Made specially for BABIES and CHILDREN Physicians tell us that one condl- tion is nearly always present when a child has a digestive upset, a starting cold or other little ailment. Constl. pation. The first step towards relief is to rid the body of impure wastes, And for this nothing is better than genuine Castoria! Castoria is a pure vegetable preparation made specially for babies and children. This means it is mild and gentle; that i¢ contains no harsh drugs, no narcotics. Yet it always gets results! You never have to coax children to take Castoria. Real Castoria always bears the name: Clett Bor CASTORIA Haul for Firemen Every time the San Francisco firemen go out on a fire they come home with a hatful of trout. Fire Chief Brennan says the through the fire mains, clogging up the lines, The trouble Is caused by trout spawn slipping through screens over the Intake to the fire hydrant mains and later growing up to be good-sized fish. RHEUMATIC PAINS relieved this 74 quick way “Wb Hf the stabbing pains of rheumatism are crippling you, rub on good old 8t Jacobs Oil. Relief comesin a min. ute! This famous remedy draws out pain and inflammation. It's the quick, safe way to stop aches and pains of Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago or Backache, Neuralgia or swollen Joints, No blistering. No burning. Get a small bottle at any drug store. fish come sometimes “Experiment Doctor—Have you ever tried going without glasses? Patlent—Yes, only last night 1 took them off when I went to bed. ep Fo when inserted in stuffy Burden Bearers He—We've got to carry several bunkers on the next hole. She (a novice)—Why should we? What are the caddies for? WARNING To Every Sufferer From STOMACH TROUBLE ACIDOSIS INDIGESTION, ETC. A trial package of VON'S a TABL the wonder remedy for stomach trouble every kind, Is yours for the asking. HERE IS QUICK RELIEF WITHOUT OPERATION Fhe mass obatinass snd longaianding ing eases reapond to this wonderful remedy, which re-creates the chemical balance in stomach, thus ou of istress. Write at once for a free trial package of VON'S PINK TABLETS and again g all wholesome foods ating al Yue pain or distress, Ven Co., Dept. 408-4, 34 Se. 17 Street Easiest of all persons to get along with, Is the man who knows It all You employ but one means, flattery, Easy to darken GRAY HAIR this quick way — — . N. Uy BALTIMORE, NO. 11-1032 Cas —- The Greatest Ever 8 By FANNIE HURST {© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) (WNU Service) OR twenty years the woman F known as “Aunt Em” had sold uewspapers In the doorway of a haberdasher’s shop In the theater section of New York's Broadway. A broker who bought papers from her on the fly had nicknamed her that because she reminded him of an “Aunt Em" who had reared him. Like most happy misnomers, it stuck. Aunt Em's real name was— well, no matter. There was some- thing short and stout and matronly about the appellation “Aunt Em.” Something kind and wholesome. The name fitted the little woman in the decent black and the straw poke bon- net which she wore both winter and summer as she sold newspapers to the fiylng world that hurtled past her doorway. Every evening at five, rain, snow, shine, storm, Aunt Em stood shouting her wares In her doorway. When the last theater light blinked out, she wrapped up her loose change in a red handkerchief, tucked under her fold- ing camp chair for that purpose and with her daughter, Wenda, who called for her, marched her way home. In a way, Aunt Em was quite a char- acter about that busy neighborhood. In the quick tide of its ebb and flow she had known great people by sight and hundreds of clerks and petty folk on thelr way to subway and tram nodded Aunt Em their good morrow as they tossed thelr pennies, snatched thelr and ran. That little tucked-In corner in the doorway had yielded Aunt Em twenty years of livelihood. Enough, mind you, to rear Into successful maturity six (some as customers), dailles, a widow, through years so lean, some of them, that the gutters In her face still showed the ravages of pain, de. privation, even hunger, All that was changed now. Five of the six children had left the nest, three sons and two daughters, mar- ried, and were on their own, A fairly prosperous little flock of petty trades people, set up here and there about the great city In such small enter prises as stationer’s shop, 1it stand or notion store. All of them given thelr start, too, by willing, If lean contribu. tions from the old lady's change hand. kerchief, When she was sixty Aunt Em might well have felt entitled to sit back and let those for whom she had tolled through the years do some of the toil. Ing for her. That was what lay heavily on the heart of Wenda, the only unmarried one of the flock. Of course the oth- ers all offered to contribute to the up- keep of the old woman, but somehow, to Wenda, who felt passionately about ft, there was something half-hearted about the profferings of the sons and daughters and the In-laws, In her heart, Wenda felt bitter to- ward these brothers and sisters. It did not seem to twist thelr hearts the way It did hers to see the old woman standing humped In her doorway, shouting. Not that the old woman could be easily dissuaded from her labora. On the contrary, Wenda had oceasion to know that all too emphatically. Aft. er all, on her own earnings as ste nographer at twenty-eight dollars a week, Wenda was well able to take the burden of the labor of long hours, outdoor exposure, to say nothing of the menial aspect of the work, off her mother's shoulders, Night after night, ealling for her mother after theater hours, Wenda ar- gued with her along these lines. Tt was rather an incongruous spectacle to see the girl and the woman hud- dled there together In the doorway. Wenda, who had a pretty, eager sort of face, as if she were smelling at a star, and who was attired In all the mock splendor of the New York office girl, wrapping the old news woman carefully across the shoulders In the knitted jacket she had worn for years and stacking the unsold newspapers In thelr corner of the doorway where, by arrangement, a small boy called for them before sun up. Sometimes Wenda had to admit to herself that It was the sting of the social stigma that went with her mother's occupation, almost as much as the desire to spare her effort, that prodded her on to remonstrance. “Mamma, how do you think a gir! feels having a newshoy for a mother?” “Go along! A newshoy for a moth. er was what kept enough warm milk in your baby bottle to make you what you are” “You're entitled to rest now.” “Yes? My boys and girls got enough struggle to raise thelr own familles.” “I'll never marry. What fellow, the kind I'd like, If I like any, would mar. ry Into a newsgirl’s family? On my salary I could come home evenings to an home with a supper on the table In- stead of having to know my mother is out newshoying!” "You're a good girl, but I'm a good newsboy.” “Don’t you think—a—a girl tn an office, meeting the kinda people I do all day—kinda-<feels it—having =a newshoy for a mother? It's not Hke with the others. They never got out in the world. A newsboy mother don't help a girl's soclal position” “Not it he's an honest newsboy™® “Mamma, let me take care of you™ “Go "long. I won't be made a gran- ny of. When I haven't got any more chicks to take care of, at least, I can take care of myself. You've got your own life, Live It.” “I tell you I'll never marry.” But of course one day Wenda, who was stenographer In a lawyer's office, did meet a young clerk named Laddle Evans, to whom her little, young moon of a face was beauty and delight. He was a straw-colored young man with a lithe, athletic body, great, square, white, healthy young teeth and a hand grip that was youth and vital. ity In one. In the office they met, these two, and life suddenly became something to tingle and flush over. New lmpulscs to cry, to laugh, to dance, to shiver ecstatically, raced over Wenda all of a morning. When Laddle Evans passed her type-writing machine goose flesh popped out over him like little bells ringing. Yet Wenda had a head on her. The daughter who had a mother-who-was-a- newshoy looked back into the eyes of Laddie with her heart crying, but her lips firm. It was hard, because, almost from the first day that they had begua to be conscious of one another, Laddie was for plunging into the heart of the affair, He hung over her desk at noon time and importuned her to go to an automat fer lunch. He slid little pa- per bags of which he had purchased off a push cart into her lap. He waited for her at closing, and she evaded him by sneaking out of a side door, One day-—he wrote her a note ir cherries won't yon to with me tonight and give that I love give In and get It you yet i go out me chance to tell You might as over with, I'll get you. ~Laddie.™ With her lips wrote him back: “Yes, I'll have dinner with you well lave quite yon” ly-Ahs street, was Wenda Ing behin was like 8 pox of new love, “Wenda™ “why have yom heen so cruel? Nothing can stop the thing between us™ after office hours, There really nhent iness of tears shine eauty. And Laddle Heady with the wine lovely he sald, and her heart crying. “You must work,” she sald, “and not Indulge In ponsense. Some day yom will be a big lawyer ™ “I know I will If you help me. Come, Wenda, let's go to dinner—we've all of life to plan™ “No—yes-—but first and see-—~my mother er? Where Is your mother ?™ “Sure I've a mother, ever.” “Where “Oh, she's We've a house up near Spring lake” ~1 must stop by gah. home, Spring Lake? Well, mother—first There she was In the doorway, end- ing her little old voles, fluty with the years, out Into the iam of the traffic: “Polper-—Evening Wolld-—Telegram ~8un and Post" “Mamma-—this is my Evans—we're on bite of supper" “Well, If it Isn't young Evans, managed It, did you?™ *Ho—what—7 “Here's a young fellow's been pos tering me to fix It for him to meet yon every time he seen yon calling for me evenings on his way home from the Iaw library and 1 told him to shuffle for himself" *You mean—7 “1 got myself a where she works. That's what 1 call shuffling for myself, Aunt Em ™ “Why-you-—why, you daring.” sald Wenda and looked at him with her young moon of a face “You're a darling yourself” Laddie. “You're both darlinga™ Em. "And now rustle along: you Interfere with ness.” we must see my our way out for a You eal said Annt yourselves my buat. Chickens Supply Millinery No one can reasonably make ohlee- tion to the present fashion of wearing feathers on the feminine head cover. ing, for no matter how brilliant they may be, they originate In the barn yard. In former days © ny of the tiful birds, but such a sentiment was worked up In opposition to this that feathers went entirely out of fashion, Now, however, these millinery decora- tions originate with the barnyard fowls which have also decorated the dining table, Many Ingenious processes have been devised for securing the brilliant effect ealled for, and no birds have been sacrificed merely to supply the feathers for milady’s hat, Truth About Octopus The octopus Is found In tropleal seas near coral reefs. Some forms spread their limbs 12 or 14 feet like great spiders and might, under fav- orable circumstances, hold under wa- ter persons whom they had seized until they had drowned, at the same time biting them with their horny parrotlike jaws; no doubt such acel- dents have occasionally happened to pearl divers and the like. Ordinarily, however, the octopus does not attain one-half these dimensions and many species have bodies no longer than an ordinary pear. JALRE I, and a jacket an el with a few extra is fashions dex One really of cun- is if one lives up to ribed d a jack jackets Just ree spring and summer, rdrobe little ning Incke mrt dress pres for the coming months. And what a de versatile Jackets are playing. They fire everything that is fascinating both a8 to color and the materials of which they are made. Brief affairs are they, the newest mod favoring oralive role these els walst- Fitted eton jackets for daytime wear in quantities. They stop above the waistline and smartly contrast the skirt. Other of little jackets have quite a military bearing, as they are broad at the shoulders and fre- quently have a double-breast fastening brass or nickel buttons. Stun- ning costumes for sports and town wear developed In Intriguing novelty lightweight woolens in gay colors (red, white and biue being In high favor, these lonlal this season) flaunt these youth. ful walst-length jackets, Whether for daytime, afternoon or evening a Jacket of some sort is now considered an Indispensable part of the At afternoon bridge, for din- ner, for the theater and other formal occasions jackets take on a versatile and decorative mood which imparts an enlivening touch to the style picture. There Is nothing stereotyped about the clever jackets which are topping the new spring afternoon and evening frocks. Some of them are of simplest construction, with flowing or bell sleeveg and open front similar to the in the little center panel above. Whatever this simpier type Jacket may lack in Intricate de- tall is offset by its fetching color. LOVE OF UNIFORM Women like uniforms, proverbislly, and now they may have military touches In thelr own clothes, as evi denced by Worth's spring styles. Chevrons, braids and frogs have been added to the already popular epaulet mode, Metal buttons and chain trims carry the effect still fur- ther. Lines of the spring clothes match the new trimmings, for broader shoul figure, Evening skirts are narrow, as with the daytime frocks, and some are de signed with slashed sides, Worth uses some trains, and continues to show the ruffled skirts, Short evening coats have very wide sleeves, embroidered In angora wool For day year, there are many bolero short Jacket suits, some with contrast. Favored for Blouses Light-weight wool, such as wool shangtung, Is much In favor with the White Is usually the color with but. tons that harmonize or contrast with the suit color, For example, one of Worth's white wool blouses has green buttons to go with a green suit; another has black or dark blue buttons to accompany dark suits; a third has red buttons de signed to be worn with a black or brown suit. Two-in-One Coats Some cont manufacturers are mak. ing spring coats with heavy interiin ings. They are being shown for Im mediate wear, and when the weather moderates the linings may be taken sut and the conts worn for spring two coats for the price of one. Made of sheerest ice-green transparent velvet as it is, and posed over a for- mal dance pajama costume of pale yel- chiffon, the color is per- As a little summer wrap to slip frocks, a Jacket of this a delight the season scheme fect, over type will through. The black eft declares a greater lingerie prox © velvet” 3 acquette to the formality. Its te is very front it ties In It is worn fitted-at-the-walstiine silhouet new and chie. At the a soft knot and two ends over a white crepe dress which has a bow tied at the neck, left hanging out- side the wrap, which lends to the back a graceful note, White fox fur on the loose sleeves completes this symphony in black and white. All sorts of intriguing detalls enter into the designing of the myriads of petite velvet jackets which are so out standing In the mode, such as for in- stance, voluminous puff sleeves, orna- mental buttons, an abundance of shir ring with a plentiful use of decorative bows, Notwithstanding the allurements of the little walstdength velvet Jackets, there is a rival in the field—the bolero or elton made of allover lace. These little lace fantasies are in loveliest their charm. The model the pale blue venise lace, It Is signi blue. This color alliance of bodice tops it is a new move which Is ac- cented throughout the costume design. lend a gay note to frocks of monotone crepes, dainty dresses (6 1922 Western Newspaper Union.) NOVEL WRAPS By CHERIE NICHOLAS A pleasing venture In fashions ac tivities is the creating of novel little capes and scarfs of colorful sheer vel vet. These cunning fantasies are nll that fancy dare picture both as to color and unique design. The winsome cape sketched at the top is made of transparent velvet with self. fabric tiny roses completely bordering it. Another new and voguish type of wrap done In high-key colors of tur quoise, coral and green or In any of the delectable pastels is the elrcular gcnrf with long pointed ends which are thrown gracefully around the shoulder. They are very lovely worn with prints, or triple sheer or satin gowns, Do You Feel Like a RAG? Do you get vp in the morning with @ tired feeling and drog yourself through the day? Nervous — jumpy irritable it is the warning sign of constipation, Neglect moy bring serious oilments, Toke 2 or more of Dr.Morse’s Indian Root Plils, They ore a gentls, mild, and absolutely safe laxative. Made of noture’s pure herbs and roots. Use them tonight and bring back your pep~of oll druggists. Morses INDIAN Dt PILLS Mild a Gentle Laxative Black Locust Has Many Uses Black locust is a four purpose tree, says the United States forest sery- ice, It quickly produces good timber for posts and other uses: It roots strongly, thereby checking soll ero gion; its flowers enable bees to make & good quality of honey: and it is a legume. The nodules on its roots store nitrogen In the soll, enriching it for futu : is a tree of for shade, RIO, NERVOUS | Hagerstow f : 3 i Eo i 4 § 3 A re crops beauty Md —*“A fer years ago 1 was very much down, weak 80 nervous least noise upset mw d ull s aches and 3 Little appetit 23d Mrs. son Ave. cines advertise d, ny try Dr. Pierce's G ! covery, caf ier d th i$ grea at toni For free medical advice write 10 Dosto# Pieree’s Clinie in Baffalo, N. Y.. usieog the eympiom blank wrapped with bottles of Dr. Pierce's Discovery Saved by Phone Call How a man was saved from death by a telephone call was told at the inquest Into the explosion which caused the death of 45 m at the Bentley colliery, near Donen Eng- land. A colliery wo med Swift sald that he a fow min utes before the blast, owing to &n urgent private message he received over the telephone, Dizzy/ Start therough Dowel pou Be when you feel dizzy bilious, Take ATURE'S REMEDY ~ NR Tablets, It's iid, safe, purely vegetable, and far better than ordi nary laxstives, Sp I JO-NIGHT Losling right. ® ALricHT The All V Vegetable Laxative TUM cain iiia em ——— Why Have Cities? Cities, after all, not alien growths, only bits of America that have increased much faster than the rest.—Woman's Home Companion. iners stor reer na left the pit Tora int ers. hk - are Insects Fly Insects have been found by alr plane observers as high as 10,000 feet above the earth, Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets re the orig. inal little liver pills put up They regulate liver pot p30 Yuan Money can buy leisure, but mak- ing the money destroys desire for the leisure. Mothers... Watch Children’s COLDS in throat and chest where they hove Pewing Topo Don’ rg PCr the first sniffle rub A
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers