The Syracuse Journal, Volume 23, Number 27, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 30 October 1930 — Page 3
The BjAHandsome Win m. Ar/ Margaret Turnbull * y /JJ. / Ilivsttafani /ruin MuffJ
THE STQRY ' A to London, practlrally penniless, - aft er an unsucceaaful business trip. Sir George Saiidlson talo-s, dinner with his ) widowed stepmother. his old nurse, "Aggy " He did not ap* - prove of her marriage to his father, but ht’r explanation satisfies -him ' Little Is left of, the : ei- . , tate. and Lady Sandlaon.proposes that they go to the United 'States to visit, her brother, Robert MaeHeth. wealthy contractor. Sir George agrees. MaeHeth lives on ah'lsland estate with hl's daughter. ' Roberta, who longs for city' life. Macßeth is a victim of arthritis and almost helpless Mac--iteth As glad to see his sister: and ask's the two to stay Roberta Is. keeping a date with Jack Navarro, about whom she knows little. Macbeth arrAiges for his sister to take charge of the household and George to act at. ■e< retafj Roberta doea ndt-dEp-proye of the arrangement. She tells her father she is not l°nterested’ In George, while the young man takes an. air of indifference to her Macßeth tells George, about trouble he has had: over ■ the pay roll and arranges tor Roberta to introdme, George at the bank and litter take themoney to the yrorkmefi.
* CHAPTER IV—Continued — 10— ■ Roberta arrived ht her fiithvf s chair anil listened Impatiently to hit propostil, iter. eyes blaring with indignation. •’Why can't sonic <>ne else take ■ Tim down to the village? I don't like him. I-tliilik lies the most disagreeable young mail 1 ever knew and I simply don't see why August cant ' <|l: v < I I’l i lie looked lit Her » little sadly: •'Surely, Roberta. even the most modern of daughters would net think It extraordinary If her father; who cantint do It himself. asked her to intro •duce •his retary .at the bank and , also take him. tip. the rivertoshow him the viaduct J"b." , “It lan't that." Roberta said sullenly. Slot si little ashamed o( bei o ls? "1 hen what Is it?' her father aw. I . and.there was ;1 ; tir>-d note in his /is well as “I have an engagement for tmlak ■■ Jlat s too bad. I m afraid I'll have •to ask ■)<»i to cancel It. AVhdi- I. ask won't wait. It s business;” I can't fl . Hopped.. “I don t want to cam el it •atber < ant we manage it spine wilier way? I could get one <>f the »«'•> s down nt Gie»Si Bend to take him " He hesitated, and then decided to rust her. ' There's been II little dijtlb •uUy about the payroll in the city, and I'm not going to risk any outside . ;mw lodge of how much money I have »ere or what I inn ask.ng.'Sir George o do f<>r me " , Ko’.eitu stiffened. •“You mean yott won't let me off '• . Iler father shook his head wearily: •I have explained w by • ,\o. I don’t think,you have. You've fust given m»* «ti order and apparently »usines< comes before,, anything else-” “It d a's Ju,st now " Min Beth said it slowly. ' I wish you could see It as (. do. Bobbie. The mntiey Isn't jus) ■ money and the loss of It wouldn't be fust the money loss I have Insured •he payroll. It’s a matter of keeping faith with the meh. The money means nome and fodd-'ahd clothing for all these meh and they depend on me to jell ver It to them on the day I've promised It. I can rpmeml>er when veil were awes thing. Bobble, how much my weekly wage meant to your pother and to me." He had used'the little old pet name •hat had been given her as a baby. but ~t did not soften Roberta. She stood silently regarding him. searching In per mind for some plea that would make hint listen. She knew now, by the look In her father's eyes. that If was hopeless. She must either do this thing or precipitate a final quarrel, that would leave her nothing to do but go away at once. She was not yet prepared for flight.' She might have to eotne t<* it some day and soon, but hot now. She lifted her eyes and saw the blue car still stationary. She raised tier arm and waved twice over her bead, the signal they had both agreed upon as “Wait for me.” and then turned to her father. "I'll go and break the engagement then. But I shan't forget.' Father. You owe me something for this." She was gone before Robert MacJteth could say anything, and the next minute was running down the beach to the bridge' . By the blue ear a very angry young man stood waiting. “Well!" he snapped, “what do you want me to wait for? Isn't it enough that I'm caught like this here?" “I can't help It, Jack."' Roberta said breathlessly, “It's all off for today. Father wants me to take his secretary lo the bank.” She blurted It out before she remembered that her father especially wanted no one ’to know. Oh. well, Jack didn't count! It would tell him nothing, anyway. But It did interest Jack. He stopped his tinkering and fussing and looked at her. “What bank and why do you have to take him -It’s the village bank, and I don't know why except—oh, yes, I do! father wants them to know him so that be can cash checks and so forth.” ■Hmm!" Jack regarded her quietly. “Well. if not today, let’s make it tomorrow.'' I Roberta regarded him with troubled She shook her head. “Tomor-
row he wants me to take him tip the river to the viaduct, construction camp.”. Jack looked nt her narrowly. “You mean you want to take him." Roberta shook her head. "Not much. 1 can think of lots of pleasanter ways of spending my time than taking that English; beanpole about.” . Roberta looked lit. him and her face changed. She was sure she hud found the solution. , , "Jack. I have It! You come with us up the river tomorrow. It wouldn't be nearly so stupid If you were along," “What!" Slowly Jack brought his attention back to her and looked at her with amazement, tinged with suspicion. "Great Idea that Is, 1 must say. Can’t be done. 1 don't choose to play second fiddle to Sir George.” "Who told you his name was Sir George?" ••You did." Roberta shook her head. "Os course you did. You told me thtft day we lunched at Indian Lodge." He had overreached himself ami Roberta let him see that he bad. "1 gfTg. 5. “I Don’t Choose to Play Second’Fiddle • to Sir George.” iould.n’t. 1 didn't know he was coming <>r anything almuf' him then.” "Well. then, you said something about him this morning." Roberta looked extremely skeptical and opeio d her mouth to protest when Jack dropped bls pliers. . ■ •oh, d ii. I Jammed my finger! See here,” he turned on her - holding his finger in his handkerchief. "What difference does it make that you have forgotten you told me hta name, when I say you did? Are we going to argue all morning about that? I have got to be off unless.’’ and he stooped And smiled at her. "unless you want to (•oiiie with me and convince me. I am wrong.”’ Roberta shook her head but she was puzzled. She did not like Jack's way of saying things today. "Well, then I'll Just start the old bu<. and see you again. When?" "1 don't know," said Roberta. Then, suddenly, as she looked at him directly. t’ J ack, why not come to the house? It would make it lots easier for me and we could see each other oftener, if you'd just come along ant! be pleasant to father.” "No," Jack answered, iso promptly that It was like an explosion of wrath. Then he looked at Roberta and smiled, showing his .perfect teeth. "I don’t mind the old man, Robbie, but I can't stand watching that Englishman hanging around, bluffing your father and trying to get at you. When will he go?" "I don't know," Roberta was disturbed. - "Meet -me Friday, same place, and we'll plan things out.” "If I can.”
Unique Church Used by Benedictines as Shrine
When one thinks of a famous church one naturally thinks of one great In age, great in architecture or great in Its historic associations. One finds none of these characteristics in the little church on the Kentucky side of the Ohio river, and so. perhaps. one can hardly refer to it tn the same manner one refers to Westminster. Colgate. Notre Dame of Santa Sophia. It may not be a famous church, but It is at least unique, for It la the smallest church in the world, capable of accommodating but three or four worshipers, says the Cincinnati Enquirer. The small brick structure was built in 1890 by some brothers of the Benedictine order, who used It as a shrine during the years they were engaged there in the making of sacLengtk of Sea Snakes It Is believed that sea snakes do not grow much longer than 12 or 13 feet. Speaking of sea snakes found near the coast of northwestern Australia, the National Geographic society says: “Sea snakes are frequently seen curled up asleep on the surface of the water. These reptiles are poisonous and grow to about 12 feet tn length.” Sea snakes are distinguished by the compressed, rudder-shaped tall, and they are unable to move on land. Their food consists chi'dly of fish.
“(Th, you’ll be there—if you really care," and Jack was gone. Roberta stared forlornly after him. She turned to go toward the house and sav< the kill-joy, as she mentally called Sir George, come along the towpath. He still looked puzzled, but when he looked into Roberta's hostile eyes, he saw there was no prospect of help in that quarter. How could he go to this girl, who disliked him enough as it was, apd question her about her recent companion because tlife man looked like a type of bounder he had frequently seen on his way to and from Yucatan? CHAPTER V But could he speak to the girl's* father, or even to the girl herself, on the strength of a likeness, and that not very strong? He could not even remember the man’s name! When he cqme Within hailing distance Roberta spoke: “Are you ready to go to the village with me to meet the bank manager?" "Absolutely. Now?" “Immediately after luncheon. On the way back well stop at Green Bend for tea. Father says now that you’re fairly well acquainted In the city—he wants you to meet everybody here. We will probably give a dinner and dance this week for Aunt Aggy—and for you. I'll have to consult her ns to the night.” " "Awfully good of you,” Sir George said mechanically, wishing that he might ask her a question or two about the lad in the blue car. As though answering his thought, she -continued with a disdainful grimace. "Entertaining here’s the last scream in old-fashioned stuff. It will be a mixture of old and young." "Is the man I saw this morning one of the ’young ?" Roberta stopped short, flushed and answered him slowly: “No, he doesn’t belong about here.” "Sorry. His face Interested me.” '"Oh, you will probably see him again." answered Roberta lightly, but though Sir George nodded, he noticed she did not give him the man's name, and she had not made the slightest effort to introduce him this morning. •••• , • • • They sat around a table in a cheap Philadelphia restaurant, and they might have been, such is the uniformity of men today in their custommade and fashioned clothing; anything but honest: clerks at luncheon. In clothes, manners and language they resembled some of the crude but fairly straight business men of that district. Their business, if neither legitimate nor honest, was profitable. The oldest man. gray haired, with thin lips, was the head of the business. He had thought it out carefully during three years of imprisonment at Sing Sing and-he had chosen his associates with care. It had been a profitable ami exciting partnership, although the Offices In this backwater street seemed dull and respectable enough. The name on the door was. "The Elite Social Register; Inc.." and the offices, two in number;, were duly supplied with files and card indexes. If the police ever grew suspicious what was there to dread? All they would find was a quiet office run by one man, a stenographer and filing clerk. If they should by chance find the leader, there, why here was a crook who was fired of the game and had settled down to earning an honest living. 1 issuing a little blue book that, told society climbers who was who, in that world of millionaires which constitutes America's aristocracy of money. The youngest man present was .Tack Navarro who was talking vehemently. While the others listened to him with attention. It could not be said that they listened with patience. "You bring too little," the leader interrupted. “You say there is money in the country bank, but how much? You ! say this Englishman is about to he trusted by hisrmployer— but how far?” Jack shrugged his shoulders. "I i bring you what I can get," he .told them aulUly. "If I ask too many questions, the girl may grow sus-* plclous.” "Os what? Why should a rich kid like her have any suspicions? Have you been talking?" i "If 1 say too much," Jack Snarled, "she will be (suspicious that l am after her money, Even now there Is trouble, i She asks me to go to their house so i that I meet the father. Well, I cannot go." "Why not?" “Because of that cursed Englishman.” _ s . "He knows you?” •*On the steamer —we met.” The older man looked from one do the other of his companions without speaking Finally he came to Jack. (TO BE CONTINUED.)
ramentai wine. During the years of its use it contained an altar, the usual church candles, a crucifix and pewa for the accommodation of three persons. But it is no longer used as a church, though still owned by St. Joseph's parish of Covington. The interesting structure the smallest church in the world. Is on the Highland pike, two miles south of Covington. New Brunswick Legend New Brunswick, largest of Canada** maritime provinces, was first settled by the French and Its history is filled with romance. New Brunswick was part of Evangeline's land and In the early days of strife sheltered Evangeline's friends in its forests. From the Indians of the province come interesting lengends of the country and of their hero. Gluskap. Once upon a time the beaver was a huge beast and threatened man's existence. Then came Gluskap in his canoe, which was an island, and hunted the wicked beaver and shattered the dams which he had built to flood the country. So they made him chief of ail the tribes. Screen Test Then there is the absent-minded professor who started to put up his screens and found out he didn't take them down last fall.
