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Familiarity
E'AMILIAKITY " makes us care
less and unobservant. But there
comes a day. when we observe
and think. Then we suffer. As a
a boy I loved life and country
things. I used to get up to see
the sun, as an old divine 1 once
read remarks, “corning forth from
his chambers In the East.” 1 have
come In to breakfast drenched in
dew. How it used to glisten and
sparkle in the morning light! But
that is all a thousand years be
hind.—J. A. Btewart.
Brave deeds are most estimable
when hlddpn . . .
What was finest In them was
the desire to hide them,—Pascal.
WORK. “FUN
AGAIN J1 With
Constipation
Cleared Up
rpHE end of everyday found her tired
A out, nervous, often with headaches.
But now, thanks to Nature's Remedy,
work ia fun again—she feels like going
to a movie or dance any night. Mil¬
lions have switched to this natural all¬
vegetable laxative. Contains no miner¬
al ot phenol derivatives.
Instead a balanced
combination of laxative
elements, provided work by
nature, that natu¬
rally, pleasantly. When Try
an NR tonight.
you see how much bet¬
ter you vegetable feel you’ll know
why tive a is best. Only correc¬ 25c.
at druggists. ^
THE A. H. LEWIS
MEDICINE CO.
St. LoUU, MUsourt
FROM GIRL TO WOMAN
Hear what Mrs. L.
L. Thompson of 2322
Commonwealth Ave.,
Jacksonville, Fla.,
says: “My health went
feminine all to pieces through
trouble. I
suffered greatly at cer¬
tain times. My head
— m ,„ would swim, I had
„• pains ,in piy side.
After taking Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip¬
tion I enjoyed eating, rny system functioned
perfectly and today I Wad no more druggist pains or
aches, ” Euy of your
WORMS
AND
TAPEWORM
are quickly expelled
from the human sys¬
tem with one single
dose of
Dr. Peery’s DEAD SHOT Vermifuge
ISOc » bottle a, <lruei,-i»ts or
W’rtKht'H 1111 Co., 100 Gold St., N.Y. City.
FRUITS-VEGETABLES WANTED!
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Owr induce market shipments. quotation* Write are not exaggerated for them. to
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SCHLEY BROTHERS
"The Dependable House ”
IK Fast Camden St. BALTIMORE, MD.
• I Established SO years and the only Wholesale
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ONE ENLARGEMENT
JACK RABBIT CO.
Sp.it.obur, South CaroHiup (COIN)
IV MI 7
No Need to Suffer
‘Morning Sickness'
“Morning sickness” — is caused by an
acid co idition. To avoid it, acid must lie
offset by alkalis — such as magnesia.
Why Physicians Recommend
Milnesia Wafers
These miht-flavored. candy-like wafers are
pure milk of magnesia in solid form—
the most pleasant Way to take it. Each
w afer is approximately equal to a full adult
tlose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chew ed
thoroughly, then swallowed, they correct
acidity m the mouth and throughout the
digestive system and insure auick, com
plete elimination of the waste matters that
cause gas, headaches, ldoated feelings and
a dozen other discomforts.
Milnesia \\ afers come in bottles of 20 and
48, at 35c and fer (>0c respectively, handbag and in
Convenient tins vour contain¬
ing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately All
one adult dose of milk of magnesia.
good drug stores sell and recommend them.
Start using these delicious, effective
anti-acid, gently laxative wafers today
Professional samples sent free to registered
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on professional letterhead. Ssl.ct Products,
Inc.. 4402 23rd St., Long Island City, N. Y
35c & 60c
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20c tins
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Bol
Davi/
'Mvea/i\
The Merry Flagstaff Painter Recounts
His Ups and Downs.
TI7TTH no object other than to
TV take the air along the beau¬
tiful parkway fringing the Gulf of
Mexico in this attractive center
of culture and refinement, I found
myself in the live oak grove of
Gul.f-Park College, an institution
devoted to the intellectual advance¬
ment of girls thirsting for university
careers.
Silve for a gardener and some tree
pruners shampooing the most mag¬
nificent forest ever set out in a city
limit, the place seemed deserted. None
the less, a more alluring environment
is Inconceivable. So, hoping for some¬
thing that might justify exploration, I
proceeded on my way,arriving eventual¬
ly at a three-acre campus, obviously
laid out for athletic activities.
From the center of this grassed do¬
main, an 80-foot flagstaff, straight as
a lance and crowned with a gilded ball,
pointed heavenward. Halfway up—or
down, if preferred—a muscular man,
supported only by a looped rope that
hound his knees against the fragile
spire was occupied with laying a coat
of aluminum paint upon the perpen¬
dicular bodkin. By tricks known only
to sailors who conquer masts, this top
lofty artist, a bucket In one hand and
a brush In the other, behaving with ail
the sangfroid of one accustomed to
defying gravity, manipulated his
looped rope length to control his prog¬
ress downward.
Professor of Pole Painting.
Here, before my very eyes, and
wltliln the range , of my Intelligence,
was a complete course In flagstaff
painting, featuring the methods of
one high In the art. Something new
In the curriculum of an up-to-date
college. Live and learn. Enthralled,
I watched the professor, silhouetted
against the unstable blue sky, do
his aerial stuff. Slowly, and with
Infinite grace, he descended with
clock-like progression until at last
his feet pressed the grass. Aloft quiv¬
ered the glistening silver shaft, Its
eleven telescoped sections visible.
Assuming the prerogatives of a stu
dent, I made enquiries,concerning the
art of flagstaff painting. "Books like a
good profession for young men. Not
much competition, I Imagine."
“No, it Isn’t brush-vyiehier, exactly crowded," re¬
plied the wiping > Ids
hands on a gasoline soaked rug. “A
little slack after the 1920 panic. I’rtor
Vo then 1 had all 1 could do through¬
out the South from Texas to Georgia
Given an opportunity, 1 could paint
eight or ten flagstaff's a day, at from
$10 to $25 a stick. When tbe break
came nobody seemed to care a whoop
about the Stars and Stripes or whether
they ever got up again. ‘You'needn't
come around here drumming business,
we are off flag stuff for the present'
said the consumers; 'Old Glory Is In
the moth halls for a stretch.' I shifted
to painting smokestacks.”
I mentioned the fact that In the
South Independence day was not so
hot since the rebellion.
Old Glory Is Supreme.
“Well, we're getting over that, and
you can take It from me that the
American flag is the only flag; that (lie
old idea of exploding fireworks on
Christmas Instead of July 4 is fading
out. It Is my intention to continue In
this profession."
"With all its risks?”
“That’s something else again," said
the steeplejack, reaching Info the back
pocket of Ids overalls. "Here’s a
copy of the release from all damages
that may arise If I crack down; an
agreement fn duplicate that entitles
me to bust up entirely at my own ex
pense, if at all. I can’t buy Insurance,
either lire or accident. Three years
ago, while painting the 16ft foot flag
staff on the Baylor university at Waco.
Texas, a lightning bolt struck the
peak, ran down the steel halyard
chains ami passed into the earth,
leaving me slightly shocked but tin
singed, about 50 feet from the top."
••Didn’t you come down even for
Inspection?"
His Job Takes Nerve!
"No. Lightning either knocks you
off the perch or It doesn't. I re¬
mained up until the job was finished,
glad to he alive and still aloft, instead
tif merely a handful of cinders on tlie
roof below. Perhaps after all it is
safer up a flagstaff than on the motor
crowded earth where one is at the
mercy of amateurs. I's steeplejacks
never get in anybody's way, or inter¬
fere with the traflic regulations.”
“I suppose yon have favorite spots
among the clouds.”
"Surest thing you know. 1 would
rather do a paint job on tne one lum¬
ped and forty-foot rod that sticks
out of the five-hundred and fifty-foot
tie,, Telephone building in St. Louis.
Mo., than to fool away an afternoon
sashaying around a public park."
"What do you do for exercise; vaca¬
tions. and the Kke?" . . .
“Oh. I visit around among flagstaff's
here and there; shin up an old friend
mm and then for a shot of sightsee
ng, so to sneak and keep myself in
touch with the new models in both
wood and metal. You would lie stir
prised at the improvement in staff
construction during the last few years
Take it fiotn me. flagstaff's are coming
Pack fast ''
*>— wxu service.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ★
★
★ STAR ★
★ ★
★ ★
★ ★
★ DUST ★
★ ★
★ ★
* •M-ovie Radio ★
★ • ★
★ ★
★ ★
★★★By VIRGINIA VALE ★★*
'^^OWADAYS N sure for there executive is- one of
way an
a motion picture company to find
out whether his company consid¬
ers him really important or not,.
If he’s a big shot',' he’s- not al¬
lowed to fly. That l s‘ a hardship
when a njan Is commuting from
Hollywood to New York .and hack
again, of course—but hardship or not,
they take trains. ~
Only last week-three of -Metro's big
men wanted to get from Nevy York to
Hollywood In a hurry, and planned to
fly; they had done ir so often that it
meant no more to them than walking
down the street; they -knew ail too
well that flying was no'more danger¬
ous than any other means of transpor¬
tation. But at the last minute some¬
body got wind qf their plans. The
resulting argument was hot and hgayy.
—but In the end they went by train.
One of them didn’t really object,
however. He was Howard Dietz,
chief of publicity and advertising.
“That’s all right with me,” he re¬
marked. Til win a thousand dollars
at bridge on the way out.”
—a—
There’s just no stopping them—T
mean these girls who are as deter¬
Joan Bennett
Ann Harding, who Is naturally .so
blonde, has been doing" pretty well
with serious roles for a long, long time.
• ■ —
,
On the. other hand, Mariop Talfey
(ex opera star and farmer, now work¬
ing hard in pictures)-, has turned
blonde for her first screen appearance.
If you have seen her, or sden photo¬
graphs of her; in the old days, you're
going to Ije surprised at her. appear¬
ance; she has lost, a lot of weight, and
it is a big improvement.
* ■-jV—i
Thosq Major Bowes aiqatbnr „8tage
unit® have been so successful that.Bob
(“Believe It Or,Not”) Itlpley is going
to have some of his own;'the first will
begin Its tour sfftnewherC 111 fk'ew Eng¬
land the last of A-prij.. It will prob¬
ably Include these acts: Little JeaYiio;
a tliirtyqiound midget;' Grace' Mur¬
phy's quintuplets, live .ballet dances
averaging three hundred pounds each;
a concert pianist who plays-—and well
—with his elbows; John Tio and Ijis.
talking bird; and a man who', makes
music with leaves. Bob himself, en¬
countered at a party after tl\e opening
of Uingllng's circus, was trying
curb a strong desire to go out with
them himself.
—
Frank Parker, who bobs ur on so
many radio programs, is going to make
another picture; his first, you’ll re¬
call, was “Sweet Surrender.” He’s
been on the Stage, so he’s prepared for,
a movie career. -
Speaking of his stage career, the
other day Fifii D’Orsay came to a re- .
hearsal of" her radio show with a pic¬
ture of the cast of "Greenwich Village
Follies of 1925." Willie Howard
glanced- at it, then at Parker, and said,
“Frank, there’s a fellow in this picture
who looks exactly like you.”
“Looks like me?” retorted Frank.
“It Is me. I was a chorus boy.”
—ft— -."
I wish you could meet Bette Davis.
She’s an overwhelming young per¬
son, because she’s so devastatingly
frank. No matter what you ask , her
she'ti answer it, and intelligently too—
with no regard for whether the movie
moguls will like what sh(t says or not.
Now some interviewers use rather
brutal tactics.
That doesn't *vork with Bette-PavW;
she doesn't get angry, she just tells
the truth, with a pleasant smile.
“How do you get along with your
husband?" someone asked'her recently,
‘There are reports that you’-ve sep¬
arated.”
, “Oh, we light,” she replied. “It’s
my fault; sometimes I simply have to
tight, and then nothing will stop me.',’
—k—
ODDS. AND ENDS . . . John Hole*
doesn't want to be tied down to one com¬
pany any longer: he’s going to free ianea
. . . Freitric March felt the same way;
thought he was making too many costume
pictures . . . So the first one he signed up
for «s a free lance was “Mary of Scotland "
with Katherine Hepburn . . . Paramount
is going to give us “Beau Geste" again,
in color this lime, with Gary Cooper in
the leading role . . . "A Message to
Garcia" is a fine picture . . . Jane If ithers
| does fine work in “Gentle Julia ” . . .
I Shirley Temple got another raise the
i other day . . . Practically all the uunie
| companies are trying to sign up Charles
j Boyer, You'll who's him already before under long in contract “The Gar- . . .
| see
j den of Sul/a Allah" tun's . broken : . And in color is holding . .. Mur
goret urm up
tti'o pictures . . . Myrna Loy uill be
teamed with If timer Baxter in “To Mary,
With Love"; remember them in “Broad
vay BUT'?
Western Newspaper Unioa.
CLEVELAND COURIER
mined now not to he
blonde as they once
were to be as blonde
ns possible. Jean
Hallow • Started It, of
course, by turning
“brownette," and now
we have Carole Lom¬
bard, Alice Faye and
Joan Bennett foltow
Inging her example.
They seem to feel that
It will help them to
k’et more sefions. roles
—quite forgetting that
HO$fyRE #0»7©DAY
Talk* / DR. JAMES 9 W. . BARTOM
About
Preserving the Figure
V7’OU A may have passed early
youth, are approaching or
have reached middle age. You are
in good health but find you are a
little sluggish or lazy, with ab¬
domen beginning to sag, and the
whole body attaining a “middle
age spread.”
As you remember your youthful fig¬
ure, and how you enjoyed games or
dancing you realize that it is the over¬
eating and the underexercising that are
causing the change in your figure.
Accordingly, you make a firm re¬
solve to take exercise at once
Dr. Barton
your has- been gradually
‘‘softening”—heait and muscles—and
any attempt to Jiarden.yourself up in
a short time will not only discourage
you from further attempts to regain
figure, and elasticity, but may cause
damage ,Tasting for months or even
permanently.
Col. George A. Skinner, M. D.,
Omaha, lit Clinical Medicine and Sur¬
gery, says: “The human body has an
elastic limit that is truly wonderful,
ami the amount of punishment it will
take and still do its work well. Is much
beyond that of any mechanical device
of man. A man may work continu¬
ously for several days and nights, get
24' hours sleep and appear to be nor¬
mal again, lie may starve himself
until his body weight is much below
average or he may eat until he Is
greatly Overloaded, with fat and'still
remain approximately in normal
health. The body can adjust Itself to
these extremes when yfftriig, but Jjiis
enormous elasticity Is gradually lost
and so as middip life is approached
this condition changes rapidly. Vary¬
ing with our family history and under
varying conditions, we lose this • in¬
valuable elasticity of’youth. While the
loss of elasticity happens to all of us,
we can" delay its going by proper hab¬
its of diet .and exercise.
Regularity Necessary.
In exercise the first thought is reg¬
ularity; ten minutes’ exercise daily
will give gradual development, where¬
as three hours Saturday or Sunday aft¬
ernoon may simply leave the muscles
sore for two or three days afterwards,
and the effect upon “the" muscle
of the body—the heart—may be more
harmful titan helpful. Also if you
-should decide to go in for vigorous ex¬
ercise at once go ns to get results
quickly you ask your heart, which has
done hut very little work for years,
to deliver extra loads of blood to tite
muscles too rapidly; It does not get
time to recover or adjust itself- and so
gives uii tot) much of its “reserve”
power. Sometimes the damage done
by this overexertion is apparent at
once hut in some cases the damage
Is tmt discovered untjl some time aft¬
erwards when perhaps the vigorous
training for the few days or weeks has
been forgotten.
Any physical director (athletic club
or. Y. M. C. A.) can show you in five
minutes the correct way in which to
do about three abdominal exercises
such ns bending f*>m side to side wi.th
the knees straight, lying on the back
and raising logs (with knees straight)
to the perpendicular position, or bend¬
ing-over and touching toes with knees
straight. These exercises remove fat
from abdomen, tighten the muscles of
abdomen giving a good carriage to the
body, stimulate flow of bile to pre¬
vent constipation, massage the large
intestine and so stimulate the flow
of wastes from the body. Five to sev¬
en minutes of these exercises twice
a day will bring gradual, safe and sure
results.
Walking Beneficial.
'The other exercise needed is walk¬
ing; This will keep the heart muscle in
shape by asking it to send blood reg¬
ularly and in a rhythmical manner to
the farthest point in the body. Using
the huge muscles in the legs to carry
the body forward means that much
blood will be needed and in purifying
it-before it is used the lungs will get
increased work and development. One
mile daily can be increased gradually
to three or more.
Of course the day golf is played the
walk can be omitted.
* • *
Gas Pains in Abdomen
While almost everybody gets a pain
In the stomach or intestines occasion¬
ally there are many who suffer a great
part of the time with what is called
flatulence or “gas pains."
The treatment of gas pains In the
stomach or intestine depends upon the
cause.
The food should be well-cliewed, and
the teeth are not in good condition
or soim of the chewing teeth are miss
rug. these conditions must be correct¬
ed at once. The diet also must be of
the type that from past experience
agrees with the individual.
e—WNl Service.
so as to get back the
elasticity and figure of
your youth as soon as
possible.
Now there isn't any
reason, why you can’t
get back your figure
and to some extent
the elasticity of for¬
mer years if you are
willing to use common
sense methods. These
HffThoils are simply to
remember that during
the years since your
A Colorful Picture for Your Wall,
Using Simple Embroidery Stitches
In honor of spring your house de¬
serves a colorful new wall-hanging
such as this, which depicts roses and
lilacs In their natural splendor.
You'll enjoy embroidering it—it’s so
easy even a beginner will be won
over to this delightful occupation.
The lilacs are in lazy daisy—the
roses in satin and outline stitch;
and you needn’t frame it—just line
it and hang it up.
In pattern 5527 you will find a
transfer pattern of a hanging 15 by
Noble Thoughts
'T'HE note of the day In all its
A higher and nobler trend of
thought is to Include, to share, to
communicate. Emerson has re¬
marked that “exclusiveness ex¬
cludes itself." /fr 11 that we keep
out we go without. If we admit
no one we deprive ourselves
of every one, and if we adniit
a few in order to lay to our souls
the flattering unction of exclusive¬
ness. we exclude the many. If
you have greater knowledge, finer
culture, do not exclude but share,
and find in it its dlvinest sweet¬
ness.—Lillian Whiting.
Counsel and wisdom achieve
more than set.se.
fir. Pierce’s.Pleasant Pellets are the orig¬
inal little liver pill* put up 60 years ago.
They regulate liver and bowels.—Adv.
Bluffs and Mountains
A man can make a big bluff easier
than he can a little mountain.
This story will interest
many Men and Women
lyTOT long ago I was like some friends I
J.Y have...low in spirits.. .run-down.. .out of
sorts. . .tired easily and looked terrible. I knew
I had no serious organic trouble so I reasoned
sensibly.. .as my experience colds has since proven... had just
- that work, worry, and whatnot
worn me down.
The confidence mother has always had in
S.S.S. Tonic. ..which is still her-stand-by when
she feels run-down.. .convinced me I ought to
try this Treatment...I started a course...the
color began to come back to my skin...I felt
better... I no longer tired easily and soon I
felt that those red-blood-cells were back to so
called fighting strength ... it is great to feel
strong again and like my old self. © S.S.S. Co.
SSS ‘ TONIC Makes you feel like yourse/k again
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The ,. FIRST QUART u .3- SAys 5"
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Out 15:5 3 has of the been cxpcncnce dm 3. sloped nf thousands a snmplc . memod of motor— l of ¢.flfi$fifl , ; _ 4‘. g
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many you go ‘ ,
refill before you have to add a quart. If you a
are Obligcd to add ml too frequently, try the ’3‘ .3 ; I. ‘3
3 ' "First don‘t Quart" farther Test with before Quake-r State, have to See add if i3“!‘-._fl“ 'fl’mf'fl . /'
you go you VL‘ 33%,??? m ‘
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up w ~13;
motor OlRfi‘ 1 e the mng safest Com lubrication, p an’,O‘lC't,Pa. 3 1 1 Quaker y State >m‘. l’, 11%?‘5 "" 3. V
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173*? 21-223: » 3 3. -3 3 ‘ .-
20 Inches; a color chart; material
requirements; illustrations of all
stitches needed; directions for mak¬
ing the hanging.
Send fifteen cents in coins or
stamps (coins preferred) to The
Sewing Circle, Household Arts Dept,
250 W. 14th St., New York, N. Y.
Baby Falls Into Basement;
Dad Makes Shoestring Catch
James Stier, fourteen months old,
rocked hack and forth in his high
chair in his Milwaukee home. It
toppled over and James fell through
an open trap door into the basement.
In the basement was the baby’s fa¬
ther, John. He heard the tot cry out
and looked up in time to make a
shoestring catch of his plunging son.
James escaped with a cut over one
eye.
REMOVE FRECKLES,
BLACKHEADS,
No matter how dull and dark your com¬
plexion, coarsened no by matter how freckled Nadinola and
sun and wind,
Cream, tested will and trusted clear for over a gen¬
eration, skin to whiten, beauty quickest, and smooth easiest
your new
way. Just apply tonight; no massaging,
no rubbing; work Nadinola begins its beauti¬
fying while you sleep. Then you
complexion see day-by-day restored improvement until white, your
is to creamy
satin-smooth loveliness. No disap¬
pointments; no long waiting; money
hack guarantee. Get a large box of
NADINOLA Cream at your favorite
toilet NADINOLA, counter or by mail, postpaid, only
50c. Box 45, Paris, Tenn.
5$ AND 10* JARS
THE 104 SIZE CONTAINS 32* TIMES
AS MUCH AS THE S« SIZE -=jg
- WHy PAY MORE ?
MOROLINE ■ ▼ I
SNOW WHITE .PETROLEUM JELLY
25 GRAND IRISES FOR $1.00
Al! different, labeled. l-c.Jaaper.Oa.
MANY KKAI-: GARDENS.It
WtftVh.
"Yes, I have come
back to where I-feel
like myself again."