Evening Star Newspaper, March 22, 1928, Page 36

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ens screness, and quickly eases pain. Apply freely; rub in thoroughly. BAUME BE NGE and Tender Spots Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads for Bun= fons stop pain instantly, pro- tect the swollen joint from friction and pressure of the shoe, and soothe and heal the irritation. Thin, mildly medicated — absolutely safe and sure. Atall N drug. shoe and depertment \ sto ve— 35¢ Q per package. Dz Scholl’s Zino-pa Put one on —the pain is gone! TAKE SALTS FOR A KIDNEY BACKACHE Drink Lots of Water All Day Long to Keep Kidneys Flushed ood forms acids overwork the fiorts to fiter it the kid- like you relieve the bowels, re- moving acids, waste and poison, else you may ieel a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains 'in the back or sick headache, | dizziness, the stomach sours, gue is coated, and when the ther is bad you have rheu- e these irri-| flush off the ¥'s ous waste, begin drink- ing water. Also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy, take a tatlespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for years to help clean and stimulate sluggish kid- stop bladder irritation. ] s it inexpensive and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which miilions of men and women take now and then to help prevent serious kid- ney and bladder disorders. By all means, drink lots of good water every day.—Advertisement. “The Guest.” A news dispatch had brought the | message to the little town that Lady |corner of the .tation, Mrs. Hartridge Martha Littieton Dunning was to ar- | watched for a glimpse of the great woman through tear-filled eyes. saw Lady Dunning’s husband and re- | rive for a visit of several days. Jack- | have known graphs THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY, MARCH 22 ert himself appeared through the crowd escorting Lady Dunning. Mrs, Hartridge was speechless. What could it mean? At the other end of the platform she saw the soclety lead- crs scattered about in small buzzing groups, They were looking in Rob- ert’s direction. Mrs. Hartridge kept well out of sight. And then she heard them talking. “Ralph, old man,” she heard her husband say, “it is darn nice of you Ehe [to drop in for this little visit. We haven't got much to entertain you with, from newspaper photo- Far back in the crowd, near the sonville citizens were aroused over the | called press dispatches of his marriage, but you're welcome to perch your shogs visit and wide preparations were made | to Lady for the prominent guest's entertain-|wind courtship in London. The dispatch did not mention | ding had been the object of many col- ment { whom the famous woman planned to | | visit, but the populace assumed that | she was merely to make the | headquarters for a sight-seeing trip in |ing at the curb. | few feet of her. the middle West. { | “'The_principal affair arranged for | | Lady Dunning's reception in Jackson- |ing automobile, and as Mrs. Ha | ville was the Farrell banquet. given at |looked she was the home of Radcliffe Farreil, one of | speech. { husband's. | form the visitors of their mistzke Rob- | your | the city's leading bankers. The joint | hostesses, representatives of the clusive” MecMurphys, Strawn Allister |and De Ames families, were known | | as the “pick" of society. ~Mrs. Hart-| | ridge, who lived in a desirable though ‘nm exclusive part of the town, desired {an invitation to the banquet—and | within two days of the gala affair she had not received it | Mrs. Hartridge was extremely blue | ! that evening when her husband ar- | rived from the office. She _confided her secret sorrow to him. It meant either the affirmation of her place in the little city's social set or absolute disbarment from it Such an & at all times included those people des- tined to be the city's al leaders if they were not already s Mr.” Hartridge ed sympathetically at his wife. . darling, you are a thousand tim as good as they Why. those women don't even know whether Lady Dunning will attend their banquet or not ‘Who. knows: she might walk right into your own little cottage here and announce her- self vour guest immediately after she arrives from New York.” There an encouraging note in his voice as he cheered his young wife “It is not myself I am thinking of. Robert.” she said. “I want the chil- dren to grow up with the nicest people | —the city’s leaders.” Mr. Hartridge cheered his heart- | broken little wife as best he could, but on the morning of Lady Dunning's | arrival she fell into a fit of weeping She recovered her composure about noon and set about tidying her home. At least she had Robert and the chil- | dren, she told herself. She could live | for them. The morning papers had carried a long dispatch concerning Lady Dunning's visit to the little city. She| |had departed from New York with a| | sleeper ticket to Jacksonville, the press | | stated, where she was to be the guest |for a few days of old friends. The | Farrells had wired ahead that they | would meet her at the train and had' arranged a reception for herself and, her American husband, a Ralph Ben- nington she had married a few months | | before. The husband of Lady Dunning | was_merely mentioned. | The 2 o'clock express was on time and the cream of Jacksonville's society gathered at the train to meet the promi- nent guest, internationally known in society circles. The tall, haughty Miss | Farrell led the group and waited for | Lady Dunning to alight from the draw- | ing-room compartments. And then they | saw her party. Her husband Ali(hmd‘ first, followed by a porter with many | bags plastered with foreign labels and | k Dunning did not appear. [ The little, smiling husband was mistaken | for part of the retinue by the crowd | and allowed to pass unapproached. The group eagerly awaited the appearance of Lady Dunning, whom they would umns of Hartridge watched him struggle along town | with the porter to a line of taxis stand- Dunning following & whirl- | on our mantel as long as you can stand The wed- | the fare.” Mrs. Hartridge heard Lady Dunning's husband laugh “But the little wife here, Bob. She's the cne that insisted we come. She's sick of New York and wants to pal |around a few days with that little fe you tell me so much about. you bring her along “No,” Robert_replied. “I did ex- actly as Ladv Dunning asked in your letter, and didn’t tell her a thing about coming. You are right—she newspaper chatter, — Mrs. He passed within. a | The bags were loaded into a wal rtled almost Robert's—her he could in- The car And befor / . Next to the natural laxative from a_ mother’s breast, a plain, old-fash-, ionedpreparationisalways best for g keeping baby's little digestive g tract clean and sweet. When g8 your little one doesn’t eat, or can’t sleep, give him a few drops of plain Castoria It is purely vegetable, you sknow. Any doctor will3§ tell you that it is utterly harmless to the voungest infant. Itis sweet to the taste, and sweet in the little stomach. § Yet its gentle influence is soon felt all through the tiny system. Not even castor oil can compete with Castoria and how much better it is to use this milder means of regu-+* lating a baby ! Never, give baby paregoric, or similar opiates, because, a few drops' of Castoria are just as soothing, and no harm That's the beauty of using pure you can give it just as often as§ ¥ you discover any sign of colic, constipation, org'diarrhea—or thosé¥ times when you don’t know just what it is that has caused an upset. Only get the genuine Castoria—bearing Fletcher's signature. Itisn’t expensive, and with every bottle comes the book, “Care and Feeding of Babies—worth its weight in gold to every mother or prospective mother. is done, Castoria; testimonial for “Standard” Gas- oline is the in- creasing number of people who use it -- “"STANDARD" GASOLINE Did | would have worked darn hard if she had known guests were coming.” Lad queeniy. day. the city that even so much as hinted | a refusal to attend one of Mrs. Hart-|ahout 100 mountain sheep remain of ridge's quiet little bridge parties in hon- | the great flocks that roamed over the | mal 1928. Dunning looked superb—even cted. She looked friendly, | died. with anybody. Robert mustn’t know ‘There wad not a Jacksonville that | or of her that Lady (Copyright. 1928.) {FEW WILD SHEEP I:EFT ON GUADALUPE SLOPES Hunters and Predatory Animals|crosses his path. Cause Reduction in est. wardens to owe their lives to the rug- gedness of the country to which the e diminishing flock has retreated. Absolute protection is given by the game laws, which provide for a fine of $250 for any person killing a moun- tain sheep, but ranchmen say it is an hunter who withstands of the rams unusual temptation when one Herds. | of this region. Mex.—Only | — - & million. On the jump in all weathers 34 of the Highway Police questioned - nnlnu':"“il;:gnm' bL‘H‘:’t‘ld [ nfiu o m)dodl,?.hlm - settters| can le | first came country. husband” was half of the great woman's | predat But she was not the orna- hngpinl-u. and that his friendship for | took their toll, an mental, overproud sort of woman some | Rol had ex| di companionable and strictly as though she could be friends Mrs, Hartridge heard the famous wom- an laugh aloud as she told Mr. Hart- ridge she wanted to hurry to his “ador- able little wife.” Mrs. Hartridge hurrled through the crowd with tear-filled eyes, and went home in a taxi. that she had been at the station to be merely a sight-seer at the arrival of Lady Dunning. happler woman in And there was not a woman in | Correspondence of the Associated Press ALAMOGORDO, N, Eager hunters and fudflmy animals the few shel 71 ert Hartridge in college had never which are left are belleved I‘:vy 'nmeg ll ’C ales. Plates = cost®3 Lgrd 10 T “dyd the| W Creation of a national park in the | Guadalupe Mountains as a range for | | mountain sheep and the stocking of | | the refuge are advocated by sportsmen | Twelve make a dozen, but very f!'i b [{9 " said, “Saves us sore muscles HE MEN whose job. it is to keep the highways safe are famous for their cou- rage, their daring, their defiance of hardship, strains, danger. In every state they represent the pick of its hardiest specimens. Their bodies must be strong, quick, supple to respond to the sudden emergencies they are constant- 1y called upon to face. And yet they have to do their work under condi- tions that would lay most men up with colds, rheumatism, stiff, strained muscles. How do they keep themselves frec of these ailments? We put this up to the men them- selves. Three-quarters of the number questioned said, “We use Sloan's.” Everywhere—the chief reliance of hard workers And everywhere you get the same answer from people whose work keeps them out in bad weather or brings a heavy strain on their muscles. They swear by Sloan’s Liniment. Used after exposure to wet or cold, it prevents chilling, colds, stiffening of the muscles. And it brings the quick- est, surest relief for every kind of mus- cular pain, rheumatism, sprains and * bruises. Read this statement from a polize- man who has served on the Philadel- phia police force for twenty-seven years: ““As I have used a considerable quantity of Sloan’s Liniment in the last few months and received almost instant relief, I think it my duty for the sake of humanity to recommend it SLOAN’ See what goes into the bean pot / These flavor-rich ingredients go into the big iron bean pot in which the famous bean holebeansof the Mainewoods lumber camps are baked. (e e The pot is sealed air-tight with clay and then is buried in a bed of pine embers in the earthen oven called the “bean hole.” Here it slowly cooks all night. This gives the finest baked bean flavor known. to others. Tt gives me great pleasure to rec- ommend Sloan’s for all pains in the back and legs, as I do a lot of walking and am exposed toall kinds of weather.” William R.Christy, Sr., 1933 Master Street, Philadelphia, Pa. And this from a brakeman on the Chicago and Northwestern who was suffering agony One of the Highway Police who said, **We swear by Sloan’s to ward off the results of exposure and strain.” It's the best ever to knock colds, prevent rheumatism, limber up lame muscles, and relieve the pain of sprains and bruises. A cup of molasses A cup of brown sug? a| orK ayer of sugar cured P a layer of beans a | ver of sugar-cured " a lil_\'(‘r of beans from a sprain and a wrenched ligament: ““I fell off the top of a box car on my left arm, spraining it and tearing the ligaments loose. I suffered considerable pain for about forty-eight hours. I got a bottle of Sloan's Liniment. It relieved the pain right away. It is now fifty-three hours since I was hurt. I have no pain at all to speak of. The swelling has nearly all gone down. I think it is the best liniment I have ever used. Isuggest that anybody havinga sprain get a bottle and apply it accord- ing to directions.” Harry M. Hall, Belle Plaine, Iowa. . . . Everyone should: have Sloan’s Lini- ment always on hand—for immediate use in case of emergency. Apply liber- ally—but without rubbing. Right away you feel a glowing warmth—a quick, powerful stimulation to the cir- culation which breaks up congestion and sweeps away germs and poisons. The pain stops because the cause of the pain is gone. Use it for: Rheumatism Lame Muscles Sciatica Stiff Neck Lumbago Colds and Neuralgia congestions Sprains and bruises Here's what the company doctor of one of the big railroads says of Sloan’s: *“People whose work esposes them to strain or & damp and cold usually suffer from a good deal of musculor soremess. We find that Sloan’s gives them quich, positive relief.” Endorsed universally by those who do the world’s hard work The very same ingredients are used in BEAN HOLE BEANS pecom® 300D, i brIdEe snitary bt » nd dean! Now you can have beans just like those famous beans baked in the Maine woods lumber camps. Bean Hole Beans! They have that same “baked- insthe-ground” flavor, The very same ingredients that make the original Maine woods beans so delicious are us¢d in Bean Hole Beans. One taste of Bean Hole Beans—and you'll know that something new has been achieved in bringing to every- one this rare flavor which heretofore only a few have had a chance to enjoy! Give your family a surprise tonight for dinner. Give them Bean Hole Beans—they'll love them! Your grocer has them in two sizes, medinoe* and large,

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