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.
At Six.
Mr. Chailoner had been honest In bls
statement regarding the departure of
Sweetwater. He had not only paid and
dismissed our young detective, but he
had seen him take the train for New
York. And Sweetwater had gone away
in good faith, too, possibly with his con
victions undisturbed, but acknowledging
at last that he had reached the end of his
resources. But the brain does not loose
its hold upon its work as readily as the
hand does. He was halfway to New York
and had consciouslj- bidden farewell to
the whole subject, when he suddenly
startled those about him by rising Impet
uously to his feet. He sat again imme
diately, but with a light in his small grey
eye which Mr. Gryce would have under
stood and revelled in. The idea for which
he had searched Industriously for months
had come at last, unbidden: thrown up
from some remote recess of the mind
which had seemingly closed upon the sub
ject forever.
“I have it. I have it,” he murmured in
ceaseless reiteration to himself. * I will
go back to Mr. Chailoner and let him de
cide if the idea is worth pursuing. Per
haps an experiment may be necessary. It
was bitter cold that night; 1 wish it were
icy weather now. But a chemist can
help us out. Good God! if this should be
the explanation of the mystery, alas for
Orlando and alas for Oswald!”
But his sympathies did not deter him.
He returned to Derby at once, and, as
soon as he dared, presented himself at the
hotel and asked for Mr. Challoner.
He was amazed to find that gentleman
already up and in a state of agitation
that was very disquieting. But he bright
ened wonderfully at sight of his visitor,
and, drawing him inside the room, ob
served with trembling eagerness:
“I do not know why you have come
back, but never was man more welcome.
Mr. Brotherson has confessed—”
“Confessed!”
“Yes, he killed both women—my daugh
ter and his neighbor, the washerwoman,
with a—”
“Wait,” broke in Sweetwater, eagerly,
"let me tell you.” And stooping he whis
pered something in the other’s ear.
Mr. Challoner stared at him amazed,
then slowly nodded his head.
"How came you to think—” he began;
but Sweetwater, in his great anxiety, in
terrupted him with a quick:
“Explanations will keep, Mr. Challoner.
What of the man himself? Where Is he?
That's the Important thing now.”
"He was In his room until early this
morning writing letters, but he is not
there now. The door is unlocked and I
went in. From appearances I fear the
worst. That is why your presence relieves
me so. Where do you think he is?”
“In his hangar in the woods. Where
else would he go to —”
“I have thought of that. Shall we start
out alone, or take witnesses with us?”
“We will go alone. Does Oswald an
ticipate—”
"He is sure. But he lacks strength to
move He lies on my bed in there. Doris
and her father are with him.” .
"We will not wait a minute. How the
storm holds off. I hope it will hold off
for another hour.”
Daysey Mayme and Her Folks
By Frances L. Garside
H T T E admires, above all else in
1 the world, a woman who is a
good housekeeper,” Daysey
Mayrne Appleton read in a letter she
received in the morning mail. "He is
FRIENDS THOUGHT
SHEWOULD DIE
Five Years Illness Caused
Mrs. Jenkins’ Friends
to Think She Could
Not Recover. Old
Lady Thought
Different.
i
Germantown, Tenn.—"For five (5)
years. I was not able to do any of my
work.’ writes Mrs. Laurel Jenkins, of
thia place, 'and half of the time I was
in bed.
"I goffered with womanly trouble,
and would take such nervous spells 1
could not stand on my feet, and my
friends thought surely 1 would die. I
could hardly get out of bed. or walk a
step.
"At last an old lady advised me to
take Cardui, the woman’s tonic, and
now I can go most anywhere.
“Cardui certainly saved my life. Had
you seen me before I began taking it,
you would not think I was the same
person.
"I had Buffered for five years with
womanly trouble, but Cardui made me
well. ' I can’t say too much for it.”
You need not be afraid to try Car
dui, for in doing so you are not ex
perimenting with a medicine of doubt
ful merit. Cardui has been in use for
more than fifty years, and its sale has
steadily Increased each year.
tn this half century of time, it has
helped thousands and thousands of
weak, nervous women. It is purely veg
etable. mild, harmless, and of proven
value
Try Cardui. It may be just the med
icine you need.
N B Write to: Ladles Advlsorv Dept
Chattanooga Medicine Co. Chattanooga’
Tenn for Special Instructions, ami 64-
pag. book. '’Home Treatment for Wom
an." sent it, pl., n wrapper, on request.
(Advertisement.;
Mr. Challoner made no reply. He had
spoken because he felt compelled to
speak, but it had not been easy for him,
nor could any trifles move him now.
The town was up by this time and,
though they chose the least frequented
streets, they had to suffer from some en
counters. It was a good half hour before
they found themselves In the forest and
in sight of the hangar.. One look that
way, and Sweetwater turned to see what
the effect was upon Mr. Challoner.
A murmur of dismay greeted him.
The oval of that great ltd stood up against
the forest background.
“He has escaped,” cried Mr. Challoner.
But Sweetwater, laying a finger on his
lip, advanced and laid his ear against
the door. Then he cast a quick look aloft.
Nothing was to be seen there. The dark
ness of the storm in the heavens, but
nothing more. Yes! now, a flash of vivid
and destructive lightning!
The two men drew back and their
glances crossed.
"Let us return to the highroad.” whis
pered Sweetwater; “we can see nothing
here.”
Mr. Challoner, trembling very much,
wheeled slowly about.
“Wait,” enjoined Sweetwater. “First
let me take a look Inside.”
Running to the nearest tree, he quickly
climbed it, worked himself along a pro
truding branch and looked down into the
open hangar. It was now so dark that
details escaped him, but one thing was
certain. The airship was not there.
Descending, he drew Mr. Challoner has
tily along. “He's gone,” said he. “Det
us reach the high ground as quickly as
we can. I’m glad that Mr. Oswald Broth
erson is not with us—or Miss Doris.”
But this expression of satisfaction died
on his lips. At the point where the forest
road debauches into the highway, he had
already caught a glimpse of their two
figures. They were waiting for news,
and the brother spoke up the instant he
saw Sweetwater:
“Where is he? You've not found him
or you wouldn’t be coming alone. He
can not have gone up. He can not man
age it without an assistant. We must
seek him somewhere else—in the forest or
in our house at home. Ah!” The light
ning had forked again.
"He's not in the forest and he’s not
in your home,” returned Sweetwater.
'He’s aloft; the airship is not in the shed.
And he can go up alone now.” Then more
slowly: "But he can not come down.”
They strained their eyes in a madden
ing search of the heavens. But the dark
ness had so increased that they could be
sure of nothing.
Doris sank upon her knees.
Suddenly the lightning flashed again,
this time so vividly and so near that the
whole heaven burst into fiery illumina
tion above them and the thunder, crash
ing almost simultaneously, seemed for a
moment to rock the world and bow the
heavens toward them. Then a silence;
then Sweetwater’s whisper in Mr. Chal
loner’s ear:
"Take-them away! I saw him; he was
falling like a shot.”
Mr. Challoner threw out his arms, then
steadied himself. Oswald was reeling;
Oswald had seen, too. But Doris was
there. When the lightning flashed again,
she was standing and Oswald was weep
ing on her bosom.
THE END.
very observant, and if you go at it right
you may make an impression. He will
call on you this evening.
“P- S. —It is not important, but 1 for
got to say he is worth several million."
• Daysey Mayrne gasped. Worth sev
eral million! And with the hopeful
ness that makes youth so enticing, she
began to dream.
But she didn't dream long. She took
action.
The bell rang promptly at 8, and Day
sey Mayrne, with a big gingham apron
covering her evening dress, answered it.
"Ah,” she said to the gentleman
standing outside. “Mr. Slimklns? Walk
in.”
"Is this Miss —,” he began when
the parlor was reached, handing her a
letter of introduction.
But he got no farther. For Daysey
Mayrne with a wild glare In her eye
gave a leap Into the air, with both
hands clapping.
The man looked astonished, and the
look of astonishment on his face chang
ed to fright, as Daysey Mayrne, with
her eyes still fixed on nothing that he
could see. made a frantic plunge to the
floor.
Still clapping her hands, she dived
under the lounge, and regained her feet
on the other side with a bound that
carried her over the parlor table.
Up in the air again, and down again,
with her hands wildly clapping, and
oblivious to everything in the world,
she chased around and around the
room, knocking over table and chairs,
always with her eyes fixed and glaring,
and giving alternate cries of despair
and shouts of triumph.
One big jump—she landed on top of
the piano, and her hands came together
far above her head, with a resounding
clap.
“I got it! I got it!" she screamed in
triumphant joy.
Then she climbed down and held out
her hand to her guest.
“You must pardon my behavior,” she
said, “hut it was a moth, and T am such
a neat housekeeper I can’t let one get
away."
"I wonder," she said a little later,
after a very frightened young man had
taken his departure, and she was pick
ing up overturned chairs and tables, "if
I made an impression?”
A CHANCE,
Salesman—Now, here, madam, is a
piece of goods that speaks for itself.
I
Customer (interrupting;—Then sup
pose you keep quiet a moment and £ive
it a chance.
• THE LIMIT.
Mrs. Jones —My son's six feet in
Ills boots. *
Mrs. Smith Six feet in his bools"
Whatever will you try to get me io
believe'.' You might at* well tell me
,l >ai in- has six heads In his hat.
“Be Natural and You Will Be Beautiful,’’ Says
Pretty Miss Alice Brady
— —* '4
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MISS ALICE BRADY, STAR OF “LITTLE WOMEN.”
By Margaret Hubbard Ayer.
play’s just sweet,” said the
mistress of the wardrobe at
playhouse, as she took my
cloak. “And Alice Brady, She’s just - too
sweet, too."
Taken as a dramatic criticism, the
statement may lack a variety of ad
jectives, but I have often noticed that
the woman who keeps tabs on the hats
and coats of the audience forms a pret
ty accurate opinion of the merits of
plays and players.
“Little Women” is sweet, and so is
Alice Brady. Even the two fat men
with bald heads who sat in front of me
audibly remarked that they thought it
was going to be a musical comedy, but
somehow it “got you," and after little
Beth died they blew their noses with a
flourish, showing that all sentiment
was not dead bene; h the adipose de
posit which surrounded their Broadway
hearts.
Alice Brady plays Meg. the eldest of
the dear, delightful March girls, and
she plays It so well that nobody is go
ing to be able to remember whether
Meg's last was Brady, or Alice’s
was March.
Miss Alice is the daughter of Man
ager Brady, as bvery one knows. But
I think that Miss Alice is showing the
world that she could have succeeded
even if she had had no connection with
the theatrical world, for nobody in any
of the companies in which she has been
playing works harder than “the man
ager's daughter,” nor has risen more
legitimately on her own merits.
Behind the stage Miss Brady, who is
still in her teens, is a pretty, win
some young girl, with a very animated
face, big, brown eyes and an interest
ing and interested expression.
The Usual Question.
It was my duty to haul out that
weather-beaten question, “What do you
do to preserve your health and beau
ty?” and I took it out. dusted it off.
propped it up and presented it in the
best light and to the best of my ability.
"Ugh!" said Miss Alice, as she.
Do You Know—
During the last twelve months 18.8G9
ships entered or departed from the
port of London.
Electricity is to be tried as a means
of making weak babies strong. They
will be subjected to the current for a
quarter of an hour six times a day.
A single female housefly allowed to
live through the winter will, by the fol
lowing September, have 5,598,720 de
scendants.
A young man named Dubois is bring
ing an action against his sweetheart at
Marseilles, because she boxed his ears
for being late to take her to the the
ater.
Undoubtedly the longest lived animal
on earth is the whale, its span of ex
istence being estimated by Cuvier at
1.000 years. The next largest animal,
the elephant, will, under favorable con
ditions, live 400 years. The average age
of eats is fifteen years. of squirrels
seven or eight years, of rabbits seven.
A bear rarely exceeds twenty years, a
vols twenty, a fox fourteen to sixteen
Lions are eoinparativi >y. long-lived, in
stanei's having been recorded where
they reai hed the age of 7o jwi-
opened her eyes very wide and looked
seared. “What do you want me to say?
I don’t know anything about health
and beauty. I’ve never done anything
about either in my life. Why. 1 do all
the things that one oughtn't do. I eat
what I want, and as much as I want,
and when I want, and I just love Ice
cream sodas.”
"Enough, enough; this will never do,”
I interposed in stern tonts. “Remem
ber, especially in this play, you are a
sort of example for hundreds of thou
sands of young girls, who will do as
yoii do, and if Meg loves ice cream so
das, what will happen to the complex
ions of the rest even if hers doesn’t
suffer?”
This was a truly sobering thought,
and Miss Brady sat down to reflect. I
had time to notice that her dimples are
her own, and that she pouts and beams
unconsciously, and is quite unspoiled
by her success and advancement on the
stage.
She seemed much pleased when I told
her that I had noticed how hard she
worked in the heat of summer, when
r The dish
that comes
first in food value
A LL meats and concoctions of the best
T*- chefs take a back seat when compared
in food value with a home-cooked dish of
FAUST
BRAND
MACARONI
What a savory, wholesome, appetizing dish
it is I Made from Durum wheat, whose
rich gluten kernels contain the elements
that build brawn and brain.
Faust Macaroni can be served in many
delightful ways. Let it take the place of
meat dishes that are not nearly so good
for you. Write for free book of recipes.
At your grocer’s—sc and 10c a package.
Maull Bros., St. Louis, Mo.
— _
she was singing in the revivals of the
Gilbert (t Sullivan operas.
“I love to do those, especially Pa
tience,” said Miss Brady, cheering up
as the health and beauty subject faded
into the distance. “I’m glad you think
I worked hard; 1 wonder ff father will
believe that.” she reflected.
“I wanted to be in this play because
I want to show that I can act a little,
too.” she continued. “Os course, I do
not mean to give up my singing, for
there is so much variety in the singing
parts. I’m afraid work would get rather
monotonous if I stuck to dramatic work
alone. But, oh dear, you want me to
say something about health and beau
ty, don’t you? Well, I don’t know any
thing about it, really. But one thing is
certain; you can’t tell what kind of a
girl is going to look beautiful on the
stage. I’ve noticed that the really beau
tiful girls, with classic features and
all that, look quite insignificant when
they’re made up in front of the foot
lights. Personally, I think beauty Is a
matter of expression and coloring,
quite as much as perfect outline. I
love exquisite coloring of hair and com
plexion and eyes.
“To be beautiful, It must be natural,
of course, for you never get the right
combinations if you change the color
that Nature gave. I like faces that are
full of expression, and I am afraid that
I don’t consider the china-doll beauty
very fascinating.
“And, speaking of dolls, have you no
ticed that all the new dolls have real
faces like children? Not like the old
fashioned dolls, who are always impos
sibly beautiful.
Children Right.
“It seems that children nowadays
prefer dolls that have expression, and I
think that the children are right. Prob
ably it means that we are getting away
from the ideal of doll-like beauty which
lacks expression and intelligence. Cer
tainly It is significant when little chil
dren turn away from the beautiful
French dolls and take the funny, life
like doll babies, whose faces are so full
of expression that it seems as if they
could almost talk."
Miss Brady can’t have put away her
dolls so very long ago, though she is
still young enough to be highly In
censed if one reminded her of the fact,
and her ideal has coincidentally changed
from the impossible silly doll face to
the beauty of intelligence which shows
in expression and good health which is
the foundation of all pretty coloring in
face or hair.
A TENDER TOPIC. .
On the village green a traveling
phrenologist had taken up his stand,
and offered to "feel the bumps” of the
natives at a very small charge each.
One of the first applicants was the
local blacksmith, a burly fellow, and
as he seated himself in the chair some
what shyly whispered in the “profes
sor’s” ear:
“He’s awfully fond of veal!” ,
The “professor nodded gracefully, and
proceeded to ascribe to his client all
the virtues he could think of, and then
as a climax he said in a loud voice:
“Now, to come to the question of
likes and dislikes. If there is one thing
on earth that my subject is fond of it
is veal!”
He stopped suddenly, for the black
smith had sprung from his chair and
struck him lustily on the law.
"An’ if I did steal a calf, what’s it
got to do wi’ you?” he roared furiously.
Between Love and Fame
By Beatrice Fairfax
A PERPLEXED little girl named
Hannah writes me:
"I ivill be eighteen in Octo
ber. and have been keeping company
with a young man three years my sen
ior for over a year. We have been
traveling in the same set since we were
in school together, and I am sure he is
all right. He is a good, steady, reliable
young man. gets $22 a week and is con
sidered a good catch by every one who
knows him.
“Herein libs my trouble. I have, I
have been told by an artist in the musi
cal world, a contralto voice which, if
properly trained, would land me on the
operatic stage. The question is: Do I
love William enough to renounce my
art? Or do I love my art enough to
give up William? I know I can not
give up both.
“Sometimes a feeling within me urges
me to yield to his importunities and be
come his wife, and at other times I
dream of the footlights and fame.”
My dear girl, you have rightly ex
pressed it by saying you “dream” of
the footlights, and I regret that I have
not the eloquence of the ages that I
might use it in urging you to wake up.
On the one hand, a man who has the
making of a good husband in him. A
manly man. good, kind, tender, and he
has been your true lover since the days
you were children in school together.
Marriage with him,means happiness;
1/
WHEN THE DANDRUFF
BEGINS TO FALL
You'll know there is something wrong.
No one with a healthy scalp hss Dandruff
—it is not natural.
Healthy, strong hair cannot grow under
these conditions and what's far more dis
turbing, the hair that you have will soon
turn grey and fall out. Then comes
"PREMATURE GREY HAIR" and
that "Has Been Look" about them.
HEED THE WARNING-USE-
HAY’S HAIR HEALTH
KecpsYou Lookin<fibuns j
SI.OO and 50c at Pm Store* ar direct epos re
ceipt of price and dealer’s name. Send 10c for
trial bottle.—Philo Ha, Spec. Co., Newark, N. J.
FOR SALE AND RECOMMENDED
BY JACOBS’ PHARMACY.
■ k
Uff". wML ■
Jr
Bk
"Elizabeth" writes, "Kindly publish
again the prescription for stomach dis
orders and constipation. I have mis
placed the letter giving the Ingredients.”
*9° to > vour druggist and ask
for tablets triopeptine and take according
to directions, and you will soon be entire
ly cured of all stomach trouble and con
stipation. This is the best treatment
known for all kinds of Stomach trouble
• • •
"Anna" says: "I am nervous, hysteri
cal and very thin due to overwork. What
cai»l take to regain my original vitality?”
Answer: You will gradually regain your
original strength by using syrup of hypo
phosphites comp. 5 ozs; tincture cade
nt ene comp. 1 oz. Mix and take a tea
spoonful before meals. This Is the best
system tonic that I know of.
• « •
"Mr. Jack” writes: “I am greatly em
barrassed on account of my 'weight In
the last two years I have gained flesh bo
rapidly that I am getting very uncom
fortable. Please tell me what to do.”
P° n v ot F et l he ordinary pills
and tablets for obesity, but use this safe
harmless and quick acting medicine. Get
them separately so as to avoid any substi
tutes: Aromatic elixir, 5 ozs.: and glvcol
arbolene 1 oz. Mix by shaking well and
take a teaspoonful after each meal for
the first three days and after that take
two teaspoonfuls as long as yotfr case
may require After the first week or two
you should lose a pound a day.
“Edna T.” writes: “1 wish you would
recommend a remedy for kidney and liver
trouble I have dark spots. before my
eyes, dizzy spells and also "twinges of
rheumatism.
Answer: I have received many letters
trorn people who have used the following
remedy and been cured of all trouble such
as you mention. Get three grain sulpherh
tablets (not sulphur tablets), and take
according to directions given. They are
sold at any well-stocked drug store and
are thoroughly reliable.
• • •
"Louise' Get the following prescrip
tion filled and give 10 to 15 drops in water
before meals to cure your little bov of
bed-wetting: Comp, fluid balmwort, 1
oz.: tincture rhusaromatic. 2 drams and
tincture cubebs. 1 dram. This should be
given one hour before meals
• • •
“Helen” writes: “My nostrils and
throat are badly affected with catarrh
and my breath is very offensive. 1 also
suffer a great deal with headache and
pain In my eyes. Can anything be done
to help me'.”'
Answer Antiseptic Vilane powder has
been prescribed with great success and
(lie number of letters received duWv from ,
a home, a shelter for life. You would
be following out a wise nature’s plan,
and if you have any doubts now I can
assure you that every doubt will be
dispelled when you have experienced
the happiness greater even than that
of being a wife—that of maternity. •
On the other hand, a struggle for
recognition which may never come to
you. Women with finer voices than
yours, my dear, and whose struggle for
fortune and fame began when they
were much younger than you, have
found only disappointment end sorrow
and unhappiness as their reward.
If you renounce William and set your
feet in the path which looks so alluring,
I warn you that you have a perilous
and troubled journey before you. And
should you overcome discouragement
and defeat and conquer in the end, that
you will find nothing in the glare of
the footlights and the applause of the
public as satisfying as the happiness a
true woman finds in a modest little
home of her own.
“True love is the gift of God.” and
you would give it up for a mere chance
of obtaining something as passing, as
worthless as fame!
My dear girl, wake up!
This Will Stop Your
Cough In a Hurry
Save *3 by Makia* Tkta Cough
Syrup at Home.
This recipe makes a pint of better
cough syrun than you could buy ready
made for $2.50. A few doses usually
conquer the most obstinate cough—
stops even whooping cough quickly. Sim
ple as it is, no better remedy ean be had
at any price.
Mix one pint of granulated sugar with
% pint of warm water, and stir for 2
minutes. Put 2Vh ouftces of Pinex (fifty
cents’ worth) in a pint bottle; then add
the Sugar Syrup. It has a pleasant
taste and lasts a family a long time.
Take a teaspoonful every one, two or
three hours.
You can feel this take hold of * oougk
in away that means business. Has *
good tonic effect, braces up the appetite,
and is slightly laxative, too. which is
helpful. A handy remedy for hoarse
ness, croup, bronchitis, asthma and all
throat and lung troubles.
The effect of pine on the membranes
is well known. Pinex is the most valu
able concentrated compound of Norwe
gian white pine extract, and is rich in
guaiacol and all the natural healing
pine elements. Other preparations will
not work in this formula.
This Pinex and Sugar Syrup recipe haa
attained great popularity throughout the
United States ana Canada. It has often
been imitated, though never successfully.
A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or
money promptly refunded, goes with this
recipe. Your druggist has Pinex, or will
get it for you. If not, send to The
Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
njePoCTOR’S
yj/jpviciu
ctf Z)r. Zetvrs BaAcr
The questions answered below are gen
eral tn character, the symptoms or dis
eases are given and the answers will apply
to any case of similar nature. Those
wishing further advice free may address
LX. Vm WiS F aker - College bulling. c“'-
Btre « ts- r >ayton, Ohio, Inclog-
f ’^, d n esHed stamped envelope for
reply. Full name and address must be
wlfl en be b ns l 3f n in' nltlals or name
win be used in my answers. The pre
scriptions can be filled at any well-stocked
wholesaler drugfflßt “ n order of
curative value. Get from the druggist a
two ounce original package of Vilane
powder, mix a level teaspoonful with an
oli n F e of vasell " e or lar<i and apply well
th ® nostrfls twice a day. Also use
the following in connection with the above
on. r,^? U . gh ’ y cle ? n , se the nostrils: Use
?" e .- h alf teaspoonful of the Vilane powder
to a pint of warm water, snuff the water
through the nostrils several times a dav
and your catarrh should soon be cured
occasionally. 4 retdrn / hls sh ° ul <
“Tom M.“ writes: “I am onlv twenH
raoFdlv W, Mv t s«’{ h f ir 18 fallin « out ver;
rapidly My scalp Is covered with dan
druff. What can I get to cure it?”
. Answer: To cure dandruff and stem
falling hair use plain yellow minyol. Thi.«
at any well-stocked drug
H tOre m n 4 oz ’ jars ’ And usecl regular!*
• • •
‘‘l W ” wr . ites - “I Should be the hap
plest woman In the world If I could find a
true remedy to help me gain flesh I
have regular features, but I am £ thin
prescription?” 1 C * n 7 ° U g ‘ V ° me a
hYPonuclane tablets. These little tablets
can be bought at anv up-to-date drug
store In sealed packages. Full directions
are given. I advise that you begin taking
them at once and continue their use for
several months and you will gain fleeh.
? an ? m pe ? ple n, r ?” ort that a two months
treatment will Increase their weight from
1 iii i 3O Pounds. Hypo-Nuclane tablets
will also Improve your complexion, giving
you rosy cheeks and lips and an in
creased sparkle to the eyes.
• • •
"American Girl” writes: "For some
years I have been troubled with rheuma
I 8 ? 1 '. I have tried almost every "cure.”
but they did not help me."
Answer: The best known prescription
for the cure of rheumatism Is: lodide of
potassium, 2 drams; sodium salicylate, 4
drams; wine of colchlcum, oz., comp,
essence cardlol, 1 oz.; comp, fluid balm
wort, 1 oz.. and syrup sarsaparilla, 5 ozs.
Mix by shaking well In a bottle and take
a teaspoonful at meal time and at bed
time, and you will not only be relieved,
but cured. If you continue Its use for a
short time.
• * •
"Frank S.“ writes: "I would like to
have the formula for a reliable cough cure
as I have a very severe cough which is be
, coming very annoying ’’
Answer: The best remedy that I know
of for coughs and colds Is made by mixing
a 2(* oz. bottle of concentrated essence
mentho-laxene with a home-made sugu:
’ syrup. Yon will find full directions on
the bottle how to make and use This
will make a full pint <>r the finest and
cheapest cough medicine obtainable
• • •
Send for Dr. Baker's Book on Health
and Beauty." <Advt.)