The Syracuse Journal, Volume 18, Number 3, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 May 1925 — Page 3
Bello Dad&dort SUpapackMiln foAw y°° r p«*** w»«n MgLsjr *•**•• ■Kl.IwnjRT Gh* fte youngsters tatiM y * eet * *> r OjJW pieaweatsssflL UNftyaowrWto jflk smoking crwn« iST/l—trorkdrags. Itk* . uff WRIGLEB Queen Mary's China Quern Mary Is a great collector cn thins. especially Wedgewood and oR Chelsea. Her majesty has been grad Bally sorting and rearranging th< * thins at Windsor, where the specla rahinets containing It are lit up fron Inside at night When You Buy Shoes for Hard Service See that they have USKIDE SOLES The Mtomfor Me for Wear— Mtoar* twte a* tee •« tete tetter f 3 . —ewri for • Better Neef «u. »."smwcshi» «m«b United States Rubbtr Company Electricity on the Farm By the use of electric light and tow on one farm well equipped with Bichinery there is a saving of M Blnutes’ working time each day by leery man employed there. allyourwalls For sleeping rooms—formal parlors and reception halls—dining room ana living room —for the library —and for public buildings. Prgperly applied it won’t rub *“ off, Ask your dealer for Alabastine Colorchart, or write Miss Ruby Brandon. Alabas* tine Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. Alabaatine—a powder in white sad tints. Packed in 5-pound parka***, ready Jor use by mixing with cold or wartn water. Full direction* oa every package. Apply with an ordinary wail brush. Suitable for *U interior surface* — plaster, wall board, brick, cement, or canvan. A Godsend to the Bilious! nnain i --■ *'-yirr--*Mw For *■■■» I aufcad tern WMmii baadsrhes . Ten wan sea l triad Beech—*» FUb. I have naw* be— without than meet. erfß not ketene to trr than." Mn. Bdna Dana, Ptoridaace. *. L T ‘“JKSl.“hiX=SJ=S fc ' taHLEE SAMPLE—ante *.«. AB— Oew4»TCteaJ tenet. Naw Tort Bui hum ram hasriw in M ate pee b*n*i Beecham’s Pills I te faite’teaate’rteater J .every MM. |M| j • nn n .... *. ■
g'ffcsjr BIRMINGHAM dbmeaMKr <* ***rmur££ as WNU Service.
AN UNKNOWN VISITOR SYNOPSIS. —ln London the teller of the *tory of the adventures of "King Tommy." and known hereafter a* "Uncle Bill." 1* informed by Lord Norhey*. eon of an old friend, that Lord Troyte, head of the British foreign office. Norhey*’ uncle, has a scheme to make him (Norhey*) king of Lyatria, in central Europe, through marriage to Calypso, daughter of King WladlsIsws, deposed monarch of that country. A financier. -(Procopius (.'able, knows there is oil in profusion in Lystrfa. and with an English king a* the throne the output could be secured for England. Norhey*. In love with a stage dancer. Viola Temple. 1* not enthusiastic over the proposition. The patriarch. Menelaus, highest ecclesiastical dignitary In Lystria. i* heartily in favor of the restoration of the monarchy, and Cable ha* generously financed the sentiment. Calypso is making a living dancing in the "Mascotte.' - Berlin cabaret. Norhey* refuses to entertain the idea of giving up Viola Temple, to whom he is secretly engaged. “Uncle Bill’s" sister Emily urge* him to secure a passport from Lord Troyte for a certain Janet Church, strong-minded female who wants to visit" Lystria in the interest* of a society for world peace. Janet Church leaves for Berlin. “Uncle Bill" is again appealed to by his sister to find a certain curate (name not given) who has left his parish in Ireland for a visit to Berlin, and cannot be found. Lord Norhey* and Viola Temple disappear from London. Procopius Cable receives Information that Norhey*. with the princes*, has left there on hi* way to Lystria. but Norhey* appear* with the former Viola Temple, now hi* wife. Th* question la "Who is the man who has gone to Lystria with the Princess Calypso?" Casimir introduce* himself, and Jknet Church, vainly seeking from the British consulate a passport to Lystria, becomes acquainted with the two men in the Adlon hotel.
