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Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and other forms of respiratory diseases, and is excellent for buildinir tin th imitm after colds or flu. Money refunded if any coughorcold.no matter of how long stand ing, is not relieved after takingaccording todirections. Askyourdruggist. (Adv.) and Take Food Able to Sit Up Beware the Cough or told that Hangs On Pri A Mountain Man Goes Home FDTIME STORY There er ?s.M . sick By DOUGLAS MALLOCH from the mountain ran all through them Just as It does be said with a country," cov were through our bodies. They n sigh, lonely ered with a sort of skin with baire "And the prairie ain't no conntrj on it like thin fur. The ends were for a mountain man to die, now. not sharp pointed as they are set I've my face to the mountains but were big and round like knobs my feet on the rlsin' road, and at horns like not all, were They And Tm goin' back up yonder to a they made my head hot and very un mountain man's abode. comfortable. That is why I hid I come from the mountain conntrj so fast away. They grew very fast, as many a man has come that every day I could see, by look When the wand'rin" fever's on him. lng at my reflection In the water, and the call of street and If a were little that tney longer. slum, seemed to me sometimes as if all B t now I'm sick of cities, and sick my strength went Into those new of the city's ways, And 1 had to be very care horns. nd I'm goin' back up yonder, in the ful not to hit them against any hills to end my days. In the first place It would thing. have hurt, and In the second place farm it might have spoiled the shape of "So thanks for your breakfast, er, and thanks for the bed my horns. had ; "When they had grown to the It was just a hayloft, farmer, but a length you now see they began to hayloft ain't so bad. shrink and grow hard. The knob on the ends shrank until they be- The smell of the hay was sweetet than any I've smelt before came pointed. As soon as they I waved my hand to Mother stopped growing the blood stopped Since I turned from Father's and I as and be them, flowing up they door. came hard they were no longer ten der. - The skin which had covered I can't help yon none with harvest, I can't help you none with tliem grew hard and split and stock. nibbed it off on trees and bushes The little rags you see are what Is For my feet are soft with prairie, and I want the feel of rock. left, but I will soon be rid of those Then I shall be ready to fight a Oh, some of you call me hobo, but that doesn't mind to me, man, If need be, and will fear him only when he has a terrible gun with For I'm coin' back up yonder to the place I ought to be. him." LIghtfoot tossed his pretty head proudly and rattled his wonderful "Yes, youth Is the time to wander, but age Is the time to rest. tree. horns against the nearest "Isn't he handsome," whispered Pe- And your home's the place to head for, and a mountain home Is ter to Jumper the Hare. "And did best. you ever hear of anything so won derful as the growing of those new Not many, I guess, will know me. not many'll care to know, horns In such a short time? It Is hard to believe, but I suppose it But your home's the place to head for, and It's there I mean to go. must be true." "It Is," replied Jumper, "and I tell There's many a year left In me, but whether It's one or ten, you, Peter, I would hate to have LIghtfoot try those horns on me even It is there I want to finish. In the hills up there again. though I were as big as a man. I'm off for the mountain country, You"ve always thought of Lightfoot as timid and afraid, but you should and here Is the reason why : see him when he Is angry. Few For the prairie ain't no country for a mountain man to die." people care to face him then." 193 J. byT. W. Burgess. )WNU Service. 193. Douglas Malloch. WNTJ Service. uXT-ES- LIGHTFOOT TELLS HOW HIS HORNS GREW IS hard to believe what seems Impossible. And yet what seems Impossible to you Is a very commonplace matter to some one else. So it does not do to say that a thing cannot be Just because you cannot Peter understand how It can ba Rabbit wanted to believe what LIghtfoot the Deer had Just told blm, but somehow he couldn't be lleve It You see LIghtfoot had Just told Peter that the splendid great horns which crowned Llghtfoot'e head were new and had grown that summer. Do you wonder that Peter found this bard to believe? If he had seen them growing It would IT Barter That Satisfied AH Concerned in Dea Forty-fiv- e years ago I owned lumber business in ft little country town In Manitoba. We were all des perately poor; a $10 bill looked as large as a bed sheet. One duy a farmer asked me to sell him, on credit, $10 worth of lumber, explaining that he bad sold some hogs to the butcher, who could not pay him. The butcher would go good for the lumber bill, he said. I ex plained to the farmer that I would as soon trust him as the butcher and told him to get the butcher, who con firmed the farmer's story. I asked the butcher if he sold meat to the Grand Central hotel where I was boarding. He said he did and that they were owing him money. I told him to go to the hotel and gel me two $5 meal tickets on account of his meat bill, which h did, and I furnished the farmer with the lumber. So the hotel paid for its meat, th butcher for the hogs, the farmer foi the lumber, and I for my board with out any money passing. W. J. Palm er, In Wall Street Journal. 'l f if 'IA f " Tour Bad f'".V If A Vm! ,f'.'f this condition, th be any reason t Eich. fmitv c V clears the little r , ?euuy, narmiewlj is regulates the bow strength to them I ana neips to tty- itrength, energy - ' v ... 'Ja ' ' 5oao.Woo.o:o.o.o.OAopAOPAQ ; Jo Mendi, performing chimpanzee of the Detroit Zoological fell dangerously ill not long ago, letters and flowers came from bis friends all over the country who had been entertained by bis tricks. But Jo Is slowly recovering, and our photograph shows him in his new pajamas sitting up and taking a little broth administered by Director John Millen. WHEN Biblical Mystery Earauel, or Lemuel, as it Is sometimes spelled, is the name of a king mentioned In Proverbs 31:1 and 4. That chapter begins: "The words of King Lamuel. The vision wherewith The his mother Instructed him." Tombstone Lives the Old Days Over Again it :t tniw . Constantly.. t. chllrl 1 headachy, half.' less, with coated J"-- no appetite or ete- -'v nine times out ot -little stomach lng. And when . over fiffv wov,"-l m, ax , "How Do You Know It Is True?" name occurs again in the fourth Snapped Peter, a Little Crossly, verse : "give not to kings, 0 Lamuel, have been another matter. But he give not wine to kings. . . ." hadn't seen LIghtfoot since the very Chastity and temperance are the last of the winter, and then LIghtthemes of the discourse that folfoot had had Just such handsome lows. Nothing else whatever is horns as he now wore, so he really of known King LamueL Some Bible couldn't be blamed for not beins commentators believe that he was able to believe that those bad been an ancient king of Massa, a small lost and in their place new ones kingdom somewhere in Arabia, alhad grown in Just the few months though that is mere speculation. of spring and summer. Massa is mentioned In Genesis as So when Peter had asked him being one of the sons of Ishmael. about the rags hanging to his horns. Pathfinder Magazine. had told Peter that he LIghtfoot didn't like to tell things to people An excuse seldom does. who wouldn't believe them. And Peter didn't blame LIghtfoot In the (. least. Breath Still "It's all true," broke In another olee. Peter turned to find his couldn't understand I Cm?" I HE nothing helptd cousin, Jumper the Hare, sitting until a tnena suggested, near. Unseen and unheard he had might be vour alomaeni And itwaJ clogged intestines stolen up and had overheard what that invariably spread poison- - Peter and LIghtfoot had said. ous wastes through the system and lead to up- "How do you know It Is true?" snapped Peter, a little crossly. etc. What a difference when he tools KS Because I saw Llghtfoot's old (Nature's Remedy). Regular bowel act ion thereafter. He felt pepped up, remade. And horns after they had fallen off. and hreath (wanw nure aa snrinz air. That's be I often saw Lightfoot while his cause NR stimulates the entire intestinal tract new horns were growing," retorted to normal tunc- tioniny. Safe, de- Jumper. 2"fcH!l "All right I I'll believe anything gists' only 25c. that LIghtfoot tells me If you saj ind'RW-It la true," declared Peteir, who Quick relief for acid U JVib tion. heartburn. Only 10c greatly admired his cousin Jumper "Now tell me about those rags cling lng to your horns, LIghtfoot Please g Favors School g should be taught, not do." LIghtfoot couldn't resist that learned by experience, declared Prof. A. E. Heath, of Swansea, Wales, In "please." "Those rags are what Is un address at the social hygiene left of a kind of covering which cov council summer school. "We should ered the horns while they were not dare to play the violin without growing, as I told you before," snld he. "Very soon after my old horn knowing anything about It," he said, "and yet we do not seem to think It dropped off, the new ones began to They were not hard, not at necessary to learn this Important art grow. of There would be all like they are now. They were more hope If appeals to the younger soft and very tender, and the blood people are made on esthetic rather OELEBKATING the anniversary of the founding of their city, the people of Tombstone re than moral grounds," he added. stored so far as they could the old time appearance and atmospaere when that place was famous as I Wa center of the life of the then untamed Far West The photograph shows the reconstructed Crystal Palace saloon that was a rendezvous of the "bad men" and the Try Lydia E. Plnkham's Vtgetabls Compound good men and the scene of many shooting affair. Garqled no EhODl subject f0r experiment medicines of vam merit ft; Tm 1 i IH i cmifl the two-fol- , lsn't1IC(,; hn living agree that I 'SKw- n ! Love-Makin- Love-makin- " Mrs. Joseph W. Ave.. Omaha. Nrt,.? never forget the to give my babyfe-- l Fig Syrun. Nothlt-- ,' 'A help his weak when he was justs. e T fered a coorl rlpsl i Fig Syrup, but It a n .quick. I have usei' "j colds and little t; x. I consider St Insist that the on the carton bei, since. boy." L wJ fornla." Over used a year. fcmk , i Scientists on Trif Fire Secni One of the oMsij rerles, the reputed tf . oriests and medlfel themselves ImmuncI investigated this if the ' I Smithsonian Truman Michelsoai p tion, has been