Note how it relieves that stuffy feeling after hearty eating. Sweetens the breath, removes food particles from the teeth, gives new vigor to tired nerves. Comes to you fresh, clean and full-flavored. you and your children if you have not already tried this unusual Our Monarch Quality Foods are not sold by chain stores. Reid, Murdoch & Co. Chicago, U.S. A. Boston Fiiteburgh Sew York Recht omer NOW FOR SALE 10-room home, water system, stables barn, | all necessary buildings; 162 good acres, part | timber and meadow, located finest agri. | cultural district of ( 3 Maryland, | en atone road. 316,000 nal terms. D. H. GARRETT, ELKTON, MD, Derisive Nickname The nickname “Jupiter Scapin” was | conferred upon Napoleon Bonaparte | by the Abbe de Pradt, in allusion to | the strange mixture of greatness and pettiness manifested in his character “Scapin” is knavish and th Mollere's comedy evish | valet in “Tes Four beries de “In short, w throug Epi a gent! i an ime posto; a rogue; and he fully de BOrVe Jupite pin, or a sor f Seamg npit son's Mes » penetraled and with THYW OY enresentative Over 2.400 Miles on One Pair Soles H. H. Roehrig, a’ postman of fe mond Hill N ¥. wore gs i of USKIDE Soles for mo aging 12 miles a day 4 weather on hard, rasping and the soles are still good for more | wear! That is USKIDE every time. JBKIDE—the Wonder Sole for Wear. It is made by the United States Rubber | Company, the world's largest manu- | facturer of rubber products twice as long as best leather. Tell your | shoe repairman to ri-sole your shoes | with USKIDE. Ask your shoe dealer for new shoes with USKIDE Soles —Adv, } Tas of | pe ave meng i — i Home Stayers You can appreciate the great change | in the lats hundred and fifty years when you remember that on his mid night ride Paul Revere found most of | the folks at home, Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 25¢ and 75¢ Pkgs.Sold Everywhers BLOTCHY SKIN need Pirnples black. Coll op A Tbe ae Resinol BATHE TIRED EVES ans er ry PASTOR, TOE prepaid, from 3 KOENIG MEDICINE CO, SOAS MN. WELLE BY. CHICAGO, Ii, ——— pe Cop— W. N. U, BALTIMORE, MO. 41..1925, ORD DRDRBRDROUOADORDRD LDA ALONG LIFE’S TRAIL By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, University of Illinois. RETREAT RR NAPA MT (EE. 1925, Western Newspaper Union.) BUILDING WITHOUT FOUNDATION RANDFATHER was a very re liglous man, and In general took the Scriptures quite literally, I think, however, he must have missed the practical application of the story of the man who bullt his house upon the sands, for when fifty years he constructed the old brick house which stands on the hill east of town, gave little attention to the foundation, The walls were of solld brick, the tim- bers were of onk. but the foundation was weak and badly laid. When I saw the old house last sume mer she walls were falling In, the oak doors were sagging, and the sills upon which the house was hullt were rot- ting, all because there had been a poor foundation. The house should have stood a hundred years as solid as the day upon which It built, if the foundation had been adequate. Peters sas thirty years old or more when he came to college, he was married and had a boy of his own. He had had a good position with the railroad, go that 1 was somewhat surprised to have him ago he was as positions go, in engineering. “What's the idea?" I asked. “1 started out wonderfully well when I left he sald. “I was advance for a time, and ns far as 1 ieational foun high school™ regularly I'd 1't the 1d higher, over ngaln and to fmt I ean bulid on am able,” gone the mast fons foundation he may hag one of nunerative posit road, now, and the wlll earry structure upon it he any the with Crosby + an architect, but It was wanted sore to he n 1 vork and took to but | way round then tid same way to be him- wife believe It was ther he meeried the in that they that order imiait necessary lege into a hig ve up col He went He had real talent foundation, tralping inadequate without further ing to get e of ened his absence, came bac foundation, than jus rress since then has mare J ithout n of training and sork, and this j th 1 he built = you has tried to teach ething or 40 persuade JE thi ng and as she had hoped. is “You can't ything.” By that there are learn for himself, to do sot wont Bn think zhe things one well that man nar teach this 1 neans some must mistakes, wall, and learn by doing. people must so learn, | am convinced. Corliss must. He has never had any faith in the doctrines which his par They are old-fashioned and behind the times, and eannot possibly understand how young people of today feel, When he went to college he could not see the wisdom of many of the college rules, he was not pleased with the curriculum lald down. Much of it seemed arbitrary, annoying and use him, =o he neglected what he did not like, and in the minimum time was fired from college, had to go to work which he liked even less than the things he was required to do in eol lege, and found earning his own liv- ing not so easy as he had supposed, He's not hopeless: he just can’t be taught anything, but after he bas knocked about for a year or so, he'll learn for himself, and will come back and take whatever curriculum those wiser than he have prescribed. Young people In general will have think out religious matters for themselves. Here again It Is hard to teach them. They must have experi- ence, they must do a good deal of reading. and occasionally they must think, and ultimately they will come to see that religion Is largely a mat- ter of faith. 1 don’t mean to say that it lan’t desirable to attempt to teach them seme fundamental things, but I should fot be discouraged If they do not at once take to the learning. In matters of love, young people must learn for themselves that love is not wholly a matter of emotion, but that it is best mingled with judgment. It Is inconceivable to a young person that people as old and steady as his parents were ever torn hy the passion of love, ever felt or could now feel the ecstasy of emotion that is surging through thelr breasts, or wherever the emotion does surge. They must work things out for themselves, If I ever learn to play golf, it will he when [ go out In the early morning and work things out for myself with. out any wise guys around to tell me how it's done. Nobody has yet been sbie to tesnh me anything. legs to fo § Jumper Frock in Fashion Picture Velvet, Having Touches of Color, Featured by One Paris Maker. outs tending is the varied An modes tones “phase of the new importance of gray In from a pale delle: e shade to 4 deeper tone almost gun- metal In color. Lanvin Is sald to be responsible for the of gray which appears not only in dinner and evening gowns and wraps, bur In charming little afternoon models of tailored genre, In two-plece jumper ef fect, In several Instances the material ehosen on the are touches lace, while ervstal frock, Jumper frocks continue to hold an important place In the fashions of the new season, In the originality of interpretation few models exceed those designed by Nicole Groult, who velvet, panne, and crepe de chine charming frocks usually accented a clever bit of decoration, motifs embroidered gold thread in porcelain beads, One of the vogue gray velvet Is cluborate models there of gray fur and fint buttons on a simple more of ert Jumper large appear ses with such n= in or most successful models veloped In black velvet of bright red velvet at the neck sleeves. Equally interesting Is other model also of velvet flects the feeling for combinations of black with pink with touches ni which BE 2 add Sa dtd broidery ls Prominent, erepe de chine and the touch of pink which appears at the bottom of bouffant sleeves. An interesting one-piece frock Is of the finest French flannel: It Is green it color, and embroidered stitches done In green, yellow, red and ether bright colors, add to its beauty, Fullness In front or at the sides oh- tained by plaits, narrow godets or panels is a feature. The plaits are posed In steps. Several Just dis- in che often entirely stray’ Embroidery Adds Color to Black Satin Frock oT i frocks for fall in either Smart severe all black, whi a colorful air. again at the wrist—are an feature of this frock of black satin. for day and evening glovves paterinls movements, at present this collection + & model Tailored Lines Liked for Traveling Outfit speaking fashion dictate two vustls lothes, But Generally hen it eler's ward and phases of « gsion of the to medium to a discu robe, they seem happy in forma perute reach a A ceria hewt 3 ittire ROVEerng a by rail boat is nothing better than the her In light weight or heavy, ated fo the Tweeds, If pot are ideal! fabrics—cheviot, reg twill and riuie to be hy traveling either And, there taliored or by lines, elt rding conditions too heavy fiannels are an- propr © These models soegsarily $15 ¢ s1¢1 ’ nve fn touch nif masculiing sinart fr AA APS NY A POINTS ON KEEPING WELL DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of “HEALTH” oT on “ ti, 1925, Western Newspaper | A DIABETIC CHILDREN d | HE di tirely persons it ha scovery of lnsulin has changed the suffering from dinbetes, ottiook While four proven that an been known for only about 17 it.ls t.t who and well dey body restored condition of of LOW hag whose uturity can be and kept in a through the constant ther the jong-continued use of this will, least, re the eloped to wlze has grown to health health fo ie in some cusses at diseased Creag to “island cells” normal ent ca condition n get along withot known. that be possible, indications this too early to make promi But SOW, how rage of treatment years. Forty Of those ¢ idren have eith crease the actual} that 1 disease amount decreased and Almost everything In ace of a is marked with an initial dx them In countless preity Little letters in gold or sil in enamel, are used card and vanity cases or monograms are wade and hand luggage embroidery done on lin robes de chambre has often an or monogram worked into and the latest fad is the initial openwork or embreidery on clocks, icles smart toilet or to letters The joy ely initial stocking Notes of Interest to Fashionable Dressers Women who really dressed today watch the way of fashion wear what they buy rather than what they pay for it, fashion correspondent in the Chicago Daily News. The two-plece jumper dresses of moderate the most popular. garments for fall They are being extensively purchased by college girls who set the styles for the younger set, but their chic is not measured by their price, The smoc® Jumper is one of the most popula¥ models at the moment. The British women's tailors have set a difficult mark for their com. petitors on this side of the Atlantic to shoot at il the new double-breasted tweed coats for fall. These garments are close fitting and reach about to the knees. The skirts show a distinet flare in the front, whiie the back Is without a vent, Scarfs continpe “5s be worn with practically every costume. One reason is that these accessories give the [it- tle Individual touch of personality which every costume needs. The large handkerchiefs are being used for this purpose with excellent effect, since they may be tied In countless ways. Bobbed-haired bandits find them pur ticularly useful and business-like. The decoration of the garter is no longer confined to the English peerage. In these days of short skirts nearly every woman wears garters and they are decorations also. As a result, many of the newer girdles and cor. sets are made without hose support- e¢rs, The girdles are usually of elas tle webblrg or perforated rubber. The younger set seems likely as {ur coats are concerned seemingly Fas been no loss larity of raccoon, muskrat, nutria and Many of the coats ard hor dered and collared In fox. A combina. the flat-haired antelope with beaver Is an attractive one There of for Gowns and Linings New shades of green, claret, bandor, a distinctive tone of blue, and black are the colors chosen by a Paris house whose models this years are of excep tional interest. Richness Is the key. npte of the materials employed and in the use of velvet In subtle deep color. ings for afternoon costumes is reflect. ed the prevalling trend toward a great. er formality than has appeared in the fashions of the past few seasons. mented upon as among the most suc. cessful of the new models, while the choice of velvet as a lining for wraps of crepe worn over crepe ks empha. sizes the growing fashiod importance of velvet In the modes the present hour, Slenderizing Lines Since It has been decided by fash. fon arbiters to have fullness various expedients have been adopted to main tain appearance of slenderness. One of the favorite ones is to have every line slanting to give length. The spiral also Is extensively employed, especinlly on evening dresses which start with only one shoulder strap. Very narrow ties are worn with day frocks, A REAL SNAKE DOCTOR HE teresting contain items fv between the article about son, Kan Joseph ha from more NEWSHUDOrs many in- ir those who ean lines this Jdaseph Girard of Atkin There's d suffered for many years rheumatism. Walking became and more difficalt, until at he was convinced that he couldn't walk at all. The doctors were’ not able to last wilk, that was all. One day he was wheeled out in the yard to get the fresh alr. He sat there in the sun, wishing he could get the way he did when he was young. ahout his eyes, dreaming of other days. When he opened his eyes, a large snake was across his foot. Joseph for. got ail about his wheeled chair and his eratehes. He forgot that he couldn't walk. He left rapidiy and on short notice, Physicians now say that he can walk without any trouble. Joseph says he can, especially nny snakes in the neighborhood. These are the facts, We printed in the daily press, Every physician of wide experience can tell you of similar in- stances, Many persons who think that they can’t move, do #0 easily in the presence of some Influence In which they believe enough or which startles them enough to make them move with out thinkiog. If Joseph had gone to a voodoo doe- tor or the seventh son of a seventh son, his recovery would have been credited to whatever kind of treatment he liad last, Does this mean that anything In which a person believes will cure him? Not at all. It simply means that when the body is otherwise sound and when only the will to move Is lacking. any- thing that makes the patient want to move worse than he wants to remain «till will enable him to move, whether it be faith or fright, But suppose Joseph had had a broken leg? The snake might have made him Jump out of his chalr, but it wouldn't have made his broven bone knit, Some afflictions can be ured by anything that the patient belleves in. mmr To Save Would. Be Suicides In Bx GAINED 17 NEEDED POUNDS Adding her voice to the thousands who are prajsing Tanlac for the return of health and strength, Mrs. George Hernigle, re. lates her remarkable experience with the medicine **To me Tanlae is the grandest medicine in the worid. It has not only increased my walght 17 Ibe, but it bas also brought me the best of health, 1 had suffered from nerwus indigestion. for five or six years and bad reached the point where it was cither £ot relief or break completely down, "When I began taking Tanlac I only waighoed 99 Iba, I couldn't sleep, felt tired all the time, and was often usable to do my housework. Since taking Tanlae I weigh 116 Iba and am a new person. Tanlac is also helping my little eight year old girl. It makes ber eat more and sleep better, and I consider it deserving of only the highest praise.” What Tanlac has done for others it can also do for you. For sale by all good drug gists. Accept no substitute. Over 40 mi) ion bottles sold Tanlac Vegetable Pills for constipation, msde and recommended by the manufac turers of Tanlac. TANLAC FOR YOUR HEALTH HAIR BALSAM Removes Dandruff Stops Hair Falling Testores Color and ee to Gray and Faded Hair oe and §1 00 ue Droggists Uber 'W ye WN HINDERCORNS Removes Com. Cal- ouses, ote. stops all pain, ensures comfort to Uw fosl, makes wa King eas ie by mall or at Drug | gists. Hiscox Chemicon! Works, Paichogue, N. XY. BEST for the Complexion The besuty of Glenn's is the beouty it brings to the complexion — soft, smooth, clear white skin, free of pim- ples, blackheads or other blemishes. Glenn’s 2s Sulphur Soap Coutsine 33% 7, Pare Selphur. At Druggiets. I EE ALASKA«fleiiabie complete i servioe for 1 year and I numbers | Alaska magazine 11.00. Money bac ten Pat hinder of Alaska Anchorage nformation lest rated k guaran A asin ri ORIDA nE AL ret ATE—We furnish eon. J tion on real estate inves: lorida exclusively atid shies handled Box $041 Miami i DON'T MISS THIS WONDER MURE'S GQUREATEST an Jumping Bean i orp id ~ 0 D DLDEN WEST SALEM 183 LOB ANGELES, CALIF | Make Your Own Malt and Hop Beverage with postage $1.25. GENESEE BEV. CO. 1849 Genesce St., Buffalo, N. Y. FLORIDA BARGAINS IN REAL ESTATE. Country and city homes Country estates farms, unimprovod land for prueking, pow. try, dairy, gen farming. Infor iy fur. hed. Putnam Realty Ce. Pdiatka, Pia nis MILLIONS CAN BE CURED of rheumatism and many other Sixanmas with Home Remedies after doctors fall formation free. BUREAU OF HEA LTH, Buite 1, $28 Vermont Ave, Washington, DC WHERE OTHERS FAIL for a snake.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers