MercolizedWax Keeps Skin Young Gat an ounce and use aa directed. Fine particle* of »*#d akin peel off until all defect# eucb aa picnplee. liver epote. tan and freckle# disappear. Skin ie then eolt and velvety. Your face looks yearn younger Merooliaed Wax >>rint« out the hidden beauty of your skin. remove wrinkle* une one ounee Powdered Sasollto dlfcwled in one-half pint witch haaol. At dru* stores. Tablet for the Tardy A novel first aid to social citizens 1s reported from the city of Hanover, Germany, where a tablet has been set up at the junction of eight streets at Rathenau place. The tablet is di vided Into squares, for writing. If one of two parties to an appointment Is late the first comer writes In one of the squares directions for finding him or an explanation of his depar ture. The innovation Is said to have caught on to such an extent that the tah'cl is assured of a full quota of messages every day. CHILD need REGULATING? CASTORIA WILL DO ITI W! nn your child needs regulating, .renumber this: the organs of babies and children are delicate. Little bowels must lie gently urged—never forced. That's why Castorla Is used hy ho many doctors and mothers. It is specially made for children’s ail ments; contains no harsh, harmful drugs, no narcotics. You can safely give it to young infants for colic pain ;. Vet it is an equally effective regie' dor for older children. The next time your child has a little cold or fever, or a digestive upset, give him the help of Castoria, the children's own remedy. Genuine Castoria al ways lias the name: CASTORIA i_ zz.~^i Good Demand for Honey rJ , w bee business isn’t much affect ed by depression, the Department of Agriculture reports. Last year’s honei crop was worth about $10, 000.i w, rim 1 beeswax about $1,000, 000. New met bods of preparing and wrapping honey have stimulated the market, the department states. Like wise nickel candy bars containing honey and almonds have had a huge sale and consequently increased the use for honey. Stalling Each Other Linnet—I haven’t the courage to ted your father of my debts. Fiancee—What cowards you men are! Father hasn’t the courage to tell you of his.—Nagel Lustige Welt. Dizzu Sturt thsro'ieh bowel action*^^ when you feel dizzy, headachy. Ibitloui. Take NATURE’S • II'JUJT-W Tablet*. It’a mild. life, purely vegetable. . kji*'*«T ami far better than erdi- # lUniHml ■ary laxative*. Keep* you - TO MORROW taoliii.r right. 25c. & ALRIGHT The All-Vegetable Laxative |g$J|l§l. When the Row Starts “I’*' ' your \vire get angry If you don't talk to Iter.” “Tv>. only if 1 don’t listen to her.’* Supply at Hand palin' arounj here, sonny?” "Vci, shop at ilie o * of the road.” — ilotmiii|ue, Charleroi. it—- — I Relieve a Cough In One Day— Any sowjh m«y ctute *«doui trouble if permitted to 90 unchecked. Prompt ui« of D S. THE PENETOATINa , D* Ot Its* ginmicidi H L.jjlly ft ret relief immediately I AJi your drui9iit for lh* SI .15 *ite u Of Oidet direct, 91 vin9 bit asm*. I iF.E. ROLLINS CO. VJZV* jl....-- -^-- - i*«IU* City Ptg. Co.. No. 21-1*82. Out Our Way By Williams -:—V~1——r-T7-““-> / WELL , |T COOLDMf \ TtEQO ’Aft .M MOOR \ | KO.'tR’ WORLD ME\/ER / BE. HELPED, X ] IDEAL'Ss’S Win HEMER [JwiLL OE PERFECT. I Guess. ‘its A I ha\/5. a Perwick' \if »t was, -that / -ClMCH MOO OiDHT \ \MOOLO ~ BECO-2. HUMAMS ]GOM COULD BE 7 do rr oki Purpose. \\ a'ht perfic^. that shriek^' with / VNE. ALL MA'(E* Bird WOULD LlV^E Th BE 1 JOM AH' TH* mistakes . throw damcim'with jom Becuz. ! bull o’th* woods l iT OoT ak ' Put »h Th* Bull aimt FiRim ‘:m j wouldht f»re \ AHOtPER. I -faiKiW' SPOlLlH' '1HaT JO0-I HtM — BUT", lF \ T-V WELDERS CAH ah' LOOH" AT Thi’ MUCT\ TH'_GUM DlD AS • SAME lT. PM P'MJ HE SHOULD, v-1 e^y _ ,/W WOULDMT Sl. “7 0_pro. n ». pat or*. TVAE. HAP PS' ENO^iGr. 5 *? r. lys; by wr» sw-vic*. iwt- „ Tales of Real Dogs-By Albert Payson Terhune He Dropped It Down the Shaft A few months ago I told you the story of a coon hound that fed a dog chum of his which had fallen into a quarry pit, and at last drew human rescuers to the spot. Here is almost the same kind of story; verified by many witnesses. But the scene of this tale is not Amer ica, but Ausctralia. At Hall's Gap, near Stawell, Australia, lived James Scott, a rancher. Less than a mile away from him lived his nearest neigh bor, Jacob Pawsey. Both men had fine Airedale dogs, which were not only admirable guards, but hunt ers as well. Pawsey’s Airedale was named Brant, Scott'3 was named Wrangler. Early in January, 1931, in the middle of the Australian summer (the seasons are opposite from one another in Australia and in the United States, the Australian summer being our winter), Wrang ler disaDDeared Scott valued the dog highly. He hunted everywhere for him, and spent much money in advertise ments. But Wrangler was gone. Pawsey’s dog, Brant, haul been a lifelong chum of Wrangler's. The two dogs had hunted and loafed to gether every day since puppyhood Brant showed his worry over his chum’s absence by teasing Scoti and Pawsey to follow him out into the woods, and then by absenting himself from home for hours at a time. The two men paid no heed at first to Brant’3 teasing, thinking he wanted them to go look afresh for Wrangler. As the days went on Brant ceased his useless effort to lure the men to the woods with him. But he spent more and more time away from home. Also he grew thin, though his food dish was well filled every rtav and nothing was found tn It when it wa3 taken to be refilled. His owner thought the Airedale's loss of flesh was due to his pining for his lost pal. Then someone no ticed that his regular absences from home always occurred just after his mealtimes. One morning, Pawsey saw Brant pick up a huge bone and lug it off into the forest. Stirred by curiosity, the man followed, though at first he thought the dog was taking the bone to the woods to bury it in some safe place. But Brant did not bury the bone. Running as fast through the • would permit, he kept straight ahead. Pawsey followed as fast as he could, ever more and more cu I rious. Through the undergrowth and i then up a hillside Brant sped. He came to a halt at the top of an 1 mine-shaft. Pawsey came in sight just in time to see Brant drop the | bone carefully down over the edge of the shaft. Now this is not the normal dog’s fashion of disposing of bones. Pawsey knew that. He hurried for ward. Brant turned, at sound of the crashing underbrush, and caught sight of his master. The Airedale dashed over to meet Pawsey. Whimpering and shivering with excitement he led the way to the mouth of the aban doned mine-shaft. Pawsey followed and leaned far over the edge. Prom the depths below rame the 1 sound of a dog’s bark. The mysteiy of Wrangler’s disappearance wa: solved. Yes, and the sight of Brant dropping the bone down into the shaft solved the mystery of how Wrangler had kept alive all that ■ tlma. Pawsey ran to Scott's home with the news Togrther the men hurried back to the shaft, carrying a stout knotted rope This rone was fast ened to a3tump near the opening: and Pawsey descended the steep FLOWERS NEVER FML US Rn.;ivrdles* of World** Conditions, Nature give* Us Beautr FVom the Louisville Courier-Journal , Now purple violet* dot the green- ! sward like stars in the sky of a cloudless night Where the soil la rich, fed by dropping leaves, the violets do best — and amongst the bluagraa* that knows no mower or pasturing cattle. No flower ha* treater appeal to children than the Johnny-jump-up." Young bocks bend tirelessly during a school holt nay till childish fists can hold no more of the slender stems. No dail "ate flower of the darkened den, ihlg hardy blossom No of plucking or trampling seems to discourage It. Year after year It* happy blossoms reappear to herald the returning season and gladden the eye. They reflect the deepest lints of April's sky and match the backs of the birds of happincaa. who make their nests as the violets spring from the ever-yielding e.irth. Overhead, redbud blovoms burst from table trunks and branches. They add a touch of color to the soother tin’i. just now beaming to dun a gnuay mantle of green. Too eerly for the dogwood,, but another mouth s 111 sec these white bole. He carried a flashlight in h!s pocket. When he got to the bottom, there was Wrangler, none the worse for his long imprisonment, and wild with de'ught at prospect of a rescue. There, too, on the ground, were dozens of meat bones and crusts and the like—the food Brant had cast down tor his chum to eat. Water in holes at tha pit bot tom had provided drink for ;he cap tive, and Brant’s daily gifts of oread and meat and bor.os had kept him plump ar.d healthy. But Brant him self was skeleton-thin, from having given all his meals to the prisoner. Wrangler was taken home. In triumph. Tb.at night, for the first time in a long while, Brant ate a tremendous dinner. Now that his friend war, safe, he could afford to use his own food for his own bene fit. It was surmised that the two Alrdale;; had been hunting ;o gether along the hillside when Wrangler had blundered Into the shaft hole and had tumbled un hurt to the bottom. Brant had tried to lead his master to the spot. lad ing, he had fed the unfortunate dag every day since then. Thus far the story has a happy ending, and I wish I might shop it here, or say that the reunited dogs spent many a happy day to gether, thereafter. But the hap piness was pitifully short. In less than a week after Ills rescue from the shaft, Wrangler was trotting across a road, in front of Scott's farmhouse, when a speeding motor car struck and killed him. This was a situation too terrible for even Brant's cleverness to lighten. He was heartsick over Wrangler's death, and he moped miserably about his chum’s grave, refusing comfort or food or shelter. His own lifesprings were snapped by grief. A reporter from the "Melbourne Herald" was sent upcountry to get the story. He wrote of Brant: "He refused to be comforted, ne glects his food and runs whining about the familiar haunts where he and his pal spent so many happy days hunting rabbits together.” It is a strange coincidence that this Airedale in Australia and a coon hound in America should have had almost the same experi ence, during the same month, in feeding and finally leading rescu ers to a chum which had fallen into a hole too deep and too steep to climb out of. But both stories are 100 per cent true. It seems, also, an unnecessary touch of fate that Wrangler should have been kept alive for days bv a loyal fellow-dog on’y to be killed soon afterward by the carelessness of a speed-mad human. Every year, many thousands of pathetic little furry bodies lie dead in highway and ditch, as sacriiices to the heedless or heart less folk who revel in motoring at top speed and to whom the death of a 'mere dog seems to mean i nothing. These people cpstroy wnat tney cannot restore. I have heard more than one of them nay: "What does the life of a cur amount to?" That is a question which only the "cur's" Creator can answer. But maybe, sooner or later, there is an answer, and a bill to pay that cannot be oald in cash. I like to think so. Perhaps I air mistaken, or perhaps r.ot. FAMILY AFFAIRS Knoxville. Tenn —Several min ute* after Glenn V. Pate left Gen eral hospital after recovering from an apn-ndlcl*la op,,ratlr,n. his wife. ?Tr.i. Tru'o Pat*, moved In—for an i:poendie tin operation. blossomed trees In all their glory. In the shady woods, adder’s tongue — the dog-tooth violet — begm to unfold its delicate, lltv blossoms of gold «»r lavender-gran. The anemones shyly peep from the b-own earth. lLpatlca’s tender blue blossoms Is a sprint poem. It Is still a bit early for the others, but • lie first comers In the woods and f elds are harbingers of a season of promise. Despile drought or untimely frecer*. the w.ld flowers always bloom somewhere in spring They nevar fall eventually to renpjiear, | but one must search to find them. When You CAN’T QUIT Fatigue is the signal to rest. Obey It if you can. When you can’t, keep cool and carry-on in coinfort. Bayer Aspirin was meant tor Just such times, for it insures your comfort. Freedom from those pains that nag at nerves and wear you down. One tablet will block that threatening headache while it is still just a threat. Take two or three tablets when you’ve caught a cold, and that's usually the end of it. Carry Bayer Aspirin when you travel. Have some at home and keep some at the office. Like an efficient secretary, it will often “save the day” and spare you many uncomfortable, unproductive hours. Perfectly harmless, so keep it handy, keep it in mind, and use it. No man of affairs can afTord to ignore the score and more of uses explained in the proven directions. From a grumbling tooth to those rheumatic pains w hich seem almost to bend the bones, Bayer Aspirin is ready with its quick relief—and always works. Neuralgia. Neuritis. Any nagging, needless pain. Get the genuine tablets, stamped with the Bayer cross. They are of perfect purity, absolute uniformity, and have the same action every time. Why experiment with imitations costing a few cents less? The saving is too little. There is too much at Btake. But there? is economy in the purchase of genuine Bayer Aspirin, tablets in the large battles. NO TABLETS ARE GENUINE ^AYEr| ASPIRIN WITh6uTTHIS CROSS HUSTLE NO VIRTUE IN CHINESE EYES If I were to try l<» sum