Evening Star Newspaper, January 22, 1931, Page 35

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Cuticura Healed Terrible Itching o urning Scalp — “‘My trouble started with a terri- bleitching and burning of the scalp. Later it broke out with a lot of little pimples, and when I rubbed and scra them it caused a great. deal of inflammation. I could not, sleepand the trouble made me very miserable. My hair fell out so that my scalp was bald in some places. “I read an advertisement for Cu- ticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. I purchased more, and after using two boxes of Cuti- cura Ointment, witi® the Cuticura Soap, I was healed.” (Signed) Mrs. H. C. Smith, 2130 Manton St., Phi Make Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment your every-day toilet prepara- tions and have a clear, sweet skin, soft, smooth hands, and a healthy scalp with good hair. A world- famous and dependable treatment for the skin and hair. Cuticura Tal- cum is fragrant and refreshing. Soap 25e. Ointment 25 and ble. Taleum 25¢. Bold BT e, L A Dept N, HEADACHES Relieved! Quick...Safe APUDINE is the new, safe and im- mensely better way of getting quick relicf from headaches. Being liquid, it acts immediately, often in one-third the time required by other forms. Nodope or harmful drugs toupsctsystem. Try it for Nervous Headaches Asingledose of Capudine stops the pain and your poor, “‘jumpy”’ nervesen- Joy & glorious lec-down. ‘Women'sHeadaches Capudise makes quick work of headaches ac- companying monthly periods. Relicf comes promptly without dis- turbance to normal func- tions. “Moming-After” Headaches For**nextmorning”’ head- aches, Capudine is_the quickest bracer ever. Two | teaspoonfuls in water and your head speedily clears up. Make This Test! . . Next time you have a headache, go to your drug store and get a bottle of Cap- udine, or take a dose at the soda foun- tain. Then time the action. Notc how quickly pain disappears and you “pep”” right up. In 10c, 30c, 60c bottles or by the dose at drug store sod.. fountains. HICKS Cdpudine FOR HEABACHES k¢ SHE LOVED TO EAT BUT WAS ALWAYS "PUNISHED FOR IT -~ | “And do you want me back, darling?” Much of the suffering from so-called *indigestion”” or acid-dyspepsia could be avoided if everyone could know what thousands like Miss Lillian Ralston have learned. This New York City business woman, who lives at 1160 Park Avenue, says: “I suffesed from headaches and | heartburn after meals; couldn’t sleep | like I should; never felt right. “For five years I experimented ‘with medicines and treatments, until 1 learned about Pape’s Diapepsin. I have used three packages now; have gained five pounds, and feel fine. I eat meats and anything I please. At the first sign of discomfort I chew a tablet of ]gape's Diapepsin and the trouble is gone in a minute.” If you, too, suffer from sourness, s, belching, nausea, headaches, S‘iuiness. or pain after eating—either ngularly or just at times, get a box of Pape’s Diapepsin from your drug- gist. Then you need never worry ain about what you eat. These tablets are like candy and just as harmless. H would like to Diapepn. Wheskag, W, Vac. nd iapepsin, , W, Va., an ‘you will receive a sample box, FREE. | PAFES DIAPEPSlN Telephone National 5000 For immediate delivery of The Star to ycur home every evening and Sunday morning The Route Agent will collect at the end ot each month, at the rate {11 <ents per doy and 5 cents sunci - BEWARE THE COUGH FROM GOLDEN 8y PETER INSTALLMENT XXIX. &« ELL,” said Dan, “Tll be back presently with the girl's record, and then—" “Out of the darkness into the sunlight, Mac.” “Well, the next one I find in the darkness will stay there,” the chief growled. The absence of the capable Lanny acted as a constant reminder to Dr. Stephen Burt of his sole experiment to date in a case of dual personality. He yearned with an alert scientific yearn- ing to get to work on Penelope Gatlin, | and when Dan McNamara appeared at| the office one day, he saw by the satis- fled smirk on the McNamara counte- nance that all had gone well, “Let me see the documents,” Stephen demanded. McNamara handed them over. “Well, you've done your full duty and | have kepi the police of various cities busy for a few days,” said Stephen. “What do you hear from Lanny?” “She'll be home next week. The skin graft on the girl's nose was a complete success.” “And how does the girl feel about it?” | “She's crazy about her new nose and spends hours examining it in a hand mirror.” Stephen- smiled. “She would!” “Lanny says the girl's been her real self more than half the time since that | first_look.” “She would be. And now I'm going to add to her happiness by sending her this record, which I shail supplement with a report of my own on her case. She'll study it, and in this convincing proof that she is not what Mrs. Merton told her she was, shell probably get well. These cases are simple, Dan. All you have to do is to discover the cause and remove it. Nature does the rest. She will have no more rebellious thoughts because the despot can do her no further harm. Her black moods of depression will.not come again; she is | organically and mentally sound, the product of a sound ancestry on both sides of her family.” “But she knows she was an inmate of San Quentin. She’ll remember she was a thief.” “She will, of course, feel great shame when fully restored to her normal per- | sonality. In her other personality, with | her acquired instincts of morality and convention smothered in her subcon- scious mind, she has, of course, no sense | of remorse or shame. I think that when I have explained this to her she will understand just what her mental con- dition was. And her fear that the world will discover her sorry record will, I feel certain, be alleviated by her knowledge that it would be impossible for anybody who knew her as saddle- nosed Nance Belden to recognize her as good looking Penelope Gatlin.” “Well, all I've got to say, young fella m'lad,” the admiring McNamara de- | clared, “is- that you're one hell of a | smart man!” | Some two weeks later, Lanny walked |in on-Stephen. “Well,” he declared acidly, “you've certainly taken your | time about getting back on the job. “You're looking mighty particular, Lanny,” he observed. “Happy?” “Stevie, dear, I never knew there was such happiness in the world.” “Where's Penelope?” ‘She’s gone back to Paris—on a new g passport. “Well, well, well” Stephen chided her, “tell me things.” “Stevie, she's a lovely as a May morning. e d the operation?” ‘A phenomenal success. Of course,” Lanny added, “she could never stand a sock on the nose.” “And coming back to San Francisco?” Lanny nodded. “How do you stand Stevie?” . “Rather well, I'm sorry to say. She’s tent and much more tact- | she queried. “There you go, fishing for & compli- |ment. Of course I do, but—it isn't | necessary. You could come in once a ot for a great many weeks, Stevie.” He glanced up at her sharply. “How | come, Lanny?” Lan; face was the color of an old rose. “I'm going to have a baby,” she whispered. And then Stephen Burt stood up and took dear old Lanny in his strong young arms and hugged her. At last she was | going to have her little slice of Jife! “Of course,” Lanny said presently, | “you’ll be the baby's godfather He nodded. Of course. ‘Three ' months passed—to Stephen | Burt remarkatle by reason of the fact that Mrs. Rudolph Merton did not call |upon him. At last, to satisfy his cu- | riosity, he telephoned Rudolph Merton to ask him how his wife was. “I don’t know,” Merton replied com- placently. “She’s gone.” “Dead?” “No such luck. She's gone to South- ern California to join a new religious sect. A colony on the fringe of the San Bernardino desert with a prophet in command.” “And what are you doing about it, | Mr. Merton?” Stephen asked. | “I'm subsidizing the prophet so he’ll stay in business 10 months longer. Mrs. Merton has deserted me, thank God, but she has to be away a year before I can secure a divorce on the grounds of desertion. The prophet comes high, but I camr afford to pay for my fancies.” “I gather you're not broken-hearted.” “Such sorrow as I feel now would be delirious delight compared with what I'd feel if she came back to me.” “I congratulate you, Mr. Merton. Good-by and good luck to you. You deserve it.” As Stephen hung up the telephone recelver, chuckling, Miss Ordway brought in his mail. In it he found a regis- tered parcel that had been through the customs house, with duty prepaid on it. It contained the finest and most ex- pensive combination stopwatch and timepiece he had ever seen, and a note that read: Dear Dr. Burt: “T know it would not be au fait for me to ask you for a bill for professional services, for I realize that what you did for me was done as one human being 1o another and quite without thought of financial remuneration. Moreover, I | prefer to remain forever your debtor. | You will never know what you have | done for me. Christ, restoring life to the dead son of the widow of Nain, per- | formed no greater miracle than did you in restoring life and happiness to my dead soul. I would try to thank you if words were not so pitifully inadequaie | COLDS THAT HANG ON Toughs from colds may iead to se- %ious trouble. You can stop them mow with Creomulsion, an- emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and ;.z s the inflamed membranes and in- ibi for coughs from colds and bronchial Arritations, Creomulsion contains, in @ddition to- creosote, other CREO MULSIO " FOR THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG elements which soothe and heal the inflamed membranes and stop the ir- ritation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed “into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfac- tory in the treatment of coughs from colds, bronc and minor forms of bronchial irritations, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu, Money refunded if not re- lieved after taking according to direc~ o | HE EVENING DAWN 8 KYN& (Copyright. 1930.) to express the profundity of my grati~ tude. Will you not please accept the inclosed trifie as a token of that grati- tude and add one more debt to those already owed you by me? “It is not easy to learn to live with my secret, now that I have found it out. I am trying to regard the past as one harks back in memory to @& very serious illness. Some day, when I have achieved sufficient courage I am curious about my other self—that dark self, evolved from darkness. There are blanks in my life. Perhaps you can fill them in. Pprhaps you will not care ¢o, knowing that they are better left blank. I do not think, however, Demand W AN YA Hygienie Towels and Toilet Tissues Prevent Contagious Diseases Spread- ing in Schools, Factories and Homes SuU The advice of your physician is: Keep out of doors, in the open air, breathe deeply; take plenty of exercise in the mellow sunshine, and have a periodic check-up on the health of your body. STAR, WASHINGTON D. that I was ever terribly wicked. If so, I have no recollection of it. “Your grateful, “PENELOPE.” “Old Mother Nature is speaking to Penelope,” he soliloquized, and replaced his father’s old ‘watch with the one Penelope had sent him. “Give Nature a chance—give her an even break— and she’ll ve herself the greatest physician of all.” ‘Come home and let me iron out the few remaining wrinkles so your life be as smooth as you could wish. The watch is wondeful. Thanks and I think you are very wonderful, too. Love as usual. STEPHEN. It occurred to him to tuck that last phrase in for good measure. Love— not merely the love of a man for a woman but the love that is a fine friendship—was, he knew, very neces- sary to Penelope. She must, he knew, be assured that in all the world some- ENTERPRISE SERIAL BUILDING ASSOCIATION 7th St. and La. Ave. N.W. 65th Issue of Stock Now Open for Subscription Money loaned to members on easy monthly payments James E. Connelly James F. Shea President Secretary NS body really cared. . Nobody knew better than he the wreckage that kindness and love denied can make of human lives; never a day passed without leav- ing him evidence of this. He was not getting quite his little slice of life. Money, success, the joy of accomplishment, professional stand- ing and the respect of his colleagues, he had, plus some good friends and true. He decided not to dine aldne. It would be far better to drop in unan- 993 « THE NEW ESSEX TLUISPAY, JANUARY, 22, 1931, i nounced on Lanny and Dan, take pot luck for dinner. (To be continued.) Plan Arctic Sm:vey. LENINGRAD (#).—Prof. Rudolph I. Samoilovich, Soviet Arctic explorer, has planned for 1931 a survey of Russis entire Arctic coast from Archangel Viadivostok. In 1932 he hopes to drive ;]Dowertul ice-breaker to the North ole. ‘875 THE GREATER HUDSON 8 Now you can afford a comfortable car—ene you can ride in all day without tiring. Hudson-Essex brings you Rare Riding Comfort at amazing low prices. Ask your Hudson-Essex dealer for a ride! Special Equipment Extra. All Prices F. O. B. Detrok. If you're fat—remove the cause! KRUSCHEN SALTS contain the 6 mineral salts your body organs, glands and nerves should have to function properly. ‘When your vital organs, fail to pere | form their work correctly—your bowels and kidneys can't throw off that waste | material—before you realize it—you're growing hideously fat! Take half a teaspoonful of KRU- SALTS in a glass of hot water before breakfast every morning—cut out pastry and fatty meats—go light on potatoes, butter, cream and sugar— in 3 weeks get on the scales and note mdmmy pounds of fat have van- Notice also that you have gained in energy—! skin is clearer—your eyes sparkle with glorious health—you feel younger in body—keener in mind. How One Woman Lost 20 Pounds of Fat | Lost Her Double Chin—Lost Her Prominent Hips— Lost Her Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor—Gained in Vivaciousness— Gained a Shapely Figure. KRUSCHEN will give any fat person & joyous surprise. Get_an 85c_bottle of KRUSCHEN SALTS from Peoples Drug Stores or any leading druggist anywhere in Amerfca (lasts 4 weeks). If this first bottle doesn’t convince you this is the easiest, safest and surest way to lose fat—if you don't feel a superb im- provement in health—so glo en- ergetic—vigorously alive—your money gladly returned. In two weeks Mrs. M. C. Taylor of Lewisburg, W. Va., reduced her weight from 175 to 1592 pounds—Her head- ache i$ no more and shortness of breath is gone—“Thanks for such a good remedy,” she writes. Mrs. C. L. of Shepardsville, Ken- tucky, writes: “I have reduced 24 pounds in 31 days with Kruschen and I ate three meals a day.” A New York woman lost 14 pounds with one bottle of Kruschen Salts—Advertisement. HINE MELLOWS Heat Purifies LUCKIES are always kind to your throat 1931, The Amétican Tobaceo Co., Mirs, mellow: Everyone knovn;s that sunshine =that’'s why the “TOASTING” process includes the use of the Ultra Violet Rays. LUCKY STRIKE=the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the finest tobaccos = the Cream of the Crop —THEN =“IT'S TOASTED.” Every- one knows that heat purifies and so #JOASTING”=that extra, secret proc- ess—removes harmful irritants that cause throat irritation and coughing. “It’s toasted” Your Throat Protection = against i DN = against cough

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