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STAR, WASHINGTON., D, C, WEDNESDAY, MAY 29.'19 9.. 17 MANY SK”_LED WORKERS | National Museum, Smithsonian Insti-| tution, Washington. \ NEEDED FOR U. S. JOBS| : Associate accountant and auditor, at | (SFRICF mechanical SfAtEman. . Gt $2000 a year; assistant accountant gsan Francisco, Calif. Civil An- | and auditor, at $2,600 a ycar, Bureau| Senior biological aide (injurious nounces Open Examinations for Vacancies. THE EVENING under the Federal Board of Vocatfonal Education, Washington, D. C. Senior ~mechanical ~draftsman, _at Mustard Spoon? This, then, was the | tomorrow evening in the garden house | Bonnle Crest, New Rochelle, who lrc‘ explanation of John's failure to come;at the Grace Dodge Hotel.* | passing a short time at the Wardman and pass the time of day with an old |\ " L CSoos L nicgin have | Rark Hotel have been Joined by Mr V] | ad assi o s . ave | john Kaiser and Miss Katherine g friend. What she had sssumed to be| Mr. and frs Ferty £ PHOSUR EONS iser jellyfishiness was ality base treach- = jellsfichiness was in reality base treach- | I Cumberland, Md, and are stopping| Mrs. A, B. Branch of Richmond, who Mrs. Molloy’s shoes. she could gladly | at the Carlton. is motoring extensively, is staying at| have kicked, he had been hypnotized by | the Grace Dodge Hotel.’ She is accom- i Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Peltz of Berwyn, | panied by Mrs. M. D. Greenwood and roman’s specious ad had this womarn's specious glamour and had | 1, "% Washington, at_the An-| Mrs. J. M. Greenwood, jr., o®Los An- Pat, eying Dolly coldly, was filled with | a sisterly desire to save John from one | who could never make him happy. { Dolly was all friendliness. « “Why, hello,” she said, removing a shapely foot from Emily’s mouth, “I|thev W sk S, B b kv ific cloubursts | | was wondering when T was going to run | Mable Habberse Sl s o e | 1 heard you lived in these inent x:nv*n‘.bl‘l of the rwyn, Ill., Wom- | destroyed a v area of crops here ' S S g | Monday night. Hundreds of farmsteads and Mrs d C. Kalser of | were put under 3 feet of water. Service Commission NEY FOR NOTHING By P. G. Wodehouse (Copyright, 1929, by North Am of Valuation, Interstate Commerce mammals), at $2.000 to $2.500 a year, Commission. "Bur(‘nu of Biological Survey, for duty Research specialist in agricultural | in Washington, D. C., or in the fleld. education, $4.600 a year: specialist in| Associate entdmologist at $3,200 to agricultural education (teacher tmn-[sa.'mo a year: assistant entomologist at ing), $3,800 a year; specialist in agri-| $2.600 to $2,100 a year, Bureau of En- cultural education (subject matter). | tomology. $3.800 a vear: specialist in agriculturai| Chief nurse, Federal Industrial Insti- education (part-time and evening | tution for Women, Alderson, W. Va., schools), $3. a year: Federal agent | at $2,300 a vear, less $300 a year for for home economics education, $4,600 | quarters, subsistence, and laundry. a year; agent for home economics edu-| Full information and application | blanks may be obtained from the Civil cation, $3800 a year: agent for trade | and industrial education, 3,800 & year,' Service Commission, 1724 F street, g visits to Gettys A They will go to Phila- or’ Boston. points trip approach- In Jersey City sister, Mrs. napolis, follow The Civil Service Commission an- nounces the following open competitive examinations: Assoclate and nssistant biologist | (general), at $3,200 to $3,700 a year| \fnr the associate grade. and $2.600 to | $3.100 & vear for the assistant grade. clate curator, at -— Cloudburst Destroys Crops. an Newspaper Alliance and Metropolitan PICROY, Czeohoslovakia, May 29 per Bervice. | conversation would once more have be- | 78 WOUS e come difficult had there not, at this| paris™ oho | moment, made itself hcard from the| - ide of the door a loud and pene- trating snif. A fatherly smile lit up Charles By- water’s face. “That’s Mr. John's dog.” reaching for the cough drops. Pat opened the door, and the state- ment was proved correct. With a short | wooffie, partly of annoyance at having| | been kept waiting, and partly of happy | We anticipation, Emily entered ‘and gazed expectantly ‘at the chemist, “Hullo, Emily.” said Pat. Emily gave her a brief look in which there was no pleased recognition, but aid Pat frigldly. Mr. ing at the Hall.” i “What & wonderful old place it Is. « WX O he said,| _“All those pictures and tapestrics and v i P The Ideal Between-Meals Tid-Bit Planter’s Salted Peanuts Only 390 Lb. Fresh, selected pea- nuts from the heart of the peanut-raising section of Virginia that have been properly roasted to bring out their full flavor and just enough salt added to make them de- licious. Keep a supply on hand —every one likes them, N SN E atricia John’s unaje widens the rift, X Save More on Popular Brands of /E}' Cigars | | father?” is M met in London.’ leased to meet you.” said Dolly. “Charmed.” said Col. Wyvern He gave another twirl of his mus- | tache. Charles Bywater hovered beam- ingly. Emily, still ecstatic. continued to gnaw one of Dolly’s shoes. ‘The |7 whole spectacle was so utterly revolting | that Pat turned to the door. “I'll be going along, father, I want to buy some amps. “I can_sell you , miss,” Charles Bywater aff “Thank you, I will go to the post office.” said Pat. Her manner Molloy, father. Lo e NINTH INSTALLMENT. (Continued From Yestorday's Star.) OME years before the date of the events narrated in this story, at the time when there was all that trouble between the aristocratic householders of Riverside ROW | only the annoyance of a dog interrupted and the humbler dweliers on Budd | quring an important conference. She street (arising, if you remember, from | p, SaHewater the practice of the latter of washing e Al their more intimate articles of clothing KA lever and hanging them to dry jn back gar- dens into which their exclusive neigh- | "Oh ‘snap into 11" replied Emily bors were compelled to gaze every time | curtly, impatient at this foolery. they looked out of windows), the vicar | “Hear her speak for it>" said Mr. By- of the parish, the Rev. Alistair Pond- | water. “Almost human, that dog is.” | gested that you got a suj Pond, always a happy phrase-maker.| Col. Wyvern, whom he had addressed, | 0f stamps there. She wound up his address at the annual|did not seem to share his satisfaction, | Rudge, as she looked upon it, sec Village sports of Rudge with an im-| He muttered to himself. He regarded | more depressing place than ever. ssive appeal to the good feeling of | Emily sourly, and his right foot twitched | shine flooded the High Street. Lo “:nnt‘z}x?ncd . a little. 5 ShE Sl d{smm- fell on the Carmody Arms, the e must not.” said the Rev. Alistair, Just like a human being, isn't she, | Village Hall, the Plough and Chickens, “consider ourselves as belonging to this | miss?” said Charles Bywater, damped, | the Bunch of Grapes. the Waggoner gection of Rudge-in-the-Vale or to that but persevering. | Rest and the Jubilee \\» tering Trough | section of Rudge-in-the-Val>. Let us| “Quite,” said Pat absently. | But. there was no sunshine in the heart get together. Let us recollect that we| Mr. Bywater, startled by this infringe- | of Pat Wyvern. are all fellow members of one united ment of copyright, dropped the cough (To be continued.) community. Rudge must be looked on lozenge and Emily snapped it up. ——— . — Phila. Hand-made, perf a9 a whole, And what & whole it is!” | Pat, still distrait, was watching the i I 9 Y S Roi Tan, P.E... With the concluding words of this door. She was surprised to find that (Continued From Sixteenth Page) e = Phone Main 5215 —_— N she said. Robt. Burns, pant. Henrietta, pop.. Any of These El Producto, boq. Blackstone, cab.. 10c Values Cortez, dips.....ccoooeess El Verso, ndj...........\ 4 for 300 Garcia Grande, queens La Palina, excel...... Luis Martinez, corona Muriel, Roths s Manuel, per| Optimo, P. E........ g A _cough drop. sald S e UG STOPRPES) “All Over Town” —the Better to Serve You N AN A Confection You Are Sure to Enjoy— Hershey Milk: Chocolate Kisses Only 390 Lb. You can't help but enioy these chocolate kisses olid c Box of 50 $3.75 milk o Jaree cnough = for good b And they are in- dually wrapped in tinfoil to insure their freshness at all times This is a_very low price for the Hershey Milk Chocols had been home a little under a week, | and that her heart had begun to beat foune herself in hearty agreement.| With mage than its usual rapidity. She Walking with her father along High | Was amazed at herself. Just b(‘(‘au‘fir' street on the sixth morning, she had to | John Carroll would shortly appear in confess herself disappointed with | that doorway must she stand fluttering, | peroration Pat Wyvern, by the time she | her breath was coming rather quickly Ru will be by way of Fredericksburg to Johnnie, ere are times in every one's ex- perience when life, after running mer- rily for a while through pleasant places, seems suddenly to strike a dull and de- pressing patch of road; and this was| what was happening now to Pat. The | sense which had come to her so strongly | in the lobby of the Lincoln Hotel, on | Curzon street, of being in a world un-| worthy of her—a world cold and unsym- | pathetic and full of an inferior grade| of human being. had deepened. Her| home-coming, she decided, was not a| success. Elderly men with a grievance are| seldom entertaining companions for young. and five days of the society of | Col. Wyvern had left Pat with the| feeling that, much as she loved her father, she wished he would change the | subject of his conversation. Had she| been present in person she could not have had a fuller grasp of the facts of that dynamite outrage than she now possessed. | But this was not all. After Mr. Car-| mody’s thuglike behavior on that fatal day she was given to understand that the hall and its grounds were as much forbidden territory to her as the piazza | of the town house of the Capulets| would have been to the young Mon- | And, though, being a modern | girl, she did not respond with any | great alacrity to parental mandates, she had her share of clan loyalty and realized that she must conform to the yules of the game. Accordingly she had not been within half a mile of the hall since her arrival, and, having been accustomed to treat the place and its grounds as her private property, found Rudge, with a deadline drawn across the boundaries of Mr. Carmody’s park, a poor sort of place. Unlovable character . though Mr. Car- mody was in many .respects, she had ul been fond of him, and she missed seeing him. She also missed | seeing Hugo. And as for John, not seeing him was the heaviest blow of all. John had always been her stand-by. ‘Men might come and men might go. but John went on forever. He had never been too old, like Mr. Carmody, ' or too lazy, like Hugo, to give her all the time and attention she required, and she did think that, even though there was this absured feud going on, he might have had the enterprise to make an opportunity of meeting her. As day followed day, her resentment grew, until now she had reached the stage when she was telling herself that this was simply what she might have e ted. John—she had to face it— was a jellyfish. And if a man is a jellyfish, he will behave like a jellyfish, and it is at times of cri!kfilhatl his ellyfishiness will be most noticeable. ) It was consclence that had brought Pat to the High street this morning. Her father had welcomed her with such eagerness, and had been so pleased to see her back that she was ashamed of herself for not feeling happier. And it was in & spirit of remorse that she had eome with him to watch him buy an- other Dottle of Brophy's Paramount Elixir from Charles Bywater, chemist. Brophy, it should be mentioned, had proved a sensational success. His elixir was making the locat gnats feel erfect fools. They would bite Col. vern on the face and stand back, all ready to laugh, and he would just smear Brophy on himself and be as good as new. It was simply sickgning, if you were a_gnat: but fine, of course, if you were Col. Wyvern, and that just man, always ready to give praise where praise was due, said as much to Charles Bywater. “That stuff,” said Col. Wyvern, “is good. Give me another bottle.” Mr. Bywater was delighted —not merely at this rush of trade, but be- cause he enjoyed ameliorating the lot of others. “I thought you would find it capital, colonel. I get a great many requests for it. I sold a bottle yesterday to Mr. Carmody, sr.” Col. Wyvern's sunniness vanished es if some one had turned it off with a | tap. Phon't talk to me about Mr. Car- mody,” he said gruffly. “Quite,” said Charles Bywater. Pat bridged a painful silence. “Is Mr. Carmody back, then’ she asked. “I heard he was at some sort of health place.” “Healthword Ho, miss, Lowick.” “He ought to be in prison,” ‘Wyvern. Mr, Bywater stopped himself in the nick of time from saying “Quite.” which would have been a deviation from his firm policy of never taking sides be- tween customers. just outside said Col. “He returned the day before yester- day, miss, and was immediately on the nose by a mosquito.” “Thank Heaven,” said Col. Wyvern. for all the world as though poor old | an_ admitted _jellyfish, were | something that really mattered? It was too silly, and she tried to bully herself into composure. She failed. A step sounded outside, a shadow fell | on the sunlit pavement and dolly Molloy | walked into the shop. It is curious, when one reflects, to think how many different impressions a | single individual can make simultane- ously. | At the present moment it was almost | as though four separate and distinct | Dolly Molloys had_entered the estab- | lishment of Chas. Bywater. The Dolly whom Col. Wyvern he held was a beautiful woman, with just that hint of diablerie in her bearing that makes elderly widowers feel that there is life in the old dog yet. Col. Wyvern was no longer the dashing Hussar who in the “nineties” had made his presence felt in many a dim sitting out place and in many a punt beneath the willows | | of the Thames, but there still lingered in him a trace of the old barrack-room | fire. Drawing himself up, he automat | | ically twirled his mustache. To Col. | Wyvern Dolly represented Beauty. | | To Chas. Bywater, with his more | practical and worldly outlook, she repre- | sented Wealth. He saw in Dolly not | s0 much a beautiful woman as a rich- | looking woman. Although Soapy had contrived, with subtle reasoning, to head her off from the extensive purchases she had contemplated making in prep- aration for her visit to Rudge, Dolly un- doubtedly took the eye. She was, as she | would have put it herself, a snappy | dresser, and in Chas. Bywater's mind | she awoke roseate visions of large orders | for face creams, imported scents and | expensive bath salts, | Emily, it was evident, regarded Mrs. | Molloy' as Perfection. A dog who, as a rule, kept herself to herself and looked on the world with a cool and rather | sardonic eye, she had conceived for Dolly one of those capricious adorations that come occasionally to the most hard-boiled Welsh terriers. Hastily swallowing her cough drop, she bounded at Dolly and fawned on her. So far, the reactions caused by the newcomer’s entrance have been un- mixedly favorable. It is only when we come to Pat that we find disapproval rearing its ugly head. “Disapproval,” indeed, is a mild and inadequate word. “Loathing” would be more correct. Where Col. Wyvern be- held beauty and Mr. Bywater opulence, | Pat saw only flashiness, vulgarity and general horribleness. Piercing with woman's intuitive eve through an outer | crust that to vapid and irreflective | males might possibly seem attractive, | she saw Dolly as a vampire and a men- | ace—the sort of woman who goes about ensnaring miserable, fat-headed, inno- cent young men who have lived all their lives in the country and so lack the ex- perience to see through females of her type. For beyond a question. felt Pat, this | girl must have come to Rudge in brazen | pursuit of poor old Johnnie, The fact that she took her walks accompanied by Emily showed that she was staying | at the Hall; and what reason could she have had for getting herself invited to | the Hall if not that she wished to con- tinue the acquaintance begun at the | | | Warsaw and south to Lancaster County. Miss Clelia Fiorivanti, mezzo-soprano, will be the guest of honor at the Arts Club tomorrow evening. ner, at which Miss Bertha Noyes will be the hostess, Miss Fiorivanti will give a | recital. The Beach and Tennis Club af An- napolis Roads will open its Summer season tomorrow. Announcement been made by Col. Charles Denby, president of the club, that there will be a tea dance on the esplanade of the Beach Club, overlooking the bay, in the | afternoon, and a dinner dance in the | golf clubhouse that evening. Many of those prominent in the offi- cial and fashionable life of Washington have arranged parties at the club for the day, The Beta Chapter of the Kappa Phi After the din- | has | Delta Sorority will entertain at a dance | PALM BEACH SUITS $16.50 Open acharge account. Easy Terms EISEMAN’S, 7th & F ~ McDEVITT DRAPERIES SLIP COVERS WINDOW SHADES 211 1211 F §t. 2nd Floor Main Your OLD HAT MADE NEW Again Cleaning, Blocking and Remodeling by Experts Vienna Hat Co. 435 11th Street B I NNy PACKARD: Town Cars Standard _and Fleetwood custom bodies—eight-cylinder chassis—excellent repair—col- ors to suit your personal withes—new tires, Your opportunity to own personal transportation of dis- tinctive quality and type at less than one-fourth the origi= nal cost. For demonstration and further particulars, please telephone or write— PACKARD 17th at Kalorama AT T AT AT T AT A8 8 8 8t a2t Y @ % CRC LR EREREER R “But I sold him one of the three-and- | said Charles | sixpenny size of the elix Bywater, with quiet pride, “and agsingle application completely eased m:fl, . Col. Wyvern said he wa hear it, and there is no doubt that North end North 2747 > 5,248 NG Our ,y/lN Combined Force nnd Knowledge is Entirely Devoted to ‘Washing Repairing Storing of YOUR RUGS 1226 CONN.AVE. Wave last week in an aer So light is this machine that you are free to walk al Beauticraft in its Entirety Coiffeur to the Permanent Waving Revolutionized The New Ringlctte Permanent Wave Only Given in Washington at Emile’s The process so simple that Emile gave a Permanent while flying over Washington, the head than a hat . . . the attachments so arranged chat with a friend while your hair is being waved. }e® Phone for Appointment Decatur 920-1.2-3-4 oplane from Hoover Field that it feels no heavier on bout the room, telephone or 1221 Conn. Ave. Modern Woman — N NR— g —_———— N &\ Interesting News of GrealterSavings! Every One Will Want to Share in These Extraordinary Savings on Health and Beauty Needs HOME REMEDIES —Priced Ve 60c Bromo Seltzer. . ... 60c California Fig Syrup ... 30c Carbona Dry C|e}ner. 50c Cascarets, large. . .. $1 Citrocarbonate, 4 oz. $1.25 Creomulsion Tenic 50c Cuticura Ointment . . 50c DeWitt’s Pills. . . 75¢ Dextri Maltose. . 60c Ely Cream Balm. 75¢c Eno’s Fruit Salts. . $1.50 Atcphan Tablets . 60c Foley Honey & Tar. 60c Fleet’s Phospho Soda 60c Formamint Tablets. 60c Glycothymoline . . . $1.25 Hagee’s Cordial. . . $1 Horlick’s Malted Milk . 35¢ Lapactic Pills. . . . 50c Lysel Disinfectant. . . 30c Zonite Antiseptic. . . . 50c Wyeth Lithia Tablets. 35¢ Vick’s Salve, small. . . $1.20 Scott’s Emulsion . . T 1l Sharpens Appetite! Glysrated Iron For rich, red blood, strong nerves and vi- brant, vigorous health- leasant tablets — easy to take. 5t Tablets 7 .09 A Spring Blood Purifier! Arseno-Calcine e G | 3 =2 Bottle of Now is the time to_take that Spring blood tonic, Arseno - Cal- cine Wafers contain cream of tartar and sulphur in L combination with acid_ arsenous and calclum sulphide to cleanse and purify the blood, which the skin clear, soft and These tablets are abso- harmless and pleasant to | To Promote Personal Hygiene— K 9 _, Astringent ey 8 Powder | otk | $1 A harmless anti- septic _healing pow- der of great merit. Thousands of wom- en are already using this powder as a re- freshing, soothing douche. It will invigorate and tone up the tissues and being perfectly harmless may be used as often as desired. Key's Astringent Powder is a necessity for damty, healthful women of to- day who wish to retain their natural charm, Extra Size.. A Low «wdbe ..35¢ sl J.3Te ..67c ..83¢ . .39 o le .. 49¢ . .50c ..59¢ . .98¢c .. 49c . .45¢ . -3ic . .43¢ ..89¢ ..69¢c .ole ..39% . s2le ..29¢ wvele . 19e Just the Thing for Over-Nite or Week-End Trips | Gladstone Bags Priced At Only 98¢ A nice-looking leatherette bag, well made with lock and two catches. Two sizes—18 or 20 inches long—in either brown or black. You will want to have one of these bags to carry with you on short tri ps. Outing Need ForYour H olid‘ay Trip! Seal-Packed Jugs e - These jugs have a gallon capacity. They are sturdy and well constructed of selected material that will stand much hard usage. Will keep either food or liquids hot or cold for many hours. Get_one now for your outing trips during the Summer. This is “an unusually low price for a jug of this quality. Ever-Kool Ex-Ray Sun Hats 98¢ and $1.98 Come in and examine these exceptional hats. They are made of good material, material which is waterproof and may be easily cleaned. Adjustable for head size. ‘The green shade in front affords you eye protection during the glaring Summer days. These hats may be obtained in either tan or white, In two different shapes. Bathing Caps 10c¢ to 98¢ ‘These chic new caps will add immeas- :rz:}l;‘ly to th;] attractiveness of your athing ensemble. Many shapes, styles and colors from which to make your selection. ki p 2 Bathing Shoes . . . $1.19 Pr. These bathing shoes are priced exceptionally low. In different sizes so that you may be sure of obtalning a pair to exactly fit you. Rubber Swimming Rings Priced from 98cto $1.69 Ayrad Water Wings, 49¢ For the children and older people who are just learning to swim, a swimming ring or a pair of water wings is a material aid. Come in and make your selection from our complete stocks. Full Gallon Sizesovaeie At a Remarkably Low Price! No. 2 Folding Model (Takes Pictures 2%4x3V; In.) $5.98 Here is an unusual opportunity to obtain a dandy camera at a very low cost. The camera uses No. 120 film. It takes. clear sharp pic- tures, yet is very com- pact and easy to carry around. Very Special Pretty lining. FREE . . . A 25¢ Tube of Wéoclb;try Cold Cream With the Purchase of 3-25¢ Cakes of Woodbury Facial Soap Be sure to take advantage of this special offer. For a short time only we are giving absolutely free a regular 25c tube of Woodbury’s Cold Cream with the purchase of three regular 25c cakes of the famous Woodbury Facial Soap at the special price of only 47c. National Pale Dry Ginger Ale A A —— Have a glass of this tempting pale dry ginger ale after dinner and get a new conception of the delicious, wholesome refreshment that can e blended-into ginger ale. N. tional Ginger Ale is made of real ginger—perfectly properly aged. or'ready to take home. NS e S — o For Only 47¢c R RURRRRERR hen You Store NASENE ol od Economical! In powder form. The modern antiseptic mouth wash, nasal spray, throat gargle ‘and douche. Also for— Sore throat— tender, bleeding gums — trench mouth —canker sores — ulcers— wounds and scalds. 42¢c 50c FURRRRRRRRREE DR 100 Each Can of 6 420 clothes when stored Na- absolutely destructive their egrs. This gas very base of furs: blended and At our fountains Size through oth-Ga clean, convenient. An Inexpensive Camera That Takes Clear, Sharp Pictures The Hawkeye Camera Away Your Clothes for the Summer Protect Them With Moth-Gas Clothes Savers One of these discs placed with vaporates and Eives off & eas s enetrates to ihe t reaches every crevice of vour clothes: the texture of s destrovs moths. s * TOILET ARTICLES —At Extreme Cut Prices 30c Amolin Powder, 2 oz. $1 Angelus Lemon Cream. $1 Azurea Face Powder. . 35¢ Barbasol, small. . . . . $1 Blondex Shampoo. . . . $1 Boncilla Dusting Powder . 79¢ $1 B. Paul Henna. . . . .. 50c Brownatone. . ... .. 60c Calox Tooth Powder. 25¢ Coty Soap......... 60c D. & R. Cold Cream. . 25¢ Cuticura Soap . .... $1 Danderine Hair Tonic. 35¢ Djer-Kiss Talcum. . . 50¢ Dorin Rouge.. . ... ... 60c Forhan’s Tooth Paste. 35c¢ Frostilla Skin Lotion . . 50c Glazo Nail Polish. ... . ..86¢ ..39¢ ..39¢ ..19¢ ...36¢ .18¢ .61c .24c .33c .34c ..19¢ B 65c Glover’s Mange Remedy . 48¢ 50c Hopper’s Youth Clay. 50c lodent Tooth Paste. . 50c Java Face Powder. . . 50c Kleenex, large. . . . . . 50c LaMay Face Powder. soade “The Safe ‘Antiseptic” Listerine 23 43¢ | 64c Listerine imparts a sense of cleanliness and neutralizes odors com- irg from bad breath. bridgework and artificial dentures. The I is most EZ | One or two E-Z Tablets on re- tiring at night will keep the liver functioning properly. mild but very effective. no nausea. wooden vials strength and freshness. Little Chocolate Tablets - Bering é Ear Oil f 98¢ A Great Comfort and f Relief for ou! — iU i h Jour Defective hearing ‘hich is to “motns _and it_even seeps the mater: 8impl —earache LAXATIVE TABLETS ‘The; No gripe, Put up in airtight to insure 25¢ y are | thetr | —buzzing and itching ears | —stiff and hard feeling ears