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Such tender bits of fine meat —such careful season ing! One taste of Libby’s Vienna Sausage, served piping hot, will tell you it was prepared by master chefs! Aslc your grocer for a package today. Contents will serve two. Libby, McNeill * Libby, Chicago She Bums That. Mrs. Flatbush—l see you have a new cook and she appears to be very dressy. Mrs. Bensonhurst —Isn’t she dressy, though ?” “How much do you pay her?” “Oh, $5O a month.” “Is she a good cook? I mean, does she burn anything?” “Only the $5O, I believe.”—Yonkers Statesman. Decollete. “Doesn’t that movie actress put on airs?” “Well, she ought to put on something.”—Film Fun. Decollete bathing costumes are all right—as far as they go. | Delicate Mechanism I 81 Despite its scope Swift & I 1 Company is a business of in- 1 Hi finite details, requiring infinite lj|B |H attention. IIU Hi Experienced men must know i B ||| livestock buying with a knowl- 3|| || edge of weight, price, the amount Il| H and quality of meat the live 3 l | animals will yield. [i |jj HI Bach manufacturing operation must 1 II be done with expert skill and scientific i ||| HI precision. A highly perishable product j B |i must be handled with speed and care fl |H to avoid loss. H H| Chemists, engineers, accountants, ||j and other specialists are required to [|| M take care of our intricate problems. fl M Alert wisdom and judgment must HH Hi be used in getting stocks of goods into ,i | | 1| the open channels of demand through 11|| H| our four hundred branch houses. f |fl H| Branch house organizations must ffl| H| show activity and energy to sell at the fl H|l market in the face of acute competi- L||| H| tion from other large packers, and fl II hundreds of small ones. H H All these requirements of intelligence, ji |||| H loyalty, devotion to the task, are met || H|j in the personnel of Swift & Company. fl HI Yet the profit is only a fraction of a cent I H| per pound with costs at minimum. 1 ml H| How can the workings of this deli- 118 1| cate human mechanism be improved ||| H Do you believe that Government fl Hf direction would add to our efficiency |i||l Hi or improve the service rendered the fl Hi producer and consumer? fl |l Let ua send you a Swift “Dollar”. fl H It wiH interest you. |fl B[|j Address Swift & Company, jjft||| ■ Union Stock Yards, Chicago, BL ||| || Swift & Company, U. S. A. 11 11 BECOMES | i|| Iffi 1 At the average dollar rTfBM 1. /A y ommimTflwncrA\ /SWIFT & COMPANy\ KLC^I// 0 ° I f FROM THE SALE OF MEAT W iMW 7 nil AND BY PRODUCTS | \\ 12.96% / V I I BS CENTS IS PAID FOR TMB » \ \ / 07/# « LIVE ANIMAL J WwtlMS# ‘ \\ 12. M CENTS FOR LABOR I \\* # JR*., i i mwmm/m «. expenses and freight ff o o swifttcomwr S PRorrr Napoleon's Faith in Diamond. Napoleon had a large diamond se In the hilt of the sword he wore at hi wedding with the famous Josephine for he believed that the gem woul< bring him good fortune. Important to Mothara Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria Always Sharp. “Do bees lose their temper?” asks an exchange. We know their stings don’t. Out-of-Ordinary People THE COUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE Representative William J. Gra ham of Illinois, whose portrait is given herewith, is chairman of the house committee investigating war depart ment expenditures. He made an inter esting report the other duy. Seven men formed a “secret government of the United States,” determined all the so-called war legislation “weeks and even months” before war was declared against Germany, he charged, after reading into the record a digest of the minutes of the council of nationul de fense. The seven men were named by Mr. Graham us Hollis Godfrey, Howard E. Coffin, Bernard M. Baruch, Samuel Gompers, Franklin H. Martin, Julius Rosenwald, and Duniel Willard, mem bers of the advisory commission of the council. Mr. Graham asserted the council assumed such broad powers that Major General Goethals, former chief of the purchase, storage, and traffic division of the war department, defied it; cabinet members protested against its activities, and Elbert H. Gary, president of the United States Steel corporation, accused it of operating in “flugrunt violation of law\” ‘‘Behind closed doors, weeks and even months before war was declared,” he said, ‘‘these seven men designed practically every w ? ar measure which con gress subsequently enacted. They devised the entire system of purchasing war supplies, planned a press censorship, designed a system of food control and selected Herbert Hoover as Its director, and even determined on the day light saving scheme.” ROCKEFELLER’S EIGHTIETH BIRTHDAY certainly, for his income is believed to be more than one hundred millions. In the meantime to every American who burns a kerosene lamp or runs a “flivver” the name of John D. Rockefeller occurs with regularity. WILLIAM HOHENZOLLERN AT THE BAR It looks as if William Hohenzol lern would be tried In the fall, at a place to be selected. It is reported that Great Britain will furnish the presiding judge in John Andrew Ham ilton, Lord Sumner, and that Sir Gor don Stewart, solicitor general of Great Britain, will lead the prosecution. German counsel for the defendant will be assisted by British lawyers, If they wish aid. There will be five Judges repre senting Great Britain, the United States, France, Italy nnd Japan. It is believed that Edward Douglass White, chief Justice of the United States Su preme court, whose portrait Is given herewith, will represent America. The Germans will charge that the trial Is framed in advance; that In the nature of the case the allies could not permit any other verdict than that of “guilty.” We need no court finding on that point. What the allies do uu uiai jmiiiil. u mil iuc umca uu want to bring out is the whole of the evidence relating, first, to those fateful days when Germany cast the die for war, and, second, to the actual conduct of the war, especially the responsibility for the policy of frlghtfulness and the more flagrant violations of The Hague conventions. SWIMMING CHAMPION IN POLITICS one in Honolulu swims. In addition, the duke is the idol of all the hula and near hula girls, and they, too. danced out on vote-getting sallies for the cham pion. “It looked like a swim-away for the duke when I left Honolulu,” said a shrew 1 political dopester upon his recent arrival in Sun Francisco from the islands. Kahanamoku holds several championship records. He is the fastest sprint swimmer in the world. Twice he has toured the United States as a participant in swimming events, und he represented Hawaii at the Olympic games at Stock* %olm in 11)10. THK CHKYKNKK RECORD John D. Rockefeller celebrated his eightieth birthday the other day at his Pocantico Hills estate and then went to Seal Harbor, Me. Replying to the felicitations of his guests on his long life, Mr. Rockefeller said: “I hope you will all live to be not only eighty years old, but ninety or one hundred, for I have just begun to live.” Mr. Rockefeller has an ambition to live to be one hundred years of age —and then really begin living. Cer tain men who lived to reach the century mark In good condition mentally and physically have held that they had to live till ninety to realize that the world was beautiful. Certainly after eighty a man should be entitled to rest and take things easy, without self-re proach for laziness. Mr. Rockefeller takes a little olive oil each day, plays golf and refuses to worry. He need not worry about the high cost of living, Duke Kahanamoku, world’s aquatic champ, has dived into the pool of poli tics over on his native shores of Ha waii and is rapidly converting his fa mous ‘•crawl” into the stroke of states manship. The duke shied his bath robe into the ring as candidate for supervisor In Honolulu. When he confided his ambition to fellow Republicans on the island they said : “Fine! Poland has a pianist for premier. Why not a swimmer for u city father I” Immediately all the ukuleles start ed strumming, and the dry-land candi dates found themselves with a lot of figurative knots tied in their shirts in this splashing campaign for office. Kahanamoku hung up records ns a campaign speaker with as much ease as he did in aquatic competitions. All the swimmers were for him as a matter of course—and nearly every- GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER In the good old summer time when fruits of an kinds are getting ripe and tempting, when cucumbers, rad ishes and vegetables fresh from the garden are too good to resist, when the* festive picnic prevails and everybody overeats and your stomach goes back on you, then is the time for "August Flower,” the sovereign remedy for tired, overworked and disordered stom achs, a panacea for indigestion, fer mentation of food, sour stomach, sick headache and constipation. It gently stimulates the liver, cleanses the in testines and alimentary canal, making life worth living. Sold everywhere. Cotton in Korea. By extension of the area of Korean cotton cultivation, Japan expects to make this its chief source of supply and thereby euable its spinning and weaving industries to be Independent In foreign output. It Is planned to have under cultivation by the end of 1928, 260,000 acres of American cotton and 85,000 acres of native cotton. "BAYER CROSS" ON GENUINE ASPIRIN MYW| “Bayar Tablets of Aspirin” to be genuine must be marked with the safety “Bayer Cross.” Always buy an unbroken Bayer package which con tains proper directions to safely re* ileve Headache. Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Colds and pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents at drug stores —larger packages also. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetic acldester of Sallcyllcacid.—Adv. Incentive to Speed. “Better not keep that man waiting any longer.” “Why not?” demanded the magnate. "He’s been waiting so long that he has become acquainted with your ste nographer. Their acquaintance has ri pened into friendship, love is a natu ral sequence, marriage follows and then you’ll be shy a good stenog.” WHY DRU66ISTS RECOMMEND SWAMP-ROOT For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder medi cine. It is a physician’s prescription. Swamp-Root is a strengthening medi cine. It helps the kidneys, liver and blad der do the work nature intended they should do. Swamp-Root has stood the test of years. It is sold by all druggists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friends. Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start treatment at once. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.—Adv. Too Promiscuous. “A wonderful invention, the wire less.” “But not yet adapted to sending love messages.” “No?” "There’s no telling who would pick up ‘Ten thousand kisses.’ ”—Birming ham Age-Herald. There is far more pleasure to be de rived from the pursuit of happiness than there Is In catching it. Western Canada| is as profitable asGrain Growinqll In Western Canada Grain Growing la a profit maker. Raising Cattle. H r Sheep and Hogs brings certain success. It’s easy to prosper where you II can raise 20 to 4fi tm. of wheat to the acre and buy on easy terms. H Land at $l5 io $3O Per Acre H PfpS —Good Grazing Land at Much Less, fl * Railway and Land Companies offer unusual induceznenta to home II seekers to settle in Western Canada and enjoy her prosperity. Loans made II lURf for the purchase of stock or other farming requirements can be had at low interest- II The Governments of the Dominion and Provinces of Manitoba. H II wan and Alberta extend erery sncoorsgement to the farmer and ranchman. ■ jPBm ([) You can obtain excellent land at low prices on easy terms, and get high prices ■ ■§W \r for your grain, cattle, sheep and bogs— low taxes (none on ■MI 1 improvements). good markets and shipping facilities, free BUy schools, churches, splendid climate and sure crops. :K3iswfcM=s& II of Inuaigrstiau. Ottawa. Quads, or H W. V. BENNETT, Raoa 4,Bce BoUdiij, OMAHA. NEEL Itsj4s*%a| St. Johns to Be Nationalized. The nationalization of the port of St. Johns. N. 8., appears to be as sured. Thl9 will mean elaborate im provements at once and will place St. Johns among the greatest ports of the Dominion. jnnDMS Bes<9 * Ssslfces, Baals—Keep your Eyes Strong and Healthy.* If jdWW Ji they Tire, Smart Itch, or C Burn, if Sore, Irritated, TfJUR LTL3 Inflamed or Granulated, use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Adult At all Druggists. Write for Free Eye Book. 1 ■■iss Eye Bfsdy Csf—y.CMcaf .P.S.i. HUSBAND $m WIFE ‘From Suffering by Getting Her Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Pittsburgh, Pa.—“ For many month* I was not able to do my work owing to a weakness which ■ caused^baekach* attention to one of your newspaper advertisements and immediately my husband' bought Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Corn- After taking two bottles I felt fins and my troubles caused by that weak ness are a thing of the past All women who suffer as I did should try Lydia EL Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”— Mrs. Jas. Rohrbkro, 620 Knapp St, N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa. Women who suffer from any form of weakness, as indicated by displacements, inflammation, ulceration, irregularities, backache, headaches, nervousness or “the blues,” should accept Mrs. Rohr berg’s suggestion and give Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound n thorough trial. For over forty years it has been correcting such ailments. If you have mysterious complications write for advice to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. THE “BLUES” Caused by Acid-Stomach Million* of people who worry, nr* despon dent, here spell* of mantel depression, feel blue and are often melancholy, believe that these conditions are due to outside Influence# over which they have little or no controL Nearly always, however, they can be traced to an internal source—acid-stomach. Nor Is It to be wondered at. Acid-stomach, begin ning with such well defined symptoms as In digestion, belching, heartburn, bloat, will. If not checked. In time affect to som* degree or other ail the vital organa. Th# nervous system becomes deranged. Digestion Buffers. The blood Is impoverished. Health and strength are undermined. The victim of acid-stomach, although he may not know the cause of his aliments, feels his hope, courage, ambition and energy slipping. And truly life Is dark —not worth much to the man or woman who has acid-stomach! Oct rid of It! Don’t Ist acid-stomach hold you back, wrack your health, make your days miserable, make you a victim of the “blues” and gloomy thoughts! There la a marvelous modern remedy called EATONIC that brings, oh! such Quick relief from your stomach miseries—sets your stomach to rights —makes It strong, cool, sweet and comfort able. Helps you get back your strength, vigor, vitality, enthusiasm and good cheer. Be many thousands upon thousands of sufferer* have used EATONIC with such marvelously helpful results that we are sure you will feel the same way If you will just give It a trial. Qet a big 60 cent box of EATONIO— the good tasting tablets that you eat like a bit of candy—from your druggist today. He will return your money If results are not sven more than you expect. FATONIC ( FOR TOUR ACIP-STOMACB) niICV Cl V ffll I CD placed antwhbkb B.Bnfjt auilM, uo Use Cuticura Soap To Clear Your Skip All druggists: Boeptt. Ointment >4 60. TaloaieM. W. N. U., DENVER, NO. 31-1919. Very Much So. “The author of *The Raven’ was a riddle.’* “Well, he was a Poe. air." FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE 11 ftawlndliinhr hrlwhailapt pahric —*—*■ - 1 **i— rnil laflai mmOom. ■■■■■■■■lll Wf LjaUa E. rUU IM CawSfor taa^yaan. A baaliif waalar far 1 eatanfc, aura throat aaJiara ayaa. Franilnal,