The World's Best Tonic Over 100 people have testified ae TANLAC has relieved them of: Stomach Trouble, Rheumatism, N Loss of Appetite, Loss ot Yeigh, Torp ver or Constipation. “Ask Anyone Who Has Taken TANLAC” OVER 4% MILLION BOTTLES SOLD For Sale By All Good Druggists Walrus Tusks Prized Ivory carving Is becoming a lost art among the Eskimos of Alaska and the ornately carved walrus tusks are much prized by collectors. A generation or so back the artisans who did this work were quite numerous, but they have gradually passed away and the young men have not learned to do It. WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT Thousands of women have kidney and bladder trouble and never suspect it. Women’s complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy con- dition they may cause the other organs to become diseased. Pain in the back, headache, loss of ambition, nervousness are oftentimes symptoms of kidney trouble. Don’t delay starting treatment. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a physician's pre- scription, obtained at any drug store, may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions. Get a medium or large size bottle imme diately from any drug store. However, if you wish first to test this grent preparation, send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a smmple bottle. When writing, be sure and mention this paper.—Advertisement Dig Up Ancient Synagogue The Danish scholar and excavator, Doctor Sommerfield, found in the Pal estine villnge of Kapernaum the ruins of an old synagogue. It was in this vil- lage that Christ first preached to the Jews. On the walls of the synagogue was found the swastika emblem. Don’t chuckle if you pat over a substitute when an advertised product is called for. Maybe your customer will never come back. Ben Mulford, Jv. There is such a thing as too mueh | caution. You may be so slow as to fall asleep on the job Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION . Fes » i ee & = oe, 204 NOE > 6 Bewrans d Hot water ns Sure Relief BDELL-ANS | 25¢ AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE KEEP EVES WELL! Dr. Thou n's Bye Water will Me frog. £8 oolel Cy - KILLS PESKY BED BUGS P.D. Q. Just think, a 3c box of P. D. Q. (Pesky Devils Quietus) makes a quart, enough to sill a million Bed Bugs Roaches, pr Cooties, and stops futures generations oy killing ther eggs, and does not injure clothing. Liquid fire to the Bed Bugs is what P. D. Q is like; Bed Bugs stand as good a chance as & snowball in a justly famed heat resort. Patent spout free in pvery package of P. D. Q., to enable you to kill them and thelr nest eggs in the cracks, . Look for the devil's head on ev- ery box, Special Hospital size, 12.50, makes five gallons; contains three Shouts. ot er size at your ruggist, or sent prepall on re- ceipt of price by Owl meal Works, Terre Haute Ind, BS SSI LOSING OUR BEARINGS HE fine spirit of assurance which we mortals frequently exhibit in the presence of our rivals, very often withers out and crackles before an ex- plosive flame of passion, It is In such a blaze that the lm- petuous soul loses his bearing and wakes up In his senses to find himself adrift on an uncharted sea. If he bas within him but a small portion of the substantial fibre of which manhood 1s made, he places the fault where it be time to mend his ways. test will not stand the hard strain, Yesterday they were proud, humble, sad-eyed and despondent, hav- dispute with the master at the wheel, duty, commit the most grievous sins. place. And this hallucination holds them In its grip until they slowly wake up and see everything around them going along at its customary galt, That haughty old general, Ego, has bined. hours a day and never loses a battle, When we find pride swelling In our our egotism, we shall lose our bearings. And ngain, when an overweening sense of importance upon us and we lose the simplicity of manners which had always heen ours, stiff-necked, turn abruptly genealogy and manifest a keen Interest in heraldry, we need a long vacation become ti which in others and which meaning people to feel We admire the grandeur and on of breeding creates an brings helps The perfec walls ail homelike suggestion HELPFUL THINGS HEN cooking the fresh green peas add a teaspoonful of sugar beets, carrots, sweet potatoes, Add a tablespoonful of melted but- cans be found making a will in and convenience a great sired : all that is needed is the thick- ening of butter and four and suuce is ready. One-half a can will make sufficient sauce, Now that the fresh mushroom Is agnin with us we may have steak with mushroom sauce, creamed mush- ty shells or ramekins, brofled, fried ifn the vast open where we can cow mune alone with Mother Nature, And at night in the sublime hush, be peath the stars, let us ask ourselves what has become of our great, welghty ambitions and lofty purposes! (8. McClure Newspes for Syndicate.) amas) Has Anyone Laughed At You By ETHEL R. ——— Because— PEYSER Of Being Too Close Mouthed? Here is a place where you are pretty much alone! The Moun- tain to Keep-Your Mouth-Shut is far away and hard to climb, But, friends, stay there If you have reached It The tongue has done as much harm as good in the world and if you know the “control” hold ft and your tongue no matter who laughs. You may get out of “gossip fests,” but you will never .get into messes, You will have time to do your work; you will have time, too, to make yourself popular, in other ways. 80 Your get-away here is: To realize that you are on the right track-—where the sig nal system is always 0. K, (9D. McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) Urol lr rp in pr lr pr rr pr IF HE WANTS TO By DOUGLAS MALLOCH SA Ae A Re aa a” a Tr HE wants, a boy can be Always full of courtesy: To his mother, nice to her, To his father answer “sir” Kind In act, polite In speech, At the table never reach, Never take beyond his needs, Know just what to do with seeds, Never drop his spoon or plate, Not complain when asked to walt Yes, a youngster really can Be a little gentleman, If he wants to, Yes, Indeed, a boy can be Help to all the family: He can get his father's chalr, He can put his slippers there, Help his mother busy days {In a half a dozen ways; | There are things on ev'ry side | Any boy could do who tried: | Wipe the dishes, "tend the lawn, | He his dad when dad is gone, | Run on errands, promptly, 100— { Such a lot a boy can do, If he wants to. Mind you, 1 don’t say 8 boy i Is a model and a joy ! All the while In ev'ry way; But 1 know that ev'ry day | Any boy can make his dad And his mother proud and glad, Make the neighbors, friends of his, Say how fine a boy he is, Even make the boy next deor Give the world a smiling face, Make the home a happier place If he wants to. (D. MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.) pr ———————————— Hor DiedmTy DOG » Lissent S-5-5al fea GUTTIY Tae moon! a WOOP MY SS 5 Ging A Dow 4 powT raed Sp Ford o Gornpel AE A COMBMALON panel OOF MC doi or combined with sweethreads, so that we may bave many dishes for va | riety. A delicious casserole dish for des sort ls baked bananas, which bave a sauce of lemon Juice and butter poured over them with a little sugar, ! Bake until tender and serve garnished good Hot coffee poured into the saucers Reflections of a Bachelor Girl Bg HELEN ROWLAND a MANY a girl fancies that a man has fallen in love with her, when he has merely stumbled-—and caught his balance. The first bitter honeymoon quarrel is the “blowout” on the road to Hap piness: after that, marriage always seems, somehow, to scrape along on 8 flat tire. Why Is a man always so suspiciong of a girl's “designs” upon him, when, pine times out of ten, a woman hasn't ANY designs; she bas nothing but Im. pulses, The worst cases of Incompatibility are those In which a man treats his wife's “afflictions” as a joke, and a woman regards her husband's jokes as an affliction. OR, yes, even a society woman needs a husband, if only for some. body to send postcards to from Eu. rope or Florida, and to look up, when she's passing through town. Theoretically, a man may belleve that a girl has the right to do the pro poxing: but when he hears anything that sounds like It from a wolmnn's fips, it frightens him like a motor horn close to the ear. . Before marriage, when a woman sprake to a man In an undertone, he ® calls It “nagging.” (Copyright by Helen Rowland.) aise e Young Lady Across the Way Seg The young lady across the way says ft she ever gets a revolver it will be an automatic, as she never dare touch the thing. ™ : (H, MoClure ver Syndicates, ie Nawavauur 3 ’ Children =!ways tury to the light. {will warm the { growth. soil will sweeten It and make It more { porous, roots and start new (E, 1934, Western Newspaper Union.) -— (mms aan aaaanas aaa nes A ROMANCE OF WORDS 4 *HABERDASHER" HOUGH Swinton, who can gsually be relied upon for the accuracy of his investigations into the antecedents of words, declares that “haberdasher” Is derived from the German “Habt ihr das?” and is based gpon the fact that a haberdasher is ex- pected to keep nearly everything in his store, it almost certainly dates back even further to the days of the berdash, or necks cloth, a combination of the words “beard” and “tache,” meaning a covering. Chambers, In referring to the word, states: “Berdash was a name formerly used In England for a certain kind of neckdress, and hence a person who made and sold such neckcloths was called a berdasher, Gradually, however, there grew up berdash- ers of two kinds-those who gold small wares, such as but. tons, tapes and other trifles which might be included In the old Norman term ‘hapertask,’ and those who sold hats. The latter being made of a substance known ug 'habertas’, the syllable ‘hat’ was naturally prefxed to the word ‘berdasher and the name ‘haberdasher applied to anyone who handled articles of either class.” (6 bw Wheeler Syndicate. une.) ssn Prins Plain Speaking Barred Mr. Sparks—Ah! stranded, 1 see Perhaps 1 can be of some assistunce There arf one or two things 1 can ell you about your make of car. Motorist—Well, keep them to your * we x POINTS ON KEEPING WELL Dr. Frederick R. Green, Editor of “Health.” (gw, 1924, Western Newspaper Union) WHAT IS INSULIN? IABETES is a discase character- ized by the presence of sugur in the urine. It hag been known for thou sands of years. Formerly regarded as a disease of the kidneys, It was found, about Jorty years ago, to be due to degeneration of the pancreas, following some infec- tion, such as influenza or typhold fe ver. It may be caused by obesity, In 1800, Langerhans found that only a part of the gland wes destroyed in diabetics and that the pancreas was really two glands In one, One glund secretes the pancreatic juice, which goes lato the small intes tine and alds d’gestion, The other giand manufactures a substance which is taken up by the blood and which is necessary for sugar digestion, The purts ¢f the gland which secrete this substance are called the Islands A Langerhans, If these islands degenerate, then the sugar in the food, Instead of being used by the body, 1s discharged through the kidneys. So that, po matter how much the patient eats, he is unable to get enough nourishment, because much of his food is thrown away. Disbetic patients have enormous ap- petites, but the more they eat the more poorly nourished they are, To make matters worse, the changed chemistry of the body produces an acld condition of the blood called acidosis, which eventually poisons the patient, He becomes unconscious—what Is | known as diabetic coma—and usually never awakens, In 1821. Dr. F. G. Banting, a young Canadian physician, determined to find secon | of which caused diabetes, After many | eceded In making a experiments he | hans, which he called insulin It Is now 2 | than that of any other animal, Before the discovery | betes was to give them a starch Since Doctor Banting's discovery is possible to restore the diabetic pa i tient to ily pormal ox The doctor w eighs the patient's fou ¢ of 4 ” ndith practics a | estimates the amount and the amount of ar excreted Then he gives nxulin to digest the body This sug the the sugar the body patient enoug taken into ennbles ahsorh it Insulin Is not a8 cure for dinbetes replaces the missing substance in the blood of enables him to lead a norm the diabetic patient an al life It is not a substitute for other me of diet re gti] necessary. | odds treatment Careful ways of living a may resjore the pancreas to normal, pot know. 5s yet GOOD FOOD SURPASSES DRUGS dollars each main Of this million | taining its hospitals i ten millions, nearly spent for food year or one-third, | des of a hospital. People used They know better now. A is a medicine. hospital necessarily. know what caused diseases or how they could be prevented, so the only restoring the patient to beaith. wise doctor today medicine unless he knows that it's going to help the patient, Of course, this means that what medicine is given beneficial than that used to be administered. Doctors give fewer drugs today because they know more than their predecessors did. Hospitals spend more money for food than they do for medicines, because they know that every patient needs to be properly nourished, while compara. tively few need drugs. With our better knowledge of the chemistry of foods and the processes of digestion we are able to combine feeding and medication in a way that the old-time doctor never thought’ of. A certain amount of iron Is necessary for health. If you must have it in a harry your doctor gives you a prescrip tion containing iron, which will rapidly fnerease the amount of iron in your Blood. But he would rather give It to you in a natural way through your food. The iron you get in fresh vege- tables and fruits Is better sulted for your bodily needs than the iron you get in pills and a bottles, So the doctor today gives his pa tients, either at home or In the hos. pital, many needful substances in their which he formerly had to give In give medicine, he gives it because It is necessary and he gives the smallest amount that will do the work, Every capable physician knows to that it is Just as important for his patient to have the right kind of food he the right kind medicine. Boe es i : i 1 i i 3 SPIRIN Say ‘Bayer Aspirin” INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by phy- sicians for 24 years. St % o Accept only a Bayer package which contains proven directions Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists Aspiria 1s the tra®h mark of Bayer Mann. facture of Moussosticacidester of Salicylicncid SULPHUR COMPOUND Physicians agree that is one of the most eflactive blood known, For pimples, black-heads, frecides, blotches, and tan. as #ell a3 for more serious face, scalp pions, hives, eczema, etic. Use . As alo internall y it gets atthe root of the trouble. For over 28 years Hancock Sulphur Com- pound has @ven satisfaction. 60¢ and $1.20 the bottle. st your druggists. If be can’t supply you send his name and the price in stamps and aad we will send you a bottle direct. HANCOCK LIQUID SULFHUR COMPANY \ Baltimore, ML o ‘S Benewd Blphur Compond Ohnt- meno $0n aul OO Sor we wish the A Lagudd Compound oT Te Ma Relief from is within your gr ering! “Munyon's Guide * will be sent to you free Write today. Get these famous remedies stpny good drug store: Manpon's Paw Paw Tenic ‘ts Diarrhoea Manyen's Gop K omedy Munyes's Paw Paw Lozative Pills ow any other Manyen vy you way peed “There's a TF Munyon Fill For Every 11" Doctor's Advice FREE has helped thousands of sufferers. 25 cents and $1.00 at druggists. If unable to obtain, write direct to: NORTHROP & LYMAN CO, Inc, Foreign Birds in America English starlings, 50 of which were released in Central park, New York, —— two or three years they have not gone South In any considerable numbers They have spent thelr winters in the as the English sparrows da last sutumn huge flocks went | learned to migrate in America as they usually do In Europe. Men can sew, but most of them make a mended rip look like a welt raised by a horsewhlip. Truths and roses have thorns about them. — Proverbs of Spain
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers