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The Topeka State Journal du lieu suivant : Topeka, Kansas • 8

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Topeka, Kansas
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THE TOPEKA DAILY STATE JOURNAL- WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 23, 1916 SOCIETY By Bertha Hempstead Word has been received of the approaching marriage of Mr. Harres to Miss Lucile Marie Dodd, of Syracuse. N. Y. Mr.

Martin is the son of Mrs. John Martin and the late Governor Martin. of Kansas Mr. Martin was gOVernor of this state from 1885 to 1899. The family formerly lived in Atchison, where Mr.

Harres Martin was born. He graduated from the Ottawa high school and spent a year in Ottawa University, Later he attended SyraUniversity, where romance between him and Miss Dodd had its beginnin5oad is an accomplished vocalist and a pianist of ability. Mr. Martin is now connected with the Remington Arms company. of Chester, where he and his bride make their home, following a honeymoon trip in the east.

The marriage will be solemnized April 26. Mrs. John A. Martin is at present in Washington, D. and will gO to Syracuse to attend her son's wedding.

Mr. Paul Lawless will give a recital Thursday in the high school auditorium. Lawless, a tenor, is night. at the head of the voice department of College of the Sisters of Bethany. He will be assisted in his concert by Rudolph King, pianist, who played the accompaniments for Clarence Whitehill in Topeka a few weeks ago.

The recital is free, and the public is cordially invited to attend. The program for the evening will be as follows: Recitation--Deeper Still Aria--Waft Her Handel Als die alte Dvorak Ein Schawn Greig Liebes treu Brahms Wiegenlied Brahms Requiem Homer Had a Horse Korbay Spirit Flower Tipton Lift Thine Logan Jean Spross Don Juan's Tschaikowsky Morning Hymn Henschel Aria- Celeste Aida, Verdi Aria Vesti la giubba, Leancavallo Aria La donna-e mobile. "Rigoletto" Verdi Mrs. John Padgett will entertain the members of her auction club Thursday afternoon at her home, 315 Eleventh street. "Miss Edith Ingham is confined to her home on account.

of injuries received from falling from a horse. She Make Skin Smooth There is safe, dependable treatment that relieves itching torture instantly and that cleanses and soothes the skin. Ask any druggist for EL 25c bottle of zemo and apply it as directed. Soon you will find that pimples, black heads, eczema. ringworm and similar skin troubles will da ippeur.

A little zemo, the penetrating. satisfying liquid. is all that is needed, for it banishes all skin eruptions and makes the skin soft, smooth and healthy. Zeno, Cleveland. -Advertisement.

Alkali Makes Soap Bad For Washing Hair Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use is just plain mulsified cocoanut oil, for this is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and beats the most expensive soaps or anything else all to pieces. You can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for montns. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is all that is required.

makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and easy handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and -Advertisement. and some friends were out for a ride, when horse slipped on the pavement near Central Park school, and threw her to the ground. No bones were broken, and she expects to be out again soon.

Clement Smith will give an illustrated lecture on color photography tonight at 8 o'clock at the high school auditorium under the auspices of the art department of the Topeka Federation of Women. Mr. Smith 175 colored lantern slides. He has procured them at expense, and they are said to hearine samples of color photography work. Some of the views he has were taken Mrs.

L. H. Munn's conservatory and Miss Hazel Hypes will sardelore the lecture tonight. go The cooking school to be conducted early in March by the Good Government club. will open March 6 and continue to March 11.

The sessions are free to anyone wishing to attend them, and women from the country and the near-by towns are many of them planning to come to Topeka to attend the school. The instruction is given by experts from the Agricultural college, and it is to be made of a practical and helpful kind. All expenses for the maintenance of the school will be paid by the club. The plan for the school was origihated by Mrs. Howard N.

Rhodes, president of the club. and met with instant approval by the members. Miss Doris Stevens of New York. who is in this afternoon conducting an organization meeting town, among the women suffragists. is wearing a smart new fangled cloak.

It is for motor or walking use. and is of dark brown leather- yes, just leather. such as the hats are being made of this spring. It is plain, of good length, and is handsomely lined with tan colored satinver imagine that the voting women don't like new and stunning clothes as well as anyone else, even if we did have an important suff lecturer in Kansas one time that had to be told that she would help the cause to dress up a bit and put on a pair of stays. and Mrs.

E. S. Pettyjohn entertained a few friends at dinner Tuesday night at the Washington Birthday banquet given by the women of the First The Methodist, celebration of Washington's birthday is an annual affair. The program after the dinner was an informal one, consisting of a short address Justice John Marshall. and music by the Glee club of the Industrial institute.

The favors were little hatchets tied with red, white and blue ribbon. de de A maid in one of the First Families of our city was married some time ago to a thrifty young chap who has been making hay in sunny and gathering in a good collection of shekels with the aid of his practical wife. She has reached a point where she has time for a bit of outside work in the aid society and belongs to a sewing club, She accepted an invitation to a church party one day, and met a woman who was a friend of the family in which she had served a good many years. "How do you do, Laura?" the older woman said to her friend's former maid, in the friendliest tone possible. "How do you doeh-Kate," the other replied, just like that.

de The Beta girls of Washburn college will give a series of buffet-luncheons for the men of the Kappa Sigma fraternity and the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. They entertained the Alpha Delta men at luncheon last week. Mrs. George Parkhurst will entertain the Fillmore Street Whist club Thursday. de Dr.

D. E. Gelwix of Springfield, formerly of Washburn college, will give an address to the students of the engineering department Thursday evening. While he is in Topeka he will be a guest of Professor and Mrs. W.

A. Harshbarger. The Junior Prom at Washburn college will be held Saturday, March 25. The members of the entertainment committee are: Miss Hazel Jones, Miss Mary Weightman, Miss Mar- SmartestGypsy Boots Of Imported Dull Kid -That were .45 $5.00, cut to In Our Season-end Sale at the Annex Bronze of same $2.85 -Lace or Button and Hundreds of others equally good styles, all worth from $4 to $5 Save the Difference Secure YOUR Pair Now Men Too- -Can Secure Unusual Shoe Values Selling Winter Weights and Short Lines--smartest styles and best of shapes- Dulls, Tans and Kid Leathers worth $4 to $5. Your Choice $2.85 Payres NNEX 515 KANSAS AVE.

EAR MUFFS AND BUCKLES ON GARTERS SEEN AT PALM BEACH The pleasures of bathing sand gets into the hair and duced a bathing cap provided obtained. Buckles on stocking The black and white sweater Photo shows Mrs James ear protectors and the buckles skies. will no longer be diminished by the fact that ears of the fair ones. Palm Beach has introwith ear protectors and the desired result is garters are there because they are novel. is also popular at the beach.

C. Perrish, of New York, wearing the as she basks beneath the sunny Florida tended visit to her old home in New Jersey and to friends in Chicago. Miss Jessie Oden, teacher of voice and Miss Zenola Jackson, teacher of pianoforte, will give a free recital at their studio at 413 Kansas avenue Wednesday evening, February 23 at 8 o'clock. The public is invited. Dr.

Lillian Malone, Osteopath, 713- 14 Mills, Hanlon will entertain the Taka Art Embroidery club Thursday afternoon, at her home, 1308 North Quincy street. DEATH OF JOHN G. OTIS It Removes From Topeka an Old and Valued Citizen. John G. Otis, pioneer Kansan and a former Populist congressman from the Topeka district, died at 10 o'clock Tuesday night at his home, Fifteenth and Adams streets.

His death was caused by heart disease from which he had been suffering for over a year. He was 78 years old. John G. Otis was born in Vermont in 1838. He graduated from Harvard school and came to Kansas in 1859, settling near Kansas City with his father.

His father died soon after arriving in Kansas, and Otis was kept out of the war by the responsibility of caring for the family. Mr. Otis practiced law when he came to Topeka. He was married in 1865 and shortly afterwards moved to the farm where his death occurred. For nearly fifty years he conducted a dairy.

Mr. and Mrs. Otis celebrated their golden wedding anniversary last September. Mr. Otis was elected to congress by the Populist party in 1890.

His political career ended with the one term. He was an active member of the Grange. He is survived by his wife, two sons, J. F. Otis of Washington, and H.

Otis. assistant dean of the Wisconsin Agricultural college: and two daughters, Mrs. J. F. True of Newman and Mrs.

R. E. McKibben of Topeka. Arrangements for the funeral will be made when word is received from the children. IOLA BACK ON EARTH Increased Demand for Zine and Cement Started a Boom.

Cement zine have come into their own and Iola is beginning to spruce up and put on the prosperity feathers of the Democratic administration, according to Senator Paul Klein of Allen county. Senator Klein, Representative and Mrs. A. A. Doerr and Mr.

and Mrs. John E. Wagner, of Larned, were the last of the Democrats to leave Topeka this mornafter attending the love feast at Convention hall last evening. Four years ago there were 500 empty, houses in Iola while today these houses are all occupied and new homes are being erected. An increase in the price of cement and a like increase in demand from railroads and cities using the same in paving are given by Senator Klein as reasons for the new business.

There are three cement plants running in Allen county at present and five smelters, employing approximately 2,000 men. STRANGLER ON TRIAL Claim Bianchetti Confessed. Declaring Girl Tried to Rob Him. Cleveland. Feb.

Bianchetti, former chef at the Cleveland Athletic club, was placed on trial today on a charge of first degree murder in connection with strangling to death of Dolores Evens, 19 years old, an actress, in a room in a downtown hotel the night of January 12. New York officers who arrested Bianchetti will present an alleged confession made to them in which he said he choked the girl when she tried to rob him of $250 and that he left the hotel without knowing she was dead. To Put On Flesh And Increase Weight Most people eat from four to six pounds of good solid fat-making food every day and still do not increase in weight one ounce. while on the other hand many of the plump, chunky folks eat very lightly. and keep, gaining all the time.

It's all bosh to say that this is the nature of the individual. It isn't Nature's way at all. Most thin people stay thin because their powers of assimilation are defective. They absorb just enough of the food they eat to maintain life and a semblance of health and strength. Stuffing won't help them.

A dozen meals a day won't make them gain a single "stay there" pound. All the fat-producing elements of their food just stay there in the intestine until they pass from the body as waste. What such people need is something that will prepare these futy food elements So that their blood absorb them and deposit them ail the body-something too. that will multiply their red blood corpuscles and increase their blood's carrying power. For such a condition it is well to recommend eating a Sargol tablet with every meal.

Sargol is not. as some believe a patented drug. but is simply a careful combination of six of the most effective and powerful assimilative and flesh building elements known to chemistry. It is absolutely harmless. ret has been wonderfully effective and a single tablet eaten with each meal often, according to reports of users.

has the effect of increasing the weight of a thin man or woman from three, to fire Arnold pounds a week. is by Drug Co. and other good druggists everywhere on a positive guarantee of weight increase or money back. -Advertisement. HONOR HEROINES Fifty French Women Are Decorated With "War Cross." Girl, 20, Caught by Germans, Thrice Escaped Death.

Looking Backward In State Journal Society Column FIFTEEN YEARS AGO TODAY The Potwin C.rrent Literature club gave its annual banquet last night at which the husbands of the members were guests. The program was furnished by Mrs. Ellen Loomis, Mrs. James A. Troutman, McLellan, Mrs.

A. H. Vance, Miss Emma Martin and Mrs. C. P.

Bolmar. The club members and those who enjoyed A. and Mrs. A. Bunker, the hospitality, were: Mr.

and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. J. M.

Brier, Mr. and Mrs. John Nowers, Mr. and Mrs. Vance, Mr.

and Mrs. Bolmar, Mr. and Mrs. D. D.

Knox, Mr. and Mrs. Troutman, Mr. and Mrs. C.

T. McLellan, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.

Lininger, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hicks, Mr. and Mrs. R.

Nesbaum, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Heath, Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas Martin, Mr. and Mrs. William Eberle, Mr. and Mrs.

L. L. Kiene. Mrs. S.

R. Tuttle. Mrs. Ellen Loomis, Mrs. J.

W. Thurston, Miss A. Nesbaum, Miss Sadie Ebey, Miss Matie Knox. and Messrs. A.

Wyman, Carl Bolmar, L. H. Thomas, John D. o. E.

Walker, Ralph Tuttle, and N. H. Loomis. The young women who assisted were: Miss Emma Martin, Miss Miss Louise Fern Bunker, McLellan, Miss Miss O. Bolmar, and Miss Mabel Martin.

Mrs. Frank Hill, of Seattle, and Miss Katherine Spencer of Kansas City were guests of honor at a card party given by Mrs. D. J. Small.

There were eight tabies at progressive high five. The invited guests were: Mrs. Hill. Miss Spencer, Mrs. Henry Keeler.

Mis. Edwin Knowles, Mrs. John Bradley, Mrs. C. B.

Merriam, Mrs. H. I. P. Hillyer, Mrs.

A. W. Parks, Mrs. W. E.

Sterne, Mrs. E. A. Prescott, Mrs. W.

Lacey, Mrs. E. T. Cartlidge, Mrs. George Eagle, Mrs.

Margaret Wiggin, Mrs. A. J. Wolcott, Mrs. B.

T. Lewis. Mrs. Edward Herbst. Mrs.

E. S. Small, Mrs. George W. 1 Veale, Mrs.

Ira 0. Howe, Mrs. J. F. Myers, Mrs.

C. B. Reed, Mrs. WalBates, Mrs. George W.

Crane, Mrs. Edwin Lange, Miss Dollie Martin, Mrs. W. A. Morton, Mrs.

Mrs. Frank Crane, Mrs. C. C. Baker.

Mrs. Warren M. Crosby, Mrs. E. L.

Copeland. guerite Kiene, Flora Harrington, Miss Isabelle 'savage, Miss Lena Baxter. Mr. Albert Ferguson, Mr. Harlow Price and Mr.

George Barrett. Dr. and Mrs. C. B.

Van Horn entertain the Impromptu club tonight at dinner, followed by a program. Mr. John Cleveland will read a paper and Mrs. John Sargent, will have charge of the program for the womans hour. The following girls are now pledges to the Kappa Kappa Chi sorority: Miss Marian Bussev, Miss Bess Cuddy, Miss Margaret Calvert, Miss Avis Clayton, Miss Florence Fair, Miss Marian Lerrigo, Miss Dorothy Foster and Miss Beulah Hall.

Mrs. Charles Kouns has returned from a trip to New York and Washington. She was a guest of Senator and Mrs. Charles Curtis and of Mr. and Mrs.

E. E. Gann, while she was in Washington. Mrs. Kouns, with Mr.

and Mrs. Gann and Senator and Mrs. Curtis, attended a reception at the White House. Mrs. Kouns was a guest of honor at a bridge-tea given by Mrs.

Charies Rodenberg, the wife of Congressman Rodenberg. Mrs. Curtis, Mrs. Gann and Mrs. Kouns were in the receiving line with the hostess.

Miss Leona Curtis and Miss Cannon, the niece of Speaker Cannon, served in the dining room. de 4 Notes and Personal Mention. Miss Katherine McFarland is viisting Miss Helen Cook, of Lincoln, Neb. Mr. and Mrs.

Frank D. Merriam, who have been in Excelsior Springs, have returned home. Jonathan Thomas and Miss Carolyn Thomas are spending a few days at Excelsior Springs, Mo. Mr. and Mrs.

Barton Phelps have moved to their home at 1020 Clay street. Mrs. A. H. Horton went to Kansas City today to visit her daughter, Mrs.

Earl McDowell, Mr. Harry B. Lautz is expected to return next Sunday from Las Cruces, N. where he has been since the third of February, recuperating after a long illness. Miss Mildred Shaw has gone to Denver, to visit her sister, Miss Ina Shaw.

Dr. T. H. Rockwell. of New York city, at one time a Kansas university student, was in Topeka Tuesday visiting Mr.

Charles A. Moore. Mrs. Guilford Dudley is recovering after an operation which she underwent Sunday at Stormont hospital. Miss Mary Chase, of Kansas City, is visiting Mrs.

S. J. Morton. Mrs. J.

C. McClintock will visit Mrs. Thomas Gray Kennedy in Junction City this week. Judge and Mrs. Lee Monroe will go to Scott City Sunday.

Judge Monroe will make the trip on business, and Mrs. Monroe will visit friends. Mrs. Lillian Mitchner has gone to Wichita to attend a W. C.

T. U. state board meeting. Mr. W.

Whitney, who has been in New York the past few weeks, will leave the east on his return home the last of this week. Mrs. Frank Cope will return the first part of next week from an ex- SHE'S WORTH A MILLION Washburn Is Trying for a Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa. Washburn is a million dollar corporation according to the letters that Washburn college is sending out in an endeavor to get a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the national scholarship fraternity. The campus is valued at the buildings and equipment.

about $400,000 and the present endowment $363,000. The endowment does not include the $100,000 recently left thee college from the Stich estate, or money raised to date the endowment campaign now in progress. Phi Beta Kappa is the greatest honorary scholarship society in the world. It was founded in 1776 and numbers a large per cent of the great men of United States history from George Washington and Jefferson down to Woodrow Wilson. It has its chapters only in the largest and strongest colleges and its presence in a school is sign of the institution's superiority.

Washburn feels very confident that the petition will be granted. The senate of Phi Beta Kappa meets next October to pass on petitions for membership. DON'T GIVE UP SHIP German Embassy Files Appearance in British Case for the Appam. Washington, Feb. representations were made to the state department today by the German embassy against the proceedings brought in the federal court at Norfolk to return the captured British liner Appam to her owners.

Paris, Feb. 50 women altogether have been decorated with the War Cress, including Madame Carrel, wife of Dr. Alexis Carrel of the Rockefeller institute. The honor was conferred upon Madame Muenier, nicknamed Madame "Daredevil," after her death. She, like the four Vatel sisters of Vertus in the Marne, earned the honor of feeding French and English soldiers at the risk of her life.

These were all absent from the Trocadero War Cross Fete, but many others were there, including Mademoiselle Marcelle Semmer, a girl, of 20 who rendered great service when the the the the Germans came down the Valley of the Somme. Through her daring scouting, the French located a Gerthe first line of trenches over open man battery and destroyed it. She provisioned an a advance post beyond ground exposed to the enemy's fire. She was wounded there September 30, 1914. She kept alive 125 old men, women and children of the neighborhood of Eclusieu who had taken refuge in cellars.

furnished civilian costumes to French soldiers surrounded by the Germans, a and enabled them to escape. In the absence of the lock-keeper, she opened flood gates of the canal and considerably retarded the advance of the invading forces. Three times the Germans caught her almost in act of hostility, but she slipped through their hands. Finally she was ordered to be shot. "All right," she said, looking the German officer straight in the eves without flinching: "I have only one thing to ask that is that I be shot with French rifles- -not German." The French artillery interrupted the execution, and General Baret a few days later decorated Mademoiselle Semmer with the Cross of the Legion of Honor before the troops.

Louise Dussait of Hainaut, Belgium, member of the Red Cross committee of Ypres, joined a field hospital at beginning, was cited by both the English and Belgian armies for her heroism during the bombardment of Ypres, and finally decorated by the French with the War Cross at Calais in the present of the garriscn. One nurse among those at the Trocadero wore the Moroccan medal beside the war cross, and several wore the Cross of the Legion of Honor. Martial Law in Chinese City. Shanghai, Feb. law has been proclaimed at Chang-Sha, capital of the province of Hu-Nan, where ere an unsuccessful attack was made by rebels on Monday on the governor's mansion.

No further details of the uprising have been received here. Colorado has an eight hour day for women. If it Catches You There "'ANURIe'; Will Quickly, Stop It! Simply to realize the importance of the oncoming kidney trouble. by its first symptoms, backache or throbs through the kidney region. is money in one's pocket as wel.

as years of sickness forestalled No organ of the body is more easily deranged than the kidneys. Day in and day out their action ie constant in separating poisonous matter from the blood. Most cases OH! MY BACK! of kidney trouble may easily be overcome by merely taking a Little with the meals. Citizens daily voice their praises of the merits ot Anuric," the recent discovery of Doctor Pierce, of "Favorite Prescription' and Golden Medica. Discovery fame.

For instance, here is a Letter that of Mr. HENRY A. LOVE who says: For a time 1 suffered trom backache pain in Left side trequent urination (bothering me at al'. times during the day and night). and the uric acid in my blood caused me to suffer from rheumatism along with a constant tired, worn-out feeling 1 heard of the new discovery of Doctor Pierce, of Invalids Hote.

Buffalo. N. called After giving Anuric" 8 good tria. 1 believe it the best kidney remedy to-dav. 1 have tried other kidney medicines but these Anuric' tablets of Dr.

Pierce's are the only ones. in my opinion that wil. cure kidney and bladder troubles." NOTE: -Experiments at Dr Pierce's Hospita. tor several years proved that Anuric" is 37 times more potent than ithia in removing uric acid from the system, as hot water melts sugar car Just ask for Anune" at druggists. or send Dr.

Pierce 10c. for trial package. Reports From Kansas City on Vap-0-Rub "Outside" Treatment Results of Tests Made Last Winter by Kansas City People Now Announced. From the Kansas City Star-When the Southern treatment for croup and troubles -Vick's Vap-O-Rub Salve--was being introduced in local druggists naturally were skepKansas an City, last spring, the tical. They wanted to be "shown" that Vap-O-Rub really would relieve croup and colds just by applying over the throat and chest.

So arrangements were made for each druggist to give away complimentary jars to his customers on condition that they give it a thorough trial and report the results. We give below a few extracts from these reports. Mrs. James Hollens, 1928 Tracey have used Vap-O-Rub for a cold in the chest and And it excellent, and especially so for children. I have also used it several times for asthma and And it does wonderful work." Mrs.

Almira Turner, 1214 E. 24th used Vap-O-Rub on her husband who had bronchitis and relieved him with two nights' applications. Mrs. Turner has also tried it on her children, a and particularly on her four months' old baby, who had a bad cold, and "It surely did cure her. I cannot praise it too highly." Use Butterick Patterns In Fashioning Your New Summer Apparel WarrenM.

Cosby STRIPES Are Much in Favor in Colored Wash Fabrics From all indications striped wash fabrics will be extremely popular this coming season. Dainty lingerie dresses and waists are being shown in black and white and stripes of various light colors. Many striking effects can be worked up in both dresses and waists and the styles this year are particularly favorable to the use of striped materials. 3D2 We are showing an interesting collection of the new stripes ranging from the narrow hair line to the wide awning stripe in a pretty range of colors, in wash materials. Some of the fabrics are: Printed Batiste, 38 inch wide, stripes, a 15c Printed Woven Flaxons in stripes a Printed and Woven Voiles in stripes, 25c to 65c Gabardines in the new awning stripes, varda Silk and Cotton Faille in stripes, a yard 69c and $1.00 "We invite you to see our Exposition of the Newest in Colored Wash Fabrics This Week." Striped Lingerie Waists Will unquestionably be very good this Spring and for the woman who does not wish to go to the trouble of making or having her waists made we have a splendid assortment.

There are: Voiles with black, blue and pink stripes in a number 716 of pretty styles at $1.95. Voiles in assorted fancy stripes as dainty as can be $3.50 Also Silk Poplin Waists in assorted stripes. These are practical waists for everyday wear $2.95 Mrs. T. L.

Marshall, 139 N. Lawndale has two children, six years old and eight months old. Mrs. Marshall writes- 'Vap-O-Rub appeals to us because it is external and the delicate little stomachs are not being loaded down with medicines containing opium and other harmful ingredients." Other Kansas City mothers who have given permission use their names are Mrs. W.

A. Winkler, 6228 E. 15th who baby had a cold-almost pneumonia. I had given him medicine, but he seemed to grow worse. I used Vap-O-Rub on him as directed and in one day's time he was better." Mrs.

Anna Taylor, 6040 Walrond has four children and writes I have ever used for coughs or colds has done them as much good as Vap-O-Rub." Mrs. Harry Webb, 2123 East 37th says little girl very susceptible to colds, and, in fact, this is the only winter and spring that she has escaped pneumonia, and we believe that this escape is due to our use of Vap-O-Rub." When Vap-O-Rub is applied to the heat of the body, the ingredients are released in the form of vapors. These are inhaled with each breath all night long through the air passages to the lungs, and, in addition, Vap-O-Rub is absorbed through and stimulates the skin. Three sizes, 25c, 50c or $1.00. Colonist Rates to California Tickets on Sale Daily March 25 to April 14 $32.50 From Topeka This rate applies to nearly all points in Arizona, California and the North Pacific Coast.

Liberal stop-overs allowed. Up-to-date Pullman Tourist Sleepers and free reclining chair cars to California daily. For particulars write or Best call and safest T. L. KING, C.

P. T. A. route. Phone 3682 Santa Fe Topeka, Kan.

Many People Don't Know. sluggish liver can cause a person an awful lot of misery. Spells of dizziness, headaches, coustipation and biliousness are sure pigus that your liver needs help. Take Dr. King's New Life Pills and gee how they belp tone up the whole system.

Fine for the stomach too. Aids digestion. Purifies the blood the complexion. Ouly 25c. at your L.

M. PENWELL Undertaker and Embalmer THOMAS E. JONES. Assistant Phone 192 508-310 Quincy St..

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