Something Reminded Her of Her Duty “Today I am reminded of a duty that I have neglected, and that is to let you know how wonderful have been the results I obtained from the use of Milks Emulsion. Nothing could have been more beneficial to me than your Iimulsion, “In the winter of 1817 and 1018 I had a severe ease of pneumonia, and in the spring of 1919 I took a cough, I was doing some summer work to prepare myself for a college, but by the time school epened I was too ill to attend. I finally went to bed for the rest cure. I galced a little In strength and got up by Christmas, but my cough never left me, and 1 caught cold very easily and it would take & month to get over it. “Fioally, In September, 1020, I got a bottle of Miiks Emulsion and wrote you for instructions, to which you re- plied promptly and for which I thank you, I followed the Instructions care- fully and soon my cough began to disappear. I was able to sleep better than ever before and my appetite was fierce, I could not eat enough. I gained In welght slowly but surely, but continued the use of Milks Emul- sion, untill I am a well girl today. “I went through the entire season without a cold or a cough, and I came back Into the soclety circle and played all the big affairs without any ill ef- fects, About a month ago I neglected mys¢lf and took a dreadful summer cold and, being at a house party, I cold not care for myself properly. But as soon a8 I reached home I flew in on my old standby, Milks Emulsion, and within a week I was well. “I have recommended It to many and If at any time I can be of any #elp to yor company by telling what it did for me, let me know. Sin- cerely, MISS KATY WALLER, 401 Argvie Ave, San Antonlo, Tex.” Sold hy nll druggists under a guar. antee to give satisfaction or money efunded. The Mliks Emulsion Co., Fees Hante, Ind.—Adv. Root: of Spruce Tree Valuable to Campers modern campers have to much fine woodceraft, as the Only under the most un must know without matches, Not know vor Indian did, usual how to fashion dishes out of birchbark, Pat there little wrinkie that coma® in handy. lings are forever Besding mending the greatest tack is fo ope, tw . OF gimil in mind that the tree make an The spruce has very little taper. These easily be salvaged from dead and fallen trees. The outer bark of the roots can be eas! wed, ond the inner root and smooth, circumstances they make fires is one somethls t efore it is well to keep roots of the spruce substitute, with excellent long roots can ren is glossy For most purposes they can be used as they are, but If intricate binding or tying iz necessary, they may be soaked in boiling wate: for a few moments, when they become as pliable as rope. Held Stationary in Air Caught by nn vigorous ascendin rent of air at Antonio, Texas, $rivate John T. Bush had the experi ence of ny i g cur Nan tting stuck on a parachute Jomp and hanging stationary in 1h air for approximately a minute and a half, Ile and six men leaped from the same plane at the Bush reached the earth 100 seconds behind his companions because of the upward current. other enlisted same moment. Seoming Contradiction Fgnoran Les at the of ail human knowledge and the deeper we penetrate, nearer we arrive ante fr. Colion | Mothers —Tw Mild i Children’s Musterole Of course, you know good old Musterole; how quickly, how easily it relicves chest colds, sore throat, rheumatic and neuralgic pain, sore joints and muscles, stiff neck and umbago. We also want you to know CHIL- DREN'S MUETEROLE—Musterole in milder form. Unexcelled for relief of croupy coughs and colds; it pen- ctrates, soothes and relieves without the blister of the old-fashioned mus- tard plaster. Keep a jar handy. It comes ready to apply instantly, with out fuss or bother, bottom the MD Better than a mustard plaster HH NERVES: Ju Pastor sNervine Has Been Used Successfully for over 40 years, by all Drug Stores, Ask for FREE SAMPLE : KOENIG E CO. 1045 N. Wells Se. CHICAGO, ILL, ALLELE REEL EM LETT TTT CONSTIPATION RELIEVED « « +» QUICKLY Carter's Little Liver Pills Pu ely Vegetable Laxative Plo Spe A CARTER’S Iii PILLS JUST HOD, BUT WORTH WHILE (© by D. J. Walsh.) HEIR minds opened rapidly. Neither had been to town except on limited buying and circus trips, and sidewalk knowledge is not like that gleaned from the inside of homes, To be sure, Hod's was only the In glide of a cheap boarding-house; but that was something, and he talked with his fellow boarders, and had good eyes and a pretty sound heart and a mind behind them. Even though all he wanted was Lizbut, he soon re- alized that she could expect more than could be got for $100, which he had planned to earn for the wedding, Up In the mountains she had been a beauty, the object of all unattached men until Hod came between, Down here she was a beauty still, even among the greater number and more adorned. Hod was not surprised, but he felt worried that admirers here didn't seem to care a whit that he was between. And especlally so was it with big, blond kHarnet, a floor walker in the store where Lizbut bought her first hat. Two evenings later Harnet went with her to a “movie” By this time Lizbut was coming into her own. Close questioning of her parents the fact that her true name was Elizabeth, and that a La had been dropped by her father as superfluous. He even hunted up an old letter, after which she signed her- self “Elizabeth Latrobe” in the crude hand that a night school was Improv- Ing. At the same time she made Hod evo.ve his to Its rightful spelling “Houghton Burrows." But Houghton Burrows eared little for a name just now, He was having his big fight, In which a sound heart won above de sire. He made exhaustive Inquiries about the floorwalker, then enlisted. The morning he started for the front he posted this letter: “Deer Lizbu I'm off to fight, which 1 can likely do pretty well, con siderin® I'm so big an’ strong an’ can hit anything In An' Lizbut, I've found out. Harnet 1s all right ile's eddicated fine an has good folks and Is a A girl couldn't find this well, so 1 done It for ye “Mebbe | bound to get into a lot mean I'm bound to try feel like fightin’. “An, Lizbut, don't think I'm whin- In’ when [| say 1 shall be thinkin® of yet all the time when I'm tussiin’ with them Germans, That has to be. Like- ly ye're more beautiful with the proper dressin’ an settin off, for they all say so. But ye can’t ever lock any more purty to me than ye did up in the mountain, barefoot. 1 try to think of ye back there, “All of don't net's the best man for ye, out, an disclosed sight, gentleman out very won't come mean but Har He is, I've know, So good which threshed it by. Hod" He was to a training camp ut he was pathetically eager to go forward, and made his one thought the ftting of himself for It as rap idly as possible, Soon, even the dull est of those over him recoghized In Hod the making of an unusually good soldier. When finally he went he Wore on his arm the rank of sergeant. A month later he was in a trench. jack on his mountain the sight of a squirrel, of an occasional bear, of a game bird zigzagging across the sky or through a brush tangle, meant quarry If he desired it. A scattering cover of quali was brought to bag by a swift, cool shifting of his rifle muz zle from side to side, the last being sometimes brought down almost at the timit of vision. . This helped him in his man hunt- ing, as did the knotted muscles of his big arms the hurling of bombs. Denth was of jittie moment, so unexploded bombs of the enemy were caught and hurled back with a coolness that often made of them a boomerang suc- cess. Also a mountain hunter Is al ways wary, and the wariness stayed with him here, not as a caution for safety, but as second nature. His Ht tie squad of the command dropped out one by one, and were replaced and re- placed again. A bullet went through his shoulder, a bit of shell entered his head, a hand-to-hand charge left a frightful cut on one Teg. He was car: ried to a hospital and came back, car ried agnin and came back." All the men Immediately about him became new faces, and then, with the excep tion of two or three, changed to a third set of faces. By that time he was referred to as authority and given extra work and danger on that ac- count, One night a number of them crawled through the mud, dropped into an enemy's trench, fought a while there and then slid and wormed on to another line of trenches, into which they tumbled and fell, But the enemy was too strong for them there and searchlight rockets began to cross the sky or explode overhead, making visible the wud covered assailants, They fought des. perately and those who could strug. gled from the trench in retreat. Hod's muscles and huge fists and coolness soon cleared a space which enabled him to throw himself from the trench. Just beyond the ridge he stumbled over a form. , In the confusion men of several commands had got mixed together, but a flashlight showed this form to be In khaki and a sudden movement that it was alive, Without hesitation Hod grasped and flung the form meross his shoulders, sent then stumbled on. Shot and shell spit covetously nround him, Something strung a fleshy part of his rounded arm, a plece of shell struck his rifle barrel and slanted away with hissing Impotence, Then he sprawled head- long Into his own trench, his burden falling on top of him, When he regained consclonsness the body was still there and In his wenk- ened conditicn he rolled It off with difficulty, “Stop that!” whispered n protecting volece with a groan. it's cowardly to maul me now." that soft mud's Just I get to feel a little stronger, though, I'l look over your wounds an’ see what I can do.” There was a “You the fellow who brought back from the trench?” “Yes, I'm to blame.” “Saved my life, of’ course, ought to thank you, lieve 1 do, as ensy, then: me short sllence, and 1 for a day or two, then he shook off to a hospital for a cutting and perhaps be able to take part of What's in It?” “Country — humanity” “Every ounce In us, you know. be you can get enough away from the hospital to stop a bullet from a better man. Who knows? a little something, It seems, an’ we're both men encugh to clench our teeth for more work, even If it's mike pincushions of our bodies to held fragments of bhurstin' shell” acquiescing laugh, which short by a spasm of pain. “Right you are,” he gasped. go back for another hit obliged.” A light sent wins overhead into burst directly its glare down trench, ing above the bank dropped quickly my. Hod had turned his face up and the glare fell upon it. His companion uttered a surprised exclamation “Houghton Burrows! I've looking for yon” “For " the other's face, been me But after the bright glare the darkness was blacker than ever Harnet the know, You talked Elizaboth~—and-—~" “"Harnet! harshiy floarwalker, with me You . # about Then why are you here?” “There are others for this work know it? Why'd you leave her? Did she Did she let you come?" “Told we to—but 1 was coming. anyhow It was a mistake —on part. 1 was merely a little dot In har friendship. You gre the whole world in her Of course, didn’t hint that, hut I eonld see. Nor did she suggest | try to find you on myself And-—if you Your love, she hud if vou didn’t yourself that way now. full of patriotism, siart has grown talks In the Red Cross through It all, under it all, she Is looking And. Burrows." an ness in his voice, “I may come ont of this and 1 may not--I think 1 shall, to do another bit, as you say. But wheth- very” fast She even gives society, all, bes for you. to go back to Ellzabeth when they no longer need you here. 1 feel that have done you. both wrong. uncon sciousiy, and 1 want to do a little to- ward making It right. Youll go back?" A terrific storm of shell came from the enemy's batteries, seeking out what the search rockets had revealed. Big chunks of bank were erumbled here and there, half filling adjoining trenches. One shell burst over a store of ammunition and was followed by a deafening explosion, with dirt hurfed fifty feet into the alr. When f(t set- tied down there was no trench below from under. Then he dug out his companion. Yor half an hour the up roar went on, then came a lull, The enemy was sbout to make a dash to complete what the shelling had left. Hod bent his mouth to Harnet's ear. “If 1 get through It” he promised, “I will go home. And I will tell her about you. Now clench your teeth again, but 1 must ift you up on the bank and then throw you ncross my shoulders. In ten minutes the butch- ers will be here to kill whatever is alive” The next day intrepid Red Cross men found them and they were token to a hospital. More shell was in them and Hod lost an arm. Harnet, recov- ered, with the use of all his limbs, and returned to the front. Captain Hod was sent home-to Elizabeth. Marvelous Showing of Insensibility to Pain Silver hooks, to which were at. tached small weights, were thrust into the flesh of Indian religious devotees at a recent manifestation of mortifica- tion of the flesh at Umbilo temple. One man had 8000 hooks thrust into bis back, chest, and legs. No sign of pain was shown, and when the people were examined the next morning there were no marks where the hooks had been Inserted. Some men skewered thelr tongues with long silver pins: others wore sandals in which the feet rested on hundreds of sharp inverted nals, No blood flowed when the ping and hooks were withdrawn, and when the devotees threw off thelr trance-like state they became smiling, normal In: dinns again. The trance is achieved by fasting for a number of days, with introspection and prayer.—Lohdon Tit-Bits, ‘ Minor Details of Much Importance Innovations in Collars, Cuffs, and Belts Attract At- tention. Fhe progress of the winter fashion detalls than writes a so-called minor are of much nppeurs on fashion cor respondent In the New York Herald Tribune, Indeed, with elegance so firmly established fn the mode that the can no longer itselt two schools of elegunce apd the differentials between various collections must come in Incidental details. Some of the hmiportant of these incidentals are interesting to uvbhserve; how dif ferently the several designers Inter pret current fashions while stil ad hering to the sume undercurrent. Pos surface, divide the tion to detail than Worth, and his explanation of the themes which he is offering for winter will give a charac teristic slunt on the season's smartest detalls. Says Jean Charles Worth : “The whole, 80 runs the malbemat- ical formula, is the sum of its com. ponent parts, and any critie of fash fons who views a collection of a mod couturier much gitention to the detalls of Wns stiown, for by their und Hew neceskarily pays the Ingenuity ton influence the trend of that mode. Marked Changes Necessary. *There is, naturally, first of all, the sithouette, but since the sil houette changes slowly, due to the fact that contrary to general opinion women are not ready W take up new tion evolute slowly and gradually. fashions three or four for = nge the “8S 8 yen it Is necessary designer (oo make innovations io de ” $ use of combination of gynusual! fabrics, an ex ifion of essentials, or thing else that Lis busy and fertile mind can ation characteristic of my perhaps r, Is the and iy on coat Those vars most of t} fl some point and » ine modified wa «J ure first chan are smaller and thus contrast cuffs weless hiplength jackets In vn plerigis Caracal B/N aon the contrary. used formerls besigtifully with the new are added 10 many hese are particulars prom fh On afl CrIoot velvet 1 use slees fine embrol ¥Y on tn son] lace or georgette or chiffon, salin gowns crepe de x ne and you occasional Russian Influence Noted in White for Winter Resort Wear, ly see a jacket of the same material, while over a black velvet gown | have placed a contee of white georgette em. broidered with a lacy design in black and gold, or | have used a lame Jacket over a chiffon frock. “As a study In the contrast of ma: terials I havé used deep cuffs of heavy fine luce culls reaching well above the elbow In gowns of satin or crepe de chine, moire ribbon as a trimming on Jersey or velvet, narrow strips of dark felt on beige earacul, ns well as on the tweed frock which the caracul trimmed. “Since enlors rule the mode this sea: son, | hinve used many vivid bits ot Jewelry to make contrasts. On heavy blnck velvet evening gowns | have either placed jeweled shoulder straps, collars of pearls or glass begds in brillinnt colors to decorate the back of the decolletage, placed hands of beaded embroidery across the decol fetage to contrast with the skin of its scintillating colors on shoulders hips to cateh and refléet the Hght, “Genlos may be the result of taking paring, but taking pains, to my mind, is nothing but attention and the gowns of couturiers which are usually a success gowns simple to details, the foremost are those in Hine and proportions which have some outstanding and new detail that atiracts the fancy of the beholder” Predominance of Black. Following the autumn showed a the France predominance of black leaders of fashion, Velvet was far aig away standing Tab ric and ut Longchamp its nu merical popularity custom of yeurs racing season in among the the out medium wis almost two to other fabric, The Goldwin-Verdor wore an Arghan velvet ensemble trimmed with golden seal at Longchamp. The long cont wus sli flared and followed the twin houette theme, being cot on precisely the sume contour as the frock underneath, The few worn during generally of ion or a yellow, One over any Baroness coats and sults racing season were navy, vermil hue of greenish Invariably these coats and were trimmed with light fur, One black broadcloth coat had an im collared the sapphire, new dusty suits Tailored Tweed Frock of Beige Has Afghan Red Trimming. portant and fore collar the Other dull standing shawl fs covering solden beige lamb cosls were ed off front epening d fox or with black in and mink were 18 He roti also mapioyed for draped or straight also on black chiffon velvet or on the popular artificial silk i made up in conts or diap velvet in cantdresses ane Some straight costs seen at Long champ were trimmed with tucked in sertions down the back and under the hip pockets, The straight coats of Mad eleine Vionnet were leather belted and had a flat spiral astrakhan {rill deep to the waist ai the side opening and an astrakban shawl collar and cuffs In a tone of warm sapphire blue a most new paquin broad cloth coat made frequent appearances, it had a back drooping frill placed ov waistline, interesting with a broad gray fex band at standing collar and A very narrow string belt of bine cloth with a leop and bution fastened at the walst, Sleeves Wider at Elbow. Paquin's new coat sleeves, widened out at the elbow under a vertical group of tucks on a popular black cloth coat having a furtrimmed circular frill at the rounded off front opening, were also exploited by Longchamp notables, as was the fur bracelet band placed ubove the elbow of certain coat sleeves, Among the tailleurs a grayish navy blue cloth, speckled over with white, made into a rather long hip jacket edged with cross fox, dreoping down at its flat back and flaring eut in front over the godets of the skirt por tion, was widely worn. It is a Paquin medel and has a fox square-cornered stand-up epllar and deep, pointed fox cuffs, . From Paquin there also appeared a black broadeloth suit with a Russian blouse flaring out at its basque and edged with black astrakhan, Its front opening was closed up In a slanting ling going from the right side of the neck 10 the left side of the waist, A draped toque of the same far was worn with it Sports coats of mixed tweeds, made of interlaced putty and negro brown wool threads with panels of tucked insertions slanting down the back and under the side pockets, and elaborate beuver collars found their way fre quently into the 1 mp course, Buttimed-up. knltted wool cardigans were worn over flaring crepe de chine skirts and light blue, brown, green or red knitted wool jumpers had darker Vaudyked and losange designs across them, matching the Ondamoussa sac hip-cont and sideplaited skirt worn with them. gray fox MONARCH QUALITY FOOD PRODUCTS eet the standard. HM you pid a dollar 8 pound you coul/ buy better food products those you find packed u the Mosarch label, Psid, Murdoch & Co. Established 1853 Generel Offices, Chicago, HI. a Turn From War to Peacs Heligoland, the rocky ind that was the Gibr Xorth itur of coutited noth rine m high, Germany, once ing but new {nes uipment guns or sub additions to | of &a new aquarium naturalists and thelr observe thé ways of North pen fish and the technique of diving = %# and sea birds features of the us valuable Now |[t neq boast German wateh {ine of pew build fireng tank large enough te Attend the Party In Spite of Cold! Don’t despair some day your social calendar is full, and you awake with a miserable cold. Pe rid of it by noon! you know the secret: yes, even one that bags reached deep In the throat or lungs. —Ady, Electric Plows in Italy eeriri b perating 58 than of the The Darned Undarned we darned %! exciaimed s he threw them * de ey're 1 darne 1 » growled Cincinnati Enquirer. and Mr. Powell says: “1 AM a circus clown and about two years ago began to have severe attacks of in- digestion—1 thought i HOT ave 0 give i . 1 lost weight and my appetite was bad.” (Anvone who has suffered of indigestion can under- stand just how Mr. Powell J “A friend told me about PE-RU-NA, so bought a bottle and started taking it. I have now taken three bottles. My health is restored and my work R ieusate. (For over 50 years, PE-RU-NA hes been the key to a renewed health and vitality for hundreds of thou sands.) “An earcost desire to others prompts me to make this statement. Signed) Albert Powell, Louisville, Ky. " PE-RUNA user is always a JE-RU.N4 All druggists have it; get a bottle todey.)
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers