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THE SPANISH-AMERICAN. 5 .Your Sítín is So Fragrant and" Smooth . This favorite Toilet Soap of three g gcncimiuni ui lovciy women is pure like the rain water you use In caring for your complexion. Mall this for free trial cake of COLGATE'S Cashmere Bouquet Soap Luxurious Lairing Refined , CoLOA-n &. Co., Dept. W. U. 199 Fulton St., New York City 1 Plene send me t free imple of Cofaete'i Cftihmere Bouquet Soap, fragrant and yen. Nam ' Street or R.D.. Ckj . Stan.. That's as Good aa Anything. We assume that one of the diseases íor which beer Is prescribed Is chicken snake bite. "I was smoking my pipe when it came to me" Which may, or may not,' ibe a boost for Edgeworth How many good ideas are born in a : pipe of tobacco I There is something i in the calm contentment of smoking a 1 (pipe that seems to open up the mind I tf or new ideas. i A busy man, a thinker, whose brain j lis crisscrossed with a thousand im i pressions, finds that smoking his pipe ' wipes out most of the confusion, and '. leaves his mind clean, so that the new j idea, the inspiration, has a much i 'better chance to make its impression .j I as if pipe-smoking wiped all the chalk-marks from the blackboard of 1 the mind and invited new ideas, new : thoughts, and creative plans to out line themselves thereon. Lots of men get good ideas when shaving. Many more find their new ideas when puffing away at the pipe. The right kind of tobacco is an im i portant matter to a pipe-smoker though, like breathing, he- seldom j thinks of it.e Having settled on a cer í tain brand, it becomes a habit to buy i that. .If the tobacco just suits his : taste, it doesn 't matter what its name is or what it costs it becomes ! his tobacco. ' I Edgeworth suits many men. We presume there are some men who . wouldn't like Edgeworth. It is a matter of individ ual taste like eat ing onions. fJ But we have a belief that there are many pipe smokers not smok ing Edgeworth who ought to be rirpi who don t know Edgeworth and therefore have no idea that there is a to bacco that hita their taste' so exactly that it might have been made for them alone. We want those men to try Edge worth. We would like to harrd them our pouch personally, but as that is impossible, we'll do what we can. The makers of Edgeworth will send free samples to any pipe-smoker who will ask for them. Simply send a postal or a note asking for these free samples and they'll come to you by the first mail. Edgeworth comes in two forms Ready-Rubbed and Plug Slice. In either form it is a moist, fragrant to i bacco that packs nicely, lightp quickly and bums freely and evenly. We can't promise that Edgeworth 'will make brilliant ideas come to you; but we are sure you will have a de lightful smoke and after all, that a all that good tobacco is supposed to give. For free samples, address yourpos-' 1 1 tal or letter to Larus & Brother Com I pany, 44 South 21st Street, Rich- mona, Va. If you will mention the i name and address of the dealer from : whom you usually buy your tobacco, j your courtesy .will be appreciated. , Toffcetail Tobacco Merchants If your jobber cannot supply you with i Edgeworth, Larus & Brother Com j pany will gladly send you prepaid by I parcel post a one- or two-dozen car . ton of any size of Edgeworth Plug Slice or Ready-Rubbed for the same price you would pay the jobber. mmm muí n,M' W. N. U, DENVER, NO. 30-1922. Southwest News From All Over New Mexico and Arizona The Fourth Annual American Le gion State Convention to be held In Douglas, Ariz., Sept. 18, 19 and 20. L. P. Beck, a ranchman living at Five Mile, thirty miles up the Pecos Valley from Roswell, N. M., was killed when he became entangled In a rope and was dragged to death by a mule. William Acker, confessed accomplice In the assault on Iver Enge, who died In a hospital In Prescott as a result of a beating and stabbing suffered June 11, pleaded not guilty when he was ar raigned before Justice of the Peace McLane on a formal charge of murder. Acker was held for trial without ball. Mrs. Clara Phillips was arrested at Tucson, Ariz., charged with the slay ing In Los Angeles of Mrs. Alberta Meadows, who was beaten to death with a hammer and a boulder. The arrest was based upon admissions said to have been made to the sheriff by her husband, A. L. Phillips, a Los An geles oil promoter. J. D. Whltten was taken Into cus tody In Miami, Ariz., on a warrant charging him with murder in connec tion with the killing In Angle ton, Tex., In February, of an alleged member of the Ku Kluz Klan and the wounding of another man in what was said to have been a klan raid on a rooming house where Whltten and his wife were living. Preliminary plans are being made by officers of the Chamber of Commerce, the