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
ICThe Kitchen | Cabinet 00000000000000000000000000 (.c;. 193 J. Western Newspaper Union.) What can an individual do but Jutst distribute such little gifts as he has to give, which increases the chances for happiness by increasi ing the appetite‘for the things of I the spirit.—Edward' Yeomans. WHAT TO EAT A simple dessert well made and daintily served gives just the finishing
touch to a plain dinner. Here are a few desserts that may be helpful in planning a luncheon and the dinner menus: On baking day when the oven is
not too well occupied, prepare and bake a pastry shell or two. or bake the shells on patty tins for individual pies. These will keep well for a few days and it will be found most helpful jo put In a filling of lemon, cover with a meringue and have a dessert in a very few minutes. These shells may be filled with crushed fruit. | topped with whipped cream, or they may be filled with a butterscotch fillj ing or chocolate; thus having any kind that seems desirable or is well liked.. The follow ing will be another filling that takes but a few moments to ! prepare: Marshmallow and Fruit Pudding.— Soak one-fourth of a cupful of candied cherries and pineapple cut into pieces either in the pineapple juice or any fruit Juice either canned ffr fresh, for an hour or moVe. Fse maraschino .’cherries and their own sirup if pre ferred. Cut one-half pound of marsh • mallows into six pieces each. Beat i one cupful. of whipping cream until stiff, add three tablespoonfuls of con j feetioner's sugar gradually, then a I half teaspoonful of almond with a few drops of vanilla. Mix the marsh[mallows w ith one-half cupful of pecan ; meats broken into pieces and fold all together. Chill and serve in thepastry cups. A Dainty Luncheon Dessert.—Spread the round butter crackers with marsh-' mallow cream, and in the center of each place a teaspoon fill of pineapple . •or orange manmaktde. Beat the'whites of two eggs' until stiff and dry. add one-fourth cupful of powdered sugar and with a pastry tube pipe this merijigue around thg edge of the cracker, then set a rose of meringue in the center. Sprinkle witli granulated sugar aiid brown delicately In-! the oven. No “Frills,” but Real Meals in Lumber Camps Sonte one recently writing of Maine lumber camp feeds describes the table | in rather interesting terms: “The i food Is all on before the cook shouts: ; ; <’ome and get it!* You will not find ■ finger bow ls, white napkins or a dozen I knives ffnd forks to every person, but vou'H find real grub, the kind that delights the stomach of every woodsman. There are no ‘courses.’. You j eat as much as you want of anything I that is on th? table. The dishes are 'kept filled by the cookees. Coffee, ; milk and tea are in, large pitchers. Other food is in tins or enameled basins and in large quantities. The cups are of tin and hold a pint—-a real mailsize cup. Knives, forks, spoons and plates are also of tin or enameled ware. Some of the men mix beans, bread, pickles, potatoes and otiions together and then cover it with molasses. As soon as a man has eaten. I he takes his dishes and <leposits them , in one of the huge dishpans that Is, usually In the sink at one end of the i cookroom. To leave, your dishes on the table would, tie a certain sign of greenhorn.' Journal. Earliest Englith Clock? In the first chamber of the great tower of Salisbury cathedral lies a i rusty, odd-looking piece of mechanism which may prove to be the earliest ; turret clock in England, dating back to 188(1, or six years before the earliI est record of the Wells clock, now in the Science museum at South Kensington. * An Interesting feature of the Salisbury .Clock is the hanjl wheel for winding .the going (as distinct from the striking) part. Only a little work at a trifling cost would be required to make the clock go again. First English Silk Mill In 1718 the first silk mill in Eng land was established in Derby by a . London merchant named John Lombe. who had stolen a secret process of manufacture from Piedmont, where he had obtained employment as a work man and, at the risk of his life, bad made drawings of the machinery used by his employers.—Detroit News, Woods for Violin Maple and sycamore are the favorite woods for the backs or under surfaces * of violins. The belly or top is made of a soft wood like fir or pine. Maple is generally used for the neck, and the tail piece and fingerboard are mdde of ebony. Altogether there are about 70 different parts in an ordinary violin. Alligator Vindicated A study of stomach contents of 157 alligators of the Gulf coast vindicated these reptiles of being seriously destructive to useful forms of wild life. Overdoing Exercise Taking enough exercise for a week in one concentrated dose on a Saturday or Sunday is probably more Injurious than no exercise at all, especially to persons more than fifty years, in the opinion of the medical director of an insurance company. The New Goa! A life devoted to the acquisition of wealth is useless unless we know how to turn it into joy. And this is an art that requires culture and wisdom. —County, Home.
Can I Learn to Fly? by William R. Nelson awaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Three Point Landing i ITTLE by little the student pilot ' takes on more and more responsibility in handling the plane. And he learns each step, or half-step, by that •• of all systems—experience. The next lesson was a continuation of the last one. But, and 1 didn't realize it at the time, my instructor added a responsibility he had been carrying for me. After I bad taxied out, taken off and was climbing, apparently satisfactorily, to the 1.000-foot level where most of my lessons took place, my instructor spoke through the tube connected to my ears. “As your altimeter shows 1,000 feet or about that, push forward on the stick and put the plane in level flight. Then cut the motor to 1,450 revolutions per minute. That Is cruising speed for thij plane. Look at your air-speed indicator. On a normal day it should register about 70 miles an hour at 1,450 r. p. m.” As we rounded the pattern, turning, leveling out. flying straight ahead, again, leveling out, finally making the third turn, he spoke again. "Now cut the motpr and start your glide. Hold the nose down in the glide and remember to gun the motor to dear It. Keep those wings up. That's it. Now relax. This is .fun. Let s see you smile?” and he turned around and grinned back at roe. My landings were getting a trifle better. I was beginning to "feel” the plane’s changes of position and loss of speed, and quickly noticed whenever a wing got "down.” wliich meant we were tipped to that side. “Watch but both sides and Judge your altitude In landing by looking ahead about 100 yards. Don't look straight down. Don’t watch out one si’de only. Keep an eye on that nose. Make it come up but keep the plane from climbing. That’s fine. You're getting the idea." 1 had made a “three-point” landing (the wheets and tail-skid touching earth simultaneously). How much my instructor helped I was too busy to notice. But it was undoubtedly “some.” Except for my instructor’s occasional help, I was now “flying the ship" completely. I taxied out, took-off, made the turns, reduced the engine speed to “cruising," cut for the glide to earth, "cleared" the motor, and made the landings. _ I did all of it, but, the way I felt, I had no desire to. do it alone. • • ♦ . Doing It All Himself TO EVERY aviation student comes that day'when be.or she vows: ”I'll take her off, fly around?and land again without help from my instructor.” Keeping that vow was just one postponement after another with me. As it W('uld spoil the accomplishment to ask him not to help. 1 resolved to make each maneuver so nearly perfect he’d not have to help in any way. Each trip something was not quite the way it should have been and lie d have to kick the rudder, bring up a wing, yank the stick, gun the motor,’ or tell me something through the speaking tube. "Keep a constant lookout for other planes." he had to caution me. ‘‘l’ve tieen doing it for -you but you must learn to do it for yourself. We are moving at high speed and so are the other fellows. We cover distances quickly. See that plane under us? It is your responsibility to keep out of its way.” i We made a half-dozen trips around the pattern. take-offs were smooth and my landings were Improving. My jmigment of distances was getting better. Judging distance from above is different from anything I had ever experienced. There was nothing I could use as a “yard stick” to measure 1L And it is surprising how small common objects—automobiles, telephone poles, buildings, trees—appear from 1.000 feet up. My instructor may have sensed my desire for a "perfect", trip. He said nothing as we started forward, left the ground, and climbed steadily toward the LOOO-foot level. / I leveled out, reduced the motor speed to 1.450 r. p. m., made the first turn, leveled out. flew straight ahead, turned, flew straight, turned again and cut the motor to idling for the glide back to earth. My fourth turn was a bit wobbly but he said nothing. I gunned the motor frequently. Probably too frequently. (1 was afraid he’d have to tell me to do so). As we approached the ground I leveled out of the glide and began working the stick back. The plane began to lose speed and 1 could feel It settling earthward. At last it touched the ground and rolled to a stop. He bad not spoken. “No. 1 didn’t touch the controls that time. Just sat here and enjoyed the ride.” was his answer to my query. US. l»S0. We«tern Newspaoer Union.) Porcupine’s Revenge Large animals such as cougars, lynx and even bears very often lose their lives as a result of an attack on a lowly porcupina Quills lodge In the animal's mouth, swelling it to a size that makes eating Impossible and the victim slowly starves to death. Not a Nico Snake The king cobra Is the most dangerous of all snakes, because he attacks unprovoked. He Is met with in Malaya, where there are also crocodiles and sharks, and it is estimated that not less than a quarter of a million species of insects exist there. From the Latin “Electricity” and kindred words are derived from the Latin word •‘electrum,’’ meaning amber. The name was given on account of the production of electricity by the friction of amber.
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Vatican Art Treasures Worth Many Fortunes Said to be the largest palace in the world, the Vatican contains SO grand stairways,: and 200 smaller ones, 20 "courts and 11.000 halls, chapel rooms and apartments, and its wealth Is so fabulous as to be beyond anyone’s knowledge, writes James T. Nichols in ’an article-in Successful Farming. Within the Vatican, he continues, are tens of thousands of paintings and objects, many of wliich alone are worth a fortune.. The single painting of the Last Judgment is 33 feet wide and 66 feet high. If a single one of the half-dozen marble bathtubs were put on the market, it would bring enough to build a goodsized church. In the library are single manuscripts that are priceless, niarbleitables inlaid with pearls and gems worth a fortune, and vases almost as valuable. Rockefeller could hardly pay for the tapestries and paintings in the Vatican, and HenryFord would be bankrupt before he half finished if he started to purchase the treasures of this great building. WOMEN SHOULD LEARN USES OF_MAGNESIA To women who suffer from nausea, or so-called “morning sickness,” this is a blessing. Most nurses know iL It is advised by leading specialists: Over a small quantity of finely cracked lee pour a teaspoonful of Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. Sip slowly until you are relieved. It ends sick stomach or Inclination to vomit Its anti-acid properties make Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia quick relief In heartburn, sour stomach, gas. Its mild laxative action assures regular bowel movement. Used as a mouthwash It helps prevent tooth decay during -expectancy. Tranxparent Mrs. Borden-Lodge—You’re preparing to leave Without paying, your bilk- Don’t try to fool me. I can see right through you. Mr. Hungerford—Dtfring the year Pve lived here you’ve kept me so thin anyone can see through me. Orders Are Order* She—Papa wants you to leave at midnight. ' ’: He—l have some home work tonight, but I suppose U can wait till tomorrow. —Chicago Daily News. Had J t Coming "She says her singing teacher charges her $lO a quarter.” “Well, I don’t blame him!” Think of the temptations to steal that are resisted !
c’. play o„’. REST —child needs Castoria
When a chad 13 fretful and irritable, seems distressed and uncomfortable, can’t play, can’t sleep, it is a pretty sure sign that something is wrong. Right here fa where Castoria fits into a child’s scheme—the very purpose for which it was formulated years ago! A few drops and the condition which caused the trouble fa righted; comfort quickly brings restful sleep. Nothing can take the place of Castoria for children; it’s perfectly harmless, yet always effective. For the protection of your wee one—for your own peace of mind —keep this old reliable preparation always on hand. But don’t keep it just for emergencies; let it be an every-day aid. Its gentle action will ease and soothe the infant who cannot sleep. In more liberal doses it win
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How Old Are You T Today Said She—l’m ‘tO Am I Fat?—Not Me Yes! A year ago I had twentytwo more pounds of fat than I needed —I was fat—and very sensitive about it—but now I say it is foolish for anyone to be overweight. What did I do? Nothing very hard, I can assure you—l cut out pies—candy and all sweets —ate moderately and every morning Oefore breakfast I took one-half teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water—Never missed a morning. I lost fat—gained in energy—vigor—charm —and vivaciousness and have a shapely figure I am proud of—anyone can do the same. A North Carolina woman lost 47 pounds in 3 months—a Montana woman lost 19 pounds in 4 weeks— Wisconsin woman 11 pounds in 6 weeks. Every druggist in the world sells , Kruschen Salts —a Bottle that lasts 4 weeks—costs 85 cents. 8521 Balsam of Myrrh FRECKLES Go Quickly... From the time you make the first application they begin to fade like MAGIC. At all drug and dept, stores or by mail postpaid $1.25 and 65c A copy of Beauty Secrets FREE. 1)K. C. H. BEKKY VO ,£973-5 Michigan Ave - Chicago Broadening Child Mind An exchange of Austrian children between city and country families, privately arranged each summer for several years, having proved a great success both from the standpoint of health and the broadening of the children’s outlook on life, a campaign has been started in Vienna to have such an exchange organized on a -targe scale by the municipal authorities and the various child welfare societies. , I've Heard Him Tourist—lt’s funny I can’t hear anything of the wonderful echo I heard here last year. Innkeeper—You won’t. The peegdog left me for a job on da "talkies." —Passing Show. - Terrible Joke Ba.wber—That girl’s face look* terribly drawn. Dawber —Yes. it frequently Is. She's ah- amateur artist’s model.— Paris Pele Mele.
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effectively help to regulate sluggish bowels in an older child. All druggists have Castoria; it’s , genuine if you see Chas. H. Fletcher** signature and this name-plate:
