The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, March 08, 1928, Image 2

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    THE PATTON COURIER
The
Utnes
Miller
COPYVRIONT oP
Tho CENTURY CB
O00
SYNOPSIS
On a certain momentous Mon-
day morning Miss Constance Ful-
ler, cataloguer and seller of
rare books at Darrow’s New and
Second -Hand Bookshop, New
York, notices that the first cus-
tomer 18 a dignified, White-
bearded old gentleman, who
saunter® into the alcove pla-
carded “Medical Works.” Peter
3urton, one of the employees,
amazes Constance by telling her
he paid $510 at Wmuction vor an
old law book <ontaining a Col-
fax bookplate. Suddenly a girl's
shriek of “Murder!” rings out in
the store.
CHAPTER III
ap
The Slippers
For one instant all five of us, Pe
fer and the three clerks and I, were
paralyzed; then with one accord we
plunged down the main aisle, Peter in
the lead, when out from the law-book
long
Her face was ghastly,
Next sec-
a
lost
she
alcove dashed the the
black Tur cape.
her eves wide with terror.
ond, and Peter both came
halt violent that she nearly
her balance. Stumbling heavily,
clutched at a table, shrieked:
it! Keep it for me!”
the floor in a faint.
Peter rushed around
her: Mr. Dibdin gave a
girl in
she to
SO
the table
law-book alcove. At that moment the
elevator cleared the second floor in its
descent, bringing down Mr. Case. He
at once helped Peter carry the girl to
his private office. I snatched up my
telephone and summoned Miss Wilkes
Then I turned down the aisle again to
seg if 1 could be of any further use in
the rear, hut I went on tiptoe and
only a little way; in a hush that had
succeeded the confusion with awful
suddenness, Mr. Dibdin and Mr. Riggs
were carrying the limp figure of the
old white-bearded gentleman out
the alcove. - His right side was toward
me, his right hand dripping with blood.
At this momen® Ulysses came, rushing
open-mouthed down the rear gallery
stairs, full on the scene.
“Hey, there! Watch the shipping
room door until I get an ambulance!”
shouted Mr. Riggs to him, making off
to a telephone,
Ulysses
obediently disappeared. 1
turned and hurried down the narrow
right-hand along the wall, past
the shipping-room door. toward Mr.
Case's office. Again 1 was where con-
aisle
fasion prevailed.
Mr. Case was not there. On the
threshold, Peter was fidgeting distra.t-
edly. Inside, the unconscious girl lay
on an old leather lounge. As I darted
into the office, through which the
frosty air was pouring from a window
some one had actually thought
opening, Peter stopped me.
of
“Constance,” he whispered, “that’s
that girl I”
His face was blanched, his hands
twitching; he was the image of real
fright, far beyond anything T could
account for. Badly stdirtled myself,
“I did manage to grasp that fact,” I
retorted tartly. “Get some water,
quick, and then go away!”
He vanished, closing the door. 1
went over to the gir. Her hat of soft
crimson ribbon had fallen off, revealing
shining black hair above clear-cut.
small, regular features of unusual dis-
tinction and beauty. Her lips were
blue in the chilly air. Her cape was
slipping to the floor; and as I picked
it up to wrap around her, consterna-
tion halted me. With her well-tailored
black eloth dress, she wore black sat-
in bedroom slippers!
Whatever could have brought her to
Darrow’s so attired? All the events
of that crowded morning’ flashed
through my throbbing brain; Ulysses’
premonition
of disaster—absurd, was
it—Peter’s narrative; th reappear-
anee, from our law-book alcove, of
this leading personality in those
strange adventures in Richmond with
an old law book and its unique treas-
ure among prints, a Colfax bookplate.
Then I heard murmurs outside the
door. - Following my first instinet,- 1
flung the cape over the helpless girl
and tucked it tightly around her feet.
The door opened, and Miss Wilkes
appeared with the water, and a bottle
of smelling salts, but her admirable
efforts to bring the girt to proved
wholly “unavailing. When clanging in
the street announced the
we summoned the
hasty examination,
would take the girl.
gentleman, to the hospital.
ambulance.
surgeon; after "|
he decided he
as well as the old
So the ambulance sped away, leav-
ing our establishment in the limp eon
dition naturally resultinz from the
nf exciting
|
AUGRESSiOD |
Uv this nungarnished record. Gossiping |
avents detailed
groups slood watching a policeman
taking down stories from eye-witness-
08. bu 1 saw Peter raw!
ere. | leaivied
“Keep
and crashed to
to
loud whoop
for Mr. Riggs, and dashed toward the
of
plate
W.N.u SERVICE.
that the old gentleman's injury was ma
severe slash across the right wrist,
The doctor thought that at his ad-
vanced age the shock had at once
overcome him, preventing an outcry.
He had been unconscious some time
when the alarm was given.
Of course the fainting girl came in
for endless curiosity, directed chiefly
at me. But even had I wanted to talk,
I knew just two facts about her:
namely, that Peter had seen her at
the Richmond auction, and that she
had had on black satin bedroom slip-
pers; and these facts I decided to sup-
press for the present time at least. I
did not know who she was, where she
ame from, what she had been doing
for an hour and a half in the rear of
the shop, whether she knew the old
gentleman, how she came to find him,
I lost patience at the unceasing ques-
tions.
“Is this the catechism, or what?” I
finally snapped at Daisy Abbott.
Daisy sniffed in an injured manner,
and glanced at Mr. Dibdin, who looked
at me as if he considered me very
cruel and rough.
“l guess we have a right to talk
about what happens right before our
eyes, especially if it's awfully queer!”
she murmured plaintively. “At least,
you heard her say, ‘Keep it! Keep 1t
for me! Now, is it ridiculous to won-
der what that meant?”
I had actually forgotten that ery of
distress, temporarily, in the ensuing
turmoil! Daisy certainly hit me amid-
ships, ‘and that time I knew the an-
swer.
“ You must think we're mind-read-
ers!” I retorted. “Now, I can't waste
any more time talking. 1 must finish
that indexing. Thank goodness I Zot
it nearly done before this rumpus hap-
pened!”
I sped down the side aisle to my
desk. But oh, my work! Where was
it? Where were those neat piles of
classified cards? On the floor, in the
aisle, everywhere except on the desk!
But there was no time for wondering
why, or even for vexation. Scooping
them all up as fast as I could, I made
for the desk, only to find a note stuck
between two of my reference
It as follows:
ordered to the rear:
wise, to this afternoon and buy
from two ladies, whose grandfa-
books.
read
“I am other-
go
old
recently,
the eyes and the whole body as well
as the vocal cords, and they are usu-
ally generous and sympathetic,
wughter is a sure indication of
character. The man who laughs in
his throat, with an almost straight.
face, for example, is generally shrewd
and
scrupulous in h
shoulders
good-natured, and make excellent par-
boy was stved from death in a quarry
0 feet deep at Portland, England. The
boy was leading the animal on a 12-
yard tether when he- fell over the
edge of the quarry. Fortunately the
rope was twisted round his wrist. The
gogt, although thrown on its side hy
the tnexpected pull, regained its feet
and nLeld the boy suspended in mid
air
ther was a bishop, his professional H-
brary (date about 1840)
able figure.
“I have one final request. I had no
time this morning to tell you that Mr.
Roberts has just given Nancy the po-
sition he promised her.
therefore; Miss Wilkes
Would you add to your
benefits, and some
and speak
sister?
‘at a
reasons
She is here.
in charge,
innumerable
time or other
to my ill-fated
is
go
agreeably
“PETER.”
Poor Peter!l would do better than
that, TI resolved, recalling the pretty
young vision with the chestnut hair
whom I had seen entering that morn-
ing with \ Wilkes. I decided to
eat, not work, even for Mr, Darrow's
nephew; 1 would take Nancy Burton
with me, in celebration of her first day
in stuffed all the cards
into a drawer; and went in search of
business, 1
her,
Through the open door of the steno.
graphic department came Miss Wilkes
metallic accents, in exhortation :
“Don’t forget that nice dark blue
serge we were talking about, dear. To-
morrow, dear, and not more than eight
inches off the floor. That will be al!
now, dear.”
As I walked in, I heard the reply
to those observations. It was a faint
yet distinctly audible snort proceed-
ing out of the straight, chiseled nose
“People who laugh heartily may be
trusted,” said a student of psychology
“These people laugh with
curious, and not always ovo=-
is methods.
laughers,’
express
“ ‘Inside whose
their
shaking
mirth, are
Goat Saved® Boy’s Lite :
By his pet gout a twelve-year-old
until rescuers came,
belonging to the tall young lady of
the short wavy chestnut tresses. She
was standing in front of Miss Wilkes’
desk, her height and slenderness ae-
centuated hy a bright apple-green
knitted frock whose straight lines
ceased not than fourteen inches
from the floor, above footgzear con
posed of many three patent-
leather straps, through which peeped
pate-peach chitfon-weight stockings,
The large blue eyes of the imperturh.
able face above the round white collay
stared as unremittingly at Miss Wilkes
as those of a young baby. The red,
red mouth was beautifully shaped and
firmly closed. '
Miss Wilkes greeted me with sweet
suspicion.
“Come in, dear. What is it?"
“I beg your parden! Has Miss Bur-
ton gone to luncheon?”
“I am Miss Burton,” swiftly an-
nounced the apple-green young lady in
a clear, shrill voice, transferring her
unremitting gaze to my face, “and I
was supposed io be gone to lunch a
long time ago.”
“Then wen't you go with me?
name is Constance Fuller—"
“TI know all about you,” said Nancy
Burton. “All right, I'll come.”
She was a speedy withdrawer: we
were on the street in a twinkling. I
cast about for a diverting topic.
“Let's go to Ernesto’s for lunch! I'm
sure you'll enjoy it. They have such
geod things to eat!”
“That so?”
“And Ernesto
less
HE as
My
is a famous local
character. He owns one of the nicest,
oddest houses on this island,
He not
Stumbling Heavily, She Clutched at
the Table, Shrieked, “Keep it! Keep
It for Me!”
only has a restaurant downstairs, but
he lives in the house, and rents some
floors as apartments.”
Nancy Nodded.
“How do you think you'll like your
work?” I pursued faithfully.
“All right, Say,” she broke out sud-
Tower,
were friends in their famous
he said, “and they often traveled to
gether.
one evening in Chicago, the young au-
thor looked up at Drew snd grunted ;
“Hang it, I can’t got these shoes
on,"
"What!" said the young actor,
‘Swelled feet, too? "=Detroit Free
Press.
denly, scattering social amenities to
the winds, “if you hadn’t come in that
minute, I'd have murdered that Wilkes
woman! I hate women! Though you,”
ww
because he was so poii.e and hand.
some, though now I hate him. Well,
then father met my stepmother at a
Put Eggs in Waterglass During Spring
church fair where she was dishing out
oyster stew, and she thought he looked
lonely, and so that was that. I couldn't
stand her, she picked on me right
from the start—said my clothes were
immodest, and look where this
comes to, abselutely to my nose, while |
the other old cat starts at the other
end! Well, Saturday afternoon Bran
don telephoned me and asked me to
go to the rink. I told him I was sor- |
ry, but Peter had just got back from
Richmend, and it was his first long
trip, so I was anxious to see him right !
away.
“Of course Brandon knew all about
Peter, and that he was a rare-book
buyer for Darrow’s, because 1 hal
told him, Maybe it did sound a lit-
tle queer to say I was so anxious to
see him; Peter's naturally always off
on business. The truth was, when
Peter got in that morning, he had
been so mad about Malvina, my step- |
mother, that he just managed to he |
civil and rush out of the house. Weil
they were married, and it couldn't be |
helped, so I wanted to smooth Pecter
down a little- bit if I could. before
dinner, But I couldn't say all that
collar
What You Need in
(Prepared by the Bureau of Home Economics,
United States Department of Agriculture.)
If you have chickens it quite
probable that during the spring you
is
over the telephone, and Brandon zat vj) ®ve a good many more eggs
fearfully mad because I wouldn't 80 | than “your family ordinarily uses,
to the rink. Why not save some of these surplus
“Then Malvina passed me in the ages for use in the fall and winter
hall on her way to a matinee, and months, when the hens do not lay so
said she was going to tell father that well, and prices in the market are
I talked incessantly over the tele-' yery high? Eges preserved in water-
phone to beys, if I didn't instactly | giass solution will be good for all pur-
stop. I said, ‘All right, T will, which | hoses for the table and for cookery
answered both her and Brandon; and | after six or even ten months, if
the minute sne’'d gone, I skipped out ' properly put down,
and met nim on. Sis avenue and | Three simple points must be ob-
then. Naney Save a Sip then oid served: The eggs must be absolutely
there, clutching my arm in excited fresh, when they go into the preserv-
hmnsamiie shed Je io Slope} ing solution—right off the nest or one
As on 2 faint, “distant hoason of day old is best; never more than two
hope, 1 fixed. my eves on Ernesto's days old. Every egg should at all
now just a block down the avenue, . :
3 . times be completely immersed in the
one of a massive row of stately gran-
: s ; 4 solution, at least two inches below
ite-pillared houses, built ninety years 4
: : the surface.
before as hemes for a group of New i :
Yorkers who had been distinguished Get several large stone crocks
Preserving Eggs.
three to five-gallon size, according to
your %eeds—and put them in the cel-
lar or other cool dry place where they
can remain undisturbed until all the
eggs are used. If a jar is moved
after the eggs are in it some of the
eggs may craek and spoil, which
would affect the entire crock.
Clean the crock you are ready to
use thoroughly. Scald it and allow fit
to dry. To prepare the waterglass
solution add 9 parts of water that
has been boiled and cooled to one
part of waterglass (sodium silicate),
which can usually be purchased at
drug stores, Stir well and fill the
crock with the solution. Put the eggs
into the crock very carefully, from
day to day as they are gathered. If
any of the solution evaporates more
should be mixed in the same propor-
tion and added. Very little evapora-
tion will occur, however, if the jar is
covered with a tight lid or waxed
paper.
ROMPERS FIT FOR
LITTLE CHILDREN
for combining money with brains.
Normandy terrace, the long row
was still called, had been constructed
to laugh at the passage of time, |
though gone were all vestiges of any
terrace, and all the graceful winding
stoops of a bygene day. Sidewalk
and floor space were no longer to be
wasted on Manhattan island and all
the lower floors of the terrace had
been invaded by business. I endeav-
ored to listen patiently to further de- |
tails of Nancy's narrative, knowing
as
Gives Freedom of Movement
and Protects Underwear.
onomies,
griculture.)
(Prepared by the Bureau of [or
United States Department of
From the time that a baby begins
Sir : : to creep he needs rompers, both to
at vo a Jinent. : : ] 4
ythiat Y Hef was jum oy tardiy permit unimpeded freedom of move-
ster seeme g yatwardly x
Pgter, Jt seemed, had, only ment, and to protect his underwear
y ) 7 or » shock of the | > s ' i
borne up nobly under the s * from the soil which he invariably ac-
's of his father's marriage, bad . i :
Rows oF i Pathe: 5 ted b th t cumulates on his tours of investiga-
iandsomely congratulate 0 par- . . 3 a a . 3 ou
te To f ot Then under pretext of tion. Until children are six or eight
28 act, en, er pretex 3 :
Ties, an dad ! years old rompers will be constantly
pressing business, he had bolted out
tt worn for play and on ordinary occa-
of the living room and down the hall pe
: 3 : sions, by both boys and girls. The
toward his own room, to find Nancy : re : *
iting for him in the hall. He liad | TOMPer Is the child's overall. It cuts
y& ing or € atl, as 3
wa y down laundry and at the same time
cheered her doleful state with a prom-
ise to come home early and tell her
all about Richmond, and show her the
old bookplate in a book
had picked up there. He then per-
formed the exploit of pitching his
suitcase acress bed and two ta-
and an armchair, to relieve
feelings, and fled.
Hence Nancy's desire to soothe him
before dinner. She had then confided
allows the child to play in the way
that is natural for best development,
Different types of rompers are need-
ed at different ages, and as their ac-
tivities become more individualized,
for boys and girls. Rompers for those
wearing diapers, for instance, should
permit an-easy change and conceal
the bulky diaper. Those for three-
year-olds should be designed to ald
them in learning to without
weirdest he
his
bles ais
dress
she was pleased to add, “are an excep-
tion. Do you know
mother?
“I have only
father’s marriag
“There's another woman for yea!
She said I couldn't be respectable! Lis-
ten, Miss Fuller: did know I
eloped 7” ;
I didn’t know whether to laugh or
ery, the girl was so pretty and clever.
looking and precocious and neglected
and at the same time there was a wild
streak of humer in her blue eyes that
both aroused your mirth and put you
about my step-
Just heard of yoar
you
on your guard. I compromised with
my feelings, and smiled svmpathet-
ically.
“I Know no details whatever about
your affairs, my dear, and it not
necessary to teil me any if you den’t
wapt to.”
“But 1 do, 1.have no one else to
tell I” protested Nancy, not to be done
by delicacy out of a recital of her ex-
is
ploits, as the rushing late-luncheon
crewd hore us down the avenue: to-
ward Ernesto's. “It was like this:
Last Saturday 1 eloped with Brandon
He taught shorthand at the
business college where 1 went, and he
liked me, and I did like him awfully
ents, while these who laugh without
a smile are hard-hearted and cruel.
People with little jerky laughs are oft-
en of shallow character, and are un-
abie to withstand temptation, They
are, however, often mentally brilliant.
“People who langh explosively and
loudly are not the hearty, blufe crea-
tures they are generally believed to be,
“The large-hearted souls are those
who laugh but rarely, but whose jov
is reflected in eves, lips, and face.” :
Both Ends
An was
Drew,
“Drew and Richard Harding Davis
actor talking about’ John
youth,”
“While he was dressing for dinner
and he recommended frantically the | Sides and Across the Back.
day's special, which neither Nancy
nor I opposed, as ‘it included dvck, | help, by having buttons where they
chops, steak, mushrooms, peas, pruta- | can be easily reached. During the
toes, beans and spaghetti, all in a | “in-between” period, when accidents
secret-formula sauce, served on a | Still occugy a romper permitting a
mystical but highly important blue | diaper as well"as one which is attract-
plate. ive with other undergarments, is avail-
to Brandon Malvina’s latest thre:
whereupon he, outraged, she coukll
by much persecution, had
stopped under the Sixth ave-
nue elevated with the romantic sug-
gestion:
“Listen! Why don't
Let's elope!”
Alas for Peter's brotherly sacrifices! |
Nancy, flattered, excited, and eager to |
leave home, fell promptly in with the
proposal to depart for Atlantic City
within an hour, where, she naively
implied, she seemed to have an
pression that this attractive young
man would marry her. |
Mercifully at this point we passed
between the clipped box-trees beside |
Erneste’s door, and were greeted fap- |
turously at the door of the restaurant |
by Ernesto himself, |
I had known this worthy Gencese |
ever since my salary could afford
him, but had yet to hear anyone ad-
dress him “Mr, Sansoni,” thongh
his gray hair, dignified bulk, aad |
stately official manners rendered him
mere than impressive, Like a dreag- |
naught convoying a chaser and & |
cruiser he led us down the wide blue- |
and-white-tiled hallway. !
“Not for ten @ays have you been |
here!” cried Ernesto to me with al- |
most theatrical reproach, pulling out |
chairs at a table just inside the door. |
“You have forgotten Erneésto’s! |
“I. never eoculd do that,” 1 averred
with simple truth, “but we've been so
busy I've just been grabbing send-
wiches at the drug stores every day.”
“My God! that's fierce!
Ernesto in fluent idiom, truly shocked.
see, SO
short
you chuck ir?
m- |
as
" ‘cried | Rompers for a Child From One to
Two Years Old, Buttoning Down the
“Still, lots of business is good,” he @ able.
‘ itte “Twi ad. it? | The illustration, which was made by . |
admitted. I wish I had it. bs it way as for any other waflles, |
I glanced inquiringly around the | the bureau of home economics of the * |
room, where the number of obviously | United States Department of Agricul- | 2 Chips Sted goft 3 tapiesoons but- |
’ Mo be . p or frp wheat our er |
contented patrons seemed to confra- | ture, shows a good type of TOR for f 44, cups mitk 2 eggs |
duct Ernesto’s implication that he was | & child from one to two years old. It | 1 cup sugar 8 teaspoons bak- |
facing bankruptey has fullness through the width to al- | 2 squares chocolate, ing powder |
“ in ang ive y freedom of movement, but no unsweetened 1 teaspoon salt |
My third-floor tenant leave two low € f Wh 1 14 teaspoon vanilla |
weeks ago, I cannotta renta the flat!” | light bands around the legs. Elastic |
he explained woefully. “Everybody ' leg-bunds are not advised for any Mix the dry ingredients, then add |
say ‘Thass notta nize place to live, | voipers. To prevent the trouser legs | the milk and the egg yolks. Melt the |
‘way downtown, I wanta live uppin | on this romper from slipping down | butter and chocolate and add to the |
the Bronx. I lovea the subway! Izza below the knee, they are made short. | batter. Lastly fold in the beaten |
nize place,” bristled Ernesto; “nize Uli cloth leg bands are sufficiently | whites of the eggs. Have the waffle |
cheap flat, nize furniture, nize and , Wide to slip up the leg at least 5 [iron hot enough to cook the waflles
inches above the knee when the child | ¢
quiet at night!
Nobody want”
recipe
waflles.
tric or iron,
down the legs as well as across the
back, in case the child is still wear-
ing diapers. This romper can be
mede from one straight piece of goods
folded through the crotch and the
shoulders.
Soft smooth materials such as ging-
ham, cotton charmeuse, cotton crepe,
sateen, prints and fine broadcloth, are
among the most suitable fabrics for
rompers for very little children. As a
fresh garment will be put on almost
every day, the rompers must stand a
great deal of laundering. For very
special occasions one or two pongee
rompers might be made.
TWO RECIPES FOR
COOKING ONIONS
There Are Many Different
Ways of Serving Them.
(Prepared by the Bureau of Home Economics,
United States Department of Agriculture.)
The humble onion becomes almost
an aristocrat during the spring
months when vegetables are few in |
number and limited in variety, There
are many good ways of serving them,
They may be boiled and creamed,
baked whole, cut in half and stuffed,
scalloped with peanuts, glazed or |
made into a rich and tasty soup. The
recipes below are from the bureau of
home economics.
Glazed Onions,
medium-sized
onions
3% cupful sugar
10 2 teaspoonfuls
melted butter
Peel the onions and boil whole in
salted boiling water until fairly ten-
der, from 20 to 30 minutes. Mix the
sugar and butter together and spread
over the sides and bottom of the bak-
ing dish or pan. Drain the onions and
place them in the pan and bake in a
moderate oven until brown, increasing
the heat toward the last. Water cooks
out of the onions, and the browning
process is rather slow, but when fin-
ished they should have a rich brown
them with the meat broth and thicken
with the flour and cold water, which
have been well blended. Cook a few
minutes. Pour the soup into bowls
or soup plates, place on top a round
or slice of toasted bread, and sprinkle |
grated cheese on top,
glaze.
Onion Soup.
3 cupfuls meat 4 tablespoonfuls |
broth flour |
6 medium-sized 2 tablespoonfuls |
onions, chopped cold water i
1% teaspoonfuls Pepper i
salt Toast |
Cheese |
* . |
Cook the chopped onions in a small |
amount of water until tender. Then |
add two tablespoonfuls of fat from |
the meat broth or the same quantity |
of butter and let the onions cook down
in this until they are yellow. Mix |
|
|
Serve at once.
Chocolate Waffles Are
New in Many Households |
New
to many households is this |
for making chocolate-flavored
The waflle-iron, whether elec-
is managed in the same
quickly. As soon as baked, sprinkle
‘TO BE CONTINUED) hends over, The back portion opens
with powdered sugar and serve.
FINNEY O]
The BABY
WHAT 16 UT YE2 /
ERE
Why do so many, many babies of to-
day escape all the little fretful spells
ailments that used fto
{ worry mothers through the day, and
keep them up half the night?
If you don’t know the answer, you
haven't discovered pure, harmless Cas
It is sweet to the taste, and
sweet in the little stomach.
gentle influence seems felt all through
Not even a distaste-
ful dose of castor oil does: so much
the tiny system.
Fletcher's Castoria is purely vege-
table, so you may give it freely, at
first sign of colic; or constipation; or
Or those many times when
you just don’t know what is the mat-
For real sickness, call the doc.
At other times a few
drops of Fletcher's
The doctor often tells you to do just
says TIletcher's.
Other preparations may be just as
drugs, but why experiment?
the book on care and feeding of babies
that comes with Fletcher's Castoria is
worth its weight in gold!
Children Cry for
HEY BUD, WH
|| THE (DEA? GET
HOLD AND QU
STALLING —
No need to spend restless, sleepless
Irritation quickly relieved and
rest assured by using the remedy that
has helped thousands of sufferers.
25 cents and $1.00 at druggists.
If unable to obtain, write direct to:
NORTHROP & LYMAN CO., Inc.,
Buffalo, New York
Send for free sample,
A single doze of Dr. Peery's “Dead Shot"
expels worms. Tones up the stomach and
bowels. No after purgative necessary.
Vermifu
ists or 372 Pearl Street. New York City
Spitz Good Sheep Tender
sheep dog, better
most countries as a house pet, small
But in its own home on
the shores of the Baltic this dog, is
the loca! sheep tender.
like face and very long hair,
he ranges over a wide scale, but black
average weight is about eight pounds.
The Spitz stands cold weather much
better than warm.
refigions is to make
YN Horatio
COLDS
A“common cold’’ may resultin grippe
or flu. At the very first sign, go toa drug
store and get a box of HILL'S. Take
promptly. HILL'S breaks up a cold in
24 hours because it does the four vital
things at once—stops the cold, checks
the fever, opens the bowels and tones
the system. Red box, 30 cents.
Cascara - Bromide = Quinine
boils, piles and felons.
d
Jl fat) combined withanti
*, healing, pain-reliey-
PERCY L.CR
© by the McClure Newspa