No Cold Fever headache or grippe ~ Colds break in a day for the millions who use Hill's. Headache and fever stop. La Grippe is checked. All in a way so reliable that druggists guarantee results, Colds are too important to treat in lesser ways. Be Sure Its wl eo Price 30¢ CASCARA 5. QUININE Get Red Bax with portrait BLACKHEADS cannot be hidden, Get rid of them now by regular treatments with Resinol Business Opportunities HARDWARE FOR SALE Located in live Penn city, main highway; has gas station; modern bldg.; fine for auto accessories or tire addition: yrs.; 8 rooms, 2 car garage; at $20,000, terms, wonderful buy (Flle 1912) THE APPLE-COLE COMPANY Transportation Bldg. - Detroit, Mich. GROCERY FOR SALE located live Penn city; Main St.; rent $45, lease; sales $32,000 yr.; cor. loc.; owner re- tiring; bargain, 7,500; act quick. (File | 1319.) Write THE APPLE-COLE COMPANY Transportation bldg. - Detroit, Mich, Macaroni Mfgr. Business for sale; located in live city near Pltts- burgh, Pa.; €st., same owner, 9 yrs.; re- ceipts $62,000 yr.; valuable property; here's a real buy; price $35, 000, terms, (File 1956.) Write THE APPLE-COLE COMPANY Transportation Bldg. - Detroit, Mich. BAKERY FOR SALE Receipts $280,000 Year Wholesale and Retail, located in live Penn city; est. 21 years; 75% sales retail, em ploys 45 people, 8 truc 12 wagons, able real estate; profits over $30,000 year; owner retiring; at $200,000; refer to (File 127). Write THE APPLE-COLE COMPANY Transportation bldg. - Detroit, Mich, GROCERY—MEAT MARKET for sale in booming Penn city (13 mines); A-1 loe.; real money maker; fine bldg., has 6 nice rooms, steam ht.; total price $6,000. | (File 1321.) WwW ite T > - De otroit, Mich. “BOILER ‘WORKS | for sale in Penn. city, doing $35,000 yr, bus.; { profits $6.000 yr est. by present owner 43 | ¥rs.; now retirin good bldgs., R. R. siding. 1 Bargain Price $30,000. (File 1948.) For details write THE APPLE-COLE COMPANY Transportation Bldg. - Detroit, Mich. | GENERAL STORE Mining town near Pitts,; est. 22 yrs.; brick | i bldg.; 7 rooms, bath, § ‘car garage; corner | lot 75x170; doing nice bus.; large stock; | owner must sell on account of poor health; price $40,000 (File 1335.) Write THE AppLEC OLE COMPANY Transportatio Bldg - Detroit, Mich. | i | | Meat Market Grocery for sale with real sales $2,000 mo.; profits $5,000 year; rooms, bath, garage, re frigerating practically new fixtures: real bargain; $17,000. (File 2113.) Write for details, THE APPLE-COLE COMPANY | Transportation Bidg. - Detroit, Mich. | ~ DAIRY BUSINESS Wholesale, located live city near Pittsburgh fully equipped plant, 2 trucks; redt $40; re- | ceipts $600 wk.; can be tripled; owner go- | ing south; price’ $12,000. (File 922.) Write for details THE APPLE-COLE COMPANY Transportation Bldg. - Detroit, Mich. DEPARTMENT STORE for sale in live Penn city; est. 20 yrs.; competition, 4 clerks; s $3 000 mc 3:56, Jease 10 y owner re ie 8 Price $28.000, terms. (File 133 Ww THE APPLE-COLE COMPANY Transportation Bldg. - Detroit, Mich. HOTEL FOR SALE Only commercial hotel in good Penn. eity: 32 rooms, modern; 7 car garage; est, 30 | yrs. real money maker; to settle estate this | hotel is offered for quick sale at $80,000, in- | (File cluding real estate. 733 THE APPLE-COL E Corb ANY Detroit, M Transportation Bldg, : COAL BUSINESS Est. 15 yrs.; live Penn. city; pumps 200,000 | tons per year; one contract with Power- | Heat Co. worth $40,000 annually; owner retiring; will sell complete real estate and equipment consisting 16 trucks, 24 tugs, 60 barges, 7 unloaders, etc. “at $350,000, | terms. (File 767:) For details write | THE APPLE ~COLE COMPANY { “Transportation Bl dg. De troit, Mich. ! estate, live Penn. city; 6 large system; price JEWELRY STORE and Columbia record store located in live | Penn. city. Hst. 15 yrs.; sales over $60,000 yr.; A-1 loc.; three floors, 24x95 each; ex- ceptional opportunity. Price, including real estate, $80,000. (File 1936.) For details write THE APPLE-COLE COMPANY Transportation Bldg. - Detroit, Mich. The weight of of a woman's first bak- I ing jis usually equal to twice the! weight of the ingredients: { A simple, old-fashioned medicine, as good | today as in 1837, is compounded in Wright's | Indian Vegetable Pills, They regulate the | stomach, liver and bowels, Adv. | ~ | Then they same owner 17 | valu- | sell this wonderful business | By Drinking Lots of of Water | | Take Salts to Flush to Flush Kidneys if Bladder Bothers or Back Hurts | [Clean Kidneys Eating too much rich food may pro- | duce kidney trouble in some form, | says a well-known authority, because | the acids created excite the kidneys. become overworked, get sluggish, clog up and cause all sorts | of distress, particularly backache and | misery in the kidney region, rheu- | matic twinges, severe headaches, acid stomach, constipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urinary irri- | tation, The moment your back hurts or kid- | neys aren't acting right, or if bladder bothers you, begin drinking lots of good water and also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good | pharmacy ; 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 acid of grapes and lemon | Juice, combined with lithia, and has | been used for years to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activ- ity; also to neutralize the acids in the system so that they no "| frritate, thus often relieving bladder | disorders. | Jad Salts can not injure anyone: | makes a delightful effervescent lithia- | water drink which millions of men | and women take now and then to help | | { { | | keep the kidneys and urinary organs | | clean, thus often avoiding serious kid- ney disorders. A one-sided quarrel never lasts. | “DANDELION BUTTER COLOR” | A harmless vegetable butter color used by millions for 50 years. Drug | | stores and general stores sell bottles of “Dandelion” for 35 cents.—Adv. The vow that binds too snaps itself.—Tennyson. strictly Duffs OLD HOMESTEAD LOOK ON THE CAN FOR THE GINGER BREAD MAN) FOR OVER | 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a world- wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. OLD MEDg, HAAR LEM OIL G0 correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the geiginal) genuine Gop MEDAL, Time risspent iS worse y than lost. One application of Roman Eye Balsam will prove how good it is for sore eyes. Costs | only 35 cents, 372 Pearl gt, N, Y. Adv. We all of us live too much in a cir- | cle.—~Disraeli. L Truth peed not tear the future. Tanlac Is of Her Extreme Nervousness and Guardian Health | Upset Stomach Relieved. | Strength Restored. Says Tanlac Adds Years to Life “I thought my days were at an end,” says Mrs. Sarah Vose, 63 Wells St., "Kingston, Pa., whose marvelous recovery from a long siege of suffer- ing surprised her closest friends. 5¢ you never feel well and Ju drag throu h the days, tired anc fagged- out; if your stomach rebels at food and youspend miserable hoursdoubled up with indigestion; if you do not sleep soundly and dizzy spells attack ou when you stoop over; if you are Fin weight, feel old —watch out! Mrs. Vose says: ‘‘For 5 years I had been going down in health and an attack of “flu” followed by pleurisy left me in bad shape. I could not eat . or sleep. And could barely walk from one room to the other. Suffering from indigestion, being unable to sleep and getting up 4n the morning tired, sapped my strength, ‘Frantically I sought relief. Every- thing I took failed to help me. Then my niece, a private nurse, suggeste that I try Tanlac. The first bottle ave me an appetite. Indigestion soon a, i began to sleep better. Soon my nerves calmed down. “Today I feel better than I Tor in years. All my thanks to Tanlac.’ Mrs, Vose 18 only one of thousands who have found happy relief from vain and gained new strength taking Tanlac. It helps build up the body, wipe out poisons and suffering. Heed their advice. Keep up—take Tanlac. Get your first bottle of Tanlac from our druggist today! Over 40 million ttles sold longer | Y Sai RE you an embroidery enthusiast, “each shining moment” by having a bit of If so something new to interest you are just their the that sort improves “pick-up” needlework at hand? here's ——peasant tea aprons, They too picturesque for words in wide-belted full-skirted quaintness. , or yellow pean or some typical Picturesque Tea Aprons. | be done in typical! Bulgarian colors. i One ought to be able to secure the cdmplete stamped ready-to-embroider | peasant apron from any fancy work | department or specialty shop. Be sure to get boil-fast embroidery cotton, for what more discouraging than te put { In precious hours of stitch, stitch, | stitch only to have them “run” and fade at their first laundering? The sight of the pretty peasant The border and belt is a bright blue mid-Euro- veasant shade, and of course the | embroidery, usually cross-stitch, must For that matter, the smocked and put to they with the embroidizred blouse can be good use this very moment, for are very fashionable worn new short-jacket suits. Turban and toques of ribbon, faille silk, grosgrain bengaline, all members family, register in the book of fasf- fon as having lately arrived from Paris. Some of #thém have a touch of straw in acknowledgment of the approach of spring, and all of them | are of the clinging close-fitting type. | It is remarked that most of these snug types have taken to following the line of the eyebrows. That lis, they have fitted forehead bands of wide ribbon which cling to the head, after the manner here pictured. These handsome silk types either quite colorful or smartly all black, the latter invariably enlivened with a handsome pin, buckle or orna- ment. Modes such as are grouped in this picture are particularly lkable for the matron. at the top is styled of wide belting, all black, cap-like fit about the forehead. The use of narrow grosgrain ribbon is exploited in the toque topping thiy | Some Between-Scasons Hats. aprons in this spire the desire to give a tea-padaty, just as an excuse to wear one of these adorable embroidered affairs, don’t you think so? Speaking of peasant embroidery in general, what a craze there is for it this season! “They say” the recent visit of Queen Marie of Rumania to our “ain countree" accounts for this | manifest interest in the handiwork of the Balkan women. At any rate the | fashion program for spring and sum- mer emphasizes the importance of peasant frocks, smocked profusely at neckiine, waistline and wrist, with full gleeves done in gay pative embroidery designs, So now's the time to begin to “study up” on the art of smocking. A white voile frock done in boil-fast cotton is a treasurable possession and it is worth beginning now to embroider it so as to have it completed ready for wear during the warm summer days to come. picture ought to in-| group. Its three rows are surmounted by a topaz-jeweled buckle. Gold cord animates the third hat, which upholds the theory that grain and other silk cap-like shapes with a touch of metal for the trim- ming answer to the call of the season mode, Crowns of ruffled ribbon find their narrow grosgrain way into many a toque for spring, such as the model to | the left. Color combinations are outstanding in the latest hat arrivals, and blues in their entire range are especially cited. The last handsome model in this picture employs alternating sec- tions of navy and gobelin faille silk. Sometimes as many as six or seven colors are combined or contrasted ip one hat. Martha Callot creates a charming hat for midseason wear, by Joining horizontal strips of belting using four shades of red. JULIA BOTTOMLEY, (@, 1927, Western Newspaper Union.) belting and of the same are | The toque to the left | It elatms distinction in its | gros- | wid- Crowds Flock to the “Peaches” Browning Case | Vast Area Flooded by This picture shows oniy a part of the huge throng that gathered outside the courthouse in White Plains, Y., daily while the separation sult of “Peaches” Browning against her wealthy husband was being heard. the Ohio River ‘Bring New Plants From China { _ P. H. Dorsett (left) and his son, J. H. Dorsett, | from China where they spent two and a half years collecting new i and doing ether research work for the Department of Agriculture, who have just returned plants | India’s Greatest Dam Is Completed Tne greatest dam of India, the Bhandardara, which was dedicated recently by the governor of Bombay in Ahmednagar district. Dua to the construction of this dam much of the surrounding waste land nay be | recovered, It has taken sixteen years and eighty lakhs of rupees to con- s{vwet this dam. Flood waters along the Ohio river for about 500 miles have been rising steadily and large tracts of land have een submerged. This photograph shews the high water in a street of Newport, Ky. ——— INVITES LEGION Th H. H. Brownlee, commandant of the | London post of the American Legion, | has come over with an invitation to | the delegates to the Legion conven- | tion in Paris to visit England. Mr. Brownlee is shown above with his lit- [ tle son and daughter. { EGYPT WANTS HER So i0e bead IIIS SSI Nts eisai This bust of the Egyptian Queen Neferti, taken from an excavation at Tel-el-Amarna by Doctor Burchardt, noted German archeologist, and now in the Berlin museum, is the subject of diplomatic correspondence, The Egyptian government, it is reported, has refused to allow Doctor Burchardt to resume excavations because he smuggled the bust out, and until its return he will continue to be barred. It will be remembered that the bust was not exposed in the mu- seum until after the signing of the Versailles treaty, to insure its reten- tion la Germany. RE TT pp THE TOAD €Y F TI could write ¢ dy Toad to Tad not go around lectur take the time away “Those who talk tc any chance to write ga too anxious to hear and that doesn’t helj “But 1 couldn't wr I shall talk. I shall matter if what I sa; to much, for talk do the hard covers of he “It does very oft “so I'd speak wisely “Well,” sald Tedd; who doesn’t speak w “1 Am Going to Give tures,” Said one who talks and le talk is quoted but wh “If you say that } Taddy, “no one will v hear you talk.” “Oh, I don’t kno “They will be sure they will not be disaj will be a great thing “They may say to “ ‘Now, today there given by the Tadpole a very dull affair. Ta apt to be. “ ‘Of course it may chances aren't so goo Toad’s lecture and h isn't going to amoul we'll be sure not to b we go to that. “They may that.” “They may,” said T they may not.” make WHEN TWENT® BY JOSEPE At 21—Eddie Guest, the Home, Was Wi He Still Is 6 INCE 1895, wher my name has be roll of the Detroit F Wednesday noon, thr 28 years, I have appe fer's window and re envelope containing 1 “My first salary wv fifty cents a week. to mean independen received it for work and Saturdays.—Edg: TODAY—Mr. Gue! some hundred new: poem of homely wi straight to the heart million. These poe: printed in books and enrich Mr. Guest's re as to expand his exc (© by McClure News] GIRUIG (Copyright) “The about more a man enthroning UT heart,” says Cynica more likely be is private.”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers