LL le Chew it after every meal It stimulates appetite and aids digestion. ii makes your food do youmore good. Note how fit relieves that stulfy feeling after hearty cating. Whitens teeth, "Light ‘Church Bells The village of Allraht, near Cologne, Germany, boasts of the first church bells made of alloy of aluminum and copper. Their weight being only one third of the traditional bronze bells, the superstructures of the steeples may be built more lightly and inexpensively. Furthermore, there is no danger of the bursting or rusting of bells made of aluminum. plugs readily reveals Champion superiority of design and finish. A new Champion in every cyiin- der means more power and speed and a saving in oil and gas Champion X is 60 cents. Blue Box 75 cents. Champion Spark Plug Co. Toledo, Obio CHAMPION Dependadie for Bowery Engine Rocco - —— - —— - An instrument recently patented measures the number of board feet of lumber in a standing tree, with a fair degree of accuracy. Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment. Wash off Ointment in five with Cuticura Soap and hot water, Is wonderful Worry eats through energy, vitality, Progressive Grocer, "A Married Woman's Advice Baltimore, Md.—"In my early married life my health was poor. 1 felt weak and draggy and my head ached near- ly all the time. Dr. Pierce's Fa- vorite Prescrip- tion is the tonic and nervine | was advised to take and before 1 had finished taking the first bottle 1 gained so in health and strength that 1 felt like a different woman. I took two bottles and from that time on I was as strong and well as any woman could wish to be."—Mrs. Isabelle Schwartz, 1410 N. Fulton Ave. All dealers. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel. Buffalo, N. Y., for a trial pkg. Try Just once P. D. vg Pesky Devils Quistus—as a reventive or to rid wgs, Roaches, Fleas and Ants, Every family should use PD. Q. house cleaning time ‘to guard against the Posky Devils, and and to prevent moths. iy not insect powder, ot ‘in fn now chemical that kills insects and thelr eggs. Each pack age contains, roe, a tent Spout. to enable o get the hard-to-ge = watts oa paves the juice, WL. % cent package a quart, onouRh te to hr - million fnwects and thelr eggs, druggist hat a it = got i for you. Ma revald Matis orks, — OT Chemical 1 if | | TL MR. BEAR'S BEE PIES R. BEAR had a dreadful time try- Ing to eatch the one who stole his verry ples. for Mr. Bear was a good 00k and especially fond of berry ple, ind when the berry season came he al- ways feasted, Ope day he made five big ples and placed them jn the window to cool, put he was very fond of his noonday aap, and when he awoke he found all »f his berry ples were gone. Mr. Bear was a good-natured fellow, sut he was angry now. He scratched als head and thought hard. “I wonder ‘What Is the Matter, Sonnies?” quired Mr. Bear, in. ‘or maybe the Possum night be the Coon boys.” “Anyway, whoever it is, I am going o stop them from carrying off my perry ples. That Is the third batch of | les I have lost this season.” “Then Mr. iinner of bread and milk Instead of he fine berry ples he had Intended to ave, and thought about what should do. to catch the rogue ‘ogues who took his ples, The next morning he was up bright ind early gathering berries, and at joon time in his pantry window there stood five nice brown ples Mr. Bear did not sleep, but he did doze ofl, and he was wwakened by a howl jump. He ran to the pantry; vere gone. Now Mr, twins, or It | or the ples A LINE O’ CHEER By John Kendrick Bangs LIFE SAVERS HEN men are drowning In the sea And call for help to you and me, what one of us can ever doubt We'll do our best to help them out, And drag them with our might and main Back to the soild earth again? Well, there are men on every snide Caught in an overwhelming tide Of evil chance who loudly cry To you and me who're passing by. we rope Of helpful sympathy and hope, To save them-—golng—going down, for the drown? ID by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate ) po | | Shall not east to them =a Lest nck of It they SCRAPING OFF DISEASE lection of superstitions current in then crawling out and leaving the dis pase tied there. Kindred methods of cure are rather common in Furope-— especially, it would appear, in rural England--and are not infrequently within this country, Crawling through a cleft tree, through the low arch of a pent ‘wig stuck in the ground or be- tween upright posts set close together, are some of the methods of scraping off disease practiced in Europe; and in Britain there are ancient stones with a narrow opening between, through which wen crawl today in the hope of leaving thelr afflictions be- hind, Just as they crawled through those same stones for the same pur pose In the days when the Druid priests cut the mistletoe with thelr golden gickles from the onk trees, The superstition ean be traced far pack and Is a survival of primitive man's sympathetic magie of the con- taglous variety. Mr. Caveman rea- soned something Uke this: If he srawled through & narrow opening he would scrape his clothing off-if he hand any on. If he did not he would jenst, His disease had become a part sf him, like his clothes or his skin, and a like process would scrape that sft. Then disease was caused by evil | made the howls, but he knew he would | find out before the day was over, and he knew, too, what the cries were about, for he had put plenty and more than plenty would not wish to taste another. That afternoon Mr. Bear took a stroll through the woods. at Mr, the Coon boys were feeling well, too. But when he came to the home of Reddy Fox, there on the doorsteps their mouths tied up. “What Is the | matter, sonnles?’ inquired Mr. Bear, toothache?" but thelr mother came to the door just then and sald: “They in thelr mouths. been able to talk since they went out {this morning to sweet to eat, but 1 think mouthful of bees.” “That's too bad,” sald Mr. Bear. “1 | guess you boys would not care for my | bee ples, then. 1 think they are nice, | 80 hot and warming to the mouth {when you eat them. [I was going to ! invite you over to have some tomor- i row. 1 shall bake some, If you think {you would care to try them, come | around.” Mrs. Reddy Fox sald she never heard of bee ple, but she was certgin | the boys would not be able to eat any- { thing for several days The little foxes did not answer. | They just rolled their eyes at each | other and looked after Mr. Bear as he | trudged down the path towards his | home. | “There, I guess that will fix them.” | sata Mr. Bear to himself, “1 don" USE YOUR OWN MIND EBECCA NORTH'S father, who himself had inherited | from a Southern plantation owner and a New England clergyman, always told her, when she came to him nos a own mind” The phrase stuck and, as she grew up, she noticed how cone spicuous by its absence Was quality in most people. pened to make the remark that, If one wanted to make a friend of a person, | the surest method was to get him to do one a good turn. Within the week she heard three of her friends repeat her bit of worldly wisdom, or get it off as thelr own. That, she decided, was not using their own minds, but hers. to read for herself. When she went to buy a hat she had ber own opin- fons about line and color, based on thought and observation. “You look just lovely In It,” the saleslady might say; but if the crown cision, | Her friends’ Len were “what John thelr stindards were “what thinks” and is done.” | approved way of getting rid of oil | spirits was to lure them Into a tight | place and leave them there. | The man's cure was three-ply. By jerawling out of the rope he trans ferred to it the “substance of the dis ense.” Then there was the magic of | the "obstructive knot,” which kept the | fever tied, and lastly he had appealed | for relief to the sacred ash. Any ordi nary case of fever and ague ought to yleld to so powerful a treatment, (© by McClure Newsre per Syndicate.) ans Poesia (© by MoClure Newspaper Syndicate.) Wb Bee He We We Ne We He WV WH WH L1H HW He He HHH Cullen Landis STA Yo We Ue Ye We Ae VS He Fr Ye He We He He Hr He He He Popular Cullen Landis is one of the foremost young Icading men of the “movies.” He is well known in Nash. ville, where he was born, also in Los Angeles, where he now lives. Landis prides himself on being an expert with the hook and tine, for he is a lover of fishing. Like most other notables of today, he started at the foot of the ladder, as a “prop” boy. He is five feet, seven inches tall and weighs 148 pounds. think 1 shall lose any more of my berry ples this season, anyhow.” And he didn't, for as soon as the little Reddy Foxes got well they told everybody In the woods that Mr. Bear made ples out of bees and he didn’t take the stings out of them, elther (© by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate. ) {high and dry without a cent tu their names. Gradually thelr possessions were sold off and their clothes grew shabbler, and the general interest that | thelr misfortune had at first excited | wore away. Then It was that Rebecen | remembered her father's old saying “Use your own mind"—and decided {that the town where they had | that she was going to New York. Presently word came from the prod fgul. After all, she had not gone off ‘on a whim, as they had thought Realizing that New York was the jof every spring | heart, and that most of her acqunint ances achieved that end but ition of being the clearing | tween supply and demand, house be In a year Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It Applicants for Insurance Should Use Swamp-Root Judging from reports from who are constantly in direct touch with she publie, there is one preparation that vas been very successful in overcoming these conditions. The mild and healing mfluence of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root is won realized. It stands the highest for ts remarkable record of success. An examining physician for one of the prominent Life Insurance Companies, in an interview of the subject, made the as tonishing statement that one reason why 0 many applicants for insurance are re- jected is because kidney trouble is so sommon to the American people, and the large majority of those whose applications sre declined do mot even suspect that they have the disease. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation, send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N, Y., for a sample bottle, When writing, be sure and mention this paper.—Advertisement. Much Honey in Tree Trunk In taking up a big black oak on an Orwell (VL) farm, A. A. Saunders and his son Dorus found a cavity in its trunk twenty inches in diameter and gix feet in length completely filled with honey. Two hundred pounds were taken from the tree, and the owner of the farm, Frank Charlton, was present when the bees were transferred from the tree, and recelved for his share two ten-gallon milk cans full of honey. The Real Goods English Candidate-—Now, my friends, when you vote you don't want to vote for a pig in a poke; you want article. —Boston Transeript. 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 Baver which contains proven directions Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists Amplirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Mano facture of Monesowticacidester of Ballcylicacsd ackage of her sisters to join her all five were taken Into the i Rebecca North's habit of using {in a crisis HAVE YOU THIS HABIT? by Metropolitan Newspaper Service ) 1% “What'sinaName?” By MILDRED MARSHALL EULALIE 1 BovcH Eulalie, or Eulalia as it Is sometimes preferred, has a Spanish origin as well as pronunciation, the name has come to be used as purely American. Perhaps no other name has a more beautiful or pathetic his tory. It means “falr speech,” and comeg from the Greek term for that phrase, The first Eulalia known to history was a child of twelve, who possessed such extreme of Spanish piety that she escaped from her parents’ guardian ship and entered Merida, proclaiming herself a Christian and enduring mar. tyrdom In the persecution of Diocle tian. The great Christian poet Pru dentius has written of the child's beau: tiful faith and cruel suffering. and spread her fume throughout Europe, The Russians call her Jevialija and the Serblans, Eviallja or Lellea, Another virgin martyr called Eulalie died at Barcelona. Her relics spread inte Guifine and Languedoc, and named the villages of St. Aulazie and Ste. Aulaire. Both Eulalia and Eulalie are used interchangeably in France and Spain. Eulalia Is frequent In Eng land, appearing In very early times In church registries in Devon and Corn wall, Eulalle’s talismanic gem Is the agate If worn by her as an amulet, it will protect her from danger, and give her courage and energy. It promises het a pleasant disposition and the gift of persuasion by which she will always attaln her heart's desire. Tuesday le her lucky day m 2 her lucky number, The wild rose is her flower, (© by Wheeler Syndicata Tne) ¥ Be HANCOCK LIQUID SULPHUR COMPAXY Equivalent “Our new neighbors have no maid.” “That's nothing against them. They have two cars.” If a woman is homely she always knows it, but it's different with a man. Loss of Weight, Torpid Liver or Constipation. “Ask Anyone Whe Has Taken TANLAC” OVER 4% MILLION BOTTLES BOLD For Bale By All Good Drugpists Record Snapshot A snapshot taken from the highest altitude at which any such photos graph has ever been made Is now on exhibition at the War department in Washington, The picture is of Dayton, Ohlo, and was taken from 32220 feet cea level, which is a little more six miles. The temperature degrees below zero F., and electric warming devices had used for the camera. it shove thar was Ol. speci: to be Hall's Catarrh Medicine 5..." claim for it-- tid your system of Catarrth or Deafness caused by Catarrh. Sold by druggists for over 40 yoary F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio Wanted—Ladies or Men to Sell Missiles’ and children’s sox. Easily sold. Large profits MM. C. Kinsell, 48804 Castor RA, Philadeiphis, Pa Fun! Fun! > uzzies, Jokes, Magen ADparatus, slags suppiles, po n acis for mage and 10¢ for tllue. enlniog Ho use Dept, 88, 254 Hal od YOR SAL E—30- INC H Bra dual od Pearl INDESTRL CTIBL ¥ seckinc w ®t 2 bos Ee Ageniin write nd 81. New York | ger A COPY OF * "STEP ¥ ING STONES TC * a #oreh 1 use « IN ONE BUILDING ross Sure Death to Rats and A year's supply for you, Write Oliver Roscamp. Mitchel i | AGENTS WANTED —In every t Bonasepta, row! offic jen ! burn balm URDeCOBAATS t., City Hall P ELECTRIC POLISHING CLOTHS « jean nl metals—Sliverware, Alu- minum, Gold per Sells for 180 Samples Agent » want 1d estab ished : N. Marshall St lants and poisons when not par? Our Body Tonic Herb Tablets b blood, restore vital. Herd catalogue and sample 10c SOUTHERN HERR HOUSE | 1700 11th Ave. South Birmingham, FAMOUS | Frederick Co. Lime A MINE OF WEALTH TO FARMERS ~Manufactared by M. J. GROVE LIME CO, LIME KILN. MD. Buy Concord Yarns direct YY manufacturer at a big saving Spun from long combed wool Write for free saznpies Many beautiful shades and be ather ixtures. 50c per 4-on skein: $200 per Ib Post see paid on all orders, CONCORD WOR- STED MIL 1.8. Dept 479, West Concord, | N. Hn or duane, EYEWATER | HELPFUL EYE WASH us River. Troy. BR. Bh _ Booklet, Ala, W ka, Patel HINDERGORNS +m. Removes Oona, Ou es aint Ss or» BE Soa mail =n | W- N. ET BALTIMORE, NO. 39-1824. isa, "Rabbits Cause Heavy Tom A deputation of farmers who waited recently on the federal treasurer of Australia, Informed him that the an- nual loss caused to Australian produce tivity by rabbits Is more than $100, 000,000,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers