Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 05, 1912, HOME, Image 13

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THE MACrAZIMB PAGE /\dvice to the Lovelorn B , BE ATKICE FAIRFAX. |T may mean nothing. tv..- Fairfax: . filing another man and 1 on a friend of ours. . ...-fore departing I present with a flower from my She accepted it with 1! ’. .nU and after a short lapse U' ,1 1 ■. d it in the buttonhole /. ; ',’,,d. Am I to take this as it she cares more for my ' than for me? GRATEFUL. \ i\c done it thoughtlessly. . little thing like this <Jis- , tn an effort to win her ",<■ . ~u do, vour love is not worth JO' r. 11 • WRITE HIM A FRIENDLY NOTE. Dear Miss Fairfax. j r ... plv in lore with a young ./. two years my senior. About T' s \ , > ago we had a quarrel and ? ’ not spoken since. I know he . to be friends, but he does n'.t' wakf any advances. I try to ;I ,Herein toward him. I love \much. X. Y. Z. IP qri-Hy friendly. Find a pretext writing him a friendly little note. r . wiil give him an opportunity for making further advances, and if he Ain mak" them, your course is plain. You must forget him. It will hurt to lose his love, but it will hurt far worse io"have the feeling that you have pur sued him. A MATTER OF TASTE. Dea:- .’diss Fairfax: I am a voting man of twenty and ] , i -ontpany for two years with a girl the same age and was en gaged. Three months after our en gagement we parted. Do you think I ought to send back a pin she gave me? Site has one of my silver mesh hags. 1' • R- There are many young men in your circumstances who don’t want their gifts bto k. That is largely a matter of tastw and a question for the lady to decide, I’nless she takes the initia tive by asking for a return of gifts, you can do nothing. Such a request on the part of the man. however justified he may be in making it, smacks of com mercialism. YOU MUST NOT SEE HIM AGAIN. Dear Miss Fairfax: 1 am sixteen years of age and am considered pretty. Some time ago 1 was introduced to a young man about eight years my senior, who later told me that he loved me dearly. Being of different religions, I was positive that my parents would not permit me to go with him, and, not wanting to part, we have met se cretly. But now, after keeping com pany for almost six months, he has asked me to elope with him, but, 1 before consenting. I write to you asking for advice, by which I in tend to abide. DOTTY. Ido not like this young man. You are only sixteen; he is eight years your senior, and for six riionths he has been meeting you secretly and now wants you to elope! My dear girl, if he loved you In the right way he would never ask you to do this. You must never see him again. You must let your parents decide for you in all matters for at least five years to come. NINE CHANCES. Hixon—Young Pellets tells me lie make, a specialty of doctoring cats. Dixon—Well, his patients are fortu nate. Hixon—How’s that? Dixon—They each have nine lives. Develop Your Bust iOc Package FREE To Any Woman Who Wants a Beautiful Figure. • '- JJ L -- •••■ " -’f : : ’ ::v .<■ j < s ; ■MfibOlfed «■: , ; 1,1 J’" longer be humiliated iir.issed because they are thin. , n ,°* developed. for science i,. v „ a s ! n ’ I ' *' 'Y av ’J' Slve tlie beau "f a perfect figure. 'l’m prove r " ?tuV.' 6 Y. ou . free of charge a " ' t' 'I "you how easily :i, ~'. d P >p developed from 2 to '7 ? J,,0 T 1 ’" full ’ "I’.imp and firm. . i o,; - Ihal ,s " f s,le h vital inter- , ■ a t. w "".’ p " is ‘he result of i„ng i-a. and investigation by one of the I »<ate whi, u e " physicians in New York I ' n her Sf ‘ Pld >'K overcome the de . f t'Kiifc Without the use "'t'-j’i ■icon ol ' / ,I 7I IS ' discovered a happy : . sed f J is’C'c-buliding elements . ~ her bust some | inches. ... , ' aims round and shapely and ' . I ‘ shoulders plump and sym- . < rl. l ,i ,l 'o f ' n " f * ’’’• Catherine Kel lin. from thL ''is< nverv on far different ' ,p ,">'Hi> ar y figure developing; „ , ' and tills explains its almost , ~ 1 " , success. fi t ° n 'y gained a beautiful • ■ sf’n, Pfcscriptlon. but used • 'fully with nianv of. a "omen, this is .' Idl message from a “f 'our own sex s ° c m»liw"l »' ask i s the ,'p tor- D " ttfttrs .. show you without n rwi* n «. 'i'’,, ■ v our part bcll\ s Form be MB. 1 ' ’ i f iil '! , . you 11 Perfect figure, l ' > i,‘‘V" ar "' improve” the . 1 ’•■ I'h Send the little coupon • .", tot- expenses, and a 50e . ’till be mailed at once in plain ”• \l ""s today tn; |<i;|.l.\ I y . ‘ '■'! I’\ NV. I >rpt 322-. Mlt i Arivt.) “Rubbing It In” ; '" r * By Nell Brinkley A?' - ! - 'llH (MJ-;- ' -’'W fflWri i - Au v/sar"'* —1 Lsar I???®-Ab? &, >*?'■' (Jf? ?? WwjOLL ? I j Hfc ' SrC W& w .I it aw* FS ®is b ■Lwvy ’WMri > I LMI W \Y I I I x /J L.?l i' 1 --* J There is little consollation in the kindest letter from your best Betty, when fate deals you a blow that puts you out of he running. DROP in on the poor Billy who got bunged up in a football fracas three or four weeks ago, a day or two after Thanksgiv ing. and look what a thankful face he’s got! In his good fist he clutches a spe cial delivery from his own true Betty, who went to she Thanksgiving game p’THE CASE OF OSCAR SLATER” By SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE Sherlock Holmes in Real Life SHERLOCK HOLMES •j- In Real Life. I 4> The Sherlock Holmse of fiction is a4‘ •J* figure well knowm the world over. 4« -J- The real flesh-and-blood Sherlock q* 4* Holmes of everyday life is seen in a d. v pamphlet that Sir Arthur Conan 4- Doyle has written on “The Case of 4- 4- Oscar Slater.” condemned for tnur- 4. A der in 1901) and now in penal servi- 4- A tude.. A A Sin Conan Doyle believes that Os- A A car Slater is not guilty of the crime A A “f which he was convicted, and he A A tells in a clear, concise way the A A story of the tragedy and the reasons A A why the man was wrongly con- A A demned. A A It is a story of deep mystery, as A A interesting as the most improbable A A fiction the great novelist ever con- A A ccived. A A The Georgian today publishes the A first instalment of Doyle’s pamphlet. A A Other instalments will follow. A •«* •’« *•* *•* *i**» < ****i < *** **'* V* •**!**/ *«“* *»* *»**i**i**i**«**»**l* *•* “** TODAY’S INSTALLMENT. IT is impossible to read and weigh the facts in connection with the convic tion of Oscar Slater in May, 1909, at the high court in Edinburgh, without feeling deeply dissatisfied with the pro ceedings, and morally certain that justice was not done, pnder the circumstances of Scotch law I am not clear how far any remedy exists, but it will, in my opinion, be a serious scandal if the man be al lowed upon such evidence to spend his life in a convict prison. The verdict which led to his condemnation to death, was given by a jury of fifteen, who voted: Nine for "Guilty," five for “Not proven" and one for “Not guilty.” Under English law. this division of opinion would naturally have given cause for a new trial. In Scotland the man was condemned to death, he was only re prieved two days before the execution, j and he is now working out a life sentence jin Peterhead convict establishment. How far the verdict vi as a just one, the reader | may judge for himself when he has pe rused a connected story of the case. There lived in Glasgow, in the year i 1908, an old maiden lady named Miss I Marion Gilchrist. She had lived for 30 ' years in the one flat, which was on the i first floor in 15 Queen’s terrace. The flat above hers was vacant, and the only im ' mediate neighbors were a family named Adams, living on the ground floor below, their house having a separate door, which was close alongside the flat en trance. The old lad\ had one servant, named Helen Lambie. who was a girl 21 years Milady’s Toilet Table (By Mme. D’Mille.) I .. "For dark and discolored patches, sal lowness and complexion blemishes, there is nothing better than a lotion made by dissolving a package of mayatone in a half pint of witch hazel. It gives a more youthful color and smoother finish than any face powder, and will not rub off or show. It keeps the skin soft and satiny. “On every toilet table there should be a jar of Mother’s salve. You can’t look your I best when suffering, and Mother's Salve relieves pain almost instantly. Hub on affected part for headache, neuralgia, rheumatism, sore muscles, bruises, stiff neck, cold in the chest, or pains and aches in back or joints. "Don’t catch cold washing your bead. Anyhow, water dulls and deadens the hair, and dry shampooing is preferred. To make a fine shampoo powder, just mix 4 ounces of orris root with a package of genuine tberox. Sift over head, brush out. ami ' our scalp is clean ami your hair beautifully lustrous, bright, wavy and easy to do up. Delatone is the simplest and quickest hair remover known to beauty specialists. Make a paste with a little delatone ami waler, cover the hairs, let remain n min ute or two. wipe off and the hairs are gone ’ —THE game that he WAS to have played up big in—went with his best friend and to have gloated on his playing with her two blue, true blue eyes—went in her white furs and the little white “toque” that is so fetching against the black velvet of her hair and WAS to have tucked a white “mum” in the lacings over his of age. This girl had been with Miss Gilchrist for three or four years. By all accounts Miss Gilchrist was a most estimable person, leading a quiet • and uneventful life. She was comfortably ’ off, and she had one singular characteris , tic for a lady of her age and surroundings, , in that she had made a collection of jew ’ elry of considerable value. These jewels, which took the form of brooches, rings. , pennants, etc., were bought at different ■ times, extending over a considerable ’ number of years, from a reputable jew ’ eler. Her Jewelry. • I lay stress upon the fact, as some wild 1 rumor was circulated at the time that the ’ old lady might herself be a criminal re ceiver. Such an idea could not be enter tained. She seldom wore her jewelry, ’ save in single pieces, and as her life was ' a retired one, it is difficult to sec how . any one outside a very small circle could 1 have known of her hoard. The value of ' this treasure was about three thousand , pounds. It was a fearful joy which she , snatched from its possession, for she ■ more than once expressed apprehension ’ that site might be attacked and robbed. Her fears»,had the practical result that she attached two patent locks to her front door, and that she arranged with the Adams family underneath that in case of alarm she would signal them by knocking upon the floor. It was the household practice that Um , ble. the maid, should go out and get an evening paper for her mistress about 7 o’clock each day. After bringing the paper, she then usually went aut again upon the necessary shopping. This rou ; tine was followed upon the night of De cember 21. She left her mistress seated by the fire in the dining room, reading a magazine. Lambie took the keys with her. shut the flat door, closed the hall door downstairs, and was gone about ten • minutes upon her errand. It is the events . of those ten minutes which form the tragedy and the mystery which were so j soon to engage the attention of the pub lic. , According to the girl’s evidence, ft was a minute or two before 7 when she went ■ out. At about 7 Arthur Adams and his two sisters were in their dining room, immediately below the room in which the old lady had been left. Suddenly they heard "a noise from above, then a , very heavy fall, and then three sharp knocks." They were alarmed at the sound, and the young man at once set off to see if all was right. He ran out of his hall door, through the hall door of the flats, which was open, and so up to the first floor, where he found Miss Gilchrist's door shut. He rang three times without an answer. From within, howeter. he heard a sound which he com pared to the breaking of sticks. He im agined. therefore, that the servant girl ■ was within, and that she was engaged in her household duties. THE MAID EXPLAINS. After waiting for a minute or two. be I seems to have convinced himself that all was right. He, therefore, descended again and returned to his sisters, who persuaded him to go up once more to the flat. This he did, and rang for the fourth time. As he was standing with his hand upon i the bell, straining his ears and hearing nothing, some one approached *up the stairs from below. it was the young servant maid, Helen returning from her errand. The two held counsel for a moment. Young Adams described . the noise Which had been heard. Lambie i said that the pulleys of the clothes lines in the kitchen must have given way. It was a singular explanation, since ihe kitchen was not above the dining room of the Adamses, and one would not ’ expect any great noise from the fall of a cord which suspended sheets or towels However, it was a moment of agitation, and the girl may have said the first ex planation which came into her head. She then put her keys Into the two safet.' locks anti opened the door. Al tills point there is a rtirious little discrepancy of evidence, latmliie is pre chest after it was all over. Extract from the day-after special: “Oh, Billy darling, it was a SWEET game—a perfectly bully game. We had the car all a-flutter with pen nants—-our own, of course—-all over the place. I saw Puss and Hoppy and Fat and ALL the fellows—why. the whole world was there but you. pared to swear that she remained upon the mat beside young Adams. Adams is equally positve that she walked several paces down the hall. This hall was lit by a gas jet W’hich, turned half up, and shining through a colored shade, gave a sufficient, but not a brilliant, light. Says Adams: “I stood at the door on the threshold, half in and half out, and just when the girl got past the clock to go into the kitchen, a well dressed man appeared. I did not suspect him, and she said nothing; and he came up to me quite pleasantly. I did not suspect anything wrong for the minute. I thought the man was going to speak to me till he got past me, and then I suspected some thing wrong, and by that time the girl ran into the kitchen and put the gas up and said it was all right, meaning her pulleys. 1 said: ’Where is your mis tress?’ and she went into the dining room. She said: ‘Oh! come here!’ I just went in and saw this horrible spectacle.” The Murderer. The spectacle in question was the poor old lady, lying upon the floor close to the chair in which the servant had last seen her. Her feet were toward the door, her -nr atiSSH The dish that comes first in food value A LL meats and concoctions of the best chefs take a back seat when compared in food value with a home-cooked dish of FAUST BRAND MACARONI What a savory, wholesome, appetizihg 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. I've got red flannel round my throat this A. M. and my ears feel like I'd gone through a battle. It was great —and all wrong because Y’OU, Billy darling" But draw the curtain over Billy’s groan! She didn’t mean to rub it in - —but it didn't mike him very thank ful! NELL BRINKLEY. i head towards the fireplace. She lay upon i a hearth rug. but a skin rug had been I thrown across the head. Her injuries were frightful, nearly every bone of her I face and skull being smashed. In spite > of her dreadful wounds she lingered for a few minutes, but died without showing t any sign of consciousness. 1 The murderer, when he first appeared ’ had emerged from one of the two bed -1 rooms at the back of the hall, the larger or spare bedroom, not the old lady’s ‘ room. On passing Adams upon the door ’ mat, which he had done with the utmost coolness, he bad at once rushed down the stairs. It was a dark and drizzly evening, and it seems that he made bis way along one or two quiet streets until he was lost ’ or two quiet streets until he was lost in in mire crowded thoroughfares. He had left no weapon nor possession of any sort in the old lady’s hat, save a box of 1 matches with which he had lit the gas in the bedroom from which he bad come. In the bedroom a number of articles of ■ value, including a watch, lay upon the t dressing table, but none of them bad been i touched. Continued in Next Issue. —— , * Little Bobbie’s Pa * By William F. Kirk MA & me found but yesterday’ that Pa dident know anything about cows & calfs. Pa cud talk a lot about them when he was all the time in Xew York, but wen he brought Ma & me up in the country ware thare is regular cows & calfs. it was different. He tdald Ma & me last nite that he was going to talk us up to Bob Har die's farm at Roscoe. Talk about cows. Pa sed, you will see sum cows. Me &. Marshall Dettn is going Oliver to the farm, <k two grate dairy men will be thare besides, Mister Lindsay & Mister Billy Dick. What inc A- them doant know about milk & other things to drink isent worth any notis. Pa sed. Ma dident say vary much then, bee cause she is so used to heel ing Pa tell about all the things he knows & all the things that other peepul doesent know that it is a joak to Ma every time Pa says a word. Wen we got up to Mister Hardie’s farm Ma met Missus Hardie. She was just as sweet as Ma and rite away the two of them started visiting, so us men went to look at the farm. All the way oaver to the big barn ware Mister Har die had all of his cows. Pa was telling imw he had rode the range out in Ari zony & herded different kinds of cattle. Sum of the steers & cows that I beat into abject submlshun, sed Pa, had horns four feet from tip to tip. These cows of mine is different, sed Mister Hardie. Thay are all blooded stock, thorobreds. Maybe you only think they are thoro breds. sed Pa. but if thay are or if thay ain't I can tell at a glanst. I shall be vary glad to have yure opinion, sed Mister Hardie. We folks up here always like to lern things from city peepul. You see, we doant git the saim ehanst to git around that thay do. We go along in our littel quiet way, wile grate men like you have a ehanst to mingel with other grate minds & mixed drinks, etc. Here are my cattel. Do You Know— India has an annual output of coal exceeding twelve million tons, ninety per cent of which comes from Bengal. Whooping cough is the subject o f mote quaint superstitions than almost any other disease. In Northampton shire it is believed that if a small quan tity of hair is cut from the nape of the i sick child's neck, rolled in a piece of i meat, and given to a dog, the whoop i ing cough will be transferred to the - animal. In Cornwall the child is fed » with bread and butter which has been r passed three times under the belly of a , piebald horse. In Lancashire they will still tell you that whooping cough will never attack a child that has ridden on 1 a bear. TS'PpCTORS ;^ w a/ JsCH'/s 3dAcr Sa ' I “Anxious M.”—Give your children for bed wetting 10 to 15 drops in water before meals, the following: Tincture cubebs, I dram; tincture rhus aromatic, 2 drams; comp, tluid balmwort. 1 oz. Mix well. This should be given about one hour be fore meals in water. • * • Doctor: “I have a very severe case of catarrh of the head ami throat. My blood is bad ami my stomach and bowels are affected. 1 would like a cure as 1 suffer greatly.’’ B. !• 1 would advise the following local treatment: obtain 2 ozs. antiseptic vilane powder, to a half teaspoonful add one pint of warm water ami from the palm of th< hand snuff the water through the nostrils several times a day. Mix a b vel teaspoonful of the vilane powder to one ounce of lard or vaselim- and applv this balm to the nostrils as far up as possible. Eor internal treatment use the following, obtain the following ingredi ents at any well stocked drug store, mix by shaking well: Syrup Sarsaparilla. Comp.. I ozs . comp, fluid balm wort 1 oz., fluid ext. buchu 1 oz. Take one teaspoon ful four times a day. * « * "X. Y Z." writes: “My hair is harsh and dead looking and my scalp is covered with dandruff. Can you help me?” Answer: Get a 4 oz. jar of plain yellow niinyo! and use ii regularly and your hair will become soft and fluffy and it will bring ba-'k the intense natural color to lh< hair: your dandruff will lie cured and you will be rewarded with a healthy growth of hair. -« » f 'Mrs. G." writes: ”1 want something to increase m.' weight about 15 or 20 pounds My blood is thin, watery and 1 have a pale complexion. Doctors say I am aeneinlc.” Answer: ITobablj your assimilative functions are impaired and aenema is the result. I would advise that you begin taking three-grain hypo-nuelane tablets at once and continue until your blo<xl is revitalized witit red anil white corpuscles. These tablets aid digestion and cause the body to assimilate the fatty elements in food, thus giving color, weight and strength to the abnormally thin. Hl ♦ ♦ "Tom l< "rites “( have been unable to work for some weeks on account of rheumatism What woulil you advise?" Answer: Take the following and I am sure >on " ill soon lie hack at your work again Mix the Jotlowing at home and take a teaspoonful at meal times and at bed time: lodide of potassium. 2 drams; sodium salicylate, 4 drams: wine of col < hicum. ' s ounce: comp, essence eardiol, I oz., fluid balmwort, 1 oz ; and syrup , Ah. 1 see. sed Pa. Thare was about 50 cows, all in a butiful grate big barn. Thay was all brown cows, & thare was sum littel brown calfs, too. Ah. I see, sed Pa. A fine looking lot of Holstines. A fine looking lot of what? said Mis ter Hardie. I sed that it was a fine looking lot of Jerseys, sed Pa. I am sure that I dident quite catch what you sed. Mister Hardie sed to Pa. | I sed that I have newer saw such tine Shorthorns, sed Pa. I looked at Pa & I thought that he was gitting kind of rattled. My dear sir, sed Mister Hardie to Pa, did you ewer see a regular, reel, hon est-to-goodness cow? Thousands of them, sed Pa. I have ridden the range out in Arizony. Well, sed Mr. Hardie, you must have ridden so fast that you cuddent see the cows. These cows isent Holstines or Jerseys or Shorthorns at all. They are Gurnseys. Oh, so thay are. sed Pa. Pa was as red in the face as the red leeves in the woods. s How to Make | Better Cough Syrup than | u You Can Buy A Family Supply, Saving $2 and Fully Guaranteed. I B l~J«fcc=aa I EEs! A full pint of cough syrup—as much ns you could buy for $2.50 —can easily be made at home. You will find nothing that takes hold of an obstinate cough more quickly, usually ending it inside of 24 hours. ~ Excellent, too, for croup, whooping cough, sore lungs, asthma, hoarseness and other throat troubles. Mix one pint of granulated sugar with % pint of v.arm water, and stir for 2 minutes. Put 2’a ounces of Pinex (fifty cents’ worth) in a pint bottle, then adil the Sugar Syrup. It keeps perfectly. Take a teaspoonful every one, two or three hours. This is just laxative enough to help cure a cough. Also stimulates the appe tite, which is usually upset by a cough. The taste is pleasant. The effect of pine and sugar syrup on the inflamed membranes is well known. Pinex is the most valuable concentrated compound of Norway white pine extract, rich in guaiacol and all the natural healing pine elements. Other prepara tions will not work in this formula. The Pinex and Sugar Syrup recipe is now used by thousands of housewives throughout the United States and Can ada. The plan has been imitated, but the old successful formula has never been equaled. A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or money promptly refunded, goes with this recipe. Your drugm’st has Pinex, or will get it for you. If not, send to The Pinex Co., Pt, Wayne, Ind. The questions answered below are gen eral in character, the symptoms or dis eases are given and the answers will ap ply to any case of similar nature Those wishing further advice free, may address Dr. Lewis Baker. College building. Col lege-Ellwood 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 prescrip tions can lie tilled at any well-stocked drug store. Any druggist can order of whole saler. sarsaparilla, 5 ozs. « « • "Clara" writes: “I have had a cough for about a year and fear I shall never he rid of ir. as It gets worse with every fresh cold I contract. Could you give me a remedy?" Answer: 1 can give you a remedy that • I am sure will cure you and one that is absolutely harmless and pleasant to take Make a syrup with one pint of granu lated sugar and one-half pint of boiling water, put on the fire and let it come to a boil, then cool and add the contents of a 2 1 o oz. bottle of essence mentho-lax ene. which you can purchase at any drug store, and you will have a pint of the finest cough syrup on the market today. It is about eight times cheaper than or dinary labeled cough medicines and will last much longer. e- * "Alary" says: "I would like something for indigestion. 1 can not eat and am cross and irritable all the time. I fear it will cause appendicitis.” Answer: Ask your druggist for tablets triopeptine and take according to the di rections. These are pink, white and blue tablets and are to be taken morning, nooYi ami night respectively. This will cure your indigestion and prevent appendi citis. • * • ’ Nervous Dorothy" writes: "I have no appetite whatever. I can not sleep at nights and my nerves are in a terrible condition. Can you tell what would help me Answer: The following has helped thousands who suffer as you do. Get 5 ozs. syrup of hypophosphites comp, and I oz. of tincture cadomene (not carda mon > and take a teaspoonful before meals. This tonic will restore your nervous sys tem and you will be strong and well with in a very short time. • • • "Carl" writes: "Can you prescribe anything for one that is too fat. 1 have tried several remedies but they do not help." Answer: I would not advise the use of the ordinary tablets and pills for reduc ing weight, but here is a safe, quick and sure remedy. Get 5 ozs. of aromatic elixir and 1 oz. of glycol arbolene. Mix by shaking well and take a teaspoonful after meals for the first three days and then double the dose. A reduction of a pound a day is not unusual after the first week or two. "Q. R.” writes: "Please advise some thing to take that will cure chronic con stipation. I have suffered for years and have used many kinds of pills, but they do not cure." Answer: I think most of the illness is caused by chronic constipation. If the following tablets are taken regularly they will gradually effect a cure, as they stim ulate the liver and bowels Into healthy action. They are packed in sealed tubes and are called three-grain sulpherb tab lets (not sulphur tablets) witli full di rections for taking. They will also purify the blood and tone up the entire system. If you are dyspeptic, take tablets trio peptine. These two medicines you will find in any up-to-date drug store. Send for Dr. Baker’s book on "Health and Beauty " (Advt.) 1