RRR ATI A — —————————\ WRIGLEYS ‘after every meal” Parents .- encourage the Children to care for their teeth Give them Wrigley. Xoo eth Stngthens t ; the Jews Combats acid mouth. Refreshing and beneficial! Tragic Failure New York is America's gayest city— and saddest. Back of the tinseled glit- ters is ever the muffled note of despalr. We who are caught and held in its glamorous web are always consclous of the futility of lives around us. It is a promised land strewn with blasted hopes. For one success we see a thou sand miserable failures. And nowhere is failure quite so tragic.—0O. O. Me- Intyre, in learst’'s International-Cos maopolitan. URIDOC tad irhed CHICAQD =~ BOSTON ~PITTIBY S————— H ~ NEW YOR Limit in Loziness “That fellow Lopp. who loafs around here so much, is very lazy, isn't he?” asked the truveling salesman w “Eh-yah!" replied the proprietor of the crosxruuds store. “He's too thun- dering lazy to even pleasure in bragging about how to take hard he used —RKuasus City Star. Reading often makes a man full gvords thut he is unable to pronounce. Things used In moderation long time last @ There is no Better Heel Made SPRING-STEP A Bettor Heel to Walk On And for tho best shoe sole you ever hades USKIDE ~the Wonder Sole for Wear Untad States Rubber Company AND WATER SYSTEMS Write for booklet B tric and Setigine driven pumps water sys. tems for every need, The Goulds Manufacturing Co. Seneca Falls, N, Y. a, A One Secret of Beauty Is Foot Comfort Frequsbuy you hear people say, “My feet perspire win- ter and summer w put on rubbers or heavier foot. wear—then when I remove my shoes my feet chill shake Into the shoes this aatisentic, heal i n Full rections sg v Package and a Foot Base Walkin Pree. Address, Allew's YooteLase, Le Roy, N.¥. m——— A . W, N. U, BALTIMORE, MO, 18-1925 | | i {HHH HE | VAIN RED ROSE ONE morning in a garden there was n little Dewdrop that wanted to away from the sun's hot breath that it might stay in the garden ull lay, so it nestled close to a beautiful ‘ed rose and whispered: “Hide me wautiful Rose, in the soft petals of your lovely gown." get The Rose wus very vain and thought | only of her own beauty, so she told | little Dewdrop to creep close Inside and neste in Ler heart, for she wunted to keep it until moonlight flooded the gurden, when her lover the nightingale | would come to sing to her his love | song, Away down deep in her heart crept iittle Dewdrop, thinking that Red Rose | must love it to let it rest in Lier heart | and that when night cate it would | Lifted It in His Bill and Carried It to | Another Rose. | shine on one of the heautiful red | petals of the rose and they would be the most admired of all the garden | folks But it did not know the cold, valn heart of the beautiful rose and all day ong she kept Dewdrop from peeping once the garden, as it longed to i0, for fear of losing the Jewel she vished to adorn her beauty at night. By and Ly when the moonlight crept nio the garden and made almost ike day the big red rose opened and told Dewdrop to rest upon one of her oft peals into ir it “Tonight I shall be the loveliest rose | n the garden, for 1 caa see that none | f my sisters wears a jewel. How for | unate you are, little Dewdrop, to have ne near you!” Tust then the sweet tones of the rightingaie’s love song filled the gar | len and Red Rose swayed a little In he that her jewels might sparkle the moonlight and fake | breeze in When the the the most beautiful rose in the garden proud head and down nightingale flew closer vain rose she was indeed yw see what you have done !™ said the angry rose. “After I sheltered you ill day you repay my kindness in this way.” Never a word did she ask ibout the poor little dewdrop that ay trembling on the ground below, “Rose, dear Rose,” cried the dew- rest again on your soft cheek!” “Bend over, Indeed,” replied rose. “Wry, you foolish thing, I might break my slender stem. You have my evening by tumbling off | Helena D’Algy | f to her heart and had grown to love her deeply. “Love you!" “Why, exclaimed the ain silly little drop, 1 sufi that more beautiful nightingale came You muke night “shen sing to me.’ me the to amd gently lifteg it In his bill and car- ried It to another rose more fragrant than ted los- but not so beautiful. Into the very heart of the pale pink rose the nightingale dropped the dew. drop. “Here you will find sweetness sald “Here will 1 come the nightingale, the red rose hus no heart for love, is filled with vanity.” For her vanity and cruel treatment little Dewdrop the proud lover. (& by McClure Newspaper Syndicate. ) Beautiful Miss D’Algy is cne of the | newest “unds” of a popular producing to good advantage in the : She is regarded as one of the most | graceful women in motion pictures. THE WREN IS an omen of good luck to have bulid Its nest neur the with the exception that wren This, T I a house, bad luck to kill a wren, appears to be the only survival in this country of the mystic character which pertains to the wren in Europe and has so long tached to It there that Professor Fra- the ceremonies attend superstition to have very primitive considers the down from a rer ing “come wren paganism.” The ancient Greeks and Romans, the modern Italians, Spaniards, French Danes, Swedes, English and Welsh, re gard the killing of a wren as sure fo bring disaster to the slayer. jut not- belief the annua! custom of “hunting the wren” was, comparatively recent times, universa throughout Europe and exists in n modified form In many sections today, as, for in the Isle of Man where Stephen's day a wren is annually killed and buried after Its body has been taken around the vil lage and shown to the inhabitants The of Killing the wren differed slightly In different countries but was everywhere rather elaborate, This annual slaying of an animal con- sidered sacred and not to be killed at other times is a custom found among many peoples still living In a primitive state and was once common to primi such . 1 : instance, on St ceremony “Whats in a Name?” Br vuorep MARSHALL UCIT THELMA N° LIST of feminine names would ! complete without the lovely | Thelma. It is a Norse name, sug-| gestive of the mythology of the Land | f the Midnight Sun where Valkyries drive their gleaming chariots over the | battlefield and conduct the glorious dead to their appointed places in Val halla, Little was known of Thelma and seldom was the name used outside of Scandinavia, until Marie Corelli in her sensational novel of that nawe pre sented the tragic love story of a beau- tiful Norweglan who was transplanted from the land of fjords to the center of London's smartest snd most cor rupt soclety. From that time the number of Thel- mas in England and America were le gion, The name has had particular vogue In this country where the Scan: dinavian {mmigration is great. As a romantic and poetical name, Thelma is be A LINE O’ CHEER By John Kendrick Bangs. EE THE ROSE ——— "LI, never think of this old I earth As lacking utterly in worth Bo long as in some garden close I still can find the budding FORE Beauty and fragrance all come bine In one rare flower of grace, and kind To every passer-by with wit Enough to pause and joy in It @ by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate) beyond Scandinavisn and English speaking countries. Amber Is Thelma's talismanic stone, it will guard ber from all evil, espe clally from contagion. To wear it on a Journey will preserve her from accel dent, Monday is her lucky day and 7 her lucky number, {© by Wheeler Byndicate. Ine.) W——— f . Morpheus and Somnus Morpheus, the sneient Greek god of dreams, was early pictured as an old man with wings. a vial or horn from which Issued the sleep-producing vapor. Morpheus was the son of Somnus the god of sleep. The name Morpheus is derived from a form, and the name was given to the god of dreams because of the shapes or forms which he ealls up before the dreamer.—Family Herald, (& by McClure Newupapor 8) ndieats. SHH {tive man, Frazer says: | shipful animal Is killed | solemnity once a year death irried door that each receive a “The with and fr wor before after is c¢ ym door of portion of ti} we divine dead or dying god sions of this great place in Religious proces. must had ritual of sare have the peoples in prehistoric times If Judge from the them which ha we numerous irvived traces in of ve #1 lore.” & by M jure Newspaper £3 Your Health By ANDREW F. CURRIER, M.D. Synd SHINGLES HINGLES, also known as zoster, is painful and suppose be due to some kind of son, It is an acute, Inflammatory dis following 1 ¢ oft Layo» lnfecting ] he course nerve distributed over the skin It begins with general loss of uppetite, perhaps { and fever (like so many infectious dis eases) and with i the skin, Its constant {| eruption along i fected nerve, These blisters are usually only on { one side of the body, become inflamed, and leave scars which are sometimes prominent apd disfiguring. The disease occurs in children, young adults, and the aged, often per. | sisting with the latter for months and years {i The fever, with which It begins, { lasts three or four dass, the pain be ing sometimes and sometimes | gharp. the pain after the eruption appears, but recurs : from time to time great sensitiveness lo blisteriike of the in feature is a the course dull Sometimes subsides in the young, and often night, The is worse at blisters come In suppurate, discharge, and at scar over. length to draughts of cold alr, or mental or physical exhaustion, and may occur as an epidemie, { The fluid in the blisters is first clear and watery, then turbid, bloody and pteulent, and the resulting sores may resist healing a long time. On the chest the eruption follows the course of a nerve hetween two ad. jacent ribs: on the face it may result in paralysis of the side affected, and the eye may be destroyed by it. It re. sembles chickenpox, erysipeins and psoriasis, and Is most frequent in cold weather. A patient with this disease should remain In bed, and should fret and worry as little as possible. The bowels should be kept open with castor ofl or salts, and the diet should be simple. Including milk, soups, eggs, cereals, fruits and no meat, The eruption must be earefully dressed every day. and the blisters must not be broken If this can be avoided. Gauze moistened with alcohol, or any suitable antiseptic lotion, may be used to protect the surface, When possible, it is better to have the advice of an Intelligent physician than to depend on self-treatment. This is especially 'mportant with tae view of obtaining as little ultimate scurring as possible, (@ by “rorge Matthew Adams) HOW TO KEEP | WELL smn prin DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of “HEALTH" OO000O00000000OCOO00000000 tig 1936, Western Newspaper Union.) POPULAR SUPERSTITIONS *VYERYBODY who has read “Tom Bawyer” (and who hasn't) re metabers Huck Finn's cure for warts Tom bad warts on his hands, as most boys do. He asked Huck If be knew how to cure them and Huck, lke ail self-made doctors, said “sure” growing This was Huck's method: “You find a stump with a holler in it full of gpunk water,” he sald, “Then you go out to the stump at midnight in the dark of the moon and you back up to stump und poke hand into spunk water and say, three times, “Burley corn, barley corn In Jun meal shorts, spunk water, spunk wuter, swaller these warts,” and then you go straight home without lookin’ over your shoulder, "cause If you turn round, the charm’'s busted.” Belief in Huck's charm still per sists In a good many minds. It bas | always been cluimed that education is | for superstition Doc- | tor Rawlings, 1llinois sate director of | health, thought he'd find out how much ! belief In superstitions prevalled among | by 11 the your You tlie tHe the remedy So students Ten old superstitions were put up to | L500 high-school pupils, with surpris- | ing results, i Nineteen per cent of the puplis be | lieved that 1 madstone would prevent | a3 he Heved that warts could be removed by charms, all the way from Huck Finn's plan, the of | stealing your neighbor's dish rag and | the believed thant a in a twenty-six per cent to simple one tinder tweuty- { long harrel fence; per sent rain or Many believed In yere hoop snakes, others | i's foot brought good | 8 strip of tied | and cnr. i the i sure n ranhhi that Lt uck ground the that a red flannel neck potato prevented croup or horse chestnut } } 2 vl “ w the pocket would draw and cure rheumatism.” These are all remnants of the child i when J} in charms and curses, in race, everyone fairies | There's a grain of super ill of us, Most of grow older and wiser. | who do not, go to fortune tell 1 palm have 1 ofessors of phrenology”™ and | bes 1 Hs aver it, us we SiR, eir heads huy ments, them or what + 1508 v4 * % nedicines” for al their 1 without what all knowing s they are taking viedzge is power, but only Truly. knovy ith common ser se DIABETIC COMA EFORE the there discovery Of two as in d liabetes insull conditions 1} the These n were hat were recognized usunl causes | for coma were in To this, rk. must third—fallure to of insulin. ! Disbetic coma or unconsciousness is | the most dreaded event in this disease, the fear that hangs always over the | beads of both the diabetic patient and bis doctor. Many persons have had | a small percentage of sugar in their | urine for a long tim® and bave never | known It. Many PMfrsons. who have | known that they had diabetes, have | lived for years in comparative com- fort and happiness. But always over | every diabetic hangs this dreaded | sword of Damocles, suspended by a | halr. The diabetic patient has a hard life. He must rigidly follow a strict diet. | He must not only avoid overeating, | which most diabetics have been guilty | of, but be must also especially avold | sugar and starches, probably the two ! things he likes and craves the most fections and mistakes in diet sa vs Doctor Foster of New Yo now added a the necessary be Use umount straw. Or the harm may be done by an in- A slight cold, that in the quence, may bring disaster to the di- Whatever the cause, the body Is strained beyond the point of endur ance, the pancreas refuses to work, the sugar accumulates In the blood and cunnot be excreted, a condition known as acidosis or an acld condi tion of the blood develops, often with. out warning. The patient feels dizzy. tired and sleepy, bas a headache, breathes slowly and deeply, soon drops asleep, becomes unconscious and may never waken, Any of the common Infections, such as measles, tonsillitis, boils or bronchi tis, may produce this result. It is lm possible for the diabetic patient 10 dodge all infections and never to make a mistake in his diet, So every per gon with diabetes should be kept un. der careful observation. He and his fumily should be told the danger and should know what to do, If he sud denly becomes unconscious. The diabetic who finds that he has # headache, feels drowsy and has “air hunger” should go to bed, keep warm, avoid chilling, drink plenty of pure water and send for his doctor, who will probably give Wim Insulin at once and more water, If you have diabetes, your life de pends on your carefulness. If you haven't diabetes, thank God and don't avereal. AILMENTS OF YOUNG GIRLS Relieved by Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound School Teacher's Experience Evanston, Wyoming. —“‘A few years ago I had troubles every month such as girls often have, and would suffer awfully every time. 1 was teaching school and it made it hard for me as 1 had to go to bed for two or “ Jthree days. One day my mother sugges ted that I take Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- etable ey which I did, and it did wonders for me. fn the course of a year I married and after my first baby was born 1 got up too soon and it caused a displacement. This troubled me so that I could hardly walk or do my housework. I knew what the Vegetable Compound did for me be- fore so I took it again. It strengthened me and now I have five little kiddies. The eldest is six, the baby is five months old and I have twin boys three yearsold and a boy of five years. I do all my own housework, washing and ironing, and I never felt better in my life, I owe my health to your wonderful medicine and I recommend it to all my friends.” — Mrs, VERBENA CARPENTER, 127 2nd Avenue, Evanston, Wyoming. Hints for Housewife if a bag In the bag is sewn pens hooked anto in front a wire hook which clothes can be and pushed : out the cle . j thes. Give and your doubled FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a world- wide remedy for kidney, liver and ladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. HAARLEM OIL CAPSULES correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gow Meoat. 30¢ ot all druggists For aching teeth use Pike's Toothache Drops Money back without question if HUNT'S SALVE fails in the treatment of ITCH, ECLEMA RINGWORM, TETTER or other frehl skin diseases. Price Boast dru sta, or direct from A § Richards Co. Sherman.Ten — BAROLD SOMERS, 360 De Kalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. ¥. 300,000 Baby Chicks From free range, frees from diseases Socks bred eapeciaily for os production Barred and White Rock = R [I Reds $12.98 per 10% White Wyandotte. 108 White Leghorn jos Brollers “nme 5.00 ioe Live arrival muarantesd by prepaid parcel pom Write for oatalos LR WALCK. R. BR 3 Greeneastle, Pa RUB YOUR EVES? Use Dr Thempseths Brewster aR Fy Rie WEIRD CHEMICAL STARTLES SCIENCE, 20th century washing marvel Agenis makes $55.00 weekly, Write quick. Columbia Prod. vets Co, 1628 Calhoun St, Fort Wayne, ind Start Mall Order Business at Home Watch your saies grow, Cost Sc. sell by mall for $1.60; partteniars free. Capital Supply House, P. O. Drawer 1164, Washington, D. ( AGENTE WANTED BY MANUFACTURER, if you want a good paying proposition, are a hustler, write us for full information FREELAND H. C. P. CO, FREELAND, PA BOYS! GIRLS! WANTED Get a valuable premium such as a watch, dell rifte, baseball glove, ety. Tor *2iling only one dogen bottles A & J. Fursiture & Floor Polish at 35 cents each Bend postoard for informstion and list of priges CO . PRODUCTS 38 W. Kibon St . Chester, Pa issn EXCEPTIONAL SHIRT VALLE 0 white genuine imported English roadeloth Shirt, Neckband or Iapest long: point styles, collar sttachefl. Beattifal lus. ter and oustom made, $3.85 each, 3 for 87.58 postpaid. High class Broadway models, Each shirt guaranteed or money refunded prompt. iy. Bend money order or check. Ryery shin has written guarantees by this Jong estab. fished New York house regarding fit and workmanship, Also money refund clause re DAN" MERA Todi ERDASHER Broadway —_ Both NM, New York Wanted-<Mun in Your Sate, now employed, and making food, who will make a change to Increase his Income. Personality afd ine ustry are often underpaid. If you ate so tuated, investigate Heplies confid ve partie. W. WwW Travit Bisomington, Sri
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers