Newspaper Page Text
-THE MAGAZINE,
■ f ■ ‘~^l? s*' 5 *'* i
w »»*e ffiQSiVERS
I rr-m «>• '!«••'< Re-nbart
I r—rm- '-~ >n > ojTTWbt-l. J® 1 ®- J?
Barlin. kngliah trA.slMPn. «n®
* _
B|<Z
. r^“A-'•*! '• ia - -ntematioo*. News vrOre)
f TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT.
v Newspaper reporter® know that the
|] Takrg of an “emphatic denial” 1a an
art a!) by Itself Those who have ma*-
*rred It also know that there are dozens
of ways of making “emphatic denials"
that don’t den> The wording is very
but the original iin pressinn re-
the sain®
'."'ran n«»t .ro»- • 1 •*
originated ' M -
"Mr V.’.ai. . t»v-r f • v# ■••
his.n** ass<" . f.t’l •’•’■ «•
knows, and »« and I are ••*
B»est of friends n friendship . lain.**-:
Waith pride, on my side, at least.
K Thia was printed in full in all of the
Wpapers, with veiled comments and sng
Bgeations. the sum of which was that,
Mr Allan and Miss IJoyd were
' BBBf
■
'. tL c !.. . • • •
Tunnel stock® continued to rl®e
Then, at Hoyt’s suggest lons. Allan
rented a whole floor of one of the big
new office buildings and moved the
headquarters of the Tunnel Company
back to NtfW York This fact wa* duly
.chronicled and had a further sllmu
dating effect on the market All this
While Allan and TJoyd ah.! even one else
concerned insistently denied that there
waa any immediate Indication that full
work on the enterprise would be re
sumed in the near future Beyond that
they refuse*! to commit themselves, and
wl.se broke,ra decldtxl that Lloyd was
planning another coup The market
continued to grow stronger
Conviction that a big and favorable
announcement was impending was fur
ther strengthened hy the fact that
Ethel Lloyd's famous ivy-colored llmnu
jrine appeared in front of tie Tunnel
Compahy's office® every afternoon h’ a
quarter of 5, and Allan drove off with
her
Ilia month of blind obedience was
long since over, hut as everything waa
going wo favorably he ins content to
drift with the current and wait until
IJoyd was readv
In the meantime, he argued with him
self about his relation with Ethel IJoyd
Though, as we have noted, hr was not
prone to tiink well of himself ns a
figure in thA eyes of women, a much
man w
wornanV attitude toward him
’. r
He
IHm IB
Hr
and he listened to her ad
■ vice and suggestions with r«s|»e«'tfui at
■ tention He was ver} fond of her rn
■ joyed being with her hut he did not
her But when u. came upon him
that ah»* loted him » loyar to
along new lines
c w
.n New • •< k .i.
b U’.t
ti.arrx hili'
-
■such pain
■OMAN TORE
■her clothes
.\ V‘>a<; Restored tc
SjSKh by I >i!<a I. Pmk
ham’s Vegetable
HH Compound.
.■rfrflnn.. X T "I.yrt'.a E. Fink-
■ftm ll '>r<» Compound haa <-*r
■fr.i. ""r J
■lmfrun I
I
I BjUfE
L
hirpnj
t&inly don® me a
lot of good. I first
heard of it when I
was a girl and 1 al
ways said that if I
ever had female
trouble I would
take it
"I suffer**! fmm
organic inflamma
tion and would
have spoils when
I would be in such
pain that I would
tear my clothea
n-• ■ rd ►’<•’ •' »■ cl.
b ;n to see what the matter was
■ but U ••> could n<>t help me Mr flr»t
■ thought was for I.\dia E Pinkham’s
■ Veg-r !e Compound and 1 Kent my
■ hgsbn I out for It and took it until I
■ was *r.t ]y cured lam a woman of
■ perfect eaJth and m\ health and
■ happlnee> came from Lydia K Plnk-
■ ham hn - dieine You may rest sk-
■ »urv<i that I do all I can to recommend
■
■ friends MRS F’RED STuNE. Route
| So : \ x
■ Vegetat Compound made from
■f<- t s and herbs is |<
■ be u. ed with perfect cunfid »■’• ••
U rm n win r fr-un dtspki
■>•'' ■-.damn.at • 1 •ration
' rr-’S'itia r.T pen-.di,- pain-
beam. ’ v. •• i:
|||i|||l v “ f ' ’ ’ ' • - • ’• • x
’ a• • -
. ea: .»: d
■■■ • • - mab-
“Don’t talk nonsense, Mac." she sai/i
gently
Allan declined to come to dinner that
evening The next cay E?he! went on
a yachting trip. (
THE MARRIAGE
was angry, aahamed, hu- i (
mlliated He found some excuse
to go to Tunnel City, where he j
could avoid meetings with Ethel s fa
ther The excuse was not hard to find '
There was everx indication now that
they would be able to resume work and ;
1 it was necessary that he make a careful t
inspection
Ethel was gone three weeks When '
she returned she sent him a telegram '
asking, nr rather < oinmandlng him to I
come to dinner the following night
The telegram was delivered to him
about 100 miles out under the bed of the .
Atlantic He read It In a little sub
station and th» battle with his pride
1 was fought all over again Hut he had
determined that ho would stop at noth- |
iug. stick at nothing, that might In any .
way aid him He scribbled an accept
ance and went It ba< k and the next
night appeared at the IJoyd house as if .
nothing had happened to alter hia re
lations with the family
Ethel received him as of old. without !
restraint and with the utmost cordial- (
ity If anything, she was even more j
openly glad tn see him than usual.
The old life began again, with this ’
difference It was now Ethel who did
the ordering and Allan the obeying
He had a I wav® refused tn take her '
through ’he completed section nf the
boring, but now he yielded when shs
insisted on seeing if
It was a wonderful experience for her
Allan found his pleasure In watching
the shades of expression flit across the
lovely face as the train whirled them
• deep Into the earth
AT last the train came to a stop
“Where are we now?” she
asked eagerly
”As the field of Waterloo.” Allan
replied with a grim set of his jaw
“What do you mean**”
’’This Is the end of the boring
250 miles from Tunnel City. We are
at the edge of the big ravine that
caused the explosion
Allan helped her to alight and thev
walked to the very brink of the great
chasm High above them the roof
w ;i» lost in the darkness, and below
them whs a great gulf, where little
lights twinkled and dodged about like
fireflie* l . The roar of the great en
gines and the mighty ventilators wa
deafen’ng Allan touched her arm
and led her to a great elevator that
was UM»d in hoisting the precious
mineral out of the pit The\ quickly
descended to the bottom of the won
derful cavern, and the opening at the i
end of the tunnel through which that '
hell-blast of destruction had roared
looked like a tiny swallow's nest far
Up the si in of a cliff
The next day the New York paper*
had long interviews with Miw< Lloyd
f In which she graphically described her
' I experience in the tunnel. And two I
' . da \ s later the engagement of the tun
. nel master and the daughter of the
• ) famous financier was formally an
r 1 nnunced.
i , Tunnel stock leaped up at the rate
Os live points an hour and fust at the
I psychological moment Lloyd gave hi®
i broker* a tremendous buying order.?
I In 24 hours Tunnel stock whs once
■ more flirting with par.
"I*ubli. confidence seems to have
returned." remarked Liovd, with ape
culiar little mile. "I guess. m\ boy. '
that ynu can go ahead now under fu'.l
steam after your honev moon ”
• • . ... t
* The wedding was celebrated late in
June Allan and Ethel saw less of
: en -h other during the period of their
engagement than before, it was de
cided to begin work on full time on
the first day of July, and there were
• ountless thousands of details to be
attended to In the meantime
The Wedding.
For two days before and two days
after the newspapers printed nothing
much excepting news of the wedding
It was a public wedding. In the sense
that al! of societx was invited. It 1
was celebrated in the great ballroom
at the Atlantic, the hotel where the
Tunnel project was launched some
nine yeara before, and the newspapers
printed with minute care and mathe*
matical exactness the cost of every- 1
thing connected with it. On top of
the whole mass of figures was the ,
bride’s announcement that as h wed-
I ding gift to her husband she had .
founded a pension fund of $R,000,000
for the crippled and 111 of the tunnel
workers. <
The reporters wrote columns about ■
♦he gay» t\ and jo\ of the occasion.
They commented especially on the ■
debonair and jovial manner of the
middle aged bridegroom During the
period of their engagement Allan
could never bring him-vlf to play the
lover but he had played a little more
i than the part of a friend In the
. presence of others his conduct had
' ' ■ w ivs been that expected of a fiance.
i lust ns it had been that expected of ,
, i i bridegroom at the wedding festlv-
I ItlM
“I Hut when he and hie bride left the
1 1 hotel to KO to her father's house
where the\ were to remain a few
‘(days before going away an abrupt
! change came over him Ethel, watch
‘ling him. in the dim light of the !
1 i limousine understood. He was star
ring straight out before him and
’’seemed alm -t unconscious of her
■ | presence His face was lined and
careworn and his eyes had something
. i of that expression which she remem
■ bered with .< shudder the night she
J bad w.ivlaid him in Tunnel City
His right luuhl. ungloved, lay close
, beside her and she softlv placed her
. ''s-•- on It It was cold to the touch.
He did not seem to know she had '
I touch. ' him Onlv once did he give
. - hat he was not d< id to the '
world ks their <ar wheeled
, r.to ,i ie id square t! .■■ r eves met a
1 gigantic electric sign which read:
“Tunnel I**
“100.000 Men Wanted!*’
X »t a w<>rd was spoken until they
t had r.-.o 'u-d th« h<mse. They were
alone her* for Mr Lloyd had found
a or. van lent time to take a long- 1
I def. r»t*<! Tip to Holton and had de-
! 1 parted ! \ a night train shortly after}
i the • mcmnnv
| To Bo Cont-nued To-morrow.
k
Beauty and Home
By LILIAN LAUFERTY.
4 4 A M BITION depends on envir
onment That is the way
my interview with Hattie
Williams began Maybe just at first
the sentence looks like one nf those
epigrams that are too good to he true
—or tn mean anything in particular.
As a matter of fart, ambition does
depend on environment, as Miss Wil
liams will prove when I let her speak
for herself a few sentences farther
** 1
J
■w-
1 ■
■■ '■■■
along. First the interviewer must
have her fling—and set the stage.
Scene dressing room of Miss H
\\ . co-star with Richard Carle, of the
"Doll Girl.” the operatic offering up
at the Globe Theater, in New York.
Slov music, taps of foot of inter
viewer; enter heroine, A O. T. w hich
means almost on time. Aml now, as
dark - haired, sparkling eyed Hattie
Williams is well worth listening to.
the interviewer retires in favor of
one of her pvt stars, who “twinkle
twinkles' in blue linen street cjothea
and in the mantilla of Rosallilla of
Sevilla as well.
’"Every year 1 want to do just as
well with the material at hand for
my stage career as I possibly can.”
said the blue linen lady. "Now, if I
am to become a lecturer on how to
be as attractive as you can. I think
1 11 have to start off with the idea of
making your ambition depend on your
environment. What’s the use of pin
ing to boa dainty little dimpled dar
ling if Nature clearly intended you
for a willowy queen? I'd advise start
ing out bj taking one long, eat nest
L<>< H< IN THE GLASS
"See what you are. make up your
mind what you have to work on. and
consider your environment If you
live in a three-room tenement don't
try to look like a languid beauty of
the Newport colons Stay in the pic
ture Suit yourself to your place in
life but. if you can manage it. march
at the head of the procession.
Only Two Tilings.
“A famous author and philosopher
once said that there were onlv two
things in all the world that were of
positive good to man -riches and
health IF I COI’LD ONLY MAKE
AU. THE GIRLS WHO THINK
THAT THEV ARE I’ooß REALIZE
THAT THEV HAVE HALF THE
WEALTH OF THE \\’<»RL!» IF
THEV AKE WELL
Now the best wax to keep well
is to take plent) of exen ie<
Millionaire rides horeshat k and plays
golf ad tennis Where will 1 get
my exercise? asks Polly Poverty
Well t!i.<t is easj to answei Don’t
turn to external means for exercise
Find exercise in the simple tasks of
every day—in waiting on yourself
in reaching around to button your
own waist right up the back in
making your own bed Above all
find a chance for healthful <xercise
in saving your mother steps Run
out in the kitchen and get her a
glass of ice water, pick up the spool®
she scatters when she gets up quick
ly from her mending. Stoop and take
steps for x our parents, wait on your
little brothers and sisters. Do it all
buoyantly xvith upheld head and chest
and deep-bre.it hi ng lungs And then
your muscles will be as fine and firm
as if an expensive gymnasium had
put \on through h course of exercise
based upon the verx movements you
have been using
Many Ways.
“Do everything with snap and
vigor Don’t let vour days get into
a rut of routine Getting out of a
rut means tolls and tumbles so keep
on the highway of interest tn what
you are doing—and don't do it the
same wax every day as if you were
a machine You can put a sparkle
mt ■ potato i-eeting if you do it for
the joy of doing n at Dast a per cent
more smoothlv than vou did yester
day
"Surprise yourself oc« assionally by
going out of the humdrum beaten
path. Keep your eyes open for new
interests Maybe the bootblack, the I
apple woman or the janitor s wife!
IMO
<•
) -i ■ ;
/ X, , ” *•
V.v ■ c,' £ '■ Jf:'.’;- 'JI
KZi
IMBjL A ~r _
.Q./Mjjk JBhb
bBHI • * ]
' W ißßia»wr
/ ' -
Hattie Williams at home, and her favorite picture.
will have a stimulating effect on
your nature if you meet them.
"Friends are fine things have ’em
all about you make them every
where Study humanity and see how
charming!} human you will become.
“Don't get the blues over the ups
and downs of life--they make It In
teresting If you’re down, hope to get
up—and if you are up try to keep
above getting down!
‘With natural means for getting
The Head Waitress
By HANK.
44 A Y 7H AT does Marie look so
V'\' grouchy about?" asked the
’ ’ Stead} Customer of the
Head Waitress in the Case d’Enfant.
"Did some one short change her this
morning ” ’
“1 should say not." replied the Head '•
Waitress ' Anybody who wanted to I
short change her would have to be !
wiser than the ginks w’ho come in here
I pity the p«x>r gux who gets her for
life. If he tries to put over any phony
financial Teals on pay night he'll find
he s up against a regular John D. in
skirts!”
“Well, what's the matter with her?"
persisted the Steady Customer
“Oh. she's sore about a little kidding
we handed her. said the Head Wait
ress "She’s been telling some of the
girls around here about horseback rkies
she's been taking in the park every
morning, and while nobody was so un
ladylike as to call her a liar, we just
acted as If that well-known bloke
named Sweeney might believe her a Ut
ile better than we did So to make her
storx look like the genuine goods, she
brings a bunch of photographs into the
place the other day with herself posed
in all kind® of position® like Josie or
\rk and a fine looking horse as a back
ground The pictures made a hit all
right until one us us happeneil to notice 1
a policeman s club sticking m the back ,
of the saddle Os course this showed )
That one of them handsome cops was
trying to capture her young affection*. I
and the horseback riding story died 1
without a groan "
"I’m surprised to hear that a Shut I
I Marie." said the Steady Customer, “but I
i brass buttons do hold some peculiar '
I tas< n;r .»n for the average female
• “Fuse nal n ain't the x»i«rd for i., •
Some Helpful Hints
From Hattie Williams
health} right at hand in daily tasks
xvith people to stimulate you—with
imagination to paint any task in
bright colors —and with ambition to
get ahead in the world, I vow I don’t
see how any girl in all this world can
avoid the beauty of clean, interest
ing. attractive good looks. And that
is the only beauty that is worth talk
ing a whole interview’s worth about!”
said sparkling, buoyant, vivid Hattie
Williams.
replied the Head Waitress. “It’s clean
dippy they get. You see. down in In
diany. where Marie conies from, they
don t have no guys in brass buttons ex
cept the motormen. and they’re so poor ;
down there that almost every other but- ■
, ton is one of them ordinary bone kind.
I don’t see how Marie could ever have
' fallen for a cop, especially after the
awful revolutions brought out by Mister
I Whitman 1 wouldn’t marry a cop for
fear that some time or other he might
bring home a few friends to dinner like
Bob the Riffer. Sam the Slugger, Crafty
Charlie and Dick the Dip. But then J
Marie is at the ingenious age ”
”1 suppose you mean ingenuous.” said
the Steady Customer.
"There you go spoiling our nice little
tate-a-tate with your personal re
marks,' said the Head Waitress scorn
fully “Here's your check.”
Well. Marie.’ said the Steady Cus
tomer to the Cashier as he stepped to
’.he desk, “so the glint of brass buttons
has dazzled your beautiful orbs, has it?"
“ir you don’t stow that brass of
yours." replied Marie emphatically,
your beautiful orbs will have a black
ring around them from a perfect lady’s
:Ist. arid don’t you forget It. Iflease use
the nearest exit on going out.”
TOUISVILLE
I > THROUGH SLEEPERS WOVlfi
Lv.7J2AMuS4O PM. ff-Wfl .
Daysey Mayme
And Her F olks
By FRANCES L. GARSIDE
THE absence of the big framed pic
ture of Beatrice DeCenci from
the parlor wall of the Lysander
John Appleton home is at lajrt explained
-Daysey MayTne appeared yesterday at
a meeting of the Upward, Onward Move
: ment Club, wearing 1t for a breastpin.
The little of her face that appeared
above the pin and below her hat was
enough to convince those w-ho saw her
that her heart was heavy and sad
Even the tip of a nose may express its
Borrow.
The motive of the Upward. Onward
Movement Club is to reduce household
; expenses Instead of staying at home
] long enough to boil a cheap cut of meat
' until it Is good, the members of this
i club meet three times a week to de
nounce the packers.
The strength their maternal ances
tors devoted to the meat chopper to
make tough meat tender they expend tn
wielding the gavel.
They are extremely fashionable, mod
ern and progressive.
Member after member arose and read
papers denouncing the meat trust
mourning the deficit a large porterhouse
leaves in a smaJl salary, and some of
the more courageous members advo
cated marching on the butcher shops a
la Albany.
Daysey Mayme arose, and the voice
that echoed from behind her big hat and
breastpin was unutterably sad.
“I wish,’’ she sard, “that the names of
♦he Appleton family be dropped from
membership of the Upward, Onward
j Movement Club.”
There was a dead silence. She had
been its most active member
“All of our family made a vow at the
last meeting,” she continued, “that we
would do without meat. We have been
untrue to our vows We have trans
gressed.”
Visions of a tempting, juicy steak
floated before the eyes of her audience.
Ah, the flesh is weak!
Daysey Mayme reed their thoughts
’Te fell.’’ she continued, "but not as
you are thinking
“We vowed no meat should come Into
our house, and we devoted ourselves to
a diet of apples and nuts.
“But we found," here she showed
signs of hysterics, for her experience
had been fraught with unrest, “that in
eating apples and nuts w-e were eat
ing as much meat in the worms in them
a® we had eaten when patronizing the
butcher."
She staggered from the room. She
felt she must have air.
The members looked at each other
Her confession explained the claim made
by dietitian* regarding the nutrition
found 1 in apple® and nuts.
Thew their heads wisely.
Household Suggestions
Grease potatoes first with a little
I butter before baking, and, when
i cooked, they will be beautifully brown «
and criep. with the glazed appearance
■ that makes them so appetizing
The fix nuisance can be reduced to
a minimum by the liberal use of par
affin on the kitcher duster. This
will not harm the furniture or wood
work. and the smell soon passes off.
• * •
If new enamel saucepans are placed
In a pan of warm w’ater. allowed to
come to the boil, and then cooled,
they w’ill last much longer before
either chipping or burning.
• • •
It is not generally known that a
tablespoonful of vinegar put into the
I water when poaching eggs will keep
them from breaking.
• • •
Three tablespoonfuls of baking hioda
In a quart of w’ater applied with a
rough cloth will remove the old var
nish verv easily when you wish to
revarnish furniture.
• • •
“Fur" comes off the inside of a
kettle quite easily if vinegar has been
boiled in it for two or three hours.
• • •
Coffee is a fairly good air purifier.
■ and a litle burnt on hot coals will
purify a sick room and abolish bad
smells.
• • •
Black stockings will always keep
a good color if. after washing, they
are rinsed through blue water.
How to Regulate It.
Knicker—Think th? Stock Ex
change should lie regulated?
Becker —Yes. It should be arranged
for stocks to go up when you bu\
and go down when you -ell.
LIVE CHEAPER—CUT YOUR
MEAT BILL DOWN
You can cut down your meat bill
two-thirds and get more nutritious
food by eating Faust Macaroni. A
! 10c package of Faust .Macaroni con
: tains as much nutrition as 4 lbs. of
beef —ask your doctor.
Faust Macaroni is extremely rich
i in gluten, the bone, muscle and flesh
i builder. It is made from Durum
Wheat, the high protein cereal.
Delicious, too. X’ou can serve
Faust Macaroni a hundred different
ways to delight the palate. Write
for free recipe book showing how.
In air-tight, moisture-proof packages.
5 and 10 cents
MAULL BROS.,
St. Louis, Mo.
rjr
• A?
tl I C ®V
Jkf I: kJx i| J |
A FISH is a small, moist, unpleasant looking body, which is equally
at home in the water and cokJ storage. It is also the father of
lies, and full of ptomaine poisoning and temptation to tell tar
radiddles
Fish are found in all parts of the world, but their favorite habitat
is a cold and clammy plate, where they are discovered surrounded by
a white sauce that tastes like bill-stickers’ paste. Few people have
the hardihood to remove them from this environment though orca*
clonally you may observe an Intrenid and foolhardy adventurer at
tempting the feat at a 60-cent table d’hote dinner.
In appearance the fish Is somewhat unprepossessinff, being lack
ing in profile and having a mouth that resembles that of a Socialist
orator. Bat it has a lovely, ainuous, straight front figure that atonea
for ite facial defect®. It 1s also possessed of a high mnrpl character,
being calm and collected, and little given to temperamental impulse*.
The habits of the fish are most exemplary. The males of the
species are always on the water wagon, while the lady fishes are so
industrious, and so averse to race suicide, that they fill the heart of
Colonel Roosevelt with approval and delight.
The chief characteristic of fish appears to be their sense of
humor. They are the great practical jokers of the animal world, and
they like nothing better than a day’s sport with a man with a $250
outfit whom they will josh into sitting for hours at a stretch in a
humped position that gives him the cramps, or else they will string
him along for miles through a shallow stream without giving him any
thing to show for his trouble but u cold in his head.
There are a great many different kinds of fish, ’’ he most com
mon variety is the One-I-Caught-But-Could-Not-Land. This specie® is
extremely large, about the size, of e sperm whale. It Is also exceedingly
game, and Is only caught after the most brilliant maneuvering on
the part of the fisherman. The chief peculiarity, though, is Its shy
ness, for it is observable that this paragon of the finny tribe is never
hooked except when a man is fishing alone.
The next most familiar variety is the fish that a man actually
does catch. This variety is a small, insignificant, measlj’ creature that
his wife doesn’t think worth while cooking. It is extremely expensive,
a little hand caught fish not three Inches long frequently costing from
S3OO to SSOO
Among other well-known varieties of fish are the sucker, w’hich
abounds in Wa 11 street waters; the goggle-eyed perch, who infests the
sightseeing automobiles and rubb'rs up at the tall biddings; the lob
ster, which flirts around the clubs and fashionable dining rooms, and
the clams, which are plentiful along Peachtree.
omen, who are great fishers of men, and frequently make big
catches, find that the most effective bait to use is a combination of
good looks and flattery. Almost any kind of a he fish, especial!v an
old one, w ill rise to that bait.
How fishing comes to be classed among sports instead of among
cruel and unusual, and Inhuman punishments, is a mystery no one has
ever attempted to solve. It must simply be set down as one of the
vagaries of human nature that a man will leave a nice, cool, clean,
comfortable office and spend from $lO to SIOO to sit oil the end of
a broiling pier, holding a dinky Tittle pole with a silly little line at
tached, fishing for a fish that hasn't been in that vicinity for ten years,
and then he will return home with a blistered neck, every muscle in
him aching, and brag about the *un he has had.
As has been said, flsh are found in all part* of the world, but the
finest varieties are to be discovered at your butcher’s. Also you will
find that that is the cheapest place at which to fish.
4 ©cl
THIN FOR YEARS—“GAINS 22
POUNDS IN 23 DAYS”
Remarkable Experience of F. Gag
non. Builds Up Weight
Wonderfully.
"I was «n run down to the very bottom.**
writes F. Gagnon. "I had to quit work. 1 was
so weak. Now. thanks to Rargo', 1 look like a
new man 1 gained 22 pounds in 23 days."
"Sargol has put 1U pounds on me In 14
days,*’ state* W. D Roberta. "It made me sleep
well, enjoy what I ate and enabled me to work
with interest and pleasure "
I weighed 132 pounds when I commenced
taking Sargol. After taking 20 days I weighed
144 pounds Sargol Is the moat wonderful prep
aration for flesh building I have ever seen.** de
clares D. Martin, and J Meier adds. "For the
past twenty years I have taken medicine every
day for indigestion and get thinner every year.
I took Sargol for forty days and feel better than
1 have felt in twenty yean. Sly weight has in
creased from 150 to 170 pounds
When hundreds of men and women---and there |
are hundreds, with more coming every day— :
living in even- nook and comer of this broad i
land, voluntarily testify to weight increases rang- j
Ing all the way from 10 to 35 pounds, given
’hem by Sargol. you must admit. Mr and Mrs. ■
and Miss Thin Reader, that there must be some- ,
thing in this Sargol method of flesh building
after all.
Hadn't you better look into it, just as thou
sands nf others have done? Many thin folks
say 'I d give most anything to put on a little
extra weight." but when some one suggests away
they exclaim. "Not a chance Nothing will make
me plump. I'm built to May thin.” i'ntll you
have tried Sargol. you do not and ear not know
that this is true.
Sargol has put pounds of healthy "stay there’*
flesh on hundreds who doubted end in spile of
their doubts. You don't have to believe in Sargol
to grow plump from Its use. Tou just take it
and watch weight pile up. holtosrs vanish and
your figure round out to pleasing and normal |
proportions. Tou weigh murself when you begin
and again when you finish and you kt the scales
tell the story
Sargol hi ahsolutaly harmless. It Is a tiny
concentrated tablet You take ore with every
meal. It mixes with the food you eat for the
purpose of separating all of Its flesh producing
ingredients It prepar-s these fat making ele
ments in an easily asslmilat* d form, which the
blood can readily absorb and carry all over your
body Flump, well-developed persona don't need
Sargnl to produce this result. Their assimilative
machinery performs ita functioca without aid Rut
thin foDre’ assimilative organa do not. Thia fatty
portion of their food now go»« to waste through I
•heir bodies like unburned coal through ar open
g r a:e A few days' test of Sargol In your case
will surelv prove whether or not this is true nf
rnu Isn't it worth trying'
1
50c Box Free
Tn enable any thin reader, ten nr more
‘ ur.-ierweight. tn easily make this trft we will jnv*
' a JlAc box of Sargol absolutely free f-Jtbex
i S»rc«l will Increase ynur weight or it won’t, and
, the only w«r to know it is to try It. Mend for
this Free Test Parkage to-day. Inclosing 10c tn
j diver or atamp* to help pay peerage, packing,
etc . and a full site 50e package ’dU he sent by
return mall free of charge Mail thin coupon
with your letter tn th* Sargol Co.. 109 J Herald
Bld*.. Binghamton. N. Y.
COME EAT WITH US AT
OUR EXPENSE
FREE COUPON.
This coupon entitles any person to one 50c
package of Sargol, the concentrated Flesh
Builder (provided ynu have never tried It I
and that lb cents l s inclosed to cover post
age, packing, etc. Read our advertisement
printed above, and then put 10r in silver In
letter to-day with coupon, and the full 50c
package will be sent to you by return po* _
Address: Th* Sargol Company. iw-.t Herald
E’dg.. Rlrxhamton. N Y. Write pour uame
and plainly ard PIN THIS rorpnx
TO TOT H LETTER