OCR Interpretation


Ventnor news. (Ventnor City, N.J.) 1907-1926, December 02, 1921, Image 3

Image and text provided by Rutgers University Libraries

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn92059905/1921-12-02/ed-1/seq-3/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for

Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
ELL-ANS
25$ and 75$ Packages, Everywhere
- OjUYE MALARIA OUT OF THE SYSTEM
Her father—You have been a very
naughty girl and Tm going to spank
Little Elsie—Would you strike a
lady? '
" A Candidate.
“Girlie, I ahi a candidate for your
hand.” “See father.” “Does he have
to indorse me?”
A GOOD TONIC AND APPETIZER
Reproved.
you.
Actual
Size
Exceptional
Offer—
» A cigar smoked in the
i* finest clubs. Sold on
1 ONE argument — and
i that's quality. Not a
cheap cigar—but intended
for the man who wants
the best Havana.
ITAMPA
! BLUNTS
> ALL HAVANA
J Made in Tampa by Cu
ll ban cigarmakers of the
3 best Havana tobacco. A
3 rich, full-flavored cigar
) that sells oh its taste—
J aroma, workmanship.
? Box of 50
I $3-5°
^ Sent parcel post prepaid
v on receipt of cash, money
? order or check. Address
? mail order department
? “C.”
* Yahn and
McDonnell
1311-1313 Sansom Street
Philadelphia, Pa*
For opood
and oaso I
scouring pots)
and pans, usa 1
SAPOLIOI
* \
tin \
; pots 1
YOU CAN SAVE $50M
By recovering your old
•□to ton frame yourself.
We make these recovers^
to fit all makes and
models of can. Any ££ *7T and up
penon that can drive a 2) f J Parcel* Pwl Paid J
car can pat it on. We T
forraUh instractioM. Roof ud qairUn mad toqethur with r«mr
eartaia, (wt«n«n, welts and tacks. All complete. Ghre ns the
Mae. rear sad model n«mb*r of your ear and we will send yen
ear catalogue with samples and quote you exact price.
LIBERTY TOR A TIRE CO., Dept. 4, Cincinnati. O.
AGENTS
Men and Women
Sell our merchandise. This is your oppor
tunity to establish yourself in a good paying
business with a strong future. Write us
asking us about our proposition.
a a Sales C®, 212 E. 126th St, New York City
DAI | If A AUIHIT Operators or Sales
DALL mflwnlnLmen. We make
MO'JO-MIB Vending Oum, an individual
piece that will vend in any ball machine and
increase sales 100%. A letter stating the
number of maohlnes operated or sold will
bring a sample and quotation.
CHICLE PRODUCTS COMPANY
Mount Pleasant Avo. NEWARK. N.J.
RARE OPPORTUNITY
We guarantee 8% on all money placed with
us. We buy, sell, operate: Stores, farms,
real estate, hold mortgages, etc. Price of
stock $10 per share. The FAMOUS GEN
ERAL INVESTMENT COMPANY. 27 War
ren Street, NEW YORK.
HARDWOOD ASHES I
I have been Instructed by the Hardwood Ash Col
lectors of Ontario to sell for them thirty cars, thirty
tons to car, pre-war prices. It v«l 11 pay you to buy car
at once. George Stevens, Peterborough, Out, Can.
Men and Women Wanted with ambition to
succeed. 1 point the way to Independence
and prosperity. Particulars free. Write F. J.
Rogers. 328 Juliana St.. Parkersburg, W. Va.
For Sule—Slightly Used Books—Educational,
religious, fiction, foreign languages, boys'
and girls’ books. Catalogue free. National
Book Shop. 1310 7th St., N. W.t Wash., D. C.
FORD OWNERS—Get a set of MRyla” easy
openers for your doors. Sample set $1.00.
Agents, dealers write for proposition. THE
. V 11 AND CO.. 1410 Fidelity, Baltimore, Md.
The
Amman
LEGION
COopy for This Department Supplied by
the American Legion News Service.)
MACNIDER, NEW LEGION HEAD
Mason City (la.) Man Is Chosen Na
tional Commander of the Amerl- ,
can Legion.
“We must build this Legion of ours
so big and fine and strong, keep it so
clean and straight and American, that
when we ask for things for the er
servlce man, for the disabled man and
for those who are financially disabled
our communities will say, ‘If the Le
gion is for it, we are for it.”'
This was the first message of Han
ford MacNlder to members of the
American Legion, following his elec
tion as national commander of the or
ganization. Mr. MacNlder is the
HANFORD MACNIDER.
Newly Elected National Commander
of the American Legion.
youngest national commander the Le
gion has ever had. He Is thirty-four
years old.
"He is a natural leader of men,”
say his friends, who have watched
him plug his way through Harvard
university and who later saw him
come out of the World war a lieuten
ant colonel with three citations and
several decorations.
His military record begins with his
service on the Mexican border in 1916
as a first lieutenant with the Second
Iowa infantry. When the United
^States entered the World war he en
rolled at the officers’ training camp at
Fort Snelling and was sent to France
as a provisional second lieutenant in
the regular army. In France he was
with the Ninth infantry of the Second
division. He was wounded at St.
Mihiel.
Mr. MacNIder is an investment
banker at Mason City, la., where he
was born. He has been an active Le
gionnaire and has served as com
mander of the Iowa state department
of the Legion.
HEAD OF LEGION AUXILIARY
Mrs. Lowell F. Hobart of Cincinnati
Is the New President of the
Women's Organization.
Mrs. Lowell F. Hobart of Cincinnati,
the first national president of the
American Legion Women’s auxiliary,
Is one of those “war mothers” who
served in the great “second army.”
When her son joined the colors and
was sent to Camp Zachary Taylor,
Kentucky, she went with him. There
she worked daily as a Ited Cross su
pervisor and at night she instructed a
class in Red Cross work.
Today Mrs. Hobart is at the head
of one of the largest organizations of
women in the world. The Legion aux
iliary has a membership of about 125,
000, having grown from 3,000 In the
lust year. The organization is com
posed of mothers, wives, sisters and
children of ex-service men.
The Best Available.
The new servant had presented her
references, and the lady of the house
read them over with a doubtful eye.
“I’m not quite satisfied with these,
Bridget,” she said.
“Nayther, am I, mum,” returned
Bridget angrily, “but they’re the best
the ould fool would give me.”—Ameri
can Legion Weekly.
’ Practice Makes Perfect.
Bums—That grocer certainly gives -
light weight. I bet he was a profiteer <
during the war.
Stern—Oh, no, he was mess sergeant I
in niy outfit.—American Legion Weekly, i
< -V ■ ■».. w'. O', .
CWSSSSSSSSaSSSSSSSSSSSSCSSSSiSSSSssSSf;
Carrying On With the
American Legion >
Lemuel Bolles of Seattle. Wash., has
been elected national adjutant of the
American Legion for his third term.
* * *
Yellow Medicine is the tenth coun
ty In Minnesota to make “American
Legion Day” a regular event of Its
county fair.
* • •
• "The Pajama Gazette” Is the name
of a publication edited by the disabled
soldiers of Asbury hospital at Minne
apolis, Minn. ■*'. i
• • •
The bodies of Gunmar Dahl and Da
vid Thor, “pals,” killed in France by
the same shell, were buried In the
same grave in their native Illinois
town.
• • • ''
v. New Orleans will be the scene of
the 192? national convention of the
American Legion. The Southern city
guaranteed $100,000 for defraying ex
penses of the meeting. . t
» . • •
Mayor Hoan of Milwaukee, WJs.,'
has vetoed a resolution of the city
council indorsing the work of the
American Legion In finding positions
for jobless ex-service men.
• • »
“I am convinced that the American
Legion Is an established power In the
United States—a power for truth and
equality,” declared Marshal Foch at
the close of the American Legion's
national convention at Kansas City.
* • *
A monumental building to be erected
in Washington in memory of the Na
tional Guardsmen who gave their lives
in the World war, has been suggested
by Maj. Gen. George 0. Rickards;
chief of the militia bureau of the War
department.
The growth of the American Legion
is shown by the organization of 1,050
new posts in 1920-21. Many new posts
were organized by American ex-serv
ice men in foreign countries and to-.
day the sun never sets on the Amer
ican Legion.
* * •
The daisy has been adopted by the
American Legion as its official flower.
The poppy, which has beten "popular
with Legionnaires because of its associ
ation with Flanders, was voted out be
cause it was not an American flower
and could not be obtained in larga
quantities.
• • • • '.v
The employment of jobless ex-serv
ice men to assist the police in com
bating the holdup men has been be
gun in Lincoln, Neb. The plan was
evolved following a series of robberies
in the residential district of the city.
The mayor and chief of police of Lin
coln have indorsed the plan.
• * * v
Following a reception for him at
Kansas City, staged by 50,000 mem
bers of the American Legion, Marshal
Foch, who came to America as the
Legion’s guest, declared that although
Washington and New York were' the
head of the United States he was cer
tain Kansas City was the heart.
• • •
The original post of the American
Legion, George Washington Post No.
1, lost no time in signing Marshal
Foch as a member. The generalis
simo was met at the station at Wash
ington, D. C., on the day of his ar
rival in America and presented with a
membership card and a ceremonial
badge of the Legion.
* * •
Marshal Foch Is now a devotee of
the corn-cob pipe. When his special
train was stopped at Washington, Mo.,
on Its way to Kansas City, he was
presented with a box of the Missouri *
product Later, while he was attend
ing the American Legion convention,
lie was offered a cigar, but he declined
in favor of the corn-cob “furnace.”
* « »
More than 30,000 bodies of Amerl
?ans who died in France during the
World war will rest forever In the
sacred soli near the bnttleflelds, Sec
retary of War Weeks declared in a
•ecent letter to the American Legion
it Washington. A total of 43,670
Jodies have been returned to the Unl
ed States, according to the war^ecre
nry.
• * *
“If you will walk down Main street,
tT. S. A.,” writes George F. Kearny In
i widely published magazine article,
‘you will come to a building which
louses the American Legion post of
he town. It is the most democratic
nstitutlon* that can be found and the
liscusslons of the post are worthy of
he closest study ns nn lndev of the
:uture.”
• • •
A survey recently conducted by the
American Legion shows that between
>00,000 and 700,000 service men are
mt of employment In the United
States. The East has a greater per
rentage of Jobless men than any oth
■r section of the country, with 150,000
'ormer soldiers, sailors and marines
n New York alone, without regulai
employment, many In actual want.
Never say “Aspirin” without saying “Bayer.” <
WARNING! Unless you see name “Bayer” on tablets, .-k
you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by
physicians over 21 years and proved safe by millions for "J.
Colds
Toothache
Earache
Headache
Neuralgia
Lumbago
Rheumatism
Neuritis
Pain, Pain
Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions.
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets—Bottles of 24 and 100—All druggists.
Aspirin Is tbs trad* mark at Barer Manufacture of Uonoacetlcacideater of SallcrlicacUl
Isn’t It the Truth7
Perkins and Brown were walking np
Main street togther.
“There goes an old buddy of mine,”
Perkins remarked as a man passed.
“Who is he?” asked Brown.
“Bill Bristow—poor old Bill!”
"Why *poor old Bllir ” r
“Well, it’s this way,” Perkins ex
plained. “When the war broke out I
enlisted and Bill got married.”
“Yes, go on.”
“Well, can’t you see? I got a dis
charge more than two years ago now?”
BOSCHEE’S SYRUP
Allays Irritation, Soothes and Meals
Throat and Lung Inflammation.
The almost constant irritation of a
cough keeps the delicate mucous mem
brane of the throat and lungs in a con
gested condition, which Boschee’s Syrup
gently and quickly soothes and heals.
For this reason it has been a favorite
household remedy for colds, coughs,
bronchitis and especially for lung
troubles in millions of homes all over
the world for the last fifty-five years,
enabling the patient to obtain a good
night’s rest, free from coughing, with
easy expectoration in the morning.
You can buy Boschee's Syrup wherever
medicines are sold.—Advertisement.
Trying Hia Hand.
Preacher Parker—I reckon you are
gettiu’ kinder negligent in yo’ religious
duties, Mr. Botts. I ain’t seen you in
church for three Sundays.
Mr. Botts—No, parson, I ain’t get
tin’ negligent. Ts jest tinkerin’ with
my soul myself.—Exchange. x
A Great Tactician.
“Cousin Margaret hides her deaf
ness with great tact.” “How?” “She
talks all the time.”—Boston Tran- j
script. I
Punishing the Fraction.
Pat cought a youngster stealing hifl
apples. As he was a persistent of
fender Pat decided to punish him, so
he laid the boy across his knee.
Another youngster who was hanging
around said: “Don’t beat him, mister;
he’s not to blame.”
"Why isn’t he to blame?’ asked Pat,
“Folks say he’s not all there.”
“Well,” said Patrick, “I can’t help
that. I’ll, just lick what there is of
him.”
Just What He Wanted.
Cadgar—Hear you’re workin’, Soak
er. W’hat are you doin'?
Soaker—Nothin’ 1
Cadger—Any chance of gettin’ a job
at the same place?—Stray Stories. * .
Few things have so civilized tha
world as bathing. t
A COLD TODAY" D0NTDEL»f
swelling reduced in a
few days; regulates the liver, kidneys, stomach
and heart; purifies the blood, strengthens thA
entire system. Writm for From Trial Trmatmmnt*
COUUH DROPS? REHEDT CO, Dept B. 0, ATUUTCA, 61
i
i •
W. N. U.f BALTIMORE, NO. 49-1921.
Cuticura Soap
The Healthy —
Shaving Soap
Caticqra Soap shaves without mag. Everywhere 26c.
/I yj Salt Your Stock the Blackman Way
DO YOU TAKE SALT
with meals, or just fill up on salt once or
TWICE A WEEK?
A few licks of BLACKMAN’S Tonic
Salt should be a part of the daily diet
of your live stock. It is medicated and
will improve digestion, make the feed
go further, and keep uiem in healthy
condition. So simple, so easy. Just
drop brick in feed-box—it will do the
rest
The Blackman Stock Remedy Co.
CbatUuoga, lean.
Health andWealth
and has brought contentment and happiness to thou
sands of home seekers and their families who have
settled on her FREE homesteads or bought land at
attractive prices. They have established their own
homes and secured prosperity and independence.
In the great grain-growing sections of the prairie
provinces there is still to be had on easy terms
Feitile Land at $15 to $30 an Acre
—•land similar to that which through many years
has yielded from 20 to 45 bushels of wheat
to the acre—oats, barley and flax also in great
abundance, while raising horses, cattle, sheep
and hogs is equally profitable. Hundreds of farm
ers in Western Canada have raised crops in a single
season worth more than the whole cost of their
land. Healthful climate, good neighbors, churches,
schools, rural telephone, excellent markets and
shipping facilities. The climate and soil offer
iuuuvuiivi.m) >u4 uiiuum c. cry srsscs ci
agriculture. The advantages for
Dairying:, Mixed Farming M
and Stock Raising «
make a tremendous appeal to industrious set
tiers wishing to improve their circumstances. ilfllS
For illustrated literature, maps, description of farm
opportunities in Manitoba, Saskatchewan. Alberta
and British Colombia, reduced railway rates,
etc., write ^
F. A. HARRISON

xml | txt