——— av. pL ~~ MOTHER! ®California Syrup of Figs" Child’s Best Laxative Accept “California” Syrup of Figs mly-—look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your shild is having the best and most harm- tess physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels, Children love its fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must say “California.”--Adv, If a sure-enough fool killer were to some around every man on earth would try to hide. BOCHEE'S SYRUP A Harmless Soothing, Healing Remedy for Coughs and Colds. Here is a remedy for coughs, colds, bronchitis, throat irritation. and espe- clally for tung troubles, that has been sold all over the civilized world In many thousands of houscholds for the last fifty-four years. [ts merits have stood this test of time and use, and surely no test could be more potent or convincing. It gives the patient with weak and inflamed lungs a good might's rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration In the morning. Try one bottle, accept no substitute. For sale by all druggists and dealers tr medicine everywhere. —Ady, The pain of a lost love Is what many a woman has paid for a home. LIFE WAS A MISERY TO HER THE $16 HOG HE $16 hog is a successful at- tempt to discourage people from eating meat three times a day. The American people,” as a class, have pald very little attention to the hog In recent years. They have been too busy protecting margins and learn- | ing how to adjust the needle-vaive carburetor so that it would carb In sequence. When a business man re celved orders to bring up a small sec- tion of pig for dinner he did so with- out taking his checkbook out of the | safe. When we look back and see! how many lean pork chops one could buy for a quarter and then see how far it will reach In that direction to-| day, we can see why so many people | turn vegetarians over night, The $16 hog wrs caused by the Eu- | ropean war, the same as the price of | uncut diamonds and bronze. shoes. | Ths Sw fee 2 $1774 People who serve any kind of pig do | so with an air of pride and comment on the price per pound in an awed tone of voice, Before the war a stout-legged, adaolt American hog could be bought almost anywhere for less money than It takes to start up In the grocery business, | No Sunday dinner was considered complete without a ninepound pork | could be strung along week with the utmost through the pickled pig's foot was seen both In mansion and cottage and produced the same kind of Indigestiow” in each. Boys | this Woman Until Re- | lieved by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. un, By Ky.—**1 suffered almost | : female weakness, 1! could not walk any | distance, ride ot take any exercise at | all without resting. | kind of pig do so with an air of pride and comment on the price per pound in an awed tone gf volce, : The $16 hog has been a priceless has enabled him to take nine full grown pigs and four runts to market and return with enough money to choke a safety deposit box. Thou today with the proceeds of a few squint-eyed pigs which g few years the seifsprouting potato. but when eral months and trie other remedies. | I had read of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- | table Com and decided to try it. | After taking twelve bottles 1 found | myself much improved and I took siz | more. I have never had any more i trouble in that respect since. I have | done all kinds of work and at sent | am an attendant at & State Hospital | and am feeling fine. I have recom- | mended egetable Compound to | dozens of my friends and shall slwayd | recommend it.”’— LiLLiaN THARP, 524 8. 6th St., Carrollton, Ky. would like to know write to the Tye E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, ass., for helpful advice given free of TO DEATH KeepYourSkin-Pores Active and Healthy A Bad Cough MEDINA ONE ON THRE COCO De Bluff =~ Yes, when i waa quite a young man I de. termined to get ahead In the world Mins Pert Where did you go—-in a cab bage patch? of bowslegged plgs to market and re- turn with the price of a twin six, it produces a lump in his throat as big as a football, Copyright) THE ROMANCE = OF WORDS “DOUGHBOY.” F all the names applied to the American soldier during the world war—"Yank,” “Sam- my,” “Buddy” and the like—the only one which stood up under the strain was “doughboy.” Probably they didn’t know It. but the reason that the men.ef the A. E. F. accepted the term and answered to It without hes- itation, is because doughboy Is the oldest of slang words for American infantrymen, dating back to the days of the Revolu- tion. At this time, following the custom of the British army, each man of the Colonial army was served with three or four cakes of bread a day~—flour and water, usually underbaked. These cakes were known as “doughboys™ and, before the end of the war, the men to whom they were served were called by the same name. During the Civil war the ap- pellation was revived-—partly on account of the way in which it had been used during the Reve olution and also because of the manner In which the large brass buttons of the Infantrymen were ridiculed, “They're as big as boiled dumplings or dough cakes,” stated one oritie, and the name “doughboy” stuck-—to be again resurrected when the American forces crossed the At- lautic. Copyright.) RE —— | [shit's Lik ~What They Mean DO YOU DREAM OF SWIMMING? OME of the scientists go so far as to attribute dreams of swimming to an atavistic reminiscence of the days “when you were a tadpole and I wns a fish,” It Is a generally accept- ed theory that all life on this planet began in the primeval sea from which the continent afterward emerged ; and scientists declare that gill-slits are not uncommonly found state, linger In our physical structure In our mental structure there may linger “some faint alavistic echo from the primal sea” Freud states that In dreams of swimming as in those of falling, hov. ering and flying-—a general statement cannot be made as to thelr sign'fi- they signify something differ- But he holds it nx pn dreams represent ln. the dream thought, These ns a rule, very pleasant ones and are classed hy hy dreams, The mystics account a dream of toc be a most favorable omen, especially if the water of the to swim easily. To dream of swim ming yourself or even seeing some else swimming, proghnosticntes a reconciliation with’ a friend with whom you are now at odds. If you swim along easily with your Lead well out of water you will be successful In love and business: if you are a sailor a profitable voyage is before you. But if in your dreams you swim slong shortly be enlled upon to face hard struggles, You them, however, by keeping per lip.” many will win ont L (Copyright) MOTHER'S COOK BOOK Barth's ndest hearts have been love ing hearts, Bince tire and earth began, And the boy who kisses his mother Is every inch a man. ay ~Eben Rexford TOOTHSOME DAINTIES. Some of these dishes may be a little too much work for every day, but will be found very satisfactory for ocea- sions: Chestnut Salad. Cook one pound of Italian chest nuts, shelled and blanched, In chicken or veal broth seasoned with vege tables. When tender, let cool and cut in shreds, Cut tomato jei.y into cubes or other shapes, shred half a green pepper, cut a bunch of lettuce or en. dive into shreds. Wash and dry the hearts of two heads of lettuce. Ar. range the lettuce on salad plates set a tomato cube above, two tablespoonfuls of dressing and Sonk one-fourth of a package of gela. tin in one-fourth of a cupful of enid water. Place over the heat two cup fuls and a half of tomato, three branches of parsley, half a dozen cel. ery tips, one-fourth of a bay leaf, half an onion with two cloves thrust into or a plece of chill pepper, a table spoonful of dried mushrooms. Let simmer twenty mintes and press through a fine steve. Add the softened gelatin, stir until dissolved, then turn Into a dish to mold. When cold use as above. O'S Dressing for Chestnut Salad. Cut 1 Bermuda onion in halves and ith a sharp knife scrape the juice from one-half of the onion into a bowl. Add one-third of a cupful of vinegar, one-fourth of a cupful of to- mato eatsap, one tablespoonful of Worcestershire sauce, one teaspoonful of mushroom catsup, half a teaspoon ful of paprika and half a teaspoonful of salt. Stir until well blended with three-fourths of a cupful of olive oll. ~~ Orange Honey. Grate the yellow rind from two fine oranges and add It to two pounds of strained honey. Take one quart of Juice and pulp of oranges; add this to the honey. Boll carefully for half an hour then put into glasses and cover with paraffin when cold. (@. 1930. Western Newspaper Union.) anism Bomatosiasissiinss The Woods CONTRAST. Nature loves neither noise, She has her silence and she has her sound. Yet all the melody that she employs But serves to make her silence more profound, silences nor The sweeping desert, yellow, bare and mute, Seems deader for a wheeling vul- ture’s scream, The single quaver of a lonely lute But makes the night seem nearer to a dream. - The sen i= silent far from shores un- seen, Save where a ripple tumbles to abyss ; As whitened water makes the green more green, The dny is calmer for the bubble's hiss. from such as these I learn the for. est’'s charm "Tis not its sllence, silent though it be; It is its sound uhpolsoned with alarm, Its whisper like the whisper of the sen. Suouting na nor silence, neither enters Only " melody of far-off things. A drifting cloud makes skies more falr The wood is stiller for the whi of (Copyriebiy | WARNING! SAFETY FIRST! package’ of Strictly Amencanl The lower down a man gets in the | vorid the nearer the roof you will find | ! ifm, Caiserhs Con Be Cured | Catarrh is a local disease greatly influ. need by constitutional conditions. it! herefore requires constitutional nent, $ taken Internally and acts he Blood on the Mucous Surfaces he System, HALL'S of | CATARRH the foundation of | ¢ disease, gives the patient strength by he has the general health and assists | ature In doing its work All Druggists, Clrculars free, P. J. Cheney & Co. Toledo, Ohlo. like they oan Ww fap week — men: are all sponges; they to ahsorb your you Do not borrow trouble : any of give you all want “Pape’s Diapepsin” “Cormests Stomach “Pape’'s Diapepnin’’ is the quickest, sure Gases, roess, Ferments caused bH Bou [Hintress tablets few give aim without fea~ illlons helped a corrective kKnown-—Ady CEDOCKETE Are rare indy wil pociet any Kill That CASCARA Colds, roughs Lazstive— No Opiate in Hill's. Cold With QUININE AND La Grippe His Share. They are two traveling men named and Butler, and both often make it overnight at the same Indi Both landed about the same time, reg- Butler received one meager little cir. cular while the dis- the For a few minutes Butler was Then be looked at his eve, “Oh” he commented. “lI sed as —————— —— — —————. sti Mize Engstrom, Ambiguous, is much inclined to be exact. One day She asked one of the pupils Columbus tumbus, ‘How many voyages did make?” “Three,” was his answer, “No, be made four,” she corrected. “Bat 1 don’t know a thing sbout that fourth voyage,” protested the bey. “1 don’t even knows where he went" “1 don't either.” she agreed. “He died just a few days after he started out from port.” Overworked. Mra. Knicker—Have you had a busy week? Mrs, Bocker—Rather; I've had two husbands, three landlords and four cooks. ~Sun and New York Herald, It is rough vn a man when love or A taste for minding one’s own busi- ness is often hard to acquire. GIVING NATURE FAIR CHANCE ' Bluggard Satisfied He Had an Admir- able Excuse for Refusing to Be Up and About “Arise? adapted for deciam the slug at an he lark is up to bee is on the Wing. we said ad- was still late mee! the sun Hemember dressing who siuge bing ionably school boy read sioud the admonition to Lucy. He had taught that when he env ered two letiers of the same kind he should pronounce them ‘doubles,’ or whatever they might be, instead of ‘0 0’ So he sternly recited, but ‘Double up, Lucy I" The sun Is in the sky. and so forth. Why do you mot double up, and to your tasks away?” “That is a very good story,” replied the shuggard, “but it does not move me. We are told that nature does most of her repair work on us while we are in bed. It is my intention to {ie here until she fixes me up so that 1 feel like going to work."—Kansas City Star. been ant —— a ———— No Favoritism Allowed. “How much are the life guards paid at this bathing resort?” “From $40 to $60 a week, 1 under stand.” “A soft job, eh?” “Not especially. They have to show as much alacrity in saving a fat nan or elderly spinster as they would a beauty in distress.” This world Is but a fleeting show, and all the best seats are taken. Even in the “fatherland” they speak the mother tongue. ir fully de- ng male destibity, full
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers