WNU Service The olfax Bookplate By AGNES MILLER © by The Century Co. CHAPTER X—Continued wd foe “In a few minutes I went back to my regular work. Then Mr. Gros- venor was fcund unconscious. And he was so badly hurt! It made me ill The sight of blood always makes me feel faint; 1 bave a refined nature. And his wrist was so badly slashed! And presently I suddenly remembered that that yellow paper in my pocket had been all cut into slivers, too! 1 was so scared 1 absolutely didn’t dare throw it away. | realized it must have been slit up during those three or four minutes 1 was away from the professor, because when 1 laid It down on the “pile of four books, ft was just as he had given it to me, I was so frightened 1 didn't know what to do, for days and days! [It did seem terribly exciting that I should have picked the note up; and pres ently I felt that maybe I could solve the mystery of the attack with it—" “What led you to think that?” in- terrupted Mr. Almy, inoterestedly. “Why, you did!” confessed Daisy, coyly. “Don’t you remember that day you interviewed me ‘up in Mr Roberts’ office? When 1 told you all about Miss Grosvenor and Mr. Bur- ton? I could see you thought 1 had more information than anybody; 1 knew it was useful to you, no matter how much Mr. Roberts tried to squelch me. And 1 did bave more in- formation than anybody, so when I—" “Pray, Miss Abbott,” interposed Mr. Almy, “proceed, in reference to the yellow note.” when,” repeated Daisy, in- cisively, “I read in the paper that ths weapon used to attack Mr. Gros- venor must have been a small, thin blade, 1 felt sure it had been also used to tear that paper, perhaps to try the blade first. But I couldn't un- derstand the cuts in a pattern on the paper; and Miss Grosvenor wasn’t ar- rested; and, of course, | was sure Professor Harrington had had noth- ing to do with the affair, so I decided that Mr. Case must have known Mr. Grosvenor and done it!” Mr. Roberts and I gaped. Mr, Almy merely said: “Let me hear your theory, please.” “Well, Monday noon Mr, Case was dreadfully eross to Ulysses, right in front of me, And you know he’s nev- er cross, least of all to a person like Ulysses. We were both in Mr. Case's office, he and I; 1 was writing a let- ter for him. Ulysses came in and asked him some question about the shelves he stockroom, and then he started to gossip about the accident. “He asked Mr. Case if he knew the old gentleman; and Mr. Case said that though a number of the staff re- ported having seen him before from time to time in the shop, he had never happened to, Ulysses then asked if the old gentleman was going to re- cover; ande«Mr, Case said the doctor thought not, he had lost so much blood, Ulysses said that was differ- ent from the old days, when they bled people on purpose, He told us his fa- ther had had pleurisy when he was a boy, and bad been bled by : power: ful fine doctor from the navy and got well right away. I said, ‘Your father wasn't a sailor, was he? and he said: ‘No'm, the doctor was visiting his folks down to Eliot's Crossing. My father he used to live there.’ He said Eliot's Crossing was in Virginia, and when I asked him what it was near. he said, ‘It ain’t near nothing ’cept the woods and the mountains. 1 was born there “at midnight tween OQec- tober and November, and my horo- scope was cast. And the horoscope says that folks that’s born at mid- night 'tween October and November gets messages. An’ I got a message this mornin’. 1 knowed. somep’n powerful bad was go'n happen, and it done happen! And then Mr. Case told him sharply he was a supersti- tious old fool! “Well, then, naturally, he went away; 1 was sorry for him, but he did give me the creeps with his bleeding and his woods and mountains and horoscopes. 1 didn't understand him at all, but he scared me to death, And 1 got scareder and scareder about that yellow note with the slits in it, until finally 1 just made up my mind that I wouldn't have anything to do with it. So I went and stuck it into the most unlikely looking book 1 could find in the history sec- tion! “Oh, it was so terrible!” shuddered Daisy. “1 finally decided Thursday morning that I ought to try to find fit and give it up, after all. And 1 couldn't remember what book | had put it in; (bat is, I couldn't remem- ber the book by name. I was scared just absolutely stiff. 1 knew 1 shouldn't have hidden the slip, for ft wasn't mine, in the first place, and if 1 suspected it was important, 1 should have told some one in authori: ty. And then, gradually, the more 1 thought about the thing, the more 1 realized that Mr, Case bhadn’t re- sponded at all to Ulysses; in fact, he’d shut him up much too quickly, “And then, that same Thursday, 1 guddenly remembered, without any warning—you know the way you do sometimes when you're thinking about “Ro, was putting up in the, a thing very hard?—that I had seen Mr. Case walking along the south gal- lery, to the door that leads upstairs, on Monday morning, just before the clock struck eleven!” “Why didn’t you ever say so be- fore?” demanded Mr. Roberts, evi- dently as much stunned as I was— and maybe as Mr. Almy was—at this totally unexpected corroboration of Julia Grosvenor’s statement that she had seen Mr. Case in the same place at the same time. “] never thought of it again until that minute!” cried Daisy, sharply. “Why should I? And why shouldn't Mr. Case walk along the south gal- lery?+ He does, every day, nearly! But 1 had remembered that the at- tack was said to have been made shortly before eleven o'clock, and that made me uneasy, taken in connection with the way Mr. Case had lost his head before Ulysses. And then he got me a wonderful position in Fernald’s; I couldn’t help wondering if he had done it to put me under obligation to him, because I had heard him and Ulysses.” “Have you anything further you would like to tell me, Miss Abbott?” Mr. Almy inquired. “That is positive- ly all you know about the yellow note?” “Absolutely !” emnly. So she was permitted to depart. vowed Daisy, sol- CHAPTER XI a The Spring-Lancet. When Ernesto’s box trees were half a block away, Mr. Almy said: “Suppose you take back this key ..nd the bookplate. If at any time you think they might get a response from Miss Grosvenor, show them to her. 1 give them to you because she as- sociates yeu, rather than me, with that book, and you might have a chance to win her confilence more adroitly. Once more, do your best to get her to talk.” We passed the box trees; we paced the blue-and-white tiled ballway; we mounted the steep staircase to the second floer, and approached the door of the Grosvenor apartment. And— Out of it walked Mr. Case! I decided that the hall was too dark for me to see him; what Mr. Almy did, I don’t know, for he was behind me, but at all events, he didn’t speak. The maid admitted us to the living room; and there sat Julia, in the same chair where we had left her the previous evning, so still that it seemed as if she had never moved. “Miss Grosvenor, we want to do something for yeu, if you will only let us,” said Mr. Almy. “Nobody can do anything for me,” she answered in a dead, level tone, Mr. Almy glanced at me. “You're mistaken,” said 1, rather bluntly, to rouse her. “I should not have dreamed of intruding here if 1 could not help you. You see, 1 was here last night when yeu and your cousin had that discussion—you re- member you asked me to stay?—and I think I have here what you were discussing with him, that object you want.” 1 took the key from my bag, and held it out to Ler. She looked at it with perfect blankness, her expres- sion changing from bewilderment te disappointment, then to suspicion. “What is it?” she demanded with some asperity. “I haven't the faintest nation 1” 1 flung. it down on the table, and drew the bookplate out of my bag. “Is this what you want, then?” 1 asked. Her eyes fairly blazed with recog: nition! With trembling fingers she snatched it frem my hand, hesitated almost imperceptibly one instant as if screwing her courage up to a su- preme effort, then turned the stout paper oblong over and scanned the blank back avidly. Then, with a heartrending cry of bitter disap- pointment, she flung the bookplate on the floor. Mr. Almy snatched it up. “Miss Grosvenor, you recognized this!” he announced sharply. “You saw It at the anction galleries in Richmond, a week ago last Thurs- day.” : Julia Grosvenor caught her breath sharply, half in chagrin in betrayed herself so utterly, half in consternation at Mr. Almy's informa- tion. “You wanted to buy the book with the bookplate, didn’t you? Surely there was no reason why you should not have done so if you wished.” “Yes,” she finally whispered; “but I had no money. So I really went to see who would buy it—where it would be afterward.” “Your cousin entered a bid for five hundred dollars,” resumed Mr, Almy. Julia made no sign or movement, “But, as you know, he was outbid- den. Mr. Burton got the book. It was In Darrow’s shop last Monday.” She gazed steadily at the floor, in dead silence. “Miss Grosvenor, I must remind you that the authorities are still waiting for you to explain your presence at that shop on Monday morning for an hour and a hgit.” having | “lI have explained it! You won't believe me! You think I followed my grandfather there to kill him!” sud- denly blazed the girl, frightened and furious. “No,” denied Mr. Almy, very quiet- ly, “I think you went there after that bookplate again, But you didn't find it, and something else happened. What, I am going to find out. Miss Grosvenor, when did you learn that Mr. Burton was Darrow’s buyer?” “When I left the auction, directly after the book had been bought, I made inquiries,” she answered reluc- tantly. “Did you tell your cousin that Bur- ton had bought it?” “No. I didn’t even meet him in Richmond. If he knew, he must have found out from the galleries.” “He did,” rejoined Mr. Almy, “Your constant avoidance of your cousin while both of you are attempting to get pessession of this drawing makes certain only one conclusion, Miss Grosvenor: Your motive for wanting \ Turned the Stout Paper Oblong Over and Scanned the Blank Bark Avidly. Now, your cousin Monday morning Did you see bim it conflicts with his, went to Darrow’s and bought a beok. there?” “No.” “Did you at any time during that morning know he had been there?” The question startled her, but she looked at her questioner steadily and answered point-blank, “Yes!” “How did you know?” “That,” sald Julia in a tone of finality, “ I cannot tell you.” “Why did your cousin go to Dar- row’s Thursday night?” “Perhaps for the book again,” said Julia, in pathetic desperation. “You know better than to say that,” said Mr. Almy, with a touch eof stern- ness, “What obligation are you under to him?” “He has often treated me with con- sideration; not too many people have,” returned Julia, with dignity. Mr. Almy looked at her hard and shrewdly. Suddenly he shot out: “What did he go to Darrew’s to get for you on Thursday night?” Her eyes dilated with surprise and horror. She shuddered, and gasped: “For me? For me? Well, if he wants to tell you, let him! There are some things I can’t do!” Her lips snapped shut just as they had dcne the previous evening in that very room, when, after all the abuse she had received at the hands of her ceusin, when it was utterly useless to try to withstand the search for him, she would do nothing to betray him. Her loyalty was again making THE PATTON COURIER faithful return for treachery. Equiv. ocal as her position was, she was so admirable that, forgetting all about Mr, Almy, I broke out uncontrellably : “l heard your cousin last night, yeu know. He offered you a ‘liberal settlement’ in exchange for something he wanted. He treated you with great contempt, in such contrast to . . . | others, almest strangers to you! They proffer you their aid freely; why do you spurn it just as you have spurned | his offer?” “I'm not ungrateful! Im not!” cried Julia, clenching her hands. “But . . You see, it's different, What | Charles offered me was a bribe out | of my own money, for all 1 know!” | She had started to talk, at last! And not because of my appeal, but because I had unwittingly hit on a grievance, But Mr. Almy was quite | {in France, told in indifferent “to cause, being Interested | orly in effect: “You think you have a legal claim on property your cousin calls his, do you, Miss Grosvenor?” he de- manded swiftly. “I do!” she cried, intent on her wrong, “Otherwise why should I have been ignored and rebuffed so pointedly all my life? If I had really been of illegitimate birth, if 1 had no claim on the estate—which was all my grandfather cared about, except Charles, and everything in the world that Charles himself cares abont— why should those two men have spent their time trying to safeguard them- selves by repudiating me?” “Did you ever do anything te try to prove your claim?’ “Not until the last fortnight. You know I've been home from abroad less than a year; and I came to the con. clusion I've just explained, only a few months ago, and gradually.” “And how did you try to prove your claim within this last fortnight?” With a groan, Julia cried: “] went to Richmond!” and then fell upon a despairing silence. The grievance had cut deeper. In a min- ute, Mr. Almy asked gently: “Why did you go there?’ “It’s such a long story!” “Take your time. Just begin at the beginning, and go on.” “Well,” began Julia, wearily, yet with a sort of relief, “a week ago last | Tuesday evening 1 was reading the | paper to my grandfather, as I some- times did. He liked especially to hear all the news of bagk sales and auctions. And I read the notice of the auction of Judge Leavitt's library in Richmond, the coming Thursday. Of course the sale of a Virginia library was of special interest to him, par- ticularly as this notice named many important books.” “Among them, no doubt, Clarihew’s ‘Notes? ” inquired Mr. Almy, “Yes; it was the last on the list, and it seemed to interest him espe- cially.” “Did he say anything?” “Not until 1 had finished reading the description of the book, or rather of the bookplate, for the book was briefly described as a clean copy in | fought a good deal, and now that it baok- | 15 all over I wish I might be relieved ¢ ic aid ‘Pic oie z. | a wud plate the notice said: Pictorial book | of future suffering, No owner's | wife.” good condition. ut of the plate inside first cover. name, Undated. And I saw he was | very much interested in the whole description, so I said, in perfect in- nocence then, I ought to mention: ‘You knew I'm going to be in Wash- ington anyway for the studio on Wednesday—’ 1 was taking down some designs for a church window there— ‘and 1 can easily go over to | Richmond, and buy that book for you | on Thursday, if yen want it.’ To my utter surprise, he was much startled; for a second he seemed suspicious | and angry; then I saw him glance at Charles—" “Oh, your cousin was present, was he?” put in Mr. Almy. “Yes, we were all in this Charles was studying at the end of it. room. | oiher suddenly changed his attitude and | said, very pleasantly, that he was much obliged to me, but I ter simply attend to my employers’ business, he thought; anyhow, he didn't know how suitable it would be for me to go and bid alone at a pub- lic auction in a southern city. But he admitted, frankly, that the sale did interest him; and turning to Charles, he asked him if he could ar- | range to go for him, as he had done. by the way, on a number of other oc- casiens when my grandfather couldn’t | leave home.” (TO BE CONTINUED.) had bet- ERR RR ER SRR Marriage No Light Ceremony in China Getting married is complicated bus- iness in China. Anna Louise Strong, writing in Harper's 3fagazine, gives the following description of Chinese wedding customs as related to her by a Chinese student: “If a marriage Is honorable in China, the parents of the groom will pay the money needed. They will send notes from the groom's father: ‘On such a date my son will marry the daughter of Mr. So-and-So. Your pres- ence is requested at the feast.’ But it is worth much te him, for at the wed- ding, all honor is shown to this old man, who will now be a grandfather, since his son has taken a wife. “But if the marriage be without parents’ consent, then the young folks cannot be at home on their wed- ding day. A proper, henorable mar- At the Enemy’s Mercy There are now more than six hun- dred thousand known species of in- sects trying to drive the buman race off the earth and more are beng found each year. — Woman's Home Companion. $338 RRR RAISIN ringe—it really cannot be done with: | out the parents; otherwise. all is dis order. There are only two other ways for young folks. One is to wait and beseech the parents. Even if they de not like the girl, still they love their son, and if they see him always un- happy, refusing to take any other woman or to give them grandsons, in the end they will often give way.” Daddy on Fire Little Mi'dred ran futo the house the other day and screamed: “Oh, mother, 1 just saw daddy on fire!” “On fire!” the startled mother cried, and Mildred vigorously nodded her | head. { After a maternal cross-examination it turned out that Mildred had passed the barber shop and saw a barber applying matches to her father’s hair. She had run all ‘the way home to tell mother and save daddy’s life, | When father came home a few min- | utes later he was surprised at the af- | fectionate greeting of his little daugh- ter, who was delighted to see that he | had escaped from the fire fiend alive. —Philadelphia Record, | collapsed | fect he assisted in getting her to a | she started | between | told those on the scene that his wife | was only having “one of her nervous she had swallowed enough poison in ames . And then my grandfather | Minister Seeks to Meet | law-abiding | fighter before he entered the ministry | and had an overwhelming desire to | | many of which | Green or succulent feed should be fed | Circuit court entered a plea of guilty HUSBAND TELLS HOW HE KILLED WIFE WITH POISON South Dakota Man Gets Life Term for Cold-Blooded Murder of Spouse. Sioux Falls, S. D.—*It all happened within an hour or less, and we were all very excited at the house about | gg In these calm words Glenn Mclver, former service man, who was gassed part about the death of his wife after he tad admin- istered a quantity of strychnine to her, giving it to her in a cup of eof- fee. He made a detailed confession of the crime and when taken into and was sentenced to life imprison- ment in the state penitentiary in Sioux Falls. Buys Poison. Mrs. Esther McIver was a book agent representing a Minneapolis house and was followed to South Da- kota by her husband, whose home is said to be at Marshall, Minn. Mrs. McIver wanted her husband to go over into Minnesota to get their car, but he refused on the ground that he kad made plans to make a trip to Watertown, S. D. This was their last quarrel, for soon thereafter Mec- Iver went to a drug store and pur- chased strychnire, signing the name “R. C. Meyers” to the poison register. In his confession he, among other things, said: “My wife and I nad never been able to get along very Assisted Her to a Chair. well; we argued, disagreed, and also, like my Helps Wife to Chair. Meclver stated that when his wife after the poison took ef- chair, on which she sat down. Then to have convulsions and seizures charged that her husband had poisoned her, Meclver in his confession set forth that when she made this charge he | spells.” Meclver said he “didn’t think the coffee to kill her, but shortly | thereafter we put her on the bed and | she died.” Holdup Artist in Ring | Kansas City, Mo.—Rev. John W. | citizen, but when c¢ca- sion demands he also can use his fists to advantage. This was revealed when Rev, Mr, Keys asked police to arrange a regu- lar fistic bout so that he could enter the ring and meet the “gentleman” who beat him up on a certain night and robbed him of $100. Keys said that he was a professional meet his assailant again. Keys of- fared the police $100 to arrange such { a bout to give him “satisfaction.” | Foiled Burglars Break | 11,000 Packed Up Eggs Berlin.—When the police were called the other day to a big poultry, | farm at Karlshorst, near Berlin, which | had been broken into by burglars, they had to wade through a mass of 11,000 scrambled eggs. Worst of all, they were valuable brood eggs, stamped and packed ready for export. The burglars, evidently annoyed at only finding a few marks in a safe they had broken open, had taken re- | venge by smashing up the contents of the egg boxes. Weighs Pound at Birth, Life Saved by Spanking | 3rooklyn, N. Y.—It is easy to be- tieve that Miss Woroshilla was indig- nant at the manner of her reception into this world. When this miss ar- rived there was very little life in her body. She uttered not the slightest sound, and since a baby’s lungs must fail if it does not cry, the doctor spanked her until she cried. Miss Woroshilla weighed one pound at birth, but is gaining rapidly. She is being kept in an incubator and fed with a medicine dropper. | | ty of exercise. | only moderately lighted and < CARE OF PULLETS WHILE ON RANGE Just “feeding the chickens” sounds simpler than the task really is, if the chickens are to be well fed. The pur- pose for which the flock is being kept has a great deal to do with the mat- ter. Rations for fattening, main- tenance, growth and egg production are all different, and will also be varied according to the age of the chickens. Twenty-one kinds of chicken feeds, all of them different in their result, and all of them suited to different pur- poses, are exhaustively analyzed and discussed in a new bulletin by Prof. A. R.aWinter of the poultry husbandry department of the Ohio State univer- sity, The bulletin, No. 63, entitled “Poultry Feeding Stuffs and Rations,” has been published by the agricultural extension service of the university. In addition to the definitions and discussions of the various feeds, there are given six formulae for rations, Two of them are “starting and grow- ing” rations and the other four are | for laying hens. Along formulae for the rations there are di- with the | rections .for making simple and effi- | cient feeding equipment for the poul- try yard. Two special fattening rations are suggested, one for hens and the other | for young birds. For hens, a ration of | corn meal, 40 parts by weight, mixed | with 60 parts, by milk, io suggested. For the younger birds a greater variety of grains is recommended. The formula calls for a mash consisting of 59 weight, of liquid | parts of | ground corn, 25 parts of wheat flour | middlings, 10 parts of finely ground | oats, 5 parts of meat scrap, and 1 part of salt. This mash should he mixed with enough liquid milk to make a bat- ter that will pour fairly easily. Egg Production Is Cut . by Uncomfortable Pens If hens could talk, they would prob- | ably say harsh things about hot, un- | comfortable poultry houses. Ohio poultrymen are urged to keep | that in mind, among other things, by poultry extension specialists of the | Ohio State university in their monthly | letter to farm records in tension service, A hot poultry house, the speeialists observe, is no place for a hen either to eat or to lay eggs. “Open the ventilators and remove poultrymen keeping | co-operation with the ex- | the windows; make the houses cool | and comfortable,” specialists, P. B. Zumbro. “Don’t ex- writes one of the! pect egg production if the house is as | hot as a bakeoven. Hens won't stay in hot houses long enough to consume their feed.” Another point in summer care of the poultry flock: “Summer and fall production are old dry bluegrass or dead rye is not satisfactory, to plant now for summer pasture. “Yard off a part of the ground | greatly influenced by good green feed; | Rape is the best thing | around the house, and plant the rape | there, allowing it to get a good start. It will provide good pasture until freezing weather.” Two other practices successful poul- | trymen observe at this time of year | are culling the slacker hens, and get- | ting control of lice and mites on the birds. Best Plan to Separate Cockerels and Pullets As the flock reaches the broiler | Keys of this city may be a peaceful, | stage the roosters and pullets should | | be separated, for the pullets need no | forcing but will make better layers | if let grow along ncrmally, with plen- | Broilers, on the other | | hand, should have only enough exer- cise for health and should be fed a! fattening ration. At the final stage the broilers should be shut in a pen fed all they will eat of fine ground corn and semi-solid buttermilk. Some prefer to use a prepared fattening mash, are on the market. also. Lack of exercise causes them to fatten very fast and makes juicy flesh. Duck Meat Breeds One of the most common breeds of ducks is the” Pekin breed. These | tender | ducks are white or creamy white in | | color and are as large as any of the breeds of ducks with the exception of one, Drakes weigh eight to nine pounds and ducks weigh eight pounds. over the United States as a whole. Pekins may be mated in the propor- tion of one drake to every six or eight ducks. Prevent Chick Loss Cleanliness is highly important in the prevention of chick losses. Al- ways scrub the brooder floor with hot lye water and let it dry before putting in baby chicks. Clean litter, free from mold and small Kernels of grain should be used and changed often enough that filth does not accumulate, It is better to keep chicks partially contined, when provided with sunlight than to let them out on old ground which may carr, disease germs and parasite eggs. seven to | In the meat class this | | breed is perhaps the most popular How Much Water ] Should Baby Get? ~A Famous Authority's Rule “By Ruth Brittain ~ Baby specialists agree nowadays, that during the first six months, babies must have three ounces of fluid per pound of body weight daily. An eight pound baby, for instance, needs twen- ty-four ounces of fluid. Later on the rule is two ounces of fluid per pound of body weight. The amount of fluid absorbed by a breast-fed baby is best determined by weighing him before and after feeding for the whole day} and it is easily calculated for the bot tle-fed one. Then make up any de: ficiency with water. Giving baby sufficient water often relieves his feverish, crying, upset and restless spells, If it doesn’t, give him a few drops of Fletcher's Castoria. For these and other ills of babies and children such as colic, cholera, diar- rhea, gas .on stomach and bowels, con- stipation, sour stomach, loss of sleep, underweight, etc, leading physicians say there's nothing so effective, It is purely vegetable—the recipe is on the wrapper—and millions of mothers have depended on it in over thirty years of ever increasing use. It regu- lates baby’s bowels, makes him sleep and eat right, enables him to get full nourishment from his food, so he in- creases in weight as he should. With each package you get a book on Moth erhood worth its weight in gold. Just a word of caution. Look for the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher on the package so you'll be sure to get the genuine. The forty-cent bottles contain thirty-five doses. Happy Widow I know a widow who is supremely happy. When other widows weep from loneliness, she continues to smile, And 1 do not blame her; I knew her husband, an exceedingly disagreeable man.—E. W. Howe's Monthly. Code Defies Experts A typewriter that embraces the only known method of producing a crypte- gram that is impossible to solve with- out a key has been invented in Eng- land. On the machine it is possible to write a code message that will defy the greatest brains in the world. His Specialty First Student—What will when you finish college? Second Student—Dunno. Dad says my chief forte is to write for money! you de Weakness of an emotional dispo- sition is that it reveals its hates as readily as it does its loves. DON'T suffer headaches, or any of those pains that Bayer Aspirin can end in a hurry! Physicians prescribe it, and approve its free use, for it does not affect the heart. Every drug- gist has it, but don’t fail to ask the druggist for Bayer. And don't take any but the box that says Bayer, with the word genuine printed in red: Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture . of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid s—T———— BEWARE OF WORMS IN CHILDREN Worms quickly ruin a child’s health. If your child grits his teeth, picks his nostrils, has a disordered stomach—bewarel These are worm symptoms! Quickly—without delay—free your child's body of these health-destroy= ing parasites. Give him Frey's Ver= mifuge — America’s safe, vegetable worm medicine for 75 years. Buy it today! All druggists! Frey’s Vermifuge Expels Worms EE JUST FOOLISHME "WHAT GAN 1 OC TW STOP MY CHIMNEY FROM SMOKING 2 * WHY DONT You OFFER IT ONE C NOUR CIGARS? THE FE. pe
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers