iladelphian ains Strength (nown Citizen Sufferi Underweight, Loss of h and Vitality Restored | Health by Tanlac. . Varallo, tien St, hia, Pa. uf fered srweight f energy me feel rs. I tried Any rem- out suc- looked nd thin. 3 eing Tan- mx eighboring drug store I de- rv it. Immediately I began nger. My appetite returned od 12 pounds.” azing tonic, Nature's own ade from roots, barks and rding to the famous Tanlac elps build up weak bodies, auses of pain. Take wonder-~ . Ask your druggist for & er 40 million bottles sold. ianent Commission on Un- is a commission formed 'otestants, three Catholics ews, Its object is to pro- vill and better understand- he religious groups of our I'he commission Is merely ing, and it will meet only group appeals to it to re- group wrong or misunder- Its members are Dr. §. man, Martin Conboy, Vie- ng, Father Francis P. Duf- H. P. Faunce, Irving Leh- Morgenthau, Dean Roscoe Dr. Stephen S. Wise. Gangs 0 survey has discovered ery ten boys who adhere me girl joins a similar or- f her own. Among adults, ibs are included, the pro- Id just about be reversed. average man needs is a is conversation. ces Out in instantly 's Zino-pads stop all pain han any other known akes but a minute to quiet corn. Healing starts at n the corn is gone it never tc. If new shoes make the chy’ again, a Zino-pad istantly. That's because remove the cause— 1d rubbing of shoes. oll’s Zino-pads are medi- septic, protective. At all and shoe dealer’s—35c. Scholls 10-pads m—the pain is gonel Offer lo Victims of gestion st Says Pleasant to Take, Help Poor Distressed 1s or Money Gladly Refunded » 80 distressed with gas from poor digestion or it you think your heart op beating. ch may be so distended ithing is short and gaspy. zzy and pray for quick to be done. tablespoonful of Dare's in and speedily the gas e pressing on the heart u can breathe deep and blessed relief; but why such attacks altogether? m at all? vhen any druggist any- tees Dare’s Mentha Pep- it elixir, to help you or OVER YEARS has been a world- r for kidney, liver and orders, rheumatism, 1 uric acid conditions. DOMED, ARLEM OIL l troubles, stimulate vital sizes. All druggists. Insist | genuine Goro MEDAL. "HY SKIN a are quinkly diopeied bp sino tter Un erstanding A LOOK FoR. TRANS | —pirss POOR ABMER MAYES] HE NEVER GAVE MICKIE, T R'S DEVIL BIC INNS AND A DOG KIN HAVE LOTS OF FUN IN “THE SUMMER THE PATTON COURIER By Charles Sughroe © Wesern Newspaper Union A BOY N' ADoG KIN HAVE LOTS You See, Mrs. Brown Has FELIX- How DO You THINK I CAN Go To THAT MANDRAY PARTY J! | 1 ™ THiS DRESS ? SS THATS pete \ TRY AND LAUGH IT OFF BUT THIS DRESS ISNT yy To BE WORN. WHATEVER “You WHY I Tink, T's A VERY Good FIT ~ FURTHER MORE A re tore CERTAINLY BECOMING ACTOR RECEIVED AND RAGS .. AGENT CLAIMED ABOVE GOES TO Dah Mathew - (Copyright W N U.) LET ME HAYE ABOUT TEN DOLLARS WORTH OF LINIMENT a FINNEY OF THE FORCE By F. O. Alerander u Newzuaper Unlon, AN SO YEVE HAL A LITTE SPAT WiTH PEG, 1S UT, MICKEY! rT 4 y — “A PAIR OF 'EM, MR. FINNEY BUT HONEST, I DONT KNOW WHAT ITS ALL ABOUT ~~: WELL TWEN-AN WHY DONT YEZ THRY To MAKE {I WENT OVER To OP WITH ii \_ SER HER TODAY - STARTED To SAY SOMETHING - BUT IL DIDNT ~ I couonT! Poo AT PATCHIN' THINGS UP IF VEZ COULDNT BRING PEG AROUND, BEGORRY/~ WHAT DID Y&Z. AlaxAil By Clancy Kids A Brush In the Hand's Worth Two Words of Warning 4 v7 . PERCY TL. © by the McClure Mewspaper Syndicate YourseLF? TO THINK THAT | HAVE TO SPANK OH, TIMMIE! AND TO THINK THAT (T THAY | PUNISHED You. TIMMIE, | HAD Suck FOND HOPES FoR You. TOO. OH! | HOPE You WIL TURN QUT ALRIGHT AS You GRow OLDER. AW, LISTEN, MA! cers CET Tis OVER WITH. CHARCIES OUTSIDE WAIN’ TO TAKE ME TO THE MOVIES - WAS ONLY YESTERDAY | naughty, too? NCS & ~ ~~ NX MARY GRAHAM ‘BONNER. COPYRIGHT BY WisTERN NEWLRAsn (i STOPPING THE TRAFFIC Nick and Nancy used to often won- der why Daddy so seldom said any- thing about the traffic in the city. Whenever they had been to the city they were always at first afraid of all the noise and the quantities of cars and automobiles and trucks that moved so quickly along the streets. After they had been there awhile they realized that everything was so beautifully managed by the big police- men that there was nothing to be frightened at. But they always thought that see- ing so much traffic was wouderful. “Everything goes just like clock- work in the city, doesn’t it, Daddy?” asked Nancy one morning. “Yes,” said Daddy, “it certainly does, as a rule. “But I must tell you of a funny thing | that happened one evening in a very | busy part of the city. “A cat discovered there was a piece of glass broken in the window of a butcher shop. “Now you can just imagine how cleverly and neatly and quickly the cat got through that window! “There was one light burning in the shop, although, of course, thie shop | was closed for the night. “And then didn’t the cat have a feast! “Never before had she known the Everything She Wanted to Eat joy of having everything she wanted to eat at one time with no stopping. “Some people saw what a good time the cat was having and stopped to watch her. “And then more and more people stopped, they were so amused. “It was just like seeing a funny play to see the cat pick out the choic- est morsels of meat and play with them and then eat them. “The crowd of people grew more and more. The street became so crowded that no one could pass by. “Soon it was so thick with people that the cars and automobiles could not pass. “After the cat had eaten as much as she wanted of all of the butcher's large supply of good things, a watch- man suddenly appeared on the scene. “With the help of a great many men the watchman finally succeeded in get- ting the crowd to move, and then he got into the shop. “But the cat simply leaped out of the window again and disappeared in- to a side alley, where probably she lived, as a rule, on bits she could pick up. “Such a looking butcher shop as it was now, for even if the cat had not quite eaten everything, she had tried everything, and she had eaten a sur- prising amount even for a hungry cat. “Well, said one person who had been watching the cat, ‘I think that the cat is the cleverest one I have ever seen. “ ‘Not only does she want to eat, but she knows just when to escape in time after a splended meal, and what is more wonderful than everything else, she stopped the traffic of cars and automobiles and trucks and peo- ple who might have been in a burry to get somewhere.” In Other Words A schoolgirl paraphrased the line “To bicker down the valley,” from Tennyson's poem, “The Brook,” as fol- lows: “To have an undignified quar- rel in a low place among the hills.” Another girl, given the line from “Lochinvar,” “He stayed not for brake,” paraphrased it: “le never stopped for a mechanical contrivance to reduce speed by means of friction.” A Give Away Margaret is only seven years old, | but sometimes quite naughty. On one occasion her mother, hoping to be particularly impressive, said “Don’t yon know that if you keep on doing naughty things, your children will be Margaret dimpled and cried tri- | umphantly, “Oh, mother, now you've given yourself away.” Preparedness Willie—What did | learn today, teacher? Teacher—Why do you ask? Willie—They'll want te know at * home A Slight Precaution Son—Cun you sign your name with | vour eves shut, daddy? Father—Certainly Son—Well, shut your eyes and sign my school report.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers