RUN-DOWN WERK, NERVOUS Benefited by First Bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound Lancaster, Pa.—* After I was mar. ried I became terribly run-down and was weak and ner- vous. My sister-in- law told me to try Lydia BE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound. My husband Bigot me a bottle at ei jonce, and it did me so much good that I kept on taking it. I began to feel well andstrong aguin and was able to do my . housework up to the time my baby was born—anice fat little girl in the best of health. I surely am recommending the Vegetable Compound to my friends when they have troubles like mine, and I am perfectly willing for you to use these facts as a testimonial.” Street, Lancaster, Pa. Women should heed such symptoms as pains, backache, nervousness, a run-down condition and irregularity, as they indicate some form of female trouble. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound is a dependable medicine for all these troubles. For sale by druggists everywhere, | BOSCHEE’S SYRUP Allays irritation, soothes and heals throat and lung inflammation. The constant irritation of a cough keeps the delicate mucus membrane of the throat and lungs ina congested condition, which BOSCHEE'S SYRUP gently and quickly heals. For this reason it has been a favorite household remedy for colds, coughs, bronchitis and especially for lung troubles in millions of homes all over the world for the last fifty- seven years, enabling the patient to obtain a good night's rest, free from coughing with easy expectoration in the morning. You can buy BOSCHEE'S SYRUP wherever medicines are sold. A one to an old tht nothing happy in pened DEMAND “BAYER” Aspirin Marked With Has Been Proved Safe by Millions. day which person is much has hap- ASPIRIN “Payer” on package or cn tablets you are not getting the genuine Aspirin proved safe prescribed by physicians for 23 years Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv by A Support ing witty. “DANDELION BUTTER COLOR” A harmless vegetable butter color used by millions for 50 years, Drug stores and general stores sell bottles ¢f “Dandelion” for 3 Adv, 15 cents, — smart thao t hi remark month will society mpputation of be- once a fot tench things him. of ~~ A Cafe and Sure Laxative Brandreth Pills, bed time will keep you In One or two taken nt good condi Adv, or sincerity is f in upp! ar visible £ Your Health is the Most Valuable Asset You Have Here is a Well-Known Man's Advice. Bellepoint, W, Va.-—"It affords me great pleasure to have the privi- lege to make public this statement in behalf of Dr. Pierce's Golden Modieal Discovery. 1 cannot rec- ommend it too highly to the publie, Wd have used it in our family for years and have reaped good results, We have always found the ‘Discov ery’ superior to any other tonic——it is a Rondantul system builder. I an chesrfully recommend it."= 5. J. Carper, Box 4. As soon as you begin to take this “Discovery” you begin to fesl its bracing, appetizing effect. Buy of your neighborhood drug store In tablets ~ or liquid, or send 10¢ to Dr. Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel, in Buf- falo, N. Y., for trial pkg. of tablets, and write for frase medical advice. SAVE YOUR EVES! Cea Hur at yomr drogelat’s or 11 Haver, Trov. N.Y Booklet. CURES COWS ~ LA GRIPPE 12 24 Hours ee in J Days ORC . D GASCAEA 7s QUININE “Poms” Standard co'd remedy world over. Demand box bearing Mr, Hill's portrait and signature, yy AE All Druggists== 30 Cents | PoP PPP eR Pee PPP eed WINTER'S LONG AX NE morning old looked over her sj Winter, dre in white, she exclaimed, then through her spectacles, thinking nad not seen aright. jut she had. Her son wore a much solled robe. His ermine once so spotless was dingy and frayed. “It is dme he went home,” sald Mother Na- tre, “he has stayed too long." But when she told her son netter run home, his Mother wetneles at her “Oh looked she assed and son i Hie very he had because sister Winter Had Stayed Too Long. soon be peeping out of the ground Winter began ind beg for one more clean “Then you a good son 1 fuss ¢ Hs en 14 shall. see Moth he = er, will be,” iA up dress me once more home spandy clean and have full hearted moth- and sway.” irivier wing I ft very soft did as he asked sent white snowflakes once more | “Now, réffiember your nter,” she cautioned her ue while you are nice may be sorry.” | went Mother Nature fo als 'r work, for, 1} very | id no tima to and | see that her son kept his But sly old Winter! no it of running wal i : and wing watch promise He fad no » after he got ° <> > A LINE O’ CHEER ———— : By John Kendrick Bangs. 4 PEPE LPPLLL022800800000 THE ROD AND THE STAFF toe rod that beat turned his wheat to chaff, its smart defeat him ila of It a Staff, #8 way he wended the deptha of Fear, its ald ascended y the Heights of ire Newspaper Syndicate ) PPLE LL LI IEILLISIPLELLLEE jest ’ with » ‘hee : Cheer $0000000000000 00000000000 LAB AG AAPA ABAD APA NAA BAANB PABA P PP FOES CCE ECG ECGF COPE ICTs FLEE u lave You This Habit? { << By Margaret Morison -, f4 0 " ‘ ‘ X < rr AAR ARR AATF PELL ALOE EEE EEE EEE PPL L EOP BELLA Y cals ago when Bella's school res! ports used to home with | spelling always far below grade, Bella's gay, “She takes after | me; I never could spell. All geniuses spellers.” Bella, indeed, rather cultivated bad come to Then came the day when instead of coming out as they had planned, Bella found herself an orphan with- out a cent In the world. She asked what one did under such Jen So Bella | to write the | and choose the costumes | plan the parties of Mrs. New-| comb, Things went smoSthly and the | Newcombs progressed vnder Bella's | guidance. Then came the great event | upon which the success of failure of the winter-—~from the Newcombs' point of view--depended. The planning of | the whole affalr as usual was handed | over to Bella. And args went re | questing “the presents co everyone with whom the Newcombs were plan- ning to play during the coming season. Perhaps no one would have noticed anything out of the ordinary had not the papers somehow gol hold of an invitation. The Newcombs were seri! ous-minded folk and there had never | been any geniuses in their family; so | Bella began to revise her opinion of | the importance of spelling as she sat | in her hall bedroom without a job and wondered what next, Then came the letter from Mrs. | Browne asking her to spend the Ywo weeks of Cornelius’ vacation at thelr place In the country. Bella was | cheered. Knowing Mrs, Browne to be | n stickler for form, and determined to benefit from experience, she looked | secretary.” herself engaged i ve days later she set forth In her best gown. She was a little surprised to be met at the station by n servant in- stend of by some member of the fam . i LU resh robe. “1 am far too hand- *yself now,” he reasoned “Why, this the best robe I have worn this year, No, I'll stay right here and be ad- mired.” to himselt is Spring the ground was time under It was get- for her to early flowers were all king things very un- Miss Spring. him to be off,” sald “That greedy brother tenses to stay longer Mother Nature listens. and what Is re.” ting uni . be out an {he for mit foi Miss of mini each I'll take ing on Miss nd tripp« } and peek up th Spring steq see go- wed out of her bed over her white. slept’ and every feet trod there arm iwoke he should have what he His and Buw but growing snow,” he solled “It will is it to snow sleep again, Instead the ng it was quite, warm and stepped of win- he tossed away the blanket out her R, CENTRE HALL, PA. | PRBRLRBRR PROP VR PRP | Dorothy Mackaill : PRP PULRUPURL RIO VPN LY othy Mackaill, “movie” star, now pictures in this country, appeared in | pictures first in her own country. Later she played in France. She was | educated in her home town in Eng land, She t! enrly flowers, to come out themsaly at old Unele a bhright crocus, OR, look “What a untidy he looks." another to sister was laughing she saw Winter trying the rocks laugh. “Oh, run," now i robe and how Then out came hat and when hide behind began to cannot Winter crocus Ww * to fences is so and he sald. his mistake she old {Md she saw should hb home a neat | go limping looking | gar. “I won't tease next year to stay longer,” } whimpered, “You had better not,” replled Spring, who heard the remark, | cause next year I shall be and early and see that I | rights.” 2 by MeClure Newspaper Bypdicate ) ave gone white robe, but now he must nway like a beg we “he up have Br ynoreD MARSHALL : whence it Was derived; signifr- DORA influence of Teutonic is responsible for the and popular usage of" Though coming originally from same source as Dorothea, and often regarded as a coftraction--of that name, since the two translations, “gift of God,” are identical, Dorn is a corupletely separate and Individual feminine appellative, The Greek word Theodoros was the uline and feminine names without number. Most of the first named were saints, one of the favor ites being a young soldleg of Heraclea who burnt the temple at Cybele and martyred In consequence The Venetians brought home hls legend and vy » # 1 ¥ litern- exist. Dora. HE ture root of mas: was hil atrou saints, eodoro. named a Greek Theodora empress # beautiful Cappadocian martyr, thus springing to fame as a feminine name early In history. Under Teu tonle Influence, however, the first gy! lable was dropped, and Dora, or more properly Dore, became a nationally common name. Teutonle literature is filled with heroines who bear the in this The form Medora, very popular in ante-bellum favor country. The aquamarine is Dora's talismanic stone, It gem of friendship, and promises [ts wearer great popu larity and 8s compelling charm of man- Tuesday Is her lucky day and number. © by Wheeler is the Syndicate, Inc.) i» The Why Superstitions By H. IRVING KING : THE DEATHWATCH N EUROPE and in this country the superstition is universal that the of that little beetle known commonly ns the deathwatch Is an omen of death. “I did not hear the dog howl, mother, or the deathwatch beat,” says the dying girl In Tenny- son's May Queen. The Insect gets into wood of houses, especially RI SAI: 7 AN AD ior ‘BONNER FASHIONABLE FISH “l must summer,” said Mr. Bluefish. “To be s Isn't summer time yet, bit it is well ire ney.” other fishes sald the same, “It's sald Mr, as he a ple how many fishes are “We travel. do not ever £0 many fishes who do the year they take the Summer Flounder and the Wes family others who come from the South, wintered, will summer, Mr. Bluefigh, same. Every a “There family ma ny where “ -% are ish they have to orth, where they autumn “Fishes ocean, travel miles | “But people noise butting its by (© by MeClure Newspaper Byndicate. ) lly. She had expected Corneline. On| arriving at the house she was taken to by a maid. Then they dining room. During a | up the subject of names, “Nothing seems to me more Inexeus- | in the spelllng of proper! I never forgive a persen‘ who off my ‘e’'" Then Bella un derstood, At this crisis she had a simple In- | spiration. She would study spelling, | and be careful of proper names! Of course Mrs. Browne did forgive the! rescued Bella from the hall bedroom. | But she never forgot the mishaps due to bad spelling. Years later when her own little daughter brought back a bad spelling report from school she wank heard to say: “Good spelling Is Just a matter of a habit and Only foolish people and slovens neglect the habit of good spelling.” Have You This Habit? (© by Metropolitan Newspaper Services.) The old, old it makes superstition that Is a death omen formerly unsuspected. All the dead wood, hear, an knock upon the that some spirit of a departed friend parently solid wood the steady sound supernatural origin, It was the dead hody calling unto death. (© by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.) ansssnnnisnigpll Postsminen TOO HONEST. He's altogeth- er too honest I'm through with him. Too honest, Mabel ? Yes, wouldn't steal a kiss, Heo sven Are you going nother's people or your tives or your friends? “They will gay: when It gets hot or will and you stay at spend r ask each other all such ques- tions, but you would think they would dy . “'Well, I see by the river or the ocean that a number of the Fish sum- mer residents have arrived’ “No, they don't do that, “They say: “i and-So has yw ead] the street. goed cook. there couldn't get and she didn't know how to thing herself.’ “It would be so much more Interest. ing If they sald: * “The summer mi a cook to sult her, make a fishes are coming. and they will not enga cooks or laundresses. “*They do not need laundresses, They are constantly being washed-— and as for being put up with that.’ “That is the way they should talk, that everyone would know how we Na ) ne any 80 we ge “They w how iil speak of the birds and will say the birds travel, and how they come at live in different parts of the country during different seasons, seem to about fishes, “They should, poor dears, for they would find, then, how fash- they don't But fishes are, were, Mr. looked his glassy 18, It 1s true, hut the world doesn't seem talk about we're doing. “Too bad, too bad,” and he waved a He Did His Best sobbed Iilma Vaselineoviteh, “Ivan Ninespotski died in battle! Do you say he uttered my name as he was dying? “Part of It, soldier” “part World. HEL So, replied the returned of 1It"-—New York Hated to Land fwo Irishmen were working on a church steeple. Mike's foot slipped and he started to fall. Pat hollers “Hey, Mike, how do you like Mike—-I like it, but I hate like the # Poor Pa Mother (appearing in door)--Why, Lucy, it's awful the nolse and fuss you're making! Look at Alfred, how nice and quiet he Is : Lucy—Sure, he is. He's got to be, he's papa coming home late and try- ing to find some excuses, ‘No Lack of It Doctor--You should exercise your feet more, sir, now that golf is out of genson, Patient—I do. I-own a player plano, St.Joseph’s LIVER REGULATOR for BLOOD-LIVER-KIDNEYS Cuticura Soap The Velvet Touch For the Skin Soap 25¢, Ointment 25 and 50¢, Talcum 25¢. ren and adults, A pleasant syrup. No opiates. 35¢ and 60¢ sives sold THIRTY YEARS AGO OR 80 years physicians have prescribed Gude's Pepto-Man- gan because it contains a form of iron which is readily absorbed, does not upset the stomach or affect the teeth, and is a splendid tonic and blood enricher. At your drug- gist’s, in both liquid and tablets. Free Trial Tablets T° %e for yourseit the boalth-bullding valse of Gude's Papte-Mangan, write today for generous Trial Package of Tablets. Send money «~ just mame and address te . 4. Breitenbach Os. §3 Warren St, N. Y. QGude’s Pepto-Mangan Tonic and Blood Fnricher Toke Hudson's SAL-FATE Capsules for NEURITIS { Contains no tes or harmful drugs, { and sells at $1.00 a box; sent postpeid | upon receipt of price. Try them. i Ower £,000 boxes seid in Baltimore last yess. Write for Book let and Testimonials. | THE SAL-FATE DRUG CO. | 1109 Linden Avenue Baltimore, Md, never takes a reason why good The devil | another i should. vacation, people i insist on having Dr Peery's “Dead Shot" for Worme or Tapeworm and the druggist will got it for you 372 Peari St. N.Y Adv ! A man is seldom In undue baste to | take up an eyerdue note. After hesitating a man often. finds that is too late to act. ‘Sure Relief i it 25¢ AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother's Remedy For every stomach and Intestinal {iL This good old-fash- loned herb home remedy for consti pation, stomach ills and other' derange- ments of the sys tem so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother's day.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers