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Show THE BEAVER COUNTY WEEKLY PRESS, BEAVER, UTA1I FiWMFE ASPIRIN NEARLYTARVED '"A- nn Nun! "Bajtr" on 'Genuine Krs. Peterson Says. She Was Afraid to Eat on Account of Trouble That Followed. i I weighed jast joandswhen oft I sf W7 s. - a hundred and three I begun taking Tanlae, Take Asiilrin only "as told In each weigh a hundred and twenty-pounds," declared , Mr. Amy package of genuine Bayer Tablets of Peterson, the wife of a prosperous Aspirin, i lien you win be following fcroer of I.akevllle, Mass., n suburb the directions and dosage worked out by physicians during 21 years, and as New Bedford. safe by millions. Take no "1 had acute proved Indigestion," die wild, If you see and no one knows how I suffered. cnancea with substitutes. I had cramping pains In my stomach the Bayer Cross on tablets, you can that were almost unlieanibU and 1 take them without fear for Colds, Headache. Neuralcla. Rheumatism suffered no end of distress from Earache, Toothache, and Lumbago Wl Wonting. Why, I whs actually for J'aln. Handy tin boxen of twelve to tarring keep from being In such awful misery, and I lost thirteen tablets cost few cents. Druggists also feu larger packages. Aspirin If the pound In weight. Sometimes I wontrade mark of Bayer Manufacture of der how I lived through It all, and I aiouoaceucaciaester of Sallcyllcacid. uiougtit there' was no hoi for me. I was restless The Chaser. night and day and wa easily Senora I'ilar Sereda, the Spanish Irritated, and Nome nlglijs I slept so little It didn't seem that I painter, was defending the bull fight had been to led at all. at a dinner in New York. "But now I feel as strong and well "An American visitor to Madrid." M If I had never been alck a day In she said, "left the bull fight one af"r life, njid I Just know Tnnlac Is ternoon In disgust. the best medicine in the world. I "'What a ford animal a bull Is!' he aren't a ,touch of Indigestion now, snld. 'It win spend hours chasing a and every time I sit down to the table red clonk round and round the ring. I .can't help but feel "And then the American saw a pair thankful to Tannic. I have a wonderful appetite of Hushing Muck eyes, and he aad have gained back .all my ' lost hours chasing a red cloak roundspent and eight and six pound beside. I nm round the town." Imply overjoyed to be feeling bo well, and 1 Jujit .praise Ttmlac every where 1V0HEH NEED SlYJIMOOT Tantac Is sold by leading druggists bow f- - - two . whereAdvertisement. . ILLUSION GIVE out Open.Air Outlets. neat little Illusion thar gives to room without a window the appearance of having a couple 0f windows has grown out of the housing shortage. In one of the remodeled houses the owner has had a window-framwith glass In It set hi the wall. There Is a space of a piece of studding nd then a suggestion of A blue sky. Curtains are hung over the window m' a pair of Inside shutters, partly rtowJ add to the setting. A plant In a email pot rests on the window sill outside the windows Tfia ai.ni.. i tlghled by electricity, the lamp being w m engur, outside and above the vlmtow. .-Indirect lighting, the window, the flower and the curtain, combine to destroy the feeling that you are In mom with no outlet to the open air nd adds a cheerfulness that could be ofa'aed in no other way. Chicago A an Interior e The Journal A Neatly Put statesman was t at a dinner party. At his sidepres--; sat an old country gentleman. ' well-know- n A ' . mceited young man spent moat Mils time during the meal In making m of this old gentleman. ue kept th Philistine. .rf!TrIng ,0 hlm 0ld "ent,n" said an- - J?. kB0W My T?LlJ ay eeottuvonsfy repeaUng that !lL?nVhlnk what ... ou word y The statesmen "A Interrupted. ThniaUne," he said, "Is a man who Is wwyed by the Jawbone of ao ess." Sleep -- According; In Wreck a- 1 EMPRESS LOST HER AITCHES Eugenie's Struggles With Unfamiliar tngnsn Must Have Been Amusing to Her Hearers. . Dr. Ethel Smyth, the n composer, who was for 30 years an Intimate friend of the late Empress Eugenie, tolls the following amusing siory concerning their first meeting: "The occasion I am speaking of, wnen ( Drat came into personal contact with her, was a meet of the bar-rierwhich took place, at her special request, at Farnborough hall :: She camo out onto the gravel' sweeo In front of the house, and her manner was more gracious and winning than nny manner I had nreviouslT seen. as she bowed right and left to the k field, sayicg repeatedly: "'Put on your 'ats; I pray you, put on your 'ats.' "The master then was Dresented. and 'she really and truly did remark io luiuaa, ir you come to think of It, she naturally would 'I 'ope the 'ounds will find the 'are near the 'ouse.'" Chicago American well-know- s, awe-struc- Safest :,. - Increasing numbers of people who could not or should not (: coffee and who were oa the lookout for something to take its place have found complete satisfaction in f IHSIMI 0SIIM -- Postiini has a smooth.rich flavor that meets every re Qiiirement of a meal-tim- e beverage, and it is free from S any harmful Economical-Ma- de breast m a pang jN omnistakalile poignant It is the nwskcuin. an Instinct as old as the race desire for the open road. It Mother Nature .bet self .callin she says: the All work "Play time, everybody and no play la folly; you know the penalty I exact. Life in these modern times Is too strenuous. StoD. eet your breath.' relux. rest ! wome ana piay awniier We Americans are the busiest people under the sun. There was a time when we played hardly at all. Now we have finally learned the necessity of i elevation and recreation. The trouble Is that we have learned to play not wisely but too welL Our avocations, especially in the large cities, are as strenuous as our vocations sometimes even more strenuous. "There should be nothing so much a man's business as his amusements,'' wrote Stevenson, and he wrote a great truth, which not yet come home to us.. So It Is that wejas Americans, many of us, are coming to have double need of a summer vacation to rest up from both our work and our pleasures. The Call of the Wild means, In a sense, pretty much the same thing to all of us. But neceswe can sarily Interpret It only according to our knowledge and experience. Fortunate Indeed are they to whom the call means but one thing whether gypsylng by automobile, or the flying spray of the salt sea, or the rushing stream whose deep dark pools hide the great trouts. or the ten) and campflre beside the placid lake or' th mountain trail to the peaks where lies the everlasting snow. These fortunate, hear, understand . and obey. Those of us who are less fortunate also hear and rejoice But lhe call has no clear We do not know what to do with our message. We do not know where or at what to play time play and the interesting sictacle of a great ,,eopi. at Is saddened play by the sight of thousands of unfortunates wastlns their nnvinn. getting little enjoyment and less rest. u PUn C?H?, catlon ay the season's Ths secret of l! trip thatdw: la knowing what to do. pars That's the motto of tim iu n,..- 'tIIUlIUlJ tneae unfortunates. The hv .ki. cation carefully and put common sense Into their plana. They have taken stock of their physical and mental needs. Thev perience of past vacations and their successes and failures. Thev undemtnm!.. n.,f . IHIUUUD . B Xor pleaaur and a vacation for are reiiiratlou - . uTwriiy me aame thing, but will try they to combine pleasure aud -- Cha.go4. a great factorrecuperation. nen In both pleasure IntT-WDlay tlina (vhhmw wi ..es....i vuiiu must or um Instinctively long for something that our dally llf .... Hnoav nn , nfr... ri. Wlirn ,al3 lotitfutK Is a safe guide, provided common aens t 'i. vruviisuai v a camping trip in the wilds Is not suited to u.u. un, aoii wwa. delicate vlanda those and deft service-e- ven If they are Vers for novel longing experience. It , eguallyV ons that these nature lovers would oil p ace In a fashionable summer resort pie congregate to see and be seen. n.on sense of It 1. that they should go wim scenic beauty can be an,. enjo.d tlwiaL comforts of life are not lackiii- -,he ronve When vacation time means to the worker an opportunity to recuperate frm J,, 1 nii show you the way j few. 4 : v u the-Wild- n, ihousa , w Ayrtlyf ..V- By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN. ! ALL of This Is the time o' year when It sounds over nil the land, creating in every nxrnml or-gan-g one medical authority, He Didn't Rate Much. the) passenger who are asleep when a He "It's my prlnclDle never tn kt. trata collision omn escape most of a tht bad effects of shaking and eon-- girl." She Tou can't exoect an Inters from me, then." Williams Purple Cow. ; or it OF WINDOW Chicago Man's Ingenious Idea for lm- proving Appearance of Room With, ; Thousands of women have kidney and Oladder trouble and never suapect Women' compkunU often prove to be nuiuiug else nm money trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other to become diseased. Psin in the back, headache, lots of ambition, nervousness, are often timet symptoms of. kidney trouble. , Don't delay starting tmtment-"- Dr Kilmers Swamp-Roo- t, a , physician's obtained at any drug store, may he just the remedy needed to overcome such condition, Get a medium nr I,m, mediately from any drug store. nawever, h you wish first to test this . ffTeftt ItrmHniti'nfi Stan A - tr Kilmer A Co,, Binghamton, N. Y for a wumVm Dome, wnen writing be sure and Jna!ii 1vi vu At.:. Hv iutm paper. H elemen-1;- . ' Quickly "There's a Reason Mutely Ibstum Cereal CompanyiLic. .... ti.i t , Th?5 let us be good sports" which la to suy. let u be sportsmen and live up to a sportsman's Ideals! And what Is a sportsman? It is easy to say this: -- The sportsman is the gentleman of the But that does not define the sportsman because Itcomprehensively is still more difficult to dehne the gentleman. Anyway, whatever else he may be, the sportsman Is the man who plays fair with nature, with wild animal life, with his companions, with himself. He never wantonly defaces the fair face of nature. He never pollutes stream or lake. He never cuts down a tree that he does not need. He buries or bums his camp rubbish. He cleans up his camping place. And he Is very sure that he sets no forest fire. The sportsman plays fair with wild animal life. He will not hunt out of season. He will not kill a female deer or elk. He will not shoot a bird except when flying. In angling be uses light tackle to give the fish a fair chance. He will use the fly rather than the worm for trout He will put back the small trout and handle It with wet hand. He will use the single hook rather than the gang hooks. He never takes from for est. field, luke and stream more than he can use. And always he obeys the local The sportsman Is a delight In camp and on the trail. He takes pride In keeping up his end. In doing his full share efficiently, willingly and cheerfully. In emergencies he Is a volunteer lie helps the tenderfoot. Poor luck cannot ruffle hla temper or spoil his outing. He fun out of trouble and can take a Joke on gets himself He Is a good loser; he grins and bear. It when defeat Is his. He Is a good winner which Is harder-n-nd wears his laurels modestly. And the sportsman plays fair with himself, which I. perhaps the hardest thing of all Is not too proud to learn from Ids 'if hi -catches fish with . s.lver spoon.- -betters, he owns to It, He does not blsme hi, own others or on hi. tackle. H, doe. notmistakes on exhlbU hi, n.usky trophy and tell of bl. skill h while hi. Inner self I. saying: "You well the fectly guide rigged your rod .ndTacST paddled you to the place., showed you tL -spot to cast, told you how to handle the netted It and landed It." In short. crowning Ideal of true sportsmanship pendent achievement In snort or woodcraft. . 2 IrJl t j!? poMy. Speaking of muskellunge, pie.. reoiU hnimorta, lines ,n Sir Ixa.k Walton'. tho1 ., "We may say of angling. . , of stiawlK-rrlea- . 'Doubtless God could have a better berry, but doubt.es, Ood never did,' TtJi . If I might be Judge, God never did tnak. . Possibly Dr. Boteler .tr. tarries. And probably Sir Ixa.k' w.Iri.ht nocence of angl.ng. !ra? splte of which do most amaxlngly smack of "fish rank r. But when the model .nd pattern of n anglers doth speak of angling as "calm" and ntlet here Is one disciple who rlsea up to My that Sir Uaak Is no "Complea, U Angler this l treason, make the most of It I action. -- I loafe and Invite g.,l " Whitman. But loafing Is a : sre too usmI to be up ,nd smJ doing to and twiddling our thumbs. and occupation, with th. h.2?l ., ' that we do no, have to do "7 TL , rest. The hodcarrler who ,,,QU,rel ,,ow J "IT, n,one use the psychology of It down fine and -- quiet" In connection when wit " a thirty-pounalarm clock as usual, threw his "t musky? And how can ,ny . It went off and turned over for ,ht a nap f"8t to wl,o..ut 1,01 ' . Tlie wise man will tak hi. seas . .. Calm! Quiet I 0 ly. To return to rest up from i mould that Sir back on earth. a poor proposl,lon. To come back t , This Is what would him. He'd he taken to renewed strength and energ- y-, hnV ".k th certain lake anj a hand-modThe wrong kind of vacation , casting ro.L with l!!i none. The right kind of tlplylng reel, braided kllk line raratlo,, ttable grsend. The wise man pork rind. Along toward evVnlngX ler'hT. i with wl, rowed rp a certain rushy point where Ply a. to come back refreshed and "stored Lk vrel. weed and lltle grow. 7a 5 12 wgr for new worlds to cornier on M.her s!de. And wl,h. , And wherevei the Call of' ,h, . uck Wnj 'ttJ. txaak would tbcrcupott WniBef ft to L cui t S J?.' ,1, JT i rrwT JjS "lull 'aZ L'S .nlvTt 2 fioro s r. ; tn, -- ! . e I,k Tlln split-bambo- o S . nr t ,d goj Kllsteuhitf, OX leaping, darting, plunging, rushlni heer ' vlltrjr that would make him m all his philosophy and all bis morals, for ssd : "ft tike a real human being. Yesslrecbob! When a man gets fast to a bV usky It Is no time for him to think of bom "Hi mother, wife, sweetheart, the League ef C' of U A that ard ,lonV H. the Kendall, puts It . k 1 I , i "b" mjr"action, and th. law. hfj'" Pulse, qulckaa when I niled tXhf'r0 " auto', lightning a rui e- - bob-- iiusn, sj hi!HV!nf .J"'"1 tha n, iu draw. V the let the peraplratloo run down my smlllnf IMS 1 clied a winning ticket on a doubtful trottlBi tare. y: ith mueclee tenM and ready I graP my poll. I forget the rocking boat innrmly which I stand. " a y wfe relations, the salvation of my sold. i ,(' m' dut, "d my native land. V Cold chills of apprehension go up and down my spins, And I wonder at my folly la selecting such a llm. Tie tho limit of the pleasures I have traveled mil W r,7t to (eel! ; " On this cloudy, breesy afternoon In June, When my heart la set to pounding by the protest of oiy reel A. the Mighty Musky rushes with say spoon. $ And then the congratulations would pour In SB Sir Izaak. For If, with the aid of an oarsmaa, dub, a revolver, a gaff and 'a landing net, b got the musky Into the boat, congratulation, would obviously be In order. And If the musky got away, congratulations would be equally to order, since the panting, perspiring and exhausted angler got away from the musky with his life. ' e e e The poorest way to see the country la from the window of a railroad car. The next poorest tt from an automobile going thirty miles an boor, A man on horseback baa a ;alr. chance to V things, provided he will gefj f the ibeaten high .maa -way- Kealtr to jrererra f' must. wait. For it la only the pedestrian, who can leave tot ' beaten track at will to climb to the vantage spot on the slope, to wander off down the woodland troll to the tinkling stream, to Cjgat himself dowa at full length on tho pine needles of the cool grove. It Is only the man on, foot who has thl time to find these hidden charms and the leisure to appreciate them. And then there's the actual feel of the country under toot the spring of the turf; the rustle of fallen leaves; the cooling touch of lush gra about the spring; the ring of hobnail on solid rock; the crunch of sand on the beach. Thatl the way to see the country get Into actual phye-lea- l touch with It ; e e 'e ' If you go camping, here Is some advice In the form of don'ts : I hon't neglect to choose your companions care fully; the smaller the party the more care H necessary. If a man has a mean, laiy or yellow streak In hlm, it will come out In camp. Don't eat a hearty meal when you are ex haustcd ; you might as well take poison. Cool off and rest a while; then a hearty meal win renew your strength. Don't go Into cold water when overheated of Just after a heavy meal. Don't go Into deep water alone. Don't stay In after your teeth n to chatter. Don't go In at all If It Is a rather than a tonic. . Don't give up and conclude that the fish will M ,hcr "re Cgh they roust feed. Don't try to do your over a enmpflret use a rooking fire. A cooking Is for campflre Jollity and warmth, a cooking Bro Is 11t coa' f prlacllly "ooklng only. , be-Rl- tt '; : , |