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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1926. | | | Quicksands of Love Adele Garrison’s New Phase of |4 Revelations of a Wife —— He and wi around t table, my sheaf of notes in his #and There he stood towering above me, {looking down at me with inscrutable | pro- | les of the | It was ) {ance ipt of his . Mind- |tion.” I had| A puzzled itzen of- | past me hefore Employir Making a Play rose ked #Mrs. Grahan *‘Yom, Mr. Vertizen.” We v seat L reat eyes, It Please “Does You" ary import; Iy, “Does ft first ques- is said surpris is the he sccond or two wingec I caught his mean me 1 of my story and my kno®l- | wanted no v part to his possible of anyone else Of course I knew his own court of last wledge that he only to my own s and ideals banished a fear h had been mine, and I ans ed his promptly and ously. no piece that has sat am afraid T have tic liberti places. He smiled enigmatically. “Yes, T am afraid you have” he said, “but I'll keep Bladner away from you until he has time to calm down. It's no more than he expects when he does a script, however, for | me. He's the last word in his line, but, when he is in a fine frenzy and vants a certain effect, he is capable of putting a negro spiritual into the fol cf N not corne fics ause possible xas on ‘rial, t n dramatic rd had T knew, th ition. Tad 1o re 1poa, lore |that nack ort d taken | ntmum of time |ide: ep upon A shorten- s far more ary diet, and which aly for schedule, for gl n mw for the rapid w every morning alon the park helow Riverside now with tensed nerves hear(, T waited the fam verdict upon the result of my lat “You Have Done Good Work! 1 had made no corrections upon the copy itself, beyond tiny red figures indicating corresponding ones upon the sheaf of papers compris- ing the report which I had handed bim. With only a perfunctory c teous word of acknowledgement, he had taken them from me, motioned me to a seat, and had then gone ed stion joy o I said. “I know of 1 ever have done me more. But I taken rather dras- ith the seript in some does,” work sfic i of ck o Place the DIAGNOS exercis: TREATMEN shoulders rotate | stretch the arms hig | tion as they will go. | the in oV The Beauty Doctor o s e o s ommoamom RY N[N () Nmo oo for Virginia Magee demonstrates this exercise CONDITION—Too much fiesh on the back of the neck and shoulders. muscles. you finger tips on your shoulders, then make a circle. \Do this many times. Also head and as far out in a horizontal posi- This will wear away the ratty tissue if you persist. mouth of a medieval monk."” 1 was more relieved than T cared to sh for T knew the exalted reputation of Theodore Bladner, the |author of the lines which I had been compelled to change in order to pre- he historical accuracy of the through them with meticulous delib- eration. So quiet had been the aus- terely beautiful room, with its sound-proof doors and walls, that his voice at last speaking my name startled me into a quavering reply which made me fiercely angry at myself for the nervousness it be trayed. That he noticed my tremors 1 knew by the sudden keen glance he gave me. T knew also by an’al- most imperceptible twinkle in his black eyes that my trepidation amused him. “You have done a good plece of work here,” he said slowly. “I am well pleased T caught my breath in a gasp of rellef which was almost a sob. Like all tyros. this first piece of work was of tremendous importance to me, and T had waited for his opin- ion with somewhat the feeling of a prisoner on trial waiting for a jury verdict. am very glad that it has pleas- ad you,” 1 managed to say after a second or two. he was much relieved at the thoug! that for some weeks at least |would not go abroad “I shall advise," he said, “th morrow you and Miss Meredith Mr. Elkins and ask when the dialogue, Repeatedly he had used |counting will be ready. If vou words and expressions which 1{or hear anything that you think is not been coined for a century or two |5t all dubious, manage to telephone after the supposéd perfod of the father's office. 1 will be there action, and though I had been aghast > morning and 1 will im at my own temerity, 1 had censored the thing relentlessly. T had substi- tuted phrasin historlcally aceur-| “But, Jerry,” T ate trying as best I could not to|you sure that you want spoil the wonderful art with whieh |father. You know he Bladner had wrought. But even [Afr, Robinson's. Why though my passion for accuracy and my memory of Philip Veritzen's in- structions enabled me to completc my task, T had felt almost as if {had committed a sacrilege. There | fore, the unqualified approval of the master fds most gratifying to me. Wi to o tc serve ac remonstrated, *z to tell your is 1 Ny tore bees I mentioned her's ‘No your job at old fool liked your looks. My isn’t such a friend of that man that vou need to worry about him, “You've never understood Judy. And by the way, dear, ther are lots of things about life you have vet to learn. I sove your {and enthustasm and your undaunte v of marching into things. but have worried —myself sic have known you for fear would ‘come @ Cropper. pretty good old scout. ‘Why, Jerry, 1 don't s can say that. You know told me about you." g ves, T know hose things about me, 1 was in love with you want you to marry myg dear, Dad's mother, more him and me name you didn’t, my dear. You got Morton's hecause that or fat Copyright, 1926, by Newspaper ture Service, Inec. co 1 that Dad you héw you what e He told you all he didn't You and me sec wife The Convenient Stomach then t see that But by for time was happéning. aind by that starfish let go lof the shell and be to crawl |away. They could see down into that vartly opened shell. Reddy looked looked at T looked down some they anyth couldn By Thornton W. Burgess something to marry be commit than hari har would worse | one. Jimmy and Jim- | * Tove ‘em »ddy and they both |/mistaken Dad's motto. that half-opened | hardly blame him, can shell. There nothing in it. No, | (Copyright, 1826, by NEA sir, theré was nothing in it. It was as empty as a shell could be in Reddy looked at Jimmy and Jim- | my looked at Reddy. “Do you suppose, “that that shell was empty time, and that that was the it opened fo easily Jimmy Skunk “No,” said he, in way. have seen lot of oysters and lot of oyster shells. Empty shells are never closed tight that vay. There certainly was an oyster in that shell. It looks to me y much as if that oyster had been edt- | n right under our very noses. Look nother one Let's ck him." enough, another hig starfish ping into view. Jimmy and This passed The Starfish has without a doubt The most convenient stomach out, —Reddy Fox. But you my u can I he has any stomach trouble, there is no reason in the world why the starfish shouldn't get rid of the trouble right away. There is no ex- cuse for not knowing what the trouble is. He doesn’t need .a stom- ach wrong side out. As a matter of fact, that is the way cats his | food. He doesn't to take the trouble of biting it, chewing it and swallowing it. He rns stomach insifle out around the and that is all there is to it. Reddy Fox and Jimmy Skunk saw this done, though they didn't quite understand what was happening They did not know tha 1ehoy or other that starfish was opening®an e rvice.) ‘ 'I'u“\trrl't T ‘,\,"“ Jur\. FASHIONS By Sally Milgrim Reddy, 1 the reason *said ave shook 2 his head just | most decided his | food there of those thi Sure > < v, & Reddy right cree watched over the ouster shell | vithout paying any attention to it But when it reached the next oster. it stopped. Reddy and Jimmy saw it fold its arms about this oy Then, as a re or patient wateh- they the ng happen that happened with the rst and the starfish. Slowly the shell opened. When enough, empty rd g 5 precisely same oyst Ty t slow ad b starfish alt ¥ secome open wide very busy for seemed to be fust it moved | an empty shell. | Jimmy knew be somehow those | ate gh it Ry whil estin and by Hany == nd that t doubt opened “Do you suppose “that that shell was tim asked Reddy empty all the ers and of fact, the of o tter orst enemies so feed shellfish, but they a 1 of oysters, Reddy and Jimmy common sta How he inderstand, but t What he really did oyster open. Then when opened sufficiently, simply tur oyster. dia it, t ey saw him do it vas to pull that that oys er Mr rfish on ed r ot any kinds. rge and common hough some- seven. But great many his wrong (f the | the others star very |1 all. The arms six or with a out it oys and shell, ayster All that Red nd was that very were all abo ove s the end of Jimmy cou sh seemed If You Are In Doubt About a Color busy about somc Arms. (Copyri "he next Scheme, Seleet One of the 1 40 S heme, Select One of the ot so intereste for it New Yellow Greens, soft, umong the new color not th featured shade through It. While n found is most effective t for is a en re che in but vellow iuv P 16 spring, a new of particular clothes, it ather strec costume S| s in in warn ensembles—the type of instance ts or_ frocks Inte ] the should line for JERRY 1 noticed that queer during Joan's long explanation and description of her brother, As she went to telephone hospital for report of Lela asked him he wu about, “I am not worrying he #ajd, “but I'think it n romewhat longer than Miss Meredith expects to get the property settled up unless her attorney has been | i 2 ADVISES ¥ in town during summer both should not 1y that on such a day accounting would be d rat late formal in They be and be Ior lays o of notice on £ slightly coloring to this re its adapt Nile tones | country in well as cool n is the vomen s worryin - dear. that wou 150N gree choice new bility it costumes e8¢ on account In makes hae yourself into a ob As very much,” already Jerry pistac delightful almond is an ex between, said tie crooked sniile always gave the me a tiny heart throb, curled up at [ and it the cornew of his mouth, and 1 knew |cellent medium for the 5 is. that hich queer lit- in chatreuse ately interest Dad in the mat- friend of . | and gold. my job at the Morton Department | Dad | «ince 1 |bathing beaches. For N is a| for he knew | my | is the pity—deserted | when T was only a year | old; consequently, Dad thinks that T}, any | ind leave ‘em’ is poor | | | autho seda with glints this sketehed | warm | of | | o | 5| A scason strect ensemble. The practical little today is faille crepe en. Cont ting notes are fur- nished the colar, cuffs and the ! mented with decor pockets tive stitching in darker green and outfit shown in yellowish by or also em green a bit sue with of gold sroidery. This smart ensemble, consistin: piece frock and short v faille crepe trimmed decorative stitching in green cape, with is gre 1926 ( Your Health How to Keep It— Causes of Illness Couyrigh °S) your | | | | | EDIT@®R'S NOTE: This is the first 4 |of a series of three articles dealing [NOW GO O with the spread of contagion at EA Service M. Metzen- nationally tells of the dan- precautions for nd the Herald, by aum of Cleveland famous specialist gers ond suggests for your safety Dr. By Dr. Every summer “dog and bathing beaches pidemics of in ove M. Metzenbaum with its public brings nation season, crowded nd pools, ection the days” ir, nose and throat troubles skin eruptions reach a high peak during the hot months, mostly due to the carelessness of a few per- |sons in the crowds of bathers, It is a seroius problem from the |standpoint of the health of the com- inity. Often, too the communit litself 1s at fault, perhaps in laxity of enforcement of restriction, per- in the construction of the ches, Danger lurks in every min- or infection. An appalling number of contagious disease cases is direct- Iy traceable each year to the swim- Iming p! ns. Breakwater a Menace Many bathing beaches, even those t the ocean, are often partially pro- {tected by breakwaters or are in shal- |10w bays or inlets, bes from being washed away |and renders the bathers rather safe. ‘IV‘H in thes ar 1y protected places. the is often stagnant or there little exchange of the water there with fresh water. In most of the Great L an unfavorable wind will often wash ge from the large intercept- rs in the direction of the often neces: ting closing by the local health protects its own e down ve, hes wate is ve the beache jes, Chic: of ng ppi Tiver pert Opinion American engineer the sew disposal sys- ny." d {ow in America dispose of | beaches by sending its s ‘whw Missis ¥ |ter {ao t { their He lakes An who was 1dying in C cities ¥ answered, “They empty it into and rivers, then bathe in it then ta some it back in drinking wate olting as that may scarcely an overstale | American ecities, in other ways al- [ most the last word in itation, |1#ave not yet learned to protect their | bathers. Ao their sound, it is nt. Many ot Fox hourlds are not the cheap pets. Someijufes good hounds bring as | mich as $2,000 each. Severe sunburn caused intense pain Skin so sore could not touch it Resinol heals Seven Mile, Ohio, Feb. 13:— am a farmer and am out-of-doors all my working hours. During har- vest time last year, I became badly sunburned about the face, neck and ms. They were so irritated and ained so intensely I could hardly tand anything touching them. I tried various remedies, but nothing did me any good until I tried Pesi- nol Secap and Resinol Ointment. I vas telieved by the first applicatton and by the time the first r of ointment and ke f soap were gone m sunburn had vanished. I am | s & booster for | Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment.” (Signed) Gordon W. Morris, R. R. No. 1, Box 14, This prevents the | THE P MERRY LOCKE, pretty ad gay as her nickname, is a born flirt. Her sole ambition is to have a good time and plenty of beaux. At 20 | she fails in her business course be- ‘Then, when takes little | | | | cause she won't stu. her suddenly dies, she LILLIE DALE'S a tiny y she is having the r of her life. se is ANTHONY awyer,who wagts engagement learns tha men, e is a job in beauty shop A that time first real love ‘The m th GAIN oun, marry her nds when he out with other r she hears that a girl in Montana, to live. She tries @ e eir A 5 going to where he not to ye Merry's ®older sister, ch employer. MOR- MAN. Merry envies her. and decides that s going to marry for money, too, | she meets ETLL | EE 3, a well-to-do bacheior, much older than herself. She be- comes engaged to him, but he keeps putting off the wedding date. JINNY, the youngest marries DERRICK JONES, n door, and goes to with his parents. Moms rents rooms in her ho to help make both cnds meet. Lillie Dale comes {o live in one of them, and a MR HEFFLINGER takes the oth After a year Moms and he get mar- ried, and home is no longer the pleasant place it once was to Merr During from goes out old \eart of hers, I ell, not knowing that he is married His wife threatens to divorce him |and name Merry in her suit. Then, on the day when Merry is going to cxplain matters to her, tries to Kill herself. Finally she and Pur- cell decide to patch things up. But lin the sister., | Muriel, h | Bill Erskine. sister, who live two | Bill's absences ith an one of town, she swe story and tells it to He writes to tell Merry |hie thinks they're not suited to one another; but Moms announces the engagement anyw; One night | Cassic comes home. She has decid- ed to leave Morley because of his love affaif with a MRS. FIFI PEI She tells Merry that Bill Erskine is |in town, and the next morning Mer- |y looks out of the window and sees 3ill drive up to the house with Mor- Kaufman! mea 1 N WITH THE STORY Merry opened the front door and walked to the end of the porch that overlooked the driveway. “Those trunks are to go back to Mrs. Kaufman's house,” she told fhe dariy “She doesn't want them The man stared at W m her he ly. asked. “Do you mean I've gotta drag them | all back to Overlook Heights?” | Merry nodded. “That's it," nswered. “They'll pay you vou take them back. He shook his head stupidly, and climbed back on his truck. As Merry turned away, | Kaufman was coniing up the steps. His head was turned, as he watched |the departing trunks, “Hello, Morle Merry him, but her eyes were | Erskine's figure. He had not stirred from his place in the great closed car. He was hunched down in his secat, gazing straight in front of him as he puffed at his everlasting clgar. | Tt he had seen her, or heard her voice, he certainly gave no sign of it With a little toss of her bright head Merry darted down the steps and ran out to the ca _ She opencd the door and jumped into it. | “What's the skine?” she at too-bright, was she when greeted on Bill matiter with you. asked him, ready-made i caningless a chorus girl's smile. “Why 50 up Weren's you even coming in to say ‘Hello’' to me? Cassie tells me you've been in town ter, Bill smile th as since y Been in town since Sunda Bill infrmed her without the ghost of a smile. seh here on busi- nese.” He offered no excus for not ccming to see her, “It must been awfully im- portant business,” Merry remarked, atter minute or two, “to keep you frem calling me up, at least.” Bill jerked his cigar from his | mouth, and savagely tossed it out of the window of the car. Then he turned a palr of triendly eyes on her. “How tonight, then?” he asked roughly. “Want to go out to dinner?” | 1t was not 4 cordial invitation. Not even a polite one. But Merry accepted it eagerly, ; Six o'clock?” she asked. s the time he usually called for her when he was going to take her out for the eyening. | “Seven,” he answered shortly. and she said good-bye to him and got out of the ca have hetween the sitting room was shut Me went back into’ the house. But from behind it came the babble of high, excited voices — Moms' and Cassie's shrill Merry caught the wor: once or twice. Then a pause. And when deep tones: “I wont' the thing with either of you. is all I have to say—Cassie | home now, with me, or she comes. That's flat.” Then silence, Merry tiptoed up to the landing | of the stairs, and stood there where she could hear without being seen. After two or three minutes Cas- | voice again not high |and nasal, but strangled and thi |as it she were crying. And then, presently, the flew open and out came all Moms and Cassic and Morley. Moms' arm was around her daughter's shoulders, bu‘ Cassie broke away from her and came run | ning up the stairs. | Merry flew up ahead of her. ‘ The door the hall and SOPranos. “Fifi Pell,” Mor- discuss This comes never came door three, PUR-| Morley | ashing | un- | about | That | when | ETTER “PLI, SUE HIM!" THOUGHT BREACH OF PROMISE.” By Seatrice Burton Author of “Love Bound,” “HER MAN (lllustrated and Copyrighted by Johnson Features, Inc., 1819 Broadway, New York City) WILDLY. . SUE HIM FOR Menus for the Family Breakfast: Sliced peaches with cream, cereal, top milk, plain ome- let, crisp bran ‘oast, milk, coffee. Luncheon: Cream of spinach soup, croutons, combination salad, graham bread. lemonade, Dinner: Watermelon cocktail, fried chicken, steamed rice, creamed | onions, cucumber salad, baking pow- |der biscuits. sponge cake, raspberry | parfait, m!lk, coffee, | Since a cream soup is served lem- |onade is suggested in place of milk |and tea in the Juncheon menu. Stewed prunes, fruit juice or ap- | ples in some form should be provid- ed for children six years of age for breakfast. Peaches, delicious as they |are, are a hard fruit for small tum- mies to digest unless the fruit is thoroughly cooked. Combination Salad | Four thin slices bacon, 4 small to- | matoes, 1 head lettuce, 1 cup cooked | green beans .few drops onlon juice, | sour cream dressing. Wash lettuce, crisp and dry. |three or four of the outer |and combine with the sprinkled with onlon juice. Chill. Scald, pool and chill tomatoes. Cut bacon in half-inch pieces and broil until crisp and brown. Arrange | beans and shredded lettuce on a bed of the inner leaves of lettuce and sprinkle with the crisp snips of bacon. Cut tomatoes in quarters and arange around the hean salad mix- ture. Serve with sour cream dressing | made by whipping 1 cup of chilled |sour cream until solid. Add table- |spoon sugar. 1 teaspoon salt, 1-2 | teaspoon ground mustard and 1-4 | poon paprika mixed and sifted. |Beat in 3 tablespoons lemon juice and 1 tablespoon vinegar and chill. | (Copyrignt, 1 EA Servi Read this, Girls: Freckles Melt Away shred leaves beans | | | | Casste’s face was mottled | kerchief th tossed down on wet little ball. it doing, listening | n in st Merry between the sobs that still shook her. | she a you that rowas were « dre asked “Are you going back home, real- Iy?" Merry answered her with question of her own. For Cassi had begun to fling her brushe: night clothes back into her } | She sniffed and wiped her eyes)! and the end of her pink nose with |t a fresh handkerchief, “I guess so,” she said wearily. “What is there to do?" Her, chin quivered. “I can't get along | without Morley. T hate him, but I'm crazy about him, too.” shook out the folds of the orchid ni folded it into her ove “I n-never knew how for hi muntil he v Fifi ePll” sitting back on her he ing up at 1 It else She crumpled | gown and | -night bag. much T did |4 began to |y she added, | Is and look- her He can't be so awfully wild about her, or he wouldn't be here to take me home with him, would h Her hard green ally wistful as she i Merry the question. And Merry gaid she was | sure Morley did not care a snap of his fingers about Mrs. Pell. “Men can make love to a woman —and it doesn’'t mean a thing in their lives,” she added, out of her young wisdom. How many men had made love to her in their time, without mean-| ing anything! She thought them over as she kissed Cassie goodbye—Less Purcell Cabby Marsh and Derrick Jones, and a dozen others whose very names she had half forgotten. From the window of the bed- room she could see Bill Erskine, still sitting in Morley'’s car. He | had 1it another cigar 2nd was blow- ing the smoke out of the window beside him. “And Bill kine,” she sald to | herself, “I wonder what I mean to him. I wonder if T ‘even meant anything to him but a good-look- ling girl for a petting party.” W chase a sister. eves were actu- velope b t |m | u ¥ dow and opened the door of her | clothes closet to choose a dress for tonight. The her clothes, | b | hanging there, cheered her up. | Ry the time had decided on | an almond-green crepe, and a black very sight of he She began to hum as she laid them {out, and sprayed some perfume on them from an atomizer. Gloom dever lingered long in | Merry's heart. She was, by nature, | |a sun worshipper. Instinctively she black cloud. P “Rill Erskine was with Morley,” told Moms and Lillie, when she | dining room for “What do | sl went back to the another cup of coffee. vou ‘think of that? T didn't even know he was in town. I'm going | out fo dinner with him tonight. | So 1 guess everything's all right with him and me again.” | Lillie and Moms looked at her | without speaking. Mr. Hefflinger got up and walked pompously out | of the room. “Did you see this piece about | Les Purcell?” Lillie asked, when the door had closed behind him. She shoved the daily newspaper | across the table to Merry. On the front page was a single-column story about Les and Nonie Purcell. The headlines seemed to spring out of the print at her—"WIFE HINTS AT OTHER WOMA The opening sentence struck terror to Merry's very soul. “Mrs. Nonie Purcell, who tried to comenit | suicide by taking poison last No- vember, yesterday filed suit for divorc: “Oh, my soul—" she groaned, and fell back in her chair. “Do you suppose I'm the ‘other woman?" You don't think 1 could be—do you?" Her eyes went from her mother’s face to Lillle's, and they were like the eyes of a frightened, hunted animal I can goon find out out from Les's own lav Lillie suggested hopefully. “And then rou_won't have to mix up in it at all.” ’ “And you'd befter stay home to-» 1 can find and | a [swollen with crying, and the hand-{calls you up” she added, getting | “I'll get a girl | | 1 know to take care of the shop, this | {and time, agent,” | morning,” could see |%n. | eryin sue him | will—just as sure as I'm alive and | angers her. et was washed and not talk to anybody opt of her chair. morn The morning passed quietly. who In Four Days Just apply this wonderful eream new discovery — and in four At twelye o'clock, while Moms|days your freckles are all gone— Merry were having unch;’ Lillie called up. “There’s nothing about you Mer been Jjust ‘other woman’ Lillie said. have hat 0 some reporter or other.” Merry breathed a great sigh of | relief. she said. If inch from panic all morning." “It I ever got myself into the | newspapers Bill WOULD be through che told when she went back to vith me, and no joking, her mother he t The front doorbell rang. “rn It's probably Moms sald, and got somebody comes, , try ng to s It was bore the name of Towers hotel. “Why, fit's from Bill It was not a long letter. that it was only pages of the narrow hotel paper. When Merry had finished it she [sat statue-still for a minute. | she flung the letter down on the | looked across at her |Other skin troubles. able and mother, One corner of up in a half-hearted smile. “He—He says le's said monotonously. down in Florida, a month ago.” Her head hands. but her eyes were dry. was no grief in her heart She turned away from the win-|Only a she gasped. ach of promise. I'l sue him! for br breathing!” (TO BE CO» ¢ Muriel Kaufman visits the beauty | hat, she was feeling herself again. | yon ang gives Mer even? Read it in tomorrow" hapter of “The Petter.” An Indian war ashore on ON THE TRAIN OHNNY was riding in the train. He was so excited when the engine began to puff and puff and go faster and faster., Soon they had left the town and were hurrying \through the country. 1 The telegraph poles ran back- ward as fast as they could . . .. and all the trees and cows and farms were gone almost as soon as Johnny saw them. The hous- ‘s waved to him with the white clothes hanging in their back yards. And two boys waved to him from a fence-gate. “I wish I knew those boy: Johnny said. “But I guess I won't ever see them lllill-” a bit of “I've been just a only an | up. ell pins or buttons, or maga- zines, or something.” But when she returned she had a letter in her hand. special delivery letter and the en- the a Erskin! | | He must have written it just this | Merry said faintly as| | she opened it with a fruit knife. i Moms two | her mouth went | went down into her | OF night. Moms thought that she was | ¥ news which ‘What does she do to 50 feet long, T Pelee Island |loked for brightness behind every |in Lake Erie recently. It was hewn |out of a solid polar log. simply melted away. | Not only that, but this four day in | treatment leaves the skin clean and and | Nonfe Purcell's divorce papers this o “It must newspaper talk— stuff. Nonie | probably had been spilling her soul clear and youthful looking. So that you will not have to risk your mon- ey, Axelrod’s Pharmacy and Crow- ell’'s Drug Store or any live drug- gist will return you the purchase | price if it falls. Just ask for Flyte. It's just what freckled women have long prayed for. Pile Sufferers | You can only get quick, safe and | lasting reliet by removing the cause —congestion of blood in the lower bowel. Nothing but an internal remedy can do this—that's why cut- [ting and salves fail. Dr. Leon- hardt's Hem-Roid, a harmless tab- let, is guaranteed to quickly and safely banish any form of Pile mis- ery or money back. The Fair Dept. store and drugglsts everywhere sell it with this guarantee. FOR SKIN_TORTURES Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Just What You Need Don't worry about Then Fezema or You can have | & clear, healthy skin by using Zemo. Zemo generally removes Pimples, | Blackheads, Blotches, Eczema and married,” | Ringworm and makes the skin clear “He mar- n Ivied some girl T never heard of, | etrating, antiseptic liquid, that does and healthy. Zemo is a clean, pen- | not show and ‘may be applied day Ask your druggist for a | small size 60c or large bottle $1.00. TWO HOMES MADE HAPPY ByWomenWhoUsedLydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound “I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I think it is the most won. derful medicine 1 ever tried,” is the statement made by Mrs, Goldie Shoup of May View, Illi- nofs, She de clares that after taking the Com- i} pound she is in better health than before. Mrs. J. Storms of 29 Lane Street, Paterson, N. J,, writes: “I can not speak too highly of your medicine and I recommend it to ell my friends.” These statements were taken from two enthusiastic letters which tell of the help that has been received from using the Vegetable Compound. Both Mrs. Shoup and Mrs. Storms were {n a run-down condition which caused them much unhappiness. ‘When women are suffering from lack of strength and from weakness, their own life and that of their fam. ily is affected, When they feel well and strong and are able to do their housework easily, happy homes are the result. Are you on the Sunlit Road to Better Health? FRECKLES Get Rid of These Ugly Spots Safely and Surely and Have a Beautiful Complexion With OTHINE 4 (]