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^ feslW^?? !pl ^ ,
f#$*>^Some i Women
Are Always Admired
You too want to be lovely and admired
I You can have a radiant complexion
and the charm of youth if you use
MARCELLE Face Powder.
MARCELLE Face Powder
quickly matches yout complexion
and brings out the sweet charm that
every woman has. t
MARCELLE Face Powder makes '
your skin feel younger and you your
k self look younger.
Then people will admire you ar.d
lay —“What lovely skin you hare!" -
Popular sire packagesat25cand50c, I
all shades—at all dealers.
Send for free liberal sample
and complexion chart
MARCELLE LABORATORIES
c. W. 8EGCS SONS & CO.. Chlcaro, Illinois
Beautify in* the American Woman for Haifa Century
WSBMM i
Complexion Requisites
—We Buy Old Jewelry—
Mail us your old Gold Teeth, Discarded
Jewelry, Ring's, Watch Cases, Spectacle
Frames, Platinum, Diamonds, Antiques,
Silver, Dental Gold, Etc. We send cash
immediately. Will return your goods i i
offer is refused.
WERNERS JEWELRY EXCHANGE
162 West 34th St. Dept. W Sew York
Obtervant. YovitH
Teacher—If you heat,, cold water
what happens?
Willler.-Oatidy's gonnjt shave.
T~
Hf pfr^ Without Kill Poison Rate
H New Exterminator that
Wbri’f Cats, Hi If Livestock'^ Baby Poultry,
Dogs, or even Chicks
K-R-Ojcati be used about thehome.barn orpoul
try deadly yai*d poison. Vith absolute K-R-O safety If* made as it contains of Squill, mo
aa
recommended by U.S.Dept. ofAgriculture.under
the Corn-able process which insures maximum
strength.Two Hundreds cana killed 578 rats at Arkansas
State Farm. of other testimonials.
Sold on a Money-Back Guarantee.
Insist on K-R-O, the origins,1 Saudi exter¬
minator. All druggists, 75c Large size (lour
times as much) $2.00. Direct if dealer cannot
supply you K-R-O Co., Springfield, O.
iT
KILLS-RATS-ONLY
Labor a Necessity
Work is the secret-'Of true happi¬
ness. “Take away the occupation of
all men,'’ says John Burroughs “anti
half the world will commit suicide
within a year.”—Grit.
PAINS No how
matter severe,
you can always have
immediate relief:
Bayer Aspirin stops pain quickly. It
does it without any ill effects. Harmless
to the heart; harmless to anybody. But
it always brings relief. Whysuffer?
BAYER
ASPS RI M
OILS 24 EMBED HOURS !H
No matter how large and stub¬
born, Carboil instantly stops
pain, ripens and heals worst boil
or carbuncle often' overnight. druggist.
Get Carboil today from
Pain ends like magic. Boils
vanish with amazing speed.
Sure
He—What would you llifrifc if I
pat toy arm . round you?'"'
She—What would I think if you
didn’t?
Work is not the secret of happi¬
ness; it is the secret of forgetting
unhappiness. . • ___
Best Laxative
Keep
Well
By Taking
Dr. Hitchcock’*'
Laxative Powder
SOLD AT ALL DRUG STORES 25t
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Remo *e» dandruff-Stop* Hair Falling)
Beauty Imparts tcGray Color and Faded and Hairl j
60 c aid 11.00 at FatchogoeJ^.Y.t Druggist*.
Hiscox Chem. Wkg..
FLORESTON SHAMPOO — Idea! for use in
connection with Parker’BHair Balsam. Makes the
'iair soft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at drug
gists. LLiBCQ.* Chemical Works, Patchcgne.K. Y«
The
Crippled
Lady
of
Peribonka
• s
By James Oliver
Cut-wood
WOT Service
(©. 1929, Doubleday
Doran & Co., Inc.)
V
STORY FROM THE START
Introducing some of the peo¬
ple of the pretty little Freucn
Canadian village of Peribonka,
particularly the Crippled Lady,
idol of the simple innabitanis.
CHAPTER II—Continued
— 2 —
From rhe hour Paul opened his eyes
to the light of life ue had in him the
soul ot an Indian. After a hundred
and thirty-five years the blood of the
lovely Molly Brant nad come Into its
own. One would not have guessed it
from the hoy s physical appearance,
for be was light ratner rha'r, dark,
with blue eyes and blond hair. But
the modern Molly, who livgd in a
palace, with a Croesus lor a husband,
saw what was happening as the years
passed h.v. Her boy grew lean ot face
and figure. His cheek bones were a
little high. His love for the outdoors
became a passion. She made it pos¬
sible for him to spend his vacations
in the woods, and each inie lie re¬
turned she knew that something bad
been taken away from him and a little
more of the other tiling put in its
place. The servants thought he was
queer, and loved his quiet ind stoical
kindness, which was many years
older than his age. Most hoys would
have lived up to the princely grandeur
of lis environment. To Paul it meant
less tin,” a tree with birds singing
In its branches.
in his thirteenth year came three
events of vital importance In the
shaping of his future. First liis moth¬
er died. No one would ever know Hie
terrible, unhealing wound It cut in
Paul's heart. It was James Kirke. the
hardened and power-peeking jugger¬
naut of flesh and blood who went to
pieces wheu he discovered that death
had- been fearless enough to cross his
path. Hist agony was tike a storm,
tragic for a time, and quickly over.
He settled hack info the fierce strife
of his money getting r>> Hie time Paul
began to grieve. But the shadow and
the fact of death changed him a little.
He saw himself alone, except for tils
son. And this sou, after years ot
ipassing interest on his part, became
the kernel of tiis plans and ambitions.
He was now king. Some day bis boy
would be king. And it was his desire
nod his decision that he should be a
greater king than himself. Pride fired
his resolution.
But here the geographical genius of
Fate again stepped in with humors of
its own. In another Fifth avenue
home a baby girl was boro to the wife
of Kirke’s most implacable financial
enemy, Henry Durand. A few months
later, three thousand miles or more
away, an Immigrant ship left for
America. On hoard this ship was a
clear-eyed, hopeful wc<Mcutter from
the mountain country of central Eu¬
rope With him were his wife and
baby. They were an unimportant
three. The sea might,hove swallowed
them and no one would have cared
very much, for their adveniure was
only one of millions of a similar kind
The immigrant baby’s fortune began
and ended with the few little clothes
she wore. The other baby was worth
millions one second after she came
irtto the world.
Paul continued to grow up, and with
equal steadiness bis father continued
to amass fortune and influence. ' it
was his passion to smash and break¬
down, then devour and build up—until
some one called him the Anaconda, a
name which fitted him so well that the
newspapers would have used If had
they dared. Kirke was always within
the legal boundaries of his country’s
laws. He absorbed shipping com¬
panies, railroads, coal mines, and tim
berlantls, and sent out his engineers
to corner vast water-power rights.
From an industrial point of view he
was constructively an asset, for wher¬
ever he broke down or consumed small
activities he builr up larger ones. P.ut
morally and ethically his brain was
inspired Dy a covetous and avid desire
to rule. He was intoleient of rivalry,
and this brought him each year In
closer and more deadly contact with
the equally far-reaching interests of
Henry Durand. The titanic struggle
between these two Goliaths of finan¬
cial and industrial activities is a part
of Wail street history The more in¬
teresting story of Paul and the two
babies is known only to a few. chiefly
about Lac St- Jean.
That his father married again soon
after Molly Kirke’a death and had
another son did not hurt Paul, except
that it made him grieve more deeply
for his mother and added to his loneli
ness. He got along only fairly well
in college, because he could never
completely shackle his mind to duties
that were confined within stone arid
brick walls. It took him an extra
vear to finish an engineering course,
and after that he was never happy
except when in the open spaces In
CLEVELAND COURIER.
a business way he was Interested only
In his father's fimherinnds and such
water-power projects as were situ
ated in the wilderness As a whole he
was a disappointment to his parent.
One restless night the greatest ot
all his Ideas came to James Kirke.
The next day he went boldly and in
friendly spiril to the office of Henry
Durand, and for hours the two colossi
talked over Kirke’s suggestion that
their Interests fie combined into one
giant force of countless millions. They
parted friends. In a little while they
were seen at the dubs together. Later
the all-powerful Kirke-Durand cor¬
poration became a reality. The
flinty old warriors worked hand in
hand, their assets multiplied. Their
palatial homes were scenes of mutual
intercourse. Their wives were inti¬
mate. Their children became ac¬
quainted.
In his thirty-second year Paul mar¬
ried Claire Durand.
In his thirty eighth year, the son ot
one of Hie richest men in New York,
fie was officially in charge of the
huge engineering work on ttie Mistas¬
sini river in the wilderness north of
Lae St. Jean and had been three years
on the job. - v
During these three years he had
known Carla Haldan.
He was thinking of Carla as he
looked from a window of his bunga¬
low office on the hill down over the
vast and naked workings of an engi¬
neering achievement which was cost¬
ing fifty million dollars. He felt no
exultation or thrill of pride, and in
his eyes was a far-hack, somber gloom.
What he saw was to him an unending
and nauseous pit into which a steady
and monotonous drizzle of rain was
falling. There were fifteen hundred
men on the job below him working in
Appearancfe Adds Much
to Value of Property
I do not think, says a real estate
expert, writing in the Washington
Star, there is an owner of any kind
of goods who will get the same angle
on maintenance as do some property
owners. A storekeeper maintains his
place of business in. the most attrac¬
tive fashion and presents his stock in
such a way as to interest buyers. The
property owner in many cases ap¬
pears to feel that it is not necessary to
keep a property modern or maintain it
in good condition to either sell or rent
it. There are innumerable cases that
could be cited wherein an expenditure
Of a few dollars on a property lias
added a thousand dollars to its soiling
price or greatly increased the return
front its rental. Persons buying or
renting real estate are influenced just
as much by the condition of the stock
or property which they have in mind
as are the.buyers of any other com¬
modity.
. Proper maintenance of real estate
is a factor in the sale or rental of it
that cannot be disregarded by Hie
owner exefept at a financial loss to
himself. There is uo better time to
give active interest' to this subject
than now. Spring is a forerunner of
blossom and bloom, and it can be made
just such a season for the property
owner who will adequately maintain
liis real estate, because from such ac¬
tion on his part a profitable buyer or
a desirable tenant may blossom and
bloom as the result.
Commence Work on Lawn
as Early as Possible
In the spring, lawns should be
finned.by golfing several times. On a
day when, fain is anticipated, an ap¬
plication of equal parts of sifted wood
ashes and groilnd hone meal at the
rate of live pounds per 100 square feet
will provide a splendid top dressing.
A little good garden loam, mixed with
the fertilizer, will bring good results.
.Get your lawn done as soon as
weather, conditions permit proper
working of the soil. Seed sown early
will get: established before hot weath¬
er, and will compete better with weeds
Out. This may be a matter of some
time.
Lsitvns ' about new houses are usual¬
ly composed of excavation earth, and
must: brt fertilized and have riel) top¬
soil added. Even where the original
levOi is preserved, building operations
will have resulted'-in hard, beaten soil
about the house, which must he
plowed or spaded. The inevitable
result is a crop of weeds, whose seeds
are contained in the soil turned up.
If you have this experience, just keep
the weeds from seeding—another year
will see very few recur.
Tribute to Progression
The editor of this newspaper was
a visitor in Opp recently. We were
much pleased to note the progressive
spirit in evidence there. They have
now completed their street paving.
They have erected many new business
houses and improved and enlarged
others. There is attractiveness about
rmfny of the stores there that would
do credit to any city. The business
men of Opp have always shown a pro¬
gressive spirit. The fine women of
that city also take an interest in the
civic well-being of Opp. The city is
clean and the lawns are well kept and
there is everywhere a manifestation
of community pride which is hearten¬
ing to the observing visitor.—An¬
dalusia (Ore.) Star.
Plan City From Start
Smaller communities may find in
larger cities some very forceful argu¬
ments to commend a policy of cor¬
recting errors before errors pass be¬
yond the point of correction. City
planning and zoning contribute to
beauty and convenience and commu¬
nity efficiency as well as increasing
and safeguarding property values. City
planning remains-city planning up to a
certain point of progress, then it be¬
comes city rebuilding. It is easy to
train a twig, but difficult and often im¬
possible to change a tree.
Beautify Highways
Garden dubs are taking their ac¬
tivities to the state highways in an ef¬
fort to beautify these for the pleasure
of passing motorists. At a recent
meeting of the Garden club of Georgia
at Atlanta it was decided the club
would sponsor the beautificaton of the
highway between Atlanta and Rome,
a nearby town, with shrubbery and
flowers.
Houses Behind Times
Everywhere about us we see change
and progress. Farming, manufactur¬
ing, office methods improve almost
daily. No longer is anything impos¬
sible of accomplishment. No precedent
is so strong that it cannot be broken.
Yet in this age of fast movement some
12,000,000 homes remain as they were
built, anywhere from la to 100 years
ago.
Consider Front Yard
It is typically American to want to
appear well to others. Why not start
in the front yard? It is here that tfie
passer-by gains his impression of the
home. What sort of an impression
does your front yard make?—Ex¬
change.
\
ittWl'V
iaY?*S
Peribonka.
three eight-hour shifts, nnd neither
darkness nor storm could stop them,
lie could see them moving and crawl¬
ing about like ants nr their labor. In
his mind they added nothing to the
scene, unless it was i< give grimmer
reality to a hell that was smoking and
boiling over. Everywhere a rumble
and din, everywhere the fierce and
heartbreaking labor ot men, every¬
where t!ie ugliness and madness of a
man-made place of torment.
Paul was thinking this even with
Carla Haldan in his mind, lie dykes coulj)
see the gray-while sluices and
with their cement nnd steel,walls, and
ttie monster sections of the almost
completed dam. which was to harness
northern waters to the production ol
light and power for twenty million
people. Three years othuman effort
and millions in-capital lay under Ills
eyes. Vet about, it all was only one
excusable and beautiful thing fof him.
That was the rim Of'wilderness; the
green .and black and purple boun¬
daries of the forest which clung like
a frame about the workings.
His contemplation ol the scene In
the valley was interrupted by a voice
at his office door, aod fie turned to
greet the most Ultimate of his friends
in the field, Colin Derwent, who was
the company’s medical man. Even on
rainy days, and with I,is hoots dogged
with mud, Derwent ' ' cheerful
was a
soul. With his Front by little mus¬
tache. tiis-.smooth - cbOfeks, fiis liveli¬
ness of movement, and his apprecia¬
tion of ah phases of life, he con¬
tinued to hear the appearance Of t
buy, though he had filled an Important
chair in medicine hi Johns Hopkiua
(TO BE CONTINUED)
Left-Handedness
After a close study of several sets
of identical twins, two eastern scien¬
tists have observed- that there is an
apparent relation between the ten¬
dency to left-handedness and the" di¬
rection in which n-lforis ’ in the hair
curve, says Popular Mechanics Maga¬
zine.
Iri every case where it was possi¬
ble to determine whether the hair on
the crown of Hie head grows in a
right-handed, or clockwise, spiral it
was discovered that the person- had a
more or less strongly developed. ten¬
dency to right-handedness. If the
whorl was curved to the left, the per¬
son was left-handed.
Daily Thought •"
God is an infinite ocean of all good
without any admixture ot evil; an in
finite treasure-tiofis'e of all riches,
without any fear ot poverty; an in
finite source of all jo.v, without any
apprehension ot grief; an Infinite
cause of all good, comprising all, ah
solutely ah good tilings.—Father An
gelo.
9 orrfifiuui Building;j - ‘
‘
""llmtcommnsn my. ‘
9‘ \ e S S lg: "s: x min—ul-lllluuulullllil gs—Tum ‘
.
a 1]” '1 'W M4. 1
l % ummSw-YM-l, .fmmm'wmu‘:
‘ ‘ 1 i :‘Ifi'fiiijfiiiii Mmfim ‘
1 ' I I Mummmw
C 1‘1 t i 1 I I “'1 ‘ ! . 1' I] mum. «manganwmfl width-W Alligfulm 5%“ $1 o‘l'NhW z 1 ,
H. ‘ “222%“33‘33‘3’3'
Children will fret, often for no
apparent reason. But there’s al¬
ways one sure way to comfort a
restless, fretful child. Castorial
Harmless as the recipe on the it
wrapper; mild and bland as
tastes. But its gentle action
soothes a youngster more surely
than some powerful medicine
that is meant for the stronger
systems of adults.
That’s the beauty of this special
children’s remedy! It may be
given the tiniest infant—as often
as there is any need. In cases of
colic diarrhea, or similar disturb¬
ance, it is invaluable. But it has
everyday uses all mothers should
Men \Mint Pals, Not
Patients!
QHE was engaged! She was the
happiest girl in the world.
A round of teas and parties, a
whirl of pleasure, and she began
to wonder what was the matter.
Too tired to go out—and he—
was he becoming tired of her?
It was at this point that Miss
Margaret Belden of Los Angeles
woke up to the fact that some¬
thing had to be done about it.
“Men want pals, not patients”
she writes. “I went right to my
doctor. Do you know what he
said? Rest—and Nujol!
“With a prayer in my heart
cabinet I began to fight back to
being the healthy, robust, happy
girl I had been before. Two months
passed. No more tears—no more
worrying, no more bad dreams. To¬
day I beat him on the tennis court,
and although he can out-swim me,
I make him work doing it. It's good
to be happy. It’s good to be free,
physically, and be able to share, any
time, in sports or dancing or any¬
thing else with the one you love!”
* Here’s another one who has learned
that the simplest and surest way to
be well and full of good spirits is to
clear the bodily poisons out of your
system regularly. Not with power¬
Treatment The Complete r\\Y Skin a
dfin&isttp.nt Consistent ii: use of
Cutieura preparations will
do tnuch to make—and keep
—your skin healthy andclear.
Soap Soap 25c. Ointment 25c. am! 50c. Talcum 25c. Proprietora:
Ointment Potter Drug & Chemical Corporation, Malden, M«ww
Talcum
Doctor’s PRESCRIPTION
when system is sluggish; DRWBCMDWfliS
costs nothing to try
When your bowels need help, the mildest thing
that will do the work is always the sensible choice.
Take a laxative that a family doctor has used for all SYRUP
sorts of cases of constipation. Dr. Caldwell’s PEPSIN
Syrup Pepsin is so pleasant to the taste, so COMBINED WITH
gentle in its action, it is given children of tender LAXATIVE
age and yet it is just as thorough and effective as senna compound
stronger preparations. Pure senna, and harmless
laxative herbs; ingredients that soon start a gentle
muscular action. Avoid a coated tongue, bad breath, P »>CE <50CENTS
bilious headaches, etc. Every drug store has Dr. PEPSIN SVRUP CO
prescription in big bottles. Or *°u
Caldwell’s famous ■kwticeuams uja
just write Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, Monticello,
III., for a free trial bottle.
A Florida Friendship
A New Yorker is a man who gets
acquainted witli his next door neigh¬
bor by meeting bin) down in Flor¬
ida.—From Life.
Firs! Aid Flit is sold only
to can in black this with band/ yellouf the
clean kitchens
Flit Kills Roaches!
O 11)30 staaeo In,
understand. A coated tongue calls
for a few drops to ward off consti¬
pation ; so does any suggestion of
bad breath. Whenever children
don’t eat well, don’t rest well, or
have any little upset—this usually pure
vegetable preparation is
all that’s needed to set everything
to rights. Genuine Castoria has
Chas. H. Fletcher’s signature on
the wrapper. Doctors prescribe it
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ful drugs, but normally, naturally,
easily. Doctors and nurses recom¬
mend such a natural treatment as
Nujol, because this crystal-clear
liquid isn’t a medicine at all! It can¬
not harm even a little baby! It con¬
tains absolutely no drugs. It is
simply internal lubrication that your
body needs like any other machine.
Good looks and good spirits—do
they spell popularity? You know
they do! Get a bottle of Nujol to¬
night in any drug store. Sold in
sealed packages only—trademarked
“Nujol.” Insist on Nujol by name.
It costs but a few cents—and it will
make you feel like a million dollars.
Good Advice
Mrs. lioniium—I-ni sorry I wrote
that letter. *
Bonham—Weil, there's no use in
crying over spilled ink.