The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 52, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 April 1930 — Page 3
The Crippled Lady Peribonka WNU Service , (©. I»S9, Doubleday Doran 4 Co., Inc.)
CHAPTER Xl—Continued Her ''admission of ner love for him was made in a quiet introspective way. us if bis physical self bad to be a living part Os iL It was this, and. her reference to Claire, which strengthened his determination not to weaken her faith in him again. He moved to the edge of piled-up debris and began to investigate it, cautioning her to stand pack a little. The rubble loosened under his feet ami slid down. There was quite a little rock slip before he had gone far, sending up a cloud of dust between them. Through this, when it had settler!. Carla followed him. -She heard him calling to her to go back, but in h moment was standing at his side. Almost above them, so steep was the ascent, xlie fissure narrowed to half a dozen feet In width and was choked with loose rock and sand; Paul looked at It with somberly appraising eyes and. instinctively put himself between it und Carla. Another explosion of dyna mite sent a scarcely perceptible tremor through the earth. Slight as It was. a tiny stream of sand and pebbles came trickling down from the suspended avalanche. He caught her hand and to<>k her kwiftly back to safety. "A nearer shot would send that thing down on -us," he said. “Walt here until 1 find out trorewbout it." “What are you going to do?" she asked. “First, climb the edge of the wall and see what is beyond.” .He did -tills and returned to her tn a few minutes. “Funny how little things put themselves in-our way!" He tried to speak lightly. “The fissure Is clear as a floor beyond that slug of debris, which Is ready to topple. We could tie out In five minutes if it Were not for that. As it Is, I’ve got to take a chance" “And—the chance?** .<’■'■ •.'We must get over tire loose stuff. Either- that or go buck —to the little tire." “We must go on,” she said “Yt s," we've got to go <>n. We p.i"Cd a stick back there five or six feet long. .By hugging close to' the wall I think I can reach one of the keystones iti the -slide and loosen it. It- won't tie difficult, and the whole thing will come down like a house v ith the foundation pulled out .from tinder It. I'm going to take you back a distance.” “And when the slide comes, where will you be?" “Against the rock wall, as small as I canmake myself.'' ”Y< u moan,'' said Carla, with quick understanding In her eyes, “that you .are going to trike the stick and pry one of the /ocka loose, but not from the edge of the wall, for no foothold is there. Your intention Is {o stand In front, and make an effort to get out of the way when the avalanche starts.” “I am sure I can do IL” “If it comes slowly, yes. But what If it should come the other way? I.et us go together. Paul. It may be that we can get over It “Wait here until 1 get the stick " “If we try to climb over It together we will not need the sfick." "But we cannot climb It 1 know. I have seen a hundred of those things tn the pit, Thev are like hair trigger guns, even when they look solid it is necessary to loosen a rock ami then make a run (or it. The stick will give me a few- feet, start." . “But It may be more tirmly fixed than you think." ; ■ VMy stick will prove. It. Until then you must remain here." She Hocompanied him to the down- • ward exit of the small, rootn-llke prison they had entered, and listened, to his footsteps until the sound of them » grew faint. - 'Then she ascended to the crest of the rotk slip again. A score of feet, beyond lay the danger point. Between It and where she stood was the* rough depression, out of which I'aiil would be. compelled to race for I s life should he loosen the avalanche. There was an overhang of rock, high up. Sind she did not see how be could •■scape It. She turned to took back In the direction he had gone. It was like Paul to take the situation in this way. as If It were an unimportant Incident rather than a tragic thing.' Light was fading swiftly, and evening shadows were failing between the deep, close .walls! of the crevasse. . A radlanpe was In Carla's face, as it a .voiceless spirit within her were sending a message to Some one In the world above She couid hear Paul's footsteps returning, the Iron nails In < tils boots striking on rock, and her 'lips moved, yearning to call his name Then she ran down into the hollow and up Its farther edge. After all. It
Points for and Against the Lending of Books
A movement’ against lending books has been started in the Interests of authors and booksellers. /The argument Is that the book lender makes book prices high because the borrower d«>es not buy. “Publishers would sell at least twice as many books If friendly lending stopped." > ’This may or may not be true; there Is no way of proving II It may well be that the person who couldn't borrow h book from Its private owner would get it fromN a library, or wouldn't get lx at all. On the other baud, the borrower of. a book sometimes takes such a liking to It that he buys it for his own collection, or for a Christmas, or birthday gift. What we find so hard to understand about the book business is that the publishers are opposed to any idea that tends to make reading easy and popular. They are opposed to bookbuying dubs ; they Insist on expensive paper and stiff bindings; and yet they complain because the average Individ-
might not be such a sword of Damocles over them. If it were not, then Paul could only scold. If it were— She began to climb. CHAPTER XII Paul heard the crash. He was a little beyond the place where he had left Qtrla, and ran to It, calling her name. Be leaped through the dust which was settling quickly and heavily, and saw the hollow choked to the nSv Her Eyes Were Closed When He Had Her in His Arms at Last. brim ,\ith the debris of the avalanche. Carla was caught in the last grip of,lt, near the crest of the rock slip. The upper part of her body, was out. and rshe was alive, when Paul reached her. He tried to speak as he tore at the rocks. But his voice was pone. He saw Carla's eyes looking at him with the light fading out of them. She made no sound. Her eyes were closed when he had her -tn his arms at Inst. Yet she was not dead — tie found tilms'elf saying the words over and over as he climbed with her out of the fissure. It may be that the full story 'of Carla Haldan and Paul would never have been known had it not been for the happening of this night. It seems reasonable that neither ‘Claire nor Lucy-Bell? nor (he others would have told the more intimate of its details. A madman told the story. The madman- was Paul. He came into the engineers’ camp in the middle of the night. They did not know him at first, for brush and llmt’s and rocks had disfigured him In the darkness. Ills face Was like that of a man who had been beaten with naked fists. His clothes were half gone. His feet were bleeding through the shredded leather of bis boots in his arms he carried a woman; a dead woman, they thought. Not until Derwent unwrapped the coat with which her head and shoulders were protected and saw her face could tie clearly realize that the man was Paul. They took Carla to'the M’lstassfnL Slit l was carried gently, but quickly. In a litter—with half a dozen men taking turns In bearing her. Even then, in his exhaustion. Paul Insisted on walking a’ tier side until the last nerve In him broke It was this which robbed him of a day and a night <>f conscious life. When lie came to hipiself again, after hours of tortuous sleep. Derwent told nltn that Carla was badly hurt hut would live, ‘ / Claire, he .-aid. had- ret/rned to-her people in New York th<| second day after, his supjtosed death. Lucy-Belle bad gone with her. Word had been sent to her that he and Carla were alive, and Lucy-Belle had replied, saying tliat Claire was very 111. Then had come a telegram from Claire. Derwent gave it to Paul. "I urn so happy," It sttld;"Come to me ns quickly as you can Only God knows how glad I tun" “It sometimes takes s thing like this to bring out the love in a woman's heart.’’ said Derwent, remembering Paul's years of loneliness. ‘ Yes. tt does.*' said Paul, and he saw ''aria's face between Idm and the words which t'inlre had written. (TO BE CONTINUED) —• .. T Briefly Told , j The hlir has m>t yet lifted Its face to heaven that perseverance will not gain the summit at lasL
ual refuses to gamble $2.50 to $3 on a blurb jackeL No doubt the price of books would come down If there were more buyers; there would also be more buyers if the price should come down. —Detroit New*. Pbenician Remains The city ot Granada is reared qpon three abruptly rising hills. On the lowest of these looms up. the more redly against, the background of the snow-capped Sierras, the “Torres Ber mejas" or Vermilion towers. Much mystery surrounds these tremendous ruins. Some historians dairtt them to be the work of the far-roaming and adventurous Phenldans. Upon the highest hill Is the Alhambra. a dty tn Itself, once said to have housed 4O.nttn men. Ever Advancing Slow are the steps of freedom, but her jfect never turn backward.—James Russell Lowdl
v i < _ d . *. GROWING CHICKS NEED VITAMINES Com, Cod Liver Oil, Milk and Grass Urged. Give your poultry yellow corn, cod liver oil. milk and leafy feeds for vitamines, recommends the poultry de*partmeiit of the New York State College of Agriculture. Chicks need vitamines for health and growth and are /more sensitive to a lack of these vitamines tlian most animals. Growing chicks need them more than mature birds. ", Os the three principal vitamines for chicks, vitamin®.A is found abundantly in.sui-h foods as yellow corn, green vegetables, cod liver oil and milk. Lack of this vitamine in the diet will retard and stunt growth and will lower resistance to .disease. j . > •Vitamine B which maintains the' —fleaith. of the nervous system is found .in the outside covering of cereals, in green vegetables, and in milk. A lack of this vitamine affects the organs of digestion and reproduction, and the nervous system. , Vitamine D, or 1 the anti-rickets vitamin®, hardens the bones of growing chicks and prevents leg weakness. To prevent rickets feed cod 1 liver oil or eggs or allow the. chicks to run out in tlie sunlight every day. Sunshine has the same effect on. chicks as does vitaniine D in their food. Window glass filters out the valuable rays of sunlight so cod. liver oil must! be fed when the'windows are* kept closed or even when the chicks are outside, if the ‘Weather is cloudy the greater part of the time. . Feed one-half pint of cod liver <>ii- to each 100 pounds of grain and inastg Unrefined cod liver oil from a reliable' company is just as . efficient ■-’as -refined oil and is much i cheaper. Cod liver ojl tends to lose-its value when exposed to Hie air, so mix fresh lots of mash every week or two. Mix die cod liver oil in a small amount of ' bran or mash with the hands and then add this to tire main, pile and shovel the pile oyer several times until'it is evenly distributed.. It is usually advisable- to feed cod liver oil during the first ten weeks of spring rearing. God liver oil should be stored in a cool dark place in closed containers. Feed for Chicles to Be ■ Raised for Broilers Chicks to be raised for broilers or roasters should be; fed as other chicks are up tq the time of finishing for • their special’ purposes. What are called growing mashes and the usually fed hard grains are given to ■■ produce sturdy frames upon which fat may- be deposited later in the finishing process. There are any number of formulas for thesel, ail suitable and each preferred by some poultrymen. There are excellent commercial mixtures and formulas nre given fronL time to time in these < olenitis. ‘Broilers are usually sold at frbm-Mglit to twelve weeks, of age and. during the last ten days or two weeks of that time are penned up rind Jed upon a special fattening ration, of which cornmeal makes up the greater - part.'- If milk in some form is .added in liberal quantity to tills ration, tilt quality of the product is improved. Vitamine D Important for Egg Hatchability Birds that have,access to direct sunlight will generally produce eggs of greater haichability than birds that ■ are deprived of this yid. Sunlight fur-, nislies the vitamine t» which is-impor-tant. Experiment stations have not [ proved that cod fixer oil is as effective ■ as direct shnlight in providing this'vitam'ine. but* as jtinshihe is not available at all times, the majority of hatcheries rainin' tiui't the hati liery flocks receive < o<l liver oil in their raticn. The addition of gre-n alfalfa ; <>r clover hay is also an aid in supplying the vitamines needed. The use. of glass substitutes <>n the tn*n houses will also aid in giving the l ens out- , door conditions, even though the weather may not be suirab’e. Aypid Cold Nests A cold iV»i-*t with cold eggs will often cause a good hen t.o step setting. Let her warm the nest first, then place under her. riggs that have stood in a warm room for several hours. A piece of the ne-T Ml and Mbodt four incites thick, turned gra-s side ‘down, will hold the beat, and keep the tholsture froni leaving the eggs too rapidly when hens are setting. Make a slight rounded hollow in ( e center of the dirt, then put in a layer of chaff or short straw. Don’t Feed in Litter I D, U. Hendersoii. poultry extension specialist ut South Dakota state 1 col- ; lege, says that since bacillary white diarrhea and roccldlosis can be spread only through the mouth and digestive tract of the chick.’ hopj>er feeding, as opposed to the feeding of mash and grain in (he litter, may lie one of the best preventive measures in combating these diseases. It is recommended that the first few feeds l»e given on clean newspapers, with hoppers or boxes for subsequent feedings. Fowls Need Sunshine The value of sunshine for growing chicks Is recognized by most poultrymen. Chicks which were kept Inside until they are more than three or four weeks old may lose control of their legs and be unable to walk. This trouble is known as rickets. It Is caused by a lack of vitamine D, which Is necessary for proper bone formation. Vitamine D can be supplied by getting the chicks outside In the direct sunshine, or where this is impossible, by feeding cod liver oIL
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
Cool Milk Right to Prevent Loss Work Is Easily Done With Little Additional Equipment of Labor. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Dairymen in the United States lose millions of dollars annually because of poorly cooled milk and cream, says the United States Department of Agriculture in Farmers’ Bulletin 97G-F, "Cooling Milk and Cream on the Farm,” a new edition of which has just been printed. These losses occur because inferior milk or cream is returned by dealers to the farmers, and because low-grade products bring low prices. Ice Is Available. Eighty per cent of the country’s milk and cream supply is produced on dairy farms where ice is available, the bulletin says. Even where ice is not available, milk and cream, by better use of available cooling facilities, may be cooled more effectively than Is often done. The bulletin points out the necessity for prompt cooling of milk and cream and discusses the use of surface coolers. milk-cooling tanks, well or spring water, and mechanical refrigeration. Keeping milk cold during shipment and winter care and handling are other subjects discussed. Proper cooling is Just aS important with cream as with milk, especially as cream is often delivered less frequently than milk. Proper cooling is easily done with little additional equipment and labor. Copies May Be Obtained. Farmers' Bulletin 976-F is a revision of an older publication bearing the same title. It may be -obtained from the'office of information. Department of Agriculture. Washington, D. ’’C., as long as there is a supply available for free distribution. Station Says Hens Lay in Cycles or Clutches Do you know how your hens lay? At the West Virginia experiment station th® poultrymen studied the time factor ,of laying hens. They found that hens, laid in cycles or clutches. The rate of laying is directly in proportion to the number of eggs laid in a clutch. When a bird lays for several days in succession the first egg of tiie cycle or cllitch generally is laid'relatively early in the forenoon. The remainder of the eggs are laid later and later on succeeding days, the last egg of the cycle being laid relatively late in theafternoon. ' Then the bird ceases to. lay for one or more days, and when a new cycle is starteil, again the first egg is laid early tn the forenoon,- and so on. The length of the interval tween the laying of successive eggs is fairly uniform for any particular bird. The data examined'apparently justify the following conclusions: The longer the cycle, the shorter are the intervals between the laying of successive eggs. The interval between, the laying ofthe last two eggs in a cycle is usually greater than any other interval in the cycle. The Intervals between the laying of eggs at or about the middle of the cycles are shorter than the intervals at either extremity. As the birds become older the intervals between the laying of succes-. sive eggs .become longer. The shorter average intervals between the laying of Successive eggs abe usually associated with the more prolific layers. Agricultural Notes Manure for alfalfa land should not contain much straw and should be plied l.»efore growth starts. • • • The place in the rotation that gives the best returns for manure is either. on clover sod’before corn or on the land after It is plowed for corn. • .» • Sweet clover plowed under often Increases corn yields 20 to 30 bushels per acre over the previous crop when no sweet clover was plowed under. No matter how large or small the space, the fruit garden should be planned for a continuous supply of the various kinds throughout the season. • • An e;tr!y spring application of a quick nitrogenous fertilizer is very helpful in a sod-mulch orchard. The first mulch can be applied early in spring. The cheapest nnd'’mpst certain method! of improving crop yields is by the use of clovers and manufe. Some farms will not grow clover without liming. • • • Summer cultivation helps to postpone the blooming season for the following spring which will enable the grapes to escape frosts, especially If frdst is late. • • • Inoculate your sweet clover at the time yon sow it. Freezing does not seem to hurt IL The inoculation will pay for itself many times over in nitrogen gathered per*acre. • • • Fresh cow manure spread at the base of young fruit and shelter belt trees will .reduce the damage done by field mice. The manure should be scattered early in the spring. • • • High grade fruit, either of peaches or apples, cannot be produced satisfactorily, unless the trees are fertilized. The average farm orchard is too much neglected in this one feature. • • • Apple scab Is one of the diseases practically universal throughout this country wherever apples are grown. It will sometimes destroy the entire crop or at least make it unfit for marketing.
dairy FACTS COWS ON PASTURE NEED GRAIN ALSO Cornell Station Advocates Liberal Ration for Herd. — E. S. Harrison, who Is supervising : the protein feeding experiment at the i Cornell university agricultural; experiment station, says that cows on pasture demand liberal grain feeding. He assumes that if the pasture were ideal and the cow could ger and eat all the grass she wanted she could not produce up to capacity on the nutrients site could digest from the pasture. In other words, he says, even under ideal conditions of pasture i i( is necessary to feed grain to heavy [ producing animals. But on the typical dairy farm, he J says, pastures are not ideal, particularly in a dry season, and a cow can gather only a relatively small part of : the grass she needs. On many of the short, side-hill pastures in New York it takes a lot of real work on the par’ of a cow to collect what grass Is there. This uses up energy which j otherwise could go into milk production. In addition, hot weather and the annoyance of dies add to the cow’s troubles and subtract from'her power to make milk, and this means that dairymen should feed grain during the. summer at about the same rate as in winter. . ' Summer silage, or a silage crop will make up for the loss of succulence in dried pasture, or even hay should be added to the ration; but the main point. Mr. Harrison says, is to feed grain during the short pasture season, and it will actually pay more profit than any grain fed at .any. J time of the yean Not only does If ■ help t» maintain the milk flow during I the summer, but it will prevent the I loss of flesh by the cows, and they will go jnto the barn in the fall able > to respond to good feeding rind fully capable of giving their.best returns in money to their owners. Plan for Keeping Flies -Out of Dairy Stables Windows in the University of Ne- ■ braska dairy barn have been painted blue. This is not to please the cows’ sense of beauty but to help till the milk pails. Covering the glass open Ings with blue alab.astine keeps thy bam darker, thus making it cooler and freer from flies. Shutting out part of the light from barns, stalls,; and sheds has been satisfactory in relieving farm animals from some of the worry caused by flies, farmers declare. Openings can also be covered with burlap to a considerable advantage. Windows in the university dairy barn are so arranged as to open for ventilation without admitting.direct sunlight. The blue paint with ’Which they have been coated is easily removed and will be taken off after the summer is over. Soy Bean Hay Excellent Feed for All Milk Cows Soy bean hay makes very excellent feed for milk cows when properly grown and cured. The best quality of hay will be made if the beans are sown in rows about thirty or thirtysix inches apart. It will require two or three/pecks of seed per acre. The beans should be one or two inches apart in the row. When sown in this Way, enough cultivation must be given to keep the weeds down. They should be cut for hay when the first leaves begin to turn yellow. The hay inay be-, cut with the mower and the- crop handled the same as alfalfa would be bandied. It is best to put it in small windrows with a sidedel (very rake tts soon ris the plants are slightly wilted. From" these they ■ may go into small cocks for further curing and from that point on handled as alfalfa, bay would be handled, ■it 11 i -H-1 i 11: ii: 11:: i Dairy Facts •H-l I I l II il 1 (■■l-b-H-1 11 Td-H-b i"! Calves do best when confined fairly closely. ? v Calves must be kept comfortable, have plenty of sleep, and full feeding of whole milk to snake rapid growth I •. • It is important to select a sire from a great dam if possible. No great sire has been produced by a mediocre cow. Cows usually test highest in butter fat content of milk shortly after fresh enlng. The test normally drops for six or eight months with a consider able rise toward® the close of the lac tation period. ■•• • . Powdered skim milk may be substi ; tuted for fresh skim milk for calves after they are a few weeks old. It should be mixed at the rate of one I pound of powder/to nine pounds of water and fed in rhe same manner as fresh skim milk. • • • One of the big losses of the'dairy Industry is due to the selling of hulls before they are proved. A bull, must he at least five years old before his as a sire can be definitely determined. • • • After separating the milk, some skim milk can be used to flush out the cream which adheres to the separator bowl and cover. The separator should be washed Immediately after being used, in warm water to which a washing powder has been added, and then scalded in boiling water. A large amount of cream Is spoiled by being run through dirty separators, as high grade butter cannot be made from such cream.
Doctor’s PRESCRIPTION a when system is sluggish; fcwloSHH I costs nothing to try | | When your bowels need help, the mildest thing | that will do the xvork is always the sensible choice. 1 1 Take a laxative that a family doctor has used for all I || sorts of cases of constipation. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is so pleasant to the taste, so »*<a«n I gentle in its action, it is given children of tender IMATIVE | age and yet*it is just as thorough and effective as SBOU Umpoim I stronger preparations. Pure senna, and harmless Tsp —j I laxative herbs; ingredients that soon start a gentle i | muscular action. Avoid a coated tongue, bad breath, 1 | bilious headaches, etc. Every drug store has Dr. peps, n syrupcq Caldwell’s famous prescription in big bottles. Or | just write Dr. “CcldwelVs Syrup Pepsin, Monticello, 111., for a free trial bottle. —— ir - ’. •■' • The Complete Skin Treatment • Consistent use of S Cntieura preparations will do much to make—and kdep g ofl p 'your skin healthy andclear. OffV# Soap 25c. Ointment 25c. and 50c. Talcum 25c. Proprietary ’tyAllaAslVwll Potter Drug & Chemical Corporation, Malden, Masa. Talcnm I
Foch, the Genius The late Marshal Foch of France, was widely quoted in Germany as a ! military authority long before the [ World war broke out. —American Magazine. - i
wTrjwui J||» llrrtrl Net Contents 15 Find Orafca ess fi j JjL v” I fcl I x - i g3 Children will fret, often for no , ; 3 apparent reason. But there’s al- ’lyl -z) 3 ways one sure way to comfort a ''••• ■ restless, fretful child. Castorial Harmless as the recipe on the mJAiWM • wrapper; mild and bland as it tastes. But its gentle action 1 - soothes a youngster more surely understand. A coated tongue calls than some powerful medicine for a few drops to ward off constithat is meant for. the stronger patibn; so does any suggestion of systems of adults. • " bad breath. Whenever children That’s the beauty of this special don’t eat well, don’t rest well, or children’s remedy;! It may be have any little upset—this pure given the tiniest infant—as vegetable preparation is usually as there is any need. In cases of all that's needed to set everything colic, diarrhea, or similar disturb- to rights. Genuine Gastoria has ance, it is invaluable. But it has Chas, H. Fletcher’s signature on evervdav u§es all mothers should the wrapper. Doctors prescribe it.
Superior Folk It’s easy to pick out superior folk. They are the people who don't leave their car parked in the driveway used by two homes. —Little Hock Aransas Democrat. Lives of great men all remind us how easy it is not to achieve greatness. , TOOK IT TO BUILDJER OP strengthened by. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound La Junta, Colo. —“After my little daughter was born, one of my neighbors : . persuaded me' to Btry Lydia E.l’ink- ■ ham's Vegetable i Cotn pound to .build me up. The nrat bottle macle quite a change in me. I got an appetite and can sleep much better, I am not so nerwus as I was. 1 hifve six children and do all my own’work. I can do so much more now than I could when I began taking the Vegetable Compound and 1 shall certainly recommend your medicine whenever I have an opportunity.” —Mrs, John Osborn,' IL ?2, Box 216, La Junta, Colorado.,
Says Men Wint Pals, Not
Patients! SHE was engaged I She was the happiest girl in the world. A round of teas and parties, a whirl of pleasure, and she began to wonder what was the matter. Too tired to gq out—and he—was he becoming tired of her? . I It was at this point that Miss I Margaret Belden of Los Angeles I woke up to the fact that something had to be done about it. “Men-want pals, not patients” she writes. “I went right to my doctor. Do you know what he said? Rest —and Nujol! “With a prayer in my heart and Nujol in my medicine
cabinet I began to fight back to being -the healthy, robust, happy girl I had been before. Two months passed. No more tears —no more worrying, no more bad dreams. Today I beat him on the tennis court, and although he can out-swim me, I make him work doing it. It’s good to be happy. It’s good to be free, physically, and be able to share, any • time, in sports or dancing or anything else with the one you love! ” Here’s another one who has learned that the simplest and surest way to be well and full of good spirits is to dear the bodily poisons out of your system regularly. Not with power-
Finest Parchment Vellum is a tine parchment, usually calfskin, which is used for expensive bindings for books and also for written manuscripts. It is clear white in color,
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>
ful drugs, but normally, naturally, easily. Doctors and nurses recommend such a natural treatment as Nujol, because this crystal-clear c liquid isn’t a medicine at all! It cannot harm even a little baby! It contains absolutely no drugs. It is simply internal lubrication that your body needs like any other machine. .Good looks and good spirits—do they spell popularity? You know they do! Get a bottle of Nujol tonight in any drug store. Sold in sealed packages only—trademarked “NujoL” Insist on Nujol by name. It costs but a few cents —and it will make you feel like a million dollars.