Farm Bureau and the New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts for the entertainment of officers and delegates of the Horse and Cattle Growers' Association of New Mexico, which will have its fall meeting In Las Cruces and at State College next Sep tember or October. Commercial truck crops most prom ising for production In car lot quanti ties In the Irrigated valleys of the Rio Grande are cabbage, Spanish onions, lettuce, spinach and cantaloupe, says O. D. Miller, assistant in marketing, Bureau of Markets and Crop Esti mates, U. S. Department of Agricul ture, in his report of a survey made recently in the Mesilla and El Paso valleys. For gallant service, Harry D. Stew art, agent for the American Railway Express Company, hag been presented In Los Angeles with a check for $1,000, an engraved gold watch and a- letter of appreciation from George C. Taylor, president of the company. Stewart, who resides in Los Angeles, killed one bandit and drove off eight more dur ing an attempted holdup of a train near Tucson, Ariz., several weeks ago. . Cattle, men in the southern part of New Mexico are cutting down trees to provide forage for cattle that are dying by the scores, according to a letter re ceived by the New Mexico Cattle and Horse Growers' 'Association at Albu querque from Hugh L. Hodge of Silver City, a leading cattle man of that sec tion. The drought and hot winds have dried up and completely parched the grass, the letter states, and water Is scarce. Conditions are called the most deplorable In years. Superior Judge S. L. Pattee of No gales has set August 28 as the date for the opening of the fourth trial of Pla cido Silvas, accused of having partici pated In the bandit raid on Ruby, Ariz., last August, In which Postmaster and Mrs. J. Frank Pearson were shot to death. In his second trial Silvas was convicted of the murder of Pearson and was sentenced to life Imprison ment His third trial, for the murder of Mrs. Pearson, ended in a disagree ment, the Jury standing 11 to 1 for con viction. H. Gordon Glore, Nogales contractor, whose fishing schooner sank In a gale in the Gulf of California recently, was found by a searching party wandering aimlessly along the barren Sonora coast about seventyrflve miles west of Nogales. Glore was. clad only fa pa jamas and had not tasted food In sev en days. The rescue was effected by a marching party from Ajo, Ariz. Manuel Martinez and Placido Silvas, convicted murderers who escaped re cently, were recaptured by a posse headed by Sheriff Harry Saxon about two and one-half miles southwest of Amado, which Is thirty miles north of Nogales. The slayers, exhausted and hardly able to move, were discovered lying among rocks. Martinez is under sentence of death and Silvas is facing a term of Ufe imprisonment for the killing of Postmaster and Mrs. J. Frank Pearson of Ruby, Ariz.., last August. The two escaped when Sheriff George White of Santa Cruz county, who was taking them to the state penitentiary, was killed In an automobile accident near Tucson. Deputy Sheriff Leonard Smith also was .fatally hurt, dying from the Injuries he suffered In the accident. James Burke, aged 36, was almost In stantly killed, his neck being broken, when a heavy car turned over several times and hit a telegraph pole In Santa Fé,.N. M. Another occupant of the car was unhurt and the car wds only slightly damaged. Plans for remodeling the Old Dom inion Company's mill at Globe, Ariz., when carried out, will Increase Its ca pacity from 700 tons per day to, 1,000 tons and should Insure higher extrac tion of metal and lower the cost of concentration, according to General Manager W. 3.. Mc3rlde. MRS. FRANK WILKIE, of Syra cu9e, N. Y., formerly matron at the State Reformatory at In dustry, N. Y., who says she is de lighted with- Tanlac since it' re stored her health after she suf fered eight years. "This Is the first time In eight years that I have been free from stomach trouble and it is all because of the wonderful good Tanlac has done me," said Mrs. Frank Wllkle, 229 Cedar St, Syracuse. Mrs. Wllkle formerly re sided in Buffalo and for two years was matron of the State Reformatory at Industry, N. Y. "I twas eating scarcely enough to keep alive," she declared, "for I would rather not touch a bite than suffer the misery I knew would follow. Even sweet milk disagreed with me. I was sick In bed for two and three days at a time, and gaa on my stomach made such awful pressure on my heart it almost cut off my breath. I had hor rible dreams at night and in the morn ing was all tired out. "Well, the longest day I live I will praise Tanlac, for my improvement has been simply remarkable. I have no more heartburn, my appetite Is wonderful, I can eat most anything I want, and my sleep Is sound and rest ful. I am thoroughly delighted with Tanlac. It is wonderful." Tanlac Is sold by all good druggists. Advertisement. ' Refreshing Ignoranc. ' Mrs. ' Kawler "I can't' do without my matutinal coffee." Mrs. Newrich "Is that a good brand? We've tried so many that are poor." Boston Transcript, Going Down. Blackstone Is. your wife still re ducing? Webster If you mean my income yes! Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION I 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief 25$ and 754 Páckages. Everywhere D I - C O L - Q FOR BURNS .CUTS ITCH 60RES 75c at storei; 85c by mail. Addreai New York Drug Concern, New York Skin Troubles Soothed With Cuticura Sp 25c, Oiabnent 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c Grav Hair ) out of fashion; is UDnecflary íor you can haw abundant hair of the original hade bf using' Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer. 6af at water try It. At all (rood druggists, I. to cents. or airect from Hessui-LLm, IVostorn Ganada Offers Heslth tnd Wealth and has brought contentment and happiness to thousands of home seekers and their fami lies who have started on herFREE homesteads or bought land at attractive prices. They have established their own homes and secured pros perity and independence. In the great grain growing sections of the prairie provinces there is still to be had on easy terms Fertile Land at $35 to $33 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 farmers 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 inducements for almost every branch of agriculture. The advantages for Dairying, Mixed Farming and Stock Raising make a tremendous appeal to industrious settlers wishing to improve their circum stances. For certificate entitling you to reduced railway ratea, illustrated literature, maps, description ot tarm , opporxumuca ill maiiuuua, oao katchewan. Alberta ana Bri tish Columbia, etc., write W, V. BENNETT 300 Petar" Tnnt Building Omaha, Nab. 1ÉÉ DROPS EFFORT TO END STRIKE LABOR BOARD PLANS NO FUR THER ACTION TOWARD RAIL PEACE. THREE ISSUES GIVEN PRESIDENT JEWELL ANNOUNCES THREE PRINCIPAL CAUSES PREVENTING SETTLEMENT. ' Chicago. No further action toward ending the railway shopmens strike is contemplated by the United States Rtillroad Labor Board at this time, Ben W. Hooper of the labor board announced on his return from a con ference with President Harding at Washington. Asked whether any new plans looking toward a settlement of the strike had been made, he dlcfated the following formal statement : "My trip to Washington was main ly for the purpose of furnishing the President with the fullest Information possible In regard to the strike situa tion.' As might be supposed, the President seeks to know this situation from every angle, from the view point of the car riers the employés, the labor board and the public. "There Is nothing else that can be said Just now other than to answer the question asked me by saying that no furter action by the labor board Is In contémuplatlon at this time." While Mr. Hooper was meeting the government officials in Washington, B. M. Jewell and other strike leaders were In conference with James J. Da vis, secretary of labor, at Mooseheart, 111. At the end of the meeting and before departing for Washington, Mr. Davis expressed, the belief that the strike could be settled at once if the roads would restore the seniority rights of the strikers and the labor board would take up the other questions in dispute. In commenting on the attitude of the roads and the strike leaders, Mr. Hooper asserted that his investigation had convinced him that "no serious obstacle is to be found to peace" ex cept restoration of seniority rights to the strikers. Further progress was seen in the statement issued by Mr. Jewell, how ever,. In which he said: "There are three principal issues now preventing a possible settlement of the railway controversy, which are found in the re fusal of the railway executives i "First To discontinue contracting out of work. "Second To establish ' a national board of adjustment. "Third To continue seniority rights of employés who suspended work." It was pointed out that this list of demands contained only one of the original three grievances which re sulted In the strike call that relating to the discontinuance of outside con tractingand it was indicated that al most every road In the country already had agreed to stop this practice. The omission of the original demands re lating to wages and rules occasioned some comment, the belief being ex pressed that the shopmen finally had decided to agree to a rehearing on these points by the labor board. It wrs , action similar to this ' which averted a threatened strike by approxl "mately 400,000 maintenance of way men at the time the shopmen walked out. Premiers Will Discuss Moratorium. Paris. A conference between David Lloyd George, the British prime minis ter, and Raymond Poincaire, the French premier, to discuss the ques tion of a moratorium for Germany has been arranged for the first part of August. It is the realization in French circles that the reparations question has reached a decisive crisis. The French viewpoint now Is that before a long term moratorium Is granted to Germany supplementary reforms and additional guarantees should be de manded. Storm Destroys Fish Hatchery. Manchester, Iowa. A sixty-minute rain and wind storm did damage est!