I , Dorothy’s Mother Proves Claim Children don't or dinarily take to med- fcines but here's one that all of them love, Perhaps {it shouldn't be called a medicine at all It's more like a rich, 4 concentrated food. It's pure, wholesome, sweet to the taste and sweet in your child's little stomach. It builds up and strength ens weak, puny, underweight chil. dren, makes them eat heartily, brings the roses back to thelr cheeks, makes them playful, energetic, full of life. And no billous, headachy, constipated, feverish, fretful baby or child ever failed to respond to the gentle influence of California Fig Syrup on their little bowels. It starts lazy bowels quick, cleans them out thoroughly, tones and strengthens them so they continue to act nor- mally, of their own accord. Millions of mothers know about California Fig Syrup from experi- ence. A Western mother, Mrs, J. G. Moore, 110 Cliff Ave, San Antonlo, Texas, says: “California Fig Syrup is certainly all that's claimed for it. I have proved that with my little Dorothy. She was a bottle baby and very delicate. « Her bowels were weak. I started her on Fig Syrup when she was a few months old and it regulated her, quick. I have used it with her ever since for colds and every little set-back and her wonder- ful condition tells better than words how it helps.” Don’t be imposed on. See that the Fig Syrup you buy bears the name, #(California™ so you'll get the genu- ine, famous for 50 years. Boa Wasn't Superstitious When Eladio Grimaldo of New Cristobal, Panama, opened his garage a recent morning, he failed to see the black cat whic lept there and al- ways greeted him with a friendly mecw. What he did was some thing that looked like an Inner tube with a buige in it and even as he looked, 1t moved. Investigation showed the tube to be a boa con- stricter seven feet long. After it was kilied the bulge was found to be the black ea: 8 breakfast. It was bad luck for both snake and cat. ~L{apper’'s Weekly. S00 the snake's Whole Show he sweet young and become “Yes “I am going to study law a layer.” “Why not come the lawye Cincinnati MUSCULAR- RHEUMATIC PAINS RAW them out with a “‘counter- irritant.’ * Muscular lumbago, soreness and stiffness — generally respond to good old Mu sterole. Doctors calli ita ““counter-irritant’’ becauseitswarm- fngaction penetzaces and stimulatesblood circulation and helps to draw out infec tion and pain. It gets action and is not just a salve. But do not stop with one application. Apply this soothing, cool ing, healing ointment generously to the affected area once every hour for Jive hours. Used by millions for over 20 years. Recommended by many doce tors and nurses. All druggists. To Mothers—Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Chil dren's Musterole. sald t Air Mail Pickup Devised A new type of aerial pickup was determined at the Washington-Hoo- ver airport recently, It permits an airplane in flight to take up mall sacks without slackening its speed. It is the old | intellectuals who have found out that what the young intel lectuals are raising a fuss about is worn out. High Cost of Art t This country purchased £250,000, 000 worth of paintings and sculpture in 1030.—Collier's Weekly. —— STOP YOUR COLD Drives # Bt away in in 12 hours. Headache iret iaeePain 1] Indicated as an Alterative in the Treatment of RHEUMATIC FEVER, GOUT, Simple Neuralgia, Muscular Aches and Pains At All Druggists on, Whol. Jas. Bally 4 Sou, oldlale Distributon i | A The Dentist ® Who Wanted to Be an Artist ® By Fannie Hurst Vv (® by McClure Newspaper Syndloate.) {WNU Bervice.) FF ANYONE had asked Howard Masters why he took up dentistry as his profession, he would have answered quickly and somewhat bitterly: Because my grandfather, fa- ther, two brothers and a sister are dentists and the period of training was shorter and less expensive than that of most of the other professions, No unsound reasons and yet lacking in every fundamental principle upon which, usually, the choice of a life work needs be founded. In Howard's case, to his bitter reall- zation, the fundamental principle, love for his work, was lacking. It was difficult to cross his familly In its unanimous desire for his electing den- tistiry. His grandfather and father were about to retire, his two brothers had removed to remote western cities there to develop practices and his sis- ter, about to marry, was torn between continuing her profession or following the wish of her husband-to-be, that she retire, It was therefore expected of How- ard that he would go into dentistry, and keep alive, so to speak, the Mas- ters’ tradition In the Middle West city, where for generations there had been a Doctor Masters, D.D.S, Well, Howard qualified all right as a student, profiting by the elders who were constantly at his elbow with help and advice during his term, and grad. uated, If not with high honors, at least with sufficiently good standing to start him off well In his practice. Not that, there was ready and waiting for Howard a certain clientele which would just naturally gravitate Certain of the old fam- of the town would let a tooth rather than take it to anyone les a Masters, As the grandfa- ther and father said, It was impos- gible for el one of them to actual ly retire, until Howard out his shingle. The town upon a Masters for a dent Strangely, the firsl & < b> 1 ony ilies ache, ither i got nsisted year was not so ‘a bad. There were so many issues the new the modern and expensive *¢8 which the olde Masters nove tice the theoretical Information he had ved in classy if-applie iis clinleal work apprentice in tl fice of an dentist, The new dent vy with rowing relationship to medic secier and irious wots of oral surgery, year, Inter writaentation and i or its g On the first vistas of exg of a girl from town's newer familles molar he happened to be wked up at him between ses grinding, and said: “How In ever choose to dentist? And off-hand Howard began to realize to what extent that same question was pushing against his Then one day a slip one of the whose right gions of Howard itched to paint corners of whose room were jammed with oils and water. colors done at odd moments between dental lectures and clinical sessions, How in the world did he, Masters, whose fingers ter of fact, It came surging over him in a slow sort of anger, he hadn't It had been planned, thought, de had allowed a half-senile grandfather and a father accustomed to rule to carve out his destiny as if it had been so much soapstone, And what sort of a destiny? The destiny of a dentist! A filler of molars. Ap engineer of small mouth and false plates for the tooth less, He, Howard Masters, with the soul of an artist, grinding, filling, bridging, and crowning his days away Realization, like an avalanche set in motion by the pebble of a slip of a girl's remark, began to roll in thun. der into the mind of Howard, awaken ing him to the enormity of his discon- tent; filling him with a kind of hu- miliation, causing him to openly loathe his profession. Thus it was that very early In his career, the first 18 months to be exact, lassitude and an indifference that were nothing short of appalling to his par. ent and grandparent, began to lay hold of Howard. Appointments he regard: ed with none of the rigid observance demanded of his profession, bridge work, because he despised its Intrica- cles, he did in a loose, slipshod fash- fon, and on one occasion, when an old and revered patient of his grandfa- ther's came to him requesting to have hig teeth cleaned, Howard flatly told him his repugnance for such work, and sent him to a rival classmate who had hung up a shingle opposite, Of course the result was inevitable, but it came none too soon to suit How. ard. Within a six-month, to the con. sternation of his family and his own secret satisfaction, his office, so far as business was concerned, was dead as the proverbial doornail, and stacked against his fine new apparatus was canvas after canvas, testifying to the leisure hours he had spent In his office thant were applied to activities other than dentistry, The upshot of it all was that after n year and a half, with one hundred dollars in his pocket, the lightest heart he had ever known, and the reluctant blessings of his familly on his eager head, young Masters turned his face toward a certaln remote art colony on the Pacific esast, there to take up the work that iay closest to his heart. water-coloe and oll-painting, Verdun-By-The-Sea turned out to be all he had dreamed it would be, Crags closeq it in, the Pacific rolled up to its curving coastline like a lazy blue tongue, cottages nestled in the pale sands, and for a pittance, the young artist could rent himself a studio along the straggling bit of Main street, where all day youths in flaring collars and ne hats and girls in tams and flaring smocks hurried back and forth with canvas and eamp chairs un- der their arms. A careless, Improv- ident, picturesque little art colony, with tea rooms along its Main street called, Ye Tiny Shoppe, Ye Rem- brapndt Inne, Ye Mortar Board and a two-story bullding called the Audito- rium, where a shaggy-haired, barefoot Hercules of a man called “Master” by the students, delivered lectures every morning and held classes (in modeling during the afternoon, It was all as in a dream to Howard who, released from the horrible ardu- ousness of a profession that had re- pelled him, found himself, the very first day, attired in one of the open- collared shirts, duck trousers, sandals on bare feet treading on warm sands to a class in modelling presided over by the Master, It was exhilarating beyond anything that had ever happened to him. The fact that the Masters, after six weeks had never so much as paused by his canvas except to mark it with a bit of red chalk, which meant “do it over” did little to daunt his enthusiasm, Free, uninhibited, and according to the demands of Howard's heart, he lived this life among the students at Verdun-By-Tl apeing thelr care free habits, learning their arty patter, relaxing the long even ings through, on studio floors or over endless hours of di Ye This, or the Ye That the Malin street. 1-Sea, scussion In Tea room on Then month there, living by Ye Tiny Shoppe, Moore, of whom the one about his his t and » met a Miss Allela precar ter of known artist Trollope, who lived In a Bris ten miles It was one of thes cases of love town cn relift, at first sigh nder, western in was eighteen, forthright as frankness, ing, and rele one look rather frus forthwith plek look Myron one look at Trollope, par Howa after took a The an rd’'s wi remained anda le were entitled to one stand and young peoj other, if they | sted, but How would his ability to make and some! Trol could do so with his alette It was at that palette became a de have to es his girl a lope wis not 3 now clined to think he momen d momet it that his terrent to Howard, “I'm a graduonate dentist.” he told his beloved’'s father In a irate self-defense of his power “I'm not like most of artists around here, dependent only upon a palette and brush. [ can pass any kind of state examinations tomorrow, and open dental offices In any town I want” It seemed to ther of Alicia, Msron Troll distinguished landscape painter, ally fell upon his neck, “Good Lord, boy, of Briarcliff and Verdun-By-The-Sea have been begging for a the past five years ing for exactly that long that bright young fellow who puts a dentist's shingle out in these two towns can reap a young fortune, Can you have Alicia? You Just bet as a D.D.S, you can have Alicia!™ Thus It was that another Masters state of earning the the fa- the Howard that ope, fame and fortune, Release From Disease Found in Common Sense be sane previously ill. Since the spontaneous generation of been exploded, precaution against dis ease can be comparatively The greatest danger lies not In the bedding, books and magazines the pa tient has used, but in the patient him self. Fumigation Is not necessary. A good soaping, airing and cleansing of articles in contact with the patient is sufficient. Apparent recovéry of the patient, moreover, is not an indication of safety to others. The doctor's duty erfis with the recovery of the patient: he has nothing to say about when the patient will be released. That duty is left to the health department in con. sideration of the welfare of the com: munity. There Is no mystery to re lease, Dr. W. W. Bauer emphasizes in the last of his series of articles In Hygela Magazine, “It is cheap. It re quires only four Ingredients: hot soapy water, sunshiny fresh air, elbow grease and horse sense.” Inba———— notion of —- No Such Word The word impossible is not In my dictionary. ~Napoleon, When Mother Sow ws s for Little F olks ND now the spring sewing cam. palgn begins. As a rule, it's “chll- dren first” when mothers begin to sew. What with the little folk's needs tak- ing precedence, it's time to look about for timely suggestions on the subject. As little daughter emerges from the tiny tot fashioned clothes g sister Where! i ore, it appe to her to have a jacket sult somewhat age, she wants her outfits more on the lines of the mother or t wears, greatly after the styling of that of her elders. The Ja ket ashable bl » of ba ttle girl who goes p the ting two-plece worn with uses has also the vine eminently ig eminent skirt Is pl weave 18 sort lagnder ¢ of the irinkine spoken, of t that Is the beauty of a § -it admits of n Any a chai comes to the bic i clever little trimamin Is a new trim stitch decoration is very effective work chine, and easily dos is entirely done by All that stitch sewing ma is needed for this is a trim thread In both needle and bobbin, the cing of the coarsest, dnd the guage set to nine or stitches to the inch. bright colors the effect broidery. the jacket bar lawn, trim. The beauty of bias ran be bought ready to use, thus proving a timesaver and a nerve saver for everyone who has had the experience knows what a task it is to cut narrow sirips on a true bias, to which add endless folding of edges. It is blas trim (bright green) which gives so pleasing a finish to the at- needle b ten Vorked In is that of em. The blouse which completes suit pictured, Is of cross all edges bound with bias trim Is that it {llustrated to is a quality- tractive pajama outfit the left. The material kind cotton print-saffron and green on a white background. Even little daughter Is letting her hair grow these days with the result that hair ribbons come hack. The latest Is to match the bair ribbon with a linen collar and cuff set unless the set is white, In whic! the halr ribbon matches {ts t r-and-cuff gels are so easy to make there is no why every little lady should them The the dainty in the round is of in, of P in cut with interworked with » with a trim stitch thread ing color, The fagoting also ying trim bordering to the ias trim minder and ready ds cutting and have case These coll: one ashes e-saver an comes to in two with a yoke, belt and other de- mtures in the realm of ju- des flair fo olens made Bs a brown crepe a%: 8 roy which r cordu is in. in the adult world re- flected among children's fashions, A type of school suit which is for midseason has a shapely skirt formed of many ROres. he jacket is collar less, is hiplength and is belted. For the Hitler tots the is favored in that it can be taken off and put on so easily. There Is a tendency In designing party frocks for the very young to in- troduce long-skirted effects with quaint high waists and sashes. A yellow- flowered white organdie, for instance, has a floor length full skirt. The high walst is defined with a wide sash of yellow taffeta, Handsome and as practical as it is good looking iz white washable satin for the making of dressy frocks and blouses for little folks, for anyone who has had the sistent is also ideal bolero perfectly it may be tubbed, (3 1932, Western Newspaper Unlon.)y NEW MODELS GIVE VERVE TO SATIN Take a length of black satin, add to it a dash of white satin, and you have a most wearable frock. Early In the season there was quite a lot of satin shown, but It hasn't been worn 80 much through the winter. But for early spring it would not be surprising to see several models of white satin touches making a grand success. Such a black becoming and is luxurious without be ing too lavish, Always an effort should be made to see that there is a dash and a gay alr to the black satin frock: otherwise it has a tendency to look heavy and set, which means, of course, that it looks old and is inclined to make the wearer something that even the matron of long staading usually wants to avold, Lace Bolero Jackets New Note for Evening Colored venetian lace bolero Jackets are a new noie for evening wear, One of the newest dinner dresses Is designed of black crepe in the prin cess silhonettes with bodice of light blue georgette over which Is worn a bolero of pale blue venetian lace. Fur Collar and Cuh Sets Add Dash to Coat Everyone will like to know about the fur colfar and cull sets that are being sold over the counters. A winter cont could have an Interlining added and one of these sets imposed upon it and turn out to be winter's greatest suc Coss, BUTTONED BLOUSE By CHERIE NICHOLAS It is considered tres chic for the blouse to button straight up the front a8 you see in the picture. This model ig of emerald green wool, finished with bindings of brown braid, It is worn with a skirt of red brown wool. Brown kid oxfords with built-up leather heels answer to the call of the hour for definitely smart footwear. The brown angora turban with smali green feath. ers at each side supplies its quota of shila Clears head instantly. Stops cold spreading. Sprinkle your dkerchief during the day your pillow at night. AT ALL DRUG STORES Hindus Eager to Draw Chariof of Juggernaut rringe of the great god Jug- gernaut now rumbles through the streets of Purl, India, a trifle faster than usual. This is due to the large number of policemen on hand, who hurry up the festival as one of the many precautions taken to sul : thirty feet in din that ir centuries-old The cf prevent cides, Awo wh rim, seven nd it is under these 1304 meter, and it RIVE eYOleeR as ceremony The celery ¥ themselves, Puri fest of the calendar a sands attends of Juggs and his Garden tempi pass a week, when God e« ecarnates himself in ( Joram Ana nat n he day i" . : fmue if most brother the ¢, where the three gods Hindus that ymes to the earth he in- ten of the and sister, to believe one f the Ais a 3 pears In Juzgeran qr, ‘hose who fortunate are they conten dox Hindu virtue about town Made specially for BABIES ond CHILDREN Physicians te 1 us that one condi- rid the b ay | impure wastes, And for this no is better than 3 Castoria! is a pure ble preparation made specially ¢ and children, This means 14 and gentle: that i? contains no Tors drugs, no narcotics. Yet it always gets results! Yon never have to coax ¢ ren to take Castorias. Real Castoria always bears the name: 7 7 Tele hers CASTORIA ne is to ‘astoria CHILDREN CRY The Last Laugh As Eddie Cantor, the comedian, was standing In front of a theater where all seats had been sold, a little man and his wife were turned away, greatly disappointed. “Here,” said Eddie, “I'll let you have a couple of my seats,” and he gave the little man two tickets, Delighted, the man gave Eddie his card, saying, “Some day I hope I may be able to do something for you.” The comedian looked at the card. The little man was an undertaker, — Capper's Weekly. Sometiimes it's a good thing If It turns out had Bedridden with Rheumatism Rubs on oil... gets . up right away = There's nothing like good old St. Jacobs Oil for relieving the aches and pains of Neuritis, Rheuma- tse, Latta, Backache, Neurmigia or scre Muscles. You rub it on With. out buming or blistering it “quickly draws out pain and inflammation. Relief comes before you can count 601 Get a s=all bottle from your druggist. EEE COMPOUND Fer Coughs tuo to Colds, Minor Bronchial and Throat irritations JAE. BAILY & BON, Baltimore, Md.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers