Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Mar 1925, p. 2

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THE lift HENRY Ft,A f Wf>E AT.KR. Hf^fflWRT. ,-t P&>vf! \CS$:: ri\*'$ l " ' r . «!' ?•:: TaCure oCald in ke1**® Laxative Bromo Quinine, The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet Proven Safe fcr more than a Quarter of a Century as an effective remedy for COLDS, GRIP, INFLUENZA and as a Preventive. The box bears this signature (o.sfcStr* Price 30c. 1 -.ia Do you yearn" for a clear complexion?* Try the Resinol products a week and watch your skin improve 1 Resinol Soap thoroughly cleanses the tiny pores and rids them of impurities. Resinol Ointment soothes and heals the inflamed, irritated spots. The most aggravated cases of skin affection have readily responded to this treatment. C*a ba obtaiaad from all druggist*. RESINOL If; TOR COLD IN HEAD ®@KfiF B&, FOR PAIN LUI. U I PSI. C m SINNERS in HEAVEN By CLIVE ARDEN "I HATE YOU!" 8TNOPSIS.--Living In the small KnR-Itsh village of Darbury, oldfashioned and sedate place, Barbara Stockley, daughter of a widowed mother. Is soon to celebrate her marriage to Hugh Kochdale. rich and well connected. Barbara Is adventurous, and haa planned, with an aur.t, an airplane trip to Australia. Major Alan Croft, famous as an aviator, is to be the pilot. At her first meeting with Croft Barbara Is attracted by his manner and conversation, different from the cut-and-driad conventions of her small town. They set out, Barbara, her aunt. Croft, and a mechanician. Word In a few days comes to Darbury that the plane is missing and Its occupants believed lost. Croft and Barbara, after the wreck of the airplane in a furious storm, reach an apparently uninhabited island In the Pacific ocean. The other two members of the party had perished. The two castaways build a shelter. In Croft's absence Barbara Is attacked by a black man, evidently-a savage. Croft rescues her. Croft discovers a party of blacks, evidently reconholterlng, but they leave without attempting to harm'the pair. Croft fixes up an electrical guard to scare off attacking natives. Copyright by The Bobbs-lisrriU Co. ' fhpr m Itoaia, add on pint of hot Water. cover head with Vpwel and inhale the dedicated sterna. Try ZMO OIL for Flue or Catarrh Xt Drag Stores or by Parcel Post, 35^ M. R. ZAEGEL & CO. 639 Eighth St. Sheboygan, Wis Stop Chile's Cough Quick-To-day ^ feafore it has a chanco to develop into croup or something dangerous, get right after that couch of your chad's. No use to dose with ordinary cough syiups. At once give Kemp's Balsam--a fine old-fashioned tried and proven medicine safe for children. It heals the throat and prevents the cold from p-oinf through the whole system. Only 30 cents at all stores. For that Cough f .KEMP'S BALSAM - Tears of joy and sadness are Holt drawn from the same tank. DEMAND "BAYER" ASPIRIN Aspirin Marked With "Bayer Cross' Has Been Proved Safe by Million*. j Warning! Unless you see the nanw "Bayer" on package or on tablets you •re not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 23 years. Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. Sttttattons may prove dangerous.--Adv. PART TWO--Continued. Quietly, as If explaining the"mechanism of a watch, lie explained how It worked. • "I will load it, and fix it ready for use,*' he concluded. And the girl who, In England, hnd shrunk from all firearms,' took the little weapon from him eagerly, welcoming it as a valued friend bringing, possibly, the greatest succor of all. . . . As they sat in the dark hut, upon their upturned suitcases, near the window aperture, the strain upon Barbara's nerves became almost unbearable. With every minute her faith in the electric ruse, never strong, grew weaker; until it ebbed away, leaving only a ghastly death, or worse, creeping nearer with the rising of every star. . . . She faced the moment when, her companion slain, she would seize the revolver, turn the dark muzzle to her fluttering heart, place her finger on the trigger. . . . She clasped and unclasped her clammy hands, sitting upright; then crouching back against the bamboo. . . . Only fear of disgrace in her companion's opinion restrained her wild impulse to rise and flee somewhere--anywhere --to escape this fearful ordeal. Had Croft touched hef or spoken, her control would have snapped altogether. But he sat perfectly still, his gazev fixed upon the dark slope down which their enemies would come, his mind apparently oblivious to all else, As she watched him, her fevered brain seemed gradually to grow calm, her faitli in his confidence and ingenuity to strengthen. . . . The strain relaxed. Hope struggled feebly with in her heart. She no longer felt the wild desire to scream or to escape. Her clenched hands parted, and she sat back with a sigh. Those who, from lack of imagination and its sense of fear, face a terrible ordeal with gallantry, are justly called brave; but those who, tortured by these possessions, foreseeing all with shrinking dread, yet meet it with no outward flinch, deserve the laurels of heroism. Some such thoughts flitted through Croft's mind, as he sat waiting, fully conscious of the suffering silently endured by his companion. When she relaxed against his shoulder, he drew a breath of relief. . . . What seemed like hours passed In the silence and darkness. Then Barbara suddenly raised her head. "Have I been asleep?" she whispered, in astonishment. He turned to answer, whipping suddenly back to the aperture, and craning forward. A sound had reached his Intent ears--the faint distant crepitation of snapping twigs. Now that the dreaded moment had arrived, Barbara was conscious of an utter lack of agitation. Save that lier fingers closed upon his arm, she gave no sign: her eyes followed his, peering Into the starlit dusk without. For several minutes nothing more was heard. The girl was beginning to think It had been a false alarm, when all at once a slight rubbing noise reached them, as of something wriggling over rough ground. At the same Instant a dark form was dimly discernible flitting, shadow-like, from a distant tree to the shelter fif a large rock, there falling to the earth. Presently, from behind this rook, Issued a little, snaky, black stream--three or four bodies waddling along on their i fronts, their outline faintly dlstln-, gulshable. Minutely sweeping the whole visible horizon with his keen eyes. Croft now perceived other black streams, issuing from other temporary shelters, slowly trickling down the slope. . . He leaned back. "They are crawling along upon their stomachs, as I predicted, to avoid detection," he whispered. Presently, two or three figures detached themselves from the moving mass and wriggled forward with Incredible swiftness, leaving t|jMt remainder some yards behind. "Scouts!" whispered Croft. it's luck that brightens life. $ Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION BtxyNAS INDmKiSfOESnTsX WJ, 6 BELLANS Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS :AND 75* MCKAGES EVERYWHERE m S5= W. H. U„ CHICAGO, NO. 10-1928. Barbara caught her breath sharply^ drawing back Into the hut. Croft, his eyes fixed upon the advancing figures, laid fi'lsliand upon the transmitter, with forefinger outstretched toward the little key upon which so much depended. No sign of the wire encircling the hut was visible In the comparative gloom. A few tense moments. . . . then he pressed the key, keeping It down, giving the spark gap a slight adjustment. Then, from all around, rose a deafening medley of howls and frenzied yells, partly of pain but more often Of fear, as the advancing men came in contact with the wire, seeing the wicked blue sparks hiss at their bare flesh, feeling the sharp sting of the electricity. Those who escaped it were equally terrified, and the whole order broke up. Some rolled upon the ground rubbing themselves, still howling ; others fled, screaming, toward the south. A few, braver, tried again to reach the goal; and agai^ retreated, half petrified with fear of the unnatural. Croft waited until but a few Stragglers remained near the hut. "Now," he cried, "we must show ourselves, and complete the illusion!" "Oh !" remonstrated Barbara, "is Ithat necessary?" " % "Yes; if It's to.be a success." ' Seizing her arm, lie dragged upon the door, and whirled her round to the landward end. • Those natives who remained uttered loud, fearful shouts, at sight of the two white figures; falling upon their faces, they stretched otit arms of supplication, gabbling what seemed to Barbara unintelligible nonsense. Those lieeing turned, halted, then likewise fell upon their fac^s, terrified at these apparitions in the starlight. For a moment th6 girl thought her companion had lost his senses. Loosing her arm, he sprang forward with a bound, his arms wildly waving. Appearing ninnaturally tall, his white shirt and bandaged head increasing the supernatural effect In eyes used only to a dark naked skin, he went through a pantomime of weird gestures. Now and then this was interspersed with extraordinary utterances snarled from between gleaming teeth and cruel, drawn-back lips. The wild awful fury, seeming to emanate from every pore; terrified her: he looked every Inch a savage himself.' His weird babble bore strong resemblance to that of her pursuer. Apparently the prostrate natives understood at least part of the discourse : for occasionally eager hands were raised In supplication, accompanied by cries or moaning rep l i e s . . . . Suddenly, as If at some command, the groveling wretches scrambled to their feet. With another torrent of wild words, he wheeled round, and. to her amazement, threw his arms around her, pressing her close. . . . What seehied. in the excitement of the moment, like a cloud of smoke, together with a sharp explosion, momentarily dazed her senses. . . . She felt-herself lifted bodily, whirled back again round the hut and In at the entrance; while, from without arose a fresh confusion of howling cries, with the tread of running feet, as the warriors, terrified by the magnified effects ot the revolver shot In the dusk, dashed for their lives away up t h e s l o p e . . . . Once Inside, he leaned back against the bamboo, still holding her close, his breath coining first, every nerve tingling, primitive iniin among primitive men, after the savage state into which he had worked himself. "Well done!" he panted, laughing wildly. "The revolver--just then--was an inspiration! Vanishing In a puff of smoke finished the trick !" Barbara gasped, too much astonished to realize that she was still clasped In his arms, having forgotten the existence of the revolver during the last scene. It hung from her hand, still smoking a little from Its accidental discharge, • "W-wlia t--were--yon. doi^r she stammered. „ . Again he laughed wildly. "Teeing them we were sent here by their gods, and should blnst the Island Info a thousand bits if they showed us hostility? You saw the effect?" "I did, indeed!" Realizing their position, she tried to fnee herself, but his arms tightened. "Among natives.", he continued, excitedly. "a wife is tabu to her husband. To^-touiroike you doubly safe, I told them you were my--my wife." "Your--" Words failed her. More vehemently she struggled, suddenly afraid of him. of his savage grip, and of the eyes which glittered strangely in the semi-darkness. But ordinary shackles of restraint had fallen from Croft for the moment. Since those wonderful hours of the night before, the girl had assumed a new prominence In his mind. Fie had hecbnie acutely aware of her, as he had never yet been aware of any woman. It was all strange, bewildering. Life or death, man and woman, savage, primitive passions pitted against, savage, primitive passions. . . No drawing room code of morals or manners was guiding their destinies put here lie laughed again, pressing her fiercely up against his chest. "So while we are here, you are mine! Don't forget. You may belong to another in Englandbut nere, you--you are mine!" His tone wns exultant, and he bent her backward so that her face was upturned. unprotected beneath his own. His breath came hot and fast above her lips. Some primeval, caged beast inst'.nrt seized her, too, sweeping away fear. Raising her free hand, she dealt him, with sudden passion of rage, a blow In the face while struggling violently in big-grasp. Ills arms loosed her so abruptly that site nearly fell. For a moment lie stood Before her, his hands groping at his head, looking dazed, or as* if awakening after some vivid dream. She confronted him with the fury of a little wildcat. "You ace raadl Mad 1 I--oh--I hate you!" Covering her face with both hands, she strove to subdue the extraordinary tumult within her . . • . then looked up at the sound of the door being hastily shut with a crash of bamboo canes. With a gasp of relief, she realized that she was alone. Had that eventful night ended with the accidental discharge of the revolver, their daily life might have continued more or less placidly, like the waters of some river, with but an occasional rock obstructing Its even course. But Croft's amazing lack of self-control had been like a huge stone hurled violently into the center of the river, causing ever-widening circles to extend. Intensified a hundredfold, all the fears of her first afternoon upon the Island rushed riotously back. She became conscious of him as she had never been before: not only of the force of his will, but of the strength of the passions lying dormant under a cold exterior. , ; . . Nothing more had been said concerning the episode. Half expecting some kind of apology, she had decided, next morning, to accept It frigidly, drawing close the cloak of her own reserve and dignity. • But the apology never came. He did not appear at all until, neatly midday, when he arrived with arms full- of fresh fruit. Then it was he who seemed encased In a mantle of such Icy reserve that her own attempts dwindled to mere foolishness. She took refuge in silence. A stone wall and ten miles of land might have divided them. He spent the afternoon fetching things over from the reef, leaving her severely alone. This position endured for some days. He seemed to keep away as much as tssible. and her loneliness became at lies Intolerable. But she learned many practical things. He taught her to create fire by friction with wood; to bake breadfruit--that substitute for a cereal in the South seas--in hot embers, then scoop out the interior; ot* preserve it by drying thin slices in the sun. She soon acquired primitive ways of preparing, with a campfire and a few old native vessels, the strange fish, birds and the fruits he brought. Then, one day, he came striding down the slope, after being absent for hours, looking strangely haggard round . . . Seized the Coconut and Hurled It Down the Beach. the eyes. With disconcerting suddenness. In characteristic, brief sentences, he demanded, more than suggested, friendship between them. "We can't go on . . . this life's unbearable. . . . ." JHis voice was unusually curt. The sentences were disjointed, his nerves evidently worn thin. She was taken unawares, at'a moment of deep depression, when everything seemed very dark. Not pausing to reflect on the possibility of similar suffering having impelled this request from one unaccustomed to beg, she shrank hack, her fears and suspicions crowding In. 'I'm afraid 1 can't, trust jowir-- friendship. I can't forget--" » He looked at her queerly, with eyes that flashed in sudden anger. "D--n It all! That was an exceptional night. Can't you understand?" But years of Puritan surroundings are not wiped out in less than a week. "I'm afraid not. I--" "Then you must lump it!" He turned away with an expressive Shrug, and disappeared up the hill. That was the only overture he ever made; and the strain between them Increased. Barbara welcomed anything which made work to absorb her thoughts. For the terrible feeling of impotence, the sheer homesickness, the loneliness, were ever below the surface, ready, .all together or Individually, to spring upon her at any moment. A day arrived on which the onsets came "not singly but In battalions." She had been alone for hours. When Croft arrived, her spirits were below zero, her nerves frayed, her temper was not of the best. He glanced at her shrewdly, but appeared to notice nothing. Coming to the liut, he dropped a large coconut Into her lap, where she sat outside the door. "There you are, my .child! Get busy!" he remarket! casually. Uncontrollable Irritation, the result of solitary fretting, welled up within her. Impulsively she seized the coconut and hurled It down the beach. "Don't call me that! I'm not your 'child'--nor anything to do with you." There was a moment's silence; then he gave a little laugh. "No, Indeed! Let's thank the good Lord for that, at all events." - ^ She looked up, dumfoundedV'jNIt he had turned away Into the hut. ^ i • So that was the position? Her dislike was returned in full? A sharp stab of hurt pride and desolation caused sudden tears to rise and roll down her cheeks. She scrambled to her feet and, out of sight among the brushwood, lay dpwn and sobbed out her heart. . Croft got his own supper that night. He made no comment on her swollen eyes and lack of appetite. But when she took the large shells used for plates to wash in the lagoon, lie rose, impulsively, to follow her. After a few steps, however, he paused uncertainly. With a little helpless" shrug, he returned to the hut. Each day he spent much time upon the reef, salving all that wns possible of the machine, until wtyat remained was swept away one night by the tide. A dozen times a day, one or both climbed the hill and vainly searched the horizon--gathering, with dwindling hopes, more fuel to heap upon the growing pile which ^some day might flare Into a beacon twattract a passing vessel. The natives seldom ventured far from their settlement. Whenever Croft encountered one, the frightened wretch took to his heels. Only once did he meet one with sufficient courage to reply to the white man's questions. But, at the first allusion to ships and other white men, his fortitude^ gave completely away; with a wailing cry of fear, lie turned and vanished among the trees, leaving Croft no wiser. . . . Barbara was haunted by thoughts of Hugh's suffering. To be alive. In splendid health, yet unable to inform those mourning her death, could be equaled only by a like Impotence upon the other side of the grave to allay the sufferings of those beloved upon earth. After a lifetime, too, of Inseparable companionship, this new existence, In which Hugh had no part, seetned strangely incomplete. Yet, paradoxically again, his presence was not needed here: he would have seemed as much out of place as the proverbial flsli out of water. Croft, on the other hand, appeared dully more suited to his environment, fitting in as if It were indeed his "natural sphere." Gradually, as the past grew fainter, her confidence returned. His apparent disinclination for her company, though reassuring in one way, piqued her In another. So she withdrew Into her own shell; and the Invisible,wall grew higher between them, only occasional chinks appearing, or thln'places through which they came a little nearer. At these times the girl regretted her refusal of his one friendly overture. . . . It was one evening, two or three weeks after the natives' attack, that the largest chink in the wall appeared. The day had been unusually hot; and she strolled listlessly up to the river to bathe. With bare sunburned feet, and the revolver--without which she seldom stirred--stuck in her belt, she passed through the grove, through the tall dark avenues beyond, to the clearing by the water's edge» There she halted, amazed. Face downward lay Croft, his dark head buried in his arms; beside him were one or two branches of bananas; a couple of breadfruit had rolled, unnoticed, a few yards away. Barbara is shocked by Croft's display of passion. Yet she is piqued by his show ef Indifference. What next? - Babies, Dropped 30 Feet, Escape Fire Providence, R. I.