Evening Star Newspaper, November 1, 1926, Page 37

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WOMA? PAGE. THE SPIBER WOMAN By HAZFL DEYO BATCHELOR. YOU'RE QUIET TONIG THE TABLE. ANYTHING WRONG, DEAR?” CHAPTER L Fiances. As he watched Helena ‘cross the Jobby toward him. John Henderson realized that he was vaguely irritated. He didn't know exactly Wi hans it was because he knew her too well. There was no longer any mys- tery about her. She moved with a «quiet placidity that anoyed him, and | riic was growing just w little bit too plump. | he word bovin at wasn't fo to go befor ed to hamed z sed his mind. T ifelena had a long way At could be apn! 1 put on too inuch we ce it was ridiculous. She | ought to he eful about regulating her diet. She ought to think of him and his feclings. No man can be ro- mantic over a an who is overfat s rising to his feet and smiling up at him as she vs did when they met. “Hello, dear. I hope I haven't kept you waitin As a matter of fact, that was an- other irritating thing about her. She y Iy late. John would have ed her to be less perfect and more feminine. She never allowed his | fmagination any sway. He rather | liked to think of a woman pr and prinking before her mirror. didn’t hurt a man to wait a few min- w ut Felena or very near- Iy always on time. And then, 100, she was always so sure of herself and his tove for her. If she ha enough to fly into passions when he pald another woman any marked at- ! tention there would be at least some | excitement about it. ! “As a martter of fact, you're just| ®bout one minute earl he said, | evenly. | Iteally,” she laughted back, “that's it scemed to John as they walked | toward the dining-room that her smile | Wwas positively smug in its assurance. id wish that she had some faul his dissatisfaction might at isonable. He wondered now - had ever fallen in love with and yet he was ashamed of him- for all these thoughts A\ orchestra was play red the dining-room. were stressing the libellfus™ What a lovely romantic | hing it was! Romanee! Why, if he | rearried Helena he would be an old | ‘man _in 10 years. 1t would be im-| possible to avoid it. They would settle | 1 rut. Of coun he would make hir comfortable, but that was 1. And didn't he rve more? He was only just starting out in life. He was only 32 and Helena 25 You're quict toni viarked from acr #nvthing wrong, dea Just tired.” he said, a trifle shortly, | nding her the menu, and watching | her while she glanced down the lfst What would she say if he told her | suddenly that he wasn't going to wo through with #t? That he couldn’t | marry her? But he seuldn’t do a thin o that. Tt was out of was May d t month 3 hin; 1 2 as they Wailing vio- se Triste 1t Helena re- the tub! “Is ext .1 centh centursy o to Rve when urned. He wouid be a cad If he did anyvthing like th a man without any A gentleman simply didn thinges | Yke that. And vet Helena bored him. | Was it fair that he should be bored all his life when fust a few words would release him? think I'll have some dear,” she was ast lamb. hut?" she nodded briefly. ings, she put down the menu ed for John to make his choic Thera w £ savoring on. Lonor. | consomme, “and who il of | Clams on Kid Silhouettes BY LYDIA LE oustte smart t otherwi or nres ave ¥ dan .d with these leather paste-ons ornament without any inten usually, of making the sti » motifs in place. Gifts for Men. (me good feature of these leather | aste-ons is that they are del | nament scarfs men f ges 1 _for Christmas v help Y8u solve a perplex distinctive ard tind «nd hounds or wests the h yote to a scarf, o ride after the hounds it is a gentl an’s sport. Motifs and Their Use. #he motifs are few on any scarf. jast three or nve arimels glued as s | l mping | ff It | Baving the half shell, filet mignon, an arti- choke and biscuit Tortoni. He hated the way Helena chose a dinner. She ate so lttle and hings. He wished sometimes that she would order lobster like a chorus rl, or alligator pears, or anything at all out of the ordinary. Consomme and roast lamb That was inspiring, wasn't it? If only he could get out of marrying her! If only there were some way that wouldn’t hurt her too much! (Continued in tomorrow’: (Con t. 19%6.) HOW IT STARTED Star.) BY JEAN NEWTON. ‘One Good Turn Deserves Another.’ When we say that we mean of course that the person who does a good turn deserves another, but nevertheless we use the saying in the epigramatic form in which it has come down to us through the cen- | turies. The many “one idea is found expressed in languages, the Teutons saying hand washes the othe: our of it is one of the oldcst Eng- ings in modern speech. It raced back to the old “Prov- John Heywood. It was first printed in 1546. which is the earllest collection of E.aish colloquial say- nown. In itz original form in roverbes, )me good turn asketh anothe: (Copyright, 1926.) HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. When one wishes spend home furnishing” dollars sely one make no mistake in choosing stately ihogany of a4 recogn: 1 period. This magnificent mahogany secretar and chair are copied the eight- ish pleces designed ~ Chippendale. an unusual typ, front instead of 1Ctop on the desk s oken pediment the an exceptionally fine piece of by the gr he tion., top is design, he chair is a surai ile ladder-back. The fretwork on ats suggests the Chinese motif Chippendale so often intr. 1 into his furniture des v to type, this chair is uph rose-red damask. These two pie bring the nd soph us zht-legged Chip- pen s couid 1 for Accessories BARON WALKER. decoration on out 3 stitched s even less to make fabi the of fu those ishings for s or boy ound mot room s used atter any ss pre Cushions for Man's Koom. cushions afford r rtunities (o use kid cut-ou men's ong and mannish ch of that s ellent 1 mater Cashmere is 2 these fabrics lued motifs te Zood point in t Basket on Cushi Cushions that are less dignified and severe can be used equally well if the et motif is cmployed for the dee- Duvetyn and satin lend mselves well, both for the cushion and the waste basket foundation and for personal accessories where Kkid motifs are employed, such as bags, envelope purses. ete. mere is the ¢ en labric. fously. r favor. such plain | we find the saying as:| cun | or kearfs, cash- | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. What Do You Know About It? Daily Sclence Six. . Is the earth drying up? . Is the earth shrinking? . Is the earth getting colder? \ . Out of what was the earth originally made? . Why does the moon revolve around the eirth and not around the much larger and more powerfully magnetic sun? . Why does the earth not fiy off into space nor yet, pulled by the sun, fall onto the sun? (Answers to these question in tomorrow’s Star. Symmetry of the Continents. | In school we learned that the earth {1s not round like a ball, but rather pear-shaped; that is, a little larger in |the Northern Hemisphere and flat- tened at the poles, probably by rota- | tion. Perhaps as a result of the small- |er area of the Southern Hemisphere, or perhaps for other reasons, it is no- | ticeable that the southern continents |all taper off toward the south; even | the northern continents do this some- what, especially North America and Greenland. Thus every continent has {a_ triangular shape. Another notice- jable fact is that all the large collec- | tions of islands are to the southeast |of the continents. Nobody is able to explain why this is so. | Now what do you know about that? Answers to Saturday’s questions. 1. A lunar month is 28 days. 2. There are about 13 lunar months in the year. b 3. The lunar fhonth was first se- | lected because it was easy to follow: it took long experience and superior | intelligence to gauge the exact length {of the solar year and so divide it into months. 4. The lunar month is not used be- cause it is not the same length as the solar month and does not male an {even year that comes out well with the seasons. 5. The lunar month is important to | navigation because the moon influ- ences the tide: 6. The lunar year is 3651 days long, | resulting in the necessity for an added uy every four years. | | DIARY OF A | NEW FATHER BY R. E. DICKSON. Sunday evening. Well, I expected it. Mother-in-law {and Joan battled and battled today |over the baby's feeding, and when I | tried to sneak out mother-in-law asked | me where I thought I was going, and | to come back here, because she was going to tell us some facts about rais |Ing kids which Joan and I evidently | |dldn’t know, judging from the dumb | way we handled things. | So I asked her Whogshe thought | she was, anyway, and ®he said that | e was the boss around here as long | s her charitable nature compelled | her.to stay, and if I gave her | more of my impudence she'd take Joan and the baby home with her and | leave me flat. | And it all started over boiling the | | baby’s milk. The doctor said—not the | first doctor, but another one; you have | to have one doctor, an obstetrician, |ana a second one, a pediatrist—any~ | way, the doctor sald to boil the miik | for two minutes before making the baby's formula. After he had gone mother-n-law said it was all poppy- cock, and we wouldn’t do it that w |it took vitamins out of the milk. | Joan sald we would, Finally mother-in-law said (we had been talking for about an hour) that | she was going home tomorrow, and | i we deserved all the trouble that we | | were certainly going to get. { ! Joan went to bed crying and her { mother made up the lounge in the tdining room—the one she had con-| | demned me to sleep on—for herself. | I suppose the battle will break | again with daylight. According to| | Joan her mother has the worst tem- | per in the world, and vice versa. i Your Baby and Mine | BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. | i Those Pesky Worms. ! in spite of much frenzied reitera- tion on the part of this writer that worms just don’t grow in a child for | no reason at all, but are swallowed | with old, dirty, decayed fruit or food, mothers continue to try to lay upon worms™ the onus for most of the un- | explained ills of childhood. Poor ! sleeping, sritting of teeth, paleness around the mouth and dark circl under the eyes—those 1 to be sup- | patiently that the | worms that can be | is the sight of the | animals in the stools themselv Any other sign can usually be at tributed to a poor diet, indigestion and what not. if the mother finds worms or their_eggs in a child's stools, then and then only is she justified in giv- ing worm dicine and only when it is 4 a doctor. Worm medi cines drugs, as they 1 to Kill off the dangerous drug is dangerous in the hands of a | thinks of it as being | 1y akin to a laxative, ! and beneficent powers ame time. | . or their eggs, as has been are swallowed Ly children Iy on unwashed fruit or un- ed vegetables, so that a nursing unless he became infected with orms from one of the older children ol the family, would be in no position to get them himself. Children who have pin worms must be cautioned to wash their hands thoroughly after oing to the toilet, and to be eful themselves, for in t! e constantly rein. the process of s 2 hopeless of depended upon are { | i | ! Al of_your questions | : unswered in leaflet No. 3, on weaning and feeding. I shall be so grateful it you will send a selfad- dressed and stamped envelope and ask for it. Steak in Casserole. Pound into one and one-half pounds of round steak as much flour as it will hold. Sear in hot fat and brown slightly, being careful not to burn. | Add one onion, and one small carrot. Plgee in a role with salt, paprika, and one cupful of boiling water. Simmer until_tender. 6 9th N. 3148 Tamn NowW. Whole Wheat 1408 N. Y. [ White Plains. | By w Getting a Line On a Girt Befreo Marnage Dorothy Dix) C.. MONDAY, Advises Studying Her in Her Own Home How Can a Young Man Penetrate a Girl's Com- pany Manners? Watch How She Treats Her Parents, Brothers and Sisters. A family. YOUNG man tells me that he is engaged to be married to a very beautiful and attractive young girl, hut that she is always quarreling with her And he wants to know if I think she will treat him, if he marries her, the way she treats her mother and father and sisters and brothers. I do. The marriage ceremony works character and disposition. It does not turn a nervous and irrital wife. born fighter. It g.ves no suavity to the b over all about her, and who is determine to others, It puts no honey on a shrewlish tongue. no miracle that changes a woman's ble girl into a placid and easy-going 1t makes no paclfist out of a humptious lady who runs roughshod :d to have her own way at all cost What a girl was before marriage, she will be afterward, only more 8o, because after marriage she feels that she can let herself go. i her market and she doesn’t have to keep her best foot foreriost and wear She can be herself. her saleswoman smile any longer. She has made It is very hard for a young man reall and temperament before marriage. Iy to get any line on a girl's temper All girls put on their company manners as well as their company clothes when a youth comes a-courting. They all act pretty and are meek and mild and so soft-spoken that butter wouldn't melt In their mouths. Th v all laugh at a m: attention to his conv sation, and fall in with his and Lsten with absorbed ‘and are so easy to get an's joke wi along with that it makes handling a woman seem a trick that an imbecile baby boy could pull off. P ‘ATURALLY, a girl who is trying to annex a meal ticket for life isn't going to call a man's attention to her faults and weaknesses. She isn’t going to let him know that the angelic disposition that he admires so much is camouflage, not the real thing. She isn't going to confess that she bristles with feelings as a porcupine does with g comfortable a life companion. She is faults. It is up to him to find them out . uills and would make just about as 't going to tell him of her own accord that she is selfish and lazy and extravagant. It is her place to conceal her f he can. v And the only possible way in which he can do this is to get a close-up of her in the family circle. That will give it he marries her, and an opportun.ty eith romance from there. him a prophetic vision of the future her to fade or else to go on with the Por the girl who cannot get along with her parents will not get along with her husband. If she “sasses” her mother, and talks back to her father, she will use her tongue as a two-edged .sword upon her husband. If she is cross and irritable, and makes scenes in order to get her own way in her father's house, she will be even crosser more scenes in her husband's house. and more irritable and will make For the wife has far more things t She has more responsibilities, more wo sacrifices. Also few husbands spoil their So the girl who lacked the sportsma human affection that would have enabled finds it utterly impossible to get along w It takes self-control. takes a sense of humor. It takes all the enable us to live peaceably in the close shows unmistakably whether she possesse her own family. Therefore, unless a man is himself a fight's sake, he does well to avoid the gir own people. And, unless he desires to be the girl who is the family boss. .« .o ship, It takes unselfishness. o0 vex her than the young girl has. rk to do, is called upon for more wives as parents spoil young girls. the appreciation, the natural her to adapt herself to her parents ith a husband. Tt takes philosophy. It good qualities of head and heart to quaters of domestic life, and a girl s these or not in her attitude toward scrapper, and enjoys a fight for the 1 who is always quarreling with her henpecked, he is wise if he sidesteps . 'HERE are plenty of girls who rule their families with a rod of iron. As soon as they get hofme from school they route their parents out of the comfortable old house in which they have lived for 20 years and make them move into a cramped little apartment i father's pipe aw: n a fashionable street. They take y from him and rob mother of her cherished heirlooms ‘They correct their parents’ grammar and pronunciation until the old people are afrald to open their mouths to speak. ‘Whenever you hear a father muttering under his breath about “new- fangled ways,” or see a mother look fui expresses an opinion, or when you hea “Susie says” this or that, flee from her for any young woman who can tyrannize over her par: rtively at her daughter before she ar one begin every sentence with if you value vour personal liberty, s and her younger brothers and sisters will flatten out a husband into a doormat upon which she wipes her feet. ‘ If you want to find out if a girl will make an extravant wife or not, observe how she treats papa's pockethool 1f she dresses bevond her means. ai father to death to gratify her craving for k in time to save your own. nd is willing to work her poor old r fine clothes, vou may rest assured that she will have no mercy on a mere husband and that the man she marries will spend the halance of his days as a b Furthermore, voif 6 not heed to be sort of a working partner a girl will mal in her own bailiwick. daughter’s are soft and white and mani {and reads novels while mother does the cooking and daughter looks like a fashion-plate and fished out of the rag-bag, you may sa will have to get up and get his own bre If mother’s hand, i1l payer. Sherlock Holmes to deduce what ke if you will cast an eye upon her re work-worn and knotty, and cured; il daughter lies on a couch | the washing; if 1 mother like something that was afely bet that daughter’s husband ikfa colic and wear his last year’s suit, while his wife takes life easily and dresses like Solomon in all his glory. A good daughter makes a good wife. Marry the girl who is sweet and lovely in her own home and she will ble: SS yours. DOROTHY DIX. (Covyright. 1926.) 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the BY JONATHAN A. Army Escapes Howe'’s Trap. NORTH CASTLE, N. 1, 1 The Am | evening safely endmped here, a short | ¢ distance north of White Plains, in a hilly, wooded section offering n: discouragements to an enemy proach, besides others which General ashington has skillfully arranged in the form of breastworl consisting of stone and earthen walls surmounted | by felled treqs with many branch a still on them, but with some of their | w branches trimmed and sharpened and { A pointing forward ‘The abatis thus | R formed can never be penetrated by |er any of the Br h or Kuropean .&nl-kl! diers whom General William Howe | N pu hi er: ap- ) his U. S A, RAWSON, JR want it, but this place serves our irposes much better. It protects the Y., November | passes to New England, and could be | ican Army is this | surrounded only by much more ener- | *tic and ambitious manoeuvres than owe has yet undertaken. it looks as thoush our Gen- as slipped out of the trap which adversary has been setting for m. But conditions elsewhere are not so od, as at Fort Washington on, Har- Heights, for instance. strong fortress, is a well-trained, ell-provisioned of 2,500 mericans f it is Hudson's iver. controlled by the nemy's and on the other sides owe's h and Hesslans hold ew York Is has thus far shown to our fighting |lem Plains to the east and the region men. Since the Battle of White Chatterton’s Hill four days ago, the |lej |above King's Plains at | General Washington’s next big Bridge to the north. prot m will be to maintain this fort enemy has been in camp in front of | which is named in his honor or to Two days ago, two brigades from New York and Kny phausen’s Hessian division from Rochelle joined them, making their total force about 20,000. All the in- dications were that they intended an attack on our White Plains position yesterday, but something held them hack, probably the heavy rain storm. Anticipating their purpose, our Gen- eral chose to meet them on ground | of his own selection; hence the with- | dawal last night to North Castle. | ting for the rain clouds to roll General Howe lost once again! 1 opportunity for that decisive battle ; of hix which was to crush this “re bellion” and_make us once more the ' subjects of George III. White Plains is still ours Serve this new relish that makes thewkole meal taste better/ PIN MONEY PICALILLI help its ga the iron son fight its way through ng which has encircled it. Women Have stopped old hygi- enic methods to assure real immaculacy. NEW way gives true protec- tion—discards liketissue EW modern women but employ a new and different way in hygiene. A way that supplants the old-time “sani- tary pad” with true protection. Wear filmy frocks and light things . any time. Dance, motor for hours without doubt or fear. It is called “KOTEX” ... five times as absorbent as the ordinary cotton pad! Thoroughly deodorizes . . . thus ending ALL fear of of- fending. Discards as easily as a piece of tissue. No laundry. embarrassment. You ask for it without hesi- tancy at any drug or depart- ment store simply by saying “KCTEX.” Costs only a few cents. Proves old ways an annecessary risk. KOTE€X No laundry=discard like tissue N t and walk the baby with the | In other | and to the south, Har-| [ ! { | There, in | i i 1 | { freshment & {about his admirable physique. NOVEMBER 1. 1926. 2 A Wife’s Trahs The Story of a Woman Gone to Seed Who Searches Out the Highest Knoyl- INSTALLMENT I. It wasn't anything so drastic as a family explosion that awakened Helen Crane from her smugly satisfied life —the security of permanence and the feeling that she and her husband were {ndivisibly one until death do them part—but it was something equally as effective. ‘When the clergy! hall pro- nounced Bob and Helen n and wife edge Science Affords. and the right things, Helen usually | greeted her husband on his return home in the evenings. She would look up from the inevitable book. in the unsmiling way of one whose whole attention is still held. Almost reluctantly she would emerge from her absorption. Their two children died in infancy and their substantial home traveled smoothly enough on {ts own momen- ‘What Helen Crane has done is no more than any other woman can do if she is observed he said, as far as Helen was con- cerned, the last word on the subject. She settled right down into the take- everything-for-granted matrimonial jog-trot. Spiritual marriage was an un- dreamt-of-thing. She expected her husband to be faithful, because, after all, she had come of a nice family, and presumably they had married for love. Nothing of the hair-shirt sort about rs. Robert Stone Crane, just a neg- | ligible quantity — something of a cuum. Her hushand's success in business made an easeful life possible, and in the process she had grown fat and flabby. She had allowed every interest in life, cxcept that of litera- ture, to atrophy. There was no real link with the outside world save through a few friends of her own remiss type, and her husband—the {husband that might some day leave her for another woman. ¢ In fact, Bob's roses were begin- ning to_adorn other women’s bou- dolrs. He sought other company with the afr of a man in need of re- d rest. His life at home was meaningless, without interest or thrill—dead.” They were growing rapidly apart, lines of communication all but broken. Yet, there was still a spark among the cooling embers. It needed but a kind wind to blow upon it. Crane was that successful looking American type. Dressed well. good brain, something fresh and vli{il s full of the love ot life as his wife was joyless and indifferent. Bob thought he had married a charming girl, and indeed for awhile Helen had charm, There was alluring glow about her, but it soon died. Love may have told her how to spread her net, but of the cage in which to keep him she knew less than nothing. The thought of lifelong companionship with Helen appalled Bob. That he admitted to himself frankly From a couch, in their charming living room, where Crane's unerring instinct had installed the best things interested in keeping young and fresh. who fades and wrinkles, or becomes fat and fabby. It is indeed a foolish woman Pursue the rules Helen | | of the workaday-frock. Good tas'e had served in the expression of in dividuality and st¥le of her clothes It was quite obvious that sfe was a young woman wholly awakened to the consclousness of natural feminine charm. sShe had well discovered the magic properties of cosmetics, and the more important parts that heulth common sense and gvod taste, play in a woman's toilet It was a visualization diametrically opposite that pried into Bob's thoughts; his wife's flabby, slouched body contour, dulled eyes, rebellious, bobbed hatr, and rough, sallow, nourished skin, that told tal sweets, Indigestible foods and inactiv- ity. “T don't care what I look lke- I'm secure!” exuded from the indulged being of the wife gone to seed. ‘Wife and Secretary. Dictation over. A door opened in response to a summons from Bob's desk. “If Mrs. Crane fs waiting, tell her to come in, please,” he said. The next moment the irregular figure of {his wife stepped over the threshold and paused. Her shoulders slumped awkwardly, and her neck thrust for ward, slightly to the side, as if her head were too heavy to be borne in an upright position. Personal dlsin terest fairly leaped forth and shouted from Helen. And the tragedy of it was that she had possessed good looks. From across his mahogany desk her husband’s keen eyes plerced her |lke raplers. That look almost vivi sected her—his half-smile seemed - | mockery. Tle spoke quickly, brittic bright, introduced his new secretary, ! indicated a chair, all were sandwiched {into some final instructions in proc ess to Miss S v, who was standing nicely poised at the door giv ing access to her own small domain Miss Secretary smiled, and humor shone from dark eyes—that was all | But the reaction that Helen got from | that smile was something quite | dynamie. She might have caid to her, “I'm in love with your husband —what are you going to do about it?" (Copyright 1926) (Continued in Tomorrow’s Star.) The cultivation of rice was intro duced into South Carolina from the v tum. So there was little for Helen to do but follow her inclinations, and thus she became a mere figurehead of a wife. Perhaps it was a prayer from a man’s exasperated lips one night to the god that understands women, after a stronger dose than usual of his wife's negligence, that brought Mrs. Robert Crane under the knife that cut into her indifference. Bob and His Secretary It was the morning of the day that Crane was to leave for Texas on a six weeks' trip. He had asked his wife to be at his offices about 10:30 on a matter ¢f busines: In his pri- vate office he had been going through his mail, dictating to hls secretary for an hour or more. At the moment Bob was slightly slumped in his chalir, his lean brown fingers neatly poised, tips matching, he was endeavoring to keep up con- tinuity of thought. It was difficult— the allure of his efficient young busi- ness woman, who one could see was as efficient in her ways of living and dressing as in the office routine, kept disrupting his_ trend. “Gentlemen,” he dictated, “in_ac- cordance with your request of July 2, we are inclosing an itemized——"" Concentration broke into bits. Bob's keen blue eyes fastened on the shape- ly fingers Greuze might have fash- joned moving swiftly across the note- book. Miss Secretary wished that her employer would go on. Suddenly he pulled himself together—‘'statement of your account, covering the bal- ance of $26.98——"" As if hooks were drawing his eyes, they lifted to the young woman's delicate profile. Just a shade of coloring noticeable on the oval cheek. The nutbrown, glossy halr, just right in soft waves across an extra white forehead, and above a stralght line of dark brown that gave character to her face. “Looks like a find!" he thought. Dressed so quletly was Miss Secre- tary in the manner of the business world, one almost missed the beau- tiful texture of the simple perfection | Island of Madagascar in 1695. To End Severe Cou; Quickly, Try This For real results, this old home-made remedy beats them all. Easily prepared. You'll never know how quick- Iy & bad cough cun be conquered, \ until you try this famous hom, made remedy. The prompt relief is almost magical. It is easiy pre- pared, and there is nothing better for coughs. Into & p bottle, put 2 ounces of Finex; then add plain || ranulated sugar syrup to make a gull int. Or us arified honey, in- || stead of sugar sy Either way, it saves about two-thirds of the money usually spent for ecough preparations, and gives you a more positive, effective remedy. It keeps perfectly, and tastes pleasant— children like -it. You can feel this take hold in- stantly, soothing and healiug the membranes iu all the air passages. 1t promptly looseas a dry, tight cough, and soon the phlegm thins out and disappears. A day's use will usually break up an ordinary throat or chest cold, and it is also splendid for brouchitis, hoarseness, and bronchial asthma. Pinex is @ most valuable con- centrated cumsound of Norwa; pine extract and palatable guaiacol, the most reliable remedy for throat, and chest ailments. To avoid_disappointment ask . your_druggist for “24 ounces of Pinex” "with dire«rinnn.% Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money re- funded. The Pinex Co., 37 Ft. Wayne, Ind. A Amazing, Chesterfield’s swift climb to popularity. Amazing, that is, until you Zaste one No need to argue quality when Jou can taste it! Ligcerr & Myers Tosacco Co.

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