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THE TUCUMCARI NEWS UZECHO-SLOVAK TROOPS TAKING THE OATH OF ALLEGIANCE PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN FOR INDIGESTION mt5 nzon 0(G-0, AA3- EAT ONE TABLET! NO GASES, ACIDITY, DYSPEPSIA OR ANY STOMACH MISERY. Troops of tlie mittonul nrmy of the C'zccho-Slovuks IuUiik ttie onth of ullei;luticu to the new yovcrnniont at I'mcue. CARDINAL GIBBONS CELEBRATES GOLDEN JUBILEE Cardinal (Miliums at the seeae of the Jnmes Ityan, Mgr. Thos. F. I.ee, Cardinal GALLANT FRANK MAUDESLY Frank Mauuosi.v a steward on the liner Cnnopie, photogniuhcd on the arrival of the vosm-I in New York. Maudesly served M year' In the Brit ish army. Hn served In the Hoxer up rising, thu liner war, In various cam paigns In India and In Ihr groat war Just ended, lie has won the Victoria cross, the Distinguished Conduct ii'.cdnt, the Ittisslan Cross of St. (Soorgo, nnd bus boon recommended by Marshal Foch for the Cross of the Le gion of Honor. On Chilsima.' day, 11)11, when the Ilrltlsh wore retiring, he ns regimental sergeant major took charge of a cavalry hrlgailo when the otllcers bad boon put nut of action. He led n Fticcossful counter-attack that mved W),000 Ilrltlsh troope from cap ture. The. samu night ho rode Into tho German lines and rescued two nurses who had been condemned to death ns spies. At Heme and Abroad. Tho teachers were Introducing n 'few modern wnrfaro terms to the class In history. "Now I wonder If any of you enn bIvo rao n sentence with 'Over ths top' In It," she snld. "Thomas, coo your The fat hoy who had been n sleep, during most of the Tesson, wni ijunl to the ocnmlon. "My father's hHlj Is gone over the top," he snld witu Wnyictl" celebration of his pilrlcn jubilee. In the picture, from iSlbbous, Mgr. James F. Mat-kin and llourku CooUran. SPRING FOOTWEAR Thosu four doughboys, Privates Crnlic. .Sorrier Kekolborg and !!. of hendiiuarters troop, Kighty-clghth division are shown In the street of Valdols, France, wearing wooden French "caterpillars" on a muddy day. ANARCHIST MEETING Kntrnnro to one of the big halls their meetings. Thu Inscription over the I'coplu." TRADE BRIEFS Osaka, Japan, has nearlv 10.000 fac tories, employing over 02,000 men nnd 0,1,000 women. The amalgamation of tho several Canadian railway organizations Is making rapid progress. During the psst yenr the number of women trade unionists In ihvcdrn .a creased over 0,000, left 10 right, uiv: I FOR DOUGHBOYS PLACE IN MOSCOW n Moscow thu doors Is whole tho anarchists mild ' Peace uud Itrotherhood of A novel thief doner for autoainblles causes a cnr to run In a circle when In operation. The natives of Slam obtnln petro leum by digging pits about sixty feet deep and dipping It nut with palls. Murdock McKenzln. well known among stockmen In tho United States has gone to manage the Sao I'nulo Land nnd Cnttlu company In llnull. It Is said ho Is to receive a sulury .if $50,000 a year. ' Why an Everyday Lunch Cost Mr. Barnay $7,800 CHICAGO. Twenty yours mm John M. Iliiriiny, the son of n wealthy Him Kiirliin. h-ft lludapest to try his forliini-s In America as n civil and nit chunlrul (nglmvr. Arrived In C'lileuKn, ho obtained a position an Instructor at I.cwls Institute. Soon after ho mar a restaurant nt fit iinst van Huron street. Her veil was down. A man entered, looked about at the tilled tables, and chose the only vacant seat opposite her at her table. She looked up enminlly and then pisped. It was her fovmer husband. Without ralslnc her veil she arose and jyt the proprietor of the restaurant to telephone her lawyer. She returned to the table, raised her veil, uud Mild : "Hello, John." "Why, why Florence, Is It you?" "Vos, It's me, John." Kho Introduced John, Jr. "Florence, I want you to come up to the Monndnock hulldlnR nnd meet my wife. You know, I married about three years ngo. I urn representing the ltepubllc Fireproof company here." Shu played for time. She was nt her wits' end when In wnlkcd Detectlvo SerRoants Michael Trant and Max Hedllch of the central station. Fifteen times llfty-two times ten equals 7.S0O the number of dollars In Mr. Bnrnay's lunch bill. True Love in Denver Bears Out Poet's Statement INVKIt. When Samuel Hnrtscl of cattleman and founder of the town eighty-four he left an estate of about F. K. I'rew'.tt, Mrs. CJoorgo Schoephoes- ter and "Honrlettn Hnrtscl." Inside the quotation mnrks Is this story: When his two elder daughters had married, the aged cattleman said to Henrietta: "If you marry now, I will lose my home, Henrietta, for I will not live In the home of uny son-ln-lnw. Two fami lies never could live under onu roof ' and never can." i So Miss Hnrtscl agreed to stick by her father tilt death, and kent her proniKe. Hut In keeping this promise she did not break faith with herself, either. She went to Ureoley about four yean ago and married I'nul J. Dono van, sou of J. 11. Donovan, president of the Colorado I'loneer society. Sho consulted with her sisters and they agreed that It was nil right. Soi. j of thoe days Mr. and Mrs. l'.iul Donovan will have n honeymoon. To date they have soon very little of each other since their marriage. It was tl ustoin of Mr. Hnrtscl to spend his winters In Florida or Ilnwult or Cali fornia, and he nlwnys took Henrietta with him. Mr. Donovan Is an electrical engineer and bis work took him several months ago Into a part of Mexico where It l not safe for an American woman to go. So Mr. Donovun Is far away In Mexico and "Henrietta Ilartsel" In the old home In Vino street. And the neighbors nre still tolling how surprised they are. All of which would seem to Indicate that the poet was Just about right when he said, "The course of true love never runs smooth." Passengers on Nebraska Train Have Experiences' NOKI-OLW. M:H The eighty passengers on a Northwestern train which ' was hurled In the snow seven miles east of here for four days In the Inst sinriii wdl not soon forgot tho experience. The train left Norfolk for Sioux City thup. It had been thought that tho train got through until Friday afternoon, when n wire from Sioux City by way of Omaha asked for Information concerning the lost train. Two trainmen from tho marooned train walked through the drifts and reached Norfolk thnt same afternoon. They reported the lost train ns being completely covered with snow In a deep cut. At midnight n snow plow pushed by throe locomotives anil carrying provisions started from Norfolk, The outfit became stnllcd on the line and did not roach tho Imperiled passengers till Sunday night. In the meantime the passengers on ths stalled train wore having experi ences out of the ordinary. The train cr.irL'd neither dining car nor sleepers. The coal ran short nnd tin; passengers were crowded Into one cnr. Friday morning revealed snow two or throi foot deep, with drifts ten to fifteen feet high. The nearest farmhouse was more than a mile away. The only food was basket lunches and eggs from the baggage car. Friday afternoon farmers came to the rescue with cooked food nnd took home with them six small children. The passengers played games, read everything on tho train nnd held prayer meetings to kill time. All this look place while Chicago was boasting of tho "first robins" of spr'ug, dandelions and one butterlly. i Why George Stallings Is ATLANTA. OA. Kvor hoar why they named (leorge Stallings the "Mlraclo .MiinV" I'rohnlilv vim. Iimt iim I lmnunliilu nf ntlmrg tluiut.lit It ii'nul.it.ntun I .'-- .... ...... ... .tt,.ij I he dragged tho I'.oston Knives of 11)11 from last place to the world's champlon 1 ship between July 1 and about October i 10. That Isn't the reason nt nil. Sialllngs acquired the title down on hW Ooorgln much In tho presence of several hundred of his colored work i lug men. Joe was foreman. Sam and Jim lived In huts hack In the woods. Now Mr. Stallings. as he's called ' on the ranch, raises pedigreed pigs for iViilch ho gets fancy prices. Onu full. several years ago, some of thu pigs disappeared. Mr. Stallings possessed a big brass ships compass. Tlioso "nlgguhs" bad never soon a ship's compass. He took It out In tho yard ono Sunday afternoon and ordered Jou to call nil the "nlggahs" together. The colored workers formed a half clrclu In front of the boss. Suspecting Sam because of observations mado at other times, Stulllngs put the compass on tlft ground directly south of him. "Now, this thing I have here," began Stallings, "Is a patent llnr nnd hog. thief detector. This hand Inside tho glass will pick out any thief or llnr In a crowd," and he kept tapping the Instrument with his too to keep tho hand bob bing around. "Some of my pigs hnve disappeared, nnd I'm going to find the thief. Joe, come up here," he snld to bis foreman, as ho quit kicking the com pass nnd nllowed the needle, to come to a stop. "Whero Is that hand pointing now?" Joo looked at tho compass, then ran his eyo along tho ground, duo north, and replied: "It's pointing right at you, Knm." "Well, I didn't do It alone," answered the guilty Sam. "I Just knew that 'nlggah' couldn't keep Us mouth shut," spoko tbo equally jrullty Jim. On hli plantation Mr. Stallings Is a fmlrocle man." ried Miss Klorenro Wain. In 11H)I chu ohtalnetl a tllvoreo on Kroumlt of cruel ty anil obtained cuytmly of the two children u daughter, four yearn old, and a mn, fix month. Itarnay was ordered to pay allaiony of $10 a weelc. Ho