Newspaper Page Text
THE GEORGIAN’S MAGAZINE, PAGE
“Initials Only” By Anna Katherine Green
A Thrilling Mystery Story of Modern Times
(Copyright, 1911, Street & Smith.)
(Copyright, 1911, by Dodd, Mead & Co.)
TODAY’S INSTALLMENT.
Sweetwater, who had been so violently
•wheeled about in entering that he stood
■with his back to the curtain concealing
the ear, answered without hesitation:
"You have a device, entirely new so far
as T judge, by which this car can
leap at once' into space, hold its own in
any direction, and alight again upon any
given spot without shock to the machine
or danger to the people controlling it."
“Explain the device.”
"I will draw it."
"You can?”
“As it see it."
"As you see it!"
“Yes. It’s a brilliant idea. I could
never have conceived it."
“You believe—”
“I know.”
“Sit here. Let's see what you know."
Sweetwater sat down at the table the
other pointed put, and. drawing forward
a piece of paper, took up a pencil with
an easy air. Brotherson approached and
stood at his shoulder. He had taken up
Ids pistol again, why he hardly knew, and
as Sweetwater began his marks, his fin
gers tightened on its butt till they turned
white in the murky lamplight.
"You see," came in easy tones from
the stooping draughtsman, “I have an im
agination which only needs a slight fillip
from a mind like yours to send it in the
desired direction. I shall not draw an
exact reproduction of your idea, but I
think yon will see that 1 understand it
very well. How's that for a start?"
Brotherson looked and hastily drew
back. He did not want the other to note
his surprise.'
"But that is a portion you never saw,”
he loudly declared.
“No, but I saw this," returned Sweet
water, working busily on some curves;
“and these gave me the fillip 1 mentioned.
The rest came easily."
'• Brotherson. in dread of his own anger,
threw his pistol to the other end of the
shed:
"You knave! You thief!" he furiously
cried
"How so?" asked Sweetwater smilingly,
rising and looking him calmly in the face.
“A thief is one who appropriates an
pther man's goods, or, let us say, another
man's ideas. I have appropriated nothing
—yet. I’ve only shown you how easily 1
could do so. Mr. Brotherson, take me in
as your assistant. I will be faithful to
you. I swear it. I want to see that
machine go up."
SICK DAUGHTER
NOW WELL
Mrs. C. Cole Tells How Her
Daughter Was Restored to
Health by Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Compound.
Fitchville, Ohio. —‘‘l take great pleas
ure in writing to thank you for what your
medicine has done
for my daughter.
“Before taking
your medicine she
was all run down,
suffered from pains
in her side, could not
walk but a short dis
tance at a time, and
had severe pains in
head and limbs. She
came very near bav-
w
■ 1 ing nervous prostra-
tion. She had begun to cough a good
deal and seemed melancholy by spells.
She tried two doctors but got little help.
“I cannot find words to express my
gratefulness for what Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound has done for
my daughter. She feels and looks like
another girl since taking it, and I shall
always feel that I owe you a great debt.
“You can use this letter for the bene
fit of others if you wish, as I shall al
ways recommend your medicines for fe
male troubles.”—Mrs. C. Cole, Fitch
ville, Ohio.
Hundreds of such letters from moth
ers expressing their gratitude for what
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound has accomplished have been re
ceived by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medi
cine Company, Lynn, Mass.
Young Girls, Heed This Advice.
Girls who are troubled with painful or
irregular periods, backache, headache,
dragging-down sensations, fainting spells
or indigestion, should immediately seek
restoration to health by taking Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
LA CREOLE HAIR
DRESSING STOPS
DANDRUFF
Restores Gray Hair To Nat
ural Color—lt Works
Sure, Safe and
Honest.
"La Creole” Hair Dressing is the only
r , ea ,' hair color restorer on the market to
, “ has been tested and tried for the
past forty years with happy and satisfac
tory results. It kills dandruff, softens
the hair, prevents bleaching, adds luster
to the hale and by restoring gray hair to
ns natural color
PRODUCES, MORE YOUTHFUL AP
. V PEARANCE.
'-h eo ' fi X Hair Dressing restores
p.Hfy- grizzled, streaked or bleached, dry.
thin hair to its natural youthful color. It
niages the Old look young and does away
with mental anxiety. It Is good for man
as well as woman
Some forty years ago, one of these fine
~ , rp °le dames, proud but poor, con-
lided to us the recipe for making the
tar-fanied Lat’reole' 1 llair Dressing
It Is without doubt the tincst hair dress
ing made Keeps the scalp clean. Jto
ettlts guaranteed by its use. price $1 per
large bottle at drug ..stores tAdvt.l
■"For how many people have you drawn
those lines?" thundered the inexorable
voice. .
"For nobody; not for myself even. This
is the first time they have left their hid
ing place in my brain."
"Can you swear to that?”
"I can. and will, if you require it. But
you ought to believe my word, sir. lam
square as a die in ail matters not con
nected well, not connected with my pro
fession." he smiled, in a burst of that
whimsical humor which not even the se
riousness of the moment could quite sup
press.
"And what surety have I that you do
not consider this very matter of mine as
coming within the bounds you speak of?”
“None. But you must trust me that
far.”
Brotherson surveyed him with an irony
which conveyed a very different message
to the detective than any he had intended.
Then quickly:
"To how many have you spoken, dilat
ing upon this device, and publishing
abroad my secret?"
‘I have spoken to no one. not even to
Mr. Gryce. That shows my honesty as
nothing else can."
"You have kept my secret intact?"
"Entirely so. sir.”
"So that no one, here or elsewhere,
shares our knowledge of the new points
in this mechanism?”
“I say so, sir.”
"Then if I should kill you," cgme in fe
rocious accents, "now —here—"
“You would be the only one to own
that knowledge. But you won't kill me."
“Why?"
“Need I go into reasons?"
"•Why, I say?”
"Because your conscience is already too
heavily laden to bear the burden of an
other unprovoked crime."
Brotherson, starting back, glared with
open ferocity upon the man who dared to
face him with shell an accusation.
"God! Why didn't 1 shoot you on en
trance."' he cried. "Your courage is cer
tainly colossal."
A fine smile, without even the hint
of humor now. touched the daring de
tective's lip. Brotherson's anger seemed
to grow under It. and he loudly repeated:
"It's more than colossal; it’s abnormal
and”—a moment's pause, tnen with an
ironic emphasis— "and quite unnecessary,
save as a matter of display, unless you
think you need it to sustain you through
the ordeal you are courting. You wish to
help me finish and prepare for flight?”
“I sincerely do."
“You consider yourself competent?”
“I do."
Brotherson's eyes fell and he walked
once to the extremity of the oval flooring
and back.
"Well, well grant that. But that's
not all that is necessary. My require
ments demand a companion in my first
flight. Will you go up in the car with me
on Saturday night ?”
A quick affirmative was on Sweetwa
ter's lips but the glimpse which he got of
I the speaker’s face glowering upon him
from the shadows into which Brotherson
had withdrawn stopped its utterance, and
the silence grew heavy. Though it may
not have lasted long by the clock, the in
stant of breathless contemplation of each
other’s features across the intervening
space was of incalculable moment to
Sweetwater, and possibly to Brotherson.
As drowning men are said to live over
their whole history between their first
plunge and final rise to light and air, so,
through the mind of the detective, rushed
the memories of his past and the fast
fading glories of his future; and rebeling
at the subtle peril he saw in that sar
donic eye. he vociferated an impulsive:
"No! I’ll not—" and paused, caught by
a new and irresistible sensation.
A breath of wind—the first he had felt
j that night—had swept in through some
! crevice in the curving wall, flapping the
; canvas enveloping the great car. It acted
! like a peal to battle. After all. a man
■ must take some risks in his life, and his
I heart was in this trial of a redoubtable
! mechanism in which he had full faith. He
I could not say noito the prospect of being
i the first to share a triumph which would
I send his name to the ends of the earth;
| and, changing the trend of his sentence,
J he repeated with a calmness which had
! the force of a great decision:
"I will not fail you in anything. If
; she rises—” here his trembling hand fell
lon the curtain shutting off his view of
I the ship, "she shall take me with her,
i so that when she descends I may be the
first to congratulate the proud inventor
I of such a marvel.”
"So be it!" shot from the other's lips,
i his eyes losing their threatening look.
1 and his whole countenance suddenly aglow
with the enthusiasm of awakened genius.
Coming from the shadows, he laid his
hand on the cord regulating the rise
and fall of the concealing curtain.
"Here she is!" he cried, and drew the
sord.
The canvas shook, gathered itself into
great folds and disappeared in the shad
ows from which he had just stepped.
The air car stood revealed—a star
tling. because wholly unique, vision.
Long did Sweetwater survey it, then
turning with a beaming face upon the
watchful inventor, he uttered a loud "Hur
rah!"
Next moment, with everything foagot
ten between them save the glories of this
invention, both dropped simultaneously
to the floor and began that minute exam
ination of the mechanism necessary to
their mutual work.
, His Great Hour.
Saturday night at 8 o'clock.
So the fiat had gone forth, with no con
cession to be made on account of weather.
As Oswald came from his supper and
took a look at the heavens from the
small front porch, he was deeply troubled
that Orlando had remained so obstinate
on this point. For there were ominous
clouds rolling up from the east, and the
storms in this region of high mountains
and abrupt valleys were not light, nor
without danger even to those with feet
well planted upon mother earth.
If the tempest should come up before 8!
Mr. Challoner, who, from some myste
rious impulse of bravado on the part of
Brotherson. was to be allowed to make
the third in this small band of specta
tors. was equally concerned at this sight,
but not for Brotherson. His fears were
for Oswald, whose slowly gathering
strength could illy bear the strain which
this additional anxiety for his brother’s
life might Impose upon him. As for Dor
is, she was In a state of excitement
more connected with the past than with
the future. That afternoon she had laid
her hand in that of Orlando Brotherson,
and wished him well. She! in whose
breast still lingered reminiscence* of those
old doubts which had beclouded his image
for her at their first meeting She had
not been able to avoid It. His look was
a compelling one. and it had demanded
tints much from her; and—a terrible
thought to her gentle spirit he might be
going to his death
To Be Continued in Next Issue.
* * An Early Autumn Fashion * *
Wk I - *
MO| \ V.
ILw K,
>. will x JF
I iX fe-i
■BBwßw*:
ADVICE TO THE LOVELORN * * "By Beatrice Fairfax
YOU MUST MARRY FIRST.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am Seventeen and in love w ith
a young man with whom I have
been going for a year. Would it be
right for me to go away with this
young man and live with his mar
ried brothel?
1 live with my father and a step
mother, with whom 1 can not agree,
and we always quarrel. For this
reason my’ fiance wishes me to go
away when- we will always live
happy. Now, do you think it is
right for me to go on the under
standing that we will get married
in a year's time, or should we get I
married before we go? If we marry ,
we will have to live with his broth
er until he makes enough for his
needs before going to live alone.
JESSIE.
You must not think of going to liv>
with his relatives until you go as hi
wlfe. As his means are limited, why
not remain at your father's until he i
in position to give you a home? Pt' -
ent conditions may be unhappy, but
you will not improve them by the course
you suggest. It takes two to quarrel.
Did you ever resolve you would not b<
one of the two'.’ Try it.
PERHAPS THEY DON’T KNOW.
Dear Miss Fail fax:
I am a young girl, rather quiet,
and have been accus' d of being a
snob so many times that I thought
perhaps you might be able to ti ll
me just what the word implies, it
is no intention of mine to be one,
and 1 should like to overcome the
fault as soon as possible, ami would
be greatly obliged for anything you
may say on the subject, for it is
rather a serious matter to lie told
that you are something of which
you know nothing about.
MARJORIE D.
A snob Is one who apes gentility. I
am sure, your accusers don't know tin ■
meaning of the word, or they would not ■
apply it. The word is incorrectly used 1
to describe one who is proud and some - I
times distant in manner, and 1 tire- I
sume that is their meaning.
If you are somewhat shy, your shy
ness may have been misunderstood. Try j
to be a little more cordial and inter
ested.
SHE IS NOT TOO OLD.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am young and handsome and
very popular with the girls in gen
eral. Several girls have indicated
that I would be a welcome visitor,
but I care nothing for them. There
is one girl, however, whom I have
knoWn a long time and whose fam
ily and mine are very good friends.
We have always treated each other
simply as friends. It was only’ re
cently that 1 discovered I loved her.
She is two years my’ senior and,
more than this, has never thought
of me as a lover.
Have I the right to ask a girl so
much older than I ant to marry me?
DESPERATE.
Ask her. by all means. She is not too
old for you. Moreover, a tnan who is
seif-avow edit "handsome and popular
with the girts" needs a wife his senior
to curb his vanity.
DO YOU KNOW YOURSELF?
Dear Miss Fairfax.
Would you kindly :msw< thi
question in The Georgian, as I be
lieve it will interest many vmiiig
folk-"
Do you think that a young man
of about 21 oi 22 yea is of age, wlio
has been nut with many girls and
finally in ikes up his mind to get
married could thoroughly under
stand that he loved a certain girl
or whether it was a mushroom
growth, using your own term?
1 can support a wife easy enough,
but m ■ friends say I am too young
and will have different tastes when.
1 glow older.
A LOVELORN READER.
The fact that you have jknown man.v
girls should m ike your education more
complete, if you are not wise enough
to pick out a wife, you have learned
tlie lessons these girls have tried to
teach you.
You are not too young, to marry.
Years do not count as mmh as dis-
Jr® OSr
Y-. >Z'
/ j aOw
You do not
eat the right food
VT'OUR bodies are ilbnourished because
-5- you feed them on foods that they cannot
get the good out of. Do not eat so much
meat and other heavy foods that are hard
to digest. You get all the good elements
of these dishes in
FAUST
BRAND
SPAGHETTI
in a much easier digested form. It contains
practically no waste. It is all quickly and easily
converted into strength and energy. Serve
Faust Spaghetti often and you and your family
will become strong, robust and put on flesh.
It’s a splendid food for growing children.
Faust Spaghetti makes delightful dishes and is
a very economical food.
At your grocer’s-—sc and 10c a package.
Hi BSMCKSB— aaKB^■ »' ! ———————————-i
--j Maull Bros., St. Louis, Mo.
« ———
O?<3 |
j Here is a very original /
; tailor-made costume of /
> u Tony” linen doth, pink
J and green over white.
/ The long semi-titling /
s coal has a collar of '•
j brown Holland, with J
' broad rovers, over which s
/ is put a second collar of■:
/ linen cloth with slashed ;
/ revers. It is fastened :
/ down with a stiched
? (
:> band of brown Holland
• trimmed with two but- )
/ ions. 'l’he three-quarter <
length sleeves are finish- /
> ' <
: ed with small pointed ;
> cuffs of the same male- z
/ rial. !
The skirt is a three- <
? t (
! gored model with the
j closing in front showing /
;at the bottom. I'he \
j small blouse is of Eng- ?
lish embroidery.
t>o<3
crimination and discretion. The ques
tions you must answer for yourself are:
Do I know myself? Ain 1 sure of my
own constancy ?
CONTINUE ON THAT COURSE.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I have known a girl for four
months and would like to know
now I could win her friendship. I
pay a lot of attention to her in the
institute which we attend.
E. P. Z.
i Don't relax in the attention you are
paying her. Be gallant, considerate.
> courleou-- and kind. Make her happi
ness the first thought in your mind, and
I am sin. such faithfulness will achieve
• tile desired result.
Beyond Rule or Reason
By Beatrice Fairfax
"Love comes to some with smiling eyes,
And comes with tears to some;
For some Love sings, for some Love
sighs.
For some Love’s lips are dumb."
—Pakenham Beatty.
WHO is wise enough to give rule
or reason whereby the writer
of this letter may tell if her
lover really loves her?
"I am a young gin of nineteen, and
in love with a man t-even years my
senior. Now. this gentleman has told
me he loves me and no one else, as he
lias had only one girl before he met me
and she is dead. My conscience, how
ever, will not allow me to believe what
he says is true, as He sees me only a
few hours on Saturday afternoons, and
tells me that the rest, of his time is oc
cupied. How can I find out the truth,
whether he means whai he says in tell
ing me he loves ifie. as he distinctly
•ells me so?”
Facts and figures may be relied on in
every other problem, but love is beyond
the most precise calculations of the
most skilled mathematician.
This man sees ills beloved only once
a week. At such a time he explains he
can not see her oftener. But he devotes
the tint..• he is with her to telling her he
loves her.
It takes very little for love to feed on.
In the days they are apart his love
lives on memory of the last meeting,
and lives again in anticipation of the
next. He loved before. The girl died.
He has been honest enough to tell his
second love al] about it. There are men
who would deny they ever loved before.
There are others, who. lacking respect
for a romance that is ended, would
speak slightingly of it.
"I was younger then." such a man
says. "I did not know my own mind.”
Os such a man, beware; but the man
who comes honestly with the story of a
past romance on his lips, who confesses
that the girl to whom he comes Is the
second girl loved, merits respect.
At least, he does not deserve the
HE TURNED AGAIN.
Naturally, they were married, for
she ordered him about in a most im
perious way. The longest lane has its
turning, however, and one day, after a
particularly violent outbreak on the
part of tile lady, the husband attempt
ed to reduce the woman’s rights in
his own household.
"Do you tldnk you rule the uni
verse?" he inquired sarcastically, when
the moment came for him to edge in a
word.
"No," came dje prompt reply. “I do
not. But I rule the first letter of it!”
And once again the mere man real
ized that he was indeed the under dog.
a.
"Speaker” writes: "I am troubled with
a tickling sensation after speaking, which
is accompanied with a slight cough and
hoarseness. Can 1 get relief?"
Answer: You will not only’ be relieved,
but you will be cured by using the follow
ing: Ask your druggist for a
buttle of ossein e menthu laxene. This
1-an be taken pure or can be made Into a
full pint of cough syrup. Full directions
.in- given on the bottle for making. This
is very easily made at home and is per
fectly safe, as it does not contain any’
harmful ingredients, as do most of the so
called cough cures.
M ■ •
"Ida” writes: “I have suffered with
st. tnaclt trouble and constipation for
about two years, and 1 fear it will cause
appendicitis if I can not get some relief.”
tnswer: I recommend that vou get tab
lets triopeptine and take a pink tablet
after breakfast, a white tablet after din
ner and a blue tablet after supper. This
s a very excellent treatment and is wide
ly prescribed for its gradual curative ac
tion Continue this treatment for several
weeks and 1 am sure you will be cured.
• *< *
Doctor: "Several years ago I took a ton
ic which you prescribed for me. but it has
been so long that I have forgotten the In
gredients. it was the best nerve and sys
tem tonic that I ever took. Will vou
kindly publish the ingredients again?’ 1
Answer: The tonic I always prescribe
for (ample in your condition is syrup of
hypophosphites comp., 5 ounces; tincture
i amimene comp., I ounce. Shake well and
take a teaspoonful before meals. This is
the best nerve and system tonic that I
know of.
• * .
"Miss Jane" says: “I am very unhappy
amt very uncomfortable on account of my
excessive weight. Please tell me of a
quick and safe remedy."
Answer: Your excessive weight need
not cause you any unhappiness, because
you can be quickly relieved. A reduction
of a pound a day’ is not unusual after tak
ing the medicine for a week or two. I
advise you to get these two medicines sep
arately to avoid substltuion, mix and
shake well and take a teaspoonfu) for
three days after meals, and thereafter
take two leaspootifuls; Get 5 ounces of
aromatic elixir and 1 ounce of glycol arbo
lene. Mix Continue several weeks or
months, as your ease may require
• ♦ •
"Torn” writes: "1 have very poor health
mt a.‘count ..f long standing constipation
I take medicine all the time, but would
like to get something that would cure
mo."
Answer More illness is caused by con
stipation than by any other ailment You
. an get plenty of medicines that will re
lieve you. but if you want something that
will cure run I would advise the use of
it-gralu sulplierb tablets (not sulphur tab
lets) Thev can lie bought at am drug
doubt with which this girl meets every
avowal of his affection.
That he sees her only once a week
does not in the least weaken his love.
That strange sentiment has away of
growing when fed on absence. Often,
the skeptics say, it attains a more rapid
growth than when one is constantly
with the object of one's affections.
If business keeps him from her, it is
to his credit that he finds his interests
there. If she suspects it Is some other
woman, then that suspicion is founded
solely on jealousy, and can not be taken
into serious consideration.
There is no way to find if he really
loves her. That she doubts him, gives
him reason for suspecting that she
cares nothing for him.
There is no scale, no measuring cup
or string, no geometrical rule, for find
ing out just the sentiment she has in
spired.
Why not have a little faith and be
lieve him? If she finds she can’t have
that, it is better never to see him again.
Little doubts, during a courtship,
have away of growing into tormenting
ones after marriage.
Try This
Cough Remedy
Coat* Little, But Doe* the Work {jj
L Quickly, or .Money Refunded. n
flUsraeairagtfl
Mix one pint of granulated sugar with
% pint of warm water, and stir for 2
minutes. Put ”Va ounces of Pinex (fifty
cents' worth) in a pint bottle; then ad-i
the Sugar Syrup. Take a teaspoonful
•very one, two or three hours.
You will find that this simple rem
edy takes hold of a cough more quickly
than anything else you ever used. Usu
ally ends a deep seated cough inside
of '24 hours. Splendid, too, for whoop
ing cough, croup, chest pains, bronchi
tis and other throat troubles. It stim
ulates the appetite and is slightly lax
ative, which helps end a cough.
This recipe makes more and better
cough syrup than you could buy ready
made for $2.50. It keeps perfectly and
tastes pleasantly.
Pinex is the most valuable concen
trated compound, of Norway white pine
extract, and is rich in guaiacol ana all
the natural pine elements which are eo
healing to the membranes. Other prep
arations will not work in this formula.
This plan of making cough syrup with
Pinex and sugar syrup (or strained
honey) has proven so popular through
out the United States ana Canada that
it is often imitated. But the old. suc
cessful formula has never been equaled.
A guaranty of absolute satisfaction,
or money promptly refunded, goes with
this recipe. Your druggist has Pinex or
will get it for vou. If not, send to The
Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ini
7KePoCTOR’<§
The questions answered below are gen
eral in character, the symptoms or dis
eases are given and the answers will applv
to any case of similar nature. Those
wishing further advice free may address
Dr. Lewis Baker, College building. Col
lege-Elwood streets, Dayton, Ohio, inclos
ing self-addressed stamped envelope for
reply Full name and address must be
given, but only initials or fictitious name
will be used in my answers. The pre
scriptions can be filled at any well-stocked
drug store. Any druggist can order of
wholesaler.
store In sealed tubes, with full directions
for using I have found them the most
reliable and gradually curative.
- • •
“A. D. U.”—l advise you to get the fol
lowing ingredients and mix at home to
cure your child of bedwetting: Tincture
cubebs 1 dram, comp, fluid halmw'ort 1
ounce, and tincture rhus aromatic 2
drams. Mix in water and give 10 to 15
drops one hour before meals.
• • •
“Miss Anna” writes: “I suffer with ver'-
severe headaches which also affect mv
eyes. My throat and nostrils are af
fected by catarrh and my breath Is verv
bad. Could you prescribe a cure?"
Answer: I have cured hundreds who
suffer as you do by prescribing the fol
lowing and have received many letter.-
from grateful people which indicates that
it is speedily curative: Purchase a 2-ounce
original package of vilane powder. To a
pint of warm water add one-half tea
spoonful and snuff th O' water from the
palm of the hand through the nostrils
two or three times a day or until thev
are thoroughly cleansed: then apply well
up into the nostrils twice daily the fol
lowing catarrh balm: To one level tea
spoonful of vilane powder add one ounce
of lard or vaseline. If used according to
the above prescription, your catarrh
should soon vanish. This should be used
occasionally to prevent its return
• • •
"Mildred K.” says: "Please advise
what I can use for a good hair tonic:
My hair and scalp are in a. very bad con
dition and nothing seems to help."
Answer: The best hair tonic on the
market is sold in 4-ounce jars and is
called plain yellow minyol. Anv up-to
date druggist will have it. This is su
perior to anything known for the treat
ment of the diseases of the hair and
scalp. Two or three applications have
been known to cure, while it makes the
hair soft. Huffy and makes it keep its
natural color.
• • a
"Jane" writes: "My nerves are in a
dreadful condition, my appetite Is verv
poor and I am extremely thin. My face
is so thin that it makes me very unhappy.
I should like you to tell me a true rem
edy."
Answer: If you wish to become stouter,
improve your appetie and your nervous
system, I heartily recommend the use of
I 3 grain hypo-nuclane tablets, which you
will find in any well-stocked drug store.
In sealed cartons, with full directions for
- taking. Hypo-nuclane tablets Improve
1 the nutrition, add red corpuscles to the
• blood, strengthen the nervous system and
I Improve the general health. Many people
report that they have gained from 10 to
30 pounds in two months.
f• • •
"Harry" writes: "Both my wife and
myself suffer with rheumatism. lA'e would
appreciate a reply telling us what to
take.”
Xnswer Mix the following at home or
, have the druggist mix for you: Two
‘ drums of iodide of potassium, sodium sali
’ c> late 4 drams, wine of colchicuni t t
ounce, comp, essence cardiol 1 ounce.
• comp, fluid balmwort 1 ounce, and syrup
1 sarsaparilla. comp 5 ounces. Take a tea
spoonful at meal time and bed time Al
ways shake well before using
f • • •
Send $1 for Dr. Baker's book on "Health
: and Beauty." (Advt.i