Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION, Sure Relief ELL-ANS 25¢ AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE A Tactfal M an Sir Robert Baden-Powell can always be relied upon to tell a story worth retelling. At the recent dinner of the Federation of Rambling Clubs he re- ated un amusing incident In which he and his wife were concerned while samping in a wood belonging to one of the newly rich. Lady Baden-Powell asked permission to put up a tent in the wood. After some hesitation, sanction was forth- oming. “But you must bring the general to see me.” insisted the landowner, Her ladyship pointed out the gen- sral who was busy unharnessing the horse. “That ywner he was some!” him?™ “Good tall, the land I thought well, hand exclaimed heavens! slim and Why He Disapproved Friend—Do approve of coedu cation in the you attend? Student—Not at all—I have to every morning hefore cinss, BEST for tne Complexion The beauty of ip s is the beauty it brings tc the complexion — soft, smooth, clear white skin, free of pim- ples, blackheade or other blemishes. Rohiand’s Stypixc Glenn’s 2 Sulphur Soap Pure Sulphur Ar Druggiets a __.s —,L- Wanted—Agents and District Mgrs, to petier line of rubbe »r aprons and househo 3ecessitie in lasive territory Sample pron §1 Products Co, Endicott, N.Y you school Contains 334%, exc Eezema. teh, Blotches, Rashes lieved by Derma Ointment box. Results guar ¥ , 1903 E. Chass 3t,, Balto, 2. in best truck section ican % purchase price t« fi nd ready to plant Imme HOOVER, Lecsburs, Inceme. Wa sell by nn Particulars Arkansas St. Oakland, Agentys-——Steady free 4 Salesmen Wanted-—Froah oysters, fish and vegetables, for a lerritory 2 Ken nmisaion rep rde good side National Packing ox ao Ma TYPISTS WANTED-TO TYPE AU THOR ~ Win apars tine; » L 3 ne " Wow ne i WILL STAR] IN BUSINESS | Unusua han - Articla ex 4 for $1 00 plete privilege Don’t wait. St )W rti H. BOYD SANDERSON 455 Seneca Avenue Brooklyn, N. STC KY FLY PAPER—NO POISON I n nd home wrong Mans £2.00 Only $1.50 for Ten Days used on expensive cars thus enabling the FORD also to climb s hill when the gas is low, avoiding loss time, goin after gas or the dangerous practice backing up this HILL CLI man $1.50 a JOSHUA Pe Warts can now be permanently removed by the latest French method. Men and wo men troubled with unsightly warts will find quick relief. Effec- tive and painless. Trial size, $1.00. Sold only by COLUMBIA FRODUCTS OO. 210 Seventh Ave, New York, N. ¥. FAMOUS Frederick Co. Lime A MINE OF WEALTH TO FARMERS ~ Manufactured by M. J. GROVE LIME CO. LIME KILN, MD. Attention! Homeseekers Low round trip fares, five or mores . one ticket, from Washington, D C, SOUTH. Tickets sold on first ors 1 Tuesday of each month, April 1 until Decem. ber 2, 1924, inclusive. Return limit 21 days Splendid opportunities for money- -making orchards, dairy. truck and general farms af low cost. Home and factory sites. Long crog seasons. Short, mild winters. Good markets Write: J. C. WILLIAMS Devel Topm Washington, ou C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM AGENTS—SELL 0. K. PADDED IRONING. boa:d covers. Every home needs one. Writs for prices and details. Central Speciality Co., id Detroit Avenus, Youngstown, Ohio Free to Women! | Send you J 105 bottle mame, we wil Ta SPAR Sern, WLRat Bp RUB YOUR EVES? T =” His ra ohn hey DE o ver, ney “mek without Jusaion " Bu NT'S BALVE me ® in the treatment of I'TCH, ECZ RINGWORM TETTER or otoer itching skin diseases, Price THe at ae sta, or direct from A. 8. Richards Gs. Tos yl Ww. N. u. “BALTIMORE, NO. 35-1024 i ] | ALONG LIFE’S TRAIL Cy THOMAS A. CLA Denn of Men, University of Illinois. CHO OHHH OHHH HHH CHO (@. 1934, Western Newspaper Union.) FATHER a INE upon line, and precept upon <4 precept,” the Good Book says, but that was not altogether father's way. He gave very few directions; he laid down very few rules; he was a man of action rather than of words. It was father's example when I was a boy that Influenced me, and it is the memory of his life today that makes me want to be what he was, I have no recollection that he ever once punished me; and though there was never any doubt that he was the head of the household, matters of our conduct he Invariably left to mother, but we knew what he wanted and we should never have thought of going contrary to his desires. None of us children ever got especially intimate with father; I think he did not know how to bring about such an intimacy. He was quiet, serious, rather stern in always reasonable, al- ways just, always absolutely sincere, and 1 respected him than any other man I ever knew, ods, but more he carried out his religious daily in our home life so conscienclous- ly that It never occurred that any man would a rellg hypo crite. “Do you think “l never church.” I had never heard father excepting at home, every morning us the day came. He the prayed before strangers, He to me be fous s07" was his response heard him excepting Ip was strangely undemonstrative, during all the years of my hood I never knew him to say a crit. or an unkind word to She was always right; did In his eyes was perfect. to ber from the day child. ieal He they and day. were entitled to a full day's The old hBrses »- r rs of he argued. service, until and comfort died. Honesty, kindness, work, to definite taught me loyalty he re- Higious principles, hh by precept as hy the Ae . thes serpent Mit iB fie i. Esl with unkn 3 absolute faith in in whom he had to each of courageously, future, He knew and he left something of his faith. It is a great heritage vod father: It is a great privilege to through youth and early man- this relationship with fa- to have had a close THE DEAD ONES I RODE, not long ago, village near which | lived was a boy, and interested seeing how much was yet me, As I came Into the town it easy still to decipher the old familiar word In advertising days—painted through the myself in in the early “Snyder Sells Shoes” “Visit Bargains a Dry joods,” “Sale Pays Highest Prices for way. + The signs, too, which still hung over the entrances to the business houses recalled old names and old memories: “C. L. Boon, Farm Loans and Insur- ance,” “Sally Shepard, Millinery,” and so on as 1 went slowly down the street. But they were names only. Not one of the men or women had for years had any part in the business or social life of the town, Charlie Boon had been dead for twenty years, Sally Shepard had married and moved to Kansas long ago. They were all dead ones so far as the life of the town was concerned. No one had had the energy or the Interest to paint out the legends or take down the signs. But this earrying along of useless or dead members Is not confined to my native town. 1 read the obituary no tice Inst week of a man in middie life and, among other things meationed, was the fact that he was a member of the Presbyterian church, though he probably had not attended a church gorvice for ten years, So far as the church was concerned, he had been a dead one for a decade. It is true of all organizations and communities. In church, social, clvie and business organizations there are names carried on the rolls that are nothing more than names. The men bearing them have had nothing to do for years with the progress sad devel opment and life of the organization; they are as dead as If they were lying ander the ground in the cemetery. No community or organization Is free from these handicaps. Only a small percentage of men Is alive to the responsibilities of the group or the organization to which they are allied. Their influence is seldom If ever vital in any way. Their absence would not be noticed. They are simply dead ones, Material Plays an Important Part in Costumes for Evening Wear. Despite the vasion of ince Into In- formal and semi-formal flelds, it Is | In the evening gown that this fabric still finds its most logical expression, | says a Paris writer in the New York | Herald-Tribune. And recent outstand- ing social uffairs In Paris and environs | have brought out some very striking | gowns in which lace plays an integral | part. On the opening night at one of | Paris’ foremost theaters a marquise affected a Chanel model of blonde mar- got lace, the design a frall floral pat- tern on a background of black, It was a stralghtline affair without n belt, and the bodice, cut in a deep round effect, had no sleeves, A nar row bund of bluck mousseline finished the hem the skirt, The costume was completed by a wide scarf of the which times the throat At Deauville a wearing king Patou gown of sil ver lace made over a pale pink foun The dress was style and the skirt supported a deep flounce of pale pink ostrich. On the same occasion an American ludy was clad In a dress of silver cloth combined with heavy silk lace. The lace took the form of two wide-spreading panels, which started at elther of the waistline and ground In a double Lace was also used for collar on the tight-fitting of long, wound several of the wearer luce, Was about princess Was scar a stri mude In princess side to the an bertha bodice, An evening model, sketched at the | and blue crepe georgette The Panel of Blue Georgette Crepe. dress 18 In chemise form and hangs | straight both front and back. It Is formed entirely of the pink lace, with | the exception of a plalted panel of | blue crepe georgette which extends down the center front from neckline | to hem, Small, pink artificial roses Cool Weather Favorite This imported rough tweed in browr and red that is woven right into the material is quite acceptable to mos! this fall. form the belt and border the edges of the skirt and sleeves, and ties of the blue georgette crepe appear ob the left shoulder and at the walstiine Blonde lace is fabric of an In teresting evening wrap which has a broad strip of embroidered chiffor the hips In such a manne suggest a low walstiine, A collar is composed of sl ar chiffon This particular lace be found quite as acceptable deb as to the more mature woman the encircling ns to model will Cape to Match Frock Is The fashion of having match one's frocks Is one of the mom attractive modes that bas been intro in many a day. It was launched last season, but than its be of decided importance, duced has more held OWN gigned for travel dresses and suits, each with its ac companying cape of the same material One stralght tailored frock of a (wo toned plaid wool in shades of gray has a double cape of the same fabric Another costume consists of a plalr circular cape lined with red and white plald crepe de chine. For afternoon there are lovely frocks transparent fabrics, often collared with ostrich and occasionally trimmed with black or cream lace. A striking feature of the moment Is the scarf. From being an occasional accessory, it has become a conspicuous and essential part of the costume. The best designers at Paris and io America are content to repeat tried conservative dress models and to cre ate beautiful and original scarfs. The latest designs are large enough to en velop the figure from head to foot, and they are made of every imaginable fabric, from wool to gauze, from the most gorgeous lengths of brocade to the lightest crepes, In lovely colors or gay prints, Long scarfs of tulle are bordered with ostrich, all like a floating cloud of rainbow tints. Strips of white crepe de chine or chiffon have ends of velvet, black or colored. A plain tength of chiffon of one color is sewn as a foundation for petals of chiffon, in the same or another shade, or a contrasting color, offering opportn- White and Black Plaid Alpaca Suits, Dresses For morning wear white and black. plaid alpaca suits and dresses con- tinue to be extremely smart. When in suit form the short jacket, beltless but tight-fitting about the hips, Is lined with white crepe and there Is a reverse facing of the same ciepe. The long, straight blouse is also of white crepe de chine of a very heavy quality, Dresses of this plalded ma- terinl are straight In cut ‘with wide lenther belts of white kid, Usually there Is a pleated skirt front and col- iar and cuffs of white crepe de chine, nity for a wide variety of delightfu color harmonies. This felicitous ides has evolved some of the most Intrig uing creations such as simply “make’ any costume, even the most conven tional, That the genius of the best artists ha been put to the creating of the scar feature of the season's mode is seen in the daring yet wholly enchanting novelties, Ivory crepe printed In huge with flower border ot mauve, rose and blue; white deeply pointed with black, and many othet striking combinations of white and black. They are printed, embroid ered, hand-painted, and they are the rage of the hour. The Lure of Gray After such a season of bright col ors it is pleasant by way of contrast to observe the appeal that the mod est little gray frock has. A partie ularly delightful little model of gray linen has a long tunic and a scari about the neck. Both the bottom of the skirt and the ends of the tunic are trimmed with appliques of cre tonne with huge floral motifs In ma genta and violet. New Neckwear Organdie neckwear has come Inte its own once more, There are many delightful treatments of this becom ing material. A wide collar and cuffs of white organdie have tiny bands of green fagoted together and attached to ths collar. The bands are of three different tones of the green ranging from light to dark. POINTS ON KEEPING WELL Dr. Frederick R. Green, Editor of “Health.” 1024, Western Newspaper Union.) GOITER (w. (GOITER is an enlargement of the thyroid gland. This structure, glands in the body neck. Golter has been recognized for cen turles. It was known to the Greeks and Romans. It has been common for France and the Balkan not only among human beings also among lambs, pigs Tradition and popular be Calves, to drinking springs and along wetter from Bireams. the who ate large It was never seashore or amounts of Sclentifie Just the with popular knowledge on catching up {ecent investiga goiter Is body. This curious way, Pennsylvania state fish mission found that golter was ing common considered eries. is be tion has p sliple in the ered in a The due to lack was discov becom wo among fish th abandoning its Doctors Marine fish hatch and asked They found hatcheries and in amount of to investigate, that the water in fish ponds they added a fodine the water was lacking fodine, 80 to and disappeared. yr Shira, the health officer Ohio, heard about this, Kimball, local school had found In 1920 that o the girls the public goiter. So the if they vent or cure goiter Doct the ver half in schools doctors asked the ited to goiter, 5.000 girls take jodine Half of were amount of lodine in thelr drinking wa ter for two weeks each spring and fall The other 5,000 giris drank water, Not war to pre the agreed, so given a ordin: nry one of the girls who drank the water developed goiter, per af those drank dinary water did develop It Three years ago, lodine and inte tablets were given to all school girls of St. Gall, Berne Switzeriand, and the amount three ms has 5 per cent. health Vo] cent who or of goiter in these cante been reduced nearly Now, Doctor Olin, sioner of Michigan, hs der prohibiting the state which fodine, It is too early to say positively what will It Is apparently proven goiter is caused of lodine and that =a i i t water is issued an or the sale of any sall does not be. bY 3 nt in Greek physicians whe aweed and sponges and gave their goiter patients foolish, after all SUPPLYING LOST HUMAN | PARTS gshes fo 't SO URGEONS, and patient's when you w & new foot buy a pair of gloves, How would be possible? By saving the of persons make new other parts of The time may can get & new hand as easily as you now today, fingers {rom body ome this killed by accident and have lost these parts. The difficulty put In in the possibility of preserving | the bodily structures for an | Incredible as It may seem, a begin aing has actually been made, Eight years ago, Dr. Alexis Carrel of the Rockefeller Institute took the lining membrane of a ben's egg and put it nto a normal salt solution in « ves sel where the heat was automatically regulated. That membrune Is still alive and growing. This is the only instance in which living matter has been kept alive outside of the animal body. Carrel was sent over to France sarly In the war to work out a method »f treating Infected wounds. Work. ng with Dakin, an English chemist, he devised what 's now known as the Carrel-Dakin, solution, by which pol luted wounds could be made so clean that they healed, as surgeons used to say. “by first Intention.” Carrel says that the methods by which be kept alive the chick's mem- orane may be developed to a point where entire members of the human sody may be kept In a state of sus pended animation. When a young and healthy man is gilled by a street car or an automo sile, wnen a brick falls and strikes a passerby on the head, causing death sy the Injury of some vital part, the rest of the body may be lu perfect senlth. Why not use the sound parts sf these bodies to restore the dam aged parts of people otherwise aealthy? The day may come when every large “ity will have an anatomical cold storage warehouse in which hands and feet, arms and legs, ears and noses ill be preserved. Then the crippled nan can tell the surgeon, “I want a eft foot, size 6%, grafted on to take he place of the one T have lost.” Does this seem Impossible? It lsn't 1 hit more so than things done every lay would have seemed to the san geon of a hundred years ago. ISPIRIN 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. Safe” Accept only a package which contains proven directions Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Dru gists Ampirin is tie trade mark Bayer of Bayer Moise , Beau % Of Hair and Skin Preserved By uticura zaps Slopes to Heal Lr in Thought of That Insurance ring his wife were sta in the car. we don't get out in the Mr. This ca 1 ne to! iy hitting Briggs and out for a ride “1 tell you, {| open | “Nothi enough, biserved, working on ng lke lke It ought had jooest ed LReRieQ bets right | assurance. Just the great difficulty. | “Guess I'l | pee | nounced, He pulled road and got out After a short | up and an “Just a ¥: por then iI have the tro look and what Briggs an over to the side of the and raised » hood investigati nounced to spark phug “Well,” commented the ft just that you surance ?"—~Kansas City Star. Mrs, fine have Den’t chuckle if you put over a substitute when az advertised product is called for. Maybe your customer will never come back. Ben Mulford, Jr. | Svelt Idea “What's your idea of 1 He—*About half a8 million a Detroit Free WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND SWAMP-ROOT For many years druggists have watched interest the remarkable record i Dr. Kil Root, kidney, Lver and bladder meds She aT gure least ™ Press by mers Swamp is a physician's prescription Swamp-Root is a strengthening medi eine helps ineve and do the work nature intended they the ki liver § p Rex t has stood the test of years | It ie so 1d by all druggists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medi cine has so many friends. Be sure get Swamp-Root and start treatment at once However, if you wish first t test this Eo preparation, send ten cents to Dr Lilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y,, for a smmple bottle. When writing, be sure | and mention this paper.~ddvertisement to i i Yes, of Course “Oh, what a pretty child! little boy? big one, Is it » *You can see it ain't ¢ can't you?” It is the custom in many of the towns in Brittany for all couples whe become engaged during the year to be married the same day. A man isn't necessarily polished be cause you can see his finish, over 28 years. +o 206 avd 52.500 the bottle cen Game :
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers