Newspaper Page Text
MercolizedWax Keeps Skin
Get an ounce and directed. Pine Young particles njed
use an of
elcm peel off Until oil defects sueK an pimples, liver
spots, tan and freckles disappear. 8kln is then soft
and velvety. Your face looks years younger. M«
Wax brings out^the hidden hidd " n beauty of your at
Brain Model in Neon Tubes
An illuminated model of the hu¬
man brain and central nerve system
has been made by two physicians of
Vienna, Austria. One hundred pieces
of neon tube were used. The glass
construction enables the showing of
both exterior and interior parts, each
particular section being illuminated
as desired during lectures.
BAYER ASPIRIN
is always SAFE
J/emcutdi/iVL
Beware of Invitations
GENUINE Bayer Aspirin, the
kind doctors prescribe and millions
of users have proven safe for more
than thirty years, can easily be
identified _ by the name Bayer and
the word genuine as above.
Genuine Bayer Aspirin is safe and
sure; always the same. It has the
unqualified endorsement of physi¬
cians and druggists everywhere. It
doesn’t depress the heart. No harmful
after-effects follow its use.
Bayer Aspirin is the universal anti¬
dote for pains of all kinds.
Headaches Neuritis
Colds Neuralgia
Sore Throat Lumbago
Rheumatism Toothache
Aspirin is the trade-mark of Bayer
manufacture of monoaceticacidester
of salicylicacid.
Quick Growth
A little girl who had been left to
watch the soup was presently heard
to sing out:
•‘Oh, mother, come quick, the soup
Is getting bigger than the pot.”
Of the many human buds but few
ever bloom successfully.
WASTED AWAY.. .
NO STRENGTH
Macon, Ga.—
“I was so run¬
down I feared I
would have a
nervous break¬
down after my
baby was born
—I wasted away
to almost noth¬
ing. I felt as if I
would never
my strength
back and was very much discour¬
aged. A friend highly recommended
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis¬
covery,” said Mrs. R. L. Lang, 131
Stratton St. “I felt improved after
the first bottle but when I had
finished the third 1 was just fine—•
my same old self, had a fine ap¬
petite, no headaches, quiet nerves,
no pain of any kind.” All druggists.
Query
“So this is your new building?”
“Yes; setback.”
“How much did it set you back?”
Imaginary troubles fill the world—
and no way to exercise them.
“Lucile is the
Happiest Girl’
So many mothers
nowadays talk about
giving their children
fruit juices, as if
this were a new dis¬
covery. As a matter
of fact, for over fifty
years, mothers have
been accomplishing
results far surpassing anything you
can secure from home prepared fruit
juices, by using pure, wholesome Cal¬
ifornia Pig Syrup, which is prepared
under the most exacting laboratory
supervision from ripe California
Pigs, richest of all fruits in laxative
and nourishing properties.
It’s marvelous to see how bilious,
weak, feverish, sallow, constipated,
under-nourished children respond to
its gentle influence; how their breath
clears up, color flames in their
cheeks, and they become sturdy,
playful, energetic again. A W estern
mother, Mrs. H. J. Stoll, Valley I’. 0.,
Nebraska, says: “My little daughter,
Roma Lucile, was constipated from
babyhood. I became worried about
her and decided to give her some
California Fig Syrup. It stopped her
constipation quick; and the way it
improved her color and made her
pick up made me realize how run
down she had been. She is so sturdy
and well now, and always in such
good humor that neighbors say she's
girl in the V» est. ’
the happiest California Fig
Like all good things,
Syrup is imitated, but you can al¬
ways get the genuine by looking for
the name “California” on the carton
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One Wonderful Week
by C. S. Forester
(WNU Service.)
Copyright by Bobbs-Merrill Co.
CHAPTER VII—Continued
— 22 —
Hawkins seized the shrinking Har¬
old once more by (lie finger, and
forced him round the room. lie stood
him up against the fireplace. He took
a length of rope from under the bed,
tossed it over the spike in the wall,
and fastened one end to Harold’s
handcuffs. He strained on the rope,
pulled Harold’s arms to their full
stretch above his head and made it
fast. Then he fastened Harold’s fet¬
tered feet to Hie bars of the fireplace.
All this without a word and with a
cold-blooded efficiency which lacerated
Harold’s nerves. Next he struck a
match and lighted the gas ring, and he
rested the end of the poker in the
flames. Hawkins looked round at
Bauer, received a nod of approval
firom him, and preceded to wrench
off Harold’s collar and tie and to tear
open his shirt and vest so that his
chest was bare.
Bauer apparently considered his im¬
passioned statement that lie had put
the letters in safe deposit at the hank
,as a clever scheme to avoid handing
them over. He was between the blank
wall of Batter's skepticism and the un¬
yielding sword blades of Hawkins’
cruelty.
Hawkins took tip the poker care¬
fully. He brought the glowing end
close to Harold's naked chest and once
more looked round at Bauer.
“Now,” said Bauer, “fell me where
those letters are."
“They’re at the bank,” raved Har¬
old. “Really and truly and honestly
“The Fellow Bleats Like a Calf.”
they are. I've told you the truth—
I’ve—”
“Touch him with it,” said Bauer
curtly, .and Harold’s protestations
changed into a wild scream.
He tried to writhe in his bonds;
from Iris throat there poured forth a
stream of wailing, pitiful appeals. At
one place his breast was smarting like
fire; at another lie could feel the glow¬
ing radiance of the poker, an inch
from his twitching shin. Bauer’s ex¬
pression of merciless determination
changed at last to one of baffled rage.
“The fellow bleats like a calf,” he
said. “Let him loose. He is speaking
the truth. Take him away.”
Hawkins dragged Harold from the
room; when, at the foot of the stairs,
Harold found that lie could not mount
them fettered as lie was, he used the
toe of his boot in an endeavor to per¬
suade Harold to achieve the impossi¬
ble, but at last lie consented to free
one of his feet and kicked him upstairs,
into his room, onto his bed, and then
once more clasped the vacant end of
the handcuff to the hedrail. He de¬
livered one more kick to the wretched
Harold and then strode out of the
room. ’
Harold lay on the bed; he did not
notice the smart of the slight burn on
his breast; he did not feel any ache
where Hawkins had kicked him. He
was too possessed by the ghastly mis¬
ery of his friendless, helpless condi¬
tion. He lay on the bed with his face
in his handcuffed hands, and his shoul¬
ders shook as he sobbed out his mis¬
ery in a torrent of real tears—tears
of exhaustion and fright and misery.
It was eleven years since lie had last
wept, but the world was so bleak and
gray and cruel. And the fact that
he was weeping only accentuated his
appreciation of its cruelty.
Wright had seemed friendly the
night before, witli his kindly acts and
conversation, but today all trace of
his friendliness had vanished. There
was no one, no one, who eared at all
for Harold, and he was shut in here
and unable, as a consequence of Ids
own folly in endorsing the deposit
form, to free himself at all. Soon
they would torture him again. An¬
other gust of sobbing shook Harold’s
exhausted frame.
Hours and hours after this the door
opened quietly and shut equally quiet¬
ly, the key turning in the lock with
hardly a sound. Some one came and
stood at Harold’s bedside. Harold
sensed him although lie did not look
up; he only turned away and moaned.
“That’s all right, old man,” came
Wright's voice in a comforting tone.
"I'm a friend, not an enemy.”
Harold opened his eyes and looked
at him.
“Here,” said Wright, "let’s get those
gadgets off, and then you'll be more
comfortable.”
CLEVELAND COURIER
lie snapped off the handcuffs from
Harold’s wrists and ankles, and put
them in his pocket.
"Cigarette?” said Wright. “No?
Don’t smoke? You’re lucky.” He
lighted a fresh cigarette at the stump
of the old one, and sat down leisurely
on the edge o' the bed.
“Don't shout or anything," he con¬
tinued; “they won’t hear us if we talk
decently quietly.”
Harold had not attempted to say
anything at all, far less shout. The
arrival of the Archangel Gabriel with
all the heavenly host could not have
made him move dumb; he was half
choked by the strange and unjustifi¬
able hope which was flooding up in his
breast.
"D’you want to get away from
here?” asked Wright, casually.
“Yes.” said Harold, and even that
monosyllable cost him a struggle.
"That fellow Hawkins is a cheerful
benst, isn’t he?” went on Wright con¬
versationally. “Of course, he’s a hit
sore because you kicked him in the
stomach on Sunday night, besides
wetting him through an’ giving him
the h—I of a cold.”
“Was that—was that you?” asked
Harold, a note of awe in his voice.
“Of course it was. And it was jolly
clever of you to have guessed we'd be
coming.”
Harold made no attempt at enlight¬
ening him on that point; yet all the
same his spirits were immensely up¬
lifted by his thus learning that once
at least he had fought and defeated
these inhuman people,' and lie was
cheered to glory by t lie knowledge
that he had kicked Hawkins in the
stomach. Instantly, ridiculously enough,
he felt a new man.
"But this isn’t business,” said
Wright. “Let’s get things fixed up
It’s like this, Bauer doesn’t know yet
whether you’re telling the truth about
that deposit. We know you’ve put the
letters somewhere. We went through
your pockets last night and found—
tin's.”
He produced the leather and strap
which Harold had originally received
from the fainting Bauer.
“The Frankfurters may have ’em
for all he knows—though I know they
haven’t.”
The corner of Wright’s mouth went
up in a queer half-smile.
“What Bauer says, though, is that If
the Frankfurters haven’t got ’em, and
they really are at your hank, they
can’t do any harm while we hang on
to you. He says that if he keeps you
here for a fortnight or so on quarter
rations, combined with periodical at¬
tentions from Hawkins, and you still
stick to that story, he'll begin to be¬
lieve you. You wouldn’t like that,
would . 'll?”
Harold shuddered and turned away
his face.
“So that’s where I come in. The
Frankfurters got at me in the street
today at lunch time, and we went and
had a quiet little drink to talk things
over. And they offered me—certain
inducements, to get you away from
here. That’S why I believe in your
bank story. The Frankfurters don’t
ever give five thousand quid for noth¬
ing. That’s what they're offering for
your miserable body, dead or—no, they
distinctly said they wanted you alive.
And for five thousand quid I’d sell my
chance of salvation, let alone you or
the D. O. B. G. G. So I’m going to
perjure m.v soul and double-cross the
D. O. E. G. G. and get you out of
here.”
“But suppose—” said Harold, “sup¬
pose—”
“Suppose you won’t come? Dear
boy, but you will come. To start with,
the Frankfurters are a cut above old
Bauer in the way they treat their pris¬
oners. It was young Kurt Rudolstein
himself whom I saw—he’s in London
expressly about this business—and I
got tiis solemn word that they wouldn’t
starve you or torture you or do any¬
thing unpleasant to you. Kurt says
that all they want to do is to offer you
a fair price for the letters, and he’s
sworn iie won't try any monkey tricks.
And lie's an honest Jew, and I’d
sooner take an honest Jew’s word
than—my own. for instance.”
There was just a hint of bitterness
in Wright’s voice as he said this last.
But the bitter smile on his face
changed to one of merciless determina¬
tion immediately.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Early National Marches
When Washington was first inaugu¬
rated ns President in New York in
1T80, the orchestra leader, a German
named Pheil, at the John Street the¬
ater, composed “The Presidents
March,” in honor of George Washing¬
ton, and played it when Washington
attended the theater. The march im¬
mediately struck tlie public fancy. In
the summer of 1789 a voting man in
the theater company, for whom a ben¬
efit concert was to be given, asked
Joseph I-Iopkinson to write an orig¬
inal song for the occasion. This song,
set to the tune of “The President’s
March,” was “Hail Columbia,” as we
know it today. It was called “The
President’s March” in contradistinc¬
tion to the march of tiie Revolution
called “Washington’s March.”
Ray Baths for Horses
Race horses and dogs are being
treated with artificial sunlight just
before they go on the track In Eng¬
land. Some stalls are fitted with
four powerful lights, and in the rays
front these the animals stand quietly
while raking their “baths.” Among
those in the know the sunbath Is con
sidered a factor when deciding racial
odds.
GEORGIA
NEWS
Happenings Over
the State
President Hoover recently nominat¬
ed Paul L. Smith to be postmaster at
Athens.
Ground was recently broken at
Rockmart for the erection of a new
postoffice building at that place.
Exports of cotton and rosin to the
Far East through Savannah have
shown a decided increase in the last
few months.
G. Burdick, well driller of Atlanta,
has been employed by the council of
Zebulon to drill another deep well
for the town to augment the present
water supply.
A drum and bugle corps was or¬
ganized at a meeting of Milledgeville
Council, No, 135, Junior Order Amer¬
ican Mechanics, at a recent meeting
of that organization.
December exports from the district
of Georgia, No. 17, of which Savan¬
nah is the chief port, were valued at
$3,690,595, it is revealed in a govern¬
ment report just received.
2. T. Harris, for more than 50 years
proprietor of the Harris house at Ro¬
berta, and believed to be the oldest
active innkeeper in the state, died at
his home in that city recently.
According to reports reaching Spar¬
ta. many farmers in Hancock county
have lost their home-cured meat on
account of the unseasonable weather
which has prevailed all of the win¬
ter.
The new state revenue commission
has extended the time for purchas¬
ing automobile license tags, without
penalty, until March 1. The time lim¬
it. was extended over Chairman Doy
al's protest.
Henry J. Sweat, former sheriff of
Ware county, has been declared the
Democratic nominee for sheriff of
Ware county, following the consolida¬
tion of votes cast in the run-off Dem¬
ocratic primary recently.
A pageant depicting notable scenes
in connection with President George
Washington’s visit to Savannah on
May 12, 1791, including his arrival by
boat and his handling on the bluff
will be planned for May 12.
The Cotton Manufacturers’ associ¬
ation of Georgia will hold its thirty
second annual convention in Atlanta
on April 5 and 6, according to an an¬
nouncement issued from the executive
offices of the association in Atlanta.
A lighted highway to traverse the
hills and valleys of Georgia from north
!o south, through valleys and hills
where the Indians picked their trails
is the latest undertaking of the Geor¬
gia State Automobile association for
this year.
In the heaviest vote ever polled in
Cook county, Sheriff Virgil Rooks was
renominated in the recent primary.
B. Powell, incumbent, won the coun¬
ty commissioner’s race, and J. W.
McCranie, present tax receiver, won
that race.
The B. F. Goodrich company will
employ newspaper advertising to a
larger extent than ever in 1932, ac¬
cording to P. C. Henderson, director
of Goodrich advertising, now i t At¬
lanta, where he attended the annual
sales conferences recently held.
Application has been filed with the
public service commission by the re¬
ceivers of the Georgia and Florida
railroad for permission to discontinue
the operation of the Sunday trains on
the Tennille branch of that road run¬
ning from Tennille to Augusta.
The Alma Exchange Credit Bank¬
ing union, only banking institution in
Bacon county, just northwest of Way
cross, has declared a 10 per cent divi¬
dend on all stock, in addition to set¬
ting aside more than 20 per cent of
the net earnings for a surplus.
“Seeing the Carnesville Charge,” is
the title of the leading editorial in
last week’s issue of the Wesleyan
Christian Advocate, so ably edited by
Dr. Elam F. Dempsey. The editorial
dwells quite extensively on the pvo
gressiveness and kind hospitality of
the splendid and loyal people in this
charge, who are continually putting
forth every effort to make the world
a better place in which to live.
Governor Russell told Ut£ farmers’
conference at Athens recently that
when the state’s total cotton crop does
not bring as much as $ 50 , 000 , 000 , it
becomes necessary for the farmer to
raise more of his own foodstuff. He
praised the Georgia State College of
Agriculture as an institution which,
he said, had inspired every community
in the state and had brought farmers
in every section of the state together.
Mrs. M. H. Margeson, chairman of
the women’s auxiliary of the mayor's
committee on emergency relief, was
recently acquitted on charges of vio¬
lating the Sunday closing laws in a
decision handed down by Recorder A.
W. Callaway.
Georgia farmers are devoting more
attention to livestock. A report re¬
cently issued by the Georgia crop re¬
porting service of the federal depart¬
ment of agriculture shows an increase
in cattle and hogs in Georgia on Jan¬
uary 1, as compared with the same
date a year ago.
Mother of 7— Still Young
npIIE woman who gives her
1. organs the right stimulant
need not worry about growing old.
Her system doesn't stagnate; her
face doesn’t age. She has the health
and “pep” that come active from a lively
liver and strong, bowels.
When needs you’re help, sluggish don’t and the lot
system take a
of “patent medicines.” There’s a
famous doctor’s prescription druggist for
just such cases, and every
keeps this standard preparation. laxative It
is made from fresh herbs,
active senna, and pure pepsin. Just
ask for Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin. until
Take a little every day or so,
every organ in your body feels the
big improvement.
The next time you have a bilious
headache, or feel all bound-up, take
this delicious syrup instead of the
Millions Thrown Away j
by Wasteful Methods i
How much water is wasted by a
dripping tap? An answer was provid¬
ed when New York decided to levy
a fine of two dollars for every tap
found leaking. In two years 40,000,
000 gallons of water were saved. It
seems absurd to worry about the
amount of steam wasted when a lo¬
comotive blows a whistle. But Doc¬
tor Foley of Indiana university has
calculated that 2,434,020 tons of coal
tire consumed annually in generating
INDISPENSABLE’’
for children
"Cod liver oil is not a 'luxury,' but an indispensable food for
young children. . . . Cod liver oil should be included in the
diet of all children under 2. years of age, and it may well be
given to all young children. . . ." This quotation is froru the
Government’s pamphlet, Emergency Food Relief and Child Health.
In Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil, you have a palatable
form of high-vitamin-test cod liver oil, easy for children to
take. Scott & Bovvne, Bloomfield, N. J. Sales Representative,
Harold F. Ritchie & Co., Inc., New York.
Listen to the Scott c? Bowne radio program, '‘Adventuring with Count
von Luckncr,” on Sunday night at 9.30 p.m. ( E. S. T.) over the Columbia
Coast-to-Coast Network.
Scott’s Emulsion
OF NORWEGIAN COD LEVER OIL
Island Bird Sanctuary
St'. Ivilda, a lonely island some
seven miles in circumference off the
outer Hebrides, lias been sold by the
former owner, Sir Reginald MacLeod,
to an ornithologist Vito wishes his
identity to remain hidden. This
buyer plans to keep the island in its
TIiait Nagging Baekaelte
May Warn Bladder of a Disordered Kidney
or Condition
MM HHEED promptly a nagging
backache, with bladder ir¬
regularities and a tired, nervous,
depressed feeling. They may warn
of some disordered kidney or
bladder condition.
Users everywhere relv on Doan’s
Pills. The sale of mill ions of boxes
annually attests to Doan’s popu¬
larity. Your druggist has Doan’s.
IIO!ll!*S PHIS A Diuretic
for
the Kidneys
Lioness Followed Girls
Escaping from her cage in Earl
Shilton, England, Zenita, seven-year
old lioness, quietly followed a crowd
of well-fed girls just returning from
dinner to a hosiery factory. The
girls scattered, but Zenita raided a
RELIEVES HEAD, CHEST and BACK COLDS 1
ALBATUM ©
Stainless "Rub In" and inhalant unsurpassed
in preventing and relieving cold congestions
QUALITY McKesson £ Robbins SOLD AT AU
SINCE 1833 DRUG STORES
Snappy Game
“Mother, Johnnie's throwing sar¬
dines at me.”
“Well, chee. she asked if she could
play sea lion.”
G BAui.f„, VANITY CASE
Handsome
lOceni
advertisement. (2) xcs and complete
parents i of of childret children or young adults who have Club Feet, In¬
fantile Paralysis, Spinal Curvature, or Hip Diseases. (3)
State which of above afflictions each cripple has. (4) Give ageof
cripple. (5) Send all with lOeinstamps. All five conditions must
be complied with to get the vanity case. Offer closes A pr. 30,1932.
McLain Orthopedic Sanitarium 915 Aubert Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
usual cathartic. You’ll be rid of all
that poisonous waste, and you
haven’t weakened the bowels.You’ll
have a better appetite, and feel
better in every way. The constant
use of cathartics is often the cause of
a sallow complexion and lines in the
face. And so unnecessary!
Would you like to break yourself
of the cathartic habit? At the same
time building health and frequent vigor that sick
protects you from
spells, headaches, and colds? Get a
big bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s syrup
pepsin today. Use often constipation. enough to
avoid those attacks of
When you feel weak and run-down
or a coated tongue or bad breath
warns you the bowels need to be
stimulated. Give it to children
instead of strong laxatives that sap
their strength. It isn’t expensive.
steam to blow United States locomo¬
tive whistles, and that if the whis
ties were moved slightly forward
and adapted to a single high-pitched
note, more than 1,000,000 pounds a
year could lie saved. But this loss
is small compared with that involved
in titrowing into the dustbin cinders
that would still give a lot of heat, it
is estimated that a third of the cin¬
ders thrown away retain from 50 to
70 per cent of their heating value.
A conceited man is easily fooled.
natural state so it may remain an
ocean sanctuary for the sea birds
which migrate there in great num¬
bers. Under the terms of the pro¬
posed plan it will he possible for
tourists to land and visit the huge
island aviary, but no buildings will
be placed on the land.
vegetable garden and was captured
later in the factory yard.
Many novel writers of today give
you nobody to lie fond of in their
novels, and their leading characters
are often tiresome.
Mere Matter of Money
Millionaire—You say 1 can help
you through college?
Young man—Yes, sir, by subscrib¬
ing to this magazine for 500 years.