-, mated at $175,000 to the federal fitfh hatchery and other property In 'the county here recently. The most se rious damage was done at the United States fish hatchery, where thousands of breeding fish were swept away. In cluded In the loss Is 2,500 speckled rainbow trout. It is estimated by the superintendent of the state hatchery it will take three years to replace stock lost. Estimated loss to govern ment ponds in 50,000. Mystery Girl Put Under Guard. Los Angeles, Calif. A deputy sher iff litis been assigned to guard the "mystery girl," who is said to Jiave identified Mrs. Clara Phillips as the purchaser of the. hummer with which Mrs. Alberta Jieadows was beaten to death here' recently. This announce ment came from the sheriff's office, with a statement that the reason was the receipt by the young saleswoman of threatening telephone messages. She has been termed the "mystery girl" here because officials decline to make her name public. . , v, Had Your Iron Today I JL Work Brains- Not Digestion HERE'S an ideal hot-weather luncheon! Two packages luscious Little Sun Maid Raisins one cool glass of milk. Big men don't need more. 290 calories of energizing nutri ment in the little raisins. Pure fruit sugar, practically predigested so it acts almost immediately, yet doesn't tax digestion and thus heat the blood. , There's fatigue-resisting food-iron also in this lunch. Vital men eat like this and resist the weather. Don't work their diges tion because they want to work their brains. Try it for a few days and you'll feel better. Little Sun-Maids Between-Meal Raisins 5c Everywhere in Little Red Packages . Curious Flit Engine, What might be described as a dbu-ble-tandem bicycle, with four wheels ar ranged like those of a wagon, and four seats for riders, two In front and two behind, and carrythg" a hose reel, ro tary pump, etc., was exhibited recently In Paris. The machine Is intended as a fire engine in small towns. Whén the scene of Are Is 'reached the pedals are thrown Into gear with the pump, the hose Is unrolled, and the riders, re suming their seats; work the pump by means of the pedals. It Is claimed that this machine can outstrip any fire engine drawn by horses on the way to a conflagration, and that Its pump Is at least as effective as those of the hand engines used In many towns. The poorest Arab woman paints her eyes with kohl to make them appear larger and more brilliant. Companion to the Goodyear All-Weather Tread By long wear, superior traction, freedom from skidding, and ultimate economy; the Goodyear All-Weather Tread has won unquestioned leadership. . As a companion to this tire there is the Good year 30 x y Cross-Rib Fabric. Built of the same high grade Egyptian fabric and with a long wearing but differently designed tread, this tire offers unusual value. Over 5,000,000 of these tires have been sold in the last five years. Their quality and serviceability have proven to thousands of motorists the follv of buying unknown and unguaranteed tires of lower price. Ask your Goodyear Service Station Dealer to explain their advantages. "We tero Made Gives New Life to Old Stoclcings Putnam Fadeless Dyesdyes or tints as you wish Women in Serbia. Woman suffragists In Serbia, writes Mrs. Slacko Grouitch, wife of the Jugo slav minister to the United States, in terest themselves not only hj; legisla-. tlon- that give ' "women equality be fore the- law, but are also sponsoring legislation for the protection of child labor. In addition to continued en deavor to raise help for the Serbian aid fund, to which Mrs. Grouitch has rendered such sustained service, she is now asking for support also tot some of the distinctive movements, such as woman suffrage, which are making for the permanent reconstruc tion of that country. Some Display. 'Will knickers do?" "I don't see why not. There's about the same length of hosiery exhibited." Louisville Courier-Journal. 30x3'2 All-Weather Cord $16.25 30x3 V4 All-Weather Fabric 13.50 30x3'2 Crow-Rib Fabric . 10.95 30x316 HeavyTouristTube 2.80 30x3'2 Regular Tube ... 2 .25 Tluii friai intluJd mmujaclunr't txrilt ta lor We tern Trade" it