Evening Star Newspaper, October 5, 1926, Page 25

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QUICK AL RUN OUT AN’ GET A RIGHT ACROSS o' AS DEBT ARBITER Money Must Not Endanger Friendship With America, Says French Deputy. By the Associated Press ALENCON, France, October 5.— The entire problem of int>rallied debts | should be referred to the League of | atlons for settlement, was the sug-| Kimtion made Ly Adrian Dariac. deputy president. of the debt com; i tBe French Cha of Deputies, in &n address Sun to politic: LOCTOR ' MY DAWGONE RHEUMATISH HAS CoMe BACK FROM DANCIN' ARQUND AT THESE NIGHT CLUBS MITH MAZIE MAZOOKA AN’ HER FRIENDS ! STREET IN THE PHYSICIANS AND SURGEON'S BUILDWG SIR' IT'S CHoek FULL OF MEDICINE to get married again. you might,” she said gravely. Will you have me?" he tell me “Yor DOYS, I KNOW OF A S CABE. OF RHEUMATISH TH' CHEAPEST GUY GETS 1T BIDDING ? Mrs. Denholm interrupted. It was several days before he had a chance to see her again. Then he asked the same question. “Are you in earnest? “In earnest? Lou? But she could not. Mrs. Denholm gave her former sec- etary some wonderful old silver for her wedding present. The whole town recejved the new Mrs. Burrhus with open arms. “You are very holm said. Lou asked. Look at me. lucky,” Mrs. Den- PLEASANT LAXATIVE For Sick, Bilious Children ers of the dep: *“The Le 1€ ted frontier questions ational honor was sking ourselves why & problem of much less importance from a moral viewpoint—liquidation of the interallied del should not be referred in its entircty to a conference at Geneva or other international | tribunal.” M. Dariac emphasized that he w speaking only for himself as pre dent of the commission, and did no desire to involve the responsibility of the other members. He added: “Amer owing to the political doctrine which made her sreat and | ! powerful, is present at Geneva only | a8 an observer, bhut she would abdi nothing of that political doctrine by | joining us some day on the shores of Lake Leman to discuss our debts, a hundred times 1 “The mise should not of two countrie on of money vho is preparing a re- | SWeet a runaway of the commission on | gton debt agreement for | ')1" amount to stepmother in no had three stepme other died; she could Gam | people; the third outlived Barney Carr. [ and profa Parliament when it reconvenes there were only two | alternatives—rejection of the accords | or racification with the insertion of guarantee and transfer clauses. presentation to Mrs. James D. Denny of ¢ Bprings, Ark., who is 100 vears old | and has 113 living descendants, | bobbed her hair three years ago and| in #ays she never intends to allow it to| more lter's sto grow long again. 66 THE EVENING STORY water. I out decent r panic th the friendship | unlucky the d: { her mother T | in two or three years was fit Unlucky Lou. was wearing a wonderful new ring which struck a thousand rainbow lights from its sparkling facets. It was her engagement ring. She was going to marry Jack Burrhus. Just that day he had strutted into | the office and sat down on the corner of Louisa’s desk. “Well, I've got her!” he announced, that a new sign be printed— hus & Burrhus.” A beautiful dian honeymoon. vears she reigned in it uccession of triumphs. ted for a pewriter. law school, all that was necessary was - | estate to ‘handle and he loved tinkes home was made for Mary, all ready for her to step into when she came back from her Cana- And for many with a Beautiful with political glory. He had a vast ing with the law People began to sa had no children. There s at the begin- ning, but they had died before they were many. hours old, both boys. If | they had lived Jack would have had as he called oS I! But I was named ‘Unlucky " Lou replied. “Mary Burdick was lucky—the luckiest person I ever | knew.” “But Mary is dead,” Mrs. Denholm said quietly. , Lou suddenly comprehended. Mary was dead. She was alive and she had Jack. It was true. She was lucky at last. (The end.) (Covyright. i026 ) e ek The most highly electrified clouds are the lowest—about 700 yards from the ground. These gigantic thunder- clouds are sometimes three miles 1 stenographer’s: pad and ty Then old Mr. Burrhus took her into He was Jack's grandfather T bhegan the Summer Louisa 15, a day school picnic ght up a boat Burdick _and him. Ma Mary ind Loui .| Since the stepped ¥ to her | lake and spc ¥ e Louisa | known, however, to the lonly for Mary - Burdick! v she fell into the ed her dress she had that Jack cared Burdick! Lovely, She Qad every- \ ine curls, the coloring of an ex te bride rose but poor 1 misste took besides s s she hi and grinning. Louisa went on typing for an in- stant, apparently unperturbed. Then she lifted brave eyes to the handsome, triumphant face above her. “I'm glad, Jack,” she said simply. And she was. She loved him so much that she wanted him to have every- thing he wanted—even Mary. He brought his hand down on hers. fary Burrhus—lucky Mary—popular Mary—rich Mary—busy Mary. The whole town sat at her feet. Meanwhile Louisa plodded along. She had left the Burrhus office the Summer Jack married Mary and gone as private secretary to Mrs. Denholm. Mrs. Denholm was very rich and old and intellectual, a high-grade club- woman of many affairs. She expected | where she had picked up diphtheria. for hers stuck ind the®grace of | Whether she rode and we Ve ter hor had begun to be she was born, for | ing died then—her fine, | tended her 1o . mother who had made | natingly be: mateh and providentially | for her mother, a long enough to re but M ind plenty Barney Carr did not | aly telling her that she much and Lou had a | most delightful thing ne. In fact, she | must never soil her hands or hers one after the | self or hefore she was 17. The first | the second stood it as long and returned to he Lou ittle not live mistake < | day in the hot office, which own v, would meet M he was the w of the lot And | a basket of roses on her arm, + died, Lou, giv 3 . but her look unlucky thing! on, went to work in s | your She studied nights and poor young birch tree. black mare, n, or lifted her sweet So- or waltzed or played tennis or was _fasci- he knew it, too, idow with no love of mone: alive. njure her complexion. s Lou, dragging home from Burrhus kept blue with pipe smoke Mary would always stop it One day whenr they met thus she |and, having already graduated from It is rather like I've tried hard, ‘Good old Lou! a dream, isn't it? but I never really expected she would. I'm just ordinary, but Mary—Mary is——" He paused, wistful before her perfection. vere married on a glowi but before thats Ma as the talk of the town. has never been so lucky as now. Was she not getting Jack Burrhus, whose mother had been a Van Dyer and had left him several hundred of the Van Dyer thousands? And ‘he would get lots more money from that queer old being, his grand- father, some day. More than that, he was going to succeed to his grand father’s name. After frittering about he had settled down to take up law gave more—her love, her devotion. v morn- radius. Louisa_accompanied her. ited Europe, Asia, was was_the Mary tire he:- Some- long old Mr. trousseau Lucky and summered in Maine. liveried service and ished and refined her. mind, it grew until ashamed to talk to any one. ary with tripping “Oh, vations in her soul. Congre: WHOSE MAKE IS IT?” only service from Louisa, but Louisa her gratitude, She lived at Cobble Crest with Mr. Denholm and thither came the wit and fame of a large ‘When Mrs. Denholm traveled They v South America, Egypt; they wintered at Cape Martin Louisa be- came used to wonderful motors and luxurious sur- roundings, and all these things pol- As Yor her she was not Yet with al she was the same Louisa—small, pale, dark, with serious eyes and wist- ful mouth and the gentleness of past ‘teen vears passed. Jack went to , but came home quite done sons to succeed him. Then suddenly Mary died. Some- In three days the light and joy and beauty of her were struck out for- ever. Loulsa, dawdling about the Medi terranean with Mrs. Denholm, did not | hear of it until They had m somehow in their drifting. It was a year later that L Jack. She had been quietly at Crest all Summer transcribing the book of reminiscences that Mrs. Den holm was writing and he had been in the Canadian Rockles shooting. Mrs. Denholm asked him to one of her lit tle evening parties; she had a guest who wished to mect him. Loulsa, in palest gray. poured tea. Afterward Jack managed to have a word with her. “Lou, 1 am lenely. What would you advise 'me to do”" he demanded, arching her with his tired, keen and letters spooniul of d-lic fern aid in surprise. dige: “I could 1 don’t know enough.” “I thought,” he smiled. Secreting tubes (FG) in Human Enamel shown by soaking tooth in silver nitrate stain, before cut- ting tooth longi- tudinally Magni- fied 100 times. 1i your little one is out-of-sorts, | won't play, seems sick, languid, not natural—suspzct the bowels! A tea- Syrup” given any time sweetens the stomach and soon moves the sour entations, gases, poisons and in- ible matter right out of the bowels and you have a well, playful "y Mother! Give Constipated Child “California Fig Syrup” Millions of mothers depend upon this gentle, laxztive. It never cramps oF overa Say ‘California” to your druggist and counterfeits. Insist upon genuine “California Fig Syrup” which has directions for babies and children of all ages plainly printed on bottle. harmless California Fig avoid at ~DRUGSTORES Teeth either harden or decay — according to the concentration of calcium in saliva, which mil- lions of tiny se- creting tubes take up by ‘bsmosis. -Marvelous Discovery ’ Checks Tooth Decay— Overcomes Sensitiveness A New Principle in Dentistry—Substantiated by investigations Conducted by Research Commission of American Dental Association WomEeN who achiete satisfaction on every purchase, buy even their bread by a name that, in itself, means quality That’s the first thing you ask RicE's BREAD has the tempt- " tng.appetizingdaintiness you want, united with the substan- tial food value that means gen- uine nourishment. about every WHY NOT ABOUT YOUR MOS N ALLyour bigsingle purchases,you achieve complete satisfaction easily enough—be- cause all you have to do is to select the “make” that you know about.’ Housewives who please both themselves and their families with every purchase, follow this plan in all their buying. They would no more think of ordering “a loaf of bread” than they would go into a shop and ask for “a watch,” or “a piano.” They insist upon the one particular kind of bread whose name always stood for the best there is. In this city the name of Rice has always meant fine bread. For years it has been giving to themost i AN large purchase— T IMPORTANT DAILY STAPLE? exacting housewives just that perfect satisfaction that you crave. It makes the most delectable toast— crisp, tender, delicately brown. It cuts into the dain- tiest slices, paper thin yet holding their shape perfectly. And always so rich and delicious in flavor that you never tire of it. And with the seal and guarantee of the City Baking Institute Every loaf of Rice’s Bread carries the seal and guarantee of the City Baking Institute. This means that skilled experts have selected and tested the ingredients and tested and approved each loaf before it goes to you. Ask for Rice’s Bread—by name. At your own grocer’s—fresh twice daily. CIDENT is based upon the discovery that teeth can be hard- cned, as a means of counteracting the tooth-softening process of decay. Simply brush the tecth with this tooth-hardening preparation and sensitiveness rapidly disappears as tooth decay is checked. Impossible as this may seem, it is true. The principle involved is a new one in dentistry. It has been substantiated by investiga- tions conducted by the Resecarch Commission of the American Dental Association. What Dental Authorities Found Dr. U. G. Rickert of the University of Michigan College of Dentistry, one of the investigators, reported that a decayed tooth will so readily take up calcium phosphate from a saturated solution that the resultant gain in weight can be actually measured. As the first stage of decay is a loss of calcium phosphate, from the tooth structure, this gain in calcium phos- phate directly counteracts decay. Dr. Weston A. Price, Director of the Research Commission of the American Dental Association, in dis- cussing Dr. Rickert’s reports read be- fore the Research Section at the Cleveland meceting—September 9-14, 1923, stated: "“I find, as Dr. Rickert brought out, that it is very easy to demonstrate changes in weight of the different specimens. We could in- crease or diminish the weight by This New Discovery changing the concentration of calcium in the solution. We have here a physical law.” —(Jol. Amer. Dental A: 406.) “Tell of New Discovery” “The Research Section was still in- volved in a discussion of a revolu- tionary doctrine introduced before it Tuesday, which points to the possibil ity of averting decay in teeth by arti- ficial hardening of the enamel. Pre- vious to the discoveries brought out Tuesday, it was believed the only change in the structure of teeth after eruption could be brought about by decay. The revelations indicated a preparation, now being manufactured, could be used effectively in harden- ing the enamel, thus forestalling the action of mouth acids.” —Cleveland News, September 12, 1923 Is ACIDENT , May 1924, p.

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