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w told him or of heing shot as a spy, and asked that, in case he should mect that fate, the aviator would mail a letter to his father, who is a newspaper man in this city aviator heard Price’s story with good deal of sympathy and prom- ised to try to help him. The follow- ing day, Price said, the aviator brought him a pair of goggles, and other equip- ment of an aviator, took him into a larc scout biplane and flew with him across the channel, landing at Hen- don, a distance of about 130 miles from the hangar. On landing the av- iator gave his passenger a one-pound note and wished him luck in his fur- ther efforts to escape. The uniform gave Price little trou- ble in lingland, where he was never once called upon to give an explana- | tion of himselt. Iie made his way to | London, where acquaintances fur- nished him with civilian clothes and a little money. gar, met an there, how he was airmar in dan £0,.0,0,0,000000/0010/0,0.0,0,0.0,0,0/0.0 0010} ® NEW, BRITAIN PAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1918. How To Make the § WANTS HER NUPTIAL £ 1 SUNRISE AND A~ | KNOT TIED AGAIN { %= ™5 WALl HS OUTLOOK Th Much Better than the Ready- o Made Kind and You Save $2. e 1 Fully Guaranteed | Announcement Prize Winners of RYZON Recipe Contest Christine Terhune Herrick, Marion Harris Neil and Mrs. Julian Heath have made the following awards from the 8,379 recipes submitted by expert cooks for use of RYZON, The Perfect Baking Powder. These awards were made, solely on the merits of the recipes, from typewritten copies identified by numbers, the judges having no knowledge of the persons to whom the awards were being made. Show Girl Seeks to Prove An- i nulment Was Invalid But Versatile Scribe Escapes 0,0,00,000,000000,0000,00000,0000M | is now | used in more homes than any other congh | | remedy. Its promptness, ease and cer- | | tainty in conqm‘rinr{ distressing coughs, | | chest and throat colds, is really remark- | 21— Ex-Senator | able. You can actually feel it take hold.| New York, March y Edgar T. Brackett, of counsel for | A day’s use will usually overcome the! Price of Audubon, N, . M Bleanor Choner (ounsel " | ordinary cough—relieves even whooping » & 0! avison, | cough quickl; Splendid, too, for bron- former show girl, announced lust chitis, spasmodic croup, broneliial asthma, ' night that action had been com- | and winter coughs. menced against Louis Marshall Ream, | fiaist, 21 ounces of after making his escape from the Am- )_pour it in a pint erican liner Philadelphia, on which : Get, (!gfim any dr\ll son of the late Norman B. Ream, the | inex (50 cents wor i capitalist, contesting the validity ol ]h:{:éeqfl;‘lar“!“r':fpb“‘{‘h"‘j“('fl"‘(‘y;‘(‘)‘u‘fl;":”l he wyas o stowaway from Liverpool, the annulment of her marriage to | cost of only 54 cents—a full pint of better, (N2t e had avoided being shot in him, which she asserts was obtained | cougl syrup than vou could buy for §2.60, | 'rance for smuggling cut information | through fraud and collusion. The pa- | Takes but a few minutes to prepare. Full . by crossing the IEnglish Channel with pers in the action were served on | directions with Pinex. Tastes good and | an aviator in a scout biplane. ! young Ream on March 17 in Worces- | ZeYer SI‘?.'IIS-] : | According to the story which Price ter, Mass, where he is employed mn | o o8 Vill be pleasantly surprised how | told_after getting his fect firmly on a steel company, the Senator said. coughs, and heals the inflamed mem-| AMerican soil, he went to France ias According to Mr. Brackett, Miss | branes in a painful cough. 1t also stops| MaY as free-lance war correspondent. | Davidson, who is said to have been | the formation of phlegm in_the throat! Hc could not get any news out of related to General Lee and General | and bronchial tubes, thus ending the per-! I'rance and he returned to England, Gaines was told by T. Howard Em- m{,‘.‘"fi loose C°“£1t’< ek where. posing as a Canadian, he joined bert, her cousin, who acted as her | qobitos i® & "}‘Siui‘fl“i'nfwfq?cfi?:?ffi the Thirteenth Battalion of the Cana attorney at the tlme, that her mar- | tract, rich in guaiacol, which is so heal. 1a" Field Artillery. After his con- .riage to voung Ream was irregular | ing to the membranes. tingent had crossed the channel, he because the Justice of the Peace who To avoid disappointment, be sure and wus attached at first to the ammuni- had performed the ceremony lacked nxs,lé_\ar:xr‘tdrugégc fo‘r“‘%r“g I‘Z;Il'lllces Pinex,” | tion column of the Second Division ; 2| & n’t accept any se. ks ater becs 5 dispato i "‘9!"’]‘;""‘5“ :"‘hf‘”“' e "r“e,g ey A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, ! “";l. ]i"'f' "]:,‘}",’,':_7,? i o ""_‘,“,,““']”‘;’_, to follow the counsel of J. Norris| or money promptly refunded, goes with: _FTic® alfleqsangay socd ey Miller, of the law firm of Fornblower, | this preparation. ~The Pinex Co., Ft, | 0f the war and produced copy by the Miller, Potter & Earle, of this city Wavne. Ind. i for American publications, but the attorney of Norman B. Ream, and his work was cither destroyed by the have the marriage annuled. French censor, he asserted or mutilat- “The suit for the annulment,” said This home-made cough syru ——Thomas . a newspaper man who has been con the staffs of the New York Evening World and the ! Philadelphia Pre: said yesterday, New York, March Eludes Immigration Oftici Ther he went to Liverpool wiere, on | Thursday before last, he smuggled himself aboard and hid in a sand locker on the Philadelphia. After the liner had sailed, Price made the ac- quaintance of some-third class passen- gers who sheltered him on the trip across. On his arrival yesterday Price, who has been a ship news reporter in this city and knew something about the supervision of passengers on the dock, found a way to reach the pier without being questioned. As an American citizen Price was in | no danger of being deported and forced to face court- martial, but he had been on short ions for several weeks and was cextremely anxious to find himself in New York again. Ile | 1st Prize—$100.00 for RYZON BABA, a new and delicious cake, to Mrs. Percy Duvall, Dower House, Rosaryville, Md. 2nd Prize—$50.00, for RYZON RICE POPOVERS, to Mr Frederick G. Wagner, Lakeview Avenue, Leonia, New Jersey. 3rd Prize—$25.00, for RYZON HEALTH BREAD, to Nettie A. Buchanan, 3 Hudson Terrace, Dobbs Ferry, | of the marriage. Ie =ent telegram | en route to his wife, but these ceased ed until it s valuele: About two ex-Senator Brackett, ‘“was tried be- fore a referee in Troy, who reported 4&avoring the decree aftér conducting hearings. Judge Chester signed the final papers. In the papers, it ap- pears that Miss Davidson was rep- resented by Shaw, Bailey & Murphy, attorneys. She denies, however, that she ever saw them. Received $25,000 in Scttlement. @ Aliss Davidson received a sum of money, a little more than $25,000, by s of settlement, her attorney said. us to this she had received $5,- just before the annulment pro- cedings were instituted, he admitted. She surrendered hes marriage certi- ficate at the request Mr. Embert, Ter then atte the former senator SBld. Miller cpresented the Ream family, iad urged her to issue a statement o the papers that T relations with young Ream were at an end, following the ‘‘foolish cere- mony we went through as the re- sult of a dare,” but she refused to do this, Mr. Brackett added. ney, when he reached his father's home, | and from that time until the present, | her gave band, Ream attorney declared. up his position in New York Trust company and the city, he said. Immediately Miss Davidson was approached by J. Norris Miller, who informed he that her husband would never return | tc her exhibiting a letter in young Ream’s handwriting to Miller refused to let her sec husband, she asserts in an affidavit Attached to the motion paper were a copy of the marriage license, the certificate of the Justice of the Peace performing the ceremony, a ! fac-simile of a Thotel register, where Lot the left | after one to their friends Ex-Senator Brackett said that he would argue a motion in the Su preme court in Saratoga County on April 8. M Davidson who has been making her home in New York, ex- of According to the motion papers, young Ream and Miss Davidson were married on Sept. 1, 1911, in Hoboken, by a Justice of the Peace, following a short acquaintance. Her sister, Mrs. &mory, went along as a witness. The wedding party returned to her home, 206 West Fifty-second street. The next day, the papers continue, they made several visits to his friends, fol- lowing which they motored to Lake- wood, N. J., registering at the Bart- lett house. +"All this while,” said Mr. Brackett, “Ream introduced her as his wife, sent announcement cards to their friends, and acknowledged different wedding gif' they received. Indeed, one gift, with a card marked “Con- gratulations,” was received from Dr W. B. Anderson, the physician of the Ream family.” Telegrams Cease Suddenly. @A few days later Louis M. Ream decided that he had better make a trip to Thompson, Conn., where his father was living, and inform Tim S ——————————————— HAIR COMING OUT? p U : avvanromnianiene Dandruff causes a feverish tion of the scalp, the hair roots shrink, aposen and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling hair at once and rid the scalp of every particle of dandruff, get a sent bottle of Danderine at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it into the scalp. After a few applications the hair stops coming out and you gan't find any dandruff. NO ACID STOMACH, SOURNESS, GASES OR INDIGESTION five minutes your sick, sour set stomach will feel fine, in up- “Pape's Diapepsin” neutralizes acids in stomach and starts digestion. Take your sour, out-of-order stom- ach—or maybe you call it indige tion, dyspepsia or gastritis, it doesn't matter—take your stomach trouble right with you to your pharmacist and ask him to open a 50-cent case Pape’'s Diapepsin and let you eat one 22-grain triangule and see if within five minutes there is left any trace of vour former miser} The correct name for your trouble Is food fermentation—acid stomach —food souring; come weak, there is lack of gastric your food is only half digested, ou become affected with loss pressure and fullness after vomiting, nausea, heartburn, griping in bowels, tenderness in the pit of stomach, bad taste in mouth, comstipation, pain in limbs, sleeples: ness, belching of gas, bilousness, sic headache nervousness, dizziness or many other similar symptoms. 1f your appetite is fickle, and noth- ¢ng tempts vou, or you belch gas or If vou feel bloated after eating, your food lies like a lump of on your stomach, you can make up vour mind that at the bottom of all this there is but one cause—fermen- tation of undigested food. Prove to vourself in five minutes that your stomach is as good as any that there is nothing really wron lead Stop this fermentation and begin eat- | ing what you want without fear of comfort or misery. , Almost instant relief is waiting for you. It is merely a matter of how the digestive organs | or | pects to change her residence to Sar- atoga Springs, he said. it believed that his son, but he when that share to was generally would disinherit the will was read it was found Louls Ream received an equal in the estate which amounted more than $5,000,000. FLEET T0 TRANSPORT CANADIAN TROOPS White Star Liuer;Will Be Used i Exclusively in This Service New York, March 21 liners Baltic and Cedric, port here, and the which will. arrive next carry Canadian troops from on their next trip to England. It was reported yesterday that these ! three ships, carrying 2,500 Canadians | apiece, would art from Hallfax to- gether, under a convoy of torpedo boat destroyers. The Tapland of the White Star line after touching Halifax, is on her way to Liverpool, where she was due yesterday. The White Star line announced late in February that no passengers would be carried to England on any of its | ships in March, and possibly not in | April. Tt was explained that the de- mand for speedy shipment of muni- | tions was so great that it was ne- | cessary to avoid the delay incident to passenger travel. The Lapland, how- ever, instead of trying to make its best time on the trip across, stopped | at Halifax two days ! Can Transport 10,000 Soldiecrs. These our ships are capable of landing in England about 10,000 sol- diers and about 60,000 tons of mu- —The White | which Adriatic, | week, will | Halifa ar are in to a statement Sam Hughes on made by General S Feb. 17 of this yea there were then 125,000 Canadians at the front and 125,000 Canadian fully trained who would be taken t the front as fast as ships could bc found or them. The Ninety-seventh Canadian Regi- ment, which is composed almost er tirely of Americans, will be carric across on the Baltic some time this !\\cek, according to a report from re- liable sources. Officials of the White Star line subject. troops in The movement of the past has been cret by the British a strict censorship news in Canada. Other ships besides the White Star fieet are believed to be engaged in carrying Canadian troops across Atlantic. It w ] ted in Parliament in London several weeks ago that the Cunarder Mauretania had beon withdrawn from the service in which she was engaged almost since the be- | ginning of the war, and this was in- | terpreted to mean that the liner | would be restored to service in car- rying passengers and munitions be- | tween this port and England. Off- | cials of the line, however, have re- | ceived no word concerning the Maur- etania All | out authorities, a the White Star liners will go loaded to capacity with muni- | tions. In addition to the. regiment of American, the Baltic will carry a nitions every three weeks. According | Miss Davidson has not seen her hus- | “‘!“(‘1\ to the Chicago | whi that cffect, | found on the soldier by Brit her | tary authorities. | so was Price. | ana they resistered as man and wife, and | Was an old brick building in Westouire the announcement cards sent | reduced | until only the walls remained. | ings serving as footholds. At the time Norman B. Ream, died | pyycn | firing line, | making | the | cinity. | cos | he found @ large hangar which I u | which patrol the channel. | one afterncon he walked to the han- have refused to discuss the | Canadian | i kept se- is kept on such | the | | cross, irritable, feverish. stomach sour, months ago he was stunned by an ex- ploding sheli and sent suffering from Hospital Unit, is in charge of Dr. John B, Mur- phy of Chicago. iTere Price met a soldier on leave and induced him to attempt to smuz- 2le to the United States his menioran- 1 book, which was full of notes on war and the economic situation in ance. The memorandum book was sh mili- He was arrested and | °r: Price was confined prison in Belgium to court-martial, which was certain, in his opinion, to result in conviction sentence of death. The prison in a military await trial by by German bombardment One | night, Price said, he climbed over one wall, the scars from many cannonad- Only one sentry was on duty, and Pricc man- aged to elude him. Haystack a Friend in Need. This, however, did not nearer to freedom, bring him because it | | | | | | | | was hopeless for his in his uniform to | | attempt to pass heink questioned staved short to the rear without Consequently Price distance behind the hiding in the daytime and progress cautiously at night toward the coast He spent three days, he d, hiding in a haystac near Ploegstredt, which was highly dangerous because a large number of soldiers were concentrated there. lle lived on turnips which he could pull neir the hayvstack and on scraps of food which he found by prowling in rear of a few hou in the vi- | After getting away from Ploegstredt | he began again to wander toward the | Within a few miles of the sea | biplanes Starvation had finally made him so desperate that 1 chiefly by large scout YOUR SICK CHILD IS CONSTIPATED ! LOOK AT TONGUE Hurry, Mother! Remove poisons from little stomach, liver, bowels. Give “California Syrup if cross, bilious feverish. No matter what ails your gentle, thorough laxative should be the first treatment given. our little one 1is out-of-sorts, half-sick, isn’t resting, eatin and acting naturally—Ilook, Mother! see if tongue is coated- This is a sure sign that the little stomach, liver and bowels are clogged with waste. When of or Figs” child, a al- breath bad or has stomach-ache, diar- | rhoea, sore throat, full of cold, give a | teaspoonful of “California Syrup of | Figs,” and in a few hours all the con- stipated poison, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of the little bowels without griping. and you have a well, playful child again Mothers can rest easy after giving this harmless “fruit laxative,” because it never fails to cleanse the little one's liver and bowels and sweeten the sto- mach and they dearly love its pleas- ant taste. Full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown- ups printed on each bottle. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup of Fig: then large number of armored motor soon you take 2 little Diapepsin, trucks. see that it made by the “California Fig Byrup Company." | ‘1 | | | | | wontained { of the morning room. | which ume on shore thin as a lath and in rags. He weighed 112 pounds, wormial weight being 170. All during his wanderings Price carried an Am- | erican’passport, but it was uscle: dangerous for him, his name and tion would show thut he its an escaped prisoner. SNAPSHOTS GHOST, bee: an inv was wanted even WESTON VICAR SAYS Spook With Beard Didn’t Seem to Mind Mundane Experience London, March 21.—The claim to have photographed a ghost is made by the Rev. Charles Tweedale, Vicar of Weston, Yorkshire in an affidavit made before the commissioner of oaths, which is supported by Mrs. Tweedale and thei Mr. Tweedale, who a few years ) attracted attention by reports of phychial phenomena Weston vicarage, told the cor pond- ent of the Yorkshire Post that on December 20 1 his wife, their son, and himself were at luncheon about 1:30 o'clock in the afternoon when suddenly his wifc that the apparitio he 1 ¥ cried out she full Wt left hand Mrs, Tweedale directed attention the figure, but neither the vicar nor his son could distinguish it. Crying out hastily to his wife to keep it there, although on reflection he admits he does not know how Mrs. Tweedale could compel the figure to remain, he rushed off into an adjoining room and picked up his camera Fortunately this was loaded with quarter-plate slides, and without a moment's delay he returned to the morning room where they were at luncheon. The vicar then placed the camera on a window-sill and focused it up the room, the distance hetween the camera and the position where his wife still said she saw the figure being about three and a half yards. The light not being very favorable for an interior picture he gave an exposure of fwenty- five seconds. Mrs. Tweedale de- scribed the figure as that of a little man, and said the top of his head ap- peared to be about on a level with their son’s shoulder. Mrs. Tweedale and the hoy continued sitting at the table during the time the plate was being exposed. The re- nad the man th a nding of hair beard her side of table to of their to | sulting negative appears to have cor- robarted Mrs. Tweedal's vision. Mr, Tweedale explained that he personally developed the plate shortly afterward and it had not left his possession in the meantime. How a Ghost Looks. The negative, which was shown to the reporter by the vicar is a quarter- plate size and reproduces the corner In the for ground is the dining table, the waite cloth of which reflects the light into the corner. Sitting at the table is Mr. Tweedale's son and opposite him, tow- ard the edge of the plate, there is a shadowy but distinct impression of the head and shoulders of a little old man, with abundant hair and a flowing beard. The figure, which appears to be in a semi-incumbent position, almost hides that part of the furniture and a piano, lies behind it, and this, in Mr, Tweedale’s opinion, conclusively proves that the apparition had defin- ite objectivity, although invisible to the normal vision of himself and his Ringworm— Scalp Sores | If you want speedy help try the D. D.D. Prescription. ~So easy to apply, not greasy. or messy. It washes into the scalp and the relief is instant. Or if you are bothered with excessive dandruff—the kind that causes almost un- bearable itching in your scalp—ask your druggist to tell you something about what. this prescription, made in the D. D. D, Laboratories in Chicago, has accomplished in your own neighborhood. Three sizes, 25c¢c, 50c and $1.00, and your money back if the very first bottle does not relieve your case. Try a bottle today and you will not regret it. D. D. D For 15 Years o the Standard — Skin Remedy the | following twent offer: Ryzon Apriba Loaf, Mrs. C. W. Shaw, M Ryzon Lemon Pot Pie, Mrs. K. E. Johnson, Ryzon Pigeon Pie, Mrs. William Noble, Ryzon Canton Biscuits, Ryzon Pie Crust and Cooki Ryzon Health Bread, No. 2. Mrs. N. S. Baker, M Ryzon Layer Cocoa Cake, Miss Jennie Wallach Ryzon Nut Bread, Mrs. William H. Bri Ryzon Ham Muffins, Mrs. Jeannette You City. Ryzon Nut Tart, Mrs Ryzon White Fruit Cake, Mrs. Harry Burgess, published or available Book when received. that RYZON is indee Mary R. Doggett, Brooklyn, N. Y. Mrs. Rachel F. Fink, Aida B. Canniff, New York City. in RYZON, and feel sure they will all be New York. Out of the thousands of excellent and carefully prepared recipes, the three have also been selected to be purchased for the RYZON - Baking Book at $5.00 each, in accordance with our published Ryzon Toad in the Hole, ountainville, N. Y Ryzon Hominy New York City. Ryzon Danis New Dorp, S. 1. Mrs. B. M. es in one, White Plains, N. Y. Mrs. Maude Jervis, Brooklyn, N. Y. Fritters, Mrs. J. J. O'Connell, Washington, D. C. Sand Cake, Mrs. Paula Lauggaard, New York City. Ryzon Pineapple Fritters, Smytli, Orange, N. Ryzon Maryland Black Cake, Mrs. Julius Snowden, Laurel, Md Ryzon Meldone Pie Dinner, Mis. A. S. Westcott, Edgewater, N. J. eriden, Conn Ryzon Sardine Biscuits, Mrs. Florence Lounds, Fort Lee, N. J. , New York City. Mrs. G. N. ggs, New York City. Mrs. C ng Norton, New York Ryzon Currant Shortcake, Hartley, Plainfield, Ryzon Orange Tea Cakes, . C. Bigelow, Tarpon Springs, Fla. Ryzon Meat Fold-overs, Mrs. L. Boisse, Douglaston, L. 1. Ryzon Polish Guest Cake a la Reszke, Hulda Thompson, New York City. Ryzon Coffee Crumb Cake, Nashville, Tenn for use in any other cookbook. department of baking, and The popularity of RYZON is d “The Perfect Baking Powder.” NEW YORK Mrs. M. Monnikendam, New York City, Every one of the 8,379 ladies who submitted recipes will receive, free by mail, a RYZON Baking Book, which will be a complete manual of baking, up-to-date in every particular and containing original and valuable récipes not previously This book will contain a complete account of the contest, involving the examination of 8,379 recipes which were tested by domestic science experts and practical cooks, requiring over two months’ time, with final awards as above stated. As the entire resources of the world are being drawn upon for the best possible recipes in every RYZON Baking Book .inv the preparation of the : rolves many drawings and illustrations to make it the most attractive and comprehensive work of its kind, it will be about sixty days before it is ready for mailing. Meanwhile, we thank our many thousands of friends for the interest manifested pleased with the new RYZON Baking growing in homes where pride is_ taken in having good things to eat and with the leading hotels, clubs and institutions of New York City, where the expert bakers and pastry cooks agree GENERALTCHEMICALCO. FOOD DEPARTMENT son. In response to the that the camera may have trick upon him the vicar carefully examined conditions as they were at the time. The camera is in perfect order and the plate was taken from a new box of quarter-plates and haa not been previously exposed. * person of similar appearance ever had been photographed by him and none of the family recognized the figure dis- closed on the negative said, clairvo aw the figure which she described, and upon sesitive plate being exposed a figure was disclosed and was recognized by Mrs. Tweedale as being like the man she saw. suggestion played o d he had His wife, he WOULD LENGTH LIETS. Holland Society Has This As Its Prin- cipal Object. Tha was announces the Neo- or- The Hague, March Malthusian League which ganized in Holland in 1881, that its membership reached 5,000 amrk, and in its annuai claims for its advoca »arental prudence” a large shaic the in- creased longevity figure Holland The National Insuran hles that the average life to wh baby may look forward bhirth for a boy, 51 vears. and for a girl 53.40 years. Tt is pointed out that these figures are exceeded only Ly those of the Scandinaviin countries, which were familiar with Malthusian- ism long before Holland, and by those of the white population of Australia. in in et show Dutch The Neo-Malthusian Leugus has been recognized in Hollard by roy; decree as a Society of Public Utility, and notwithstanding oc sional ob- the | | taxed clerical ministries, the Le that intelligent interest in trol” has grown tly among the laboring cl among the great army of | humble functionaries, i fixed incomes where the cost |ing is mounting up by lea bounds, make too frequen: visits ot the stork events to be drcaded rather than welcomed. ue clain ace con- secially a levks and small of liv BT N nose SUBSTITUTE Netherland The problem of findine FOUND. March 2 1hstitate STEEL Amsterdam for ferro-manganese for the tion of steel solved, produc- has official statement here from Terlin. This substitute, the naturc of which is not divulged can he produced in large quantities from inte raw ma- terials, it is said. T for t production of the new ce already working and bei constructed. It is asseried that this new process will make Germany inde- pendent of imports in this line. in Germany been according to a sem received fr es re more are NOVEL METHODS TRIED . Smuggling of Letters at War Uronticr Taxes Ingenious Minds, Netherlands, March 21, smuggling of German German The 1 The Belgian Hague, letiers over the and fronticrs, in or- der to evade the censor, has the genius of many en ing persons but it is doubtful wheth- er a more striking ruse has been adopted than the one just reported from the frontier. pris- structive measures taken by previous A nurse who was entering Holland broken' plaster of P Arrived has sea t | from Germany, nhad that was encased in in the regulation manner. the fronticr, where everyosne submit the most rigor the. military guard demanded cven the plaster of paris ercasing arm should ne ripped op to o ‘hroken' When the cast was broken, « letters lay exposed Lo | The whole now arm was perfectly healthy, a German its possessor is and prison FEET AREN'T AGHING OR TIRED NOW-- burn calloused feet and ng, corns. Feople who their feet all tender, sweat They use “Tiz, are forced to stand day know what sol burning feet me and “Tiz” cures ti feet right up. 1t keeps feet in P fect condition. " is the only rei edy in the world that draws out the poisonous exudations which pi up the feet and cause tender, so tired, aching feet. It instantly stoj the pain in cor callouses a bunions. Tt's simply glorious. Al now comfortable your feet feel afty using “Tiz You'll never limp draw up your face in pain. Yo! shoes won't tighten and hurt Yo feet. -cent box druggist. foot of “Tiz” nol Just think! comfort for on Get a from any whole ear s 25 cent