The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 4, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 May 1936 — Page 2
Synthetic Gentleman By Channing Pollock Copyright. Channing Pollock WNU gervfca.
SYNOPSIS The Duke. Barry Gilbert, likable youth —of twenty-three, jobless and broke, enters an unoccupied summer home in Southampton, seeking shelter from a storm. He makes himself at home. Dosing at the flreplace, he is startled by the arrival of a butler, Willetts; and a chauffeur, Evans. He learns that the son of the owner of the house. Jack Ridder, whom the, servants bad never seen, is expected. He decides to bluff it out His supposed parents have left for Germany. Next morning he is given a letter for his "mother." He opens it and finds a message from the real Jack, ' saying he could not come, and returning a hundred-doilar bill. The boy’s father had pensioned him Into obscurity. Barry pockets the money, intending to return It later. He orders Evans to take him to Montauk, intending to disappear there. On the way ho moots Judge Hambidge and his daughter, Patricia. Believing be is Jack Ridder, she invitee him to dinner the following Thursday. Barry returns to Southampton, deciding to stay a bit longer. Mr. Ridder, Bn, through his newspaper, the Globo, accuses Judge Hambidge of taking orders from Tammany Hall in a condemnation proceeding. Barry meets Peter Winslow, prominent attorney. Winslow tolls Barry that Judge Hambidge had seen an accident In which a woman was killed by a taxicab. At home Barry finds the wife of the real Jack Ridder awaiting him. Her husband Is tn jail in New York, charged with the murder of Mike Kelly, Tammany boas. The girl, Peggy, tells Barry how she had mot Jack In Florida and married him, as Jay Rogers. Jack lost hie job, and they went to New York, where she got work at the Cocoanut Bar. There she was accused of trying to pick the pocket of Mike Kelly, and was arrested. Her husband wont to Kelly's to induce him to drop the charge. Later Kelly was found dead, bis skull crushed by a decanter. Barry suggests he can help as Jack Ridder, and Mrs. Rogers agrees. Judge Hambidge delivers a decision in the condemnation suit in which Kelly bad been interested. Barry cables Mrs. Ridder for (1.000. Winslow taken Rogers' case Barry gets a job on the Globe under hie true name The editor, Ernie Harwood, assigns him to, cover the Kelly murder. Barry suspects the Filipino servant of Kelly.
CHAPTER IV—Continued ' —lo—- — sir? Tvs been a loafer moat of my life —end this la the beginning of a new chapter.** “Thank yon, sir? Willetts said. "I’m very pleased, sir. If you don’t mind my saying so, very pleased." There were three memos of telephone messages from Pat. Looking at them, on the library table, Barry went on grinning. He called her Immediately, and she asked where he'd been all week. When be told her, she seemed almost annoyed. “So you've deserted me for a chorus girl,** she said. Could Pat be Jealous? "Bow soon can you come over?" she Inquired. "Marian’s not here yet, and dinner'll be late, but 1 simply can't wait to hear your adventures in sleuthing.** ■ As be dressed, Barry kept thinking of this conversation. Absurd that Patricia Hambldge could be worried by his attachment to the "glittery lady." “Willetts and Pat both ooxing disapproval Or do 1 merely imagine it?" But Pat's disapproval at least, was depressingly evident from the moment he saw her. She met him at the door, looking lovelier than ever. “The one girl in the world for ma’ Barry thought. “Let's alt on the sun porch,** Pat greeted him. "Father’ll be down In a minute. Marian came over by ferry from New London. She's dressing. Fancy your being concerned with this Kelly murder. A true motion-picture hero. Go on; I want all the details.** And, as Barry related them, the girl’s Irritation began to show In her face. It wasn’t fair, she said, to "drag poor old Peter Into It** Just because they'd met tn this house at dinner. Nor could she see why he wanted to go Into his father’s office under the name of Barry Gilbert "Frankly. I’m disappointed tn you,** she concluded, and obviously meant it Before Barry could reply, the Judge appeared, looking" tired and haggard. That changed the subject and Patricia's voice, which had been a little strident softened again. She was plainly disturbed about the old gentleman, and kept glancing at him anxiously. “Father’s been ill all week," she said. "Ton ought've called off this dinner.” "I wanted you to meet Marian. But X do hope she comes down soon. Father’s got to get to bed early.** The Judge patted her hand. -Nonsensei” "The doctor warned you against late hours,** Pat reminded him. "But you would go to that banquet last Friday." "That wasn't Ute hours? the Judge argued. "Wo were all through before midnight." "But then you went for a walk," Barry said. He said it quite innocently, bat be was Startled at seeing Hambidge’s hand dose spasmodically over Patricia's. "Who told you that?" the Judge salted. ’« -Mr. Winslow? Hambldge relaxed again. "So 1 did? be recollected. "But only a couple of blocks.” -Nearer a couple of miles, wasn’t ttr Barry was still making conversation, but there was nothing casual in the Judge’s "Why do you say that?" "Mr. Winslow says you saw that taxi accident at Sixteenth street and Fifth avenue." The Judge raised his eyes to Bar ryX almost defiantly. "The taxi accident I saw was to Times square," he declared. *T don’t ijiiicxs you tt was at Sixteenth street. I certainly
"What doe* It matter?” Pat asked. “Here we are, gossiping, when I’m supposed to be preparing you for a reunion." “A what?" "A reunion. With an old friend. That’s the reason Marion was so anxious that I should have you here. I didn’t know myself until half an hour ago. Marian Lorn. Do you remember? She knew you at Harvard." Well, It was bound to come, Barry thought "Are you surprised? Marian wanted you to be—terribly." "I am—terribly." This was the pay-off. What would Patricia say? Patricia was saying, “Well, you must be delighted, too. Marian was going to surprise all of us, and then she lost her nerve. ’Wouldn’t it be too catastrophic,* she said, *if be didn’t remember me?*" Miss Lorn was on her way down the stairs. ' Barry braced himself. "Come on, you!" Pat called. “Dinner's waiting, and go’s Mr. Ridder." Marian raced down the steps, and halted, looking at him across the balustrade. “Mr. Ridder?" Now for It! “Well," she continued, "the Joke’s on me. I should never have known you." “I’d*ve known you anywhere." “Os course, you bad to say that But didn't your hair used to be dark?” “Sure; I hennaed It” “No foolin’l I thought you were slighter, too. But of course, there was only that one evening." Thank God for that! “Don’t tell me we met only once?” "Don’t you remember?’’ “It doesn’t seem possible that I let you slip through my fingers." “Come on." Patricia urged. “Everything's getting cold." Not Barry. Be was warming up,
U* I I V mImwSI “Well, It Was Bound to Come," Barry Thought. and actually enjoying himself. It was a maxing I y bow his luck held I A pretty girl, Marian; all fluff and gurgle. She and Barry had the table conversation pretty much to themselves. Patricia put in a word occasionally. but she was distressed about her father, and with reason, for the Judge seemed suddenly worn out. Exhilarated by this newest escape, Barry was almost brilliant They were finishing their coffee, when Marian said, “Do you still play?” "Bridge or golf?” he asked. “Silly I The violin, of course! I hope yon haven't been flattering yourself that It was you I remember. It wasn't I didn’t even know whether your hair was dark or fair, but Hl never forget the way you played the Llebestod.” "You never told me you played," Pat said. "Oh, I don’t any more. That was a youthful Indiscretion." "Youthful genius, I call It I" Marian persisted. "That night waa full of music, Pat A party at Betty Fletcher's. I came late, as usual, and the lights were very low, and Mr. Ridder was just beginning the Llebestod. Little you knew what an admirer you left In that darkened room." "Shame on you!” exclaimed Patricia. "You’ve got to play for me now? Waterloo, "I haven’t touched a violin since I left college,” Barry protested. *T don’t even know where the old fiddle is? ■ “Mine’s upstairs? Marian Interjected. “I’ll bring It down." And she bounded out of the room. "I can’t play any more." Barry held out, lamely, "and I flatly decline to destroy Miss Lorn’s illusions, or yours." “No excuses," Pat said, very definitely. "Come on; well go Into the drawing room? As they passed through the old fashioned sliding doors. Marian, instrument to hand, reappeared. “I’ll accompany you." she insisted, "and I've brought the Llebestod." "That’s great,” Barry said, “but I warn you—" Patricia was opening the piano. *T warn you." Barry said. *Tm going to make the most awful sounds human ears ever heard." And. with that, he pulled together toe double doors. -Ouch!" he exclaimed. They aB turned to him. -What’s the matter?" Pat asked. "Nothing serious," Barry replied, clamly. "I've slammed toe doors on my fingers.” . He held up his right hand It was crushed badly. was extremely solicitous.
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
and Pat wanted to send for the doctor. “Certainly not" Barry declared. “It’s only broken the skin." “I’ll take care of It now," Patricia said, dispatching the butler for wltcbhazel and bandages. . “Weti, that’s the end of the vloUn playing,” Marian remarked. “I’m afraid so. Wasn’t I stupid?” “Not at alt" Patricia answered, manipulating the gauze deftly. “The Judge wanted to go to bed early, anyway. I wonder whether you’d mind telephoning for Evans.” “I’U run you home in the roadster," Pat volunteered, touching the bell again. “It’s been a sweU evening," Barry insisted, giving Marian his left hand. “Pleasant surprise, meeting you here. This isn’t good-by, la it?” “That’s up to you. I’ll be around until Monday." "Good night, Judge, and I hope yon feel better tomorrow." The roadster had been brought to the door, and Patricia climbed Into it, “I'll be back soon* she promised. Five minutes later, the car halted In front of the Ridder house. “Thanks awfully," Barry said. “Don’t mention it” There was something very like mockery In her voice. “And, Mr. Gilbert —” For sn instant, Barry wasn’t certain he had heard aright “You've got courage," Patricia went on. “I’ll say that for you. And a grand sense of melodrama. I suppose you picked that up In Hollywood.” “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Barry floundered, helplessly. “No? Weil, maybe I’U tell you sometime." She laughed. “Meanwhile”—as he alighted from the car—“l’d watch my step, if I were you.” “I’m all right" Barry rejoined. “That depends," Patricia said. “You’re being a little bit reckless, I think.” She put her foot on the accelerator, and the car moved away.
CHAPTER V Pat knew of his imposture. That was clear. And what else? For hours after her car had left him at the door, Barry sat to the library of the big house where he had no right to be. thinking, thinking. And the more he thought, the more complete was his mystification. Every word Pat had spoken, every Intonation, was Impressed on his mind. “And, Mr. Gilbert—” she had said. “You’ve got courage. And a grand sense of melodrama. I suppose you picked that up to Hollywood." How did she know? Obviously, the crushed finger had not deceived her. No question about it; the girl bad seen through hts desperate ruse, and realized that he had closed the doors on his hand deliberately to avoid the discovery that he was not John Clarke Ridder, Jr. She must have had some hint of his brief career to the movies. After all, that would have been simple. The vague recollection of bls appearance to a picture; an old circular, with his photograph. Not without pride, Barry reflected that he had won mention to advertising before he left Hollywood. What did It matter, anyway? She knew. And she had advised him to watch his step. ’Tou’re being a little bit reckless, I think.” she had warned him. Was that a warning—or a threat? And why should Pat threaten? Tbe answer to that was apparent. “She doesn’t want me to ask questions about her father. But why not? What Is she trying to conceal?" That, too, was easily answered. Os course, there had been no taxi accident to Times square. It was absurd to suppose that two cabs had mounted the pavement and killed two women almost simultaneously. The Judge’s accident bad been at Sixteenth street What was be doing down there —e hundred yards from Mike Kelly’s —at two to tbe morning? The same morning Kelly was murdered? A few hours before the filing of a declrion alleged to have been dictated by Kelly. “None of my business!" Barry snapped at himself. Tm not s detective." But why should Pat be afraid of investigation? Why "afraid?* She was worried about her father’s condition, and did not want him harassed needlessly. Ussder tbe circumstances, of course, she resented Barry’s probings. “But. damn It" Barry exclaimed, “she began resenting before 1 even mentioned her father!" He mad* an effort to marshal his facts. “Three things are clear," he began. “Kelly was expecting someone when Jack left ... Or was he? Winslow doubted that too. Anyway, Kelly told Jack someone telephoned. And then Hambidge arrived at Sixteenth street Hambidge denies that he did so. And then Hambidge’s daughter warns me ■* ' He bad begun pacing the floor. (TO BE CONTINUED) Parchment Made by Hand For over 1000 years parchment baa been made by hand at tbe little town of Havant to Hampshire, says London Answers Magazine. Sheep and iamb skins are first washed to spring water, and then limed to loosen the wool. The pelts are treated to Ume pita for five or six weeks, than tic n wooden frames and dried while ;esh is removed. Grease Is eliminated by dabbing skins to whiting. Scalded and poltabed with pumlee, the finished parchments 'are removed exported $ Awlct. .
B; Up enie erwge C Science Service.—WNU Service. Noiseless Burglars Are Detected by Loudspeaker Alarm Device “Hears” Intruder Before He Makes Sound WASHINGTON.—A simplified burglar alarm that “hears” the burglar before he makes a sound, and goes off even before he can get to his safe-cracking tools, forms the subject matter of a patent recently granted here to a New Jersey Inventor. So sensitive Is this alarm that should the burglar change the position of the tiniest object within the vault or vault room, a warning gong rings and the police dash to the scene. A conventional loudspeaker operated by a special electric circuit serves as the “ear” of this Ingenious alarm. How Alarm Works. The vibrating diaphragm of the loudspeaker sets up sustained, silent, air vibrations within the Interior of the vault Connecting the loudspeaker to an electrically operated gong-system Is a balanced electrical “bridge.” When setting the alarm system to safeguard the vault, this bridge Is adjusted or balanced so that no current can flow from the loudspeaker circuit over the bridge to the gong-operatlng circuit In this condltlon. the loudspeaker diaphragm produces constant vibrations within the vault or room interior and the alarm gongs are silent Device Is Sensitive. But let some one open the vault room door, step Into the Interior, make a tiny bole In one of the walls, or as much as change the position of an object In the room, and the nature of the air vibrations Is immediately disturbed. Such disturbance breaks down the balanced set-up of the bridge, and starts the alarm circuit where It is detected, amplified and sped to a relay which works the gongs. The Inventor claims that his protective alarm is much simpler than the present-day systems used in banks, which for complete protection require specially designed locks and switches in the doors to control some alarm device, as well as alarm system networks embedded In the vault walls and sound ptck-up devices in the sates to detect boring and tapping noises. Bachelors Are More Prone to Insanity Than Married Men NEW YORK.—Bachelors are three times as likely to go insane a$ are married men. Divorced nien are even more likely to develop mental disease, Drs. James Page and Carney Landis of New York Psychiatric Institute revealed Id a report recently to the meeting of the New York branch, American Psychological association. Marriage is not a “vaccine against mental disease." they warned. But It acts as a sieve; men who are later to need treatment for mental disease are not the ones who readily find wives and willingly enter into marriage. If they do get married, they are more likely to be weeded out by divorce. Spinsters Found Sane. Here are the striking figures presented to the meeting by Doctor Page: For every one married man admitted to mental hospital* during the period studied, two widowers were admitted, three single men, and about 4.5 divorced men. For women, the figures are muchthe same. One married woman to two single women, three divorced women and about L 4 widowed. Young people under twenty-five years old were net considered In these figures. How Divorced Rank. When the proportion of married and unmarried mental patients was compared with the marital status of the general population. It was found that a Somewhat greater percentage of single persons and a markedly greate" percentage of divorced persons find their way into mental hospitals than remain to the population at large. To be sure, it was pointed out. the married people do not always need to go to mental hospitals; they are taken care of at home. Doctors Can Produce Fever by Suggestion ATLANTA.—If you tell a person that he has a fever, you may actually give him a higher temperature. The power of suggestion to raising the temperature and increasing the blood pressure and pulse rate was described to scientists at the meeting here of the Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology by Dr. M. Kershaw Walsh ot the University of South Carolina. Suggesting to a person that be is cold win act tn the opposite way to reduce the body temperature, Doctor Walsh said. It is not necessary to nypnotixe a person to cause this body change by suggestion; hypnotised subjects did no. differ from normal subjects to the amount of temperature change. It was found, although lgff wue •Uffutiy
Seek Solution for Age-Old Mystery of Canyons in the Sea Collision of Earth With Asteroid Is Held Cause T"A ID something that hit the A-f United States a million years ago slow down the whole spinning earth? Were the hypothetical meteorites that made the “bays” of the Carolinas responsible indirectly for the many recently discovered tremendous canyons to the bottom of the sea? These questions are raised by the suggestion put forth by two Princeton geologists, Drs. H. H. Hess and Paul MacClintock, that the ocean level was lowered because of a sudden slowing down to the earth's rotation, thereby exposing to river erosion what had been, and Is now again, sea bottom, and to turn permitting the canyons to be cut—a sort of geological House that Jack Built Ocean Level Varies. The level of the ocean Is higher at the equator and lower at the poles. It should be explained, because of the centrifugal effect of the earth’s rotation. If the earth stopped, or even slowed down, there would be lower sea level to lower latitudes, higher sea level to the higher latitudes, proportional to the lessening of this centrifugal effect Doctors Hess and MacClintock offer the Idea, on a quite candidly speculative basis, that some small astronomical body, like an asteroid, hit the earth about a million years ago, and slewed It down enough to permit the rest of the train of events to happen. Effect of Collision. Such a projectile would have to be so massive that the great Siberian meteorite of a few years ago, whose effects even in the wilderness were devastating, would seem a mere pebble by comparison. For the Siberian crasher had no more gross effect on the earth as a whole than a tennis ball bitting a battleship. Ancient scars of what may have been a meteor fall of the required order of magnitude exist In the “bays" of the Carolina coastal plain. These “bays” have nothing to do with the sea; they are great, shallow, elliptical depressions in the earth, now filled with swamps or timber, but presumably much deeper tn earlier ages. Drs. F. A. Melton and William Schriever of the University of Oklahoma hqye for several years defended the thesis that these “bays” were once yawning meteor craters, like the famous single crater in Arizona. Bottle Bred Babies Still Distant From Human Realization „ CAMBRIDGE, MASS.—Babies bom in a bottle (or produced “ectogenetically,” to use a more learned-sounding word) are still very far from human realization, Dr. Gregory Pincus of Harvard university emphasizes. Doctor Pincus is the young biologist who has created something of a stir even outside biological circles by starting tbe development of rabbit ova, or eggs. In glass dishes without the intervention of tbe male elements, or sperm cells. - _ . These “unfathered" rabbit eggs were induced to start the normal processes of division and differentiation by treating them with salt solutions more concentrated than normal blood, and also by beating them to a temperature of 45 degrees Centigrade, which is about 113 degrees on the commonly used Fahrenheit scale. When this treatment was first applied to the unfertilized eggs of such creatures as sea urchins and frogs by Dr. Jacques Loeb, about a generation ago, the resulting “partheu©genetic," or "virgin-born” organisms were the center of a whirl of popular Interest comparable only with that aroused by tbe advent of tbe Dionne quintuplets to our own day. Idea Is Far-Fetched. But Doctor Pincus frowns upon any tendency to read Into his experiments and their results the dreams of such imaginative scientists as J. B. S. Haldane, who predicted that some day babies would be produced in bottles of suitable nutrient fluids outside human mothers’ bodies. In a communication to Science Service he states: “Rabbit eggs subjected to the described treatment have behaved as though fertilized, and to date have followed development to early blastocyst stages, both to vitro and to vivo upon transplantation Into recipient females after treatment A more extensive statement is not justified." Reduced to non technical language, this means that the chemically or heattreated rabbit ova have gone through only the very earliest stages of development either to tbe glass dishes to tbe laboratory or when re-lntroduced Into the bodies of “foster-mother” rabbits after suitable preparation. “Lying Down” Spectacles Aid Reading in Bed LONDON. —“Recumbent spectacles"—glasses for invalids and others who have to lie more or less flat on their backs and who wish to read—were shown to tbe public for the first time at this year’s British Industries Fair. These spectacles enable the wearer to see more or less at right angles to the ordinary line of right; they contain a pair of prisms, which project Incoming rays of light to such away that the wearer can read a book held comfortably at arms* length, resting on the waist—Ln a position where it could not be read at all. ordinarily, without raising the head from the pillow. Corrective lenses for righting defects of eyesight tn tbe usual way can be combined with the two
Cheese Rises in Popularity as Knowledge of Uses Grows —
400 Different Kinds Offer Wide Range of Recipes. “Will you please tell us cooks something about unusual ways of serving and cooking cheese dishes?" So writes a homemaker. Fortunately I have some rather interesting information on the subject, says a well-known food expert. Evidently, the use of cheese which has been Increasing very much In the last twenty years Is going up to 1936. Cheese Is, of course, our very oldest manufactured food. It was discovered accidentally at first, no one knows how, many thousands of years ago. In the following centuries, all kinds of variations of the original pot cheese type had been developed In various parts of the world. Alexander Togoroff, In his simple and accurate guide entitled “Food Buying Today," states that there are eighteen distinct types of cheese comprising some four hundred varieties:. He goes on to say that these may be divided Into two groups—hard cheese, such as American; Edam and Swiss and soft cheese, such as cream, cottage and Camembert. “The many varieties of cheese are due to the variation In the kind of milk used, the proportion of butter fat or cream retained or added to the milk, the methods followed in separating, preparing, seasoning and handling the curd and to the handling and the ripening of the cheese." American Cheese Popular. The type of cheese known as American, “store” or “rat trap" cheese, is used more than any kind to this country. It Is also known as Cheddar, taking Its name from the English cheese of the same type. It la made from sweet milk and varies to flavor according to the way it is cured and aged. The first American Cheddar cheese factory was established In the Mohawk valley of New York. New York state cheese is still famous. Wisconsin Is now one of our chief sources of domestic cheese. Many other kinds of cheese are made to this country, most of them bearing foreign names. When the Europeans came to this country, they naturally tried to duplicate the native cheese of the countries of their birth. Sometimes they were successful to duplicating IL Our domestic cheese has been greatly improved to the last few years, principally through the experiments of the federal bureau of dairy industry. There Ms been great Improvement in our domestic Swiss, for Instance, In the last few years. A cheese of Individual flavor and texture which Is purely American is Llederkranz, which ranks with the imported Camembert In the opinion of many experts. This cheese, with Camembert, Stilton, Roquefort, Pont L'Eveque, Port du Salut Bel Paese and Gorgonzola, Is used with crackers or French bread as a dessert. Pineapple, Edam, . Munster and Neufchatel are other popular dessert cheeses. Cottage cheese, known also as pot cheese. Is usually used as a tnaln course accessory. For cooking we use In this coun-
- '• > £ £ (ULdhX' fe ‘ Q MOTORISTS INVENTED THIS "FIRST QUART" TEST ' 'Srr of ISOtOITStS ClAde this dISCOY*" ery for themselves: When they refilled the W crankcaie of their ami with Quaker State I oil, they went farther before they had to add a quart. This simple test proves that Quaker State stands up longer. But it proves even more... because the oil that stands up is giving your motor the best lubrication. Try the Quaker State “First CT Quart” Test yourself. See if you, too, don’t go farther than you ever did before under ■ similar driving conditions. Quaker State Oil Refining Company, Oil City, Pa. £ Retail Price... 354 per Qaart > II I ■ I law II I I ■ !■!■—■■■l.Ml.S—■■■ —UN I H I cooAeA f IWt go another day without trying the Cuti<sra aid to skin beauty. In a week you’ll see a change. And as the treatments continue, you’ll be amazed. Tte asfirir merieated qaaKtias of Cation* Soap, plw mr aooffitas. eorreettas action of Cotiem Ointment bi tbe secret S“ Boy now! Soap 2le. Ointment e-H 25e. Sample each FREE. Add— F “Cuticnra," De®t S, Malden, Maes. riITIFIIBA oiNTMcnrrli LU I ILUnA ano
THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1936.
try American cheese almost entirely, although grated Permesan and Ro man cheese are used to some extent In using cheese for cookery remember that it needs either a short cooking or a low temperature. Oveercooking gives a stringy texture which le neither pleasant to eat o» easy to digest. Alsatian Fondue. 1 pound. Swiss or American cheese % cup white wine 2 tablespoons brandy or kirsch French bread Slice cheese Into a chafing dish, cover with wine and let stand several hours. Stir over fire until cheese Is melted. Add brandy or kirsch and serve with pieces of French bread. Creme Fromage. 2 tablespoons coffee % cup boiling water 2 packages cream cheese 2 tablespoons sugar t egg whites Add coffee to boiling water, cover and let stand five minutes. Beat cream cheese well with a fork. Stir in coffee, which has been strained, and mix well. Fold to beaten egg whites. Chill and serve with pineapple wedges, which are dipped into the mixture as eaten. C Ball maieiti. —WXU Sarrica. To keep clean ands healthy take Dnw Pierce’s Pleasaat Pellets. They regulate liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv. Up and Down Both men and women take up th* law nowadays, but It’s mostly th* women who lay it down.
Here Baking Resalts/ / l < - / OSE C A , 0 r°v—* A i Tkis ata! sorist kew takas, kakal with CLABBER GIRL, show perfect starts wktrt /jUr&rfrw Bakii( Pawtar cMsts. [ CLASSIFIED MS|| BUY A NEW YORK ALFALFA RANCH near Syracuse and Auburn, Macadam roads. High School, seventy-eight acres 18,000. Investigate. G. R. BOSTWICK, CATO, N. Y. FREE: LADIES 33.00 SILK I SBRELLA. Start a chapter ot the Umbrella Club, and get this Umbrella Free. Write! Rochelle Specialty Co.. Box X, Larchmoat. N. X.
