The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 22, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 September 1927 — Page 3

MRS. BASSEn ALWAYSTIRED Now in Good Health by Using Lydia E. Pinkham’* Vegotable Compound Lansing. Michigan.—“l have taken Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com- ■ — 1 ■■ pound whenever I needed It When I first used ** l was RRBKI sobad I could hardly O' / RR walk across the room without cryw£L>. Ing. I was tired all " Or the time. I think k, my trouble was com- ' jßh l n S on me f° r six months before I realized it. 1 read WEBHH3 of your wonderful medicine in the paper, and • • • my husband bought me a bettie, and after the first few doses I felt better, so kept on taking it until I was well and strong. I take it at times when I feel tired and it helps me. I will always have a good word for your medicine and tell anyone what good it has done me. I recommended It to my neighbor for her girl, who is sixteen years old. and it was just what she needed. She is feeling fine now, and goes to school every day."— Mrs. E. F. Bassett. 216 South "ayford Avenue, Lansing, Michigan. Do not continue to feel all run-down and half sick when Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is sold by druggists everywhere. It Is a root and herb medicine and has been used by women for over fifty yearn. When a man with all the facts ar rives, arguments are likely to cease. Just say to your grocer Huss Bleaching Blue when buying bluing. You will be more than repaid by the results. Once tried always used.—Adv. After it has happened. don't worry. Feel Stiff and Achy? ~ r I feel constantly lame and achy ie * too often a sign of sluggish kidney*. Sluggish action pennits waste poisons to remain in the blood and is apt to make one languid, tired and achy, with dull .headaches, dimness and often a nagging backache. A common warning that the kidneys are not acting right is scanty or burning secretions. . Assist the kidneys at such times with Dmi Pills. Since 1985 Doon’s have been winning friends the country over, /<4 VW DOAN S '''it 8 STIMULANT DIURETIC » KIDNEYS foster Milbum Co. MigCUn.DuHsUNY Healthy, Happy Babies The best way to keep baby ' in crowing, contented health is Mrs. Winslow's Syrup. This $ safe, pleasant, effective remedy regulates the bowels and « quickly overcomes diarrhoea. colic, flatulency, constipation. * and teething troubles. MRS. WINSLOW’S SYRUP is best fur b»by. Guaranteed free from nareixks, cpi»te». akobol end a'l harmful ingredients. Open ■ formula on every Label Ar «ZZ DnseriWs Wr-t» fte f-e» tockte* el fetter* trow pk.f,' w.taer*. Aa lcto^"cx r “ SISaiT Fatam St I ' '■l N-w ' J One Way “How can I double'tny weekly pay envelope?” “Easily, by folding. It.” s? VHa Nrf— uiSh. a*r m* » X.-fOi W ««L Mrs /tout. floors are not expensive Never wed reclscvmest. yet cost ao axes than temporary Soar coveriac*. Add peraaAeat vaiae fee natal or male. OAK FLOORING BURKAU m> Bultoarf —nSSs* CHICAGO IM 1 ■ RSZ3I Bimh FMOfeSEI H ■ Kids. adsHa too. tor* th* matarrt -I I

THE POT OF POSIES

by D. X Wateh.» MIRA WESTON emerged from the office of Todd A Son. realtors, just as the five o'clock whistle was blowing. She was tired, depressed and unexpectanL Lights were on and the street, banked with new snow, was singularly attractive. But M(ra was In a hurry to get home. It was the night her sister Lucy went to the “movies" with her husband, and Mira was supposed to appear at the very instant the biscuits were ready to be taken from the oven. When she reached the other side Mira found herself facing the window of the town’s one florist shop. It was radiant with potted hyacinths in full bloom. She paused Involuntarily. Spring beckoned from the window and Mira, the weary, paused for a clearer look. She loved hyacinths ao deeply that she would not have hesitated to have sold both loaves of bread as a great philosopher advised to buy a Jar of that fragrant beauty. Hyacinths meant more to her than the mere fact that they were lovely flowers; they embodied a memory, a romance, a wistful association. Long ago she had stood beside a row of hyacinths in her mother’s tiny flower plot and said good-by to the one man she had ever cared about He had promised to come back—but he never had. and she had ceased to look for him. Her mother had died and she and Lucy had gone to a big town to earn their living. Lucy had married and Mira lived with her. She could not resist the hyacinths, so she went in and bought a pot of the palest pink ones. A high wind met her as she returned to the street. Hugging her parcel, she tucked her cold chin Into her fur collar and forged along. As she turned her own familiar corner she collided with a man. The shock of’the Impact Jarred the pot from her arm and it fell with a crash. ' “I'm very sorry!" the man exclaimed. and stooping down he gathered up the wreck. “It was my fault," Mira returned, taking the parcel from him. From it arose the fragrance of perishing beauty. At that Instant the wind caught the man’s hat from his head. He sprang after it and Mira sped on. anxious to save her own hat from a similar fate. “You are ten minutes late," Lucy said as her sister entered. Lucy was stout and rosy and practical, a direct contrast to the slim, pretty and shad-owy-eyed Mira. "I stopped to buy a posy, but here Is all that there Is left of It." Mira said, opening the parcel. “I had an accident with It." She took off her things and sat down to supper. She was not hungry. The pink hyacinth bloom rescued by Lucy leaned from a tiny vase In the center of the table and reproached her with Its ruined loveliness. It was only a little thing that had happened but. added to a great deal else, it lmj»osed upon Mira an unsupportable weight. She thought of Will Kelly as she had not thought of him In months. She thought of herself getting old—and getting nowhere. Even Lucy, wedded to. the dull and unattractive Fred, was happier than she. Rut then Lucy had never had a romance before she met the man she married. "I kept you waiting. Lucy: Til do the dishes." Mira salt! Lucy hurried to change her dress, for the first show began at 7. They were gone by the time Mira had the dishwater In the pan. The telephone bell rang and Mira went to answer It. A familiar voice boomed tn her ear, the voice of Horace Lasher who had that day bought another piece of property of Todd A Son. Horace already owned a string of tenements but his purchase consisted of a large house with a porte where and garden. He had said something to her that made her think he had her In mind as a passible mistress for the big house. His wife had been dead a year and It was said he was looking for another. “Td like to come up and see you this evening. Mira." he said. Mira hesitated though imperceptibly. If she let Horace come he would understand naturally that she was willing to accept his attentions. And she wasn’t willing, especially tonight with this memory of Will trailing her with peculiar tnsistanc*. •Tm sorry, Mr. Lasher." she began, -but " “I'd like to come. Mira." She tried to think of an excuse. She had none, save that Invariable one that she did not want him. He sensed the meaning of her faintly Uttered objection. "All right. If you don’t want me."

Architects at Work to Eliminate *> Noise

— Noise not only affects health hot causes a large loss to business through the distraction of attention. A noisy environment means the use of more energy In talking. Night noises cases a loss of sleep. Conversation on a railway train or tn the subway requires an expenditure of more than 100 times as much energy as in a quiet room. Soon noise producers will be banned | completely. Even the work of dlctating an article like this to a typist using a noisy machine means more of a drain on the energy of the author than be realises. In a short time architects, in designing buildings, will no more think of neglecting to consider sound-absorbing measures and devices than they will provisions for adequate supplies of beat and water. Street and subway cars will have noiseless wheels and coupling connections. In office and factory every machine from typewriter to drill will op | orate In comparative silence. Some I rooms will be tat. or dead, but in au-

Ho laughed coolly. "HI go over and see Mrs. Peters, I guess.” He hung up. Mira stood very still, her face burning. Mrs. Peters was the lively widow whose bouse Todd & Son had just sold. She had gone to board with a fijend. It was the end of Hdhice Lasher as far as she was concerned. He would never be able to get away from Mrs. Peters, She wondered if she were a fool. Lucy would call her so. No need longer to toil in that dingy office, wearing out what was left of her youth. And she was not particularly happy with Fred and Lucy. She had given up all this for a mere memory. She moved over to the table and bent over the broken hyacinth. Its perfume came up into her face. She could shut her eyes and see that flower pot of her mother’s and Will Kelly, who hadn’t come back. Again a bell rang, the doorbell this time. Mira went into the cold little hall and opened the door. A man stood there with something done up la paper held within his arm. “Does Fred Peck live here!" he asked, peering through thick glasses. Mira went white. In spite of the glasses and all the other changes In his appearance she was sure that her memory had come to life. He couldn’t bellSVe it was she — just at first. “My sight Is so poor,” he said. “Has been ever since I came out of the big fuss. I got laid out. you know. That’s why I didn’t come back. I—r wasn’t sure. Mira, you’d want to see such a wreck as I was.” “As if that would make any difference.” Mira said rosily. She had taken the parcel he gave her and found It contained a pot of pink hyacinths. "Oh. Will, you remembered!” she breathed. “Oh. yes, I remembered. But I’d never have had the courage to have come here tonight if it wasn't for a little thing that occurred soon after dark. I was walking along when I ran into a woman and knocked something she was carrying out of her hands. I smelled hyacinths and—and it all rushed over me irresistibly. I said to myself: Til go and see her before I leave town anyway. You see, Mira, though Td got your address from old Mrs. Horton back home and had come here on purpose to see you. I’d given up the Idea and was going away without letting you get a glimpse of me. I—hated to have you see me like this. But the smell of these posies—well, I thought about It a while, then I get my offering, and here I am," Mira laughed tenderly. "You poor boy! It was I you banged against—my' pink hyacinths you shattered. And neither of us knew the other! Though there was something In the sound of your Tm very sorry’ that —that —well. I’ve been thinking about you ever since I reached home.” A happy pair sat by the gas log talking when Lucy and Fred returned. “Why, William Kelly! Where did you come from?" Lucy screamed. “And what are you doing here?” "Ask Mira,” Will answered. “Mira has generously consented to share my life. She’s a fool, isn’t she, Lucy? Even though 1 can.” hts voice broke between a laugh and a sob, “ “support her in the style to which she has been accustomed.” as the jokes say.” 9 Lucy put her hand on his shoulder. Her eyes misted. “No. Mira isn’t a bit of a fool. Fd do the same thing myself," she said unexpectedly. Lucky He Was Fired A young fellow named John Bernet was fired a* a blacksmith’s helper because’ he was “just naturally no account." the blacksmith said. Bernet then tried to get a Job at a railroad switch shanty. He was turned down but hung around until he had learned to telegraph, which came to him easy. Then be got a Job as telegrapher. Pretty soon be became assistant train dispatcher. One day there was trouble on the line and the superintendent took Bernet along. The young man made so many practical suggestions the superintendent made him a chief train dispatcher. Then he became t ran master, assistant superintendent, all within a few years. Now Bernet la president of the Erie railroad. Being fired from one’s job may be a kick upstairs.—tapper's Weekly. ffe Meant Right A professor of systematic divinity in one of our best known divinity schools became indisposed and could not conduct his classes, a notice to that effect was given after morning chapel. Whether the professor who posted the notice belonged to the old school fundamentalists or to the newer school of scientific investigators is not known, but here is a copy of the notice he posted: "The professor. being ill. requests ' me to say that the seniors can keep on going through purgatory, and the middle class continue the descent in to hell until further notice from the professor."—Boston Globe.

ditoriums. churches and theaters the alm will be to preserve rather than to reduce resonance As a result, office routine will be accelerated, human energy conserved, costly mistakes reduced and the human body released from Its present on u a sound shock absorber.— Floyd W. Parsons In the Saturday Evening Post. Only Posits sficufsii Intnctt The silk worm shares with ths honey bee the distinction qf being the only insects in the world which have become domesticated. In China the product of the silk worm amounts to 9,000,000 pounds par year and there are 900 miles of silk fiber in a pound of silk. With « First Writer—Have you arrived yet? Second Writer—l certainly have I All the editors are telling where to get

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

The PONTING MARSHES a

< ' View of the Appian Way.

(Prepared by the National Geocraphle Society. Washington. D. C.) THE Pontine marshes, close to Rome yet little known, form one of the strangest corners of Italy. It is paradoxical that this region is-rnot better known, for one of the world’s most famous roads, the Appian Way, leads straight to it. The Via, Appia, built by Appius Claudius about 300 years B. C., starts from Porta San Sebastiano, the southern gate of Rome, and leads toward Naples. For the first 65 miles it runs as straight as a taut string, until It reaches the town of Terracina. where it passes under the ‘ cliff of Monte Saint Angelo that overhangs the sea. The Romans had to chisel off part of the rock to make space for the roadbed. After passing this point It makes a first bend and then goes to Naples. When you leave the Eternal City on this classic road you pass at first along a wonderful array of old Roman sepulchral monuments; then you climb ; up the Alban hills, extinct volcanoes j of prehistoric times, and from there you gradually descend upon a great , plain, some 30 miles from Rome, known to history as the Pontine marshes. On flie left, as you travel toward Terracina, are the olive-covered Lepine mountains, of gray limestone, I that at sunset are veiled by that beautiful purple haze one sees so often reproduced on the background of the early Renaissance paintings. To the right is the Tyrrhenian sea. along the ! border of which runs a large sand dune covered by a wonderful oak forest some 30 miles In length. Between the dune and the sea is a series of lagoons. At the extreme end a solitary mountain rises, to all appearances from the sea. It is Mount Circeo. the cornerstone of the Pontine marshes. This mount was an island in bygone ages, as geologists have proved, and Homer, eieht centuries before Christ, speaks of It in the “Odyssey” as an island, though probably it was not so any longer. Water of the Marshes Confined. The large quadrangle formed by the foothills of the Alban volcanoes, by the Lepine mountains, by the wooded sand dunes of the coast, and by Mount Circeo, measuring some 150.000 acres of extraordinary fertile land, is known to history as the Pontine marshes. The water, hemmed in on all sides, cannot flow out. In winter the mountain streams pour their foaming, muddy torrents upon this lowland, flooding thousands of acres; the rich mud slowly settles, coating the fields with a slit which Is the finest of fertilisers: then the waters gradually flow out through narrow channels until, in summer, only the lowest portion of the land, that which lies practically at sea-level, remains in a swampy condition. A dense, luxuriant growth of water plants springs up with the approach of the warmer season; the stagnant, lukewarm waters teem with life of every description, and toward the month of July the treacherous Anopheles mosquito drops its filmy larval veil, rises out of the marshes, and. flying around In search of a living for itself, sows death upon humanity. Many centuries ago most of the Inhabitants fled to the mountains, built their towns tm some steep hills, and from these vantage points made dashes Into the plain to work the fields and tend the cattle. Such a place was ancient Cori, founded by the Trojan Dardanos. with its city walls constructed of huge polygonal blocks and with Its beautifully preserved temple of Hercules. Ancient Towns of the Hills A little farther on rose Norma, on the very edge of a vertical cliff GOO feet high, as ancient as the city of Rome, if not more so. in olden times It was called Norba. and the cyclopean walla formed out of huge, carefully i trimmed boulders, are still a marvel I to those who visit this not easily accessible place. At the foot of Norma is the abanioned medieval town of Nlnfa. the i

No Record of Morris Loan A has frequently been asserted that Robert Morris, the financier of the Revolution, loaned the Continental congress large sums of money which were never repaid, but there is no record of any such loan. In 1790 congress passed a law providing for the ssimmptkm by the government of all of the debts of the Continental con- . grass. Morris was * senator from Pennsylvania at that time and If he ;

Pompeii of the Middle ages, as Gregorovius called it, covered with ivy and brambles. This is one of the most poetic spots of the world. A little farther along the range is Sermoneta, with the Thirteenth century castle of the Caetanl towering on a high mountain spur and dominating the vast plain of the Pontine marshes. Then follow Sezze, Piperno, and other towns. These are the inhabited places today ; but in olden times the whole land was densely populated and highly productive. Twenty-three towns are supposed to have existed where now one sees not the trace of a single building. The most famous of these cities which have disappeared was Pometia, conquered and sacked by the Roman king, Tarquinius the Superb, in the Sixth century before Christ. The lagoons of the marshes have formed between the great prehistoric dune covered with oak forest and the more recent one thrown up by the sea. There is no natural communication between the lagoons and the sea. When these lakes swell, during the rainy season, the fishermen cut a smalt ditch across the dune, and the waters, rushing out to the sea. in a few hours widen to a broad river. The fish taste this lukewarm, brackish water and swim by the thousands and millions into the lagoon, where they are caught. This locality is also a wonderful shooting resort. There the ducks come from the sea, seeking shelter and food in that maze of ponds and canals distributed throughout the dense growth of reeds. How the Marshes Were Created. At the time of the Roman republic, in the Fourth and Fifth centuries B. C., the Pontine region seems to have been free of waters, healthful and densely populated. Then, a little before 300 B. C.. near the time the Appian road was built, something happened that has not been fully understood. The natural outlet of the waters in the depression between the city of Terracina and Mount Circeo was obstructed. probably through some seismic movement; a raising of the ground a few feet was quite sufficient to stop the outflow of the waters; and the sea Increased the obstruction by piling up sand dunes. In this way the great plain of Pometta became hemmed in on all sMss by higher lands and converted Into a large basin, into which the waters naturally converged from everywhere, but from which they could not flow except through the narrow dug near Terracina to connect the marshes with the sea. The ground became water-soaked. The great Appian road, not a long time after being built, began to sink in places and had to be raised by Trajan and other Roman emperors. During the Eighth century it went completely under water and the road from Rome to Naples had to be shifted to the foothills, passing near Nlnfa and Sermoneta. From that time tc the present this waste but fertile region became the playground of unruly waters. li winter over large tracts of land the yellow waters often rise as high as the tops of the fences: ducks, sea gulls and geese make it their home, diving in the shallow water for food. In spring the waters subside and the fields become covered with a luxuriant growth of grass and flowers, where the sheep and the long-horned cattle of the Roman Campagna find idea) pasturage. New Italy Intends now to tackle the problem of draining the marshes that has baffled each succeeding generation for more than two thousand years. The government is .approaching it with all the means and technical knowledge of modern times and will accomplish the work. The ancient canal of Rio Martino will be opened again, the mountain streams will be placed under control by building a reservoir at the foot of the mountains, and large pumping ata- j lions are to be erected for draining the swampy land that is practically at se< level.

had a claim against the Continental congress he bad an opportunity to bring it up, but there is no record in the reports of congress or the Treasury department of any such claim.— Pathfinder Magazine. Promusent Amencatt Robert Green Ingersoll, American lawyer, lecturer and politician, died on July 21. 1899. He first settled as a legal practitioner at Peoria. DU in 1857, and In 1858 was attorney genera' for Illinois.

Old Folks Say Doctor Caldwell was Right

The basis of treating sickness has Sot changed since Dr. Caldwell left Medical College in 1875, nor since he placed on the market the laxative prescription he had used in his practice, known to druggists and the public since 1892, as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Then, the treatment of constipation, biliousness, headaches, mental depression, Indigestion, sour stomach and other indispositions that result from constipation was entirely by means of simple vegetable laxatives, herbs and roots. These are still the basis of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, which is a combination of senna and other mild laxative herbs, with pepsin. The simpler the remedy for constipation, the safer for the child and for you. and the better for the general health of all. And as you can get results in a mild and safe way by using Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, why take chances with strong drugs? A bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will last a family several months, and all can use it It is good for the baby because pleasant to the taste, gentle in action, and free from nar- , cotics. In the proper dose, given in the directions, it is equally effective at

Poor Lighting Puts Big Strain on Nerves The average American home is only half lighted, asserts Miss Helen G. McKintay of Harrison. N. J. Miss McKiniay is one of a score of engineers eye conservationists carrying on a nation-wide investigation of light, sight and safety under the direction of Richard E. Simpson of the Eyesight Conservation Council of America. She is studying the effect of inadequate lighting in the home. Sufficient lights, all shaded, and a center light in each room are the essentials of a well-lighted home, declares Miss McKiniay. She sees no harm in reading tn bed providing the light is good. “It takes 12 per cent of the nervous energy the body generates to see under normal conditions,” she explains. “When there is poor lighting 50 per cent is required. “Every well-lighted kitchen should have lights above the sink. If you work and can’t see well, your irritability is increased Why lose so much nervous energy in the kitchen?” For true blue. u?e Russ Bleaching Blue. Snowy-white clothes will be sure to result. Try it and you will always use it All good grocers have it. —Adv. Stretch of Railroad Abounding in Bends An engineer once said L’intah railroad reminded him of'the rail fence that was so crooked every time a pig crawled through It he came out on tlie same side. This tine, which covers the 70 miles between Mack. Colo., and Watson, Utah, is declared to be the most difficult to operate in the United States. There are 233 bends in one stretch of te&-miles. Between Mack and Baxter pass, atop the Rockcliff mountains, the railway climbs 3.596 feet, and to negotiate this stretch of 85 miles geared locomotives are required. Gilsonite is the chief commodity hauled, a vast -posit on the eastern edge of Utah being the only considerable quan tity of the mineral known in America. Detour We have Just been apprised of a taxi-driver whose fare, a, gentleman slightl.v unsteady, gave the order to drive “to the end of the rainbow.’’ The chauffeur was acquiescent—until he began to worry about the custom eris ability to pay. Then he stopped the taxi, opened the door and said cheerily: “Well, here we are!” “Is this the end of the rainbow?" Inquired the fare. “Well, not quite, sir.” was the ingenuous reply. “The end is really one block west, but the street’s torn np and you’ll have to get out here." — New Yorker. Almost one-third of the small towns In the United States have lost their doctors in the last ten years, a survey shows. Love is a thing full of anxious fears. —Ovid. When a man is in love he Imagines that he neither eats nor sleeps.

FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, HAARLEM OIL correct internal troubles, stimulate vital on the original genuine Gold Medal. Old-fashioned history left out 75 per •ent of what was interesting, calling t unimportant

llf ■ fc ■ ■il AT AGE 83

all ages. Elderly people will find it especially ideal. All drug stores have the generous bottles. ' We would be glad’to have you proro at our expense how much Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin can vnban to you £nd yours. Just write “Syrup Pepsin,” Monticello.lllinois.and we will send you prepaid a FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE.

Conscience gets a megaphone when it wants ,to remind jou afterward of what it said before. Adversity sometimes transforms a coward into a hero.

DIURETIC STIMULANT TO THE KIDNEYS Standard for Generation*. Mrs. H. A. Brandt of Silverton, Oregon, writes us as follows: “I am writing to teU you that your Dodd’s Pills and Diamond Dinner Pills saved my life. After standing my urine was almost half albumen and I was so weak and tired I could hardly move. After taking two boxes of Dodd’s Pills and one of Diamond Dinner Pills 1 felt like a new woman." At all druggists, per box. or The Dodd’s Medicine Co., Inc., 700 Main St.. Buffalo, N. T. peel(jood Meet ailments start from poor elimination (constipation or semi-constipation). Intee> tinal poisons sap vitality, undermine health anjjjmake life miserable. Tcnight try Nt — *•!' Italure’a Remedy—eii-veg-table corrective —not juet an ordinary iaxat-ve. See how N> will aid in restoring your appetite and'rid you of that heavy, bggy. pepless feeling. Mild, safe, purely vegetable—dy*jbMS 11 Mi aft At Druggists —only 25c To Cool a Burn Use HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh AD feakn art o-:«l to rtfaad roar orory tor tie br»t bottle if aoi Mated. ROILS Theres quick, positive, relief in CARBOIL SOi BOX. - iw powder ts and mice ithingelse without dancer to your k. pets or poultry, s means to you! used freely in the home, □use with abeo! ute safety, t proved that ft kills rats me but other animate and jured by the largest ooms. A POISON K-R-O does not contain arsenic, ptaaptonisor bariumcarbonate. Madeof squill bulbs—the new safe way urged by govB eminent experts. At your dnjjrist 75c Large sue (4 times as much) $2 OTOr sent direct from us postpaid u he cannot supply you. Satufioctioo K-R-O CO., Spnng6eW,Ohjo *!• Dally Cash Commission Selling cuaranteed bedspreads, window draperies and table damask. Write today for free sample outfit. Carolina Mllto Company. Gaffney. 8. C. FREE DRESSES Show our Samples' F.icellsat opportunity toepare time money making! Writeouiekt WKSTKRN DRESS MEG. CO. A-1834 Noria Ave. Chicago, 111. Dr. C H. Berry Co. Dep*. W. Chicago. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Bnmo.eßDandruff-Stop.HmrFaUlns Restons ’Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Han «oe. and tl.se at Drowtess. Hiates Chem. Wks. Patchogue. N. T. W. N. U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 39-1927. What a monotonous old world this would be were It not for the delusion* therein.

Disfiguring Blemishes Healed by Cuticura Daily u * e of Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointmentwhen required, not only soothes and heals unsightly and annoying blemishes and irritations on neck and face, but tends to prevent such conditions. Nothing purer, more economical or more satisfactory than these haBWr* CtU cwn~Mcfe