOlt. Dame élu u ynw «• L—— ■■ 1 -"■« the sole of every pair before h i* hr uh b t««àdtr. the shoes leave the fartary. tritt to otost ' M&ruj&i President v Douglas SheeCo. 1 Spark Street Proekton. Mate. «oahty. material and 4 ienthlr are better wan ever («fare; only by e r a mm ing Utetnaan you aiwraciato thebr superior qua Kn e e Bo Matter Where You Lira ■boa deators can sapptr yo® with W. L. Dougina ebons. If net convenient to call at one of our 110 stores in the large cities, ask your shoe dealer for W. L. Dougles shoos. Pro tection against unreasonable profits is guaranteed by the name and price stamped on the sole of every pair before __ _____ the shoes leave the fartary. wilt to atotf. Rsfuse substitutes. Prices ate the same everywhere. Te Merekante : 1 /no dealer ' in your toten handlet H r . L. PrMi«w*f •" Douglas shot*.wrxte today for W,L. DouglasShooCo. &r/«»ire rights to handle ihu JQ £t*d*rk Streut fyick sotting * Quick turn-over Une. ,r ajæS£.<ÏÏ> do you ship 7 r New York Pay* Top Notch Prices Sf) per cent of your fur« are Bold in New XOTZ ■ regmrolrM of where you ehip ■ Cot Out the Middleman—Get All You r Mpa f ■ SHIP DIRECT TO HERSKOVITS I THE WOHLD IS OUR OUTU5T-UAK* IT TOURS . bartsgss?a S3H»wa ! SEöSSSjÄös«« • WEITE OR SP.D A POST CABD TODAY I laur-gtoto. NEW YORK, N. Y.J mm ¥ JÂLM SoM tt aQ first-class Drug Stores. Cut this out and send for FREE SAMPLE to E. W. VACHER, Inc., NewJOrleut, La. CTIiTIBSffl LIVER REGULATOR Laröe Can 2Sf -10799 DIED in New York City alone from kid ney trouble last year. Don't allow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Guard against trouble by taking LATH HOP'S HAARLEM OIL The world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles. Holland's national remedy since 1696. AH druggists, three sizes. Guaranteed. Look for ( ho nan» Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitation Stops coughs Eases tlirsalsf Cven a litde helps to free you from that cold and eases the coughing. See directions on bottle for relieving congestion, soothing inflamed, scratchy throats. Banish that cold. Now — don't risk your health through sheer neglect— .ask your druggist for DB,KINGS MSCOVEJRY -a symp for coughs & colds Wimtersmitb's P CBillTonic SOLD 80 YEARS A FEME GENERAL TONIC IFYOURI VETERINARIAN Uses "Cutter's*' Serums and Vaccine»** n doing hu best to conserve your interests. 13 years concentration on oat lice count for m Berkeley - i HO DYE Til* Cutter Lsbontory "Tito Latoreure diet Xnemt Urn'' UJ.S. License) California To reetore gray or faded hair to orig inal color, don't use a dye-—K> danger ou —Trot a bottle of Q-Baa Bair Oeler Bestoree—Safe as water— I Your Eyes teei Uuli Kted Heavy, tue Muviae. It In •mwt: JSfV. N. U-i LITTLE ROCK, N0.50--1922. ^MP^fPËôpij : American Observer at Constantinople It has been said that the United States sent a naval patrol to Tufklsh waters to observe what the warships of the allies were up to. That remark may be looked upon as one way friendly or unfriendly—of Intimating that, sinco the United States has not been at war with Turkey, the position of th6 American high commissioner, Rear Admiral Mark L. Bristol, has been somewhat more detached politically than that of his four colleagues. Dur ing his residence in Constantinople— Admiral Bristol first received his ap pointment in 1919 and has been longer in the ancient capital than any of the other high commissioners—his shrewd brown eyes have watched the course of many an Intriguing scheme and his determined mouth has said what he thought, In season and perhaps out of season. As commander of the United States naval forces in Turkish Wri ters, he has been primarily concerned with the protection of American interests in the adjacent territory. In the re cent crisis the Department of State put at his disposal whatever ships he needed, in addition to his few destroyers and submarine chasers, but or dered him to confine his activities to the safeguarding of American citizens and property ancf the relief of refugees at Smyrna, Chios, Mytllene and other centers. It has been his duty to send the Department of State full despatches, ns Secretary Hughes declared the United States to be thoroughly In sympathy with the demand of the allies for the freedom of the straits. Admiral Bristol served as an observer at-the Lausanne conference. % Mundelein to Be Made Cardinal in 1923 Archbishop Mundelein of Chicago Is to be made cardinal during the next year, according to announcement made In Rome. He la fifty-three years of age and therefore will be the youngest cardinal. He was born In Brooklyn in 1869 and was graduated from Man hattan college, New York, when twenty years old. He then went to Italy for his theological course at the Propa ganda In Rome end was ordained in 1895. He became assistant secretary to Bishop McDonnell of Brooklyn and later chancellor of the diocese. In 1906 Pope Plus elevated him to the office of domestic prelate of the papal house hold with the title of monsignor, and the following year he was made a member of the Ancient Academy of the Arcadl, an honor never before conferred on an American. He was raised to rank of archbishop when he was chosen In late 1915 to fill the Chi cago vacancy caused by the death of Archbishop Quigley. Before that he was auxiliary bishop of Brooklyn and titular bishop of Loryma from 1909 on. Among the Institutions founded through his efforts are the Miserieordla hospital on the south side for unmarried mothers, regardless of tlielr denomina tion or sect, Quigley seminary and the greater Rosary college west of Chicago. "Honest Sam" Ralston, Hoosier Senator Samuel Moffet Ralston, who upset the Indiana bean pot by defeating Al bert J. Beveridge for United States senator, Is said to be the regular old fashioned neighbor with the gkid hand. "Honest Sam" is one of his nicknames. Carrying more than 250 pounds on a six-foot frame, the easy-going senator elect has not shaken the early ear marks of the farm. He is In moderate circumstances and his wife is a skill ful mistress of her own kitchen. Mr. Ralston will assume, in March, 1923, his second important public office. He served as governor of Indiana from 1.913 to 1916. The outstanding feature of his administration was the fact that he held the state to an even course, with no spectacular attempts to make over the government. Mr. Ralston was börn on a farm near New Cumberland, Ohio, Decem ber 1, 1857. In 18G5, with his parents, he came to Indiana. He attended and later taugnt the Owen county schools. He was graduated from the Central Normal college, Danville, and attended Valparaiso university for a time. He was admitted to the Lebanon bar In 1884. He practiced law there until he went to Indianapolis as governor. Mr. Ralston married Jennie Craven of Hendricks county December 30, 1889. The Ralstons live In a country home in Forty-eighth street, just west of the Michigan road. They have three children. ; j j j i ; wm =S=L ■7 U-., ' Î j ! ! Enter "Spirits From the Vasty Deep"? Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has an opportunity to win money with his photographs of ectoplasm, the mysteri ous substance which he contends is the link between the spiritual and ma terial worlds and which he says re cords its presence on the photographic fitaa. The Scientific American has of fered $5,000 in prizes for genuine psychic phenomena produced under condRions which It will name, and among them is a $2Ji00 prize for a psychic photograph. When Sir Arthur was In this coun try lecturing he showed a number of psychic photographs, many of which he said had been taken by himself un der rigid tests which precluded fraud. Some of them were of persons dead, among them his son, and in nearly all of them the spiritual representation had been formed from the white sub stance which be called ectoplasm. In Its announcement, the Scientific American sdys: "On the basis of existing data we are unable to reach a definite conclusion as to the validity of psychic claims. In the effort to clear up this confuÜon and to pF6860t to our readers first-hand and authenticated informa tion regarding this most baffling of all studies, we are making tills offer. "Always we have had soothsayers and haruspices, oracles and fortune tellers witches and prophets; the medium of the latest 1928 model is but the ' old thing brought up to date" an editorial In the magazine aaya. ] NAME STUCK IN HER MEMORY Small Gin's Somewhat Amusing Idea Concerning Appellation of Her Native Land. New York always extends a glad hand to Herbert Adams Gibbons when he comes over from Princeton to speak. An authority on internationul affairs and widely known through his lectures at a Chautaqua, lie gets Into frequent arguments over his favorite contention that patriotism is not a natural feel ing, but is acquired by education. To illustrate his point he tells a story of a research he made in his own home. He asked his little daugh ter Hope, aged seven, In what coun try she lived. She looked at him blankly. "Don't you know the name of your country ?" he persisted. Her face lightened up. "Course I do," she answered. "It's named Tisofthe. We sing about It at school."—New' York Times. The Cuticura Toilet Trio. Having cleared your skin keep it clear ; by making Cuticura your every-day toilet preparations. The Soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal, the Talcum to powder and per fume. No toilet table is complete without them.—Advertisement. Flowers for the Living. There is a fine drinking fountain in j the porch of old Jewell hall at William j Jewell college with a tablet bearing j this inscription set in the wall over i it: "Dedicated to the members of ; this class who are fighting to make the world safe for democracy, 1918."— Kansas City Times. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every* bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Not Now. "When I was young, girls were Î taught to darn their own stockings." j "Yes, Grandma, but in those days ! It was possible to place a dam where It wouldn't show."—Life. Baby's little dresses will juat simply dazzle If Red Cross Ball Blue is used In the laundry. Try It and see for your self: At all good grocers.—Advertise ment. A Good Plan. .Tones—"I never know what to do with my week-end." Bones—"Why not keep your hat on It."—American Boy. Earrings remained out of fashion only as long as the ears did. ! I "4 * vA ae BfifU m The present conditions in the business of the farmer and m the fertilizer industry call for serious thought. Both are going through a readjustment period, with its hardships and doubts. The farmer may well ask whether he is using the most prof itable fertilizer. The fertilizer salesman may well inquire whether he is selling the kind that will do tne farmer the most good, and lead to larger sales in the future. During the war America could not get Potash, and the use of acid phosphate increased. Central Europe could not get phosphates, and the use of Potash Salts increased. > Today plenty of Potash can be had at less than pre-war prices. Now is the right time to restore the balance by using more Potash in the fertilizer formulas than the average a before, 5 to 10 per cent. average amount used Crops take from the soil very much more Potash than phos phoric acid. On any soil where Potash has been profitable it is not unreasonable now to use at least as muen Potash as phosphoric acid. Ask the fertilizer agent for prices on this kind~of goods, and rebuild your soil while Potash is cheap. Recently it has been shown that a lack of available magnesia causes serious injury to important crops on some soils. German Kainit and Manure Salts furnish this soluble mag nesia without extra cost. SOIL & CROP SERVICE, POTASH SYNDICATE * H. A. HUSTON, Manager 42 Broadway New York City \ Ask for PoTASH-Buy PoTASH-Use Potash "Lots Cor Your Money Brands" Should Not Tempt You—Use CALUMET The Economy BAKING POWDER That's What NUttons of Housewives Do a«« n a ■nw* Caiumij (Ö % ft w % «6 PO ' •AKINS P CtOCAROA*-* pow®** BEST BY TEST —They know that Good Baking Powder can't be sold for less— that "more for the mon ey" means bake-day fail ures, waste of time and money—that Calumet means economy. The sales of Calumet are over 150% greater than that of any other bak ing powder. THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER Cooking Utensils Tf* CLEAN For quick results on all metalware use SES O O SAPOLIO Cleans • Scours > Polishes Large cake No waste tf-nofactorari Eatcb Mergin'* Son* Co., New York, U.S.A □□□□□□□□□CDOCDOa IQe Gives New Life to Old Stockings Putnam Fadeless Dyes—dyes or tints as you wish