SAME PRESCRIPTION HE WROTE IN 1892 When Dr. Caldwell started to practice medicine, back in 1875, the needs for a faxative were not as great as today. People lived normal lives, ate plain, wholesome food, and got plenty of fresh air. Bot even that early there were «drassiie physics and purges for the relief of cemstipation which Dr. Caldwell did mei belive were good for human beings, The preseription for constipation thet he used carly im his practice, and which Fe put in drug stores in 1892 under the mane of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, is a Liquid vegetable remedy, intended fier women, children and elderly people, and they need just such a mild, safe bowel stimulant. This prescription has proven its worth and is pow the largest selling liquid Isxative. It has won the confidence of People who needed it to get relief from dackes, biliousness, flatulence, indi- Raila, loss of appetite and sleep, bad h, dyspepsia, colds, fevers. At your denggiel, or write “Syrup Pepsin,” Dept. BB, Monticello, Illinois, for free rial botide. — - i Acar — we — — - There Is always room at the top, Luk in case of fire It Is better to &e at the boliom. Tog much to eat—too rich a diet— gr too much smoking. Lots of things cause sour stomach, but one thing can casrect it quickly. Phillips Milk of Maenesia will alkalinize the acid. "Take a spoonful of this pleasant preparation, and (ue system is soon sweetened. Phillips is always ready to relieve wlistress from over-cating; to check all axiidity ; or neutralize nicotine, le- member this for your own comfort; for the sake of around you. Endorsed by physicls but they ai- ways say Phillips. Don't buy some- thing else and expect the same re sults ! PHILLIPS Milk of Magnesia When competition ceases, “federal eommissions” will be asked to regu- late. ' those Cold Need Cause No Inconvenience Singers ean't always keep eatching cold, but they can get the Best of any cold in a few hours-—-and #0 can you. (et Pape's Cold Compound that comes In pleasant{asting tablets, one of which will break up a cold so quickly you'll be astonished. — Adv, from One Americanism is to assume the man is guilty because he hired such a swod Ilawyer.——San Francisco Chron- fcle, COULD NOT GET OUT OF BED Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Strengthened Her Elkhart, Ind "1 had a tired feel- ing and was unable to get out of bed without the hel of my husband. We heard of the Vegetable Com vound and de- cided to try it I am still taking it and it sure is a help to me, I ean do my work without resting i before 1 am y through, I know — wr {hat if women will give the Vegetable Compound a trial they ean overcome those tired and worn-out feelings, 1 cannot ex- press the happiness I have received and how completely it has made over my home.”—Mgs, D, H, Sent, 1326 Lawel St, Elkbart, Indiana, BRR ANOTHER ! ¢ ’ i | $ 0 . —— aL RD. J Walsh y TY (CQ by ID you call her Roge?' idly asked the visiting flapper, arrunglog her saucy bangs. Betty giggled. “Yes, she looks more like an antique, though.” Rose, clipping dead leaves from her window box overheard them and flushed painfully. The description wus flagrantly unkind, for she wus got quite thirty, but she was old enough to realize that twenty-nine seemed old | to seventeen. Yet the careless refer ence burt and the reflection that her { unmarried state had cowe about | through sacrifice and unselfishuess | didn’t seem to give her the moral sup { port It should. After all, youth Is the | time to play about and Rose's youth | had been spent generously of her time {| and strength, First Alice, who bad | come back nn Invalld widow, and late; | her small son, Ed. Men aren't apt to | Invite a gir! out when she must be ae {| companied by a child and, because of i her loyalty to the beloved sister who | had passed on, had done wore { than her duty by Ed. | “Antique,” repeated Rose to herself, | “not an awfully attractive name | She glanced at herself in the mirror, | not the cursory Inspection she usually gave to sure her lLalr had not { strayed from its pet, but a real look. A few moments later she Lawmned | away, an astonished expression In her | dark-blue eyes. Then laughed: | “Looks as though I'd taken myself too seriously. After all, a fiveyear old boy oughtn't to cause me to under study for the anti-man soclety. [I look entirely too strong-minded and I'm of { the feminine type that requires a few { frills, [ wonder if that could have | been Ed's reason for saying 1 needn't i bother to take him to Sunday school | yesterday—he adores beauty. Rose didn't turn {| ¢lean pantry that as she'd | planned. Instead indulged her | self in some needed personal repalrs— beauty secrets, in fact, that must not | be revealed. | “Why, Auntle Rose, you look so dif- { ferent,” was Ed's frank comment when | he awoke from his nap; “let's we take ia walk and let the boys you can~—" | A laugh { iy the wearing her ruflled blue dJimity that | deepened the exquisite tint of ber | corn-colored hal iich was, for once, waved an arranged, “I'd that," coaxed Ed, longing the merry-go- round In the carnival grounds. Rose mentally consulted ber budget i She had half a dollar over aid bad been unable to whether she'd use it for a new basin for the kitaken gink or a Both were needed. Perhaps it as the holiday spirit ailing, possibly UH g of well-being pro at any rate, evening Ea ou the Rose make she " out afternoon her perfectly she see interrupted him and short two strolled downtown, lose eyes on decide broom. badls genera pre was the gay feels duced by her appearance; she consented and that was one of first riders painted steeds, my horse harness,” he boasted, as gently put of his chubby feet in the too-dong stirrup, | wou needn't hold me on, Auntie Rose, I'se & man, nearly. With an amused glance at the | gaudy bits of green and red tha! dec ! arated the prancing horse, Rose with ! drew and joined the circle of spects tors. : They were leaving when there caiue | a sudden commotion and the sheriff | arrived. A pocketbook had followed the carnival and a man had been robbed of a valuable ring. The depu ties searched some suspected men | and some feminine trinkets were found and restored to the owners bht, of the valuable ring, there was po trace. There was some talk of taking away the license and the manager had trou ble in getting his troupe away with out fines, as the main thief had been one of his tent men, a new employee who had been hired the previous day and whose references were forged. Rose had felt sorry for the bar | assed manager and relieved when the sheriff finally released him with a | warning to be more particular in hir | ing strangers. i “lI don't see how he could be { blamed,” she sald, later, when relat. | ing the happening to her next-door neighbor, “Well, a body would expect to be robbed like that. The head of the carnival ought to be made responsi | ble,” replied the other. “Most folks | don’t get more than one ring In a lifetime—~you haven't done that well, | Rose,” he added, twinkling eyes on the slim left hand of the girl “I'll give my Auntie Rose a ring.” Ed, sleepily listening, dug his knuckles into his eyes and got hime self fully awake. “Here's one 1 found on my horse. 1 didn’t chew the gum, | though, 1 thought there might be a germ on It" “Germ,” scoffed old Ellas, have the child a siksy, Rose! harm does a germs or two do?” : “You got this on your horse? How?" demanded Rose, staring at the gum. encircled object that Ed had dragged from his pocket, “Why, | was digging at those pretty Jewels, but they were stuck in hard and 1 just happened to touch this wad of gum some one had left. The funny old ring was In It.” “Isn't that what they eall an ‘an. tique,’ Rose?" demanded Elias, staring | through his bifocals at the qualntly- the has Jewels on Its drawing away, “See, his aunt one “you'll What curved setting from which she was digging away the gum. “1 belleve It's the ring that was stolen,” cried Rose excitedly, rubbing away at the ruby. “I've read that sneak-thieves sometimes get rid stolen property by hiding it in chew- obvious place” Old Elias yawned: *“Taln't Let the boy play with it, found ir.” But, already Rose had snatched her purse, recklessly putting into it the coal money from her budget box, She was thinking of the expression in the eyes of the manager and she couldn't rest untill she found him and stored Ed's find which she felt wus the missing ring They've gone, dance, William Hkely. lose, re- tose, and a good rid- Maybe I ought to have held Blake. It may be he's split on the stealings,” sald the sheriff. “Why, do