beliefs and folklonC of Indians In Iom. 1 f he found the habit w conducting certain I Rosetta Stone a missionary to plunge their bare rf " Turkey. water or to take tl burning flrebrandi a bcrs of the Fox m BONERS are actual humorous tidbits found in examination patrick to the previom 1 ; pers, essays, etc- - by teachers. hands and arms lnnf unnamed weed wbicii Shakespeare was born In' the iy In the prairie comi , year 1554, supposedly on his birth- it is believed, proteof'5 day. porarily against j The enraptured tourist stood on the bank of the Grand canal In Venice drinking It all In. . An Idiom is a person of low Intel ligence. A demagogue Is a vessel containing spirituous liquora Explain the effect of heat and cold and give an illustratloa Heat expands: In the summer the days are long. Cold contracts: In the winter the days re short. . 1932. Bell Syndicate. WNU service. Nippy Jacquette f love-makin- g. Magazine. Why Not fori Tn l?offl rhoro Ins! his daddy. Thus w birthday dinner for progress Reid was ef ? ested In every detail "And when are K out the flag, mamma'pi e "What flag, dear, i : "Why, the flag fori lay!" Paper From Paper thin enoui I has been made from,! experimental laborator Ga., has announced. ' P Is experimenting win means for making pr : ft paper supply from ern pine lands. fifty-secon- d PA PA KIO- It takes a good fc celt to undertake to s 0 Oft i1 quick-triggere- AT THE j She's Up in the Air Again Those she loves . . . are first to suf fer when monthly pains shatter her nerves. Lydia E. Pinkham'i Vegetable Compound would ease that awful agony. Joan of Are Flaj Flies ,"Pop, what Is perslmonyr member of her Scottish bodyguard "Picking up bits of string worth who designed her original battle flag, ten cents a mile." WNO Service US. Bell Syodlcata. a reproduction of which has been to the of presented archbishop Itheims and by Scottish Eng Leads f cupful of raisins, cupful of New Orleans molasses, f teaspoonful each of cinnamon and salt. Mix well and bake two and f hours, stirring often during the first hour of bak On the last stirring add two lng. tablespoonfuis of butter. Southern Waffles. Sift one pint of flour with three tablespoonfuis of baking powder.one-halteaspoonful of salt, then add one and cupfuls of milk two eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately, mix and beat well, then add two tablespoonfuis of melted butter. Add more milk if the hat ter seems too thick. Serve with New Orleans molasses. one-hal- f Jri'A'. 1 If. V V M, i 4 ' 4' t'-'- f j. (If i - S. GOLD MEDAL 1 i HAARLEM OIL COMPANY 220 56th Street, Brooklyn Now York i - i t t II T V., - V in. - v , w f 1 Essence ... by Western Newspaper Union. Putnam T (If i IID Ul AND one-fourt- HW, Salt Labi One of the prettiest things brought out recently In this little Jacquette of broadtail. With Its close collar and capelet sleeves It converts the wool frock Into a smart ensemble. Wf) j tiOTf T0 fill , SOUA 251 200 Rootni .' Radio connect!'1'' RATES I'j ' j Gri'gnry Knimt. who last yem liie Mil cunfiTfm'e team, lt c!iil:iili ol (he ( hivcisily ul Wlscnri sin eleven this scuxnn. He i,ij rryiiliirly at ini;in1 Imt Is also an es rellent back field limn. ni.'nle 5 f der. Just try taking Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules. During 237 years this fine, oM preparation has helped millions. Why not you? lns.st on COLD MKDAL. Sue & 75c FltT!: A ffenorous s.'imple, free, if yon print your name and addrt.-farrms this advert cement ainl mail to lriartmcnt "11", care of M. one-hal- KITTY McKAY V,. . one-hal- 0 ....I 1 one-hal- By Nina Wilcox I,. If yon are on of th millions who must et up several times a night, your trouble n probably due to an irritation of the blad- f Smoking Him Out llsh friends of France. The de signer of the original was Hamlsh Polworth, who after serving with Joan's warriors, became a monk and died at Dunfermline abbey. mm, 0 At Night It was eaten with mush and cereals on griddle cakes and all kinds of bread, sweetened dried annle nles. baked ham, cakes and puddings, as there was no sugar In those days MADE OF MOLASSES such as we commonly ose now. Molasses the product of the 4 0ST of us think of molasses as bouth. has being Its delectable dishes an sirup which which have been handed down to us was used In grandmother's day to from generation to generation. The sweeten the gingerbread, cookies and Juicy pies, that gave an aroma following are a few worth keeping to ber pantry which we never for as they are choice: Louisiana Pudding. get. Take cupful of well However, molasses goes back much farther than grandmother's washed rice, four cupfuls of milk pantry, for our Purllan grandpar ents used molasses In all their cook the Badgers ery, and the ful) molasses keg was a large part of the food equipment t-one-hal- Once more the flag of Joan of An is flying In Rheims cathedral, whert she ended her mission. It was a DON'T FIRST USE ERNEST the girl friend Bays she hasn't vet decided whether to take her vaca tion at the seashore or In the mourt Mini: sht can't make up her mind which is the least exhausting. 183: BhII Syndicate. WNU Hervlc. "What this country needs," tay Impecunious Imouene, "Is somebody who can cross the dollar bill, with a boomerang." C. 103. Ucll Syndicate. on C. ITcllrl ftoctricil esln ' C"11"8 5 ) fr mm WNU Berrlc. r |