--Two children perished and four other children were saved from death by being hurled from a second story window In a fire here. Marion BTOWBIB", sixteen, th«» eldest of five children, discovered the fire in the tenement and awakened her mother. Together they took a baby and two girls, aged four and six, respectively, from their beds "and dropped them from a window 30 feet to the frozen ground, after finding two stairways enveloped In flames. A fifteen-year-old boy was also assisted to the sash and pushed out. The children escaped serious injury. Finally mother and daughter flung themselves from the window, both being hurt In the fall. ^ 1 after every meal* Daswwfa.- nmm A • (TO BE CONTINUED.) "To Walk Spanish" To make a person "walk Spanish" Is to make him come up lo.time, or to make him act under compulsion. It refers to the old sport among boys in which one boy seizes another by the collar and the seat of the trousers and forces him along on tiptoe. Hence, "by extension, it means to walk gingerly. Apparently the expression originally referred to the manner In which the Spanish pirates used to handle their prisoners while starting them oat on the plank.--Exchange. Mirage Produced by Passage of Light Ray# After the natives' attack, a new phuse began between the pair. Paradoxical though it may sound, the hours which brought them so near to- ] gether widened the gulf between them. The mirage is an optical illusion in which Images of distant objects tre seen as If Inverted or raised in the air, says the Detroit News. This phenomenon • as first explained by a Frenchman who went with Nftpoleoa on his first expedition in Egypt, where mirages are very common. The phenomenon Is due to the rays of light being changed in their dlre^ tlon -when passing through colder or hotter strata of air. Layers of air In contact with the surface ot deserts become greatly expanded and rarefied, while those Immediately above remain denser, thus causing the light rays to be bent upward. However, over water the condition. Is Just the reverse. The layers above are wanner than those next to the water. When an object appears to be lifted above its real position In the phenomenon it Is called looming. In the case of looming the reflection Is from the skjr while In ordinary mirage It Is front the earth. Mirages are common In Egypt, Persia. Turkesta.i, California, Nevada and Alaska. HERMIT IS FOUND x -FROZEN IN SHACK ' Spurned World When Wife Fled Years Ago. Springfield. Mo.--The story of a prominent school teacher wh<> became a hermit after separating from his wife 45 years ago and finally froze to death In his shack in Howell county, Mo., was unfolded when relatives came to claim the body of Christopher Arnold, seventy. Arnold and his wife separated In 1879, when Arnold ordered his fatherin- law from his home. His wife went along, taking their small son with her. She left a three-year-old daughter with "him. Arnold deeded all of his property to his wife and left the country. N. After educating his daughter he came to the Ozark region and settled near rWilIow Springs, buying a small tract of hilly land. He refused to have anything to do with neighbors and no one knew of his relatives. That was 25 years ago. When neighbors failed to see smoke coming from his shack it was decided to investigate. They found Arnold's frozen body on a pile of straw in the corner. The only piece of furniture, was an old stove and the only food was some cornmeal In a tin can. A bit of paper furnished the clue to his Identity and messages were sent to Ohio and Indiana. His son, William Arnold, superintendent of schools at Richmond, Ind., cume and claimed the body. Mistress* "Ghost** Haunts Farm Hand Hampton, Conn.--Saying' that he holds spiritualistic conversation with Mrs. Phoebe Simons, by whom he was employed without pay for 20 years as a farm hand prior to her death last' July, Herbert Lyman has refused to leave the farm and says he regards It as Ms duty to remain and guard the property. This is the charge made by H. G. Hills, administrator of Mrs. Simons' estate, who has instituted proceedings to have Lyman ousted from the property. which has been sold. Hills and Lyman have retained counsel to represent them at the hearing. According to iftlls, he has offered Lyman $500 cash and all the stock and farm implements If he will vacate the property. Lyman estimates his wages for 20 years at $8,000, but has refused all offers of settlement, Mr. Hills alleges, which do not include Ills right to remain as guardian. The purchasers have agreed that Lyman may remain until spriug, but seek control of thfe property unencumbered at that timet Cleveland on the Cow Grover Cleveland's composition on the cow, written when he was a small boy in school, follows: "The cow la very useful If It ware not for the cow we could not have no milk to put in our coffee and tea. "Every part of the cow is useful; the skin Is tanned Into' leather and boots are made of |t. The flesh Is good for food and is called beef; their horns are made into buttona. • Of milk butter and cheese Is tnadc. There Is a glutinous substance by the hoof which Is made Into glue--indeed If It were not for the cow, we should have to do without many things which are considered necessaries of lite."--i City Time*. M Parents'- encmrap fh€ '%•hiidren io care mr their ummf ©ive them Wriglejrfc. It removes food particles the teeth. Strengthen* iunu. Combats add Bdtablii& and beneficial! H'Aim TIGHT KEPT RIGHT Pet Pony Is Placed Upon Operating Table Philadelphia. -- Trussed up and swinging in a hammock, a pie-bald pony Is being treated at the veterinary school of the University of Pennsylvania. The pony belongs to Mrs. Irene de Pont, of Wilmington, and was sent to the university to have healed a tendon, severed recently in an accident at Wilmington. The operation was performed before 200 veterinarians from the Middle Atlantic states gathered for the annual Veterinarians' association convention at the university. While children were playing with the pony, a sled smashed Into him and cut one of the leg tendons. He was brought Immediately to Philadelphia on a motor truck and delivered at the clinic. The pony was chloroformed and stretched upon an iron table. For an hour doctors worked over him. Cheats fry Radio Strasbourg. Frunce.--The use of wireless as a means ot "cribbing" by a young Strasbourg medical student has horrified the whole faculty of the university here. It appears that the aspiring Alsatian Installed a wireless telephone receiving set under the table at which he was due to undergo a crucial written test, and that a friend, coached him from thw optalde- ^ jv'l Kills Eight in Family Rome.--Dispatches from Oagliarl, Sardinia, reported that unknown assassins invaded a home during the night and killed eight members of one family as they slept. The messages stated that a widespread search bad been Instituted for the criminals, whose motlvgm. were not known. Orders Boy Spanked Houston, Tela*--Found guilty of a charge of cruelty to a dog, a thirteenyear- old boy was ordered by Juvenile Judge Bryan to write Vest's "Eulogy of a Dog" 500 times. The boy was paroled to bis father, who was U> glvp his son, a spanking. # Shirane Volcano Active Tokyo.--The Shirane volcano near Kusatsu is again pouring out ashes and smoke, and the populace haa ftsd from the vicinity. ^0"$AKCJJ h CREME FACE POUDRE Its fragrance captivates. Adds a pearly clearness to the skin. Stays on unusually long. This exquisite Cold Cream Face Powder has an oriental perfume th^C lingers and fascinates. AtJl toilet countm yoc and ft TOTAT W TRIP Performance is the BestTesf Have yon ever made this test ot HwisWotor ? Do it today. More miles, smoother miles, faster miles, with less "loss" of oil will show you how decisively MaaiMzlsa excels, MonaMotor will sell you OQ perform* ance. Stick to MonaMotor. You'll be satis- Bed with MonaMotor performance. Your motor will live longer. Boy oil at the sign. Voalateli Vaaafaetvdar Oo. Council Bluffs, Iowa Toledo, Ohio Oils & Greases All. eviU are "giant evils" to thoeo who have no faith In the human race. Croup Means Danger! Be prepared to i he dangerously clogged throat the Instant an unexpected attack* arrives. A well-known physician's prescription brings relief without vomiting. In 15 minutes. It la the quickest known relief for Coughs. Colds and Whooping Cough, and has been used In millions of homes for SS years. If you have children, get a bottle of this time-tried remedy--Or. Drake's Glessco--at your druggist. Only 60c a bottle.--Adv. A true friend is forever a friend. Keep Stomach and Bowels Right Br si Tin* bafar tha harml--• purely T»K Infanta'aadchthi ran'Twrnlator. MO. WNS10V7 SYRUP MACS astoaiahlns. (itlUyiui results (• maktaff baby's stonack digsst Ettofao*ir asnhdou lbdo wats Uta amthohwv s s tim*. Guaraatead fra* from narcotic*, opiatas, alcohol and all harmful inp«dk Snts. Safe and satisfactory, i tfR. HUMPHREYS* COLDS G R I P I N F L U E N Z A . mMM.

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