CHAPTER Vll—Continued That seemed a small result of so much conversation, and gave Tommy very little fresh information. The Casimir and tbs Istvan he had read on the visiting, card, though ta reversed order. Graf he took to be the German for counL “Tell him," he said, “that tbere’a a mistake. He can’t possibly want to see me. Ask him who be does want, and then get him to go down again and find the number of hia friend’s room." Janet started again. So did Casimir. This time they talked for a quarter of an hour, fast and emphatically. There I* nothing in the world so Irritating 5 as bearing two people talk to each other an unknown language when you know they are talking about your affair*. Tommy is the best tempered of men. but even be began to feel impatient. “He sajs" said Janet, turning to Tommy at last, “that he’s sure your name i* Norbeys." “Is that all he said?” “That’s-aU,” said Janet "Weil, then, all I can say is that I don’t wonder the Germans lost the war. If It takes them half an hour .to say 'What’s your name* they can’t expect to get on at war or anything else. It must be an utterly rotten language." Janet, who hated all German* with a passionate Intensity during the war, has been developing a strong affection for them since the peace was signed. She cannot bear, now. to bear a word said against them and ba- transferred her dislike to the ii'reneh. When Tommy insulted the German language site turned away and stalked down the corridor toward the bath. Casimir hfl* an amazing facility tn quotation. “’And the Imperial votaresa passed on.”’ be said. “'ln maiden meditation. fancy free.’ Please." Casimir's English accent was by no means perfect Tommy, though he ought to have recognized Shakespeare's compliment to Queen Elisabeth, seemed to have thought that the count was still talking German. He darted into his room and picked up his phrase book. He distinctly remembered that he had somewhere aeen the sentence “Please go away.* That was, as I have said, a very good phrase book. “Please go away* is a thing which the traveler in a foreign land constantly want* to say to beggars, extortionate cabmen, gulden, touts, and officials who want to look at passports. Tommy grabbed the book, turned over the pages quickly, and came to the sentence he wanted. Unfortunately, the next sentence In the book was “Please ait down.” Tommy, running his eyes hurriedly from the Engl lab to the German column. picked up the wrong phrase. “Bitte setxen sie rich." he said. Casimir rouid not very well sit down ■on the carpet in the corridor. So took Tommy’s words to be an invitation to enter the bedroom. Tommy Mood exactly In the middle <rf awrwaj. vesianr; oqwahjj very suddenly recollected that all his hsKisiey 7 hty CSermmi Bay o© the tahße hot tßye mßddle td? the man had made no mistake. He bad |
such people. They are immensely daring. Immensely clever, and they adopt all sorts of ruses. They are often well dressed. They are always plausible. Tommy winked knowingly at Casimir to show that be understood the situation and cherished no ill-feeling. Then he firmly shut Hie door in his visitor’s face. CHAPTER VIII An hour later Tommy stepped from ‘ the elevator Into the great central hall of the hotel. He had discarded his clerical stock. Hy wore a light bine tie instead. He was still a young man, only a little more than twenty-six, not long enough in Holy . Orders to have bls profession recogi nizably written on his face. A by- ' stander, interested in his appearance. . might have guessed him to be a young ‘ barrister, or perhaps a clerk In one of the higher branches of the civil service. But no one appeared to be the least Interested in Tommy’s appearance. or to care what he was or what be did. The large hall was full of people. Hotel porters in red Jackets wheeled barrows of luggage in and out. Pageboys, as thickly decorated with, bartons a 8 any of their kind anywhere In the world, went to and fro wailing the numbers of the rooms of the guests whom they sought—guests whom visitors had come to see or for whom telephone calls had been made. Fussy travelers, newly arrived and filled with a sense of their own importance, crowded round the desk of the reception clerk and demanded rooms. Self-possessed elderly men. mostly fat and often Jewish, lounged tn deep chairs with cigars in their mouths and surveyed the scene through half-dosed eyes. American tourists eddied round the newspaper stalls In the corner of the hall and clamored for the New York Herald. It was in their eyes a sign of the well nigh Inconceivable stupidity and Incompetence of all European peoples that the supply of New York Heralds was insufficient tc meet their demands. The desk of a harassed woman who sold, concert and theater tickets was besieged by ladies who did not know exactly what they wanted but hoped to secure seats at some agreeable entertainment by asking questions In bad German. A boy. rather older than the pages, stood at the swinging glass door and drove it round on its pivot with vigorous pushes. Be drove it faster and faster as more and more people passed In and out His hope was that some time In the course of the morning he would succeed in hitting a slowly moving passer with the following wing of the door. Those who en tered and left the hotel approached the whirling door very much in the spirit of medieval sportsmen who rode at the quintain. All this delighted Tommy. He had hitherto led a quiet and uneventful life, seldom disturbed by anything more exciting than a Sunday school treat He watched the moving figures. gased at the strange faces, listened to a babel of different languages, and felt that this was exactly what he had come to Berlin to enjoy. For some time he was content simply to stand watching and listen ing. Then he began to wonder what he had better do next. He had the whole day before him. Hla breast pocket was stuffed with money. He had a great city to explore. Before leaving home he had read up Baedeker’s Guide to Berlin, an old copy borrowed from my sister Emily. He knew that there was a street called I’nt er den Linden which he ought to see, a park called the Tier Garten, an avenue called the Sieges Allee, several churches and museums. There were theaters, picture galleries and restaurants, ail duly named and the nature indicated by the worthy Baedeker. At the moment he felt more attracted toward a restaurant His breakfast had been very light, and though It was only ten o’clock, he felt hungry. He wondered whether it would be possible to demand luncheon tn a Berlin restaurant at that hour without exciting the derision of the waiters. He felt a light touch on hla arm and looked round. Count Casimir stood beside him. “Just you clear off, like a good man," said Tommy. Tve had enough of you for one morning. • Hia mind was stlU fuU of his hotel theory, and be was quite determined not to be robbed by any piaua-
When Barrett Wendell Wu Roused to Angei
For all his scholarly dignity, Barrett Wendell. Harvard professor, now and then lost his temper aad espeetaily at football games, to hla biography. M. A. DeWoife Howes recalls an occa sioo when Doctor Wendell and his daughter were greatly annoyed by an excited fan directly to front of them, who kept leaping up and cutting off tjidr When protests proved of no avail.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
Ible stranger. He turned away and walked across the hall toward the row of telephone boxes. He had no intention of telephoning to any one. Indeed, he knew no one In Berlin to whom he could telephone, nor could he have given a number in German. He merely wished to escape from Casimir. * But Casimir was not an easy man to shake off. He followed Tommy. , “You wish to go to the Mascotte tonight," he said. “Please?” The word “Please" was evidently in constant use in Casimir’s language. His repetition of it in English gave a curious effect of extreme politeness to his conversation. Tommy had heard of the Mascotte. My nephew, Emily's eldest boy, was in Berlin for some time as a subordinate member of the inter-allied mission of control. He knew all there was to know about the night life of the city. It is a supper place, “d —d expensive,’’ but the dancing was “top hole.” It was not the sort of dancing which the censors of the London county council would approve, but It was “top hole" and '‘not roo. you know, only rather more so than you’d see at home.” “Please, you will visit the Mascotte.” Casimir nodded and smiled in a very confidential manner, as if he and Tommy shared a secret which no one else in the world knew anything about. Tommy revised his opinion of the man. He was not a hotel thief. He was a tout, engaged in securing customers for the Mascotte supper room. Tommy had heard of such people. He had no intention of putting himself into the hands of one of them. "She wilj be there, naturally,” said Casimir, “and” —another quotation, this time disagreeably suggestive to Tommy’s mind—"Journey* end in lover* meeting. Every wise man's son doth know." This was going" too far. Tommy meant to enjoy himself on his holiday. He had discarded h!s clerical collar in order to do so more freely, but he had no wish to pursue unknown ladies into night clubs. In order to get rid of Casimir finally he stepped Into the nearest telephone box. ft was already occupied, and, since a telephone box Is always a very small thing, he bumped into a lady who held the receiver to her ear. She was so Intent on what she was doing that she took no notice of Tommy. He most unwillingly heard what sh« was saying. “Then let me tell you, young man, that there’ll be trouble. Lord Edmund Troyte distinctly promised that my passport would be ready for me. Yes? What’s that? I’ve been to the consulate three times and I’m going again. The consul is totally incompetent and his clerks are rude. It’s your business. What? Yes. I say it’s your business. You’re the third secretary, you say. That makes no difference. It’s your business to see about that passport. . “What pn earth are you doing there and who are you?” Janet Church turned at last to Tommy, who had bumped Into her again. She was fully dressed this time and the light in the telephone box was dim. But he recognized her at once as the lady who had stood talking German tn the corridor. He also realized that she was in an exceedingly bad temper. Casimir, with his suggestion of strange lady-loves at the Mascotte, was bad enough. Janet Church, thirsting for the blood of the third secretary, was worse. Tommy left the telephone box hurriedly. Casimir was waiting for him outide. "Please.” he said. “I have engaged i table for you at the Mascotte. It s catalogued—no, registered, no. I emember, you say booked, for the Iraf von Norheys, please.” "rUbn’t exactly know what a Graf is,’’ said Tommy, “but whatever it is, I’m not one.” “Please?" said Casimir. “Ah. I see. If it were possible—in France, yes. M. le Marquis. There Is no difficulty. But here. Excellejiz perhaps. O» Prinz. Otherwise there is only Graf. ; It will not be understood if I cata- | logue the table for Herr Marquis. As your poet Shakespeare says, ’As you like it.’" (TO BE CONTINUED ) And He Never Came Back Poor snd Sad. a tired-looking Individnai entered the shanty where the workmen were eating their dinners.! He was earning a red tin can. ’Hey, comrades,” he sighed, bolding out a hand byway of salutation. “Look at this tin cf powder I picked up thia, morning. I guess I’ll blow my *eif up with it and so end my troubles here and now." “Cut that sort of talk and clear out.” ordered the foreman. Bnt the mat? addressed paid no attention. He cast one glance around the shanty, then walked deliberately to the stove, opened the door and thrust the can Inside. A shriek of d isma y fol lowed this action and a moment later the place was empty. Ten minutes later, when the runaway* returned, they found the can reposing peacefully on the fire. The tired-looking individual had gone. Sc had their dinners and other of theit possesaiona.
“Who did tbatr -I did,* replied WendeU calmly “Come'out and Til buy you a new haL " 'fm jlmwil aStufe aemvaaA It ,~n wsm i seWt e-j-c ****** W-a *X™ b ° OBed U wastes patrolled by robber tribes bad I ** Id Ist h hl
the m HcabinetO »((£. I***. rte»i«rn ciuoo.) There Is so little re*t! There I* such an unreasoning passion for activity. And so we *klm the surfac* s os all things; we never look down into their depths and see th* power of help and culture* which they might contain.—Philips Brook*. EVERYDAY FOODS Nearly everybody will eat and enjoy a good meat pie, if It is well seasoned and pr o per 1 / baked. In a small famI lly there are always leftM over meats that may be ’■>4!.’-1 used in such a pie. For cl ‘icken add the gravy, a little thin cream or milk foT to lhe bbs of meat, cover with baking powder btscult antJ t - ake - I!e sure HUB that the chicken is boiling hot when putting on the biscuit, as this will. Insure them : from being soggy, or soaked. A bit of chopped onion, parsley or a bit of a clove of garlic may be, added to a meat pie, making It more appetizing. Dutch Pot Pie.—Cut Into dice onehalf pound of smoked ham. cook slowly until well-heated, then add six sliced potatoes, three onions sliced; cook a few minutes with the ham, then add three pints of boiling water. Cover with biscuits made from buttermilk and baking powder, as*they are especially light and flaky. California Eggs.—Have eight hard cooked eggs cut lengthwise. Parboil the tips of a bunch of asparagus. Butter a baking dish, put the eggs into it cut-side up, cover with the asparagus, then add the remaining eggs, yolks down. Prepare a white sauce, using cream and the liquor from the asparagus. Pour this over the dish, sprinkle with seasoning and well-but-tered crumbs and bake fifteen minutes. Breakfast Tomato.—Hollow out small tomatoes and fill with the following: Drop a raw egg into each tomato, season with salt and pepper and cover with two slices of bacon. Add a bit of Worcestershire sauce to each, skewer the bacon with toothpicks and bake in a hot oven twenty minutes. If you have a little ginger bread left over, or any plain cake, steam it and serve with a lemon or vinegar sauce, for dessert. Use one cupful of sugar, a tablespoonful of flour, one-half cupful of boiling water, a grating of nutmeg and two tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon Juice. Add a teaspoonful of butter. Just before serving. Add a teaspoonful of sugar to peas, or roast or stewed meats; it adds to the flavor. Variety of Good Things. Every little while some one asks for a recipe for Scotch short bread. It is too rich for dally food, bnt will be enJoyed occasionally; it Is nice served with a cup of toa. Scotch Short Bread.—* | Take two pounds of floor. oo« pound of butJ ter, one-half pound of ’- BUg ar and two beaten eggs, a grating of nutmeg and a teaspoonful of grated lemon peel. Mix and roll one-half Inch thick. Prick with a fork and bake in a hot oven. Breakfast Toast-—Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter in a frying pan. i Cut bread into one-fourth-inch slices , and cut each into squares. Lay these | in melted butter. Beat four eggs well; add salt, paprika and pepper to season with one-balf cupful of milk; pour over the bread. Cook until wellbrowned on the bottom, then turn each piece with a spatula and brown on the other side. Serve hot Arabian Ambrosia.—This sounds good enough for any occasion, but Is a most simple and easy-to-prepare dessert. Measure two cupfuls of choice dates, wipe them carefully and remove the pits. Cut the dates into quarters and combine cupful of walnut meats coarsely chopped; add one tablespoonful of lemon Juice and arrange the mixture in sherbet I glasses; top with a spoonful of whipped cream, or marshmallow cream. Fruit!nes. —Beat two eggs and add one and one-half cupfuls of sugar, enefcalf cupful of softened butter and a teaspoonful of suit. Soak one cupful of raisins in two tablespoonfuls of orange vor any fruit Juice for an hour, then put through the meat grinder. Mix and sift three and one- > half cupfuls of pastry flour; add the fruit juice, one teaspoonful at soda, two tablespoonfuls of milk, one teagpooxiful of cinnatqon and one-half tow spoonful of cloves. Mix all to getber and beat well; add the raisins and drop by teaspoonfuls on a baking aheet, two inches apart. Bake eight to ten minutes. This recipe makes absat fifty cookies. Chop Suey.—Take one-half pound of loon veal, cut into pieces, two cupfuls of celery, one-half cupful of onionscut fine, one can of bean sprouts and three tablespoonfuls of Chinese sauce. Heat the mazola. cook the meat in it until done but not brown, add the celery and onions and cook until well-beated through, but not soft. Add meat stock or water from the bean sprouts to cook the vegetables. To one cupful of broth add two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch to make the gravy; season well add the chop suey sauce and serve hot. Endurance of Wolveo A pack of wolves will travel from 25 to 4U miles in a night, appearing in a vicinity which has not seen them for years, to raid a stock farm, then vbnih like lean, gray ghosts after committing hundreds of thousands of dollars’ damage--—l*o a Angeles Time& — f/te Cat Wife (of her husband)— He has rot bZsV’se 1 white-haired since I marj. JU—.' neu I
I AFTER HER BABY CAME • —■ Mrs. Hollister Unable To Do* Her Work for Six Months Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health I ♦
■' sip MRS. HENRY HOLLISTER WYANDOTTC. MICHIGAN Wyandotte, Michigan.—“ After my baby was born I did not do my own work for six months and could hardly take care of my own baby. I always had a pain in my right side and it was • so baa I was getting round shoulders. I would feel well one day and then feel so bad for three or four days that I would be in bed. One Sunday my mother came to see how I was, and she said a friend told her to tell me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. So the next day I got a bottle and before it was half taken I Advertiting Watted The city council of Santa Barbara, Calif., read a letter from a Cleveland (Ohio) manufacturer with mingled emotions. “You will find that our rotary plow will be a great saving, the letter read. “After each snowstorm you can send the motor plow through the streets and rapidly have 4 path cleared wide enough for two lines of traffic.” The council sent the letter to the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND . SWAMP-BOOT For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder medicine. It is a physician’* prescription. Swamp-Root is a strengthening medicine. It helps the kidneys, liver and bladder do the work nature intended they should do. Swamp-Root has stood the test of years. It is sold by all druggists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friend*. Be sure to get Swamp-Root and start treatment at once. r However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cent* to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Scripture Goet Poet Free Under a new law and regulation of the Post Office department Holy Scripture manuscript for the blind may be sent free If It Is to be given to the blind, and if It is to be sold to the blind the postage is only 1 cent a pound instead of the regular rates. Shave With Cutlcura Soap And double your razor efficiency as well as promote skin purity, skin comfort and skin health. No mug, no slimy soap, no germs, no waste, no irritation even when shaved twice daily. One soap for ail usee —shaving, bathing and shampooing.—Advertisement. Tap Big Electrical Supply Florence lake tunnel, thirteen and a half miles long, in the California Sierras, will provide electricity enough for 200,000 homes, pump water to 620,000 acres and run 5,000 factories. Red Cross Ball Blue is the finest product of its kind in the world. Ev* ery woman who has used it knows this statement to be true.—Advertisement. Trimmed "Betty’s rich uncle cut her off with practically nothing.” "Bobbed heiress, eb?” - IndWteloa produce* d!»»rree»ble and •ometinie* alarmlns »ympiom«. WrUrht’a Indian Vegetable Pllla remove ajrmptoma and raator* dl*e»tion. *7l Pearl Bt., N. T. Adv. Judge s tree by its fruit, not by Its leaves.
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got relief. After I was well again I went to the doctor and he asked me how I was getting along. I told him I was taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and he said it did not hurt any one to take it. I am always recommending the Vegetable Compound to others and I always have a bottle of it on hand.’’—Mrs. Henry Hollister, R. F. D. No. L Box 7, Wyandotte, Michigan. Another Woman’s Case St. Paul, Minnesota. —“I have a little girl three years old and ever since her birth I have suffered with my back as if it were breaking in two, and bearing-down pains all the time. I also had dizzy spells. I had read several letters oi women in the newspapers, and the druggist recommended Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to my husband for me. As a result of taking it my back has stopped aching and the awful bearing-down feeling is gone. I feel stronger and do all of my housework and tend to my little girl. I have also taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills for constipation, ♦ I have recommended these medicines to some of my friends and you may use this letter as a testimonial if yon wish. I will be pleased to answer letters of other women if I can help them by telling them what this medicine has done for me.”—Mrs. Price; 147 West Summit Avenue; St. Paul, Minnesota. / ToneorrovirX I Alright I I oXm and kMptb* (listed v* and I 1 eUminatlv* function* normal. II istte d^^JHsedfbroeerl/ 11 y° yeors f > 1 I CHpfiofl thToM Block » JURIDRRf N< Uttla IRs 11 I Ona-thlrd th* W- I I lar doa*. Mad* of J■ > II Wfiraamu incredianta, > > 11 than candr coated. > > . 1 L For ehtldran and adulta. al I 1/” 9OUO •* YOUII o* uoQirr -\L j XIN&IGESTION thispapti* Ga * J ask friend. .. J WE WILL GIVE AWAY absolutely free any of the tollowln* A one hundred piece, beautifully Inlaid L»u» ner Set. Twenty-Inch Solid Leather TraveM In* Bas. handaome large *Ue Walnut Writ* in* Deeh. Floor Lamp with handsome ShadM Twenty-year Gold Watch, Lady’* or Gentle* man's Sire. A Three-Bulb Radio Set. A Twenty-Dollar Gold Piece. And many othed very beautiful articlea for just a few hoary of your time. Write at once for full liw and Information to J. A B. WILLIAMS CO. Minneapolis Mln*| PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM tenovee Dandruff Stope Hair Faßter IgQsPkjt Color Be.utr to Gray and Faded Hair 11 ■ <x ’ st Pn »<< toto - HINDERCORNS o™, osf louses, etc., stope all pain, ensures comfort to th* feet, rnaheo walking easy. Uc by nail or a* Drugl gist*, Hlacox Cbemical Wot**, ntchogu*. K I. tfgJOneDrow ■ of Bourbon Pultry Qfrfc Cures RemeSyC*.. Ste tS, teri**le*.S»q Awful Girle “Gee, there’s an awful lot of glrlfi stuck on me." “Yeah. They must be an awful lot." —Minnesota Sklu Mab.
