Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
s, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1027, | Qui Y yheimice Always Equally Good Quiksnds of Lve | SAOLLYWOOD GIRL 25 [V e Kb Eqal Good T RTINS . 4 . Adele Garrison’s New Phase of © JOHNSON FEATURES | “HONEY Lou'ETe Causes of Illness 'F " —Revelations of a Wife—— t[ CHAPTER LX “Love?” she said, and the soft- around in restaurants and at the 3 = evelalions ol a ue But before they reached Lo\()c's!spokvn word seemed to fall from movie studio, instead of at his own| BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Madge soek: te anything save that con- | house that afternoon, Bobbie heard | her lips.into the dim hush of the house, w be the only dif: itor Journal of the American | Amln‘:::hl::llp o !h@‘}fi.;‘}-::(:‘g u:::[ “‘,Jo)m J.f’;d n.ee ,,,y,(m')- the real reason why Monica had|room like a star falling inte dark- | ference! And yow'll be alone at| Medical Association and of Hy- | Surreptitiously I closely scruti- | surrounding 1t, a mystery enhanced 'EOt herself engaged, so suddenly, to | ness. “Love?” | home, cating your heart out!” geia, the Health Magazine nized my father's face as he, Hugh by the fact that Hugh Grantland Mr. Ted Piper, whose :Jtznk account ¢ %‘!_\e ,'“,’L Uggr it l}gu \' sil‘t 4 ‘thn. ’,,‘,1,1 1kr\m“vn| :hn w"‘m:_ The Medical Research Council of | Grantland, Lee Chow and I dis-|and Lee Chow had been compelled | Was fully as long as his long lean L\ul)dlhvnh )uu] l\umlr o z\,, E \I‘. n‘,' r' “x( el oy Great Britain has completed an L " elici ishes | t e at ny apartment | body! wouldn't you like to go she | tained Lottie to pour forth d [y vestigation’ of | the physique of| cussed the delicious luncheon dishes | to meet my father in my | b A R A, i T g pl TE8 . cati v s ccat ey were | “You see, it I go up to this|asked in aic 4 bt | ar P R e R S | ring on my finger, and tell her I'm| Somehow they got out of the face was fiushed and her eyes were | b ttln FAat CU R, SO ‘worn loni{. :.lmos{ of illness, which So filled with anxiety for my Boing to marry Ted, she won't|beautiful quiet house, and out {0 too bright. She looke as if s i Over 3000 women employed in | had so worried we upon the occa- | father was I, that it was not until | have a leg to stand on!” she said, | the car. 2 __{might burst into tears at anyifuctories were studied and com- | sion of his former visit. At that|he came to my door and summoned | turning her flashy roadster into the| It was a new car, and it pis -/ S U .. |pared with 400 women who had, time, indced, when he had given |me, that 1 realized 1 had completely | hedgod driveway ‘that led up to painted bright yellow and grecn. IUp *On, you can't tell me anything | formerly worked in factories but| FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: me the counsel concerning Dicky | forgatten a plan which had flashed | the pink stucco house. {bore a great gilt monogram M. fabout Gus foud. I've Uvedlyhg hgq been out vork. for a 5 A Soft Hat and Hugh Grantland which had so | upon me like an answer to a prayer | he'd look pretty sick, bringing | M.” upon it de, and AL lodked j next door toihkim too;lor sheliong period. The final group for R Ad e il voibe manner | when Katie had announced Hugh |suit against me because I'd vamped | fearfully out-of-place and vulgar in | cried bitterly. “He's just as bad loon'vavison tncluded 500 healthy | e eitione bre e DA S Novad ntland and Lec Chow. I had|her husband, when I'm going to | Lotti’s cool green garden. as they make 'em, and it 1 could i cont "0 S0 tending o col. cne farowell, one whom he might meant to ask their aid in tracing | marry another gink” she added,| “Wait for me a minute,” Bobbie I'd stop vou from spoiling your life | jcgo or teachers. Rever se aln, movements of Mrs. Baker, the | With a toss of her small defiant|said as she was climbing into it. by marrying him!” = | Among the tests applied were T had surmiscd that from out mysterious lodger from the fourth | head. Il be back in no time. Roy gav “Spoiling my life,” thought Bob-|jipiing the grip of the hand, and a the mysterious past which was his, [l 3 blishing her identity, and “But you aren't goipg to marry|me a message for an_r\ yesterday dully. "Im‘\\" will it .qm“” WY | orushing forward movement. The vears whose history 1 never had 3 g any meeting between her | Ted, so you say,” Bobbie re- and I forgot to deliver it. 3 him? I love him. heaviest work done by any of the | Jully shared, there had come a call roung Mary Harrison, It was a minded her quictly . | Monica turned upon her a look the trees she caught’omen was that in the chemical ¢hich spelled me for him, but task T could not perform myself| “Yes, but she dcesn't know that”|of concentrated fury. “You go gleam of his white clothes as|worie and in the brick works, but which he could not ignore. without sac my work with | Monica giggled. As the car cameback into that dame's house, andhe got out of his car. In & minute | gipers were occupled in steel trades That he still was listening to that | Philip Veritz 1 knew that it [to a stop she honked its three-|vour name's wall she snapped. [she was on her feet and calling %0 {,nq in potteries. Many of the w call, that the present co would be chi v to Lee Chow | noted horn loudly. | "8he as good as kicked us both him. Oh, she must go to him! She | nap 4130 worked in industrles | with Hugh Grantland and Lee C —unic | circ dis-| It was a bold blast. But Mon- |out of it must put her arms around him, and | whicy, merely required them to | & T i -a’s own boldnes ddenly e But Bobbie went on, and as she | feel his kisses on her mouth! : it : | pertsined to it, I was certain. But mayed about the possibilit ica’s own boldness suddenly left| . watch activities of various ma- | I also was convinced by the look |both Hugh and the Chinese might |her as she stood on the porch of | reached the porch Monica started |was sure of him, surc of every- ! pin . upon his face that he did not feel | be called away by the same mysteri- | the house and rang the doorbeil. |the car and tore down the hill with while he was kissing her — | “'y¢ the same sense of fatality which I ous summons which my father ap- |Bobbie could almost see her trem-|a roar and a flash of yellow paint s! She forgot all her doubts. was sure bad been his when he had peared to he obeying. |ble, and she locked white and|and new nickel. and her fears then! bidden me good-hye. It was with t (his in | strained, Lottie came to the door in an- Tell mo quick that vou like me Mysterious Conference Hitna bia + Mugh Grant-| "1 feel about as checrful as If|swer to Bohbie's ring. ts!” she half-sobbed out to him But that the matter was a serious | land's hurried el l 1 were going to the electric ch { “Didn’t you go?” she asked, sur- _she reached him. “Tell me one, the threads of which ran to | flustered query- led nervously. “For two | prised. you'll never look at another woman |jum qistricts of Glasglow and thelr | B L e I'd beat it!” _“No, T want to talk to you for a as long as you live. Tell me!" mothers ‘and grandmothers | continents, was patent from the | out of the city 'he door opened, and Lottie her- | Jiffy ; He ore that he never would, ! qone the same kind of work before | i o ndiohe wiich| e looked at me with selt stood there. | Lottie pushed open the screen fand the chances are that he meant |ypen SHngh Grantiandand Lee Chow. gave | keenness | Without a word, she looked first | d00r with a slender hand, came it. He was very much in lova with [ oo of these girls had shoveled | to him, a welcome which held in it “No, no ; hy? Is|from Monica to Bobble as if she|outside, Slde by side, she and Bob- |the small blond girl who had her |¢rom twenty to twenty-five tons of | Small soft hats of this style are stiil the unmistakable relief of troubled ' there ar v i i can | wondered how on earth they hap- | bie sat down on the stone steps. bright blond head upon his shoul- ! vai material In one day, lifting the Glaay Ry NEN EERVIGEAIING. 185Gk iy Hhe dEbehah AL BT men at the sight of a superlor in |serv pened to be standing there side by| “Roy came to me the othe ¢ der. It he hadn't been, he never!gpoio'to"aefizn e 97 s teat. | REG.U. 5. PAT. OFF. falt' orown ot pink’,cbmblnadiswith office. As deftly and unobtrusively e s T said with s side. 3 |and asked me to talk to you,” would have asked her to marty| ‘The girls who worked in the | | pink bangkok, and a rhinestone or- as 1 could, T expedited the serving mination “How—do—you do?" she falteréd | le began, her eyes on the sarden | Lim—not in a lifet BricE Senrls careiad asaalahisat Busl| b e fiBnt.fashlon thid: toqte. of the impromptu luncheon, and 1 your aid and advice s s that spread out before her in all) Tor he didn't want to get Mar-|pundred pounds at & time, o dis- | Telping Katle in clearing it away ly, not for any problem of my own| A E: nlr wz\nthrr little | its l"“‘sl.y green beauty under the nw\x' ] |tance of from seventy to elghty = 9 Ly eft them to their cigars and their | bhut for—Can vou come to see me|pause, she said: yon't .you |sunligh ) B And the o reason he was ds: ::ofl:!erence. Horhn fime Aees Hridee W { comte 1n?” | Beyond some flowering trees, | marrying Bobbie Ransom was be- | ™' A\0 0 pote the el wars - “Take at er onn's j eaicine Fortunate indeed it was for me. 1 had just remembered that| It was perfectly plain that that | Jolly was playing in her little sand- | ause she wouldn't let him make |\ oon the ages of 17 and The #hat T had put in a strenuous week | Lillian's dinner to my father w was what they had come for, and | box under a red-and-white :\\Tml!\: love to her as much as he wanted | .. weight of the women | d S H lh ” of research for Philip Veritzen, and | scheduled for Friday evening and | the ally was nothing for her|Her nurse sat near her, with a|to, unless he did marry her. N s foa s B N8 cuRak: | an tay ealt y w0 had but comparatively little to do | that time before then would be | to do but to ask them in. | piece of sewing in her hand “Come in and have a bite of SUP- | 1pe average height was 62 inches: | - 58 T went toimy desic in my own |tilled with my work for Philip| v followed her into the cool| From somewhere behind the per with me he said, his M| {he avorage puil of the hod room, and placed it near the open | Veritzen and the attention T wished | dimness of the house. The blinds | house came the sound of a lawn- against her soft halr. b e door to the corridor, a position from | to give to my fath were down to keep out the biazing | mower, and the trill of a can: But she shook her head. * 5% polings,. ind the wishIDE owWes SIhich T comd aee and flag anyons sunlight of the late afternoon, and, bird. The whole place scemed to | she sald. thinking of all the women (¢, "5 pounds. approaching the front room. For 1| Copyright, 1927, by Newspaper |all of the rooms were filled with|be wrapped up in peace and quict he had invited to go with him into | e terchers. who ranged from | found it impossible to focus my at- ture Service, Inec. | artificial twilight. happiness. that house of his — Monica, Joan | 15 t5 22 yvears of were in gen- | | Bobble saw Monica look curious-| *“How In the world could Roy |Joyce, Stella, his first Wite—d0Zens | pp1 1 poten welont, aon stecoorn s g {1y about her at the plain soft rugs, | Schultz have given up a home like of others! sUperios to both Brovas ot woioe {the light-colored walls, the ellk | thls and a wie like Lottle for| “Iwant to £o home. sho told |Sine 1o an attemnt to Aeconnt o | draperics, and the great crystal |cheap little Monica Mont?" Bobbic | him, and she insisted upon going | Gy i &% attempt to acecunt for | bowls of roses that were every-| silently ed hersclt for the alone and on foot. She wanted to .-o,m‘('l g x?;a.n\@rv a medi- | where in the rooms. | twenticth time. There was no ex- | (hink, she said. a1 l\'vn;lr;a;infi) BB el This was anything but Monica's | plaining it. &5 that they <were: Raaliy pleka notlon of what a house should be.| Thére was no exp mm::h him or s ey VN ¢ | Her own taste ran to gilt-tramed |any other man either, for that mat- M f h F I men. Al of them had vegula | pietures on the walls, bright-col- | ter! enus for the amity ;l‘_g‘?“‘m""r“f:;-r and during | ored rugs on the floors, taffeta sofa| Men were a queer lot. Part of : Mo cushions loaded with gold lace, in-|the time they acted like cr: : 1 or th ey 1t W cense burners and vel gt chairs. | hool boys, and part of the time | 1\»“ fl__h;sl\h' 0»|{fl\-< \h\'.ah 4.\ y “ ho sat down on the very edge of | like gods of the universe, Some-| Dre - SiR e Sanan Ay e | a straight-backed chair in the cool | body once called them ‘“apes and |cereal, € ache i isienlined Lo B i !dim library, where every inch of | angels” and that just about hit |in-milk on toast, c Ing particular fliness for industry 3 / Sl il x ; Aoiiats ralite: aatlaa: of women workers. It was only Whitcy Makes a Mistake 1 spa s covered with book- | the nafl on the head! s Tl R O DDA AT v The css | P “And what did Roy want you to| Luncheon—Creamed scallops in ' Sugsested that such workers should | By Thornton W. Burgess - = > AvRElIng " ch ot oAb . have a complete physical examin: \.\ Gl | bie sank down on a stool near The soft voice of Lot- ramekins, carrot-cabb: nd pepper i » N p L from her aay. |salad, bran rolls, apple tapioca pud- tiOn previous to employment in in- | | ding, milk, tea. dustries, and regular heavy physical “He wanted me to| Dinner—Roast loln of pork, can- |1abor, and .regular examinations as{ to their fitness to continue such | Maintains a tradition of excellence. was found by the observers | {that the most perfect specimens of | womanhood in industry were the | irls in the chemical works in Glasglow. Practically all of the wo- | men had been born and bred in l]\(vi Little sister’s daily dozen are errands. Home times a liberty you take ‘ b nd Lottie faced them both on | Doth prove a serious mistake. g | the wide blue so ross the room. | —Whitey the Snowy Owl | She looked i she had been| She started : ] crying, and her face was almost | tell you that he wanted to come died sweet potatoes, chillied apple O F] 0 or of the cream-colored linen | back home, she said simply and | Ssauce, creamed onions, head lettuce | Work. s S R she wore. She folded her |quickly, “He said ¥here never was | With Russian dressing, apricot whip, | The slogan of our family is: ‘Take Father John's Medicine and {::: “‘“"):'“‘";‘;:‘:': Z‘fi".‘(““"fr,]"l'"“": 1S5 |long stender hands on her knecs|anything to this Monica affair, and | mill e, gaham bread. healthy, We have used for muny years. We find iy R e o 3 : and looked espectantly at Monica. | that all men Kiek over the traces| Crenmed Scallops in Tamickins (m | that our children put on weight and get more rugsed each day while they and '\lsnir;g Farmer Brown's hen- | “Yes, she asked quietly. “You |once in a while One pint scallops 3 ldlvh-:'v\*nns ng Father John's Medicine. (Signed Mrs. HenTy Desautel, 193 b Th o h o e A - | wanted to speak to me?” “That's just it!" TLottie cut butter, & tablespoons flour, 2 cups | Fisher St., No. Attleboro, Mass. m‘;"d hilrsx‘;;é‘k(]:?:’gl;pqo which | g Monica gulped and nodded. Then | “They think all right if they | rich milk or thin c . 1 small Most Men Value i Father John's Medicine builds strength to resist Colds, Coughs, all at once she was herself again.|have a fling every now and then! [onion, 1 teaspoon sal Bronchitis, Asthma, Fiu, Pneumonia, and also relieves and heals the a o L e S e Her bold brassy self, | We women are supposed to take |Pepper, 2 cups hot rieed potatoes G d H lth | focted membrane. Do not wait. Take Father John's Medlcine now. No ;::1 l;fc:mnfcar enough you could She flung up her head, opened |them back and mend our broken | tablespoons butter, 1-2 teaspoon s 00! ea | arugs or alcohol. Over 70 years of HEALTH VICTORIES. el ‘ her painted mouth and began: | hearts and open our arms. We're 2 ¢sgs, hot milk “I would rather have a rat or| : "\pfiyl. ; «:I\‘I““r.l\:v Jt’ndsx:ngl:"w you | supposed to )w them have a little | Pour boiling water over scallops, Men who are doing big things some plump mice for a meal than | about that husband of yours! 1!thrill every once in a while, and | brir in to boiling point and boil are giving attention to their Sit L nsplino ot T sald LWhitey, | hear yow've got a fool idea in yourforget it when they're ready to | rapidly for one minute. Reduce heat | health, keeping their bowels with the end of a rat's tail dangling | “I think I'll stay around here Weaa tia Yivh alolent him a“_ny}..nm,. home! Oh, no! Not for me, and simmer for ten minutes. Drain. lugcflm\lngpropwlyby t-k.mg from the corner of his mouth. a while” | from you. Well T haven't. T don't |Bobble! I never can iive with Roy Melt buter, add onion cut in three | this nataral, pare-herb laxative Jrh:irar;;ch: Ithl"?ris:))"mh‘:xr::}”:\l"ng‘ 31510 b 1o the iy ot ors | WEDE NTE AR T oeyer T Sant Jreatn or four slices and cook over a low q ¢ ’ ey i N (3 ) up Iy the Far North, When 1 ean | Fun. o Whitty waited In vain for |Pim. A€ far as T can sce, he waa| ~She halt-turned as the sound of fira for fiva minutes. Romovo onion 9 Elmr ; and in vain for a hen, and of | Just sick of his home and his|a purring automobil 3 and stir in flour and salt. When per- Set theso I don't bother with ar e vanted a little cheerful- | from beyond the he f blended eream slowly. s = 5 | course all the time he was growing anted a little cheerfu ¥ N g RIS Se AT e L s Bt Bem i and Bungsler d time. So he hung| “There's Gus, coming home!” stiming constantly. Cook, stirring Wwhy anything is better than Then came an afternoon when | himself on mel” she said bitterly. “You're miil mixture boils. Add prepared iag. T think I'll stay around here| oot St R e anly all day| She stoppcd and waited as it she | marry him, and for a while every- | ramekins. Top with potato misture for & while. As long as I can get) © o B0 Vet plsewhore, | Just | expected Lottle to fight back, or at | thing will be merry as a marriage- scallops and turn into well buttered P % S1at now, and then it will bel o | St 8 he returned to . Farmen |1e08t to aty somethir | bell.” Then ne'll probably start prepared in the following w The True Family Laxative | §ood place to stay. It I can't get| /0 0 & o had no luck| But Lottle sat perfectly silent, |cut up. Oh, you needn't look so| Add butter, salt and well beaten - | BRA" e -Was. vy, very hu e | her dark eyes wide and shadowy |shocked, Bobbie. It's better for ' volks of csgs to hot riced potatoes, Giiish cleanses asiit dedrsithe’ | | looked over to Farmer Brown's|in the shadowy room. you to hear this now than later. Beat well, adding enough hot mllk | jneearinaltract. Usedsince 1851, | house. Something black and white “If I hadn't taken pity on him, | “Gus has always had a lot of to hold mixture together smoothly. | was moving in the dusk. On silent | S0me other girl would have!” Mon- | ¥irls hanging around that house of | Fold in whites of eges beaten untll| «¢ does all you claim for it in wings Whitey flew over, What |ica rushed on after a minute or so. |his—bringing them home for lunch stiff and dry. Drop from tip of large | aiding digestion and relieving made Jimmy Skunk look up just | A Man can't run around Holly- O tea or dinner. You know, you've spoon onto crcamed scallops in insomnia and constipation.” when he did, not even Jimmy him- | Wood looking for excitement with- | '{""“ ““‘;‘f- g‘lvn‘-'yt(rx times! Now, “M}W Put h\l’(» a hot ayen long — Wm. L. Ralph, N. Y. C. o saw Whitey, Whitey | 0ut finding some! You'd better be | do you think that just beeause he | enough to puff and brown the potato s o e “:;::,pljuhd that he didn't take up with | marries you he's going to stop hav- mixture, It will take about fiftcen | Family size $1.20; other sizes 60c & 46c. Get Cut the Spring Things! ARM weather is in the air! The first rebin has been re- ported! Spring will be with us before we know it. Call 1323-3 or 1323-2 and have vour lighter togs cleaned and pressed for use the first appropri- ate day; be prepared. When handicapped by conati- pation, for prompt relief take & rat I may be able to get one of those atupid birds that are kept shut up in that house, I've noticed that they are let out during the warmest part of the day.” So Whitey the Snowy Owl, who had come down from the North, visited Farmer Brown's barn every day for a week. Farmer | Brown's Boy like to see him there, | W88 reaching for him with o~ A S = a {2New Britain , | @ Vs " . | some dru store blond who'd have | Ing all those little love affai of | minutes, e . dla Farnér Brown and - Mother :’,f':flll,;q‘l“in?!’uh-‘,i..‘:“.],«l,:‘.‘\)u?rz:'r';:l‘;! Rung on to him 1ks = lescii—one | Hia? Nevor! Hell be hay Copyrisht, , NEA Servics, Ine ! Clmnl”gcip“ Brown. Thereforo they took great | (560 Uit [ U8 BesfEUR he catrles| ooty (o brass chickens that run | — . To a Masters Standard, e O | Whitey lost his appetite. But he | around Hollywooa! | g i“l iy ingialityand Scrvics i ( I However, Whitey n't easil N . t MAIN ST. alsturbed. He wasmt afrald of thesy | Wasn't the only one that lost an | s soon as I found out that RIS T AN, sturbed. He wasn't afraid of th appetite. You see, at the time Jimmy | YOU were worrled about him and | 1325-3 twodlegged creatures. Up In the | S00% & eoing to onter the | me I told Jim to go hang himselt | | i i ) ProNes- (3333 land where he had come from they | . : | ont on a limb!" she addea i § : ; ¢: I'shed of Farmer Brown's house, and | oK a1 AOGS | dido't harm him, 80 he saw R0 |y s perfume was so strong that| Bobbie Xnew (hat this was “ Fason why ha should -be -afrald | %0 ot away the appetits of |brasen’ lie. Monica never had| down here. In fact, Whitey took a | o 4\ 2ol S L ey | told Roy Schultz or any other man | t deal of interest in watening | Farmer Brown's Roy, Farmer Brown | & great deal of interest In watching | B RANE S 00 | to g0 hang himself out on a limb.” | all that went on down below. You | s % Her gystem was to hang on to the |n‘ | 1 | know he can seo by day as well as until she had got everything from by night. Those are very convenicnt them that &he thought she could eyes. It is all because his true TN () st from , them — money, jewelry, home is way up whers part of the TQ EE & lOD ¢ parts in a motion picture, year the sun doesn't sct at all and | She was a highway robber, and part of the year there is no sun, So | S TO Q | E S she cleaned them out. Whitey has become accustomed tdes,” & sceing under hoth conditions BATHS | Don’t tredt it lightly. said coyly, ttic's stony i = Disease germs always find a A . . Now there is nothing stupid about PLASHI Splash! Flutter! rioes U andmed. o sy el pey i L i IR AN ' fine breeding place in the || : Buy PaSteurlzed Mllk Only! the members of the family of itob- Splash! | other man. See? " { 3 : i} raw, sensitive membranes— ber the Rat. After {hree or four A Bl a1 Rebi ean Balkig s | She held up her small hand, and 3 : : they multiply rapidly, infect them had mysteriously dise Bkl it i binioad Rer | Ted Piper's great diamond blinked | i 4 ! he bird-pan. Betty and T great diamor 1 e ; T went aroin. (h i e SRR o (R il lhee. ot e : e : } ] the throat tissues, and unless OU are protected when you buy was a mysterious enemy wait over hus back.. and dip his head [ eye 1 4 & checked, may cause a dan- m Every time he did this he “I've sent a notice of my engage- | g : them outside the I o that it | # gerous inflammation. | pasteurized milk; you KNOW was no longer safe to visit ta: hen- | looked up so surprised! His | ment to Mr, Theodore Plper to all | | Louse, After that all of Iobber's round. bright eves looked first | the papers.” she announced in her | § 3 i 48 g Actatonce, at the first sizn of a it is pure and uncontaminated. fumily vemained v and under e | f‘ln="""’f'hh'"?l Bilhe. Then [ | soft coarse voice, “and by the time i ) g : fe?fR’a’s“ié‘fii})’i;ifiszsffl,?fi’ aw milk may or may not be suit- sarn, seldom showing o much as a e hopped upon the edge of the | you get ready to sus your husband | ¢ : ( : fhat = . ‘ 4 | | v I Y : flammation from spreadinginto the } - S ablefor human use, whisker outside. In vain Whitey sat pan and let hus tail feathers hang | for a divorce, I'll be on my way to “Danger Zone” and developing into on the roof of the barn and waite in the water | B p o RS Y . B ey s na wnited | Let's be Robins tony [SERTORS 4 INE honsrencH ! Bronchitis—Pneumonia—or worsa h. w hungrier and | ght when | Bobbie gaspad at the holdness of it lungrier and hungner. But patience we take our haths!" Billie sad 8. 106 ALG wad tllhE Golug. te % & ¥ complications. 8 a virtue possessed by Whitey and | Oh! Yes!” Betty laughed Europe on her honeymoon with Ted | . . : PERTUSSIN brings healing other members of his family, So he and then the Mama bud will Piper! Why, it was absurd. She | ! ¥ comfort and_belps to free you of Milk that bears our label is sat and sat and sat and watched | il et ‘]’, 3 lot of ‘| wasn't even going te marry Ted | 5 3§ sticky, germ-laden mucus thatclogs ALWAYS pasteurized, hence it is and watched and watc At | A >Iper: had ntention. of oe : B 4 : the air passages. For safety’s sake, : { Piper; had no intention of marry ; S iy Y he began to wonder if | ing ed Biper, £.8 4 get a bottle today. If your cough always safe. Buy it ONLY. possible that he had cat « | "I wonder i Lottle bet her,” 4 o has already settled in the “danger E N onde ottle believes her, e 3 » v last rat. If ho had, he would have| | : thouglit Bobblo 1 7 zone™, you should see your Doctor, :a get something else for a meal 7 ’ | Tt Lotiic showed dbthing with t 3 3 ; Note—PERTUSSIN is a simple began to think ahout those huns , face that was not quite a § ¢ e i herbal remedy free from dope, and d“:{" ”l“' : : { 1 ¥ -face, but more a pale and 2 1 » has been prescribed by physicians Now Farmer Brown's Doy k: s 3 TR, motionless mask. Her lips did not 38 P e for 20 years. N feathers and fur. When | ! elicate pointed fingers clasped and | ge 4 i Past: zed Mi Whitey catch a rat, he knocv | ‘l"m‘\K R A ; } : 5 | | = 3 eurt 3 IR Cream '\)\'hl'fi_\ h d probuhly had enoush - she sald nothing—just waited | % | 3 i 1\ ake Swit Its Seiberts” 12 present, so he did not hesity ' It would just upset Mr. 3 i f S ENTYAT G to let the hens out In the henyard ' BT RN el 1t hett y k o e R H b[\‘(l[;ll{.hg\‘ 437 P‘R'\:‘!:ONE ;Z%%MTNN CONN 2 e ’ for & run. But when he wasn't cor P should accuse me of——of having a taln that Whitey had had a rat, p v love affair with your husband "' Farmer Brown's Boy wisely decided e | Monfea hegan agaln when Lottie “I FEEL AS IF [ WERE GOIN( THE FLECTRIC CHATR," SHE ry Cou@ i 1«0 to put Mmp'allfli in his way stopped her with a lif GIGGLED. l REEZ