———————————————— WOMEN CAN NOW DO MORE Because Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Keeps Them Well Fifty years ago there were fow occupations for women. Some taught - school, some did housework, some found work to do at home and a few took up nursing. Today there are very few occupations Today they work in factories with hun- dreds of other women and girls. There are also : women architects, lawyers, dentists, executives, and legis- lators. But all too often a woman wins her economic independence at the cost of her health, Mrs. Elizabeth Chamberlain who works in the Unionall factory making overalls writes that ghe got “wonderful results” from taking Lydia BE. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. Mrs. Chamberlain lives at 500 Monmouth St., Trenton, N. J. She recommends the Vegetable Compound to her friends in the factory and will gladly answer any letters she gets from women asking about it. If Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vegetable | Compound has helped other women, | why shouldn't it help you? Latest Clock Novelty A London clock maker has devised a clock which has no sign of mechan- ism. The face of the novelty is em- bedded in a slab of erystal five Inches in diameter, and the hands, which are made of platinum and diamonds, re- volve on a thin metal pinion, Al- though the crystal is transparent, no one except the maker knows how the clock goes, because there is no appar- ent connection between the hands and the framework. The price of such a clock Is something like $4,000. not open to women, | | was cataleguing his treasures. | Brewer's fallure had been as complete If your eyes smart or feel scalded, Roman | Eye Balsam, applied on golng to bed, will relieve them by morning. Adv, Will Supply Homes By decree of the Italian government one-third of the profits of the postal administration will be used in pur chasing and building houses for its employees and agents during the next ten years. 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F Aral 0 iy Druggists STORY FROM THE START From the comfortable financial situation to which he had been born, Peter Milman, American gentleman of the old school, and last of his family, is practically reduced to penury through the misfortune of a friend, Hazen Brewer, whom he had unwisely trusted CHAPTER I—Continued pr, iy “It was my intention them to the Metropolitan.” Milman frowned a little, “It will seem like breaking faith with the dead.” Sneed did not yet know that the van he served was insolvent and that all these relics which told so much of the Milman history must come un- der the hammer. “You can leave me,” Milman said, after a pause. “I want to remain here some time,” At six o'clock Sneed ventured to dis- turb Peter Milman. During the hours he had - passed downstairs Sneed thought he understood what his em- ployer meant. He had put things to- gether, He believed Peter Milman Hazen to bequeath as the evening papers proclaimed. Peter Milman’s manner vaguely dis- his butler. There was a smile where usually wild cynicism reigned. Almost it seemed as if the sword which Milman held had imbued him with swashbuckling courage of that hard-drinking, roystering Oliver Mil- man who had been a notable figure in the Colonial wars. “I am not sure,” Peter Milman ob- served, “that man made a good change when he put aside the sword and depended upon law and its chican- eries.” ex- “Sh. FPve heard, Mr. Peter, sir? Sneed returned, understanding noth- ing. not aware the view was so accepted,” said his employ- “I was generally er. ‘The man who owned this literal- ly carved his way to fortune. He had fought in Europe before he came here. God-fearing brother, my own an- disowned him publicly in church on Christmas Sunday and lost cattle and barns by lightning have always ha mansion. He knew that to seek work in the bustling world outside would He real- ized that Peter Milman and he were | two lonely, friendless men. And they had lost their home because them had trusted implicitly in Hazen What a price to pay for Sneed mused unhappily. one of Jrewer, friendship. He did not understand how it the other seemed in no way depressed. Sneed was not to know that Captain Oliver's shade had whispered courage | was Into the ear of the last of the Mil- | mans CHAPTER II At ten o'clock on the following morning, Peter Milman entered the offices of a firm of lawyers which har transacted the private business of Hazen Brewer. Henry Payne, the head of the firm, looked troubled when Mil- man's card wus brought in. The in- terview would not be pleasant for either of them. “T came,” Milman began in his ur- fane manner, “to find out, if possible, the extent of Mr. Brewer's losses, [ might have called up Hazen, but in a moment like this he has worries enough.” “I hope Mr. Brewer is not worrying gow." “Then things are not as bad as they geemed?’ Milman's heart pounded as he sald it. “Worse, I've bad news for you, Mr. Milman. Poor Hazen Brewer com- mitted suicide in the early hours of this morning. I suppose when he saw there was left nothing but liabilities, his mind gave way.” Payne wished he could discover from Milman's expression how much or lit- tle this news meant to him. But Mil- man had too much control of himseif to allow any man to see how stricken he was. “Poor Hazen,” he was one of my friends.” A curious tribute, thought the law- yer, to one whose speculations had ruined him. But perhaps the other did not yet realize to what an extent his private fortune was involved. “The mortgage on my house,” Mil- man began, “I suppose it will be fore- closed?” “I'm afraid so, There will be a “He bes? murmured. oldest and meeting of his creditors within a day MARTYN COPYRIGHT in the UNITED STATES W.N.U. SERVICE or so. If 1 can act for you in any way, I shall be only too glad to do 80. “You are very kind,” sald Peter Milman courteously. He shook Mr. Payne's hand and left, “A thoroughbred,” murmured the lawyer, who had seen many distin- guished men listen to bad news in this office. “Poor devil, wiped out ah solutely !" Before going home, Peter Milman took his way to an agency which spe- cialized in French domestic help of the better sort. “I want.” he sald to the woman at the desk, “a French butler who will do the entire work of a house in which only a few of the rooms are occupied. A woman comes in by the day to clean the place and the windows, and the furnace is attended to.” “I think I can suit you,” she said, and turned to a card index. “Wait,” said the other. ‘““There are other necessary qualifications. He must be a good plain cook and know no English.” “That makes it easier,” she “I have a man with very good ences who could fill the bill. said. refer- He came = THE PATTON COURIER is inevitable. There are This is one of them.” “let me stay,” Sneed begged. “I don't want wages. I can do the work the furnace is good exercise. my home, too, sir.” I tell you that by remaining here yon will embarrass me and imperil tain plans I have determined on, will you still want to stay?” “I'd do anything for you, Mr. Peter,” he said brokenly. “I knew you would. I will say this: If, by any turn of the wheel, things become better, I will have you back.” “The papers say nothing Is left,” Sneed returned dismally. “If the papers were always correct, this would be a direful world.” Sneed looked into the face of a Peter Milman he did not know, and he had believed he knew his employer in every mood. It seemed to the but- ler he had discovered a new person- ality, someone more ruthless, harder, bitterer. “The man who comes tomorrow will never take your place. You may regard him as a temporary expedient, When you go, Sneed, I shall see one of my few friends depart.” The butler knew that there was no { argument he could use to change his employer's determination. But he was cheered by the faint hope that sone day he might return. Mr. Peter, he reflected, had never been like other men. Reserved, non-communicative, aloof and austere, but inflexibly a man of his word. Six months was not &o long. Sneed thought he would spend the period in foreign travel. He had understood that during the past quar- ter century certain improvements had been made in the world. When Peter Milman told Sneed that his presence would imperil certain plans, he was speaking sober truth. In the upper rooms of his home there | that had been theirs, had concentrat- ed their influence upon their ultimate descendant. He had gone to the Mil- man museum to say farewell. He had put down his ancestor's sword with the determination to fight. And in this fight Sneed, for all his faithful ways and honest heart, could have no part. Any deviation from the way of life he had followed for so many years would alarm the faithful butler. He would inevitably have imagined his employer was ill and buzzed about him like an anxious fly. Milman's way of life changed direct- ly Achille Lutry entered his service. To the Frenchman it was nothing un- usual that Milman went out frequent- ly. Lutry knew nothing of the former secluded existence. A few days after Sneed's hegira had [5 Wipe “You May Regard Him as a Tempo- rary Expedient.” over in the last quota. If you could | wait a few minutes, I could arrange | to have you meet him.” | Achille Lutry was forty-seven, rath- | er terrified with the size and noise of | New York, and anxious to save money so that "he might return restaurant, The wages he was offered seemed mar- begin to | to Amiens and establish a velous. The restrictions seemed no | burden to him. He had no friends to | ask into the house, and the little leisure he was allowed made the sav- ing of his wages certain. He was to report at the house on Lower Fifth avenue tomorrow at noon, That night at the estimable Sneed noted a unusual nerv- ousness in his master's manner. The old butler did not dream of the ill fortune that awaited him. “Sneed,” Peter Milman began, when | the coffee had been poured out, “my future household arrangements will be on a different scale from what they have been of late. You have heen ga faithful servant to me for many years, I am not Ilkely to find your equal. In lieu of notice I shall give you six months’ wages. I shall be glad if you will leave before luncheon tomorrow.” “Oh, Mr. Peter, sir,” Sneed wailed, “what have 1 done to be treated like this?” “Nothing. If I had my way, I should never let vou go. You cannot under- stand how sorry I am. But the thing dinner certain £9 £0 CO ££ LXEXLTIT Big Job for Woman to Handle Grown Man | oratory of an oil begun, Achille Lutry dropped three { letters into a nearby mail-box. The letters were addressed to: Fleming | Bradney, Edgewater, N. J.; Floyd Malet of Philadelphia ; Neeland | Barnes of Peekskill-on-the-Hudson. Fleming RBradney, returning home from a tedious day of work in the lab- refinery, found his letter on the table where his meal was set. He was a big, untidy man eof middle age, taciturn, and unpopular with his fellows because he invited no nor answered personal At the Edgewater refinery, Jayonne from which he previously, he None sus- confidences questions. as in that at had two was known as F. come years jradney. | pected him of being the great physi- cist, I'leming Bradney, once the fore- most man in his line America had produced. He slit the envelope and lookesl o the address and signature. The name Peter Milman meant as little to him as his own name to Edgewater. Brad- ney had never read a Social Register in his life. Jetween the pages was a money order for one hundred dollars, “1 beg you,” Peter Milman wrote, “not to imagine that by inclosing this money I suppose you to be an object for charity. 1 urgently desire you to dine with me today week at half-past seven o'clock, and it may be that you substitute or be put some expense must engage 4d by my request—to not otherwise necessary. “You may ask yourself why should go to this trouble for a unknown to you. I am thoroughly acquainted with your you man I would answer that | matters which you must not ask me to explain, we pay that woman for, and tending This is “Sneed,” sald the other kindly, “if cer- Peseeleeleeteetoeteel ee aleeleel eters Soreeiea sessile ec neni ee en ee Qoelofrelaienieelonionseions ow i TRY THIS & fummmsmssnssseeeee—————— By EDNA PURDY WALSH qeeisaleiaieifeiaeionieds x Relieving Pain With a Reading Lamp A SMALL reading lamp has great possibilities In its light rays, as a reliever of pain. The rays of light seem as powerless to cure pain as the alr to carry the radlo message until one has actualy tried them, as they are now being resorted to in hospitals, in sanitariums, and in the tuberculosis camps for the cure of disease. While large wattage lamps are nec- essary for deep therapy, to produce general hodily reaction, a small nitro- gen reading lamp will relieve the local had been born the determination to | save the things he loved from being disposed of at auction. It seemed almost as though the shades of his forbears, lingering about the things 3 » ritis, especially if the rays be brought down within ten or inches of the area, and a cloth covers the lamp to concentrate the rays on the aching spot. The earache, toothache, the pain in the foot or hand, knee joint, elbow or shoulder can be successfully treated at home in this manner. Many seurs and physicians order light rays twelve INas- | for twenty minutes, alternated with a i dash of ice, con- the which keeps up a stant stimulation of the blood in painful area, and fit tive action of the blood that the pain, inflammation is is by this cura- abscess, or removed. Many Uses for Old Phono- graph Needles LD phonograph needles of the metal style will sing songs of | other varieties when they have fin ished their tasks on the phonographs. There is no tack made which is so soft and so practical for use in fram- ing pictures as is the phonograph needle. It has no rough edges or top to injure the back of the picture or | mat, and its smooth, sharp point is easily pushed with the screw driver into the wood frame to hold the pic- ture in place. Needles placed in a fancy glass or | china bowl take the place of the shot which holds the quill pen on the desk. Both wooden and metal needles may be used for this purpose. To clean a milk bottle in which the | milk has soured and caked on the | sides, a handful of steel phonograph | needles, shaken up and down in the bottle, will do the work in a few seconds, scraping and cleaning it off. { Warm water with a little soap added life history and entertain a great ad- | miration for your genius. Think of me as one anxious to see vou regain your rank as one of the great sclen- tists of the world. Perhaps at this dinner you may be offered the oppor- tunity CONTINUED.) “Man has always wanted a listener | will since the beginning of things, and when he comes home he wants it still, Listen for all are worth: it 1s your job. I can tell you, to handle a full-grown man properly is a full-grown woman's Job, and don't you forget it.” “Anyone can be charming when the evening falls and the stars twinkle In the sky. but give me the man who can be charming at breakfast without be ing offensive.” “It is the things of the spirit more than those of the flesh by which love is preserved. A woman may not trouble to powder lier nose, nor mani- cure her nails, and yet she may have that subtle flair for loving well which turns life into a coustant adventure, That is the women of whom a mab you never tire, and who will adapt rerself to his mood, even when he wants to kiss her while the bacon fat is still congealing on the dish.”—From “Sugar and Spice,” by Lady Kitty Vin- cent. Start With Clean Slate You should enter the door of eacn | new day with a clean slate and clear wind, Ne matter how poorly you have dore your work before, there must be a pew start mude.—C, F. Johnson. Her Choice The modern girl when called upon to choose hetween an average man and an excellent job ponders care- fully—and takes the man.—Harrls- burg Telegraph, | Langland. In to the needles, of course, is necessary. A spark plug held at the top of a | test tube in which there is some gas- | oline and a handful of phonograph | needles will be quickly loosened of its | stubborn carbon after a few shak- | ings. ©, 1927, Western Newspaper Union.) Invented Pendulum Guygens, a Dutchman, born in 1629, was the first practical exponent of the pendulum, employing it in the mechan- ism of the clock. However, he was not the original discoverer of its prop erties, Leonardo da Vinei (1452-1520) left notes as to his study of the pen- dulum and Galileo (1564-1642) contin- ued these studies. Excellent Simile The simile needle” is taken from the writings of William its original form the | is spelled “nedle.” Our authority is the collection of similes | edited by Paul Wilstach. There are | few articles so devoid of adornment as 4 needle. It seemingly affords an ex- cellent opportunity to coin a simile, “naked as a word “needle” The Obvious People who live in glass houses ob- viously should do one thing. They should draw the blind.—Toronto Star, rheumatic pain, or the twinge of neu- | | ber of i ally was 1,310. AMERICAN LEGION (Copy for This Department Supplied by the American Legion News Service.) ANNOUNCES CONTEST FOR NEW MEMBERS | sllver and a bronze, will be awarded again this year to the three persons getting the highest number of mem- bers for the American Legion for 1927, Howard P. Savage, national com- mander, announced recently. The continuance of this individual membership-getting contest Is the re- sult of the interest shown last year, when rhe contest for tirst honors was won by Frank B. Giglioitti of Rome, Italy, and who received the gold medal at the national convention held { in Philadelphia. Gigliotti's total num- members he obtained person- The silver medal was | awarded to Willlam CC. Mundt of Bloomington, Ill., with a score of WI, | and the bronze was awarded to Fritz | world-wide In scope, the honor of be- | | membership | glon Blumenthal of Oklahoma City, Okla, who obtained 763 members. This contest is open to all naires in good standing, and, Leglon- being ing the top leader is a coveted one, as work 1s considered one most important phases of Le- endeavors, because it has been found that the power of the Legion to do good, in community service and in all other efforts, is as great as its of the | numbers. | elety Under the rules of the contest, no | distinction is made between renewals And new The must “sell and close” the prospect. contest will close August 1. to be no assistance from other viduals or from but previously signed as of 1927, above conditions, will count. fied form is used. It is provided by national headquarters, Indianapolis, Ind., to the contestants entered and re- questing same. Another announcement made by Commander Savage in Legion member- ship work was that cards, to be known as the “Savage Testimonial of Appre ciation,” would be awarded to state Legion officers and post members. The indi- posts, under the A certi- and adjutants of those departments, or posts, as the case may be, that equal or surpass by September 19 their aver | age membership of the last four Vears, The total sued last number of these cards is year was 4,826. In the of departments, the various state case cials received the the this high as 76 when state accomplished the objective, cards occasionally requiring as cards in one state, The cards have proven to be the Legion's testimonial of most popular form of recognition from ! national headquarters virtually the only and constitute thing going direct | from the national commander. The total number of department offi- cials receiving the Commander Me- Quigg cards last year was 341. There | were 4,485 post officials, commanders | | and adjutants, who received them. Pershing to Help Jude Legion Poster Contest Special Offer Gen, John J. Pershing 1s among the prominent figures of the country who are as a jury in the prize winners in a new 1928 American to act selecting Legion poster contest recently in augurated. The chosen design will supersede the one that has been ap | | | pearing throughout the United States in the last few months as part of the membership drives. Three are to be awarded, $1,000 for the first: $300 for the sec- ond, and $200 for the third. The con- test is being conducted by Voiture 220 of the “Forty and Right,” Room 308, 160 North LaSalle street, Chicago, as- sisted by the National Poster Art al- All artists are eligible. The | selection of the prize winners will take place in New York between Sep- tember 1 and 10 in time to take the | winning poster to the Paris conven- | tion of the Legion, ! Among the other | Hanford MacNlder, { tary of Charles A, tonal commander of the “Forty and | Fight,” the playground and honor so- | | | | prizes liance. Judges will be assistant Mills, na secre- war; of the Legion, and Mrs. Adalin Wright Macauley, national president of the auxiliary. | | War on Caterpillars Is | Post’s Civic Program | A campaign to exterminate tent cat- | erpillars which have denuded trees in | Ansonia, Conn., each summer for sev- | eral years, has been started by Emil Senger post there as part of its com- munity service program this year. Cash prizes have been offered for the boys and girls bringing in the largest | amount of eggs of the pest, and a pub- | licity program has been launched to bring about concerted action of all cltizens against the caterpillar. Willed $500 to Post Mrs. Leona Lounsbury, of Omaha, Neb., who did not have any sons, took pride in the American boys in the World war and later the members of the American Legion. She died re cently and her will contained $500 of her small estate for the Omaha post of the Legion. DE — Three medals, one of gold, one ot | contestants | There is | members | commanders | offi- | appreciation | ~ Philadelphian "Regains Strength Well- Known Citizen Sufferi from Underweight, Loss of Strength and Vitality Restored to Good Health by Tanlac. Alfred V. Varallo, 1419 Christian St., Philadelphia, Pa. says: ‘I suffered from underweight and loss of energy that made me feel tired always. I tried a great many rem- edies without suc- cess. Ilooked scrawny and thin. < | “AfterseeingTan- HRN | lac in a neighboring drug store I de- | cided to try it. Immediately I began | to feel stronger. My appetite returned | andl pi 1 pounds.” , This amazing tonic, Nature’s own remedy, made from roots, barks and | nerbs, according to the famous Tanlac | formula, helps Ruld up weak bodies, drive out causes of pain. Take wonder- ful Tanlac. Ask your druggist for & | | { | bottle. Over 40 million bottles sold. For Better Understanding The Permanent Commission on Un- jerstanding Is a commission formed of three Protestants, three Catholics | and three Jews, Its object {8 to pro- mote good will and better understand- ng among the religious groups of our citizenry. The commission Is merely opinion-making, and it will meet only when some group appeals to it to re- dress some group wrong or misunder- | standing. Its members are Dr. §. Parkes Cadman, Martin Conboy, Vic- tor J. Dowling, Father Francis P. Duf- ify, Dr. W. H. P. Faunce, Irving Leh- | man, Henry Morgenthau, Dean Roscoe Pound and Dr. Stephen S. Wise. Gangs | A Chicago survey has discovered [that for every ten boys who adhere to a gang, one girl joins a similar or- ganization of her own. Among adults, if bridge clubs are included, the pro- portion would just about be reversed. What the average man needs is a censor for his conversation. Takes Qut all pain instantly Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads stop all pain quicker than any other known method. Takes but a minute to quiet the worst corn. Healing starts at once. When the corn is gone it never comes back. If new shoes make the spot “touchy” again, a Zino-pad stops it instantly. That's because Zino-pads remove the cause— pressing and rubbing of shoes. Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads are medi- cated, antiseptic, protective. At all druggist’s and shoe dealer’s—35¢c. Dr Scholls Zino-pads Put one on—the pain is gone! to Victims of Indigestion Your Druggist Says Pleasant to Take, Elixir Must Help Poor Distressed Stomachs or Money Gladly Refunded You can be so distressed with gas and fullness from poor digestion or dyspepsia that you think your heart is going to stop beating. Your stomach may be so distended that your breathing is short and gaspy. You are dizzy and pray for quick relief—what’s to be done. Just one tablespoonful Mentha Pepsin disappears, the ceases and you naturally. Oh! What blessed relief; but why of Dare's and speedily the gas pressing on the heart can breathe deep and { not get rid of such attacks altogether? | Why have them at all? Especially when any druggist any- where guarantees Dare’s Mentha Pep- gin, a pleasant elixir, to help you or money back. FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a world- wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. GOLD ME HAARLEM OIL (SETS oN correctinternal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine GorLp MEDAL. BLOTCHY SKIN need not annoy you. Pimples blacks beads, otc. are quickly dispelled by Resino ALAS! | MOouRy POOR ABUER MAYME HE NEVER GAVE A LOOK FoR TRANS | —pirss ) I ZZ 1 (Copyright W N 1 Sy — AN SO YEVE A LITTE SPAT PEG 1S UT? Clanc A Brush {1 Worth T ® by the McClure Dri nmomtmsasnn
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers