WHAT DR. CALDWELL LEARNED IN 47 YEARS PRACTICE le A physician watched the results of constipation for 47 years, and believed that no matter how careful people are of their health, diet and exercise, constipa- tion will occur from time to times Of next importance, then, is how to treat it when it comes. Dr. Caldwell always was in favor of getting as close to nature as possible, hence his remedy for consti- tion, known as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Foie, is & mild vegetable compound. It can not harm the system and is not habit forming. Syrup Pepsin is pleasant. tasting, and youngsters love it. Dr. Caldwell did not approve of drastic physics and purges. He did not believe they were for anybody's system. In a practice of 47 years he never saw any reason for their use when Syrup Pepsin will empty the bowels just as promptly. Do not let a day go by bowel movement. Do not sit and hope, but go to the nearest druggist and get one of the generous bottles of Dr. Cald- well’s Syrup Pepsin; or write “Syrup Pepsin, Dept. BB, Monticello, Illinois, for free trial bottle. You Must Wear Shoes vy ¥ ¥ UT DO they hurt? Do your feet smart and burn, corns and s ache and n w They won't if yo lions of others are de Allen's Foot = Ease in y¢ takes the friction from the shoe and makes walking or dancing a realjoy. Sold everywl here. 4“ ‘Allen's Foot:Ease of = good without a Free lrialpackage and a Fe Fors Walking Doll, addreas Allen's Foot= Ease, Le Ray, N. Y. or Old Sores Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh Al duslers ate authapbted ts vebund rast maser for the first bottle if not smited. 8 % We have no salesmen. Bank references. THE PEXEL CO. Food Products 119 N. 4th St, Camden, N. L a ———————— CHILDREN WITH WORMS NEED HELP QUICKLY Don't delay a minute if your hild has worms. They will destroy his health. If he grits his teeth, picks his nostrils— beware! These are worm symptoms. Disordered stom- ach is another. Immediately give him ifuge. It has been and 507% of earnings. Write for circular. Frey's Ver- vege- rs worm t wait! yur dru Frey’ & RR iTugs Expels Worms Lots of folks who think they have ‘indigestion” have only an acid condi {lon which could be corrected In five yr ten minutes. An effective anti-acld ike Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon -ostores digestion to normal, Phillips does away with all that sourness and gas right after meals, It prevents the distress so apt to occur two hours after eating. What a pleas ant preparation to take! And how good it Is for the system! burning dose of soda—which Is bu! temporary rellet at best—Phillips Milk times its volume In acid Next time a hearty meal, or too rich a diet has brought on the least dis comfort, try— F 7 rs THE STORY Hilton Hanby, York merchant, 19 country place near Pine Plain Miss Selenos, former tenant of the Gray hous varns him that the houses In 1 rf y urther alarms. ing di 2 are impressed upon Adolf Smucker, Hanby's secre- tary, by a man w claims to have been chauffeur for Sir Stan- ford Seymour, former occupant of the place. The Hanbys laugh 2ff the warnings, as some form of practical joke But they nre shocked when they hear that the caretaker whom they have put in charge of the Gray house, a man named Kerr, has been mysteri- ously murdered fianby consults his friend Pelham. The family starts for the new home, Apple- ton, a clerk of Douglas and Smith, the agents from whom Hanby bought the Gray house, explains to Pelham, that a dan- gerous pond near the house, in which several children have been drowned, been filled In, but he sunde Hanby from « house. Hanby that the to prosperous New purchased a Gray house, ho has since urges Pe care CHAPTER IlI—Continued J first with a It was his fa man hen Death with marked emphasis the unsoci: qu which Red What he h was opportunity to see price on hi had reveale alitles with heen dowered now see-—the loose mout um, the shuddered a “What d thr t. Tf Si-10r little cholog “The n prob 1h Red, ai shan't got he wit this tima that he did not tice until car slowed down to pass Amenia he had again mi Gray’ “Wow !” he said. a mil on, “you missed ths leas was cri ne the axed the than an “You exaggs “It was hurry have They time, " news not speak aga Hanby ions surp! concerning Leslie uth to whom Celia gave val of her time, “les is a peach™ “If 1 way Cells ugar “I've nlor warm: iy. were he, wouldn't stand 1 bet next vinegar.” that,” Hanby returned “Thats’ not unusual. [ did not mean that. Is he ¢ eourageon Would he be a useful man lo a tight place?” “You ought to have seen the scrap he put up ngainst a strong-armed waiter that tried to put him out of a roadhon April! The walter was an old heavyweight pugilist, and he certainly could punish. Les knew he was outweighed and outclassed, and hance to duck: but he isn’t He he aves, One day she's ‘ v and the seen 181 se last that sort of a mother's boy. was out for twenty minutes.” “That's interesting.” his father com mented, “1 didn't think the languid Les had a fight in him; but you don’t expect me to approve of a rowdy boy being thrown out of a questiofhible roadhouse, 1 hope?” “It wasn't a questionable piace” Junior retorted. “You've taken mother there. Les (sn't rowdy—he's just fas tidious. He complained of a big Ay io his coffee. That roused the waiter to fury. and he said that Les could bit he had to pay.” why his father Leslie's gameness, in sn unusually Junior wondered should ask about Mr. Hanby was thoughtful mood. “You're pretty husky,” he sald pres ently. “What do you weigh?” “A hundred and seventy stripped,” Junior told him, “My weight to a hair, much, is he?” “He and Bill weigh a hundred and fifty-five stripped. Why? Going to promote some boxing exhibitions 1” “Nothing like that” “What's on your mind, dad?” “Sherlock Lupin, it would take more than your admitted skill to find out. because 1 don't know myself. | apolo- gize for It. For the first time, the Gray house gave me a shiver as | passed it. This murder was the cause, 1 don't revel In crime, 1 hate It. | {ike people to be happy and harmonl ous, Something inside me leads me Les isn't so The Mystery of a Haunted Mansion - By — Wyndham Martyn W.N UB Copyright lervice by Wyndham Martyn almost Invariably to dependable peo ple. 1 wouldn't have picked this fel low Red Chapin to have watched dog pound, if he was half as bud as you say. | took that man Smucker over with the business, the d—d, dirty anarchist! 1 caught myself c¢alculat ing my forces If anything unpleasant happened up at the Gray house Bi Pelham would tackle a tion single handed. He's been proved. I dered a little about Leslie.” “Dad, you don’t think anything wrong with that new place? wob rently there's ‘I'm Not Ge of It by Any Ru inn Be Frightened Out de Old Woman" story, It to prevent the a blessing same he nu honest wale “Dina” sald Hanby i conscious of 133120: resently is wife's unusunl depres sion, “if you are scared at the pros i'n nego enos wie par and despises ow up there, Miss ionthes pect of going tintlons with ticularly What about 1177 “Think twice before Bill Pelham warned her “1 haven't even scen the pia she sald, smiling. “I'm going te be frightened out of it by any rude old woman, Hil, 1 believe the bot tom of all this mystery. ot going to rob my Housatonic manor! “Housatonic?” “What's that? “Hil's real name, called him Tong.” “It's a new one on me,” “Blame your Aunt Selina Hanby declared. “She got me going with her California rivers, 1 tell you that old haz hus a face like the Furies She may be mad and vindictive, but open Sel yOu answer ! ce yet’ not she's at Fm og of his Bill queried, At college you said Bill for it.” . her mind whim, 1 don't suid | und nhout there's something on more than a passing hut Dina meet disaster, here's some my ure house know ghouls death my pleas iy." away “We shall in the pl right, She ruin, stery Dutehes “Nothing will keep me now,” Dinan usserted. four able bodied even in 8 Coun have men ice al the sunnier “Four? “You oid her hus not band dem counting nnded fourteen-year bodied nre Tim you?” “There and BIL” “Me? “Of slon, as un able male, ars will be you, Junior, Leslie Pelham cried On your nothing to company reorganized in the Dunger calls, and we need you. alrendy picked out your suite” “Dinn, you are taking grent chunces Even dull-witted HII, the to scen: the danger, that in love with you.” “That You shall work, to hi dens course ! awn do confes youve until you fall I've is last kuows I'm rmankes you 80 much the safer I'm crazy old-world gar mun with the belleve me Ive some You stately shall be my hoe. y ul ‘Where are “1 promi inquest. My ¢! interest in or on here and now.” sald Bil gn or i » going? yoo sed to tell Tim Hidren have Don't ahout the ne »«d at Hanbg joke As to there and §+ » mixed ug fle *1 hate gloom : When | first saw the house, gnid, ‘Here ig a plod re people have been § Pretty her, Bin “Your family will take ing.’ i he other spoke a ar apps rotten pie eh the nN “Dina wi as ever nd Cell guess Curee t stynsll ipplly «8 my interesting conclude your detective » minded sleur! dollare a da During the day | shall be ijef to Dina. At dusk | detective. I'll get = in case 1 have to make won't be a very Dat oni” he iy “Cutgide dramaticn win thful house be watching -the si whose meager pay is five mple and exiras hoe man in ¢} am the house deputy’s badge, arrests.” There wos a knock on the Mary Sloan entered. (TO BE CONTINUED.) door, an Physicians among the ancient Greeks and Romans utilized the bee's honey in preparing their medicines. [In fact, the manufacture of candy traces ils origin back to the days of Hippocrates, father of medicine, who lived in the Fifth century B. C. In those days doctors’ remedies for human iis con sisted of doses of bitter herbs. In or der to tickle the palate of his rich patients, Hippocrates smeared a little honey on the edge of the cup contain ing the potion, and later on coated his pills with similar substances, thus com forting his patients and, no doubt, also increasing his fees, Little did Hippocrates think that he was destined to go dowa to fame, not only as the father of medicine but ns one of the originators of the art of candy-making. From this qoaint origin the eand) industry has progressed to such an extent that it is now one of world's leading Industries. [ts produc tion involves labor in all parts of the world and employs every means of trangportation known to man.~Ex change. Certain Recipe A man can make himself an un comfortable bedfellow by doing things | that go against bis grain. --American | Magazine, | i { | On Any - Bicycle whether you buy from your Local Dealer or from us direct. Savesl0%fos25% On Your Bicycle Prices From 21> Up Get full particulars by mail today. Use coupon below. Sold On Approval You are allowed 30 days’ actual riding test before sale is binding. Write Today name of nearest Mead Dealer. OUT ON THIS LINE Trial Mead Cycle Co., Chicage, U. 8. A. est dealer. Name Street or P.O. Bos Town __ LL Specid wat I No. | 17 70) State Orientals in America Cling. to OM Customs along and 18id- ‘hinese ry col Selsmozraph in Place that {io it was Pelee, place where if. there be been pleased ! ted did not For Pel was the in the eternal fires missionaries Her ancient priests, red their prophecies of tidal 1 1 is that the predic tions, aph. Pelee's the wrath of Pelee did not behave to oe tit the enoe the aor nog Ample Provision for Education of Sailors Dr. Frank Crane, writer, after an of the United States navy, said: *1 recently had a very illuminating visit aboard the battleship Tennessee. It was {lluminating because 1 found It not a fighting machine, but a In this age of modern efficient methods it is only natural that a wise government provide means to insure the highest type of person. nel. Why not? A battleship Is per haps the most perfect laboratory In All its machinery must be only i i the high standard the United States navy has set, it Is necessary that the Education | | y, the Navy depart: ment has provided enlisted men with a correspondence course system that is | perhaps the most completely organized | project of its kind In vse. It is com. prised of 100 courses, prepared by the | lending universities of America, A program of personal supervision by naval academy graduates and compe. tent Instructors insures a thorough knowledge of the subject undertaken.” go Guaranieed, — Lamps, wheels, equipment. Low prices. Send no money. Use the coupon. Mead Cycle x Chicago Robert Fulton Might Have Saved Napoleon tele ¢ irip oi Bishop's Pot of Oil Stilled the Tempest trog- anon, fair which easant is being all send you ' a8 3 arose as if by into the and was quieted when Utta ~Detroit News, i cast the « Hebrides hlead Has Unique Police Record “No police case within living mem- ory!” This is the proud record of Elgeg. one of the most delightful little islands to be found in the inner Heb- rides, says the Weekly Scotsman. It has been rendered famous by Hugh Miller on account of its curious geo- and several his- with a halo of romance owing its tragic associa. tions in what is now the remote past, Twice It was the scene of dastardly massacres, but today it enjoys an im- munity from exciting incidents that is continuous and complete. So at least says the chief constable for Iverness- shire, the county to which the island belongs, Despite the serenity of its social at- mosphere, and although no representas tive of the police force is stationed within its limits, yet Elgg is assessed for police rates and has to pay for the upkeep of a strong staff of uni- formed men for which it has no use, and which might be disbanded for any harm that would eventuate to ith inhabitants. The people are beginning to fret at these exactions, from which they receive no benefit, and also at the heavy burden of road rates, which go to naintaln “fine highways else- where” It Is an old grievance, this matter of rates, which In out-wof-the- way places are often very uneven in their Incidence, to
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers