WOMEN WHO CANNOT WORK Read Mrs. Corley’s Letter and Benefit by Her Experience Edmund, 8.C.— “I was run down with nervousness ant female trouble and suf- ! jf fered every month, 524 1 was not able to do f any work and trieda lot of medicine, but 8 got no relief. I saw i your medicine adver- #1 tised in a little book that was thrown in my door, and I had not taken two bottles fof Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable #l Compound before I could see it was help- ing me. Iam keeping house now and a able to do all of my work. I cannot say enough for your medicine. It has done more for me than any doctor. | have not pape: enough to tell you how much it has done for me and for my friends. You may print this letter if you wish.” — ELiZABETH C. CORLEY, care of A. P. Corley, Edmund, S. C. Ability to stand the strain of work is the the pr rivilege of the strong and healthy, ow our hearts ache for the weak bat sickly women Struggiin with their daily rounds of househ en with backaches, headaches, nervousness and almost every movement brings a new ain, Why will not the mass of letters m women all over this country, which we have been publishing, convince such women that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound will help them just as surely as it did Mrs. h Curley! HOW DOCTORS TREAT COLDS Purgative With Calotabs, the Purified and Refined Calomel Tablets that are Nausea- less, Safe and Sure. * Doctors have found by experiemes that no medicine for colds and infla. enza can be depended upon for full of fectiveness until the liver is made thor. oughly active, That is why the first step in the treatment is the new, nausea- Jess eolomel tablets ealled Calotabs, which are free from the sickening and weakening effects of the old style ealo- mel. Doctors also point out the fact that an active liver may go a long way towards preventing influenza and is one of the most important factors in en. abling the patient to successfully with. monia, One Calotab on the time with 2 swallow of ws thas all, No salts, no nausea Sor ‘the slight- est interference with your eating, pleas. ure or work, Next morning your cold has vanished, your liver is active, your system is purified, and yon are feeling fine, with a hearty appetite for break- fast, Druggists sell ¢ alota bs only in original sealed packages, price thirty five cents. Your money w ill be cheer Lully refunded if you do mot find them delightful.—(Adv.) tongus 0 ¥ Estonic Ended His Troubles “Eatonic is the only thing I have found to stop my heartburn and I think it has been a great mervous spells,” writes G. C. Johnson. An upset stomach may cause lots of suffering all over the body. Eatonic helps in such cages by removing the cause of the misery, because it takes ap and carries out: the excess acid and gases and keeps the digestive or gans in natural working order. A tablet after meals is all you need. Big box costs only a trifle with druggist's guarantee. D:-Helloges Asthma Remedy for the prompt rellef of Asthma and oy rover ands gp A rg ene ollar, FREE SAMP ar. Write for Northrop & Lyman Co.,Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. KEEP HALES HONEY OF HOREHOUN D AND TAR in, She house. house, Dent let fu pneumonia or Fous aliments. he the a7 at a Sough ng, hoarneners etc. con tains nothing harmtul 30s at ait drasutite Ce Soap IS IDEAL For the Hands Seap 5¢, Ointment 25 snd 50¢, Taleam 25¢. Nm w . N. U,, BALTIMORE, NO. 14-1921, The Only Obstacle By R. RAY BAKER Ro. 1021, a ed ane poaanaer dp | @. 1921, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) A sigh escaped June Afton, ste- nographer, as she finished her work of the moment and let her eyes wan- der across the private office to a desk at which sat Dick Roulton, the hand- some private secretary to Jasper James, head of James & Co, a top- notch fiem in the Grand Rapids furai- ture Industry. The sigh was occasioned by the fact that June nearly loved Dick. Ome of the points in the young gentleman's favor was, of course, his prepossess- ing appearance. He was dark of complexion, tall of stature and ath- letic of physique; but the thing of all things that made June nearly love him was his adorable personality. June was aware, too, with a wom- an's ability te see, that Dick cared much for her, although not once had he bro#thed the subject. The sigh was because she did not completely love him, instead of nearly. She knew a proposal was imminent, “What a wonderful man,” she told herself, as she watched him working with a pen, probably signing Jasper James’ name to some letters she re- cently had typed. “What a wonder- | ful man, with his looks and person- ality, if he only had boss’ great supply of force and exec- utive ability to go with them.” June's eyes flashed from Dick to! Jasper James, rotund and pompous, reading letters with furious energy, one after another, at still another desk. “Such force! ing note of of the | some " June whispered, tak- | the middle-aged man’s concentrated scowl. “And what enormous fund of executive behind those little only had some would marry him the only obstacle.” June an | ability i Oh, If! then I! les eyes. of it— in a minute. its] arranged her hair, which | no arranging, and dusted the te mechanism of her typewrit- with a andled brush, With i and those curly finely fea- meant man there big intrie er long-h brown tresses eyes and seemed But chiseled for a was that dark tures she Dick. obstacle, The great man at the other desk | was leaning back in his chair, holding one hand back of his head while he | glared at a letter held in the other. Shafts of fire seemed to dart from his | and June not have been letter flare into a | eyes, would biaze. “Yes, brains are nm I than begnty in a “Some day if ed to James, to be man,” the couse re ad- | June | asks She | boss nt.” cared for | had never He was a fac. mused me I'll be tempt knew that Mr her, although, like Mek; he volced his and rich, LOO wns, and the latter to be considered, June's credit that | to her th wealth, wr tiy sent something be it to more for was although meant an They were a happy business family, the three of them. Formalities were Mapensed with in this inner office of the big Industry. The his right- | man and chief stenographer | worked together for the interests of the firm, and the business prospered. While June thus idled away her things sudden- boss, The great Mr. James bounced from His voice through the room. i “Quick, Miss Afton and Mr. Roul- ton! Get on your coats and hats! | We've got to motor at once to Hast- | ings, The success of the big Jones | contract is involved. The directors | are meeting there right now, and we must arrive before their conference ends, or we lose.” Within the space of five minutes they were seated in Mr. James’ tour ing car, heading at as rapld a pace as the law permitted for Robinson road, which led to the city of Hast. ings, thirty-eight miles distant. Dick was at his wheel, with his boss and the latter's stenographer In the ton- pean. June had a big pad and some well-sharpened pencils with her, for ft was hoped some documents would have to be rushed through the type- writer, Eight miles they traveled, before anything happened; then "bang!" went a tire, and before the ear could be brought to a stop, “bang!” went another, “Pwo blowouts!” exclaimed Dick, us he stopped the car beside the road. “] was nfrald these tires were about ready to quit. Luckily we have two inflated extras,” While he was speak. ing he had turned up the front seat and was extracting jacks, tire Irons and other implements, The great Mr. James was fussing and fuming over the delay. “Here, boss,” Dick admonished, “you take one of these tires off while I get busy with the other.” He ex- tended a jack and one of the Irons. Mr. James looked dismayed, “Why,” he fluttered, squirming on the seat, “1 can’t change a tire. I don't know the first thing about it.” Dick glared at him for a momeat, then smiled, and went to work. June offered to help, but she could do little, Rattle, rattle, went one jack, and a rear wheel was holsted. With furl ous haste, but making every move count, Jack changed two tires in the space of thirty minutes and they were again pounding along the road at breakneck speed. Across the Casgade bridge they sped and up a hill, round a set of curves and down a smooth incline, Then of a sudden the ear stopped, for no apparent reason. “What's the trouble now?” the great Mr. James. “Out of gas, I guess,” hurrying round in back. indicator registers nothing.” “What'll we do?" fumed the boss, “Stop a car and siphon some from its tank. In the meantime I guess I'd better see about oil.” He raised the hood, took a look and “nodded. “Good thing 1 looked. Fortunately, there's a can ip the tonneau, and we have a rubber hose with which to siphon the gas.” “Here comes a carl” eried June. “Good,” sald Dick. “Stop it and ask for gas while I get busy with the oll, Boss, I guess it's up to you to siphon the gas” “Why-—I-—don't know how,” pro tested Mr. James. Dick was busy pouring oll into the engine, June ex- plained to the boss. The oncoming car arrived shortly and was stopped. In the meantime Dick discovered two loose spark plugs and was tightening them. “Up to you at.the siphon, he called. “Every mihute counts. 1 would suggest that this ear be kept in better running ordér.” So the great executive down from the car and, rasped replied Dick, “Yep, the boss,” thrust end of a rubber hose into the fuel, placing on It catch the needed by the tank and, in his mouth, drew second he was coughing while a stream of gasoline from the hose. He had to the tube In an gasping, got engine, hose from Mr. James hand and helpless car, the driver of the other car was offered pay and refused, wns bustied into his own ve hicle and away they sped. At Alto, the next town, filled the y-mile galt the journey wus re. June enjoyed the wild ride, car with + sumed. her hoss clung to the fear, and when they hill into Hastings exhausted, mp football, “Dick but drove he slumped as a deflated stiff, the he sald, weakly, “take hotel. I'm going to bed day has been too much for me the meeting.” turned on him, amazed Mr, James! Surely We certainly without you." boss smiled June “Why, you wearily, The “I'm not He's anyhow, Surely you Miss Afton. and I merely He's run the vears, and I've simply his orders. Dick, to the hotel " me. the braing of the con. and Tm just the must have Dick docs act as business cern, urehead, ticed It, inking, ith piece the t} for five on at the back of Dick's head Whale Shark, Caught on Miami, Fla, Something of a Surprise to the Scientists. The first whale shark ever captured is on exhibition at the Smithsonian in- stitution at Washington. Capt. Charles Fla, who has gome big fish captures to his credit, in- cluding the largest devilfish ever lifted to land, is the captor of this monster, He caught it while cruising off Knight's key. It took 20 men nearly two days to bring it ashore. The net welght of the fish is 30,000 pounds, its length Is 45 feet and its circumference at the thickest part is 23 feet 9 inches. Its tall measures 10 feet from {ip to tip. Fhe scelentists who looked this fish over sald that he was only an infant whale shark and that full-grown ones are two and one-half times ss large. It inhabits the ocean at a depth of 1. 500 feet and ite hide Is of great thick. ness to withstand the enormous water pressure. A 45-caliber bullet could not even dent It How this baby whale shark hap pened to come to the surface Is con jecture, one explanation being that It was thrown up by a subluarine voleanie disturbance and that in the journey its deep-sea diving powers were injured go that it was unable to sink to Its natural water levels, The whale shark has little circular Yidless eyes that are sightloss, Its mouth is 80 inches wide and 43 Inches deep, Its tongue Is 40 inches jong Hundreds of teeth line the sides of its jaw. It had a speed on the surface of 45 miles an hour and put up a fight be. fore being captured that lasted two days and a half, Too Little Mustard “Why did Tom quit the photogra- pher’s daughter after all these months?” “fe says he's been calling four times a wedk, and she hasn't gotten half through the pleture album yet.” Knows What It Means, Caller—Do you mean to say, Hobby, that you understand French? Bobhy-Yes, I do, for when pa and ma talk It at the supper table, I know that after I'm asleep they're or to the movies, 4 been through many variations since it renewed its oldtime popularity. Its coming out of ob- security a few seasons ago, fashion writer, enthusiasm as the return to the stage | of a favorite who had been living for | un time in retirement, It again surrounded with all time feministn, It was the wide bon tied in a big, puffy bow The sash has rib- their white muslin frocks, in guise it was met with acclaim by all women, young and old. It have come In a wore appealing way. The sash has stayed with us now for several seasons—a much time than the usual life of a fashion. During this period, however, it has undergone many changes. No longer is it Just a bit of ornamentation, but one of the mainstays of fashion something to be relled upon by makers not only to make dresses smart but to make them extremely adapt- able. A frock Is metamorphosed by It is sashes If, may different tjress. economy to have many the addition of one, a changed Into an entirely Costume, Sash Variation With Side Panels. The ilress by of a model the cachet depends hé narrow broad, the body and knot or wound twice around the and fastened In a -very short, ky bow. A foundation dress which Is nothing more thau a little fhemise is transformed by addition sash. - Vionnet, an exclusive Paris maker, whole on mash, which nay or about tied in a ice the of a dross. makes panels to h Sashes of ribbon of the dress is evolved are as popular as ch material from whi the Desigrers and manu- of ribbons play a very in the clothes industry of We Sed ribbons facturers portant role hin present day have come reatly on unr ticles of dress. A long fme ago a taste for these strips of silk and velvet ed the he are ust ns was consider they terinls ight of frivolity; + much stan i iard § frinn ch fo evolve clothes whi and woolens Ribbons in Brilliant Hues. Callot 8 great partiality ribbon her liking for gor geous fabrics Is seen in the sort of rib. Bre cotions for tl : % show ne sash, and BeOS Usunily she prefers marveious color wt {iy 2 * ggg of heavy i: scat on ond and feat and big the 1 of allows ither in- mineds of silk to hang at ¢ dress, Model of Brown Taffeta Featuring Favorite Sash With 8ide Panels At. tached. The Dress, a Straight Piaited Chemise With Sleeves Cut in One With Yoke, May Be Worn Without Sash to Make Another Type of Frock. . ite with many designers. While It has been used for some time, new variations of it are constantly appear. ing. It I& a goldcolored crepe de chine with cascading sides. A straight plece of the silk Is cut out at the sides to form sleeves in one with the body of the frock, which is slightly girdled at the waistline by a very narrow belt. A plece of the ma terial is attached to the underarm BOHN which are | picot | the and the free edges, finished, allowed to ripple down sides In twisting cascades, The trimming consists of rows of double hemstitching, done by hand. There are three on the skirt and one around the bodice, The same sort of stitching finighes the neck and sleeves Lace seems a perishable material i for a sash, but nevertheless it has been chosen to play its part in gir- dling the frocks which to make up the mode, Some of our prettiest | diesses have no trimming other than gO | The New Vogue for Simplicity Ap- Crepe de Chine and Gray Lace, the Lace Encircling the Skirt and Hang. ing Below the Hem in Long Points, sash, which, if the frock for form: train, th a huge lace § Intel na Oe ded : ining IS going of Ur own dregsma ki short and feature The a wide searf of brow » encir Hing the waist and knotted at the Jeft The a few ends are one ing inches on Laces of Every Pattern and Tint It ix t { vogue d Lention to predict a There is will play dresg this summer year, The industry has received great impetus from this continued demand and lae makers have been constantly renewing | their to produce even more beautiful things. Whether the i over laces Is propaganda for this line of work, which was almost ruined dur ing the-early years of the recent war, or whether the fashion for clothes {nade of Ince has stimulated lacemak- | Ing are matters over which we need | give ourselves little concern, They pertain to the trade. The things that | interest the woman of fashion or the { woman who likes to be suitably and {Prettily dressed is the fact that laces : still are very much in the present-day i fashion pleture and that she has an | almost inexhaustible variety of colors | and patterns from which to choose, { Frocks of lace have become simpler {and even more charming than ever, { Much crepe de chine is used In com- | bination with lace. Such a union I makes a garment which Is soft and | elinging, so that this fabric is more | suitable as a foundation over which to [ drape soft filmy nets than any of the { heavier silks. Black Lace, White Crepe de Chine, White crepe de chine and black lace is a well liked combination In ex. clusive dressmaking circles. Women appear leath to abandon the vogue for | black and white which came upon us iso suddenly and ran such a rapid ‘course that In the natural order of things its existence should have been a brief one. Its long life, however, is no doubt due to the fact that black and white is practical, filling many needs in both the limited and the ex tensive wardrobe—and, used In cone Junction with each other, is lkewise becoming to almost all women, Demure Models in Popular Gray, Crepe de chine frequently consorts with satin in the newest models tugped out by the great Fronch dressmaker, Gray and Black is a favorite combina. tion in many of these new costumes, ‘One designer makes a very simple chemise dress of gray satin trimmed only by a sash of the satin, which is embroidered in bright colors and sliver, An accompanying cape is of black crepe de chine lined with gray duvetyn, safe for ls that they fant a part in they did in s impor- LPN every last efforts ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine Beware! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on packege or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pres scribed by physiclans for twenty-one years and proved safe by millions Take Aspirin only as told In the Bayer package for Colds, Headache, Neural gla, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago, and for Pain. Handy tia boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of As pirin cost few cents. Druggists alse sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid, Adv. Fuel From Wheat Btraw. A ton of sundried whent been found from the C ments to have a fuel jual to that of 32 gallons of gasoline It yields about 10,000 cubic feet of puri fied 600 to 650 pounds of car residue, and about 10 gallons of The about cuble and has consti has ian e peri- value about e straw anad gas, hon arry which has a 403) foot, a slight ox are ZnS, value of Sritist units per blue flame, combustible burns ents carbon The ng re methane ¢ residue Is capable o to a very fine powder ind hydroge f by New Pension Laws Certain regulars and volunteer: In July, dren acts of June 1002, and widows and minor ch of such, are benefited by §, 1820, sand July 16, 1018; regulars and volunteers In Indian eampat 1801, and thelr widows, by act of March 4, 1917. Writ Milo B. Stevens & Co, attorneys, 627 F Washington, D. C.—Ady, gns Bad Form. “Judge, 1 wasn't trying to flirt indy” ni called her ‘Prec SF myself young “She says ye “1 was talking to “Then you ought not to pet names, Ten dollars and dirmingham Age-Herald. Watch Cuticura On rising Improve Your Skin, and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment. Wash off Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura RBoap and bot water. It Is wonderful sometimes what Cuticura will do for poor complexions, irufl, itching and red rough hands —Ady, dan a gold brick Quite prevalent is i habit of hoping for spring six hog Ww CONS If your syes smart or feel scal Aided. Homen Bye Balsam applied upon Just the thing to relieve them. Lov i+ san it never locksmith ber tough at at the pian may giggles LUC STRIKE CIGARETTE No cigarette has the same delicious flavor as Lucky Strike. Because Lucky Strike is the CREST season! are what you need for your cooking, ing, preserving, etc. bee cause they Are a itely pure. Send $1 for our assortment of 16 sealed boxes spices, including Con Jecuy New Jo se CREST seasonin AS enor more tasty fonds. ' ATR Tan! Snin, oa Automobile hag + alae Thang
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers