a Don’t Let That Cold Tura Into “Flu” That cold may turn into “Flu,” Grippe or, even worse, Pneumonia, ua les you take care of it at once. Rh Lo Mustaroleth the congested ham see how quickly it brings relief. As effective as the messy oldmustard plaster; does the work without blister. Musterole, maftle from oil of ustard, camphor, menthol and other simple ingredients, is a counter-irritant which stimulates circulation and helps up the cold. . You will feel a warm tingle as it en- ters the pores, then a cooling sensation that brings welcome relief. Better thom a mustard plaster Was Your Grandmother's Remedy For every stomach and Intestinal {lL This good old-fash- loned herb home remedy for consti- pation, stomach ills and other derange- ments of the sys tem so prevalent these days is In even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother's day. Coat, All Right, but— In hurrying to answer an accident call, a Kansas City (Mo.) hospital In- terne put on the first coat that came to his hand. It was a fur coat well suited to the chilly outside. After the ambulance had arrived at the scene of the accident, and while the doctor was treating the imjured man, he became aware of the curious glances of bystanders, He closer at the coat he was wearing. It was a woman's coat of muskrat fur belonging to a nurse at ‘the hospital. On its shoulder was a red flower. blasts looked DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN Aspirin Marked With “Bayer Cross” Has Been Proved Safe by Millions. Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 26 years. Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv, Midget Pony pouy in Baltimore that it is feared that its hoofs would split if were put on it. The animal, eighteen months old, weighs pounds and only 18 inches in size the extinct whose bones have been found in the ing to Popular Meel —————————————. A is so small shoes though only 56 high, five-toed in horses West, accord anics Magazine, You never can know how superior is Dr Peery's "Dead Bhot™ for Worms until you Rave tried it. 372 Pear! St. N. ¥Y Ad, Heredity “Dear, I'm broke.” your old man.” Times-Star. Your friend may love you fondly and still think your advice Is of neo account, “So's Cincinnati Special Offer Indigestion Poor Distressed Stomachs or Money Gladly Refunded. You can be so distressed with gas and fullness from poor digestion or dyspepsia that you think your héart is going to stop beating. Your stomach may be so distended that your breathing is short and gaspy You are dizzy and pray for quick relief-——what's to be done. Just one tablespoonful of Dares Mentha Pepein and speedily the gas disappears, the pressing on the heart naturally. Oh! What not get gether? blessed rid of such attacks alto- Whny have them at all? where guarantees Dare's Mentha Pep- gin, a pleasant elixir, to help you or money back. ———— a EH EE Wn Wy IST gist for it. 20 cents and one dol« far. Write for FREE SAMPLE. Northrop & Lyman Co. Inc.,Buffalo, N.Y. YSCHEE'S SYRUP B 4 Th Sa ABOUT THE PELICAN call lots of things parties,” sald young Peter Pelican. "I even call birds are so ordinary but not a peli- “A pellean is unusual. Perhaps some more queer ones like ourselves about. them. “We are different looking. We have derstand. “Then we have beautiful white feath- ers and we're dressy and important looking. “Our long, long bills are so un- usual. Now some animals and some people look so much alike. You can't tell them apart very well ut there is no mistaking a pelican, “You might see two little birds be. longing to quite different families and “We Have Such Long, Golden Brown Bills or Beaks." one belonged to which family, “You might forget the family “When I was but a little pelican and bill I thought that was a called it a party then and were I a it a party. am not as young as all that. I am white now. Of course the brown pelicans are brown still! they have that family name, handsome birds, too, birds, too, but I cannot help but th I'm handsome. And I'm really conceited about It as I give credit to “They, have good Now I call mealtime a party. all pelicans do. “That is the way I think stomachs should be. 1 think it would be sad to look at food one wanted to eat and not be able to eat it because one's could not hold any more, “I wouldn't call it a party If such a thing happened to we. I can eat all I want to eat. “Then I call it a party when I swim. Swimming is such fun. 1 swim easily for my nice, webbed feet can help get the water mighty quickly. “I'm like a person who hurries out to the market snapped up and I am ¢ for 1 would hurry along that my ’ too, appetites, stomach RO generous sized me through before everything gets ven superior to such a person faust ' market cou from me! I call splendid party. “Then home 1 eail it a when have party we a nice Island for wy We or home many of us make a home together, Know And in case If you live in big colonies, you roa) you may not know, you do not koow 1 am telling you. birds It was which looked that distinction and difference, “The pelican is unmistakably a pell- can. But ties. Well, It is true, as [ sald, 1 call lots of things parties. we decide for We aren't so we won't see when and settle “I eanll KK a we'd like to party travel full of local pride that “At least we will go atraveling and decide upon will be off, going toward what we have decided will be our new home. But at the present moment | am sleepy and every pelican I've had a good meal just recently. Yes | must sleep for all the other pelicans are asleep. | call an after-meal sleep a good now (Copyright) CTHE WHY of SUPERSTITIONS By H. IRVING KING or SS Og OP Eg PO AT { WHEN I WAS | TWENTY-ONE BY JOSEPH KAYE } i a ssi 15. SASSAFRAS WOOD N SOME parts of the country they simply say that it Is bad burn sassafras wood In tions they go more into details and say you must never burn this wood, for, if It cracks and sputters in the burning some one will die. The sassa- fras was formerly called saxafras and thus appears to have become mixed up In folk-lore with quite another genus, the genus saxifraga, the “stone- breaker” of the Romans, As the saxi- frage commonly grows in rocky places forcing its way from the interstices of the stones, it was considered by the Romans as a cure for calculi, acting by sympathetic magic. Both In the sassafras and the saxifrage medicinal virtues have been ascribed from time immemorial and from time Immemo- rial the saxifrage has been considered a mystic plant; its mystic qualities have been communicated along with {ts near-name to our common sacca- fras, formerly saxafras. When sassa- tras is mentioned In modern folk-lore it may mean either sassafras or saxi- frage. Ome legend connected with the gaxifrage is that when that rather hazy Hungarian king, Chalba, after a Aeld strewn with his wounded he was miraculously directed to “try sassa- fras” and, plucking great handfuls of the plant, cured 15,000 of his men by fts application. To use as firewood a plant possessed of such mystic and therapeutic powers as the saxifrage was naturally accounted among the an- clents as a crime; a destroying of a gift of the gods and therefore calcu- fated to bring bad luck to the de- stroyer. The bellef that the cracking and snapping of the wood as It burns Indicates a death comes froin a natural association of ideas. Every crack and snap calls attention to the fact that something is then being destroyed which might save a human life; something that for want of which some one will die. Thus the current superstition regarding sassafras In- herited from saxifrage. (® by McClure Newspaper ®Eyndicate.) esses Poston Belgian Women Active Women are going into politics In Belgium. In the province of Liege the little town of Waret-I'Eveque pre. sents a number of woman candidates for municipal office, There Is a split in the ranks of the men, but It is sald women vote enmasse for thelr sex At 21-—-Donn Barber, Famous Archi. tect, Had Not Yet Started Learning His Trade. 6 T THE age of twenty-one | was at Yale, from where 1 grad uated a year later. I wanted to be an lllgstrator or painter but my father out-argued me on that point. That was in 1803, the year of the worid's falr In Chicago. 1 had a friend out there who invited me to visit him and I went, intending to stay a week and then come home and look for a job. “The whole scheme and the build: ings of the fair fascinated me so much that I stayed a month, studying them and asking questions about them, and when I came back East 1 knew what I was going to be. 1 found a posi tion with distinguished New York architects, But I found I was not even the beginnings of an architect, but an office boy—Donn Barber.” Mr, Barber, one of this country's greatest architects, won nine medals at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, where he went to study upon the ad vice of his employers, and when he came back he began a distinguished career. Many of the famous build ings In the United States were erected by him, Including the beautiful Con- necticut State Library and Supreme Court. It was he also who built the demonstration residence for the Bet ter Homes in America campaign, and which was erected In Washington, back of the Treasury building. This home was modeled after the pattern of the original John Howard Payne cottage, a very handsome structure, containing seven rooms and two baths, and costing only $15,000, (® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate) ENTRE HALL. PA. AARP PEE SELL PIPPI POP PLSS Natalie Barrache Natalie Barrache, known as the “most beautiful Russian,” has arrived | in this country to conquer the screen. | She has been famous in the film | studios and on the stages of Moscow. i It was only a year ago she was pro- | nounced the “most beautiful woman | in Rusgia” by a committee of dis. | tinguished Russian artists, producers and writers, LE A Ee WHAT THE GRACIOUS HOSTESS SAYS: By DELLA THOMPSON LUDES NEE Ae WHEN CALLING certain fanda heerved will thing by the wental rules which make the bered brief visit a to be remem and incite her to u desire, perhaps, for fur ther pleasantly hostess, courtesies Do fuss your courteous, affable, pleasant, and show her by your interchange of not gush or make a over hostess lo visd Do your without not chair about and uncrossing Do not sip or talk too much about your own affairs, If there are in a8 room, carry ot wriggle or twist Sit evenly crossing and knees half a dozen times, on quietly, your Kos. several persons and Talk what In do not buttonhole one a private conversation, quietly with you can generally, and lerest host ess Woinen Do not aitempt to Kiss your unless she makes the sdvince of good breeding do pot often kiss each It is a pretty « check, but abused other in publ in Nelther should ustom greatly be ifestations of one promiscuous affection in any way. the utterly unbridied, senseless affection like “sweetheart” “darling.” and similar words, the ef feet to one who really cares for words is nauseating. The too-familiar clerk who calls youn “dearie,” and the wom an who doesn’t care any still calls you “sweetheart,” are on a level. Words and hands should: keep their places, and then, when they do steal away to pleasured uses, they will mean something, which is what they do not do, used promiscuously. When the time comes to go, get up easily. Shake hands with your host. ess, make some pleasant remark--and go. The people who are always talk. ing about going and are the last to leave, are dreadful bores, “Stand not upon the order of your going--but go at one,” is a motto that many a hostess would be glad to have framed and hung over her door. Never overstay, It is better to have your hostess wish you had stayed longer than have her regret that you stayed so long. If there sre any elderly people In the room pay them special deference. If there are very young people, treat them as if they were grown up. Give them a word or two of real conversa. tion, and do not “talk down" to them. They hate It. If a caller arrives before you, as hostess, are dressed for the afternoon, receive her in the dress you have on rather than keep her walting. (Copyright. by The Eastment Syndicates.) O Has Hearing in Whiskers Doctor Mannich of the University of Minnesota digeovered that the ca’. erpillar. of the morning clock butter fly hears through its whiskers. He found that by carefully singeing the hairs of one of these creatures, or by otherwise putting them out of com: mission, the caterpillar failed to re spond to sound stimull. He also noted that these caterplliars respond. ed to sound when their heads were cut off and that relatively small sec: tions of a dismembered caterpillar showed that they could still recognize a sound stimulus, ipsam Prams In That Sense Mother (at midnight)-1 wonder if that young man can really support our daughter. © Pather-~Well, he can certainly keep her up. Headache Neuralgia Colds Pain Lumbago Rheumatism Safe proven directions. Made Business of Affairs of “Honor” the alr For weapons as wel A Budapest needs, time and pin § layer supplied and in time developed quite business with seconds reads $ hour, « An army oi called upon at any very early on vor this om did not fa carrying irrying ont duels in to court on the money for organizing duels, The law no when ry ingignant Cautious Man joes seem, Hobert Patriotic Roman The first 1 Brutus, the famous Homan, his own sof 1 enth for disohey- a orders du If a miniary campaign, according to an answered question in j.iherty From Years of Suffering If you are pearing the tragic mo- ment when good health will slip from you; if indigestion, nervousness, kid- ney disorders and ailments caused by run-down condition torture you, ben- cfit from the experience of Mrs. Fanny C. Martin, 1907 Frederick Avenue, Baltimore, who says: “Without exag- geration Tanlae did more good for me in 2 weeks than all the other treat- ments that I tried did in 2 years, “Chronic nervousness and stomach disorders caused me to suffer terribly for a long time. I wasa nervous wreck. At night I would lie in bed and ery and worry about my troubles, bot real and imaginary. My kidneys were in bad shape. And biliousness both- ered me a great deal, wearing down my strength, making me feel sluggish. My condition gradually became worse. I was face to face with the grim truth + « « My health was slipping beyond my reach. And I almost gave up hope of ever again feeling well. “Then Tanlac saved me from long rears of suffering. I feel stronger, look setter and younger than ever. I don’t know that I have any nerves. I can eat everything without suffering. 1 pr #, - er £ . am enjoving life more than I have in years, if any one doubts the true merits of Tanlac, I am the living answer to their question.” Good health, vital strength, free- dom from pain and suffering are the gifta of Tanlac, made from roots, barks and herbs according to the famous Tanlae formula. The first bottle of Tanlac shows amazing results, Ask your druggist for Tanlac—today. More than 40 million bottles sold. io Cuticura Loveliness A Priceless Heritage For generations mothers have been using Cuticura Preparations for ell toilet , and have been teach- ing their daughters that daily use of them clear, smooth skin and healthy hair They find the Soap pure and cleansing, the Ointment sooth. ing and Beosng, should any irrita- tions arise, and the Talcum an ideal toilet powder. EEERES ———— year’round a digestible
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers