Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION a om © ~ =| Sure Relief DELL-ANS 25¢ AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE ASTHMA DR.LD.KELLOGG'S ASTHMA REMEDY for the prompt relief of Asthma and Hay Fever, Ask your druge sist for it. 25 cents and one dol- ar. Write for FREE SAMPLE. Northrop & Lyman Co.,Inc., Buffalo, N.Y. KELLOSS YOUR BLOGD NEEDS THIS IRON TONIC UDE'S Pepto-Mangan provides iron in just the form most readily assimilated —a form which will not irritate the weakest stomach nor injure the teeth, but which efféctively enriches the blood and invigorates the body. At your druggist’s in liquid and tablet form. : To sea for yourself Free Trial Tablets 35 Seuitn-suniding value of Gude's Pepto-Mangan, write today for generous Trial Package of Tablets, Send no Money — just mame and address to M. J. Breitenbach Co., 53 Warren 5t., N. XY. Gude’s Pepto-Mangan Tonic and Blood Enricher) HALES HONEY OF HOREHOUND AND TAR relieves colds, coughing, throat and bronchial trou les in a good, old fashioned, safs, quick; home way, JOe¢ at all druggists. For aching esth— Pike's Toot CHESEBROUOH MFG. CO, CONSD, 17 State Su New York Vaseline MC US PAT OFT. PETROLEUM JELLY THE CENTRE STRANGER DOLL GCQUIR Is pretty, you cannot deny that,” said Teddy Bear, “but never In my ddy have I seen a’ doll just lke her and you all know that I have seen many come and go.” : ‘Her dress Is not quite the latest style,” remarked Paper Doll, though it is something like my new gown. But then clothes are so expensive these days.” “But her halr, just look at her hdlr,” said Rosetta, the French Doll. “Little tight curls all over her head that you must admit are far from the very lat- est style of dressing the halr nowa- days. Why, you can see both of her ears.” Poor little Stranger Doll felt very uncomfortable for she knew what was the matter, She had been taken from a bureau drawer !n an attic where she had lived many years. i “You Are Worth All the Dolls in the | World.” had been smoothed out a bit, her curls pulled a little to make them stand up | and then she was given to a little girl | who had In her day known many dolls. | She was old-fashioned. Stranger Doll knew that. Her head was made of wax nnd that was the reason she looked so strange to the playroom | folk. i Then one night a terrible’ thing hap- pened. Stranger Doll had been left | close to the steam pipes and her pret- “I knew she was terribly painted,” | sald Rosetta. “Poor thing, her face! CThe Why Superstitions By H IRVING KING Cuticura Soap ree SHAVES eee Have you RHEUMATISM Lumbago or Gout? DOGS AND HEALTH Ir IS a general superstition all over | the United States that the heaith | of children is improved by having them | play with dogs; and in many localities | it is believed that a sick child-—or, as many say, even a grown person--can be cured by having a dog sleep in the | A publication of the American Folk-Lore soclety has the! following instance: ! “A few years ago a young man in’ Holyoke, Mass, (a common-sense per- gon) had a chlld {ll with dumb ague, By advice he got a pup and put it In the child's eradle. The dog broke out in sores and the child got well” Here, again, we bave that form of sympathetic magic known as the magic of contact—the ancient primi “tive belief. The dog sympathetically absorbs the disease of the patient by bging brought into contact with him-——J draws it out, as It were, As to the selection of a dog for the curative process, the dog was one of the three animals-—the other two be- ing the lion and the goat—sacred to Jove, Mercury (some say Mars) and Pan. To put a goat or a lion In a child's crib might be a trifie Inconveni- ent, but the dog Is easy. Thus in working the cure we not only get the benefit of sympathetic magic, but in voke the beneficent power of the great gods to whom the dog Is sacred. (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) ann Presses The Spanish Main, fhe name Spain Malin was popular- ERI ofa di Fe fl o) ty given by English voyagers, during turies, to the north coast of South American, between the Orinoco river and the Isthmus of Darien, and also to the Spanish provinces of Central gen. The expression “Spanish Main” is also used to denote the Caribbean gen Itself, ‘especially In connection with the buccaneers who Infested i Is quite spoiled. 1 should not he a bit surprised if her huir was false as well, or at least that it Is colored.” “But 1 thought your cheeks were painted and Paper Doll's as well” ventured Teddy Bear.” [1 thought all dolls had—" “It does not come off, Teddy,” sald Paper Doll with a flirt of ‘her skirts and a toss of her head. “We could sit beside the steam pipes, Teddy Bear, all day and all night,” sald Rosetta, “and we would look just—just as we do now.” Poor Strarger Doll was not only un- comfortable, but unhappy and miser- able. She wished herself back In the drawer In the attle and she wondered what would hecome of her now that her face was spoiled, For some did not see night they dnys the playroom folk Stranger Doll and then sitting in a chair by the | saw a beautiful doll. At] It was Stranger Doll with a new head and a new gown. “lI think we had hetter speak to her,” sald Rosetta. “You can tell she is worth knowing by the way she dfesses.” So all the toys sald, “Good evening,” “We are so glad to have you live! “Yon are so dif- No one worth | am eertain” | But Teddy Bear thought he saw al in the eves of the new doll | when he looked Ht her cunning | little kid hands he knew the secret. | “I won't tell,” he whispered as he | sald good night. “I liked you the way | you were, just as well as I do now, | and that is a great deal” “Oh, I am so glad,” replied the new Doll, "and 1 will tel! you something. ! de Shirley Mason Handsome Shirley Mason, the “movie” star, was born in Brooklyn, N. Y, in 1902. She is the daughter of Emil Flugrath, and a sister of Viola She be. gan her stage career at the age of three. At the age of thirteen she Joined the oid Edison studics, When she was fifteen she adopted the name of Shirley Mason. 8he has been seen in a number of prominent productions. I am not filled with sawdust Illke Rosetta and other dolls of today. | am made of good strong kid and filled with cotton, “The man at the doll hospital sald 1 was worth a dozen dolls such as are | made In these days and that [ would | last for years yet.” | “You are worth all the dolls In the | world,” whispered Teddy, sitting down i close her, while Rosetta beside and | room looked on with envy. (& by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.) “Whats in a Name?” BY MILDRED MARSHALL PHOEBE HOEBE, quaintest and most charm- ing of names, was first in use among It is derived from Phoebus, god, or Apolio and signifies empire, the sun According to Greek mythology, the | original Phoebe was the daughter of | Gaea. According to a tradition adopt- ed by Aeschylus, she bequeathed the Deiphic oracle to Apollo, son of her | daughter Leto. Poetic license calls | the moon personified “Phoebe.” “Phoebe our sister,” the deaconess of | Cenchrea, was commended by Saint Paul to the Romans: but she has few in England, where she typifies the quaint, demure’ old fashioned type so popular with British writers and poets, The Italian Febe refers only to the moon and is rarely used as a proper name. It was In reference to the noble qualities of the huntress goddess of the moon that Spenser named his love. | ly Belphoebe, as he also called his | other warlike heroine, Britomartis, an | individual who lager became Identified | with Artemis, the moon goodess. Ar temis, of course, is the italian Diana, | and Diana, as the sister of Apollo, was | frequently called Phoebe, 86 the re- | intionship, seemingly so terplexing and | Interwoven, Is really logical In England, Phoebe was a favorite name for rural maidens, and the poets | bestowed it upon the simple rustic charmers to whom they wrote odes and esas Iss EAT LA YYTYYYY Men You May Marry By E. R. PEYSER Has a Man Like This Proposed to You? Symptoms: Collar stands out # | from his neck—the high nonturn 4 | over kind—tie flat, ready-made * | (probably). Red carpet slippers are the most moving like “movie” he would appreciate “Had a hard day In the office,” he tells you; “every one on earth ecnme to see the boss and 1 bad to stave ‘em off— Such ques tioning takes me sick, There are so many fools in the world, awfully tiresome answering questions.” Yet he is the kind who always bringe you a few sweetments, wishes every time they might be better, but they never seem to improve in brand. IN FACT He himself pever seems to Ime prove, : Prescription to His Bride: inhale dally a vapor of stand pat patties. love what he Is, not what he isn't Absorb This: vou CAN LEAD A MAN TO THE ALTAR BUT HE DOESN'T ALWAYS ALTER | Prssssssssssnssssssnssnsnen @ by MeClure Newspaper Syndicats \ dasestuanasssssnsnsnanay lucky day end lucky jewel 0 roundelays. Phoebe's virtues are tolled in “The Rural Mald™: Her homesgun dress in simple neatness jen : And for no glaring equipage she sighs; | Her reputation which is alliher boast, | In a malicious visit ne'er was lost: i No midnight masquerade her beauty | wenrs . : not paint, the fading bloom | repairs | Crystal is Phoebe's tallsmanie jewel | It's clear transiucent beauty is be To dream of it sig- | nifies true friends. Monday is Phoebe's {(E by Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) meen Pssst frovsssssssscntnsnsnnnansd | A Line o’ Cheer By John Kendrick Bangs. hii hh ER Ay THE VERDICT AME or no fames, It’s all the same to me. I'll play the game without a name If only it may be, When my full course at last is run, Men who speak true May call the things I do Well done. (© by MeClure Newspaper Syndicats ) Prrsrsssnsusssassascsanssnnns AAR RRTLTRRRARAARRARAARR RRR RE. o ean} a How to read your char. acteristics and tendon. cles the capabilities or weaknesses that make YOU HAND =z vas CARRIAGE AND MOT/ONS OF THE HANDS EE fIEN a person caries the hands in front of the body, or slightly at the side, and moves them continual ly, or almost always, waving them ahout as though to keep them from touching anything, or to keep any- thing from touching them, It Is a sign of a nature that Is suspicious, looking about for traps, ete. In some subjects, to be judged by other characteristics, this is, of course, a sign, since it dendtes earefulness, watchfulness, and a desire to Investigate mutters before passing Judgment upon them. We sometimes encounter the sub. Jeet who keeps the hands clasped in front, with. the palms together, In very many cases (t. ls a woman who carries the hand« thus, She is calm and placid In temper, looking at life through the’ philosopher's spectacles Such a persom will let the hand be read in a quiet, unhurried manner. and is a good “subject.” Of course, all of the other types that have been de seribed wil, thelr mental and moral chara ieg—to some ex. tent, at leust-