New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 28, 1925, Page 4

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A Wife’s Confessional Adele Oa.rison’'s New Phase o REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Madge and Uillian Money, T think J was as pale as Lilllan as T took the bundie of supposed banknotes from her outstretched hand, “Counterfeit money!" I gasped, ruffling the bills through my fin- gors as she had done, “But surely these are real!” T stripped off the outslde bills from the top and bot- fom of the package and held them out to her, She took them and held them close to her eyes, “Perhaps they are,” she said a dublously, “although there are mighty clever counterfeits floating around. I'm not an expert on them, however. Your fath now, could tell them, in a minute. I'm inclined to the opinlon, though, that these are real. Whoever copped the original contents of s vallse, certalnly had enough to be able to spare any number of twenties. It's the old tric genuine bills on top and bottom, phony in between. And to think I fell for it for even a minute!’ A Bundle of Paper Her voice was filled with self- contempt. I knew that though no possible harm mistake, and although no one but oureelves knew of {t, yet she was scoring herself as bitterly as it she had been guilty of a most flagrant error. This is her invariable pro- cadure with her own sins of omis- sion and commission, and it is one which makes it easier for her as- soclates to be patient under her dis- cipline, She stood rigidly direct for a few seconds, looking down at the bundle of bogus money in my lap. Then she struck her hands together with a gesture of decision, 4In the language of the redoubt- able Dicky Troop of Kipling's char- acter gallery,” I'll never trust my own judgment again,” she said. “But that doesn't string any beans for us now. Come, you. We'va a hit of work to do in which I need that photographic memory of yours, Here, I'll Count the it xome er, could come of her | Madge, up with | take | b TeRTy either Inside the package or upon the paper wrapping them. And I want you to remember exactly the way In which they are tied and wrapped, so that we can do them up agaln in such a manner as to defy detection that they 1 been opened. This stuft may be evidence, you know, Perhaps — who knows? — it may be the very thing needed to put the rope around the necks of the people who are trying to blackjack poor Hugh.” 1 opened the valise wide and fn- spected the position of the pack- ages carefully, fixing them in my memory, Then, waving Lillian aside, for 1 wished to be sure of putting the packages back in exactly the same or 1 Jifted them out and plled them on the table, observing as I did, so that each one bore a | number. ve had better open one at a time, go through it, tie it up again |and deposit it in the valise before | we take the next one,” I suggested. “Go ahead. You're the doctor this trip* Liillan rejoined And then for a long time we did not speak except to check each other's | counting. We counted the bills in each bundle, made sure that there was no writing on any of them, re- tied the bundles and deposited them in the bag. When we had finished, we faced each other, tired and flushed, but certaln that no scrap of writing, except the numbers upon the outside of the bundles, was contained in the valise, “You're a Wiz, Madge.” |will be much e e e AILY FANH This French frock has an inter« esting hemline made decorative with embroidery and fringe. It conforms to the present mode of concentrating the trimming in one spot and permitting the rest of the gown to be elegantly plain, Gossip’s Corner Best For Pancakes A soapstone or aluminum griddle is best for baking pancakes. Cakes Not So Rich 1f a cake seems too rich, substitute | water for milk or for part of the| milk next time you use the recipe. | Let Them Simmer In roasting, broiling and braising, meats should be cooked as near! possible at the simmering tempe ture Easy Wringers | It the wringer works hard, apply | | little kerosene on the cogs and | {work them for a few scconds, then fow drops of sew- The actlon wipe and put a ing machine oil on them, ier. Sugar Your Beef Add just a little sugar to the salt- ed water used for basting roast beef, 1t will give it a rich, brown color that improves the looks as well as the taste Helps Vegetables A pinch of bicarhonate of soda hastens the cooking of vegetables [but doce not injure the flavor or ap- pearance. Morning Cereal “You're a wiz, Madge,” Lilllan «aid warmly, drawing a long breath compounded of fatigue and relief. | * ‘Neatness and dispatch’ ought to be printed acrass your chest. Now ty of this thing. I hate to have it kicking around the house.” “I can put it in the bank strong room, down at the Harbor," T said. | “That's where I put the silver whenever we leave the house alone. | Ot course, the things are too big| for a eafety deposit box, but the ank has a room on purpose for the next thing is to insure the safe- | Figs, raisins, prunes, or chopped lates are delicious with the morning cereal, | To Make Better Pios If your pie browns hefore the fill- |ing is sufficiently cooked, cover with | |another pie plate until the filling is | done, Makes Mush Crisp | 1f slices of mush are dipped in white of an egg before frying, they will be crisp and will brown nicely. 1ON SERVI(E === FRENCH FROCK IS UNIQUE of each grapefruit, sprinkle the pulp |of each half with one cream pepper- Imint, broken in pieces. It adds a different flavor to the breakfast standby. The Jabot’s The Thing The importance of the jabot creases dally on the ttilleur and the formal type of dress alike. Linen For Sport Wear in- | BEGIN HERE TODAY Norman Slater, In love with Kath- leen Glenister, searches for her on a motorcycle, after she had been | tricked to visit a lonely #pot by-— 8ir Dudley, who wishes to marry her to allay suspicion that he is the murderer of lLer brother, James Gienister, Slater is made prisoner by Sir Dudley's James Wragge, signed to the case, begins a search for the two young lovers— NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XX The Whispering Gallery Inspector Wragge followed the | old butler through the green baize | door on the tip-toe of expectation. Here at last was a man who for ! years had lived at the very heart of the happenings which led up to | the Beechwood mystery and who seemed to want to tell him things. The pantry proved to be a cozy and secluded den, far removed from the clatter of the kitchen, and evident- ly a sanctum into which minor satellites of the household would ! not dare to intrude. Hinkley produced a hottle of port and with trembling fingers filled two glasses. 'm all ehaken up, sir,” he said. “T heard you tell the master that Miss Kathleen and Captain Slater | have eloped — but it can’t be true. | There was no need for them to run away together. Roth of age and | Lady Marrables set on the match. There's something behind it ail. Wragge felt that it would be good policy to give confidence for confi- | dence. "I agree with you,” he said. | “I don't mind telling vou that for {the moment I am more concerned | with Miss Kathleen Glenister's {safety than with tracking her | brother's murderer. What exactly do you apprehend has befallen her, Mr. Hinkle “God knows” was the reply. “I | don't trust the master since our { voung lmdy turned against him over | that ghastly finger, sweet as he }\ls("l to be on her. He was away o iz © 1925 by NEA, Service Inc. dlary — at least so you say," Sir Dudley returned. “Look here, Ivy, why can't we run this on business lines? We are both tarred with the same brush, and the tar is thicker on you than on me. Let's call it a deal. T don't belleve you were fool enough to burn Simon's record, which would be your only real hold on me, T will glve you ten thousand pounds for it.” “You brute — to suppose I want your money,” her anger rang out. “You have got to accept my terms or I glve you away." Sir Dudley shrugged and, walk- ing to the table, poured himself & stift drink. “If that s your ultimatum, here's mine,” he said calmly, “As soon as you start giving me away I shall lay an information against you for doing Simon in.” Wragge's complacenf” thought that the information was as good as lald already was interrupted by a movement flashed on his vision from & quarter apart from the principal actors in the scene below. It took place outside one of the French windows of the library, and as it focussed through the monkish | | sky-hole on the retina of the de- | tective's eye it gave him the sur-| prise of his life. The whole pile of | evidence built up during the last ten minutes fell with a crash. Tor standing outside the window, his fishy eyes staring through the plate glass into the library, was Mr. Simon Trickey., He didn't look as if he had been buried very deep, un- Jess it was In the recesses of a saloon bar. His nose was perhaps a little more inflamed, and his check suit hung a little looser than when Wragge had seen him last. But there was no doubt that he was very much alive, and deeply inter- ested in the couple In the library, Wragge concentrated all his at- tention on immediate developments. Did the reprobate intend to revenl | his presence, and if not what were the chances that he would be able to retreat without being seen? Mrs. The only words that may be, found - difficult here are the four four-lettered words along the sides | of the-puzzles, The two middle let- ters are unkeyed. But they're all elmple words, so no extra help will be offered. HORIZONTAL 1. Front part of leg below kne . Carbonated water with cream. . Where yon live. . Twelve inches (pl.), Placed, 3. EIL . A class of foods (pl.). . You and I, . Perfect score, . Opposite of cathode (pl.). 22. Tin container. . A large cooking vessel, . Treland. To damage. . Values, . Near. Joyful. Cow-headed goddess. ice 7. Alleged force that hypnotism, Level. Age. Paid publicity (pl.). . Fluld rock. A law or precept. To prepare for publication. . Opposite of woof. 20, Reasonable. Chief cities. . To try for verification tense)., . Soldier-sailor. . Top of house. . Perches. . Sews dress bottomn . Shriek, . Therefore. . River in Italy. . An image. . To make 4 rent (past tense). . Fetid, . Sicknesses. < . Birds similar to ducks. . Actions. 7. A few, produces Linen in woven stripes and checks | all yesterday till late at night, and | 24 Tairy. the money. She stooped and lifted the bundle of bills, careful, as I noted, not to | the larger things.” she Peppermint on Grapefruit “That's just the ticket,” agreed. “I'll go down with you | when you take it, but — not — just | After you have removed the pulp | | |as well as in plain colors is being fponsored for sport dresses. he went out again after breakfast this morning. He had only just come in when you ealled.” Coningsby had her back to the win- dow and unless she turned round the apparition there would remain 35. Attar; name. 36. To leave ouf. but it may be a boy's 51, Twelve months. . To keep out. unnoticed by her so long as it pre- served silence. But Sir Dudley had only to raise his eyes from the woman confronting him and he could hardly fail to perceive the malign countenance of his former clerk. This was exactly what happened. Tn getting down his empty glass the baronet had to turn slightly to the window, and the detective, watch- ing him like a cat, saw by the gleam of surprised horror that he had recoghized Trickey. Wragge could scarcely contain himself. Would Sir Dudley rush forward, fling open the window and demand dieturb the order in which they had been wrapped. I sprang to my feet as soon as they left my hands, and she imperatively gestured me to the table where she had placed the bag. “We're going go through every packet in here,” she said, “to make sure there is no message or writing of any kind concealed in them. I want to examine every | realized if you find one, woman whom I held in my arms. “See here, Mr. Hinkley, all this is very serious,” the inspector said in his most seductive tone. *“And the gravity has been increased by the arrival of the lady you ad- mitted as I was leaving the library. T have reason to belleve that she is culpably implicated in the case.” No error there, sir,” the butler rejoined with quavering heartiness. “Mre. Coningsby wants to be Lady | Glenister — you can lay to that. It il would suit her to rights for the e o capees aicknemsy | ofci¥in st master ankeradfatiertio arialipos B ase of | moct with foul play.” [ Toiia e noneh “You are a colleague to be proud 2 of,” Wragge pursued his advantage. | 37. The money you pay for speed- ing (pl.). . Toward. Slowest creature in the world. 43. A vulgar fellow. 44. The world money standard. . Measure for cloth, 47. Sun. . Perched on an aerie, . Sneaky. . Upon. Raisers of etock. . Direction of Cape Good Hope. . Headgear (pl.). . One who recolors your clothes. 59, Always, Spikes of corn. . To place, Pronoun, masculine, §8. Second note in scale. — now."” The last words came faintly and | T caught her as she awayed against | me, her fase and lips pallld, her | s closing wearily. | Tillian!” I called frantically, |{ steadying her sagging figure as best as T could. “What is 1t?” | “Why did the first wave of influ- But there was no answer, and T (enza over the country in 1918 cause that it was a EWoORing 5o many more deaths than the many |epidemics since?” Mr. Mann of Any- ‘itown asked, “The reason lies in the fact that {the human body, when attacked once, buflds up a strong resistance |in order not to be caught unpre- FABLES ON HEALTH' THE “FLU” EPIDEMIC to first attacked societ Beientists have learned this, and come to the assistance of humani | with vaccinations. A person Is va cinated against smallpox. | c- faintest pencil however, to start i Tanglen Letter from Leslie Prescott to John Alden Prescott, Continued Probably as you read this, John, you are wondering why I, your wife, at a crucial moment in our lives like this, should go into this long dissertation on the modern marriage. It is hecause I want to let you in upon the ways and means by which I am trying to reason this thing out. It is because after this I want to make certain that there shall be no misunderstandings, Tt is because I am trying like you to be honest with both you and my- self. In my case, however, there is no question of the “meal ticket” T know that I would never have to worry about money for myself or my children if I should put out of my life, but as usual in af- fairs of this kind there are alwave | other people to be taken into con- sideration, T know, as vou your leaving the the steel mill at maks my mother very unhappy. She would fecl it her duty to come home it she were told about this sorry mix-up, and besides, I shall ave to c John, I myself am to the speech of peo- 11d not care to go out friends it I knew that the room they were won- dering just w going to do. T can not b to let the world know that my matrimonial p has gone on rocks. W it is true, steered away from many ot them some of them which T thought would surely be our destruction, intimated, this time would pla. among my SfteE THatE but now it seems o be almost a case of either Secylla or Charybdie. I wonder 1f the matri- monial bark of all other married people sails in such troubled wa- ters. More than one lovely auto- ist would dcive you to distrac- tion. that | management of | | | Perhaps it is because we are hoth ~d with vain pride for, after all, Jack, it s the hurt to one's pride rather than the wrecking of one's ove or the hreaking of one's heart that plays havoc with marriage. I told to Ruth and she smiled. “You haven't reached the depths yet, Leslie,” aid. “It is only | after one has thoroughly realized | | that one must bury all pride, that i one knows that love i3 dead.” thinks that we can, out- Ruth wardly at least, co to some kind | he insists that | ot compromise. | marriage itself, with or without | | love, with or without trust, is noth- | |ing but a series of compromises. | She quoted to me that old stanza | Kindest pair Will find occasion to forbear. And something every day they 1 To pity She secms to pin that verse aboye where 1 could read it Just at this momen how- ever, I can not b to share with all the poor little women who may remind you of bedraggled Kittens my unquestiol a wife. I do think, care to live with you have the the world the fact that we are no and wife in t of term, our this of Ce and the happiest { and perhaps forgive. nk that I should mirror, day. my every perhaps, that if you me, purely on a friendly basis — if conver 1 husband he cceptance try to reconstruct a different basis. he we lives Hosiery Made Elaborate Oy 'n),)') %y PR Oy o - o b because down gettir exam- flesh Elaborate featured until shoes have been at they have we find stoc H roide not 1 so y ings an better 1y e s p e—these s P pink | beads. are silk ed in | pared. “It is something like locking the |door after the thief has already made a haul, except that the ques- tion of disease Is much more impor- tant. “Measles do not cause nearly so many deaths as they did when they the fighting agencies of the body to preparing for a general onslaught of the discase garms, The result is that thereafter when the person comes in contact with smallpox, the person is not affected. | The body has built up an immunity |against the disease. re The Adventuresf il by 3o my “Is it very much magician's castle?" asked the | and Raggedy Andy and Mr. Tuney nd Lady Lindy walked along the ath through the woods. Raggedy Ann asked the strange creature, because Mrs. Grundy the | witch had changed the magiclan into a puppy dog and of course the puppy dog could not tell Raggedy Ann. All he could do was to bark. “It fsn't very far if the magician as not worked a lot of magic to Raggedy Ann nable rights of | courage to keep from | | | Mrs. Grundy the witch was trying to hit the puppy dog. | make the way longer than it really ix!" the strange creature replied. strange creature had worked for the magician a long, long time hut even though the magiclan had tried to work magic on Raggedy the strange d hearted, gedy Ann 1 { The Maybe if you work magic on the magiel Mrs. Grundy's dropped when gle soda water ged into a, plg, and if sou the magician back into shape again, will not magic on ue!" Lady said to Raggedy Andy. “1 spect I will try it!” Raggedy she took out the “You must place in a circle, Raggedy strange creature said. way I saw Mrs. Grundy Then you must say ‘ho- and wish for the pup ange » magic Raggedy Ann lavghed. ot of sail as harms, That is t¥ kus pok dog to into t farther to the| strange creature as she | KaggedyAun “Then I do!” “What will vou do, Raggedy Ann?” Lady Lindy wished to know. But Raggedy Ann just smiled and replied, “I am not sutre that it will work, s0 I mustn't tell, then if the magle doesn't work, no onc will be disappointed!"” know just what I shall So she spread all of the witch charms in a circle and was ju about to say “hokus pokus” when the little pig, who was really Mrs. Grundy the witch cafhe runnng out of the bushes and grabbed up the charms in her mouth and ran away with them. The little puppy dog, who was really the | ran barking after the little pig and | nipped her heels, but she did not drop the magic charms. “There now!" Raggedy Ann cried as she sat down and covered her shoe button eyes with hands, “Mrs. Grundy has spoiled it her her Just then, the little puppy dog came running out of the hushes and Vehind him with a long sti Mrs. Grundy the witch, was trying 1o hit the sha came. “Oh dear!” Ra “Here she is again, little pig any us right to the with the golden all rorts of mischic “Indced! I shall!” the witch crled “And when I get I shall change the magician from a puppy dog into a puff of smoke, then the wind will blow and I d puppy dog as ¥y Ann W eried, fsn't a follow castle cause more, magician's towers and there, him away shall live fn his castle and have it | for my very own! It Raggedy Ann and L: Mr. Tuney and Raggedy Ar would turn around and run home, hecause If you come to the castle I will need servants and hir to wait upon me and T &h you do all the hard “Don’t you believe Ann!” the strange T were you, work creature sald “Everything in the castle is run by | magic and ehe doesn't need hired girls!” “I spect I'Il have to ahead vou and work a lot of magic that you will not find the castle!” the witch cried as sh and ran “Let her run!” the strange crea- ture laughed. “T know a short cut to the castle and maybe we can run that way and beat her there!" hold tion the 1 them, run s started So t of hands strange and ran ir | greature showe cau the magician, | rag | me ‘\ “You won't raise any objection if 1 creep back into the entrance hall and use my ears at the library door?" The butler's facs lit up with sen- ile glee. "I can do you better than that,” he said., “I'll take you up to tke whispering gallery. You can hear every word spoken in the li- brary and see what'’s going on through the Judas-hole. The place was fixed up by the monks hun- dreds of years ago when this house was a priory. I never told Sir Dud- ley about it.” Wragge finished his wine and stood up. “Take me there at once,” he said. “It we meet any of the maids you are a plumber, sir” Tejoined Hinkley. But they met no maids as with all due caution they mounted a | back staircase, traversed several corridors and so came to a spare something to the carved mantelpicce and Wragge found himself passing through a euddenly disclosed aperture in the | wall to a narrow space that smelt | of all the age. “There is the Judas-hole,” said Hinkley, pointing to a pin-prick of | light in the darkness of the secret | gallery. “I will wait in the bed- room, but I must shut vou in or ou won't hear anything, Tap when you want to come out.” The panel slid back and Wragge at once | in heated altercation. “I don't belleve you,” the woman was saying. “You've got the girl somewhere and you are trying to force her to marry you. I warn you | here and now, Dudley, that I won't stand it. You have got to marry me or take the consequences.” | Wragge's eye was glued to the | Judas-hole by now. The scene be- low in the libngry was as clear as !t viewed fromPa stage box, yet he was peering through a perforation in the wal] so small that it might have been the puncture of & needle. “The consequences? sneered the master of Beechwood. “What con- | sequences can you threaten me with, my dear Ivy?" She ralsed one of her clenched fists, "I will denounce you to Scot- jand Yard,” she replied in low, tense tones. “I will repeat to the police the revelations of my broth- or's diary, showing how you faked the details of George Glenister's Jeath. Simon Trickey shall from the grave to accuse you.” r Dudley's laugh rang out un- afrald. “It Simon is dug up he will make it a good deal hotter for you than for me,” he retorted. “You are hardly in a position to throw etones from your poor lvy. Your disclosure to me about that dose of poison would interest Scotland Yard far more than your unconfirmed recollections of €l mon's diary.” For a moment the woman seem- ed to be nomplussed by the bar- onet's counterstroke. ] don't care” ehe broke out ain. “I'd go to the gallows glad- if you were to hang, too. And diary will work that all the butler did | | | into place heard volces simon right." ! “But you haven't got Simon bedroom on the front landing. H“re‘ come | little glass house, | explanations from the dissolute blackmailer who had so mysterious- ly risen from the dead, or would he conceal his discovery from the woman who had somehow failed to administer a fatal dose to the man outside? Flve geconds later, by the master- ly manner in which he adopted the latter course, Sir Dudley had earn- ed a grudging meed of admiration from the detective. With perfect composure he addressed the lady in the only way possible if he was not to loosen his hold on her by revealing her failure. “Well, he said. “Are you to face the music, Iv “The shortest way down to the | garden, Mr, Hinkley?” he begged. “There i6 not a moment to spare.” The butler gave some brief di- rections and a minute later Wragge emerged from the gun-room door by which Norman and Kathleen had left the mansion on a certain memorable night. A few steps brought him round the angle of the house and so into view of his quarry, Mr. Simon Trickey was still hovering near the library window, having only withdrawn far enough to be invisible from the interior. (To Be Continued) | golng tasted such Chocolate Cake before/”, a filling and icing made from -Bakerss v Chocolale p (PrEMIUM NO.1) By all means the most satisfactory chocolate for cook- ing and drinking. G U8, PaT. O7F Walter Baker& Co.Ltd. CSTABLISHED 1780 . Drop of fluld from the eye. VERTICAL . To ooze; to percolate siowly, Whether. . Knots in wool fibre. . Rock. 5. Foreigner. . Personal pronoun, Breakfast cereal, corn — Grapefruit, thin cream, codfish balls, bread, milk, coffe; Luncheon — Split pea eoup, toasted cheese crackers, fruit salad, steamed brown bread, milk, tea. Dinner — Spareribs and lima beans, creamed carrots, spring salad, Spanish cream, whole wheat bread, milk, coffee. A simple fruit salad with a pfain bofled dressing should be served to children under school age. If the fruit is perfectly ripe and finely chopped and molstened with a boil- ed dressing or olive oil and lemon juice and served on finely shredded lettuce the salad is wholesome and suitable for four-year-olds. The beans used in the dinner dish should be rubbed through a ricer before serving to small’ chil- dren and, of course, the spareribs are not planned for juniors. The rest of the dinner can be served to them as desired. Split Pea Soup fix cups cold water, 1 cup split dried peas, 1 onfon, 1 carrot, 1-2 turnip, celery ‘leaves, salt and pep- per, 2 tablespoons flour, 1 cup milk, 1 teaspoon dried mint, Wash peas through geveral wa- ters and let stand over night In wa- ter to more than cover. In the morning drain and put on to cool in the cold water. Add any ham or beef hones at hand. Bring to the boiling point and simmer two hours, Add vegetables thinly sliced and simmer two hours longer. Rub through a wire sieve and return to the fire, It meat bones were used mix the flour to a smooth paste with a little cold milk. If not, melt two tablespoons bacon fat, stir in flour and, when perfectly blended, add to puree. Cook until thick and smooth. Add milk to make the con- sistency of cream, eeason with sait and pépper and powdered mint and serve, Steamed Brown Bread One cup molasses, 1 cup milk, 1 cup sweet milk, 2 cups cornmeal, 2 cups graham flour, 1 cup white flour, 1 teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 2 tea- spoons salt, 2 tablespoons melted butter, Dissolve soda in sour milk. Mix and sift white flour and baking powder. Mix ingredients in order sour Dorchester Mass. Monireal.Can. [BOOKLIT'Of CHOICT RECIPES SINT FREE given and beat well. ‘Turn into pans and steasn two and one-half how Remove from steamer and bake 10. minutes in a hot oven. Spring Salad Two sour apples, 1 bunch spring onions, mayonnaise dressing, strips canned pimento, hearts of lettuce. Pare apples and cut into dice. Sprinkle lightly with lemon julce to prevent discoloring. Wash onions and mince very finely. Mix apple and onion - thoroughly and add enough mayonnaise to hold mix- ture together. Arrange at once on hearts of crisp lettuce and garnish with strips of pimento, The apples and onions should be very cold and the mixture used as soon as mixed before the mayonnaise —separates and becomes thin, (Copyright, 19 I A German firm is eonstructing an alrplanc factory near Angora, the new capital of Turkey. 'Lynn Man Coughed So Hard That He Spat Blood Right Lung So Sore He Could Not Lie on Right Side Mr. Thomas Nickerson, formerly of 24 Flint street, Lynn, tells how he was cured”f a racking cough and sore lungs by using Allen's Lung Healer, He says: “I had a bad case of pneumonia, which left me with an awful cough, My right lung was so sore that I coygd not lie-on my right side at all. When I had a bad spell of coughing I would spit up blood. Having used Allen's Lung Healer be- fore, T began to use it again and T am thankful T did. T took three and a half botties and am glad to say I was entirely cured. 1 can't say too much for it as a great lung healer.” Allen's Lung Healer succeeds in breaking up severe, deep-seated coughs when all other remedies fail. 60 cents and $1.00 a bottle. For that tickle in your throat that keeps you coughing we recommend ALLEN'S BRONCHO THROAT TARS (Allen’s Lung Healer Form.) Price 25 centa _ NEA Service, in Tabule

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