disappeared. Shu resumed her maiden name and wont to work. The other day she brought her son, now fifteen years old, dnwnlown to lmy a suit. They were having luncheon In 1027 Vine street, n Colorado pioneer of Hnrtscl, died recently at the age of $200,000 to his throe dnughters, Mrs. on u Thursday morning. A blizzard had started and tho train was preceded by n snow plow pushed by two locomo tlves Seven miles east of Norfolk the plows anil locomotives stuck In a drift. The passenger train halted to wait un til the plows battered a way tiirough, but soon was snowed In Itself and was iiuablo to bai'k up. Telegraph wires went out of com mission and division hendiiuarters In Norfolk could not be notified of tho Called "Miracle Man" YOU'LL MOT GET I ,jv ,1 V 7 M f'n G0IHGTS Undigested food I Lumps of pnln; belching mis. -'l,ls K'l'riH'ss. When your stomach Is all npot, here Is In stant relief N't wultliij;! A' A The moment you eat a tablet or two of 1 'ape's WnpcpMn all the Indigestion pnln and dyspepsia distress stops. Your disordered stomach will feel tine at once. These pleasnnt, harmless tablets of Tape's Dlapepxln never fall and cost very little at drug stores. Adv. Tool or Talisman? Mary I'crt "Thank ;:oodness, 1 have a perfect complexly!" Kitty Katt "Hut you carry a haiosfoot Just for luck':" RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half p'nt of water mid 1 or.. Hay Hum a mall box of Ilarbo Compound, and 14 or. of glycerine. Any druggist can put this up or you can mix it at home at very lit tle coit. Full directions for making nnd ue come in each box of llarbo Compound. It will gradually darken treakod, faded gray hair, and make it foft nnd ftlomy. It will not color the fralp, is not sticky or (rcaiy, and does ant rub on". Adv. (let your principles straight nnd the rest Is a mere matter of detail. Na poleon. Weekly Health Talks A Single Remedy Often Cures Many Diseases BY VALENTINE MOTT, 51. D. It is almost impossible to give a lilt of the endless dis-Mfcs that follow indigestion. Perhaps a whole column in this newspa per would Lc required to print them all. You tat to keep nhve to supply blood and flesh and bone and muscle and brain. It is easy to sec that if your food is not di gested and taken up by the delicate or gans and distributed where it is needed, . disease of komc sort is sure to come. Dys pepsia is a common symptom, and so nre liver complaint, loss of flesh, nervousness, hail memory, dizziness, sleeplessness, no appetite. Many times, wficn neglected, in digestion results in coughs, throat diseases, catarrh, bronchitis and even more danger ous thinps. And all these disorders arise because the fool is not properly digested in the stomach. It is plain even to a child that relief nnd cure arc to be had only by setting up a hcalthv condition it ' the utornach. Dr. Pierce, of IlulT.iIo, N. V., many years ago combined a number of vegetable rrowtln into a temperance remedy for indigestion, and called it Golden Medical Discovery. It is probably the inoi-t eflic.icious discovery ever made in medicine, for the lit of people all over the world who have had their countlcs ills overcome by Dr. Pierre's Oolden Medical Dicovcry makes nn amazing total of thou sands. I know of no ndvice better than this: Hcgin a humu treatment today with this good vegetable niedieine. It will show you better than I can tell you what it will do. When taking Oolden Medical Dis covery, you can rest nourcd of one very important thing it contains neither alco hol nor opiate!). Theru is nothing in it hut standard roots ind herbs that possesi curative properties of a high order. A safe medicine is the only kind you cam afford to take. k Cough That Lasts And will not yield to ordinary rem edies must have special treatment. Hayes' Healing Honey Stops Tfi9 Tickla Heals The Throat Cures The Cough Wonderfully cffectlvo In tho treatment ol Coughs, but, if the Cough Is dcep-seuted and tho Head or Chest Is sore, a per.etrat Intf salve should be applied. This Srcatly helps any cough syrup in curing Coughs and Colds. A FREE BOX OF GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE f Opens tho Pores snd Penetrates Fof Chest Golds, Head Golds, and Croup, Is enclosed vlth every bottle of HAYES HEALING HONEY. This la tho only cough syrup on tbe market with which this additional treatment Is given. The ! Salve is also very valuable as aGennlcld ior uio nose ana inroai. you get boto remedies for the price of one. 35c, Sold by all Druggists. If your Druggist should not have it In stock, he will order It from bis nearest Wholes alo Druggist Mado. Recommended and Guaranteed to the Public , 7 MIS MEOKWC CMPMY, MAMcrAcrutzasor Orwrt TasUtMs Chill Tonic Y