you want to catch him? Miss something yourself?” “y explain pow, 1 want know where 1 can reach him by tele phone,” ne, can’t she cried excitedly Mr. Brown, I'm sure is luno- Ed found a ring tonight.” “Jump in,” he briefly he cent, unswered, can't make those vans” Hose whose troupe much speed the bonnet stepped Into mild-appenring cealed the engine of a racer and they darkness, at William spair con off 70 miles an Elake gave a gesture of de he the sheriff: to arrest me,’ 1 suppose, Mr. “Dan't be I've to talk to you,” grinned won. She wants another descrip m of that ring that was rom the stranger in It was to Franklin night, Alt the Blake of confidend sped into the hour. us Saw hasty. to iy ou af ® i £ town" beside the sheriff hough she had ruby and any suspicion of bel sy £3,000 cleared ng in the on the path for Will the Interview, thing that hing more another ring. gratitude had, deepened into leading to u's gave promise of enthralll * a definite arrange very se BO had seeing and nent for Rose ni that was sald he was a good and, as he drew smartly the tage, he chuck | acting awful honest, after him with that fun ng, but 1 see you were uiatin’ to make ar - quite all RuUesser before though 1 Rose, racing ny-l ; ri Jes® co yt were » “ : calc Prized Collection of Early Silver Dollars An exhibil of interest to numisat isis, ng and to the general public the display of 1.600 doliar size sliver pleces coined by 420 states, principalities, cities and religious bod ies over a period of more than 400 years The collection, housed in the lobby of the Chatham Phenix National Bank and av. New York, G. Kaufman, and is said giiver histori is Trust comp property of Lon dent of the bank, emplify the dollar size since 1456 Although presi {10 ex- entire of in every part of the werld coitage silver has been coinag until colus of denomination 1456. Then first silver dollar size struck for the province Tyrol by Sig lsmund, archduke of Austria pieces were called talers similar coins were adapted to the cur. ff the ™alers” Talers is still Yiddish term for a dollar; 'n Denmark they were called “"dalers”; In the Netherlands “daaided” ; lero.” and a dollar in Siates The equivalents «in tussia and Spain were crowns, five franc pieces, rubles and reals, respec tively. old shiver colns were once made by hand. The metal hammered into thin slabs of requisite thickness and after the impression of the dies had been made on the face and reverse each coin was cut out sep: arately with hand shears. Many of the coins in this exhibit are not cir cular. Some are rectangular; others have a general rectangular shape with rounded corners.—New York Times, the United These Comfort for Old Men Those of us who are old have one comfort: we knew the fine old fash. toned women. How modest, engag ing, lovable, they were! But modern young men are com- pelled to go with girls as knowing as actresses, and wearing almost as short skirts, How delightful the old fashioned girls were! We old fellows knew them by the hundred: we knew the delights of love as modern men can pot know It, The old fashioned girls pretended to believe in love, if they didn’t; but modern girls are as wise as widows were in m3 youthful days—E W. Howe's Monthly. Inquisitive Deer While twelve deer walled on the eleventh green of the Greenwich {Conn.) Country club, two bolder ones approached the clubhouse, climbed up the steps, ran through the lounge room, out to the opposite entrance to the veranda where several club mem. bers were having breakfast. The deer then made a leap from the veranda, landing on the first tet of the golf course, and disappeared, running In the direction of Cos Cob, where the herd outside joined them for thelr report of their Investigation, Popular Ensemble | Again in Picture i | Importance of Matching Ac- cessories Is Stressed in New Duds. Once agein the ensemble note has | beens sounded for the successful up pearance, Each season brings its new in accompanying chic and the season also expresses smart. Color schemes are always Important stresses the various colors irowns ushered in with marked success, richness of these shades makes them becoming to all types and there range In the shades. The dark but rich tones In brown are most favored while lighter belge cinnnmon tones are seen in se nying articles or in entire cos the uau- season wide very compan fumes. Blues and blacks are next popular. in a wide selection of shades many interesting ensembles violet, mulberry and purple mark Wood Gray Satin and Georgette Frock; Accessories to Match. of the costumes, but It Is usually lighter or brighter the color schemes Gray, too, i ipunied by a for contrast Dawson, in the is seen, accon ghnde Doris featured “movie™ selecting =n ensem film, “Heart Trouble™ which stresses the ime of little things. Miss Daw. son has selected a gray satin and georgette frock with a bunch of violets on one shoulder wora to match handbag and slippers of violet color. Miss Dawson's coat Is of gray cloth trimmed with platinum fox collnr. A new note In styles Is seen In the fur less cull, neliress, for an outfit smart Lie chione the Tweed Cut on Youthful Lines Tailored sults with short straight Jackets of youthful ine, wade of tweed and beavy kasha mixtures are taking the place of the informal sports Under the Jacket Is worm a silk blouse or knitted sweater of gay mod Only in the detail of collar and skirt do the new suits vary from those of former seasona. Collars stitched than the mannish Skirts in many Instances have a being stralght. One important piaits In the new tweed and kasha sult models, Slippers for Evening Are of Crepe de Chine Apple green slippers have a lead over every other color as the favorite for wear with evening dresses of white or pastel tint, writes a Paris fashion correspondent, The slippers, to be quite correct hy newest standards, should be crepe de chine. Mauve and powder blue are also favored shades for evening shoes end there are some plok slippers worn with white frocks, The shaded shoes are usually court pumps without buckles or trimming of any kind. Flat handbags, of a shade to match the shoes, ndd to the effectiveness of the costume, Silhouette That Flares Prescribed by Fashion If you're wondering whether dresses will be distinguished by a solhouette that flares, you'll find that many of the smartest will. One especially chie ver. sion concentrates fullness on one side or at the back of the skirt, leaving the rest of the silhouette slim and strafght: then there are flares pro. ceeding {rom the hips all around the skirt or in one place oniy; and tiers, seen in tulle and satin evening gowns, usually circular In cut : Jabot Effect Is Carried From Shoulder to Waist prot. An unusual dress, mew this season, Is of brightly printed orchid tissue velvet. A jabot effect iw carried from the right shoulder to the waist where It falls into a sach, On Rearing Children from CRIB to COLLEGE w wv » Compiled by the Editors of “ CHILINREN, The Magazine for PARENTS" Respect for personailly is one of the prime requisites of culture. The best means we have of ineuicating Ri ia eur children is through the eon siderution we show them as in dependent and sovereign persons to i you would know your children weil, take them on hikes; hew muck they observe; test thelr endur- ance of minor inconveniences aed thelr sportsmanship, my misadventures that merriment and many radeship as they over the difficult whe poes gains much self discipl of self-control, and enriches life Immeasurably. RE There are create proofs of com another parent youth learns more his owe help one The with places. advent ine, child, choose those which do not pre sent many difficulties. You can find waists and underwear and pajamas that batten in front. Select stockings that are enough to easily ndiusted, and bultons that size bie enough for chubby fingers to hang ontv es they are maneuvered through the buttonhole. Ehoes can be marked se that even the youngest child can tell the right from the left. Bloom ers, If correctly ftted. are just os comfortable with an elastic band around th. waist as they are with a buttonhole band and are then quite simple to pull on and off, provided the front is marked. Some of the newer jersey suits for boys come with elastie in the trouser bands. The swenter walst pulls on and extends over this band, presenting a trim effect. foose be are In order that words may have de pendable meanings to an infant, his father and mother must agree upon a few key words which they will use consistently in bringing about the. re. sponses which they wish their child to make. A baby changes constantly. To each word addressed to him, thoughtlessly or otherwise, he Is mak. ing some kind of a response. While at first a word may be merely a sound, more or less pleasant, the baby very goon begins to differentinte among words and varies his behavior ae cordingly. When marking hems in dresses for the rapidly growing girl, make a line of measurement two inches from the hemline measurement, and crease on this line. Make a tihee-quarterinch tuck, and “then proceed with the reg ular process of hemming. When it becomes necessary to lengthen the dress, the tuck may be removed and an inch and a half wilt have been added with little effort The best book for children pub lished this year, nceording to a com: mittee of librarians, and awarded the Newbery medal is “Gay Neck" the hlography of a pigeon. (9. 1928, by Children, the Magazine for Parents) Lace, Velvet Combined; Ermine Is Also Popular Velvet and ermine are frequently paired in the season's fashions, The dressmakers put them together in dresses and coats for afternoon and evening, and one designer even shows a house cont of quilted velvet collared with ermine. The velvet, nat urally, is always black. Another pet combination of the dress collection ia velvet and real lace Usuully the lace is used for soft rof flex around the neck and at the cuffs Some houses show lace ruilles or printed as well as plain velvet dresses. —— If Kidneys Act Bad Take Salts i Bays Backache Often Means You' Have Wot Been Drinking Enough Water A When you wake up with backache and dull misery In the kidney region It may mean you have been eat ing foods which ereate acids, sys 8 well-known authority, Au excess of such acids overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and logey. When your kidneys get siug- gish and clog you must relieve them, like you relleve your bowels, rewmov- ing ull the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue Is eoated and when the weath- er is bad you have rheumatic twinges The urine Is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult & good, reliable phy- glcian at once or get froma your phar macist about four ounces eof Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the neld of grapes and lemon fulee, combined with lithia, and has been assed for years to kelp clean and stim- slate sluggish kidneys, also to neu thus often relieving Jad Balls is inexpensive, cannot in- jore and makes a delightful, eferves- cent Hthia-water drink. Drink lots of good wuter, INDIGESTION RELIEVED . « « QUICKLY Carter's Little uiver Pills sesist nature in its digestive * duties. Many times one of these Bode pills taken after meats or st will do woaders, especially when you bave overeaten or are troubled with constipation. Remember they are 8 doctor's prescription and can be taken by the entice family. All Devggiste 25¢ snd 75¢ Red P PILLS Besuty to Cray and Faded Hi Guo. und $1 et Dregriste he 'y Wino yr Chem. Wie Pateborae BY. FLORESTON SHAMPOO-Idex for mse in connection wilh Parker's Hair Balsam. Makes the hair soft and Selly. 0 ernis by mail or at = y sts. Hiscox Qbhemical Works, Patchogue, Ko X. Snake-Saving Campaign To save Barmiess snakes freem be ing killed by smal¥ boys, hunted by plenickers and’ destroyed by farmers, C. Edward Roefliriz, a €alifornis physician, has started the Herpete- society of California. Signs been: placed the read In society's educational eanmpaisn informing the pubife that the enly dangerous snake indigenous te the sinte is the prattier, and that al others should be spared because eof their economic value. logienl have along the Alcohol From Pest Bengal's pest, the water hyaemth, may be converted into power by a process that Bas been announced by the Science coliege of Calcutta, The flower, which Bas stopped many wa- terworks by its heacy gpewth, Is be ing used in eonnection with the gang wa tree, which alse grows wild 1a Bengal, and ean be oblained in large quantities. The new methods whieh have been worked eut te prodoce al cohol from the water hyacinth net only give 2 pew source of power, but will help toward elearing the water ways. Just for a starter—"Go™ — - When You Catch Cold Rub On Musterole Mustercle is works right > ad away. It may preventa cold from ing into “flu” or pneu-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers