THE PATTON COURIER gi + oe | might have been conscened nan of | NEW COAT SHOULD HAVE SMART BOW; CHILDREN CRY i — - | = fensive light” Neeland Rarnes per- MRS, BASSETT | mitted himself to smile at being In BEACH ATTIRE IS GAY OF COLOR | sulted by a gift of a hundred dollars, ———— bi nr: \ £6 ) 5 Ho ) “I have never met any of you per JHEN buying that new coat for | present-day beach attire seems | S19 | - | | | | - there is a handsome bow somewhere some of Mr, Malet's work. 1 also was thrilled many years ago by Mr know to the contrary, Thanks to mod- Especially Prepared for Infants ern invention, no wave can wash HWay in its make-up. The interesting purt of the new bows are they keep one guessing as to where on the coat they | the gorgeous glamor of color and de- Ny Drudney lecjure and imve seen the water.” However, the enlightened Now in Good Health by Using | ALWAYS TIRED Sonally before, although 1 have heard WW the vacation trip, see to it that | like that—as if it dare not “go near | and Children of All Ages ! Barnes’ horsemanship.’ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege. | table Compound Very handsome of you to say so, will choose to locate, A bow is just | sign, for the materials of which thee ge — sald Neeland Barnes, i flatter my as apt to be positioned on the shoul- | resplendent garments and accessories | Mother! Fletcher's Castoria has Lansing, Michigan ct] have taken | self 1 could ride in those days,” der as at the back of the collar or per- | are made are now processed to the | Peen In use for over 80 years to re Lydia E. Pinkham'’s Yogstane : om “What I am going to say may seem | haps it may find placement where the point of being rendered waterproof. | li€ve bubies and children of Constipa- : a it, gi ah I nothing: whatever to do with ‘me at | coat fastens to one side, as instanced | It is a fact, nowadays silks are being Hou, Fiatulency, Wind Colic and Digr. first used it 1 was first. It may even be that you will | on the model here pictured. This coat | rubberized, likewise ecretonnes iq | rhea; allaying Feverishness arising sobad Icould hardly WYNDHAM consider me guilty of seme breach of | of beige kasha is all that fancy would | even velvet is actually being rubber. | therefrom, and, by regulating the | good form when I mention certain Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimi- walk across the room without ery- ing. I was tired all | the time. I think | my trouble was com- ing on me for six months before I realized it. 1 read of your wonderful ——d medicine in the paper, and * * * my husband | { lation of Food; giving natural sleep | without opiates, The genuine hears signature of MARTYN matters in the past life ot all three of you. If so, I beg you to betieve I shall say nothing idly. I have a definite | plan in asking you to eet, and I must tell my story in my own way.’ Peter Milman looked from one to | the other of them a little anxiously. He was meticulous in matters of per- COPYRIGHT /n W.N.U. the UNITED STATES SERVICE ’ They followed their host through library and corridor to what seemed to fear, I have done nothing to be em. e ashamed of, although I cannot expect the world to believe that.” Hiso it helps me. I will always have a good gentleman of the old school, and word for your medicine and tell any- last of his family, ig practically . 1 reduced to penury through the misfortune of a friend, Hazen Milman’s Japanese garden. “This Is Japan,” Malet exclaimed. “I STORY FROM THE START : a Ue of I bought me a bottle, and after the first | — a blank wall. A door, cleverly con- Sone pinay od je JEgre te isi | AIR BALSA few doses I felt better, so kept on | From the comfortable financial cealed by moldings, swung open.’ Not a ne Soe us. " sald i iti BALSAM 7 4 / taking it until 1 was well and strong. | || situation to which he had been for twenty years had strangers been | ~0 far as I Hn concerned,” sac Restores Color and | al ni 1 take it at times when I feel tired and | [| born, Peter Milman, American offered the chance to gaze upon Peter | F1€ming Bradney, “you have nothing I ama bh a rogues he 5 | 1 Wks, Patchogue N.Y HINDERCORNS Removes Corns, Cal- | louses, etc., stops all pain,gnsures comfort to the one what good it has done me. Dr. Alexander Cairns, contributing to the editorial page of the San Fran- Juvenal says that to be poor is to be * day.”—Mgs. E. F. Bassett, 216 South ridiculous. Well, Mr. Milman, I can Hayford Avenue, Lansing, Michigan. French butler, Achille Lutry, with a suggestion, here and there, from who speaks no English, and is the Fukawaga garden.” : have seen this in Nagesaki.” recommended it to my neighbor for her | S10 : : , fagasaks “My ion” sai { f 200k, HE AK rs 57 atl or af rug. JUST FIoLISHAS irl, who is sixteen years old, and it | || Brewer, whom he had unwisely “I modeled it on a part of the gar- My reputation” said Malet, “% a | | gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue. N. Y. QUST FIOLISWME giri, | » | trusted. Learning of Brewer's sui- See ir "m trifle besmirched, but 1 have long { | Se was just what she needed. She is feel- | cide, which means the destruction dens in ‘The Teahouse of the Inde- Phi Si A ttovash | TOL d Le k” i ° ing fine now, and goes to school every | f fic lust hope, Milman engages a scribable Butterflies’ in Nagasaki, | Since ceased applylng whitewash. Shut Your Eyes an 00 PRECIOUS i THOT FOR | | to replace Sr £ f lor A S Teplace Sneed, Servant of long cisco Examiner, is moved to rhapsody Do not continue to feel all run-down plead guilty to that count.” | i : : . i Neeland Barnes knew nothing about If sick when Lydia E. Pinkham’s | standing By Lutry, Milman 1 f ; . A ; 0 " Verotanie Compound 1s Sold by drug- | || sends letters to Prot. ileming || | Japanese gardens, but the thing took | Peter Milman turned. courteoysiy | on the subject of education. With | WHE gists everywhere. It is a root and herb Bragnes, Floyd Malet and Nee. his fancy amazingly. Quaint bridges, | to the third guest. | great eloquence he declaims: “No Ro- J 5 on Se 8 5 y t : ; ] “ , ; » ; g ( be ! medicine and has been used by women ed een, =~ A re little streams with brilliant goldfish, Don’t mind me” said Barnes man triumph staged by American Cae- ' = WORTH : sars returning from foreign conquests ever thrilled with such passionate sig- nificance ag that endless procession of American youth marching away to the seats of higher learning.” He adds: “Just shut your eves and look at them.” He follows his own advice and declares: “Note the epaulets and cul- ture and the music of synthesized tal- 1 ents, and the proud and stately bear- | ing of innate ambition.” That {8 ex- | actly what one might expect a man with his eyes shut to see.—The Argonaut. J FOR OVER genially. “I am used to it. If you) had had all the d—n silly relations I've had, you'd have no sensitive spots left. I have been worthless since birth,” He chuckled. “But I've had a d—n good run for my money, even if this Juwvenal person has my number up and the race lost. Rub it in, if it helps you. My wool is black, and I know {t.” “I'm afraid you don’t exactly un- | derstand.” Peter Milman smiled. “I am neither schoolmaster nor reprov- ing relative. I merely wish to ask your pardon if 1 talk of things in your lives that may stir up unhappy | memories.” i for over fifty years, garden-lanterns, strangely set stones, made this back yard of seventy feet long by half as much wide the most entrancing garden he had seen on this Avenue where he, too, had been born. At the other end of it was a sort of By degrees Bradney found himself | platform on which comfortable seats listening to Barnes’ anecdotes with a | were arranged. Immediately below it less critical attitude. Barnes had hu- | was a lily-pool. Twenty feet above mor. A handsome man, Bradney de- | was a framework of steel mesh to cided, courageous, popular with men | which mosquito netting was attached. end women alike and not burdened “This 1s exquisite,” Malet mur- with sufficient mental power to enable | mured. “No wonder you do not move, him to feel he had a mission in life. He lived, no doubt, as his wealthy class does, simply for the moment. In truth, Neeland Barnes had for- once of high position. In response, the three call on him at his home. Personal Reason She—How is it you were not at | Westend's reception? CHAPTER III—Continued He—1 stayed away on account of | 4 # personal matter. She—May I ask what it was? He—Well, they failed to send me an invitation. For speedy and effective action, Dr. Peery's “Dead Shot” has no equal, A ingle dose cleans out Worms or Tapeworm, 872 Pearl St., N. Y. Adv. Worst Ever Jack—A beautiful chorus girl mar- | ried a scene-shifter. i Bud—That proves how bad the pres- | ent theatrical season really is. ‘Takes Out allpain instantly CORNS gotten Lippsky entirely. The dinner { was excellent. A fellow-countryman of Achille’s had seen to that. The wines were superb. Barnes adopted an alr of exquisite but lofty courtesy toward his fellow-guests. They said very little, but their table manners were reassuring. When the dinner should be finished, Barnes determined to lean back in his chair, survey Mil- | man with a smile that had world- knowledge and kindly cynicism in it. and demand to know for what reason he was brought from Peekskill retire- ment. As one old New Yorker to an- other, Peter Milman would give his { reasons. “That's a very fine oll-painting over | your head, Mr. Milman,” said Floyd | Malet, disturbing the train of Barnes’ fancies, Floyd thought of his lonely room, | his uncongenial work, and looked | about him and sighed. He liked this | unknown Peter Milman, with his | charming manner and a dignity that lynd something forgotten and Victorian about it. Life had not given Malet what it had promised, and the disap- pointment had embittered him; but there was nothing disgraceful in what had brought him low. “Go ahead, Mr. Milman,” he said. | “You can talk for days if vou like.” “Let me begin with Mr. Fleming | Bradney,” said Milman. “I have said I once heard him lecture. It was be- cause I read an article of his in the North American Review on radio-ac- tivity. What I read and afterward heard him say stirred up my imagina- | tion powerfully, and I understood that NEW SUMMER COA'l MUDEL picture when it comes to patrician | ized. So if the apparently conserva- | style as attained in exquisite line and i smart detailing. As to swagger bow- trimming it elects to place little bows even at the wrists in addition to the self-material bow where it fastens. That is another fascinating eccen- tricity of the modern bow, it is no re specter of fabrics, it would as soon he of the cloth of the coat as of ribbon or mayhap it will be of velvet or, more Interesting still—of fur. A flat fur tive dresser is secretly beset with sn urge for gay and hectic color, the beach is the place appointed by the mode, for a pageantry of attire as | vividly colorful as the human eye can | picture. The beach ensemble in the picture is | typical of the trend to elaborate and | fanciful effects. jeach coats are sa favorite fashion topic of the day The one illustrated is of cretonne 200 YEARS | haarlem oil has been a world- wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. correctinternal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine GoLp MEbAL. Kill All Flies] mom Placed a hy pl CBE Diff a Ia ny where, 8 FL attracts a kils all flics. Neat, clean, ornamental, convenient and cheap. Lasts allsea- son. Made of metal, I can’t epill or tipover; bow-trim at the side or buck of the | fowers of yellow, green and red being | Dr. Scholls Simo pade stop all pain [ “A relative of mine,” Milman an a man may have a passion for knowl- ) } will not sof] or injnre i picker Tool ar lows | swered, “Capt. Oliver Milman. That edge which is a burning hunger.” neckline is the newest thing out for printed on a tan background. The arabia. the Worst corn. Healing starts at i was painted in Holland when he was Fleming Bradney nodded his head. coats. Another stunning effect is for | elipped wool collar and cuffs make | DAISY FLY KILLER } once. When the cornisgoneit never | 8 young soldier in England's wars “Yes.” he commented, “that’s a good | the shawl collar of fur to finish at the | the garment ideal for a chilly day. { from your desler, low waistline with a bow of the fur Favorite media for the beach coat | BAROLD SOMERS Brooklyn N. | comes back. If new shoes make the | with France. It is by Jordaens, the description of it. It Is a passion that N spot “touchy” again, a Zino-pad | brilliant fellow-student of Rubens. He recognizes no limits of time or labor | tied In one loop with two sash ends. include terry cloth, moire fabrics, hand | expended. It Is a passion that has | Often the same shawl-collar and | blocked linens, also tinted silks and | ED ROUGH SKIN | ? | —rt ind it instantly. Thats because joined his brother in Plymouth coun- ; b i . : sip Bp sl | ty, Massachusetts, fust after that pic- By Degrees Bradney Found Himself | knowledge as its goal and not fame | OW treatment is followed, substitut- |! crepe de chine. Most of the gay bg is ugly and annoying—make your F & : : | ras inte 7 a : . y es. 1 had i nce,” 15 Ujiy an Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads are medi- ture was painted. Later he fought in Listening to Barnes’ Anecdotes. or money. Yes, I had it once din soft, whit, Yovsly, by using cated, antiseptic, protective. At all | ‘King Philip's war’ He was killed “The circumstances which led Mr. | druggist’'s and shoe dealer’'s—35¢. | fighting for England against France in | Your taste seems to me to be perfect. | Bradney to give up his life-work and » | Pennsylvania. Historians know It as | I have never been In a more harmoni- drop out of his world have never been « Dr Scholls | ‘King William's war.’ His brother | ous and beautifully furnished house.” told in their entirety,” Peter Milman | ® | disowned him for his godless ways of While Achille was bringing coffee | said, after a pause. “I am going to 1NOo~pPa { life. In revenge Captain Oliver be- | and liqueurs, Milman explained how. | tell you now. I may say that up to | P } | queathed him his entire fortune, | by the use of glass where now was the moment of his retirement we have one on bain is gone! which rescued the stern and righteous | netting, he could regulate the tem- | never had a physicist who gave such | Resinol Woman Boiler Worker i O-1 Overalled and gloved and her face EE, dr = may | DrOther from beggary. But for Oliver | perature and keep his garden beauti- | promise as he. It is to the honor of a | covered with A i mask, the only cn] (LCN, KIN BLEACH | Milman we might have hecome ob- | ful when snowstorms raged and frost | great university In this state that he | | woman Aretyions wv) a5 hn coun- as ee . . ; V cirteacle Sores . SOV ie try is rapidly completing the biggest : — &cure farmers on Cape Cod. What the | bit viciously. was elected professor of etheric 3 — derful and sure. One complete box ot | . oiler © . . ; HREM OLA wil convince Ie asi, sxepusal. | Milmans had, they owe to him.” It was when Achille had gone that | physics and asked to erect the most { bolle: Tham 50,12 The hojier Iso cures Bezema. Price 81. gen a - | . 3 > Se : a ratii's A y es : srl | | works at illdwood, N. J. She is Mrs. 3EAUTY BOOKLET FREE. Dr. 0. H. Bers | Neeland Barnes launched into a bit- | Neeland Barnes found himself sigh- superb laboratory for his work that | | Catherine Nelson, of Stelton. N. J Yo. Dept. 3,275 Michigan 4Ve:, Chicago. | ter invective against righteous rela- | ing. He had abandoned the idea of | could be built. It was to exceed in | tives. “Take it from one who knows,” | his man-of-the-world questioning of his | equipment that of Cambridge univer- | e Es ** | he concluded, “it is the black sheep | host. He was content that this pleas- | sity. He was allowed to design it. 1 ant atmosphere remain unchanged. He | think such a chance has rarely been | | and the mother of two children. In { addition to wielding the torch, Mrs. | Nelson bosses the labor of several { men. Before the World war Increased | the demand for women in industry, Name............ . + | who'll do a man a good turn when — | he needs it. I've found that my | did not want to think of going back | given to one so young. Frivolous Parisians righteous relatives always gave me | to Lippsky and the rent question, Bradney nodded his head. “It was | £ A Nel oS reRS nak Paw plates for dogs of the idle rich | good advice and the shadier sort | The wine and the green Chartreuse | the greatest opportunity ever offered § Sem Yas gies i are appearing on Paris boulevards. A | slipped me the coin.” induced a pleasant lassitude. Neeland | a man.” ! i | Ta 0 ne i little silver chain holds a half-inch sfl- | “Some day a great lawlessness will | Barnes stretched his long legs and felt “And he lost it,” Milman’s quiet, | § | ver plate on the left front leg of the | sweep over the world,” Malet declared. | at peace. precise voice went on, “He lost ft, | i | Su ic Relief dog. The plate carries the name and | “T don't mean as a concerted action “You have been very patient, gen- | and with it the chance of making a | g | 2 address of the wearer. It looks, at| on the part of any Socialist or Syn- | tlemen,” Milman began, “in not ask- | career of supreme service to mankind. | i ) BELLANS first glance, much like a wrist watch, | dicalist, but an expression of human | ing me ere this for what reason I in- | I wonder if Mr. Bradney would mind i { INDIGESTION which may be the next step. unrest. We have been tied down too | vited you. And you have been very | telling us how.” | i 3 ey 23 CEN CRE long. We have endured too much the | courteous to come when my letter | - (TO BE CONTINUED.) y 6 BELLANS You May Have Noticed oppressions of those in authority.” ALE - eT = 3 = Hot water “I suppose Easy Street is a happy | “We'll stampede, you mean?’ said | ¢X4¢X +3 “ eo. XXX RIROTIROTINY : CL { | S R lief place.” “Naw, it runs right into Af- | Barnes. “I'll be there.” i ” { ure ke finity avenue.” “Do you think,” Peter Milman Veteran Opera Goers Startled by Tamagno { AN asked, “that there is any justification [ b | for the human herd stampeding be- rause It Is dissatisfied with its mas- FOR INDIGESTION 25¢ and 75¢ Pkgs.Sold Everywhere . Tr —————————— Meant Well, Anyway i For monthe an aged Indian woman of Visalla, Calif., dropped cents In the | toll booth at the passenger station. | When asked the reason she explained { | that she always contributed to worthy ! | causes and thought the phone box was | & contribution box for charity, Caruso, in his prime, possessed the | the orchestra stopped playing and the ters?” most powerful voice most people ever | stage became a scene of confusion “Certainly,” Floyd Malet said. | heard, but there lived before him the | A few moments later, the reslination “Sometimes 1t is just to take the law | &reat tenor Tamagno, whose voice pos- had come to them that not only ha in one's hands.” sessed even greater volume. On his | Tamagno a glorious voice, but that he “The law,” scoffed Bradney, recall- | first appearance in Moscow he was knew how to use it as an ATU, and ing certaln earlier passages of his life, | announced to sing “Othello. When | then their Dp ause Shook the theater. he appeared on the stage his tremen- | —Montreal Family Herald. "The law. Now I'm a. typical law- Sa | abiding citizen, but I cannot regard dous height and breadth astonishe : the audience, but it did not prepare “Cutting teeth is made easy” YT | any man-made statutes as sacrosanct. Left Name in History MRS. WINSLOW'S | . . What 1s law? A rule of civic con. | them for the thunder of his first note, King-Maker was the name given ta SYRUP \ | Its strength so astounded them that, Richard Neville, eari of Warwick, one fuct prescribed by the supreme power | . re | it is said, they surged backward as] . .. powerful nobles of the STOCKING will make you happy and easy { Throw away torturing elastics | or troublesome bandages and | forget leg troubles. They cost very little and you'd gladly pay mueh more for the support and ease. Call and be measured free, or write for self-measurement blank No. 118 HOURS ¢ TO 5 DAILY { SATURDAY 9 TO § | LACED IDEAL STOCKING : DR. GEORGE H. STROUP { 8148 Jenkins Arcade - - Pittsburgh, Pa. | Gentlemen: | I am more than glad to tell vou | of the experience and result obtained | from your wonderful Baby Medicine, Our second baby is now seven months old and has never given usa moment's trouble. The first and only thing she has ever taken was Mrs. Winslow's people lost their self-control. Lear deposed Edward of York and restored | most alluring, both as to fabric and | ingly popular—hand-painted, Espe- ing from their seats, they rushe Henry VIL The restoration lasted color. There is a lovely new creamy | cially is the much exploited coolie about commenting to each other on only a few months, for the Yorkists| pejge shade which appears its hand- | coat decorated with bizarre motifs, the most extraordinary voice they | won the bloody battle of Barnet in | somest in heavy double-faced satin— As to the bathing suit, the two had ever heard in their lives, while | April, 1474, in which Warwick was | ysed reversibly, The effectiveness is | piece jersey comprising” slip and | slain. The duke of York was restored heightened by clever manipulation of | trunks or tights is outstanding for | as King Edward IV. Lyttop's histor | the material. practical use. As to silk bathing suits, (Name on request) 4 : i. | ical romance, - “The Last of the A coat of almond-green velveteen or | taffeta in solid color or In gay plaids have coffee and liqueurs served in the | hibiscus, says the Nature Magazine, is | Barons,” is based on the career of of beige is another of the mode's nov- | seems to be taking the place of the ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO. | | garden.” He rose. “Think you may | that often, after it has been plucked, | Warwick, the King-Maker.—Muntreal | sities for summer. crepe de chine types which were so 215-217 Fulton Street, New York > “| the petals will turn back, gradually | Family Herald. “Mother, may 1 go out to swim?” | popular last season, { { 'n order. In his own days of wealth | he had done the same. But there was ! po frown on Peter Milman’s face. “This I8 a discussion which interests 1 { hb . e vo ay ” sai Syrup. She hes four tah ay ow 8 | me more than you can Imagine, said Jars smiling and playing. Cutting { Peter Mllman. His guests noticed teeth is made easy by the use of Mrs. g ig a ance Winslow's Syrup. Most sincerely, | that he turned his head and glanced rc iariabl ot the swiftly at Captain Oliver. “I usnally A rather remarkable trait o ‘ ’ ‘ ’ l | what is wrong. That's as GARI + 5 a Biting Kinin PoRg Thats [oun they were warding off an 88 | \jgqie gees, He took a prominent A GAY BEACH COSTUME | LEG COMFORT Non-Narcotic, Non-Alcoholic | Neeland Barnes looked instinctively | Sault. The second note Was more}... in (he Wars of the Roses. He Don't utter from Varicose Oakland, N | over the table to his host. It was his powerful ny Sng 0 ye de he raised an army of 30.000 and placed | ing more or fallle silk or crepe satin | ured fabrics are either hand-blocked | Xnicles, swollen Love or other Anion Siac, Hels. Keb 3, 1920 experience that all rich men support- | had sung 5 ur x hat. the the duke of York on the throne, Theu for the fur. in striking modernistic design, or | leg troubles Which head con ? »d those laws which kept the masses | had such colossa he turned to the house of Lancaster, The new summer coat models are | brightly printed or what is exceed- LACED IDEAL | Petals Turn Back JULIA BOTTOMLEY. |W. N. U, PITTSBURGH, NO, 23.1927. (®, 1927, Western Newspaper Union.) prefer it there.” | “A garden?” Floyd Malet cried. “A | returning aguin to norma! severs) ® by the McC: Bemmsnmonnomonnn — nt — “Yes. my child, but do not go near The most certain sign of wisdem Is | the water.” The color splendor of a continual cheerfulness. garden in Lower Fifth avenue?” hours later, A silent protest, it would “Yeu sha)! see,” sald Milman, seem, against despoliation,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers