. E HALL, PA. WOMAN SICK ~~ TWO YEARS Cansed by Troubles Women Often Have—Relieved by Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound Medina, New York.—*‘I had a great geal of trouble such as women often have, and this af- fected my nerves, For over two years] suffered this way, then Iread in the ‘Buffalo Times'about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound and have taken it with very good results, I am very much better ! and feel justified in - ’ praising the Vegeta- ble Compound to my friends and neigh- bors who suffer from anything of the kind.’’—Mrs. Wn. H. ADKINS, 311 Erin Road, Medina, N. Y. Feels Like Girl Sixteen Rochester, N. Y.—* After my twin giris were born I was all run-down. My neighbors thought I was going to die. I'saw your advertisement in the paper and bought Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound. The first bottle helped me and I kept on taking it. I only weighed ninety unds when I began taking it, and I have gained in weight and feel like n girl of sixteen. I never can say enough for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Dorey, 16 Skuse Park, Rochester, N.Y. " GREEN MOUNTAIN COMPOUND quickly relieves the distress: ing paroxysms. 65 years aod result of long experience In treatment of throat and lung diseases b Dr.J. H. Gulld. FREE TRIA causes, treatment, efc., upon request. He. at druggists. J. SPEEDY RELIEF FOR CONSTIPATION Let Cuticura Be Your Beauty Doctor Soap 25¢, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talenm 25¢. A GOOD TONIC AND APPETIZER An Obstacle, ng in a small town,” confessed proprietor of the Wiggly Wabbly store other. reason with a lady about the terrible injustice done to local merchants by customers patronizing mail order con- back at me with the information that my own wife sends away five times as much money to the mail order octo- puses—or octopi; I am not exactly clear as which the plural of octopus—nas she herself does” —<Kan- sas City Star. Dry feet a the doctor to is will make stranger Say it with garden seed, One mingte—~and the pain of that corm ends! That's what Dr. Scholl's Zino-pade do rafely. They remove the cause — fries tion-pressure, and heal the irritation. Thue you avoid infection from cutting your corns or using corrosive aside. Thin; an tiseptic; wate . Sizes for corms, a neous Dr Scholls Zino-pads An hes of Br ar om Comfort Appliances, Arch Supports, me. Put one onthe pain is gone! Sg 4 5 ss Stearns’ Electric Paste Farman: 4 nena: rg vy a rs rE. S00) thi ay preparations, Roady for Use—Better than Traps Raz box, Be hoz, box, $1.50 S0L0 EVERYWHERE SALESMANSHIP for threshing machines or life dollurs a week, you are a salesman In the first instance you ure selling somebody else's product. In You ure selling your own. Hie “insurance fuster If you # something sbout them, sud believe in them, self. If the merchandise worth the price you it, can't be sincere in your efforts to dis- pose of it. And you do not absolutely that your worth than you are getting for them, you will nsk for you if services are nore never be able All tO get more, ship that Is worth any- thing is based on confidence. il sitesi You will find it hard work to con. vince people of anything { believe vourself. Bei any | your own salary be sure that it ought not vou do ore you make effort to ralse { to be raised with other for the Compare yourselt tl work people HE Kaine sine it better than you { the job, don't ask for a made yourself better than are nre nt they they hands or your brains are the you have to f just efficient, #8 You can aliminate 1 keep them from doing their best. dispose them as Just us over and the faults tRERRRRRART RRR RRR RRR. v WHAT DIES? ’ . ¢ ’ ’ By DOUGLAS MALLOCH drrssnssnssssssnnnnsnnnaarg pine Will never die descendants hrave up to a higher point of usefulness, Then when you begin to taik about | getting more money you will have an’ urgument, Believe in yourself thoroughly and | other people will believe in you. | Jut remember that you cannot sin are convinced that you can really pro duce more than the other men who (@ by John Blak.) mmm} i. ! France lost 10 per cent of its popu- | lation in the war, ONCEIS ENOUGH The very oak above the grave Spenks Nature's continuity. What dies? Not, certainly, the tree, dies? the seed, Each has its time and has its turn, One needs his garden but to read Of life's eternity to learn, That every springtime will disclose, What dies? Not, certainly, the rose, The bud, the rose, dies? The sun will fade, the stars Come out, fade and then has its Mars, The will have Its light day ide, is done, the sun, The sun again when night Not, certainly, n les? The riy The sea the sky, the si The hill shall give The river fron th What er fingds the seq, y the hill— us presently wountain rill, Wi star to gleam. ut dies” y. the stream What dies’ and 1 my breast’ lan? nn by Mc re Newspaper Syndicate, ) rose Hive on irk within if nil the What dies? Not, cerita ’ this the ! spn $ ith ena « the m : Falgsehoods Biacken House. In Tu author « oy wienl uny not hincken the whole front of k ¥y nan Is the f wious faiseh | Something to Think About By F. A. WALKER ted ean be trud shadowed ways of life Ted are « send und cheer, which onstantl natures oan their inten seek no praise, suspected, is grand Ties nove about trail their nod r breezes, leaving in Helous scent of gardens tranquil skies ipiness they give to others, gratification rich heyond it once inn your life you fortunate enough to meet n arted or the re. of will linger in your until the end of vour days Gireat h often d man : it Woman, brance : ii enrts well in lowly $ir Ts Sent they are poorly clad, but found there in frail is about a radianey of spirit brighter than I stars and clear as the thousand the noonday sun lies, them f { beaming | i ban : g of Great hearts blow to flame the spark that Ll; with Truth and Mer yy: they sing from morn till night of kindness amd will, when their days are lonely and thelr 1208 love: they Capote good i tables They are neither silent nor neglect. ful the ill and need succor ar sympathy, are bare, when Meek or lowly, they are the minister Ing angels from heaven, carrying to the sorrowing “good tidings of great joy." EE Last night | gazed upon wrapped in her moon-veil and sald: “How perfect. "Tis like heaven.” But—iz heaven like this? Or do the dead gaze out upon heaven as 1 upon the world, and say: “How perfect! Tis like heaven! ing on and on, beyond perfection that is no longer perfection, to that perfection which, too, ends doubt? —Annle Greenwood the RECIPES FOR RAREBITS —— served at once when prepured, Nut Rarebit, one cupful of cheese and stir une First Tomuato— What do the farmers do with the tomntoes they raise? “wn, snd ean all they ean't, % » From idle slumbers they call youth ! and goint the way to honor and fame ; from the valley of gloom they bid the | heavens ; from the mire of sin they tift up the fallen, no reward but the joy that Is theirs from doing good, They sin ns we all sin, but unlike seeking | i all mankind, prayerful, watchful, faith: ful, When the chimes in the belfry chant their evening hymns, no souls on earth are more serenely peaceful than the th melted. Add a few dashes of cay- tershire sauce, a beaten egg and let ature. Add one-fourth of a cupful chopped walnuts. If cream cheese is not so rich should huve a tablespoon. ful of butter. Serve on toast or heat- ed crackers, — i Tomato Rarebit, Heat one tablespoonful of butter with spoonful of dry mustard, six drops of | tabasco sauce and a cupful of toma. | to soup. Cook well together, then | add one cupful of grated cheese and | stir until melted, then fold in two! well-beaten eggs; when erenmy pour | over well-buttered tonst, flaked Bean Rarebit, Melt one tablespoonful of butter, | ful of milk: ed add one cupful of mashed baked beans, one beaten egg, mustard, salt and cayenne to taste. Pour over hot toast, » i (0 AME, Western Newer “per “fiom % TI 74 Evening, Fairy Tale BONNER Semmes COPTRCAT BY WITLI MEWS APE 0m mamonmemnnmon THE GOLD FISHES Mr. Pekin Baxter and Mr. Tokio Jones the two gold fishes, were chat. ting together In about the rouin, They Joying immensely, had just very good were had been given too much, “It sald ig strange, Mr. are who gold many feed fishies much. 1 hear the friends of our | mistress talking, and they ask her such | absurd questions, “They say: { untouched which you've given to them too “It Is Surpris- ing.” ‘If the fishes leave food | It shows you've given them too juuch, f+ | doesn't 1t “You want to much they could { any untouched, and the way to do that | 1s to give them very, very little don't that them so leave give possibly should when It Is given to them, and when they leave food untouched It wenns they've heen given a great deal {| beyond what they could possibly eat, | a great, great deal beyond what | they should eat. { “*Gold fishes have small | they're not taking great long swims | and lots of exercise, and they shouldn't be fed too much “Yes her friends “And that { Tokip Jones, i gorant | fishes and how many of them think that as long as the gold fishes eat up | all thelr food they've been given the right amount! “Dear me, It | norant people are™ * “Well” sald Mr. Pekin Baxter, “it Is true that people can't read our thoughts—what few ones we have to i | i { | i | stomachs: ” is right too” sald “It is strange how ig people are about feeding goid te know just how much gold fishes want to eat, for people haven't the tastes of gold fishes, nor have they the stomachs | of gold fishes, nor have they the wishes | of gold fishes.” = y 7 iy 2" Tue ART GALLERY | » great-hearted : when at the setting sur {ifé the streams of light grow dim in the ber shadows golden west, fall #11 about souls on earth are happier them, nd than they or more eager to go. (2 by MeUlure Newspaper Syndicate) ol Pressman COROOSSLOINSLs Less EBL AAA THESES EER i $ THE ROMANCE OF WORDS & “DUNCE” 4 —— : CURING the middle apes cer 3 tain theologians were called $ “schoolmen” because they were y taught in the cathedral schools and cloisters founded by Charle- magne and his successors. At first these men were revered and looked up to. Their writings were the court of last resort: their opinions, authoritative Later, however, thelr works fell out of favor because the form of thelr speculations was unattrae tive and their works were not written In classical Latin, There were some, though, who still clung to the teachings of the schoolmen in general and to the doctrines of one Duns Scotus, a great teacher of the Franciscan order, in particular Whenever an ndherent of the old learning would seek to bolster up his contentions by referring to the works of Scotus. his oppo. nent would seek to silence him with the rejoinder: “Oh, you are a Dunsman'” or, more hriefly, “You are a Duns.” an epithet of scorn which gradually found its way into the language with the slightly altered spelling “dunce”, Thus it Is that the name of one of the best known doctors of the church, admitted a keen and sharp-witted teacher, has been turned into a hy-word for sti: pidity and obstinate dullness, (0 by the Wheeler Syndicate, Ine) Stray Bits of Wisdem. Childhood is Hke's mirror which re flects In afterdife the Images first pre sented to It-SBamuel Smiles, | they gold fishes!” | glad when news about gold fishes is | spread about, for we don't want to get | sick, and our relations don't mean to be | greedy, but when they see so much be | fore them it is hard not to eat and eat {| and eat. | “Of course, t00,-it is hard to tell when we're not feeling well, for the | way to tell about us not feeling well is | & different way from the way people | have of telling If they're not well or If { thelr children are not well i “When our little mistress does not i | then he usually says: “*Ah, just what I thought! little tonic will do you good.’ | right.’ | “A tongue Is most important.to some, | for it seems tO be an excellent thing son is well or not” | "Yes," agreed Mr. Toklo Jones, “with { people a tongue Is important; or, per : haps I should say, many tongues are | important, for they ell have one aplece.” | Mr. Pekin Baxter. 4 "We need our dor sal fing, They are all Important; or, | perhaps 1 should | say, each one of ius has a dorsal | fin and it is very | Important. {i “I think, per | haps, that is the ! gorrect way to | speak. | “Some may not know what the dorsal fin is, but if | they will look at you or me, or at any of the mem- bers of our fam- fiy, they will see a fin which 1s spread up on top of our backs. It is a fine, straight bealthy-looking fin when we are well, but when we're sick that fin droops and does not stay out nice and smooth, “So people can tell If the gold fish is well hy the way his dorsal fin or the fin upon his back looks, and a person can tell if another person is well by the look on his tongue. “So let the people have thelr tongues «they need them-—but let the fishes have thelr dorsal fins, ; “My dorsal fin Is not wrinkled up~-it looks like a handsome, outspread fan, and that shows I'm healthy, and yours Is the same way, Tokio, and so you're “Stick Out Your Tongue™ | gurgle, bubble I" i 4 and give your stomach a lft. Provides “ithe bit of sweet” In beneficial form. Helps to cleanse the teeth and keep them healthy. ENG: = Good to the last drop ESjothing but many years of coffee ex- | perience could give 1 the housekeeper her calm confidence in the unvarying flavor of Maxwell House. a A ST, I ————s i Pa Oil, there are probably more people interested i the oll busines y any other Eanize & COD the siock i ¥ 9% if I'l put ee paying mesthls sell the siock TULSA, one ne haadir 5 a producing dividends Puy ARNOLD, TW OKLAHOMA, me ae } uv Daniel Hidg.. GENERAL AGENTS WANTED (One in sach county for PEF TABLETS, a vegetable medicine. Neal money maker Samples Tree F. 3 REES Bex 207, BURLINOTON, IND MAKE 85 A DAY RESILYERING OLD MIRBORS, Compilets instructions 31. OAK LAND COMPANY, Box 318, RANGER. TEX To know how good a cigarette really can be made you must tiy Patience No Word for It “It takes patience,” says the Detroit Free Press, “to bring a boy safely through the smart age” And longevity. The smart age usu. ally begins at about five, and lasts until the boy finally leaves nome to earn his own living. With a large number of boys it lasts much longer than that, but this fact is concealed from the par ents by the absence of the sufferer, Marriage cures a respectable percent. age; but many are immune even to this drastic treatment, and bear their chronic ailment until death. God gives every bird ite food. but He does not throw it into the pest. Holland, » A AA CASTORIA oF siread Your Hair TE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers