Evening Star Newspaper, September 30, 1923, Page 65

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SPORTS, (This is in a serie of lessons Which bring out the most important Ppoints which every boy should know Who wants to learn to play foot bal right.) ) good ANY a team has won a gome be- cause it happened to have a drop kicker. A boy who can kick and who practices steadily is sure to find a place ready for him on the foot ball team. The drop kick is most effective in the first part of the same, as it paves the way for a scoring pass or run lat 1t hould not be used when the opponents ahead and more than three points are neces- sary to win. The opportunit kick comes when . to use the drop team is within THE DROP-KICK THE HOLD BEFORE DROPPING - In Snoppyquop Land This Snoppyquop’s name is Prentice. Central tells him to stand farther because the phone is his nose. B away from is nickel, and I doubt that. To make matters worse, he's get it, the line would be busy. Notice how Prentice has taken hanger attachment behind him. long beard, A Crow Woman of the Plains. 7E always think of the Indians of the plains as fierce war- riors that rode upon their enemlies on the sturdy Indian horses or plains yonies, when the truth of the matter §s that the Indians had no horses until foreigners invaded American woll. The horses the Indians had were imperted from Mexico, where they were brought by the Spaniards in the sixteenth or seventeenth cen- tury. The northern tribes got them about. 1750, Before horses became their valued property, the plains Indians were poor, timid foot wanderers. They were looked down upon by other trbes. But with horses they began to travel long distances, to accumu- late property, and they took on a fierce boldness that taught their mnelghbors to fear them. Air Travel Safety. ‘We hayé learned that it is safer tos . Wy to travel by rail than it is to risk cur lives on -crowded city stfeets, where accidents are frequent. But ‘§n the early days of railroad develop- ment there was a.frightful toll of hu- man life. The tracks would break, 2ails would spread, broken wheels and axles were common and bridges collapsed. And that was not many Years ago. Already the latest mode of travel, airplane service, which seemed so hasardous. is being perfected so that ygople begin to sce it, a few years ce, -as a safe way of transporta- on, - 3 The probiem before-ther builder-of| STORIES, FOOT BALL. That's very convenient. for then he doesn't have to wecar any necktie, and he can dust off his telephone with his beard. Moral: “All that shivers is not cold.’ Lesson on e Drop Kick forty yards of the opponents’ goal. It is essential that this kick be made in* less than two seconds after the ball is put in play. The kicker stands cight to twelve vards behind the center. After re- ceiving the ball he quickly adjusts it so the long axis is vertical or tipped slightly to the rear, lacings to the front. He then drops the ball carefully so that it will reach the ground in this position. As it touches the ground and starts to rebound his kicking toe drives into the lower quarter of the ball and lifts it up and forward. Usually, in order to get up “team” the kicker takes one or two steps forward while adjusting the ball in his hands. Where Nothing Seems Queer PUZZLES, — Lear P 0 L Billy Possum. Written and Ilustrated by Edward McCandlinh. At forty. every man is either A fool, or & physician sometimes both. * - —0ld Chinese Proverb. time all the creatures in the O neighborhood of the big pond made an agreement to join hands and cloar the bushes and stumps from a piece of land, where they could grow some corn, tobacco and garden sass. | On the appointed day they all came | trooping into the meecting place and, peeling off their coats and rolling up | their sleeves, they set to work grub- | bing out the clearing. Brother Jack | Rabbit made boss of the gang. | and he An't been made boss v - | long before he went away for a min- ute and appeared again wearing a checked vest, a silk hat, and carrying a large knobby walking stick; and | before very much longer still he was | lording it over the other creatures/ about the same as the King of Sene- | gambia, w lers slacked up on his job, Brother| + {smart tap with his walking stick. and gotten himself a fat job as check- * Occasionally. when one of the work- Jack Rabbit would give him a pretty { which would set the idler off working i He is in an awful fix, for away from the phone and he can’t sides that, the buffalo is beating it Central will take his money after forgotten his number, and if he did | his coat off an | d hung it on the coat So is having a ~—Courtesy of Field Museum, OMcage The Indian saddles were patterned after- those of the Spaniards. The high bow and cantle in the picture were used by the women. The men used low ones. The saddles were many times elaborately decorated with beads which were bought from American traders. The Crows de- veloped the most beautiful workman- ship in decorating their saddles of any of the plains tribes. In the panel to the left of the pic- ture of the Crow woman you 'see two bags, which she was very likely to take with her when she went on {a horseback journey. The long skin bag above was convenlent for carry- ing home berries picked along wood- land paths. In th® painted leather bag below were carried all the sacred tokens of the Indian's faith. airplanes is greater than was faced by those who fostered steamship and railway' inventions, but last year one American aerial” company reports that it made more than 2,000 flights and carried more than 9,000 passen- gers without one accident. 1In the | British service, in 1922, 630.000 miles were flown without a fatal accident. All-metal construction will prove an aid in perfecting and making safe the new drt of fiying. One terrible danger Is that of the fire from the en- gine reaching the gas tank. A mounted tank which can be dropped clear of the machine by the pull of a lever,.as an airman drops a bomb, is something which may be worked upon as an assurance against explo- again faster than ever. complain, because they had all voted to make Brother Jack Rabbit over- seer of the job until it was finished Nobody dared It was pretty hot working out in the bolling sunshine, and the folks soon began inventing various ex- cuses for getting a rest. Some went to get a drink at the spring, and stayed long enough to drink all the water in Cheat river. got a call to come home because his old woman was sick. Brother Fox allowed he had to knock off work be- cause he had & cramp in his shoulder. So many began dropping out on va- rious pretexts that Brother Jack Rab- bit Betty’s Old Shoes. Betty didn’t keep her things clean— She seldom it to be seen; Her dr had spots, Her shoestrings had knots, Her shoes were stained black and grass green. €6)H. Betty, do hurr; Mrs. Fisher brushed an imaginary speck from her already immaculate skirt and adjusted her large, droop- ing hat again. Betty caught her breath looked up at her mother. as she She was very proud of her beautiful mother. | She wondered if she would ever be as Weautiful. Mother was always teMing her that the most important thing was to Keep her clothes pressed and neat, and she did try, byt it seemed she alw forgot to do it until the last minute. “There,” she cried, slamming down the iron, “now I'll be ready in just a minute. “Well, do hurry, dear,” Mrs. Fisher begged. “I don’t want to be late. You know those great men- are often ec- centric. I wouldn't like to come in after he had begun hiy lecture, espe- cially as Mrs, Graham is having it in her house, and any one coming in late is bound to make a commotion. Here, T'll lay out your gloves and hat for you. I bought you a new pair of gloves, as I knew you would never thfnk to have yours cleaned for this afternoon.” Betty blushed as she thought of the dirty white gloves that she always forgot to have cleaned. She usually had to sit on them when she went any place with her mother. “Oh, thank you, mother,” she cried “That's awfully nice of you.” She dashed ffito her closet for her white shoes, just as mother started down- stairs. “Oh, goodness!” she wailed. There before her sat her white shoes all covered with mud. It had rained the last time she wore them, and.she had never had time to clean them since, Well, it was too late now. She just had time to drag on the dirty things, hoping her . mother would not notice them in her hurry. “Are you almost ready, Betty? It's time we were there.” “Yes, I'm coming.” Betty grabbed up her hat and new gloves, hoping every one would look at her hands instead of her feet. Luckily, her mother was in too much of a hurry to look at her closely. She would sit in the back of the room and hide her feet under a chair. Maybe no one would notice. She remembered. her heels were terribly run over, too. H mother had been telling her 'to get them fixed, but she always forgot. They were late, as Mrs, Fisher had feared. All the seats were taken €x-: cept those in the front of the foom. Betty was pushed down the afsle in front of her mother. She could hear her mother's astonished gasp wheén she first saw those awful shoes. Betty sank weakly into the first empty seat. “Elizabeth!” gasped her mother in her ear, just as Mrs. Gra- ham rose to introduce the speaker. “It gives me great pleasure,” she be- gan. “to introduce to you the grest author, Prof. Selby. He will ‘sp to you this afternoon on his lgti book, ‘Your Character as Reveslgd Thtough Your Feet. " -3 —_— Arctic Gymnasts. Teacher—Johnny, what can you tell of the morth pole?. Johnny—It's a pole sixteen-feet N height. Teacher—What about the climate’ Johnny—The Eskimog climb it .3 Brother Coon | WASHINGTO! Boys’ and G RIDDLES, Brather Fox Bro |need o8 a boss, because there wouldn't {be any more gang. As soon as he saw how the wind was blowing, Tommy Turtle had gone |er-up and timekeeper, in which ca- pacity he sat under a shady tree, alongside a pitcher of ice water and orange juice, and made a notch in a stick for every hour of perspiry labor {put in by the laborers. On the third day the roll call show- ed Brother Possum, Brother Coon, | Brother Fox and Brother Turkey Buz- zard all on the sick list and credited | with every known disease from cere- bro-spinal meningitis to housemaids’ knee. | Brother Jack Rabbit and Tommy | Turtle held a conference in the tool- house to decide what was to be done. After half an hour of discussion, ac- | companied by many shakings of the | & aw nu‘u unless something was head and a great deal of tobacco!ment one about it there would soon be no smoke, a message of sympathy was|appoached the sick bed of Brother |war path—he was a hoss poctal -_— e AROUND THE CITY By Nannie EPUBLICS may be ungrateful, | per pessimist, but there are | comfortable exceptions. A long- ago senator gives this for | proof: | “I was walking near the Capitol | the other twilight, and in reviewing | the scene of past honors, there came | to me regret that I had used my great office for self-glorification rather than for the betterment of the people who had conferred it upon me—regrets that come to most' of | poor has-beens in the sunset years.| Happily, however, my thoughts wefe interrupted by an old man whose open pleasure at seeing me was so genuine that I supposed he had mis- taken me for some tone else—but no; T reckon you don’t remember me, Senator. I'm Mack, the man you put in the Treasury. I tell you, Senator, that was a mighty fine thing you did; riding up there in all that storm to see the Secretary personally about my case. We could never have pulled through, except for you—sticking at the old job still, sir.’ “‘Is. that so, friend? well—" Yes, sir. And Jim Blank—you put him in the pension_ bureau, you know—Jim was retired.a few months back.and i§ living like.a bug .In a rug; owns is owh home ‘and everything I couldn’t save that much, because T had a family of six; but they are all cducated now and® doing well; the girls married and both Sam and Ed working at their trades—John is still in high school.’ “Well, well, well—-I'm glad to hear it all.” “‘And I'm glad of the chance to tell you. My wife and I have never forgotten what you did for u: And in finishing up the little fnci- dent, the senator—who was—said to the one he was telling: “If ‘Mack’ only knew it. T never did half for him that he did for me when he came across me that twi- light. I only helped him to a job, but he .gave me self-respect. I needed it.” Well, well, * ok, k% HE is pretty encugh to play Beauty in-a fairy tale—a: role which requires twice the good looks SEPTEMBER ToRTLE Bas . ) ther Tuckey Buzza'd. Bro dispatched to each of the four inva- lids, with the information added that “Doctor Thomes Turtle” would short- Iy attend the i1l arfd afficted, arid that Brother Black Bear had agreed to go along and help in administering the medicine. The day after the sending of the notes Brother Coon, Brother Fax and Brother Buzzard all turned up for work again, declaring that after a wee rest they all felt a thousand times better. Brother Billy Possum still held to his bed, however, and he sent one of his chilluns down to re- port that he had & high fever and would not be able to attend work that day. g Accordingly, Brother Black Bear and Doctor Tommy Turtle set off for Brother Possum’s house, loaded dows with several quart jars of calomel. a hack saw and a pint of horse linl- Thus formidably armed, they Lancaste perched a baby who had reached the age of “sitting alone.” Both the man and the woman bub- bled over with happiness at owning a home of their own, and after he had picked out his den and she had lodted the playroom, they went putside to consider the place from the front. The deal was satisfac- tory from every angle until it came to where the husband mentioned |that he would put the house in his wife's name. Wife objected: “Saddle me with a responsibility like that? Why, hon, I'lp surprised at you! I'm famished for a home of our own, but if I've got to be tied down to—" “Say, old girl. Climb down ‘common sense. It is only that want it in your name in case any thing happens to me.” No, sir. I may be business, but 1 know that.” 3 The men grinned at each other and the husband patted the shoulders of “the old girl” who was rather a callow young one. “All right, then, T'll make it over to the kid." 7 The motherhood of her flared up in combative protest as she jerked the baby from its paternal perch. ot while I've got a breath of life in me, you don’ The very idea—a helpless ‘infant with only two teeth. Say, since you are so set on not having the house in your own name, maybe Mr. Agent will let you shove it onto him.” Silly? Maybe, though, the agent will tell you that it is not at all a rare occurrence’ for very young wom- en having their first experience with business. All they know is that buy- ing a heme takes long vears and self-denial and_signing of motes that come due and, not understanding, they balk at the unknown. And you; will recall—uniess your patriotism refuses to indulge in a German flarebadk—that once when the world's greatest medical scien- tists were in session at Bonn, and after each authority had read his paper on some special line. it was decided that each man .write on a sllp his secret opinion of human na- ture's most compelling ‘emotion. And when the unsigned slips were read, of the twenty savants present, nine- teen, of “them had written “Fear. The twentieth man wrote: “Fear of the unknown.” Anyhow, the agent sold the house —in"the man's name. to 1 foolish about too much for that are necessary for a movie queén —and there is no calculating the hearts she and little Dan are going to thread on that arrow of his, once she ‘is done with college—not count- ing-high ‘school scalps to date. Also;-she 4s endowed with a grand- mother who might, herself, serve as a'Hans Andersen distributor of blesss ings—except. that regular grand- mothers are best—and by way of.a last pleasure before school opening, |, she thought It would be nice to_take little Beauty to see Niagara Falls. Little Beauty made tho idea unani: mous, and when the train had whizzed them from this city to that oneé ‘and they had finished supper at the hotel, grandmother, bubbling over with happiness at the treat in store for her dear one, suggested that they go for a first wonder-look at the falls by moonlight. But her dear one wouldn't. No, she just couldn’t g0 near the falls——for why? ' “Grandmother, it would take the curl out of my: hair.” * ok kK o REAL estate agent unbosomed this experience the other after- noon. He was showing a house—six rooms and bath; so much down and thie ‘balance in monthly installments forever after—to a possible client ‘who was looking over the premises with his wife. On his shoulder was * K k¥ HEN the carnival at Bolling Field was over last Sunday afternoon, one spectator who had been watching the miles and miles of automobiles passing along Ana- costia’'s main road, sald to another .spectator: | ... ~“This is jthe <Jongest funeral I've ever seen ih all the days of my life!” R o Presto! .The, teacher who had writen 927 on the blackboard to show the effect of multipliying by tenm, rubbed out the decimal point. “Now, John, where is the decimal point?” “On the eraser,” replied John. | Collector—This bill has been run- ning for over a year. Short—Don’t 1 know it? it has followed me around il S i Y . Frightened. Fimmy, who has inclined to be a braggart, was telling his father and mother. of his. experiences :while out camping. “And all of once T stepped on.a big rattlesnake,’-he began. Look how “How'did you know it was a rattle- | snake, Jimmy?” asked:hfs father. “T could hear Its teeth chattering the minute it saw me.” OMES A PeocTer ther Coon & : I\ Brother Jack Rabbits Billy Possum, whom they found prop- ped up in bed, with his eyes shut and a towel tied around his forehead. Walking softly, so as not to disturb the patient, Doctor Turtle began tak- ing his pulse, and Brother Bear began unpacking the calomel and carving tools. All the time Brother Possum kept his eyes shut, but every now and then, it seemed to Tommy Turtle, he opened them a little way to peep at the things going on around him. After a while Doctor Turtle shut his watch with a snap and announced that Brother Possum was “a very, very sick man, indeed, and that he would probably have to undergo an operation in the clinic.” Brother Possum sort of raised up when he heard this, saying that “ho already felt a little better.” Then he |opened one eye, and when he saw | Brother Bear unpacking the butcher's |ax and the bone chisel he declared that he already felt llke a new man, and was sure he could go to work again in the morning. Doctor Turtle, however, thought it best to be on the safe side in this respect, and so—with {the help of Brother Bear—he gave |the patient a teaspoonful of “Dactor Jenkins Patented Ring Spavin Cure,” which Brother Possum declared to be the best medicine he had ever tasted. The next day Brother Possum turn- ed up bright and early, and he sailed |into that clearing patch like a pinch of gunpowder, and never left oft work |again until the whistle blew for sup- | per. | “Land sakes, Brother Turtle!” said Brother Jack Rabbit the next day | (Brother Jack Rabbit was always a | terrible fellow to swear), “how come |you to know so much ‘bout medicine “It's natchul wid me,” replied Tom my. fy old man is a homeopath. my granddaddy was a osteopath and | my great-granddaddy followed the| i “What’s Your Color HAT'S your color? That's a question you can't often answer, because, usually, you don't. even know what your color is. This game's a good one because you have to work hard, and your contortions to keep your opponent from finding out are amusing to the crowd. Two people are placed on opposite sides of the room and each has a square of brightly colored paper or cloth pinned squarely in the middle of his back. The plafers start off walking toward each other. Each must try to see what color is on the other’s back without letting the other see the color on his own. As._soon_as one person spies the i ! | Ambidextrous Tommy.i Tommy's talent was really a sight— His left hand was good as his right; He shouted with glee, “Ambidextrous, that's me!"” And he scribbled with all of his might. OMMY was “ambidextrous.” He had just looked the word up in the dictionary and was almost as proud to think that he knew what it meant and how to pronounce it as he ‘was of the fact that he could use one hand as well as he could the other. “It's great to’ be ambidextrous,” Tommy bragged as he changed his pencil to his left hand and started writing with it for a while. “I sure am glad I can write with both hands. ! Here I have been writing all day long, and I never would have been able to keep it up if I weren't able to | change hands every little bit.” ! All day Tommy had been working | hard on a short story he was writing for a contest. One of his boys’ maga- | zines had offered a prize for the best | story accompanying a new subscrip- tion. Tommy had always been clever at writing, so he thought he would try for the prize of $100. Mr. Dix came into the room just in time to hear Tommy's last re- mark. “Well, I'd advise you to sign all your checks with your right hand,” 'he laughed. “Oh, sure,” Tommy agreed. “I know eénough to do that.” His father had taken out & checking account for him. “Fm going to write them all ‘with my right hand. I just wrote my first for the subscription to the maga- zine” ' Tommy finished copying his story, folded it and placed it with the check in the large envelope he had ‘bought for the purpose. He was very much excited for the next week., He knew he had writ- | ten a good story. Every one who had read it had praised it, and his.teacher had told him that she was almost sure he weuld win the prize. At the end of the week Tommy received a long envelope. from the magazine'of- fice. He was very much excited as e tore it open, I This was what Tommy read: “Dear Sir—Without a doubt your story was the best ‘one entered in our conteat. However, it is necessary to award the $100 to the second best, with this' explanation: Our experts on handwriting have examined your manuseript and they are all of the same opinion.’ The story was rot written by the same person who ‘signed the check. Of course, this one of the rules of the contest.” “Did I say it was great to be am- bidextrous?” groaned Tommy. “Well, it isw't. I wish I'd" never heard of - that awfal word.” s o | l i i Mre. Henry L. to outline work for the coming year.| ADVENTURE, P iyrlexpressES THE SENTIMENTS' . WARM FROM THE HEART YAND © BEAUTY 1AYS PRINCIPAL CLAIM. . Jigedies is a fine game, for if you can't guess the answer to the riddle given, you're sure to get it when you draw your peicil lines through th cities to which the Jigedies skated. Mark straight lines for the first Falls, S. D, to Des Moines, Iowa, Mo. Second letter: Madison. W Tenn. Then from Charleston, W. Va, to Cin N. Y, and eastward to the edge of t Janet Montgemery Tuesday afternoon at Wells, Chapter met the home of in Rockville, Committees appointed by the regent, with their respective chairmen. are as follows Historio spots, Miss L. Mc. Gilli- | land; correct use of the flag,. Mrs. F. B. Bomberger; historical and literary reciprocity, Miss M.. I. Jackson; music, Mrs. B. W. Moore; historical research, Miss L. Mec. Gilliland; ltbrary, Memorial Continental Hall, Mrs. H. Gibson; international rela- tions, Mrs. M. L. Gibson; sick and ttendance, Miss Elanche Griffith; moticn pictures, Mrs. E. F. Lines; girl home maker, Mrs. B. P. Whalen; revolutionary graves, Mrs. M. ( Weaver; Flag day cxercises, Mrs. J T. Willlams; America's Creed, Mrs. J. F. Wilson; scholarships, Mrs. H. L. ?” Asks Funmaker. color of the other he calls the name of the color aloud. That proclaims him the winner of the game. If you wish to make the game a contest between two sides the company may be divided into two teams. Each team has a captain who receives the report. The mem- bers of the two teams wear different colors—say, for example, the people on one side wear red, blue and yel- low; the others, orange, green and purple. assigned a person opposite him “spy” on. ished th to r walking tour the mem- bers report to their captain the colors they: saw. Then the two cap- tains call colors, the one having the correct list winning. Saturday Night. Teacher—What is the der of the Bath? Tommy—*"I dunno. Usually Johnny comes first, then the baby, an’ then S All the Kiddieslove Barber BillsShop No other place like it inWashingion L Bipa &, THE AvEwvE AT won Tw WOMENT DIE 00D THINGS New Draperies Ginghams Stockings VATIORALY RNUMN Sweaters Waists Skirts Dresses Coats Kimonos Diamond Dyes Each 16.cent. package df “Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple any woman can dye or tint any old, worn, faded thing new, even if she has never dyed before. Choose any color at drug store. Indianapolis, Ind., to Detroit, ‘Ancient Or- letter from: St. Paul, Minn,, to Sioux to Topeka, Kan., to Jefferson City. to Indianapolis. Ind. to Nashville Mich. Third_letter nati, Ohio, to Pittsburgh, Pa. to Buffalo, he map. | Wells; Children of the T. Lydda tion | Harts Mrs. L. J ! liquidation and W. Moore: national old W. H. Wingate; m W. Moore; reception, Mrs. H. Griflith revolutionary relics, Mrs. Cun nmgha\mF conservation and thr Mrs. E. F. Line: Columbia ¢ | afternoon at | vienic lunci under the ‘Coomh!, At the tulm: of t epublic otio ¢ Mrs tr tion, endowment Pter met Tuesday Temple Heights. A was served at noon Treaty oak, Mrs. C. C. regent, being the hostess. business meeting the min- t meeting were read p committees given. A resolution was passed to devote half hour of each meeting to a studs {of the United States Constitution junder the lcadershtin of Mrs Warren Myrth. A.committeé was pointed ~to _write a blographic | sketch of Charlotte® AL Var apter House book Doren during her life been an active member of the chapter. It was voted to support the reception to be given by the ichapters of the Dijstrict in honor of {Mre. Anthony Wayne Cook, presi- | dent general, D. A Among_ those present R. F. Rose of Valley Chapter, Feer and Miss ) timore, Mrs. Takoma Park. and reports o M the C! were Mrs | | Each member of a team is: When the teams have fin- | Gouraud’s {Oriental Cream for 80 years has brought Joy and Happl- ness to many women in the greater beauty it has rendered to them. Its service is now extended so that those | who would harmonize their complexion i with their particular shade of beauty can | dosotothe bestadvantage. Nowmadein RACHELL and FLESH shades as well 2s WHITE : Send I0c. for Trial Stze | PERD. T. HOPKINS & SON, New York City strength of pale. puny. -serofulous children. for young or old people, zet Dr. Plerce’s Golden Medical Discovery— one of the best things for a wasted body and a weakened system. It pi % the hloods enriches it and make{ efective every naturai menns of cleansing repuiring and nourish« ing the system. In recovering from grip. fevers, pmeumonia or = other debilitating dix- enxes it Is an appetizing, restorative tonic to bring back health and vigor. Benefitx nervous and general debili- 1y. Sold in Tablet or Liguid form. PIMPLES OVER CHILD'S FACE Were Very Disfiguring. Cuticura' Healed. “My baby was troubled with a breaking out of pimples all over his | face. They itched and burned and were very dis- figuring. He used to try to rub his face when awake, could not sleep well, and cried almost ell the time. ““T began using Cuticura Soapand Ointment. Ina week there was a great improvement, and after using one box of Cuticura Ointment and one cake of Cuticura Soap be was completely healed, in about four weeks.”” (Signed) Mrs. A. 8. Horton, Jefferscn, So. Cer. Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal- cum are ideal for daily toilet uses. Samples roa by Mall Addzens - Onticurs Laber: e Gorae. Ofpiiment i a0 Falcomibe. W Cuticura Soapshaves withoutmug. BumsteausWormSyrup *“To children an angel of mercy.” Where directions are followed, IT NEVER FAILS. Despite scarcity and enormous cost of SAN- . it tains full dose 1 ul: R e S i , Est. C. A. Voorhees, M. D., FPhiladelphis, |

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