Com or These Back Don’t Bother Me Now Lincoln, Nebraska. — ‘My back would bother me so and when I had to do any heavy lifting it made me sick to my stomach with the pains in my I have my housework to do and four babies to take care of so when I heard of Lydia E. Pinkham's etable Compound I took it and I feel better. back don’t bother me and I can eat more and work. do all my housework and washing for six in the family. I will tell other women to take the Vegataple Com- and you may publish my lct- r."’— Mrs, CHARLES F. DOLEZAL, 1201 Garber Ave., Lincoln, Nebraska. Felt Better At Once Vol Sity; Lwacay will tell you what Pa Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for me. I was all run down and could hardly be on my feet. 1 was so cold I could not keep warm, I had numb feelings and then heat flashes would pass over my body. had severe pains in my sides and was very nervous. I saw your advertise- ment in the newspapers so I thought I would try your medicine. My hus- band got me a bottle of the Vegeta- ble Compound and I began to feel better as soon as | sta taking it. I have taken it off and on for three years now. ~ I keep house and do all my work for my husband and two WARNERS TONIC AIDS DIGESTION CORRECTS STOMACH and BowEL DISORDERS Ar all Drug Srores WARREN CHEMICAL CO. NEWARN.N.J Autoists Carry Goat Goat milk en route was enjoyed by | t Colorado motor party recently. The | mmping party fixed a stall for a milk goat on the running board of their me flilum-stzed auto and consequently had pt supply of the milk on their trans | continental trip. The goat would eat leisurely even while the car was In| notion. i FleZir WNT MOTHER:- Fletcher's Castoria is especially prepared to selieve Infants in arms and Children allvages of Constipa- tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic ousewives little boys and make my garden. I feel a I tell others what the medicine has done for me. I think it is the best medicine in the world for women.’ — Mrs. THOMAS GRINDLE, Volga City, Iowa. Can Do Any Kind of Work Fouke, Arkansas.—*‘I had the ‘Flu’ and after that I had a pain in my side and was not able todo my work I was so weak. I found an advertisement in a paper and it told what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Sompound would do, and I took it. Now I can do any kind of work I want to. I think every family ought to keep it fn the house all the time and I intend todo so.” —Mrs. DORA PHILYAW,R.R. No.2, Fouke, Arkansas. Ovet 100,000 Women baye so far re to our question, ‘‘Have you ad Sel ip ey taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound?” 98 per cent of thsse replies are “Yes.” This shows that 98 out of every 100 women who take this medicine for the ailments for which it is recom- mended are benefited by it. This goes to prove that a medicine specialized for certsin definite ail- ments—not a cure-all—can and does do good work. For sale by druggists everywhere, The Highest Talent There is no higher talent than that to maintain kindly and on Cuticura for Sore Hands. of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub in Co Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. This is only one of the things Cuticura will do if Soap, Ointment and Taleum are used for all tollet purposes.—Advertisement. Study of the now department of English by Unl- migration being conducted the of the zoology — one it is harmless. Take Nujol regularly and adopt the all druggists. ol . POINTS ON KEEPING WELL Dr. Frederick R. Green, Editor of “Health.” a an (§, 1924, Western Newspaper Union.) SLEEPING PORCHES LEEPING outdoors Is a present-day fad. Some fads are foollsh and temporary. Others are so sensible that they become permanent, Sleeping In the open air is a fad which ought to become a permanent hubit. It is getting back to the habits of our ancestors and getting away from one of the dangers of overcivilization, For long centuries primitive man, whatever rude shelters he bulit for himself during the day, slept in out. door air, But modern houses are practically air-tight, Close-fitting windows and doors shut out all alr. Hot alr, steam and hot-water heating warm our houses and office buildings instead of the open fireplaces of our ancestors The house is mude air-tight with storm doors and windows or is banked up with straw or dry leaves at the first signs of winter. Not only do the inmates live und work all day In a stove or furnace-heated but they often close bedroom. sleep all night ery winter brings its regular crop of coughs, influenza, bronchitis preumeonia and tubefculosis, There is no medicine you that will prevent these diseases, remedy Is free to all. Pure alr, and plenty of it all night vive and stimulate the tired, throat and lungs Here's where comes In, All right for millionaires, you but you can’t afford any such luxuries Not at all. Any turned into any open-air sleeping room Select a corner the wind and storm, as sallors wonld say colds, enn buy out door re dried-out will the sleeping porch sny. porch corner can be gereened from on the lee side of the house, Curt Hin nmde of canvas, old awnings tar ure privacy and If you want something can be sushos, paulinsg will sed kee out the rain elaborate, It window glazed In 80 that more with made they can be opened und closed enslly An iron bed that oar 1 L$ an army cot is ali a sleeping porch 1 pot, a door can down to breathe, and go back to you room In the morning If a sleeping porch must be on the second floor, a f one-story addition can be used All nonsense say. Al But try it wee much you save in lost time from sick right how yon this winter and ness, medicines and doctors’ hills, and how much better and stronger you feel - » in the morning DIRT EATING AMONG CHILDREN VO5T children have perpeto petites They are always h heir young need food to bulld hem up ang to mal bodies plenty eI possible for n to grow to full sized strong he and wonen Plenty of milk. good bread and butter, fresh ment " J men fruits and vegetables and are needed The healthy child is satisfied of good food. t gets hungry of course, but it Is a natural is satisfied with ordi with plenty again, hunger which nary food But a few children, when they are from one to three years old develop a craving for unnatural things. Some of them eat mud, coal, cinders, gravel mortar, wallpaperg newspaper, or paint. Koplik of Philadelphia thinks that this starts from the natural instinct of the child to put anything it hold of Into its mouth. We all know that the first thing a baby tries to de. with anything It gets its hands on, is to put it into its mouth, Most children outgrow this habit. But In a few, generally those who are weakly or anemic, the habit is kept up and the child eats all kinds of queer sub- stances, In most cases, these different kinds of dirt are comparatively harmless But the paint eaters and those chil dren who have a morbid craving for painted objects may easily develop lead poisoning. The child may gnaw or suck paint- ed toys or may gnaw the paint off the window sills, white furniture, crib rallings, porch railings, or even off door and window frames. In one ease, reported by Dr, John C. Ruddock of Los Angeles, a boy of three years had gnawed every bit of paint off the porch railing, window sills, furniture and doors, The lead In the paint poisons the child Just as it does the painter, It becomes restless and fretful, has a poor appetite, foul breath and palos in the stomach and legs. Its gums bleed and it may have convulsions These convulsions may become more frequent and severe and may end fa- tally. In Queensiand, Australia, where frame houses are coramon, these cases of lead Misoning In dirt-eating ehil- dren became so numerous that efforts were made to prohibit the use of white lead paint In houses where it was within the reach of children. Children from one to three should be carefully watched, and any tendency to dirt-eating corrected. Paint and painted objects should be kept out of their way. or bbb bbb ddd bh : MAKING GOOD IN A S MALL TOW! Sty Pa Fin a Real Stories About Real Girls a a an By MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN FERRER RRR RRR RR RR F AQ, 1924, Western Newspuper Union.) THE CANDY KITCHEN A MERK must And for the girl who knows what undies are America's “best sellers” and how to make those candies, there Is money in helping to satisfy It. That's the declaration of financial In- dependence made by a small town girl who has proved her statement. “But ordinary candies, like fudge’ and taffy, that everybody makes,” she asserted, “don't pay well. And with practically the same materials, you can make the expensive chocolates and bon-bons.” This girl has found the *best sA- lers” to be fancy chocolates and i fudges, cream caramels, nut brittle and butterscotch. She maintains that it is better to specialize In only one | kind of candy or, at most, only a few | cholce varieties, rather than to at- | tempt too many kinds and have them | imperfect, The girl whe "candy kitchen” in her home needs to onsider three factors: Instruction, and supplies, and market- | Ing. If she doesn't know to the kind of candy she wants | to sell, she must, obviously, get some preliminary instruction, and she should procure a book that gives ex- | plicit directions for the making of the | most intricate candies. i Her equipment will | (preferably gas), = | scales, measuring cup, ure, spatula, case knife, leng sharp | knife, wooden spoons, tablespoons, teaspoons, caramel pans, saucepans or teandy kettles, boller, mint bonbon dipper, marble slab or porcelain table, or large | tray. She may simplify or | elaborate upon this equipment accord ‘A'S notorious sweet be satisfied, tooth proposes to run =a | equipment i how | make he: a range, thermometer, quart meas double dropper, or table, white ing to the extent of her business Ag for her market, novice best on a scale, to personal friends and acquaintances. | | She will probably have plenty of | ders for the holliday times, the anti all-the-year-round the the had | begin small selling | or and may avold stimulate trade, advertising “Saturday " the box to treat She Special, may advertise her “strict iy home-made snd hy wares” ners pers : them further announce sccompanied plate of she may a curd, | attractive-looking her window, The candy-maker’ | wares neatly and candy, should attractively, the boxes should { eandy, and never crumbly in advertising include broken hits fudges or trimmed per, string. boxes or time-—she Is sure to attain Mgncial success through her "eandy kitchen™ IN BOTTLES HAT dream out of the yet——for the girl tgrily collector. Moreover, of alr” “pleking dollars may come romance, as well nance may be her consideration thrill of the artist at the discovery how a California girl, an initiate ams up the wonders of her work. And the more “rare and beautiful” the butterflies she captures, the great- er her material returns; she might i have added. The butterfly chase takes place at | night But the butterfly collector must make daylight preparations; she must have smeared the bark of the | | trees on the butterfly “farm” with a | sweet and sticky substance, such as {sugar water or diluted honey: and | she must equip herself for the noe {turnal chase with a wide-mouthed | bottle containing eyanide, and a bull's {eye lamp. After the captured “fiy,” | as the technical trade dubs the beaut | ful creature, is dazzled by the lamp, {it Is dropped Into the bottle to be | asphyxiated. i After the night's eateh., damaged | male butterflies are again turned { loose, while all perfect specimens are wpinned in cork-lined boxes and shipped ito the purchaser. Larvae and eggs {may be kept In cold storage until i apring, when their particular food plant will be available, or fed on for ege crops which are grown Indoors. The eggs of some butterflies will hateh within a féw days, while others will not come out until spring. The col: lector should keep the eggs in ordi nary glass test tubes, where she can examine them every day to see wheth- er they have hatched. When they do hatch, the work-brood should be trans ferred to a jelly-ginss tightly covered, and left until they attaln a quarter of an inch in length, Later, they should be placed in larger fruit jars, or, if there are very many, Inte barrels. Several Inches of dirt and leaf mould should be placed In the bottom of each receptacle; and fresh plant food should be put In every day and the old leaves taken out, Butterfly markets are many. Col leges and schools, big museums, taxh dermists, jewelry manufacturers, so clety people, hotels, department stores, and private collectors buy them either Sweet Relish Catsup Chili Sauce Preserves Mince Meat Mayonnaise Dressing 1000 leland Dressing i Pork and Beans Peanut Butter Prepared Mustard Crape Juice Fruit Selsd Pineapple Cling Peaches “ MURDOCH pg a egy, »s Apricots Pears I Loganberries Red Raspberries Strawberries Blackberries Cherries Beets Red Kidney Beans Lims Beans If you paid $1.00 a pound you couldn't buy coffee better than Monarch. Yet Monarch is priced so low everyone can afford to drink it. Try it today. REID, MURDOCH & CO. Manufacturers and Importers Established 1853 BOSTON PITTSBURGH Reid. Murdoch ® Co.'s food products sre sold the Regular Retail Grocer whe nore. Com Tomatoes Peas Hominy Pumpkin Strioalens ne wos® gree) CHICAGO Sweet Potatoes Sauer Kraut Spinach Salmon Milk NEW YORK We never sell to Chain Stoves. nt Cut Your Shoe Bills with USKIDE OUVE always wanted a sole that would wear like this, and now here it is. USKIDE~the wonder sole for wear. Wears twice as long as best leather. Comfortable, healthful, waterproof, protects against slipping. The hardest job, the toughest foot. ing, can’t faze USKIDE. It wearsand wears and wears, Tell your repairman you want USKIDE Soles on your shoes, Insist on new shoes soled with USKIDE. Look for the name on the sole—it's there for your protection. And fora Better Heel to Walk On! ~*“U. 8.” Spring-Step Rubber Heels. Made of Sprayed Rubber, the purest, toughest rubber known. United States Rubber Company USKIDE Soles 3 . ra SE BR oh, w a - « w charity that begins at home Without Fear If You | Unless you sev the name | not getting proved the genuine enfe by Bayer | millions and | busy to take care i only vegetable | gentle purgative, i i i 3 i i i hard ~ PAY LESS ele NT TOG purity and det a, OF] HII and { Tete = RR I ADIs oS and save money! Bake it BEST with DAVIS NO. - V-Y 4], [e POWDER as 8 Adv.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers