Newspaper Page Text
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American Sunday Monthly Magazine Section
How to arouse
a sluggish skin
A dull, sallow, lifeless complex
ion has several causes. Whatever
the cause in your case, your skin
needs stimulating. The following ,
treatment is the most effective ^
you can use:
To refresh your skin
Just before retiring, wash your face
and neck with plenty of Woodbury’s
Facial Soap and hot water. If your
skin has been badly neglected, use a
flesh brush, scrubbing it for about five
minutes until the lather makes it feel
somewhat sensitive. After this, rinse
well in warm, then cold water. Now rub
your skin five minutes with a tump of ice.
Woodbury’s Facial Soap is the work of an authority on the skin
and its needs. This treatment with it cleanses the pores, brings the
blood to the face and stimulates the fine muscular fibres of the skin.
You can feel the difference the first time you use it.
Woodbury’s Facial Soap costs 25c a cake. No one hesitates at the
price after their first cake.
Woodbury’s Facial Soap
For sale by dealers throughout the
United States and Canada.
Write today for samples
For 4c we will send a sample of Woodbury’s Facial
Soap. For 10c, samples of Woodbury’s Facial Soap,
Facial Cream ami Facial Powder. Address the Andrew
JergensCo., Dept. A’-6, Spring Grove Avenue, Cincinnati,
Ohio.
Use this
treatment just
before dressing
See what fresh,
vivid adoring
it gives you.
In Canada
address the Andrew Jergens Co
Ltd., Dept. N-6, Perth, Ontario.
3 In One Garment
Sturdy, vigorous old age is but a question
of maintaining the recuperative powers
of youth—of building up tlie life-forces
faster than they waste away. Outdoor
exercise, careful diet and persistent use of
Bafrst Extract
tteJesYTomc.
will do much to overcome the ills of old
age. Being a food, as well as a tonic, it
makes rich, new blood, aids di
gestion, and tones up the whole
system. Recommended and
prescribed by leading physicians.
Order a Dozen from Your Druggist
Insist Upon It Being "Pabst”
Write for “Health Darts" booklet.
PABST EXTRACT CO.
Milwaukee, Wis.
IKEffl,
1 Corset-Cover, Skirt and \
Drawers AJI in One
The Leona Garment is the most pleasing
undergarment because of the convenience, the
perfect fit, the daintiness, the ease with which
it is laundered, the economy and the many
other pleasing features it affords.
It is the only comfortable and practical
muslin undergarment for which the particular
lady is looking.
Model No. 339—This garment is a staple
model. Sold by waist measure at all merchants,
or by Parcel Post, $1.00. Booklet Free.
Leona Garment Company
222 Main Street La Crosse. Wis.
Drink Good
Pure—Delicious—Satisfying -
At Fouhtalns or in Bottles at Grocers'
Guinevere’s Lover
{Continued from page io)
Algernon went off shore early this morn
ing before I was up. I do not think he can
mean to take out the Fire Queen, it is a hor
ribly squally day, and the yachts which are
rat ing must be having a miserable time.
Letitia and 1 landed and did some shop
ping in the town and then between the
showers we sat under the tree on the lawn
in the gardens and watched the rocking
boats while we talked to our friends.
1 Hugh was in the Club, we saw him pass
us as we went in.
“It was simply disgusting last night,
wasn’t it, Guinevere,” Letitia said to me at
length when we were left for a moment
alone, referring to the subject of our last
evening, which she had ominously avoided
until then.
I he girl isn’t a lady for all her hundreds
of ( atesby ancestors—one would have
thought it was a nigger out for a holiday,”
Hu* went on “but you have never been in
America and down South so you can’t judge
of that, Guinevere. I have, though, and
know the blacks’ ways. Her movements
are exactly like them. It is incredible that
I.ord ( atesby should have permitted such
i an exhibition."
“Youth will express itself. We must not
be hard on her,” I answered. I did not
want to talk about it at all. I was over
whelmed enough as it was with foreboding,
and preferred to avoid discussing the re
membrance of last night.
“It is appalling for poor Hugh,” Letitia
went on feelingly. “ I le tells me he is going
away again and I don’t wonder, at it . I
should think if he stayed he would shoot
himself or her—but it almost serves him
right for marrying her—anyone else could
have seen the sort of character she had;
he was too blindly infatuated, though. I
wonder how it will end.”
So even my clear-sighted, keen Letitia
has not guessed anything. I almost sighed
aloud my relief.
“I wonder what Kathleen is doing this
morning, she has not come ashore, as far as
I have seen,” I said. “Algernon went off
before I could catch him. 1 wanted to try
and persuade him to promise me not to go
out in the Fire Queen I don’t think he will
—it is too rough, but he continually makes
one nervous.”
Letitia laughed.
“ He would not have paid the least atten
tion to you,” she responded, “it would have
j been waste of breath. But did not you see
them in the town; they passed when we
! were coming out ot the post-office, he and
Kathleen -they have probably gone off in
I his motor to play golf."
1 cannot say why, but it seemed like some
horrible dream as we sat there in the gar
dens. I could not shake off my feeling of
anxiety. After the scene last night things
cannot go on calmly, and we have still some
days before the week ends.
At last I felt so disturbed, I could not sit
there and talk lightly any longer, and, leav
ing Letitia with Freddy Burgoyne, who had
just come up, I went down the landing stage
and, getting into the waiting launch, came
back on board. And here I am sitting with
a vague restlessness upon me—and the
i clock has just struck half-past twelve.
Ah! Heaven, how can I write it—the final
agony has come—as the stroke finished,
something seemed to force me to go up on
deck. This was the hour fixed for the start
ing of the Fire Queen—supposing Algernon
was still determined to go out. I got my
glasses and leant there on the rail scanning
anxiously the direction from whence the
motor boat would come.
Surely my son would not be so mad as to
j venture—surely Kathleen would not dare
j deliberately to disobey Hugh for all her
insolent defiance.
I could distinguish nothing at first, but
as I watched I at last perceived the long
white thing with a man in it close by the
pier steps at the side of where the steam
boats land their passengers. And yes,
there was a woman’s figure all clad in those
new red oilskins, being carefully handed in
—I knew it was Kathleen, for had she not
bought those very garments with Letitia
and myself on Monday at Redferns in the
town, delighting in their new shape and
bright shade.
So she had disobeyed Hugh and followed
her own will. 1 watched them in trembling
anxiety—the water, once they would be
beyond the shelter of the castle, was rough,
{Continued on page 14)
Street and Number
Prepared for nearly half a century
by a Doctor of Dental Surgery.
Prevents the formation of tartar and the lodg
ment of decay. Neutralizes all acid tendencies of
the mouth.
Dr. Lyon’s preserves teeth
by polishing them thoroughly—
a harmless method yet the most
efficient one.
Dr. Lyon's is a pure, velvety
powder which is very pleasant
to use.
Teach your children to use
it night and morning—especial
ly at night. The benefits of
the habit of Good Teeth keep
ing increase each succeeding
year.
What Dr. Lyon’s
does not do only
your dentist is
competent to do.
Sold Everywhere
If UNGT
<M> 4
T HE family doctor put this baby
on “Eskay’s Food” when He
v/as but 10 days old.
Hu mother, Mrs. Jas. H. Bush, Schenec
tady, writes: “ * Etkay 't ’ agreed with
little Richard perfectly. He it thor
oughly healthy, weight 34 Ibt. at
14 montht, and hat nearly all hit teeth,
eight of which he cut during July and
Augutt without the leatt trouble. ”
What "Eskay's Food" has done for this boy,
it will do (or your little one ii he is not being
thoroughly nourished.
Don't let him “ worry along," but (or his sake,
and yours, don't wait: “Aik Your Doctor”
about "Eskay's Food" today.
TEN FEEDINGS FREE
B l
ways clean immaculate.
But permanenlh/ beautiful teeth
are the result of cleansing them
the safe way.
1 he use of a dentifrice not entirely
free from injurious elements defeats
the very purpose of
Good Teethkeeping
It is not enough merely to brush
your teeth. Visit your dentist at least
twice a year. For daily care, use the
tooth-powder known throtigh three
generations as a safe preparation —
Dr. Lyon's
PERFECT
r J er
Smith, Kline A Frrnrh Co.
(in*Ti.twr>: I’lease send ute
your helpful book for mothers,
. I ill Arch si . riiilails'l|.hiu
free ID feedings of Esksr's k
"How to Care for the Hafir.”