New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 1, 1925, Page 5

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m |||l!|| llw l(ll | -'n "lliL Unlews otherwise indicated, thea written by the press agencles The king in “Confessions of a Queen,” the Victor #astrom pro- duetlon which comes to the Capitol theater today, 1s in a quandary.- The influence of good is beckoning him | on one side In the form of his,queen, i beautiful regal woman of the cold type, while that of evil coaxes him on the other in.the form of the vi- vaclous RBephora, a woman of the world, A much strouger willed man than King Christian would hawve puused-—not knowing which one to ollow. The Keith vaudeville bill has five plendid acts that are guaranteed to slease you. Topping the bill is the Swirt Gibson Revue In a “Smart Frolle.” Ji Valjean is an aerial- i«t and performs wondrously on the yings; Petit, Leighton and Josephine ofier a song, dance and comedy act that will make a decided hit; CAPITOL TODAY - TUES. - WED. Alice Terry Lems Stane “Eonfessmns of a (lueen KEITH VAUDEVILLE SwiftGibsonRevue “\ MART FROLIC” JEAN VALJEAN "Ql/th 0]‘ THE R]’\(;\" DAVIES ALE ‘' IN ‘FUN” l,eightond-' .loscphiné Peppy Trio Petit - “Keith Favorites Brown & Whitaker in “CLOWN TOPICS” Famous Music Master Series “Stephen Foster” A Novelty Film With Special Music Continuous Shows and Music PALACE THEATRE —HARTFORD— ALL THIS WEER STARTING TONIGHT THE POLI PLAYERS With Jean Oliver and Arthur Howard Iy of American Life “THE GOOSE HANGS HIGH” By Lewis Beach “One of the Best,” Says New York Herald Tribune Prosent a Co Seeley's Entertainers 1OR ALL OCCASIONS €. SEELEY. Representative 21 WASHINGTON ST. Phone 2336 " Ken- | HRATEDS ) notices mod reviews o e colunp ar the respect've amusemen! company. nedy and Davies, two clever come- diennes, present the real meaning of \ruu as clearly as the dictlonary, and [rown and Whitaker, Kelth favor- |ites, will be well liked in their com- ody song and chatter “‘\'Hl\\l\ Toplc . | There are continuous shows with continuous musle daily. i SRECOMPENSE Maric Prevost and chieve another screen triumph in tecompense” which opened at the céum theater last night to eon- |tinue throngh Wednesday, This ple- | ture is the sequel to Robert Keable's |novel, “Simon Called Peter” and | deals with the same characters, The AT LYCEUM | |story told in this film is the struggle | of Peter and Julie to learn the real | meaning of life and love, Their in- terpretation of the famous roles of [ the are perfect, | The program at th® Lyceum | changes on Phursday and one of the features already is being acclaiméd | by the movie fans since it brings | Tom Mix in “The Golden Thought.” The companion picture for the | last three days of the week is “Reck- less Romance,” a fast movine, semi- comic drama fn which Harry Myers, Wanda Hawley and Tully Marshall (a4 have good parts Commercial Crooks Reap Big Harvest in U Washington, Jun he loss caused Americ ness an- nually by “commercial crooks” runs into hundred of millions of dollars, iSccretary Hoover declared in a let- | ter, made x\xm last night, {o lhr- National Association of Creditn |endorsing lhf' organization's cam- paign against fraudulent business {practice. He cited particularly the “fraudulent transfer of bankrupt stocks and other forms of° credit abuse,” and pointed out that "zthn from the very impor moral qu tion invoived this is obviously enormous waste in business.” an \nolher Explorer Tells Of Amundsen’s Chances | Orlando, Fla., Tune Samuel J triken, cr and an officer in Peary's expedi- tion to*the north pole, is not wor. ried at Roald Amundsen’'s protract- cd stay in the Arctic regions. “I give him three months' time be heard from.” said Entriken. | s some unforeseen accident im. he will come out all right. Amundsen knows where there is a cache of food. He is the only man who ever has made the northwest passage in a boat," he declared, Entriken, who t man to hav Alas 1. (AP)— Arctic explor- to Unles has overtaken | a lives here, s ths 1 a tent on occupied by FAGTORY GIRL ONE OF THE 98 Will Answer Lette Letters from Women asking about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Lititz,Pa. — ‘I was very nervous and suffered for a long time with pains in my back and side. I was employed in a fac- tory and for about three months I did no work at all There were two women who_told me about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound. I didn’t believe what they told me atfirst, but atlast I tried it. It has taken my pains away and my nervousness. Iam glad to say that 1am one of the ‘98 out of 100’ that it has helped. I recommend it when [ can, nsIlkknow it is good for women’s troubles. I will answer any letter that any woman writes to me, I know the Vegetable Compound has le[ x ,me and hope it will_help — Mrs. CHARLES R. SHUE, R F. D 2, Lititz, Pa. Qflqutaf every 100 women who take this medicine for the ailments for which it is recommended are bene- fited by it. They have said so in an swering a questionaire sent to them. For sale by druggiets everywhere, LYCEUM—NOW PLAYING W The Robert Keable “v‘?ta‘r-x led Two Sensational S Novel that Contiments ~* Sequel to SIMON CALLED PETER' Directed by HARRY 3EAUMONT AL This Coupon and ! MaATEN ‘e Will Admit Any Tady to Best Seat offering, | Monte Blue | +{ gatta this month, army chaplain and army nurse | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 1, 1925, T VAL RESHNEN N SERIOUS RIOTING Professor Manbandled-Class Faces Probation New Haven, June 1 (AP)—Yale officials were Investigating today a riotous calebration staged by the freshman class in the Berkeloy oval, the freshman dormitory section yes- terday and last night in which the old traditional freshman fence was torn down for kindling wood. Prof. | F. H. Bangs was roughly handled in trying to quell the outbreak and considerable damage was done, Today the entire freshman class faces the punishment of being placed on probation for its riotous action, started evidently in celebra- tion of the closing of the college year. Such a probationary meas- |ure will be far reaching If it is |adopted by the college officials as it will mean the recall of the freshman |erew not Iy practice at Gales Ferry in preparation for the Harvard re- | | Hurling logs out of the dormitory | windows started the outbreak, the | freshmen trying to see how many @ectric lights they could break in the oval. A honfire was then start- od, and the students lacking fuel tore down the old freshman fance which | has stood for years. Locked in the oval by the college |officials the students swarmed over ‘thn enclosure and many tried to | scale the iron gates at the entrances. | The campus police were powerless to |stem the | outbreak, Prof. Bangs |made an attempt to check the riot- {ous scenes but was forced to retreat Three times he faced |to his room. *!)VO students and left the scene only lnth the stream from a fire extin-| | guisher was turned on him, Threats of placing the class | probation and recalling the fresh- |man crew and the appearance on |the scene of Regiatrar John R. Elis | inally put an end to the celebration. |The campus was covered with | wreckage. - BRUTALWURDER OF THEATRICAL oW ‘Boston Police Have Hystery on ‘ Their Hands Roston, June 1. (AP)—Apparent- Iy without a clue, the police were today seeking the man or men who murdered Mrs. Mae Price of New York, in a hotel here early yestei- day, and robbed her of $200. She was left face down on Mer bed to suffocate among the pillows, with her hands tied behind her back. Mrs, Price, wardrobe mistress for a musical comédy company which ended an engagement here last Sat- urday. retired late that night after | leaving directions to call her at ten o'clock. But the call went un- answered. An clevator man found her door unlocked and discovered her body. The woman had been choked and heaten into uncon- | sciousness before being tossed into the bed, and two envelopes which contained her weekly salary and funds entrusted to her by members | of the troupe lay torn on the floor. | The door key also lay there and | detectives believed that the as sailant had fled down a fire escap to the street. Mrs. Price dead about six hours. a medical aminer said, crime in the early hours of the morning, Hotel officials ~declared ex- that no one had passed through the | lobby in those ho | Mrs. Price was 50 ycars old and had been a wardrobe mistress for many years. She was known in the world of players as “The Mother of | Chorus Girls,” many of whom she befriended and protected, Her hus- band, William Price, is a earpenter | in New York. He was notified of | the murder by police, and according | to reports recelved here could throw no light on the crime. CHAPEL DEDICATED Walllngford, June 1 (AP)—The new § ) chapel at the Choate school was dedicated yesterday aft- ernoon with im ceremonies. Bishop Ch y Brewster read the dedicatory service and Dr. Hughes | Black preached the sermon. Others who took part in the exercises were ge C. St. Jo head master, and the chaplain, Rev. P. Greenleaf, After th recital was given on the new Protessor Harry Jepson of Yale. The organ is a gift from John Paul Hitchcock of Youngstown, O, sive service a | on had been | and this placed the | |last summer found !a dance above the saloon of Charle OUTLAW CABIN USED Old Stone Structure in Nevada Now Being Used as a Radio Church— Near New Gold Camp. Tonopah, Nev, June 1 (AP)—In| | the hills near the new gold comp of Gilbert, 30 miles from here, ls ln‘ old stone structure known as the/ Outlaw's Cabin, It has stood for 50 years or more, Many tales are| told of this rendezvous of the des- | peradoes who once infested the desert country, It was here they gathered to plan their stage hold- ups and perlodic ralds on the scat- | tered scttlements—or to divide the booty, an occasion that often ended in a bloody fight. Many bullet scars in the walls and dark streaks | on the floor testify to the former character of the place, Recently the name of the cabin was changed to the Radio Church. The discoveries ot gold in the sur- rounding hills lately, bringing a stampede of prospectors, provided a new use for the old landmark, Every Sunday evening it is filled with those who listen in on a ser- mon delivered several hundred miles away, Some of the grizzled are a bit bewildered at march of progress, but gradually they are becoming used to radio alks and concerts in remote places, to prospecting with an automobile Instead of with a string of burros. PHI BETA KAPPA MAN LAYS BRICK Columbia Honor Student Back to Trade This Sammer —— New' York, June 1. (AP)—Wil- llam Leider, bricklayer and Phi Beta Kappa student at Columbla is RO ing to continue laying bricks this summer because he does not know what else to do to make money. His Phi Beta key may dangle from his watch chain underneath his white overalls, but his union card will help him get $12 a day time and & half for overtime, old-timers | the rapld This earncd money for college expenses by laying bricks. He won a Pulit- zer scholarship in 1921 and a state scholarship of §100 a year. He is 21 years old and is studying phil- osophy which he hopes to teach some time, Leider comes from a bricklaying family. His father, Jacob ILeider, learned the trade in Russia amd be- cause of ‘pogroms the family emi- grated having $10 cash on arrival in New York 20 years ago. There are six sons and no girls | [in the family. Four hoys have been |or are bricklayers; the others are too young to wield the trowel. The eldest son is a contracting brick- layer with his father. Ben, a graduats of the school of journalism of the University of Mis- sourl, is a New York reporter. Will, the third, was the last son born in Russia. Max, the first American- born, is studying architecturs at the L’nlvmuy of Michigan, CONPOSER OF 01 WALTE SONG DIES “The Sidewalks of New York" Was by Charles Lawlor New York, June 1. (AP)—Cl | B. Lawlor, composer of “The Side- {walks of New York" the tenement children’s waltz with which enthu- | stic supporters of Governor Al Smith greet him invariably, is dead. An immigrant from Dublin at the age of 16, a quarter century ago. a vaudeville actor whose brogue tenor captivated crowds in Bowery beer halls, then blind, infirm and forgotten till the last democratic |convention, Lawlor died yesterday | of heart disease. The sale of & song |for which he received $2.500 has run into millions of copics Folks curious as to the source of the song which the Madison Square Garden convention heard again and again when Governor Smith was seeking a presidential nomination Lawlor living with his wife and two daughters on West 104th street. The inspiration for the song car after Lawlor in 1594 had attended s 1. Murphy, later kead of Tammany. On the way home Lawlor kept think- ing of the ragged children of the Bowery he had seen dancing on the sidewalks to music by itinerant or- gan-grinders. He composed the melody and gave the idea for the words to James Blake, a clerk in a store, who put them iInto shape. They sold the song and divided $5.000 the song has heen assemblage In recent years | heard at many a public |attended by a product of the Bow- ery region, an Fast Side newshoy who is gerving his third term as gov- ernor of the 'F‘u'mrv Srate | Special ( ourier Tnkml France’s Note to Berlin Paris, (AP)—A special courier who left Paris last night is en route to Rerlin carrying France's reply to Germany's proposal for a western Europe security pact. The note wil be presented to Foreign June 1. | Minister Stresemann of Germany by | The absolute purity and delicate medication of Cuticura Soapv make it ideal for baby’s tender | skin. Used daily,with touches of | Ointment to little skin troubles, it keeps the skin smooth, Clear and healthy Cuticura Talcum is soothing and cooling, idea) for baby after a bath. s o Tweom Be. $0d e Laberstarn eyt OF duleen, g ™ Cuticom sn-i-' su 28Be. | , etmant i u | the text of | ve j'and a group of ambassadors of the al- ! tomsorrow, Twelve hours later g letter accom- 1l be published cover reply iying the | in Paris and London Twenty-four later a a Mt German disarmament clauses of the treaty of ailles wil made publi A or two later the complete rey 1pon W Is annex is be given ou The 3erma agreed upon by England an after detailed annex giving of violations of the be has heen 1 France note to v repreasnts the of the allies ’mlrcl‘lmdls(‘ exports in 1924 valued with | will be the second summer he has | The second. | CONNECTICUT 2ND N N. £. EXPORTS Merchandise Valued at $35,503,- 409 Shipped to Foreign Lands Washington, D. June 1.-— Leading all New England states but Massachusetts, Connecticut, with at $35,503,405, finished 29th In the list of states secking forelgn mar- kots, according to statistics just r leased by the department of com- | merce, COLOR CUT-OUTS Aladdin’s Lamp Kansas, Kentucky and Alabama immediately leading the Nutm"x‘ | state in the year's race, had exports | | amounting to $36,802,068; $35,086,- | 200; and $35,739,440, respectively, 1 the highest of three being less than | $1,400,000 more than the amount regtstered by Connecticut for the | year under review. Iowa, runnerup, | | to this quarter, fell behind Connccu- cut to the sum of over $1,600,000. The total trade of the United States | with foreign countries for the year 1624 was valued at $4,498,151,936. | Ores, metals and manufacturers of, | led all commodities shipped abroad from Connecticut in 1924, and amounted to $14,375,740. Next came_ machlvory with valuation of | 36, 4, and then in order, hard- ware, :\mml aL $3,399,112; textile products, $3,375,799; chemicals and alifed products, $3,263,920; copper, | brass and bronze manufacturers, $2.- | m 202; rubber manufacturers, $2,- 267; firearms and ammunition, 2,268,133; and paper, except print- | cd matter, $473,879, Exports amounting to over $100,- 000,000 for the year were attained by 11 states of the 52 states and | reglons Included in the tabulation. | They were Texas, with figures ¢ York, $131,5 $203,2 California, $22 $787,218, 502; Pennsylvania, Tilinote, $230,314,270; $234,684,210; New Jersey 264; Louisiana, $222, A | gan, $177,876,654; Virginia, $150,- 108,225; Ohlo, $133,559,362; and | Massachusetts, with merchandise | valuations of $114,418,430. [ sota, with shipments valued at $99,- of | Minne- | ALADDIN, A CHINESE LAD In a distant city in China once lived a boy by the name Aladdin, He lived alone with mother who was a widow. |still very young he had never kno v poor. Here is Aladdin, ing 1ittle Chinese 1ad who had {the wonderful adventures you read about. Cut-Outs for the next throe we: {you will have a whole set of Alad |paper dolls with which to act out interesting story. 80,490, was just outside of the first 11 states, while Nevada, with ex- ports amounting to but $233,413, | brought up the rear of the entire | list. This i3 the first time in the his- {tory of government trade statistics, | according to Dr, Julius Klein, direc- tor of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, under whose |charge the figures were compiled, [that an attempt has been made m show the relative yearly standing of the different states and regions of | the union in the never ending strug- gle for foreign trade. Formerly, of- ficial trade figures gave on | port from which shipments cleared. Inland producers, of finding out what, agricultural and n anufactured goods came from thei regions wanted the commerce de {partment to adopt some other sys- | tem. The outcome was the new com- | pilation which is based primarily on | through-bills-of-lading, and there- fore, flects but a part of their cign trade and for othe :fm]; produced elsewhere. The ment of seasonal fluctu says lnrmnr Kiein, should also be con- D'IET FOR DOGS ! Fruit Salad total for- includes tior Proves Remarkably Successful In London, Londen. June 1. (AP) ps thrive on fruit salad. is a discovery made by A. E. Kennard, a veterin- ary surgeon. He first experimented on a litter of Borzois, feeding half of them on the usual dog foods and the others on a diet cons! v of oranges, apples and bananas. “At the end of three months,” sald Mr. rd, “the latter were noticeably in advance, physically of their brothers, and eventual result of the experiment was that the fruit salad pups all became first-class hounds, whereas only three of those fed on meat, fish and biscult grew into good dogs. One died and two othera developed rickets.'” The experiment was repeated with Pomeranians, and in three mont the fruit-fed Poms grew almost b vond recognition into the sizo of large fox-terriers. When distemper attacked the fruit-fed puppies it passed off like a cold. INJURIES FATAL Waterbury, Jure 1 (AP) H. Chamberlain dicd early yesterd at the Waterbury hespita sult of injuries sustained ¥Friday in he Waterbury rolling mills, The man’s body lies now at the funeral home J Mulville awaiting the Iccation o relations or Little is known of the antecedents the man, who roomed at the home of Harry L. Sizer at 37 Mid- Waterville, ing part- | Ker Milton H f friends. Ilesex street, Gained 10 Pounds In 22 Days some—but skinny and children just can't help putting on good. healthy flesh when they take McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets, As chock full of vitamines as the ty, fishy-tasting cod liver oil it- self, bu sugar-coated, taste- less tablets as ensy to take as and the stom- Th men, at’s Eoing women these are candy, won't upset ack One twent sixty Drug ( Vs Co m an gained days. any druggist Me- r Ol Compound Tal formula on eaeh ten pounds in ablets, o Sixty Dic cen tions and ( Get McCov's, the originaj and genuine Cod Liver O1 ot the | were | desirous | in the case of some states re- | Has Been Tried and | |in | tators. Color Aladdin’s suit orange, tri there o | his | As Alad. din’s father had dicd when he was wn what it was to have a father's care, ~a. |He and his mother were very, 99,153 | ery the queer look- all will 1t you follow the Color eks din the | m- {med with black around the cuffs and {the bottom of the coat. Make |shoes and stockings biack also. |tore cutting him out mouvnt him !a piece of heavy paper. The cof lof a magazine will do very |Tomorrow |for Aladdin and the story of his citing adventures will begin, 9 Assoclated E il]liATH TAKES 3 AT Indiana Event Ind.. June hs in a hospital here ree the toll of lives taken the dirt track aute rvaces here |urday. Ten persons were in the h pital with injuries and three are s to be in a serious condition. Maurice Schwartz, 60, Mishaw Ind., and Joseph Lauer, 14, of E hart died in a local hospital yest Robert Lieb, 8, of Elkh died Saturday Floyd G. Shawhan and Davidson, both of D {the race, were relea: $1,000 each a technieal t and battery as a cident. police said, Shawhan and Davidsor wheels with a third Frank C. Matthews. an attempt to wrech ar. Ma ws co automobile and a wire fence into a Sha 1 day Arthur ton, on cha: 7 decla drive other Matthe n crashed crowd of won the came ra while in Evades Blockade But Is increass thir his Be- on ver nicely. there will be a fine suit ex- AUTOMOBILE RACES Many Others Are Injured at Two ed in Sat- o8- | aid 1k~ er- art J. ivers in d on bond of rze resuit ked by er, we 1gh d. Captured, No Booze Found (AP)—One to d's liqu ¢ coast June 1 reported New York the few s)n,m ,)‘rrc.‘l the Threatv akali It is the W masted auxiliary schooner, outf and carryt No liquor Menella he Wou W sk per 1 pr test vas towed I of running wit While off the ight Friday, Men coast guard boats f schoor rent craf papers and he said Coast at th capt the W through Hell Gate quor. T and sold March. government Mene for £600 Five of I'amll\ Killed of have ) in [ ip- 0- In Crossing Tragedy Hamilton, 0., June 1.- bers of an Indiana y of were killed and the sixth, a boy 10, was Injured severely wher automobile was struck by a nati, Indianapolis and Western ra road passenger train n erday morning ve m AUTOS COLLIDE Newtown, June 1 (AP and Harry F dgeport, we mobiles i . night Bray o “ &s nolds is suffering from s acerations six of eir Stewed rhubarb, crisp Breakfast | serambled eggs, broiled bacon, | bran toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Baked new cabbage, | brown bread, cup custard, plain cookies, milk, tea. Dinner — Pot roast of beef, tatoes rousted with meat, brown gravy, creamed new carrots, spin- ach salad, cream puffs with straw- cream filling, Some authorities on young children consider “brown gravy" one the forbid- den foode, If the gravy is rich with fat, heated to intense heat the purpose of browning, it most suredly is forbidden. But if ts browned the as in a pot roast and slightly thickened with flour, well cooked before serving, it makes a delicious and popular dish for kiddies, Baked New Cabbage Tour cups finely shredded | bage, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 spoon flour, 1 1-2 cups milk, teaspoon salt, few grains pepper, | tablespoons buttered crumbs. BRINDELL AGAIN - BEING ACCUSED | | po- for the by meat cab- table- New Oiienm Wile on Parole Are Charged Yonkers, Junz An from Charles Johnson, Jr., of the dock carpenters’ Robert P. Brindeli, who was convicted when he was president dock union, was attempting resume control of the organization and that he had committed a new act of la- bor extortion, was sent to the state board of parole yester . Brindall was paroled recently with the stipulation that he must not take any labor office. Violation of the terms of his parole would result in sending him back to prison for almost six years. Samucl Untermyer prose- cuted Brindell, has charged that the former lahor lcader had violated his parole, but the boa “informal discussion’ tion last weck decided tions unfounded. The Johnson affidavit was sent to the board by Mr. Untermyer in furtherance of his demand f an open hearing on the Brindell case In the affidavit Mr. that Brindell told him he sery taken care o !would act as a “dummy” president and let Brindell resume actual con- Johnson-also says affidavit that Brindell told he wes reported and the anybody with sense could make that much if they used their head Jo aid that he had inf tion fre f a president union, that former leader of of the to who the the accusa- of situa- were Johnson says a be wo we ol of the union. his m th i president orma- ecent- a strike Iy completed b Srorkarsion had T af given Erindell $2,000 on his solicitation, ture been calle Tat Reducing Since the Bread starting of f Wa has ad in a hig de- aign for . there on mar fiom company, Ly reasor | | | Let cabbage stand in cold water for 1 hour before mincing. Pouw boiling water over cabbage and le stand 1 minute, Drain and plunge into very cold water and let stané 2 minutes. Drain. Put into 2 quary rapldly boiling water salted with teaspoons salt and boll uncovere¢ for ten minutes, Melt butter, st in flour and slowly add milk, stir. ring constantly, When thick anc smooth seafon with salt and pep per, Add drained cabbage and turs into a buttered baking dish. Cover with buttered crumbs and brown in hot oven, Strawberry Cream Filling One-haif cup butter, 1 1-4 cups powdered sugar, 1 egg white, 1 1-3 cups strawberries cut in haly Beat butter to a cream and beat in 1 cup sugar. Beat until Tlight, Beat white of ecgg until stiff and dry with a wire whisk, Beat in re- sug Fold egg mixture butter mixture and add be maining into Piles ‘ Can't Be Cured from the Outside. Fixternal treatments seldom cure | Piles, Nor The i do surgical operations. cauge is inside—bad circula~ on. The blood is stagnant, the veins | flabby. affidavit | extortion | of parole at an | The bowel walls are weak, the parts almost dead. To quickly and safely rid yourself of piles you must free the circula- tion—send a fresh current through stagnant pools. Internad treatment is the one safe method. Ointments and cuttings won't do it. J. 8. Leonhardt, M. D,, a special- ist, at work some years ago to find a real internal remedy for piles. He succeeded. He named his pre- scription HEM-ROID, and tried it in 1000 cases before he was satisfied. Now HEM-ROID is sold by druggists cverywhere under a guarantee, It i a harmless tablet, easy to take, and can alwaye be found at any good druggist, who will gladly refund the purchase price to any dissatisfled customer. Callouses Get rid of themn this safe, sure, way. Stops the pain at once, At m. and shoe stores Put one on—the Zino-pads pain is gone ! Lemon Removes Lines, Wrinkles Squeeze the juice of two lemons in & bottle containing three ounces of Or- shard White, which any druggist will supply for a few cents, shake well and you have the very mildest anti- wrinkle lotion to d skin, erase fine lines 1 er ate crows-feet. Massage this sweetly fragrant tion into the skin at night, most of the tell-tale 1 lines and crows-feet othed out, giving a more contour chin, velvety lemon ¢ By mornir wrinkles, cheeks, skin this astringent cd pores, also to sallow, tanned and whiten harmless loti n yourself PROMINENT CLUB WOMAN SAYS TO PUBLISH HER STATEMENT umatism, triend of mine to try NOX-RI-TIS. 1 took i today, I am well and It goes to NOX- ainly is a wonderful 1 say rheumatics, 1o ail Hanson Drug O nd get the bookle

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