up In a phrase the main difference between the Chinese and ourselves, l should say that they, in the main, aim at en joyment, while we, in the main, aim at power. We like power over our feliowmen. nnd we like power >ver nature. For the sake of the former we have built up strong states, nnd for the sake of the latter we have built up science. The Chinese are too lazy and too good-natured for such pursuits. To any that they are lazy is, however, only true in a certain sense. They are not lazy in the wny of tropical peoples; that is to say, the Chinese will work hard for their living. Em ployers of labor find them extraordi narily industrious. But they will not work, ns Americans and western Eu ropeans do, simply because they would be bored if they did not con tinue doing their daily work. Nor do they love hustle for its own sake. When they have enough to live on, they live on it, instead of trying to augment it by hard work. They have an infinite capacity for leisurely amusement—going to the theater, talking while they drink ten. admir ing the Chinese art of earlier times, walgiDg In beautiful scenery, or playing gnmes. Living in the East t»»s, perhaps, a corrupting influence upon a white man, but I must confess, that, since I was In China, I have regarded lazi ness as one of the best qualities of which men in the mass are cnpnhle. —Bertrand Ilussell in the Modern Thinker. "Ad” Got Roulu A Newport (England) miner found life dreary after he had been legally separated from his wife. He insert ed this advertisement in n paper: "Young man wishes to meet widow, no objections to a child.” He got only one reply. He wrote several letters to his mysterious correspond ent, finally arranging to meet her. When he arrived, the wife from whom he was separated was await ing him, with an order to appear in court to answer maintenance charges. Loneliness is to endure tHe pres ence of one who does not under stand. Horses Carried to Fires Motorization of tire equipment lin* done away with the fire horse, but In Los Angeles they have gone a step farther. Horses now ride to fire there. A motor truck with a special body la used to transport horse*, whenever there is a forest fire In the mountains. The horse* are used for scout duty In regions where motor ized apparatus cannot penetrate. How One Woman Lost 10 Lbs, in a Week Mrs. Retty Luedeke of Dayton writes: “I am using Krusclicn to reduce weight—I lost 10 pounds In one week and cannot say too much to recommend it.” To take off fat easily, SAFELY and HARMLESSLY—take one half teaspoAful of Kruschen in a glass of hot water in the morning before breakfast—It is the safe way t<> lose unsightly fnt and one bottle thnt lasts 4 weeks costs but a trifle. (Jet It at any drugstore in America. If tills first bottle fails to convince you this is the safest way to lose fat—money back. Rut be sure and get Kruselien Salts—imitations are numerous and you must safeguard your health. Swimming Pool Handy Firemen pumped water from the swimming 1t°°l In the basement of the Y. 11. C. A. building in Berwick, Pa., to fight a tin* on the third Iloor. Water lines feeding the pool were turned on simultaneously. Firemen estimated the pool would supply water for throe hours of lire fighting. Ancient S.wedi*h Bible A Swedish loule, printed in Eu rope 310 years ago, was handed down from generation to generation in one family and is now owned by Peter Pearson, Ashland, WIs. It is printed In oJd Scandinavian script. —Indianapolis News. How Not to Sell Customer—I want a dress to put on around the house. Polite Clerk—How large is your house, madam?—Detroit News. A Word for Himtelf Betty—Jack don’t take “No" for nn answer. What shall I do? Dick—Say "Yes" to some other fellow. Nurses say that many people would never •re the inside of a hospital, if they took care of their "nerves." When they feel vitality larking, nurses take Fellow*’ Syrup because they have •ccn doctors all over the world pre*ribe this wonderful tonic for “rundown" pa tient*. They have *een the definite results In Increased pep, improved vitality and "interest in life." Try it yourself. Ask your druggist for gmuint Fellow*’ Syrup today. FELLOWS’ SYRUP Newspaper advertising * The advertisement* you find in your newspaper bring you important news. News in regard to quality and ; prices. Just as the "ads" bring you news on how to buy advantageously...so do the "ads"offer the merchant the opportunity of increasing his sales at small expense.