\GHES ‘here’s scarcely an ache or pain t Bayer Aspirin won't relieve mptly. It can’t remove the cause, it will relieve the pain! Head- es. Backaches. Neuritis and ralgia. Yes, and rheumatism, d proven directions for many ortant uses. Genuine Aspirin t depress the heart. Look for Bayer cross: 2 YER BAS R berdeen’s Poetic Nickname rdeen is known as the “Silver )y the sea,” due to the gleam- hite of the Scottish city’s gran- ildings. — or Ivy Poisoning Try Hanford’s alsam of Myrrh salers are authorized to refund ney forthe first bottle if not suited, our Modern Mai -Have you loved anybody be- e? Nobody. -Nobody has loved you? Nobody, ‘Then I can’t marry a man little experience. IVER TROUBLES ngue, bad breath, constipation, bili- :ausea, indigestion, dizziness, insom- from acid stomach. Avoid serious taking August Flower at once. Get ood druggist. Relieves promptly — stomach, livens liver, aids digestion, poisons. You feel fine, eat anything. JUST FLOWER eak Addresses Barred st Office department has an- that hereafter letters bear- « addresses will be sent to letter office if they do not ‘esses of senders. Postal au- in the past have been in- oward violations of the rule etters and post cards should ber addresses, but this re- ? sion would indicate that it 2d by an increase of first- ter bearing freak addresses. ELL I a) ith Soap and Water Iy wrist watch has stopped Mother, —Perhaps it needs a little 0, ‘cause I just washed it ing. erate self-made man expects his ngke the most of him. ADACHE ? HE d of dangerous heart de- its take safe, mild, purely ble NATURE'S REMEDY rid of the bowel poisons 1se the trouble. Noth- MR for biliousness, sick and constipation. Acts . Never gripes, safe, purely vegetable only 25¢c. Make the test tonight. LIKE A MILLION. TAKE TO-NIGHT TOMORROW ALRIGHT Lydia E. Pinkham’s Compound when I nervous and run- w the advertisement d to try it because I ly able to do my . It has helped me vay. My nerves are ave a good appetite, land I do not tire so commend the Vege- mpound to other it gives me so much nd makes me feel erson.”’—Mrs. Lena 1, Ellsworth, Maine. m Med. Co:Lynii, Mass. i 3 & 2 Place Los Angeles Harbor Now in Second WIDE WRALD £ROTG © With a record of $1,425,844.19 net profit earned for the city during the past year, Los Angeles harbor is now sec- ond in American shipping, and was one of the “exhibits” most interesting to delegates of the National Foreign Trade convention. Above is an aerial view of Los Angeles inner harbor. Medals Given Navy's Transatlantic Flyers BA HS 2 The United States navy flyers who made the first transatlantic fight in May, 1919, being presented with the NC medals by President Hoover at the White House. In this picture President Hoover is presenting the medal to Com- mander John H. Towers, ‘for conceivin is Secretary of the Navy Charles Francis Lieut. Comdr. Elmer F. Lieut. J. L. Breese, and Chief Aviation Pilot Eugene S. mander Albert C. Read, o 5 organizing and commanding the first transatlantic flight.” On the right Adams, while on the left are the others who received the medal: Com- Stone, Former Lieut. Walter Hinton, Lieut. H. C. Rodd, Former Rhodes. LANDMARK PERILED and fire bell historic curfew tower at Moreton-in-the-Marsh, Glou- This cestershire, England, in which King Charles once hid during a hazardous trip across the country, is being shaken to pieces by the vibrations from pass- ing automobiles. The city council must decide between expensive restora- tion work and demolition or removal. NEW REVOLT LEADER Hon. V. J. Patel became leader of the passive resistance campaign of the natives of India following the incar- ceration of Mahatma Gandhi and Mrs. Naidu. He was formerly president of the Indian legislative assembly. The ‘UO, 8. tually rebuilt. Submarine 0-12, in the naval “boneyard” at Philadelphia, which Sir Hubert Wilkins has requested from the Navy department for his underwater trip under the North pole from Spitzbergen to the Bering sea. The plans disclosed that the submersible, if made avallable, would be vir THE PATTON COURIER | MENTAL HEALTH PUBLIC CARE | By DR, HAVEN EMERSON, New York Public Health Official. HERE would be just as much sense in sending the case of scarlet fever to a reformatory as in sending a delinquent schoolboy to jail. Public Lealth work can no longer be limited to the con- trol of eommunicable disease, correction of physical defects in children or safeguarding the lives of mothers and children in childbirth, It must also include prevention of defects.in nervous and emotional control. The health officer must begin to ask himself such questions as: “Will the psychiatrist get to the mean, lazy, ne’er-do-well before the police- man does?” “Will the bully, the fearful child, the miserable man mect a. wise social worker before he is forced into an institution?” Ts it not at least as important that the suicide rate has risen from 4.9 to 19.% per 100,000 of our people in seventy years as that the diabetes death rate has done about the same? Is there a greater need to report upon a rising death rate from appendicitis or to analyze, publish, teach and, if possible, prevent the conditions that have brought about a rise in the divorce rate from 26 per 100,006 to 68 per 100,000 in less than fifty years? It is just as much the province of the doctor of public health to concern himself with occurrence of temper tantrums as with the preva- | lence of rickets in a community. Perhaps the probabilities of truancy can be estimated on the basis of today’s records of boys who have mother- less homes or breakfastless mornings. Much improvement in the field of mental health may be hoped for | through preventive measures. Only about one-tenth of retarded school children owe their difficulties to such causes as heredity, mental disease or epilepsy. This is an encouraging fact when considering the possibili- ties of prevention. PARENTS’ NEED OF TRAINING By DR. LOWRY, Director Institute for Child Guidance. Child guidance clinics continually are encountering “infantile” par- ents. The most frequent complaint of this type is that their children disobey them. They do not seek help in instilling desirable qualities. In an attempt to analyze the most desirable attributes of personality, I have collected from 26 persons, mostly not parents, lists of those traits | which they regard as most desirable and most undesirable. The ten 1 traits which appear on the largest number of lists are honesty, sense of humor, cheerfulness, tolerance, sincerity, intelligence, sympathy, courage, reliability and loyalty. The ten traits placed on the largest number of lists as undesirable are selfishness, egotism, deceitfulness, dishonesty, jealousy, laziness, cowardice, instability and stubbornness. It is note- worthy that obedience and disobedience, as such, do not occur in these two lists. The contrast with the interests of parents emphasizes the fact that parents are most likely to be concerned about the problems of the present instead of the future behavior and success of the child. x TENDENCY TO CRIMINALITY By DR. FRANS ALEJANDER, Berlin Psychoanalyist. All children, if iree to respond to their instinctive impulses, would act as criminals. Instead of the popular conception that it is natural to be a faw-abiding citizen, mental science has shown that people are born criminals. Distinction must be made between the chronically criminal and the accidentally criminal, as the former class is incapable of reform by a mere change of environment, but requires medical treatment. The tend- ency to criminality is acquired in the conflicts of childhood between the natural impulses, chiefly love and hunger, and society. It is often impos- gible to find any rational motives for the behavior of the chronically criminal. Punishment has no deterrent effect on the neurotic criminal except- ing to stimulate him in an opposite direction from that desired. An indi- vidual of this type after punishment feels he has expiated his crime and is encouraged to commit new offenses. NEW AGES, NEW RELIGIONS By CHARLES FRANCIS POTTER, New York (Humanist). Ox-cart religion is out of place in an airplane age. Every age has to have a religion of its own, because every age is marked by its system of transportation, mind of man broadens. When men had to depend on their own legs or on ox carts they could not travel far and remained tribal in their outlook. The development of transportation has continued until now the air- plane removes man’s last handicap in travel. When the airplane arri must go. World peace must come in tl airplane ag and as travel increases, due to improved facilities, the ne provincialism The provincialism in religion also must go. Cadets Take a Ride at Aberdeen West Point cadets of the graduating class taking a ride on a self-propelled gun mount during their annual visit of instruction to the artillery proving grounds at Aberdeen, Md, tod with ordinary theism, humanism stands for thinkin As contr versus praying. courage versus trust, confidence versus fear, simplicity versus elaboraicness and ritualism and a pioneering instinct versus conformity. CRIMINAL VICTIM OF ACCIDENT By DISTRICT ATTORNEY CRAIN, New York. 1f hust reli- gious educat s respected their wives, and if children were given and taught to honor the old-fashioned principles of hon- esty and fair play, there would be no crime problem. [ am ne ving anything new. I am merely repeating a few beliefs 1 have alw eld.” We should be fair to the criminal, and take into account his « environment. He should be allowed to earn a fixed sum while in pris o that he will feel independent and not an outcast, and his term sh e cut down if he shows an intention to reform. While on parole, & r should he treated as a man who has had ua accident. The j down judic would also he treated with fairness. It is not wise to cut wer becuew ‘nm some instances it has been abused Pathetic Reunion That | Has Film Outclassed | Stranger than fiction and more | moving than a film is a story which | comes from Saint Omer, France, The | scene is a cafe at Quivrechain. Among the customers is an elderly woman. A miner enters, He has a story to tell, He relates how his fa- ther abandoned his mother in this | very same village of Quivrechain in 1885, and took him to America when he was three years of age, His fa- | ther died shortly after his arrival, | and he was adopted by*Poles, who made a miner of him. Eventually he returned to France, working in a pit at Hensies and passing as a Po- lish miner. The elderly woman put questions, and the miner was aston- ished when the woman jumped up in great excitement and declared | that he was not a Pole, but a French- | man, and that he was her son, taken | from her 44 years ago, OLD DOCTOR'S IDEA IS BIG HELP TO ELDERLY PEOPLE | | | | | | | | Tn 1883, old Dr. Caldwell made a for whigh elderly people the world over praise him todag! Years of practice convinced bime that many people were endanger- discovery | ing their health by a careless { choice of laxatives. So he begam a search for a harmless prescription Pipe-Organ to Sound in Famous Tabernacle | which would be thoroughly effpe- tive, vet would neither gripe mr One wonders what Spurgeon would | { t 2 « \n which form any habit. At last he foand i. | | | Over and over he wrote it, when he found people bilious, headaeky, have thought of the new org: is to be brought into use at the Met- | ropolitan tabernacle, writes “Looker- | On” in the London Daily Chronicle. | out of sorts, weak or feverish ; with The great preacher shared the oid | coated tongue, had breath, no appe- r, It relieved the mest Scottish dislike of “a kist 'o whis- | tite or ene bs, and yet was gentle obstinate cas tles,” and in his time would permit | i : a no musical instrument of any kind | With women, children and elderly in the tabernacle services, all the | PeoDIe in : Today g amous, effective singing being led by a precentor, who | loday the same famous, effective: sane) prescription, known Dr. Cald- sang announced the hymns and 1 P 13 & 5 | ell’'s Syre wnsin, is the wo = through the first line to give the con- | Weil's STUN Pers, 15 Ie Or | It may be: as : 108 ular laxative. gregation a start, In recent years | Pal popular Jasative an American organ has been used,| © tained from any drugstore. but the famous church in Newington | = : re ae Her Nee Butts has had to wait until now for d add- | Little Betsy had been ill, and width of the privilege of an invalid, demanded the Co co much of her mother’s time and ae thie tabernacle | tention that her older brother, Fred, | was a {rifle annoyed. One day when had kept her pareat | reading aloud to her until she was al- | suceinet- vhat Betsy 1t should b despite—or its first pipe-org: ed that, the tack of instrun gregational singin has always been notably good. he tal ause Jetsy devoted Nothing Doing McCankle of the Ameri- most hoarse, Fred rem Secretary ly: “Well, mom, I thin can Institute of Actuaries told a | peeds is a ‘talking picture of yow™"™ story at a banquet in Des Moines. | ee “A waiter in a night club,” he | Old Tires Know Tacks said, “complained bitterly to the | A ne. tire rides nicely, but it's the cloakroom girl. | old one that knows its tucks.—Des “‘The whole night through’ he | njgines Tribune-Capital moaned, ‘I've had the hardest kind of | ———— hard luck. Haven't made a cent on | <Yhen a the side, not a cent, I added in the | ;yqq, he only becomes sulky. date on every blasted bill, but not |. once did the trick work. Not once | ? the whole night through. “You poor fish, said the cloak- | room girl, ‘no wonder your trick didn’t work. Den’t you know that all these people here are attending the actuaries’ convention? | good-natured man Nonsense Jean Assolant, the French airman, | said at his wedding breakfast in Old | Orchard : “Everybody ought to get married. Most people's excuses for not marry- | ing are as nonsensical as Sir Thomas Lipton’s. ol. 1 “Sir Thomas, you know, said the Dolly sisters: RR ——————————————t “ ‘Yes, I'm a bachelor, and I'm go- | WORMS—A CHILD'S GREATEST ENEMY Look for these symptoms in your child—gritting the teeth, picking the nostrils, disor- dered stomach. These signs may mean worms. And worms left in the body mean brokem ing to remain one, for you know, my dears, married men make the worst husbands.’ ” Self-Diagnosis Patient (sareastically, after being kept waiting)—I am afraid I have al- most forgotten what 1 came to see health. you about, doctor, Don't delay one hour. Frey's Ver Doctor brightly ' e mifuge rids a child of worms quickly. | octor (brightly)—Ah! loss of For 75 years it has been America's safe, vegetable worm medicine. Af all druggists! Frey’s Vermifuge Expels Worms memory, obviously.—Stray Stories. Household Hints “Thrown out of apartment three wife, man returns,” solemn- headline. Possibly’ that not want him back!— Times. times by ly states a woman does Los Angeles For bloated feeling and distressed breathing due to indigestion you need a medicine as well as a purgative. ul Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills are b both. Only 25¢ a box. Adv. Bourbon Poultry Medicine for each chick daily in drink or fesd sti ; appetite, aids digestiom, wegu- vels, promotes health, lessens isease infection. On marked for 25 years, Small size 6c, aif pint 3, pint $1.50. At druggists,or sent by ual. : Bourbon Remedy Co., Box 7, Lexington, Hx. is a statesman if he doesn’t | =——= p— The Right Way Out that A man have to bother about being re-electgd | Taming and leaves that to “the boys.” Policeman— Where's | ee de | youth who was creating all the dis- Remember this: Among men, only | turbance up here? young and :hapely men look well in Landlady—He just went down the a bathing suit. fire escape.—Cincinnati Enquirer. ’ Flirts soid onle Don t in this yellow Swat! Here's the sure, quick, easy way to kill all mosquitoes indoors and keep ’em away outdoors! Con Smet EF NV LEARN BEEKEEPING orto: : ture’s purest food. Raier at home. We send the handbook, “How to Succeed With Bee” used in schools and colleges, and a full year subscription for Your questions cheerfully answered. The Beckeeps rs It Beekeepers Own Magazine.” 3ox 333, San Antiguo
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers