HALL. PA. A QUARREL JS IPPIE Locust f message hopper” that around them, “That message for ‘Mr. Grasshopper’ is certainly meant for me,” sisted “You have objected name of last night Freddie Firefly “And you quarreled loudly marked “For Mr. they drew a NO (irass soon how being called by Why, Stop after you.” the know to ‘Grasshopper.’ yon refused to shouted it cried Leaper yourself you the Promise You That | Shall Trouble for You.” Make “you Lust - Chirpy ¢ the moos: ‘How-ds in your open promise rou thut for you if vou do bout You sant Val tthowed throng of it, 1.ocust CTHE WHY of SUPERSTITIONS By H. IRVING NG KI AN ITCHING NOSE HE ide iat an itehing coming is now mmon an w But it was was a announced the coming mn stranger, not { but by olfactory in the da Scientists idespread supers not alway the time when by itel [ge which {it ys of our primitive ancestors. tell us that p of smell were acuteness and that his if not possessed today lower animals remarkable for thelr gift of scent. Many tribes of savages retain to this day extraordinary pow- ers in this respect. Mr. Caveman was, In all probability, a rather high- scented ereature and when he went with a party of friends to visit the dwelling of Mr. Clifdweller, if wind was right, that gentleman could smell him coming a long way off, just as many of the lower animals today “snuff the tainted gale” and aware of the approach of their ene- mies they can them. Civil Hzation has caused the sense of smell modern man but though the has lost Its power it has retained its reputation by means of a popular superstition, (@ by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.) il Pormminamions GIRLIGAG.S the exer powers possessed rimitive well kept man's organs developed in gharp by constant use, tory powers were equal, rior, those sO supe to by the become hefore “ee to become atrophied In nose by The Balt Syndicate Ine) “Being a man of convictions 14 noth. ing to brag about” says pertinent Polly, “the rogues galleys is full of then, that the stranger had traveled a had a back, Furthermore, like Kiddie and cousin of either noticed long distance. he slung was And his enouch ier to be a malil-pouch over Leap one of A person couldn't see his horns, account of the hat that he wore, When this traveler asked about dispute, everybody hastened to the quarrel to him. Hstened carefully, and when on the ex- plain He he he said: “This you know I'o you know who has It “No!” Leaper the while Kiddie Katydid echoed “Ah! I thought not! or, “I thought not, have it in this that message—do now?" Locust the word sald the because 1 And zled n stran mail-bag I'm know which And he pul imself fanning hi must confess puz ivself ; for I don't one ft for." nded } and began led off hat it. It was that to perplexed perfectly plain everyon Locust ust was not The There was stran ' Jhe Hotel Srmoguapher 9 Roe Fulkerson. Hamu House A I do not like Hotel young Henry wl ars o> explained tl nond’s thie wtectl swered the Sten ing after a given her no use for a is somebody's son of ROE hoy who because he A lot of around Peaco veral of them turn SONS : ' loaf ck Alley here in this ho tried all down tel and se to make me, | promptly “1 play fathers [| never of them were hod carriers and some were preachers; of them small-town and some | of them were farmers. 1 never care IAve them whose of of lot heard with a of boys Some { them sSOme were merchants i ancestry. its papa and mama registered and had been In show the dog I like and nobody can plck ont their ancestors, anyway “A lot of boys think they can get i by In the world because of what thelr papas did, They may be able to get their money that way, but they can't get me, “1 would rather know a had taken a half-nelson on the world dnd twisted a living out of it for him- gelf. When I am with him I may have i to ride in a filyver but with g | everywhere a flivver Is good enough. {1 may have to go to the ‘movies’ In | stead of having orc hestra chairs In a | swell theater but the ‘movies’ | often better than the theater, anyway. | I wonder what certain rich boys would | have done if they had gone to publie | se hool and had a paper route? Would they spend so freely If they knew how hard a dollar Is to get? Every boy | I play with Is a possible husband and {I always wonder what father's son | would do to make a living If papa’s | money ran out and I was married to him. Nix! Give me a boy with a | union card and a good trade | (Copyright by the McNaught Syndicate, Ino.) wnssanmall, Jon Cause and When Eddie Laemmle making | “Spook Ranch” It was natural | that the boys got to telling ghost sto- ries. Finally some one asked a darkey who worked In the cast if he had ever stayed in a haunted house, “Ah sure has,” admitted the black man, were un bench hoy who rod roads Effect was only “But never again! “Why, what happened 7” “Well, sub, long ‘bout two In de mawnin' Ah wakes. up, an’ dar comes Mistah Ghost right through de wall, jes’ like dat wall wasn't dar.” “And what did you do?” “Me? Ah went through de other wall de same way." EE PAUL PANZER referee ferferfonforfenfenfenforferfonfenfoteffeelfe eee This well-known “movie” actor at- an officer in a Ger- then a coffee salesman then a comedy German, he became He has enacted roles in a num- { ground, He was man regiment, { in Brazil, actor. Born a American citizen brilliant musical an character ber of well-known productions. WHEN I WAS TWENTY-ONE A Joss RAYE At Twenty-one Senator Edge of New Jersey Was a Journal Clerk. A’ THE vhotit ’ Told by Irvin S. Cobb AN ECHO FROM 1865 J ZATHER guess they have 1} telling thi ne over since the % «i ver ir i hetweet I know hack as Puni¢ really glory never ties goes into re tirement for a season or a decade or a century and rises up again when occasion suits with with miracu- its ¥¢ lously restored Now may of Any age but to the best of my personal knowledge and belief It belongs to our own Civil war period I know 1 first heard it years ago from an old gentleman who had served In a Texas regiment from 1861 to 1865 } had almost forgotten it when here the other day a friend wrote me telling the same yarn and he had it from his father The narrative runs that In the last days of the war a rag wornout, { hungry. haif- dead Confederate | gler was limping along a { highway striving to eateh command, Where there dle in the he his brulsed and ant at the roadside dabbl { len the water a Union skir | misher, fed and lusty, stepped { from hehind a tree with his musket | raised to his shoulder and yelled out | exultantly : “Now [ got you!” ! “Yas,” drawled the Southerner, {a h-1 of a git yon got!” © by the Cantral Press Association.) this present story he you plea Se, saving that ged, strag Virginia up with his pud stopped bathe foot As he ing his swol Was 2 ruts to bleeding toes in well " an (& (0) by MeCiure Ne Waar Tyndicate.) LEAN MIXTURE IS CAUSE OF FIRES Carburetor Gets Out of Ad- justment and Then Mis- chief Is Done. fire™ “1 back at car take ward It pop sad suddenly ite” “What made ay out be “How did your don't know, 1 hg the carburetm ered that it w ft backfire Ir don't (digcoy ne on carburetor?” can't find a total loss.” He know We the car Is This Is no Imaginary fon because cars have burned in the past and will again in the future backfiring in the carburetor, CRluse conversal due Cause Is Lean Mixtuse. The most frequent mixture, This mixture than gets of adjun SOME WAY and the mischief is done A ixture Is slow-burning It cause is a lean air In carburetor means more The tment in usual out lean all during mm opens, hurns g the power back un Sticker on Windshields One Cause of Accidents Windshield object of the by the pecident ment of the ChieaZo stickers made the are iatest campaign conduct fon depart- Motor club ns in nll the result ed prevent “Chambers of commerce especially In the West, tourists stickers over their windshields with that visibility 18 decreased and driver is likely to an accident, ‘he collecting of stickers from vari- a fad, and Orga m of advertising should for the sake of safety.” and trail sociations, duce to plaster the Cause ous sources has become should be discouraged naing this for discontinue it The bulletin also of stickers reason that the drivers following, and because obstructed rear vision is needed by the driver in backing condenms the ¢ on rear windows, for these stickers ee the disconcert un ———— ———————— Spd P PPP d Phe Op SOL Pete POPP ET PPP PPP VPP PPP PLR Pde oH» we Sd Good Way to Sling Z Hammock for Baby % The Walsh county, #8 found problem that other a county agent in North Dakota for un perplexed whut to with the the family is mobile ride n solution has many a un do baby when auto his taking He de follows an » o ox ciibes dpparntus us “Take eighth-inch enough to re bow to of rope, enc uch from back of Into these two pieces three aroun other short about a foot the the two to make wide car pleces and body of rope at to the tangie nearly as is wide, the four four bows on the top. “Over this rectengle denim basket about two long This will make a satisfactory hammock and that can be used at any time of the year. The irried In it will be happler than In the ther's and the mother long Lenve ends corners us to tle fit a feet very one baby «4 lap will have a pleasant tr : PPLE IL III LEE BEBE SL Pood POLE P RPP PPP P PPT PP PPV PRP OV PUPP PPPPd A Rests Driver of Motor drivers Most rest the for Long Driver Cistance Les sens Strain of Driv ing. and Cause of Much Trouble 1L.oose Ye lot of tire fually come loose and 1} whole train u ~ © 1 Furthermore, those we oft ges are This end “wobbly down motorists with rm or on en tightened up unevenly in tire and maturely At pound both the to t what is referred to as a tread is w other ti rim get orm mes, the pre the tire oft doesn't and #8 hammer the pounding of the rim do particular harm, unless it bends but every blow on the tire canse a fabric break, and that is serious rims are dangerous, because make it hard to es result In ns should be may very lusty they change corrode tubes, and sometin the tire. Ri east once every six months paint on tires ing on cleaned at! Ordinary sometimes placed good practice, inasmuch as the paint and the tire sticks to the rim. bringing with them their 7 motor car. It is claimed LIVES ON FARM IN OKLAHOMA Happy Woman Praises Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound In a & herd of & i it it the thin woman in the che sighed as at them blue cked apron she looked She was , tired tedious work dairy “he tired of cook- for a houseful of boarders, be- sides caring for her own family The burdens of life seemed too heavy for ber failing health. She had lost con- fidence in herself, One day she began taking Ly Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound her general Beith began to improve. Bhe took it faithfully. Now she can do her work without any troub well and is no longer blue This woman, Mrs Cora El 8, Box 296, Oklahoma writes '! veryhbody now Short, 1 welgl {OOK bottles tired of cows of her in the rdia E. on and and road to be through the faithful 1 Pinkham’'s Vegetable Cow pound. Ask your neighbor, Have a lovely = Goin mu can make and kee a TES Little at mation t y Hl a Haneock Fwiphur (Comps a it -— for une wilh "Hancock Sulphur Compound 6 BeELLANS | Hot water -| Sure Relief BELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION 25¢ and 75¢ Pkgs.Sold Everywhere both An idler a watch that ants Builds up weak bodies ‘After what ir did for me, Tanlac has my unlimited praise and endorsement. 3 years of mervous in digestion had ruined my health and shat- fered my nerves. Tamloc gave me Serfect health again.” Mrs. Ed Graff, 232 Neo, th , Scranton, Pa. From Mother Nature's storehouse we have gathered the roots, barks and herbs which are compounded, under the famous Tanlac formula, to make Tanlac. If your body is weak and under nourished, if you can’t sleep or eal, have stomach trouble or burning rheumatism, just you see how quickly Tanlac can help you back to health and strength, as delay taking Totllas an- er y. top at your ruggist’s now and get a bottle of this, the goat ogee est of all tonics. Take Tanlac table Pilla for constipation. PROTECTS BRUISES Cover bruises and piber bey a skin with ane » Quic corhine JY a >