Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, July 30, 1919, Page 5, Image 5

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    " When a Girl Marries"
By ANN LISLE
A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing
Problem of a Girl Wife
(Copyright, 1919, King Features
Syndicate, Inc.)
"When I finished telling Jim Lane
Cosby's story Jim sat silent for a
moment, staring at the ceiling and
puffing hard at the last of a series
of cigarets he had been smoking
steadily all the while I related the
circumstances leading to Loretta
Cosby's death and Lane's second
marriage.
"Poor old Lane," he muttered to
himself. "Poor old chap; And no
one would think he ever had a care
in the world."
He crossed and uncrossed his
knees restlessly several times, still
murmuring his comments without
taking any notice of me.
"I'll stand by the poor old chap.
Guess he's groggy from all the
sharp knocks he's had. That cat —
can't do a thing. Women are a
queer bunch."
Then he pulled himself up sud
dnly and turned to* me, speaking
gravely:
"Anne, have you ever stopped to
realize that with the Harrison
name, the money I'm making now—|
and your own personal charm, you j
can take your position with the
best in society any time you're '
ready?"
I did a right-about-face to put
myslf in touch with Jim's mood.
'Do you want me to be a society
leader, lad?"
"Virginia, I'd like to resume our
old position," commented Jim.
"Yes, and I'm pretty keen to get 1
back to the old place. I'd like it !
all right. It was ours once, and 1
we have the equipment now. It's
only a question of"
He hesitated, and finally went on
with an air of Abstraction:
its a question of how much
trouble Evvy has started for the
Cosby's and of how much cham
pioning them will cost you. It isn't
fair to ask you to make any sacri
fice for Val. I'm wise to that, little
Anne.
"Jim, you don't think I'd mind?"
1 asked. "Society doesn't mean
much to me. And if it's going to
boycott us for standing by Lane and j
• Careful What You
Wash Your Hair With
Host soaps and prepared shampoos
contain too much alkali, which is very
injurious as it dries the scalp and
makes the hair brittle.
The best thing to use is Mulsiflcd
cocoanut oil shampoo, for this is pure
and entirely greaseless. It's very
cheap and beats anything else all to
pieoes. You can get this at any drug
store, and a few ounces will last the
whole family for months.
Simply moisten the hair with water
and rub it in, aoout a teaspoonful is
all that is required. It makes an
abundance of rich, creamy lather,
cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out
easily. The hair dries quickly and
evenly, and is soft, fresh looking,
bright, fluffy, wavy, and easy to
handle. Besides, it loosens and takes
out every particle of dust, dirt and
dandruff.
0 0
j "I wonder"—
? "Why it wouldn't surprise 0
? me at all. She announced g
0 it would be Twice-a- j
0 Twelve month, you'll recall. 1
g And the last one was in :
A February." .
1 8
V "Why my dear, you've no g
n idea how much it would •
: mean to me—with every- 0
0 thing so high priced these 6
0 da > s " 0
0 "And to me, too. Oh, Ido 0
j hope it's true. Why last j
. February I picked up a "
0 $35 suit for $18.55. And I)
j 1 it has given splendid ser- g
; vice." •
9 ?
g "Well, Constance said she g
: heard it was scheduled for :
V the week of August 41h." ?
8 ?
!
0 /K §ml a/}£ 210 j ;
She Grew Thin and Was
About Down in Bed When
Friends Advice Saved Her
"I was just about down in bed
with stomach and kidney trouble
and I had grown thin simply be
cause I was getting no good from
my food," said Mrs. Alice Kennedy,
of Marysville, Pa.
"Anything X ate would distress me
and cause gas to form so that I had
shortness of breath," this Pennsyl
vania woman explained.
"I had an awful pain in my back,
and sometimes it seemed that I
couldn't even stand the weight of
my clothes.
"A friend of mine had been tak
ing Natonex, and she was feeling
so much better that she told me
about this new Nature medicine. I
cantvot tell you how glad I am that
she did tell me, for the relief it has
given me has been a blessing.
"I began to notice relief about
the third day after I began Natonex,
and since that time I have improved
right along. My meals no longer
distress me, andT' eat good, nourish
ing food since I know it is not go
ing to hurt me. The pains in my
back are gone, and the poisons have
been eliminated from my system,
becauso the vital organs are doing
'heir work properly.
WEDNESDAY EVENING.
t being loyal to him. I'll despise it.
Val doesn't count. It's what we
owe that big brown bear. We'd
never desert Lane—never!"
Jim fairly flung himself from his
chair to sit on the arm of mine and
draw me close to him. For a min
ute I felt his lips on my hair, then
I heard him murmur very tenderly:
"Sweetheart! My lilac lady. If
I ever lose the way, you'll show it
to me again, won't you? What a
thoroughbred you are, Anne—what
an absolute thoroughbred! Vir
i ginia talks a lot about being an
; aristocrat. You just naturally are
j one. From now on, Jimmie's on the
j job. And you inspired him. He
j won't forget that in a hurry."
"Can 1 inspire you to do anything
about Miss Evelyn Mason in an
| other connection?" I asked tenta
! tively, wondering if 1 could bring
| myself to talk to Jim about mother's
I diamond circlet, once Phoebe's en
' gagement ring—now about to be
I used as Evvy's wedding ring.
Jim interrupted me before I had
I finished nerving myself to the 01-
| deal.
"You still have your heart set on
winning Neal away from Evvy anil '<
patching up matters between him
and Phoebe?" ho asked.
"It's the desire of my heart," I
replied.
'I wish it could be done, dear.
[ I wish it could be done," said Jim,
thoughtfully. Then he added. "By
Heck, Anne, I'm the sleepiest, tired
est man in three counties! You
wouldn't think I was casting asper
sions on the charm of your society,
would you, if I suggested that now 1
I am in the mood to do a bit of 1
sleeping?"
So I didn't tell Jim then about
Mother's diamond circlet. And the
affairs of the next day demanded
so much of my attention that
Phoebe and Neal had to be ne
glected. I told myself encourag
ingly that a day or two couldn't
matter and there would be time for
them later.
Toward noon next day Tom
Mason telephoned me. At once I
jumped to the conclusion that he
wanted to discuss Val's affairs with
me and to give me his ideas about
Evvy's persecution of Val. So be
fore he started framing his request,
I felt that I must accede to it.
'Anne, will you meet me for
lunch today?" he said and then
rushed on to an explanation that
amazed me. "I'm asking you to be
one of a party of three, and the third
is about the last person in the world
you expect ever to see again. As a
matter of fact, you're going to be
a complete surprise to him when
you join us. It's Dick West."
Dick West!" I gasped in amaze
ment at the idea of Tom's asking
me to meet Jim's ex-partner.'
"Startles you, doesn't it?" asked
Tom. "I'd like it mighty well if
you d trust me and come just on
my recommendation that it'll be to
your advantage to stroll in at about
1.15. IV ill you take a chance on
my being the devoted friend of
yours I've often declared myself?"
"I can't, Tom," I said, with honest
regret that I couldn't conquer my
deep distrust of him. "I can't come.
I've no desire to see Dick West
again, and I don't see what right
you have to suppose that I'll lunch
with you."
.1 I s ?: course You won't believe
tnat I d do about anything for you.
You like me about as well as you
do West." Tom laughed bitterly.
"But this meeting is going to prove
that I'm ready to do anything for
y°u even double-cross a man who
trusts me. Anne, West is planning
to revenge himself on Jim for put
ting him out of the firm. He imag
ines that jealously will prompt me
to help him. He's a dangerous
enemy—ready to dynamite your
Jimmie. Low will you come'"
*Jl Ye t",, I , replled ' swe Pt Past cau
l° ii of or disbelief. "Where
shall I meet you?"
(To Be Continued.)
DESPONDENT WOMEN
A prominent writer claims that
"women are naturally despondent,"
but often mental depression may be
attributed to an abnormal condition
of the system, which expresses it
self in nervousn-ess, backache, head
aches, sleeplessness, and consequent
despondency. Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound goes to the
root of this trouble, it gives tone and
strength to the system and restores
women to a normal, healthy condi
tion.
"Natonex was recommended to
me by a good friend, and I want to
help some ono else as much as she
helped me. Of course we cannot
expect to be cured in one day of a
long standing trouble, but I *gave
Natonex time, and now I know that
it will build up a system, because it
built up mine, as I was thoroughly
run down."
From every part of the country
comes these statements of men arwl
women who, after they have tested
Natonex, and have found its great
merit, recommend it, so that they
can help others as they have been
helped.
No matter how discouraged you
are or how many medicines you
have tried without success, do not
hesitate to begin this Natonex
treatment, which costs but little.
Nator.-ex is made of 12 famous Na
ture remedies, each noted for a spe
cial relief, and all combined to
cleanse, purify and invigorate the
entire digestive system so that Na
ture can build new strength.
Natonex is specially recommended
In Harrisburg by the Gorgas Drug
Co., 16 N. Third street, and is sold
by leading druggists everywhere—
adv.
Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service - By McManus
LITTLE TALKS BY
BE A TRICE FAIRFAX
Are you in love with love, or are
you in love with young Mr. Jones or
Miss Robinson?
The mistake is by no means re
stricted to the feminine gender.
Perhaps you are a young man of ro
mantic age and are addicted to read
ing poetry and thinking unutterable
thoughts and imagining yourself to
be deeply in love with Miss Hawkins
or Miss Robinson. But you may bo
wholly mistaken, the object of your
tender solicitude may not be either
of these young ladies, but love it
self. In fact you may be in love
with love, which is a common enough
complaint among young people and
others not so young.
And if you are contemplating mar
riage, as the next step to being in
love, please—if you value your peace
of mind or that cf Mr. Smith or Miss
Robinson—find out if you are in love
with love, or some young person.
Fqr if Mr. Smith or Miss Robinson
happens to be only the peg upon
which you hang the rainbow-tinted
fragments of romance they will not
measure up to your ideals no matter
how hard they strive.
Ureanilg Drenms of Perfection
For when you are in love with
love you are dreaming dreams of ab
solute perfection and you are de
manding quite too much of Mr.
Smith or Miss Robinson as an un
derstudy.
There are a number of very sim
ple tests by which it will be easy to
prove whether the object of your
affections is an abstract ideal or a
flesh and blood man or woman. Do
you have to make a good many ex
cuses to yourself for Mr. Smith's
or Miss Robinson's shortcomings?
Do Mr. Smith's never-failing opin
ions on all subjects get on your
nerves, and do you sometimes feel,
in the words of the classic squelch
er, that you wish you knew as much
about anything as young Smith docs
about everything?
Does the way he chews a tooth
pick or pares his nails in public
make you wish his mother had not
wholly neglected to instruct him in
the little decencies of life? And do
you wish he would not cough or
fidget that way, or make himself the
hero of every story, or tell you
that old one about the time, etc.?
Are you aware of the distinct fea
tures of Mr. Smith, on the opposite
side of the fireplace, when you
dream of the future or is there Just
an indefinite blur that stands for a
masculine presence about the house?
Do you think it would be lovely
to stop going to office or to "busi
ness" and to have a strong arm
write out the checks, and a bass
voice to contend with the janitor,
and a robust presence to stand be
tween you and all the disagreeable
situations in life? And to achieve
DAILY HINT ON
FASHIONS
A POPULAR MODEL
2872. This style is good for mad
khaki, muslin, linen and flannel.
The fronts are finished in coat style.
The sleeve may be finished with
the cuff or in elbow length.
The pattern is cut in 8 sizes: 15,
15 1-2, 16,. 16 1-2, 17, 17 1-2, 18
and 18 1-2 inches neck measure.
Size 16 requires 3 5-8 yards of 36
inch material.
A pattern of this illustration
mailed to any address on receipt of
10 cents in silver or stamps.
Telegraph Pattern Department
For the 10 cents inclosed please
send pattern to the following
address:
Size Pattern No
Name
Address m
City and State
tLARRISBURG TEUEGRXPH
these blessings are you willing to
have Mr. Smith's features "thrown
in with the lot?"
This, however, does not mean that
you are in love with love, but with
prosperity. And alas! people some
times are even more in love with
prosperity than they are with love.
The affirmative tests for being in
love consists in reversing the situa
tion. Do you think Mr. Smith's
chuckling laugh the sweetest music
you ever heard? Do you know his
footsteps apart from a hundred
other footseps? Do you remember
the shape of his hands and do they
seem to you the most manly, capa
ble hands in the world? And do you
in the beautifully simple language
of Robert Louis Stevenson feel as
Kirstie, the elder, felt when she
heard young Hermiston's step about
the house?
"I have said her heart leaped—it
is the accepted phrase. But rather,
when she was alone in any ihamber
of the house and heard his foot
passing on the corridors something
in her bosom rose slowly intil her
breath was suspended and as slowly
fell again with a deep sigh when
the steps had passed and she was
disappointed of her heart's desire.
This perpetual hunger and thirst of
his presence kept her all day on the
alert."
If you feel like this, you are in
love. Or, again, you may apply a
test to a lower round of the ladder
of romance. Do you think how love
ly it will be when Mr. Smith pays
fifteen dollars a pair for your pale
gray boots, or have you decided to
buy a serviceable black pair for
much less money and save the differ
ence for a nestegg?
Straws Show the Way
These are all so many favorable
straws that point to your genuine
affection for Mr. Smith, as against
being actually in love with love ard
prospeity.
And a young man may submit bis
lover's litany to practically the
same experiment. Is it Miss Rob
inson's actual presence he sees
about the house, or does he merely
have a vision of slippered ease in
which some capable, economical,
agreeable young woman ministers
to him and keeps a votive lamp
burning before the shrine of his
comfort?
Or perhaps he is not as selfish as
all that, maybe he is honestly in
love with love; he reads poems like
Poe's "Raven" or Browning's "Last
Ride," and he gets a degree of mel
ancholy comfort out of them, or
! again his young enthusiasm may
| kindle to a magnificent declaration
|of love like Bayard Taylor's "Bed
ouin Love Song:"
"Till the sun grows cold
I And the stars are old.
And the leaves of the Judgment
Book unfold."
After that, what is there for a
susceptible young man, with a nice
taste in literature to do but to look
about for some girlikin feminine
for manikin—to wrap about with
these splendid sentiments of ro
mance? Alack and alas! when the
awakening comes the girlikin is
Just a nice little thing and not the
sort at all to inspire a grand pas
sion.
Love is a thing of superlatives.
If you are in love you long exces
sively to be something finer, nobler
and more beautiful than you really
are, so that you may be worthy of
your beloved. You believe you are
utterly happy in thinking of her
till you discover there is a keener
bliss in persuading her to smile on
you.
Perhaps you may succeed in rec
ognizing some of these symptoms
and classifying them as belonging
to the "in love with love" school, or
those that belong to the "one girl
—or one man—on earth" school.
Hearn, K-C Commissioner,
Honored by France
New York, July 30.—William P.
Lurkin, of New York, overseas di
rector of the Knights of Columbus,
has received word from the Paris
headquarters of the K. of C„ that
Edward L. Hearn, of New York,
overseas commissioner for the
Knights, has received the Cross of
the Legion of Honor from the
French government, in recognition of
his individual services as a war
worker and of the services of the
K. of C. towards winning the war
and the establishment of recon
struction work.
Commissioner Hearn sailed to
France last summer, after having
served as assistant to Overseas Di
rector Larkin in the New York of
fice of the K. of C. He arrived in
France in time to take charge of the
work of the Knights of Columbus
during the most crucial period of
the work of the Knights of Colum
bus during the most crucial period
of the fighting, and he personally
made a tour of the battle front to
superintend K. of C. service under
fire.
Allies Hampered by
Weights and Measures
San Frnnclaco, July 30.—That the
Kaiser would not have dared declare
war ff the United States and '
Britannia had been at one with their '
allies in the matter of weights and I
measures, is the interesting asser
tion made by President F. O. Wells
of the Greenfield, Mass., Tap, Die, j
Machine Tool Company, in support of i
the campaign for world-wide adoption |
of metric units. He says the Ger- I
mans counted upon the confusion I
which did actually occur.
This is borne out by Major Fiorello
La Guardia, formerly in command of
American fliers on the Italian front,
now Congressman from New York.
Major La Guardia has issued a state
ment that the greatest single cause
of delay, confusion and expense was
the fact that in specifications and
orders the Americans and British used
the old, complicated weights and
measures, while all other used metric
units. We were finally forced to the
metric system during the war.
Advice to the Lovelorn
He Has An Awful Temper
DEAR MISS FAIRFAX:
I have been going about with a
young man for the past three years;
for certain reasons we are not yet
engaged. Although I love him dear
ly, I must admit at times I think
I am only infatuated with him. The
reason I give for this is that he has
an awful disposition and temper.
When we are out in company if I
happen to do anything he does not
like, he will insult me and spoil my
whole evening, and then on the way
home he will beg for forgiveness.
Now, Miss Fairfax, this has hap
pened time and time again, and I
am just growing sick over it. I try
to explain to my friend that I
never mean to do any harm and
that he shouldn't be so hasty, but
it does no good. As I said before,
I love this young man and I know
it will be hard for me to give him
up. What shall I do?
CONSTANT READER
If the young man treats you with
such marked rudeness before mar
riage, I do not see how you arc
going to deal with the situation
afterward, and you will probably
have less influence over .him then
than you have now. The only thing
to do is to take a firm stand anil
when he insults you before people
leave the company or do something
that will bring him to a realization
of his own ill breeding. Such a
romance does not sound very prom
ising to me.
He Speaks Poor English
DEAR MISS FAIRFAX:
I am nineteen, a bookkeeper and
going about with a man five years
older than I am. This young man is
a foreigner, has been in this country
about eight years, and speaks very
poor English, and I am an American
girl. He is an ordinary working
man, is very good at his trade and
earns rather a good salary—l have
had several gifts from him. Now
what I want to know is, whether
you think it advisable for me to
continue to keep company with him
any longer, as he has already pro
posed to me, and the only answer
I gave him was if he proved worthy
of being my partner he could be.
The more I see him the more 1
learn to care for him. It seems as
though my friends are making fun
of him, so I take this opportunity
to ask you for your kind advice.
J. M. G.
As you say the more you see of
this foreigner the more you learn to
care for him, it would seem is if
you had answered your own ques
tion. Why do your friends n: ke
fun of him? Because he speaks
broken English? And how well do
they speak his langunge, or do they
speak it at all? As you do not
seem to know your own mind as yet,
why not let the question of the en
gagement drift for awhile and see
how you feel in regard to this young
man six months or a year hence.
She Is n Widow
DEAR MISS FAIRFAX:
I am a widow of twenty-six and
have a baby girl of four. My hus
band died eleven months ago, and
now an old acquaintance is in love
with me and wants me to marry
him. I do not love this man, but
I know he will be a good fathei
to my baby, whom he has known
since she was born. Now my ques
tion is, do you think I should many
this man for my child's shake?
Y. M.
I can never advise a woman to
marry for any one's sake or a home;
such arrangements invariably turn
out badly. There is really no rea
son for marrying any one at all
but for a deep and abiding affection.
Why do you not give yourself a lit
tle time? Perhaps you may learn to
love this old friend.
A CH'ESTtOX OF BREAKFAST
DEAR MTSS FAIRFAX:
I am 27 and expect to be married
shortly. In discussing various suhiects
with the nrospective bride the subje.-t
of breakfast was brought up. My
flnancee insists that it is entirely er
roneous on my part to expect her to
rise in time to get a breakfast ready.
T would not mind if she was sickly or
a weak girl.
Her chief objection Is that her moth
er serves her breakfast in bed to her,
and she expects the same treatment
from her husband.
This question as to which is to pre
pare breakfast had beter he thrashed
out and decided upon In a manner
acreeable to both of you before von'
think of getting married. I can think J
of no worse handicap than a disparity !
of ideas on such a sublect. And are you
sure you would be able to sunpoft a !
young woman usPd to such luxury?
Remember the cost of living, remem- I
her the cost of servants.
Life's Problems
Are Discussed
Ily MBS. WILSON WOODROW
There, is one thing the world is fl
ways looking for, and, having found
it, will pay almost any price that is
asked; and that is new and better
ways of doing old things.
The other person's way is for those,
who lack initiative and opinions of
their < wn. But the man or woman
who can breathe the breath of new
life into his work and achieve dif
ferent and more satisfactory results
will find that tne world is his.
One of the greatest elements of suc
cess in the life of a man who be
came an empire-builder—for with his
railroads he opened up the North
west, with its vast wheat fields—was
that all he ever asked of the men
under him was results. He would
ihvariably say: "Don't come to me
and ask how 1 want things done. Do
them!" If a man couldn't meet this
requirement he was dropped.
A contemporary of his, a man also
of greut power, died of a nervous
breakdown before he had reached his
prime, largely because he refused to
let the men under him exercise their
individuality or express their per
sonality upon their work.
He was, as was said of him, not
content to be the head of the organi
zation; he wanted also to fill every
position, major and minor, all the
way down the line. His subordinates
tried to save him, but gave it up in
despair. He couldn't or wouldn't let
go of the small things to grasp she
big ones, and practically committed
suicide by attempting to tbsoib a
mass of unnecessary detail.
And what applies to the large
issues of life applies also to the small
ones. Recently I watched a girl
packing the family trunks prepara
tory to a summer flitting.
She was both practical and metho
dical, and since the task devolved
on her, she made her own plans about
the way she meant to accomplish it
and thus save herself time and un
necessary work.
But lier mother, not well enough
to attend to the packing herself as
she had formerly done, and a woman
of the fussy, worrying sort, was not
willing to give up the mental super
vision of it. In spite of her daugh
ter's pleading and protests, she stood
by, directing the placing of every
article and the arrangement of eveiy
fold.
Of course there was bickering and
Daily Dot Puzzle
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Draw from one to two and so on
to the end.
Superfluous Hair
Ik^Uiraefe
DeMlrmclev the original sanitary
liquid, operates on an entirely dif
ferent principle from any other
method. It robe hair of Its vital
ity by attacking It nnder the akin.
Only Pennine DrMlraele kas a
money-back guarantee In eaeh
parknge. At toilet counters la OOe, '
•l and 93 sines, or by mall from
us In plain wrapper on receipt of 1
prtee.
FREE book with teattmnnlala of
hla heat authorities ex
plains what eanaea hair on taee,
n<-c k and arms, why It Increase*
aafl how DeMlmrle devitalises It,
■nailed la plain sealed envelope on
request. DeMlrarle. Park Ave. and
13th St> New York.
JULY 30, 1919.
fault-finding, and the consequences
was that they both left home perfect
wrecks and in no condition to enjoy
a summer free from care.
Now this girl had a mind of her
own and she wanted to exercise it.
let, instead of being allowed to do
so, she was forced to suppress her
own ideas and blindly follow the
mother's. And the outcome was a
sense of bitterness and futility on
her part and of annoyance and irrita
tion on the part of her mother.
Most people can rise to meet the
big responsibilities of life; but it is
trivial, soul-wearing interferences
and petty tyrannies like these that
darken the day and make harmony
and a sympathetic understanding iii
the home impossible.
We have all heard fathers say to
their sons, "You will do it my way,
or you will not do it at all?" or moth
ers say to their daughters, "I am
perfectly satisfied with the old way;
I don't want any new experiments
introduced."
In this way the boy or girl would
be put upon his mettle. He might
make a dozen mistakes, but he would
make haste to rectify them, for his
goal would be the results demanded.
And he would conserve both time and
energy and temper in doing it. since
he would not have to stop and arg le
or dispute about methods.
I saw a mother looking on in be
wildered disapproval at the way lit
daughter was making a frock. She
said:
"I've tried to teach her the tight
methods, but she won't listen to me.
She cuts right into the material with
out even a pattern, and sews it up
any old way. Y'et when she puts it
on, it looks as if a high-priced dress
maker had made it. How she does
it is a miracle to me." She shook her
head and continued to wonder. It
seemed all wrong to her, even if the
results were all right.
The daughter simpiy had a knack,
a sort of intuitive knowledge how
to achieve the effects she was seek
ing, and by following that instinct
she got there. If the mother had in
sisted on the girl abiding by her di
rections, the results would probably
have satisfied neither of them.
There would have been no use
ful and valuable inventions, and the
world would long ago have stood
still, if the inventors had listened to
those willing advisers who told them
that the thing couldn't possibly be
done, and urged them to stick to the
old ways.
Emerson, as usual, put the whole
To make flaky
biscuits, delicious J l **
muffins and kyiuMlilil
gems, rea/dough- INKING J
nuts and cake of
fine texture —
you must U3e —^
THE WHOLESOME
BAKING POWDER
Go buy it today !
STECKLEY'S
Special 15 Day Sale
Of Distinctive Footwear
The pronounced reductions which prevail during
this sale make the values unusually attractive to buy
ers, who would realize the full purchasing power of
their money.
Men's Low and JOI M
High Shoes J
Black, White, Tan,
Mahogany, Etc.
Our large assortments of shoes for men include A
about every grade and model that may be called for.
We bought in advance of the recent rise in prices and
are giving you the benefit of this saving—plus the big
reductions that make this sale notable for exceptional
low prices. •
Unusual Values in Shoes For Men,
Women and Children
All Sizes and Widths
STECKLEY'S
1224 N. Third St., Near Broad
thing in a nut-shell, when ho said
"Your own gift you can present witl
the cumulative force of a whole life'i
cultivation; but of the adopted taleni
of another you have only an extem
poraneous half-possession."
BRUISES-CUTS v
Cleanne thoroughly—
• educe inflammation d£s
by cold wet comprea-
I :r.-s—c.pply lightly, without
j fiction— tirWf
yicrw vaposussT
She can find it in
the dark—
Seems like second nature
for a child to be able to
locate a loaf of
GUNZENHAUSER*
AMERICAN-MAID
BREAD
Good as ice cream, dainty
as cake,and no old
doctor fussing around if
she eats a slice or two
more—
Of course, she loves it
Builds bone, develops
muscle.
The GUNZENHAUSER Bakery
| 100% American
5