New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 12, 1921, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1921. turned from the po il dl i lendon % been standing here thinking that I “Ye see. Mis e,”” he began, g been thinkin’ we'd better send a man BEGINNING TODAY want 2 Rlght ot Abeniwaier | {Whet| jastingi his)gianses ain’t out there to look things over. Kind % ”» do you say to our taking a coast |a driver as Cap'n Glendon , o' comb around on the quiet in Ma- rba d San Diego and Corona- | iness lately. Looks like -rlee’s | branch in Singapor in. Then the BY FREDERICK F. MOORE "‘“‘ 5 1_”"‘"“, st ‘f‘..v.m‘ s Sy let 2o of things—he's the|hemp busimcss looks good in the Gulf A real sea story—full of thrills and action—wtih a charming “Oh Jink ald Mre. Wade as she | M ag & |of Davao —that's Mindanao. A good apice of romance which in rather surprising i it e am oy puniarera e 1¢——company isn't making | man to pole around and see—" : Harriet Wade discovered that it was a love story when it was expect me to turn out another thriller | %5, Much money as it did?" “When does the next steamer sail?” all over, and also that there were thirteen persons concerned in the e e 1t Well. that don’t matter so much | “This is Wednesday. Let's see— plot which led to the amazing climax aboard the steamer Coral B | :ot to =et back to work.” J AL EAR ue Oxed W are n il | Mongolis; ssilsfor Manila (tomor, Queen in the China Sea heierst said Fleamor. “Dlease, | Mt on ready money in big lumps. [row by way of Honolulu and Hong- [ orhritlers’™ sold Eleanor, -Please.| We've sort of reinvested, and we'll | kons. Now Next Week— Unless otherwise Doted, these noices are written by the press pa—— LT cal have to do more—new ingines all Order a suite in the Mongolia. bureaus of the theater or attractions with which they dme. member you represent Art in - the | ound. Now don't you go and be| “What's that?” asked Tweedles, (Copyright, 1920, by 1. Appleton & Co.) sdon family. Bealdes yow're work= |l o iaa Vour rather hase that conn. | startiod (Copyright, 1916, by The Frank A. Munsey Co.) Ing too hard and getting little [ (ry first hand. I can’t seem to keep I'm going to Manila—with Mrs. HOYT'5; REVUE OPENS timers when it comes to deeds of valor wrinkles around your eyes. ¢m on the jump out there like they [ Wade—and look things over.” AT THE LYCEUM |and therein comes the humor. Thank heaven” said Mrs. Wade,|did when t knew Cap'n Glendon My dear! You speak of going to| After many weeks of absence the CHAF R 1 | Eleanor for the morning. She had | “I'm past t ge to worry about ght take a trip out and take things nila as I would suggest catching|Hoyt's Revue opens at the Lyceum | By humor and satire, this comedy proves that men and women of today own bungalow in Sausalito, across | wrinkle more or less. In my profes- |apart to see what ailed 'em.” the Berkeley ferry! today with a new musical comedy |2C Just as good as those of yore. After | Y | ceeing this picture no one will be able ¢ to ride down Farmington avenue in Harttord, past the Clemens home, without having a deeper, more pro found respect for that great humorist. Beginning next Monday vaudeville will again be in order at Fox's. San Francisco Bay was like a | he great pool of liquid turquoise when |the bay and had run over to Cross-|sion I can get as old as I like, and ‘Then this Satterlee seems to be| “Jericho aid Tweedles. You [ farce act and many new faces. Th Eleanor Glendon cam> out on the | talk like Cap'n Dan himself, Miss Nel- [ old favorites, Lew Brems and Felis breakfast porch of Crosstr o s = lie! By Jericho! But you do, now!” | Martin, will keep everybody roaring looked down upen the City of the “ee in laughter and Miss Buckley and Rcs Golden Gate & Emmett will entertain with new songs. Eleanor looked younger than her S CHAPTER IIL Frank O'Neil, who is a new mem- twenty-four years. She was slender, Satterlee wasn’t in the office of|ber in the company will have some sre was @ sturdiness about her the Crown line when Cap’n Nickel- | surprises in store. Tne picture for the e eI = in her carrigge than in her / sen arrived, s the captain decided |first half is The Devil.. George ar. | WESHEY “FRECKLES” BARRY il outlines to wait. iss, who is starred in “The Devil”" will IN PHOTOPLAY AT PALACE. moved to the end of the porch The office was on the top floor of | keep you in suspense till the finish. Marshall Neilan's new and best and drew aside sliding glgss panels . 3 a two-storied building on the Binon- _— production, “Bob Hampton of Placer,” ta admit the sea breeze, straight fram p s do side of the city. The ground floor | s CONNECTICUT YANKE opencd a four day engagement at the tropic Isles, which she had known S5 had an American restaurant and bgr AT FOX'S ALL THIS WE Talnrs lnst ivemlox OF ¢ coocies in her childhood, when she had sailed which catered to the elite of the| < house. The fhalod W S : k Twain, peer e rica . cast includes Wesley with her father, Captain Danlel Glen- : % water front. ar DOSLWC L marivan ciata o g : “Freckles’” Barry, James Kirkwood, don, in barks and square-riggers. ! = o0 Nickeissn} wasBknownfast « W nea | FREIOES ST ORE0R mnti sed Fn o [l S e et s At R e el o beal Her mother had been buried in those : s : g > . : dandy.” A tall and powerfully built 3 = = ¢ is loved | Indians and soldiers to portray Cus- 3 « > . d int of being | {foM here. Today his memory is loved L 3 v blue waters which pounded at the X : : man,hefmsde quite s ipoin e by all and one of his greatest master- | ters L Stand. Chief Two-Guns- headlands of the shining gate ‘ Rye] a gentleman and always wore white. pieces, “A Connecticut Yankee in King | White Calf, whose face is on the buf- Those were the days befor her 4 i His trim jacket of duck made him |, .\ o court,” opened for a week’s | falo nickel, was in charge of the father bullt up the fleet of steam- & L. . look more slender t_hap he was. Other run at Fox's theater. Replete with | Blackfcet Indians during the taking ers which now flew the house flag of ’ ? & b masters resented his immaculate ap-| .1 ,ine comedy filled with side split- [ of the production. Fifteen hundred the Glendon Crown line—Eleanor's B A \ 4 WA T ) pearance, his pride in his clothes and | i,z episodes, this picture surpasses all | men and horses of the Tenth Cavalry, own Far East vagition Co.'s ships. L y an education acquired at sea by end- others of its kind. Mark Twain’s inten- | stationed at Fort Huachuca, Arizona, But old Capt. Dan endon had been s A 9 % , » _ : less sea reading. tion was to poke fun at the old knights | were also ysed in the action of the dead two years, and Eleanor was mis- I 5 g - @ , There were footsteps on the land-| ,r ;0 Round Table, he being of the | picture an®*for the first time in the tress of the fleet, of the great house, : S g and a chort, stout, florid-faced |pejief that people paid to much atten- | history of the motion picture a large Crosstrees, atop the hill in S8an Fran- ) g ; ; B man entered. ton to eulogizing: those old timers at | dirigible blimp was used for the cam- efsco, and of the Glendon fortune T 5 Al . 4 “Where's Ben Satterlee?” he de-|(ne expense of the present generation.|eraman to take the fight scenes. In “Sallor girl!" she had been to her . X ¢ v : % 3 manded. This story was the result. The sight| “Bob Hampton of Placer,”” Marshall father, from the day when he had S Not in,” said Nickelsen, coolly. He | ot seeing armored knights sallying | Neilan has presented the most won- held her chubby hands on the thump- 3! - ! 4 caught the odor of gin. forth to battle on 1921 motorcycles, | derful picture of nis entire career. ing helm of the bark Eleanor ¢ en- | S 4 § The stranger ,urinnt;d- 2 n the aspect of a dignified baron start- B — den while rounding Diamond He 2 .. " 'Well, you old walrus!” e eX-ling forth for a tournament in a little rAY & And he brought home to her in his | claimed. “Don’t you know me? If|tin lissiethese are but side lights of| BECAPWAY STARS AT PALACE. ships the wealth of the te ing orient. | - 3 N . it ain’'t Dandy Nick! S'prise o' my |this mirth provoking spectacle. Martin The porch on which she stood h n‘\" s M r N life! Shake, ye old oakum face! Don't | Cavand sh, chief character, is of old been built by Capt. Dan in the style 3 & o - know me, do yve?" New gland stock. Having reveled of a ship's bridge. Here FEleanor. 3 2 e o~ S ;: Yes,” said Nickelsen easily. [in reading of old King Arthur's court, last of the Glondons, was left alone, | > 2 “You're Galen.” he has an opportunity to see for him- the flower of her father's and moth ? : g : “’S right! Cap'n Galen! Got the|self when he is suddenly transplanted er's lives of struggle and planning ~ s : Cristobal now—goin’ down t' Thurs- | there. The plumbing of the castle does siainet odds. 2 - - . day island 'morrer. 1 look out for|not appeal to him, he finds it hard “Ship ahoy!” came & woman's 7 Number One once awhile. I'm goin’ |not to have a telephone at his elbosw cheery call from an lwner room of to hit for Frisco in a few months— |and the loss of his automobile and a the house. “You know, my de CLOSE BY THERE WAS SOME SORT OF A SCUFFLE, AND ELEANOR SAW STRONG STAGGER|With a stake—big stake. That's what | dearth of trains makes his lot even S that clock sounds as shippy as & | pyp TO CAPT. > LSON A JER 2 3 1T S SAVY WATE LE. I come up to see Ben 'bout.” harder. But withal, the young Yankee |[§ whhnla fleet ot nav g \' O CARTAN RPN AND IR T OV TR TTRAD WITH B HRAY W TR DO T U]l Pouna sola ssmewnere=—or pearls %] a5l da Niimselt bk matoh {for ] the ot widow just in the comfortable |trees the night before for a little |the general public won't know the|your chief trouble?” “Who told you that?” Galen looked . Lillian and Anna Roth, Broadway's youngest stars are on the Keith vaude- ville bill for the first three-days of the week. These clever misses were fea- tured last season in the famous Cape Cod play, “Shavings.” They are now in vaudeville and offer “The Night of the Party,” a kiddie skit that harks back to childhood days. and successful n novelist, came | visit diffeven And I can't go, lor girl. That's it. All the others are doin’ | jjarmed. Galen joyously, turning to Satterlee. out on the porch, clad In a gayly | “Shippy!" laughed Eleanor. “That's | I've bought four more lots to have |their share, but he can't seem to| “I guessed i “Nick an’ me’s been havin' a game s - flowered kimono borrowed from |Just how I feel this morning!” She [¢ bigger garden. The real cstate|make the Queen earn like she did,| “That's funny. It's a segrit. I|['bout old times. Tonight—Tues.—Wed. | agent won’t wait but a year for his|and we're 30 close-hauled as your |hymped on somethin’ in Singapore a| Satterlee scowled. “Can’t see ye, MARSHALL NEILAN 2% TR OA L money."” father'd we feel it. Satterle a|while back that's worth a od deal|Galen. I'm busy.” A “How much?” asked Eleanor in a|good man, I guess, but there's a leak | {5 the right man—an’ I'm him, only| He went to the door, but turned Prrrteris ual tone. somewhere—money or business.” 1 need some help. Y’ know, Ben put |as if he would come back. B A ND Four thousand, with—" Harriet| ‘‘Stealing?" through some neat deals in his day| “Vamose!” yelled Satterlee furi- His Greatest Photoplay AA { |paused and pursed her lips as she| “Maybe not right out, like that.| _on I know a lot o' things 'bout ly. e made a mental calculation. But I hear from the China boats that | pen Satter ore he got to be an| “Oh, all right. But Nick—you |§ BOB HAMPTON . ! There!” cried Eleanor. “you've|Cap'n Nickelsen and Satterlee are|agent an' so fat an’ pompou: think over what I said. Gold in my Adele Garrison’s New Phase of been father and mother to me since |pritty thick together. Nickelsen's| ']‘;p':“.nig(;n{\"‘husy I?n*sr\‘dn) " said | pockets, ve old oakum face!’ OF PLACER" ather died. and you'd never let me |master o' the Queen—they may be in | Nickelsen. “He's been chasin’ me all day!" | * f g W'l’ do anything for you. I'm going to|to pick up a little kum-shaw. fold on! I do’ know but what |snorted Satterlee when Galen had —With— eve atlons o a l e pay for those lots tod: and you'll Kum-shaw?” She had heard her ' y,u'q come in on somethin’ good with [gone. *Sure as he gits pickled he’s come to Santa Barbara!" . father use the word, and groped in|pe» He looked round the office |got some scheme to make a million MARJORIE DAW “You give me $4,000! Nonsenge!" her memory for its meaning and lowered his voice. “I know where |over night. Wait till I look this mail “I shall, all the same—there’s my /hat the Chinese call ft—graft— can pick up a bucket of pearls |over. JAMES KIREWOOD private phonc! Excuse me, dear!” |under-handed money. Sometimes a|j,st like findin’ ‘em in the road.” ““Ought to keep him out of here,” X |turnea her decvotion iwith interest The: i was coming from the li-|master of a ship to runnin’ things [~ “you'd better go somewhére and [said Nickelsen. He's talking wild I sat still for a long fter my rry Ticer, under Dicky's irec- |y | ry to call her, and she hurried in.|on his own hook—takin' freights at|have a sleep—and keep your mouth |about you.” WESLEY “‘Freckles’’ mother-in-law had flounced out of |tion, had contrived two immense B low rates for a private commission. | gp ¢ “What's he sayin'?” asked the agent the room, pondering the words ghe|windowboxes under the windows of Troxlisd B ave 2 up too early?”|They can, if the agent stands in. I'm| «“Now look—listen to me! I know |in alarm, had flung at me In her anger, words|the transformed corncrib, boxes with d a voloe s'prised if it's so about Nickelsen. He's | comethin’ worth a power of money. Never mind, but keep him out. Up which 1 discounted. as I always do|hinged lids. which were crammed 10| “\why, Mr. Tweedles! Where are|been with us fourteen years, mate|know who" e er Y t thi bout 1s with that y. A eedles . s ' s fo vears, Know who's my owner t Yuen.|to something about pearls wi a £ those sho utters In irritatior but |[the brim with his sketches, and| o, SRR e sihe e I el e | L1oh Binpesorel ChInL WiNasS: e S wEs A thrilling tale of the days of which my ¢ dence told me held|which, when the lias were down| <y at the office. and—" “I suppose something has to be|phe's down on the pearlin' grounds |the Cristobal—Fat Yuen. He's got a General Custer. more than n kernel of truth made wonderfully comfortable seats,| . ' S0 early! You naughty general |done. How would father go about|,,w buyin' up pearls!” line on how he gets home from the . . I had been “on my high horse.” |cushioned and curtained as they were. | vy oin 78 Voulknow sl imethoas Telli i | e b e el ne oin et it line oot nsas Faall aatmakic Kelth Vaudevflle because of my Jealousy of Edith Fair-|'erched upon one of th Junior “Yes, ma'am. I came down for|what he’d do—and we'il do it." “Nick, i could sell what I've told |out.” fax, in my attitude toward Dicky,|[would prattle to Grace by the hour,|iome papers I want to talk ove “He'd haul Satterice and Nickelsen |y, for 'a bumeh of money. Nobody|. “How can I keep him \yway from Featuring notably in my refusal to try the new and the girl seemed never to tire of “Certainly’ I'm coming down town |over the coals. I a cable signed |1 ,ows how Fat Yuen gits back to|here when he's ginned up? Now what Broadway’s Youngest Stars moetor ear, \;]IH; the w'fl”h revu " """" e et : o e th Mrs. Wade—in the car. Your | Tweedles’ ain’t got .he h"“‘l ‘Ol it | gingapore with his pearls, and—I|the devil's this? A cable! Signed LILLIAN & ANNA ROTH of t : which generally comes to was a could do somelimes 10|ygjce sounds tired. What about that [that a good scarin’ up signed ‘Glen-| . in't supposed to know. If you |Glendon!” r p » re any ungraciousness toward let him stay there, and I knew that|ygcation you promised to take? Here |don’ would have. They don’t mind—" | tia'nt half hitched to vere old tub| “You're crazy with the heat,” said Late stars of ‘“Shavings’. my husband, 1 wished that 1 couldiboth Mother Graham and Katie dis-{yoy are in the office at 8! I'm sure| “Very well,” said Miss Glendon,|,f 5 Coral Queen, we might—" Nickelsen, looking up from his paper. —Other Fine Acts— live over the last few minutes. 1 |approved jealously of the associa-|you're workin yourself ill. You |reaching for a sheet of paper and a alen, you'll end up in Billibid |“How can we get a cable signed |} resolved that the next time Dicky tion. and revented it as much us they | need a scolding. Right after 10, then |pencil. “Just how would prison at the end of a hemp necktie. | Glendon?” asked me to drive T would g could, but 1 remembered the divine yes—goodby! scare them up? Dictate a e?” | Are you crazy. to run around full of | The agent held the cable before his But there was no next time. Dicky [assertion concerning a little child sreie Well,” said Tweedles, smiling and | i1 ¢alking piracy? You keep away |startled eyes. Nickelsen scanned the @id not apear to hold any rancor to-|influence, and my conscience would CHAPTER I ging at his Sip belia et Taa et lines quickly ward me when he came home, he|not permit me to remove frgm Grace| My Tweedles was worried. De- |somethin’ like t “Ye're a friend o' mine, ain't ye,| “Glendon? Who the devil can that was casually courteous, with lit-| Draper what seemed to me her only |gnite the promises of Satterlee, the ‘Satterlee, Manila. No excuse k7" pleaded Galen. *“An’ Ben's all |be? Why, it must be the Glendon tle air of detachment with which chance of redemption agent at Manila, the report sheets|poor reports last few months. Cut| jopt J know things 'hout Ben he |girl!” 18 often Invested when he's enkased| Of Dicky I am sure she saw noth-|for months had been falling off |expenses. You and Nickelsen get |5 o, o (oW CURES 2O (00 Seanliti™ fimed Satioried: upon some important plece of work.|ing excet when he was working With|rspidly, and the one received the |sixty days to show increased earnings|y .. he run guns to the Filipinos and And he never mentioned driving me|her upon the Pennington illustra- [ night before showed the Coral Queen |or get out. Glendon. then tipped off the government secret (Const & Tomoreow) Now Playmg fn the big new car again. Nor did tions. He only had needed Miss|io bhe barely paying her coal and “Of course, with this new fangled i N 2 : 4 - serv the reward. An’ you was y he agaln speak of driving to Mother | Foster for thre mornings. This|crew bills. A clerk looked in. way of sendin’ cables in code, it|;. (i R Graham or to Grace Draper But | was something for which I was ex- orhat st i1 i Tnsdles: diked don’t look so bad at first sight. The “Oh, dry up!” fumed Nickelsen. In the year ended June 30, 1920, regularly each day, as soon as he had ) tremely thankful, as Dr. Petti's| Mjg Glendon and another lady— |cap'n didn't believe in code for such| g iicrlee stood in the door blowing. | Great Britain built 594 ships, United finlshed work in the studio, he went|blackly disapprovin and resentful| 5t got out of her auto.” messages—said he liked to hand a|yyo wag a ponder man. in a loose | States 430 and Japan 105. away in the new car, which Jim [face, when he brought her and called [ “Jericho!” cried Tweedles. He|man a jolt. But maybe we better — kept polished like a mirror, and I[for her, he Invariably did, made|iumped up and shed his Jjacket, |code it.”” Atraw bat) Tiiatiat Dulbousitace was 2 miserably surmised his destination m :‘\]lxrm-l\ nervous and uncom-|(hreaded his celluloid cuffs over his No, we won't code it.” said Elean- | o rer 030 e Tl O e, AL Chines weddmgi‘ ’tthi ":(\gfiar A New Musical Farce That I was not mistaken in my |fortable Bands! o At they I weroll bincelota s she finished writing. e 3 chief” is invited to solicit funds for | 5 a s ting. cording to the sf ! . e e | i e e R e e L e el T R GEORGE ARLISS keo's air of Indignant commiseration o the days went on. peacoful [ hairs at the office table. one of father's jolts. ; —in— when we met. though she sald but|cnough in all outward seeming. with| «Gowa morning again, e R ent Y 1 little. 1 know it more surely from|Grace Draper's face losing its hag- |pweedle fh . - 3 THE DEVIL a certain alr of recklessness on|gardness and its hardness, rounding| Afiss Glendon came through the Edith’s art, from the smoldering |[into something of its former beauty,|d4oor like an avalanche of fur and wrath which I saw in Dr. Jim's eyes. | with Lillian stowly recovering in her| i ang velvet, and saw at once that from s timid, troubled glances |hospital room, though it would be|pe was reluctant to meet her eye. at me. An'attack of rhoumatism that|weeks before she would be able to| «ly there anything serious?” she prevented Mother CGraham from|be about again, with Robert Savarin E fi elmbing into n ear had kept us from |devoting every waking hour to| —= — accepting any invitation to dine with|Marjon's entertainment, but with my|ing fatuously after him. The studio [] them, and we entertained them fre-[own heart a turmoil of tormenting|could not be seen from the ve auenily during heir stay. Upon (wo|doubts and fears. | 1 wax desperate: |1 ax my mother pride made. me This Woman says Lydia E.Pinkbam’s —Now Playing— NEXT MON., SEPT. 19 at ::"vrk e ithilGracs Brapériiin| thal kelt thit1 patilal notltelnipralrn var e an ,,,,.h‘,,l" f]“, drnwime il Vegetable Compound Made TIRE WEEK OPENING studio I took Junior and drove over [able was several minutes before with a a New Woman to the hotel to call upon the Durkee| How little I knew what was be-| uick glance around that she said a s o William?q,: f oar— ; ; efo ng X ~— party—being ¢ I to return be » me bit mervously fore there wn chance of Dicky's t was late one afternoon, almost wonder what's keeping him. I i Vegetable Com- Ppresents 2 = T Edith made but the briefost | ¢ . time, when Mother Graram . . sddling with his| [l I [ETE Dound 1 had bearing- @iy VAUDEVILLE | HARTFORD e e e s el et Pl e e et ol Lol Bl 4 Do vou mina | (IS Bown. pains in my Mafl( ;h’ams TODAY_—CONTINUOUS saw what [ was sure the rest ob-|veranda, that ce Drape ame up I wouldn’t like to ¢ sides, stomach and 3 7~ Policy Clara Kimball Young Pyl » \ —_—in— udeville will be wead, that she was carefully avoid-|te us, holding a radiant Junior by Rt then 2 I - back so badly that I 3 jnale&b C'onztt{y F iIng me the hand. Dicky was away, as us tainly.” I replied. and . i could hardly s ur a . ’ S Diehy s Always Away. ual. and Robert Savarin had taken|srolled over to the studio, but there | |§ R lc:if ;V“d“i;‘v‘i_ _ £ v selected from acts “CHARGE ‘T’ tite and onlyweighed Re* SHUBERT | From the N Y. Hipnodrome Draper was @ of Dick le-[there was a restless glitter in her|foor. The door v i ‘ e 11> ‘I?“&i’i wlnr‘::xk: (P " ~K TH : MASON COLE & CO. fection ¢ < . re-{eyes that I had not seen there i a[5n the 1zth leadine ficm it to the % ten bottle: - G EI ] BASIL & FRABITO 1 missing one dose and PG 3 " Ve POLI HARCELL EALLET ave it a fair trial. R : ‘ D irrwias ey LOEW ERFORD’S ODDITIES | 1ast bottle everyone asked me what : tag pon ‘ EF ! ! g z s : "¥- | made the wonderful change in me. I That, Incredible as it . Junior has something he « y gh stiff lips ¢ s e e L Ry sympathy was real, impr to show mother.” she mid tends Myl B 5 © s i | Vg otable Gompoursd and I recommend ‘ _Circ . s o o ey ilbicn sk Sttt il i) : of | Grace Draper ctically. “Come | jt wherever I can. 1 give you permis- : g 7 | sion te . ; ‘ Mon.—Tues.—Wed. went by « omething. P ketch board with a ecrud o Iy be way.” | sion to publish this letter to help suffer- - T T own wuffering or her a Vit v dow upon it ! Shwaslir ERRE 0| e aer agty s T $ ) L b Per bad't changed - b A K Of &) YREY. S : Isc | nerfunct i shen franticaily. | send and made a new woman of me. } ° A A I : - ; 5 stivee she Had com ‘ takarly b on it the| 1zh the « 1 pastiges| Mre. Fo A. Bakox, 4749 Butler St., »Lu 1R BURLES QU r i nhility ot - [1nd tiy woodland we could fint no| Pittsburgh, el - 99 ; e P e * drawing r w baby boy | Why will women drag a';oulr(ld k:‘lay E » L “BITS O’ " Te? 0t ke doegle for mamy — __ | after day, suffering from backaches, 2 BROADWAY” erat’'s he PEUGlY, (ANAATIECA R et | o O = s aby and e Picture that made the wholei; ey ob o.in. With M A Musical ¥ ¥ With . Comfort Your Skiry! | the blues " cnduring a miserable ox S e : § A el ey ) : Danz'« his grand- | XL} | istence when they have such evidence as e T i i ihrice 1,001 Thrills. b amie Coughlin & s - g o { Hariy Zoup Welsh P g aked " . . | | theabove that Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- z AL 9 Dy S e ! : u ! - is and old root aad herb medi- . . BACK TO PY WAR « xSt st amet et S B and Fragrant Talcum | Sears this grand old root sa e ) o 1 @ty action Clark & Brainerd nportantly. and ran toward | Nt T e g, S o o has been restoring the women of ) The Place For the Entire Family l PRICES el it on guArantes Jcorncrib studlo, while we stood smil- L America to health and strength. ably adored the child, and h —ana- | Shantung suit of tan and a tentlike in— of unrest wa e fact that Grace|girl's face was paler than usual, oy hroe lines upon it drophed upon ferred ey fibr TIT tim but the smile sb ntlorehard we found the woolly aware o ‘ . ‘ rot [upon the child transformed he | which Juntor siways drags of all. of patt »r pre- |tures as if a light had ®l | vith him tended hind them | . . g away.” T found

Other pages from this issue: