CDAY, S, 1035
THE DUPLIN TIMES, ;
KENANSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA
Child Knew Jut 5'
. 1 re That Clam Went
e Hillings child on her Sunday
to the beach picked up a clam
: and regarded It - meditatively,
ow 1 wonder wnereY that clam
gone to?" she Inquired. ,
- tler parent, responded. tovt
r olds are always ; ; wonderng
lethlng,' and ; Billings was tony
ing in the hot sand,'. while Mrs.
. iing was bosy robbing, sunburn
on, her -persons :v;i.;v.';:ft;i
"I : wonder where tHat clam " has
i mo tor repeated the BUIlngs child.
No answer being'., forthcoming ' she
, -manded loudly: Vi'i-f&K?:.:!.':-
"Mommle, do you want to know
where that clam has gone to? . Dad
dy, do you want to know where that
clnm has' gone;. toT-i''kt-R;:"-'
Both ; parents averred absently
that they- .o'".vAi,;'
.Th Billings child tossed aside the
empty shell, picked. Op her pall and
eliovel and started for the water: In
departing she remarked f 'Si J, 'iw
"Ifs crawled into an oyster' slreil
and Is going around fooling people..
New lork San.
"" What Blessing , j
If they could -only devise" some
Find
Out
v From Your Doctor
if the f Pain" Reniedy i
v You Take Is Safe y
; " " Don't Entrust Your
Own or Your Family's ;
Wril . Banff to Unknown -
" Preparations ' ..
BEFORE yon take any Prepara
tion you don't know ad about,'
for the relief of headaches; or the
pains of rheumatism, neuritis or
. neuralgia, ask your doctor what he .
thinks about it in comparison
. with Genuine Bayer Aspirin,, ' I
-' We say this because, before the
'discovery of Bayer Aspirin, most
so-called "pain" remedies were ad- .
' . vised against by physicians as being
bad for the stomach; or, often, (or
' the,', heart, And the discovery of
Bayer Aspirin '. largely - changed"'
medical practice. . ry -i . . j:'
1 Countless thousands of people ;
, , who have taken Bayer Aspirin year
in and out without ill effect, have t
' proved that the medical findings
about its safety were correct. , ,
'. nniraiiiuci una. uwjuiib umj- a
Aspirin is rated among the lastest
' methods yd discovered for the relief
f headaches and all common pains
. . . . ana taje iot un averager person
j to take resularlv. a . t-
, You can get real Bayer Aspirin at
'. ami Ana. store simply by never
, asking for it by the name "aspirin
alone, but always saying BAYER '
-,' ASPIRIN when you buy.
.Bayer Aspirin
ASTHMA riOW
QUICKLY RELIEVED
From Enron now comes a mat mad
, . icil discovery. Uaad there by famous
. Thnlinui and hoaDitala. Ita woodar-
anffarers have bn deacribad in med-'
ical journals. Doctors ataU whan
-t Ftruthman tablet la (ivan for bay--i
-j lavwr or aathrna. bnathinc baeonua , I
, V auiar and the miaery Is ow aJmdat ,
imiMdiatal . Cliokins anaama bacomo
leaa fraqnent and law severe. Patients
1 diicard inhalatora and other old- .
, ' iaabioned ramadiaa and ara able tq r
1 aleaf peacefully through the night,
Peraatinnan contains no habit-fonn . .
fng drug and nothing to tax the heart. .
v Its benelicial raaulUJsro gasranteed
by a return of your money promptly. .
What mora could you ask? Ton really
N take no riakwhateTer.YouTl find that
Feraathman ia the relief remedy you
have long hoped for. Send for pack- ,
' age of 12 tablets C.O.D. forll or
, . your personal check. Do this NQW- ,
befora you forget. Addrwttha , ,'v
Psrssnsua Ctx, 2N 1 1? ft, Hew Ysrl, K
' ' s s Sooa M Kignt
V 'i
I had regular shaking spells worn
nervousness writes Mrs. , Cora San-
, ders, $fc Paragould, Ark. '1 was aU,
run-down and cramped t my time
' until I would have to go to bed. After
my first bottle of Cardui I was bet
ter. I kept taking Cardui and soon
I was all-right.!, The shaking quit
and I did not cramp. -1 -felt worlds
tetter,-1 gave Cardui to my dwshttf who
waaln about the same eooditim end-she
was soon all right," . . .
Thousands of women testify CuM berte--j
.i t t, rfoae not benefit YOU,
-w K ' 1 on 'nd Street I blocks oaa
' ' .1 S-ion, -
-LB iOOMdtoWM'
i
; CHAPTER XII Contfnued
VSherlltl Tve got a hold of the
answer' to It now.1" ' 4
- Her tone was ringing; her coun
.tehance ,trlumphant..;,tA;' .p
' -listen here 1" she cried. "If Bart
had left his gun belt, with the halt
can and the gun, there oh i the
ground In all. that rain while he
fetched Huldy over here, the belt'd
be soaked through and wet as a
string; and there'd be rut. on that
gun I But there ain't a speck of
Kust, and his belt is dry as a bone!"
Saladlne had not noticed wheth
er Bart's gun. Were rusted-or not;
yet he perceived the Justice of this
argument, and turned to . bear what
the sheriff would say. But Bart
laughed, and he protested:'
"Maybe that belt looked dry to
you, Granny, but It's wet enough!. I
can feel it right through my overalls.-
And the bolster kep' the gun
dry.! He told Sohler: "111 show
yon, when we get over to my place,
Sheriff, Ion can see for yourself.
Sohler accepted this. . "All right,
ma'am," he shouted to the old wom
an, oyer the engine's roar. "I'll look
at It, sure 1" '
And Marm Pierce, after a mo
ment's hesitation, drew back al
most reluctantly. She stood there,
small and straight In the darkness,
as they drove away. .
It was no longer raining, although
beside the road the ' leaves were
dripping, and .the headlights re-
And Instantly He 8semed to Dive
Straight Upward, Out of Their
8lght. . ' v
yealed .black. mirrors of muddy wa
ter in 'the ruts. At the turn that
led down to Carey's, Saladlne swung
that way, carefully, since the clay
was slippery; 'and so presently he
saw the farm buildings, the pale
white blur of the house, and the
barn with" Its high peak black
against the gloomy sky.
He turned Into. the arnyard and
stopped by the kitchen door, and
switched off the engine. .The head
lights, fed by the magneto, died as
the engine died; and darkness em
braced them there.- t
. In the deep silence and the dark,
Bart, said hospitably.:
i "Ton -folks go! inside and light
the lamp. I'll feed the critters and
come. right in. Won't take me a
minute.". : ' i?;,;
He and. the sheriff swung to the
ground. 'Bait started toward the
barn, but the sheriff, standing here
beside the car, called; , ' r "
-I'll be wanting to look, at that
belt of yours, Bart FX- e -
"Certain," Bart .agreed, without
stopping. TU be right in I", ,
v"Need a light yourself, won't
your .the sheriff suggested doubtfully;-
and' Bart said:
"There's a lantern In the barnl"
: He had not paused; be did not
now. The wide barn doors were
open, so that there was a gray rec
tangle of light against the black
bulk of the structure, and Barfs
figure, as be moved toward the
barn, was In silhouette against this
. So they were able to see, though
Indistinctly, what happened. Bart
reached the barn, walking steadily
enough; . and then suddenly his
hands Jerked toward his head, and
Instantly he seemed to dive straight
upward, out of their sight i s : f
- And at the same time, with a ter
rific Splintering impact and a metal
lic clank of Iron, something :' fell
shatterihgly upon , the barn -. floor.
Then silence t and in this sllencs a
rusty, creaking sound j, y f ,
;c : CHAPTER XIII .''.'
FOR a moment after Bart disap
peared In this fashion so mys
terious,' the sheriff's bulky .figure
was motionless beside .the car; but
Saladlne scrambled to the, ground,
and tripped on the running board
and fell hard on hands and knees,
bis fingers digging deep Into . the
soft and spongy sod, and there was
a wet chill of water on his shins. .
He wa on j his feet, Instantly.
From the barn came, diminuendo,
that rusty, creaking sound, i' V'
They went forward at last like
wooden soldiers, stiff kneed, on tip
toe, warily; till as they came close
to the barn, looking up they saw
something dark and bulky swinging
a little to and fro above their
heads. In the peak of the roof
above them there was a projecting
beam from which the horse fork 1
was rigged. It was from that beam
that, this object .was suspended.
Blurred and foreshortened, it was
yet' unmistakable ; and the sheriff
uttered a stammering exclamation,
and he went blundering Into the
barn, groping here and there.. He
stumbled over something, and Sala
dlne struck a match, and the sheriff
demanded hoarsely : r
"A knife? Got a knife? Quick I1
As he spoke, -he. looked up st
Saladlne and above htm. Saladlne,
very stiffly and warily, turned his
head to look that way. Over his
shoulder, following the sheriff's eyes,
he saw a man sitting cross-legged
on a timber, his hands hanging
idly .over his shins, his eyes bright
as a cat's eyes In the dark, and
burning strangely. His grinning
teeth were white. ,
It was Zeke Dace, with that big
hat, Its brim curled so - Jauntily,
pushed far back on his bead.
Zeke, above tnem, said in s
drawling tone: "Here's a knife I
Help yourself!" And something
thumped on the barn floor.
The sheriff found the knife even
In the, darkness,: and twisted open
the blade, and Saladlne heard steel
saw -,i on i hemp. Then a pulley
whirred, and something fell heavily
on the ground outside the barn door.
- The sheriff was quick that way.
He became busy, there, and he said
over his shoulder:
."Find the , lantern, Jim I One
somewhere I" "
Zeke spoke calmly. ,"It hangs
right here under me!"
Saladlne was a man not easily
daunted; but his hands were shak
ing now. He tried fruitlessly to
light the lantern, broke two or three
matches in an absurd futility before
Zeke dropped from his perch and
said:
"Here I Let me 1"
And he took the lantern and with
steady hand had it lighted In
atnntlv.
So they turned to where Bart lay.
The sheriff had Bart's, wrists In his
bands, pushing Bart's arms up and
back and down to the ground above
Bart's head; then bending the el
bows, pressing the folded arms bard
borne on Bart's chest . He repeated
this in a rhythmic persistence.
Zeke said at last, in tones which
had a peculiar terror of their own:
"I 'low you won't do him any good
that way. mister. His neck's broker
He sdded contentedly: "Or if It
ain't, It ought to be I" ,
The sheriff relaxed bis efforts.
"It's all I know to do," he admitted
helplessly. He bent forward, exam
lnlng' the dead" man. "I guess yo're
right," he said at last, and stood up
slowly. "Ton must be this Zeke Dace.
they tell about," he reflected.
"That's ; so". Zeke . assented,
"That's who I be!"
The sheriff looked down at Bart
there on the ground. "You done
rhla to him. did you?"
' "Guess I did," Zeke assented ; snd
after a moment, he explained as
though proud of his grim device:
"I 'lowed. he'd come to tend the
critters, In the barn here, give him
time. So I run a fall through .the
tackle of the horse fork, and got
enough purchase with it to h'lst the'
grindstone fnto the upper mow. I
didn't knowas It'd be heavy enough ;
so I fastened some trace chains and
such truck' onto It Then I balanced
It up there on the edge, so's it'd tip
over easy, with one 'end of the fall
fast to it, and a running noose In
t'other end; I fetched the noose end
down here and. waited; and- when
Bart come in, all I had to do was
drop the noose over his head and
twitch the grindstone off Its perch."
The sheriff tipped back his hat;
ran 1 bis fingers, across his brow.
"Well, .we'd ought to get Bart in the
house," he .decided. "Can't let him
lay out here 1 And he said to Sal
adlne: "Take his feet, Jim,' will
you? IH carry his head."
w And he spoke to Zeke In a matter-of-fact
tone. "Ton hold the lan
tern," ha directed. "Open the door
for us." ' ' ' . " i
So they carried Bart Into the
kitchen, and laid him on the floor.
Zeke ' closed the door, i and he set
the lantern on top of the cold stove ;
and the sheriff mopped his brow
and turned .to face this man.
"Ton done this, you said?"
Zeke : seemed almost to , chuckle
In assent - .
"How come?'Vthe sheriff protested.
"Why, they don't hang for a kill
ing In Maine," Zeke explained, in a
saturnine . satisfaction. ' "But it
looked to me that was what he
needed!"
Ton mean ' to say," Sohler
prompted, "he was ' the one killed
Mis' Ferrinr ' -
"Certain r
''Know that for a fact, do you?"
"I low I do," said Zeke, without
vehemence; yet there was. slow pas
sion lit his tones,:'-. V.
The sheriff considered ; and then
on a suddn thought he knelt down
to fumble at Bart's belt, feeling It!
with his fingers. He looked up at
saiaaine, noaoing. ,
, "His belt's dry as a bone!" he
said hoarsely.' ."The old woman hit
on" It, finally!, That was one thing
he 'couldn't He out of, and that was
enough to nail html"
He wagged his head. "He had a
cold nerve,", he said, almost admir
ingly. "Stood up to ier good, didn't
he? You wouldn't ever have thought
he - was lying," And he decided:
"But I guess he see he was done.
Likely he aimed to duck and run,
Just now. If he could have got to
the barn, be could, go on through,
and1 cut for It- and we wouldn't
have a chance to catch him, In the
dark."4"'"
aladlne' Was curiously pleased
that old. Marm Pierce had been
able to prove her case In the end.
But that-was over now, and Zeke
was here and must be dealt with.
Saladlne turned to him.
"How do you know Bart did It?"
he asked. '
Before ; Zeke could speak, the
sheriff warned him gravely: "You
don't have to say a word, less'n
yo're a mind."
Zeke stared st them In an ab
stracted fashion. "I've got no rea
son to hold back," he said. He
stood with his Shoulders against
the door, his hands behind him,
and his eyes flickered from one of
them to the other as he spoke.
"How come you didn't try to get
away?" the sheriff asked. "Here
after you'd finished him?"
Zeke shook his head. "With Huldy
dead," he said, "I hadn't no place
to go, nor nothing to go for!" e
. "I'm going to have to take you
along to Jail," the sheriff reminded
him; and Zeke said humbly:
"Why, the way it is now, rd
full as lief be InJail as anywheres."
And after a moment when they did
not speak, he added ;, "Likely you
know about Huldy and me. It
was kind of desperate and dreadful
for me, right from the start; like
having holt of a live wire when you
can't let go."
He stood tall In the dim lantern
light; he went on, as though speech
eased him, to tell all' that remained
now to be told.
It fell to Saladlne to repeat to
Will Ferrln and Marm Pierce and
Jenny what Zeke told them now,
When halt an hour later they re
turned to the house divided, Will
and Jenny came to the door; but
the sheriff stayed with Zeke and
that other in the car.
"Jim, you go tell them what hap
pened!" he said. ', '
So . 'Saladlne alighted and came
Into the warm kitchen and while
they listened without question, be
told the tale.
"You were right Marm Pierce,"
he said. "It was Bart His belt was
bone-dry 1" Will stirred, but Sala
dlne added quickly, restraining the
other' man: "But Bart's dead
a'ready, Will. Zeke killed him."
And he related the manner of
that ' killing ; then harked back.
"Zeke was upset when Huldy took
me - down to the brook," he ex
plained. "As soon as Will left him,
he tried to find her at the ledge;
but she was gone. She must have
tried to follow me."
: He hesitated, struck by the percep
tion that his own coming here today
had precipitated all that ensued.
"Zeke didn't see her," he explained.
"But he traipsed down brook, and
caught up with me, and he thought
she was bound to meet me, some
where; so he followed me till I got
over, here. He was hiding outside
when Bart come through the barn,
carrying her. . ' . ''
"Zeke was too far away to stop
Bart; but be knew it was Huldy by
her dress, and he .was wild; and
he crawled into the' other side of
the house, to try to hear what had
happened to her."-? j
"It was him I heard In there?"
Jenny whispered.
. Saladlne nodded. ' "And it was
him in the shed, after that' Marm
Pierce," he said. " He looked at
Jenny. . "Zeke heard Huldy tell you
that. Will killed her," he explained,
"and he set out to find Will, ready
to do for him! But on the way
home, he see Bart's tracks In the
woods, and- back-tracked Bart ,, to
where he picked Huldy up, after she
felt ' . - - --.''"jrii'-Si-il',.'.:''.:.;
"It had rained, but the ground
was all soft before the rain, and
Zeke was tracker 'enough- to make
out what had happened. Bart didn't
come up from the broqk to where
she fell. There'd have been tracks
to show, If he bad, but there wa'nt
Bnt his tracks was all plain where
he'd come down -from the . ledge
and ; across ' to. where Huldy was
laying." f ? -.jw-,vv;
Marm Pierce Interjected sharply:
"There was tracks coming np from
the brook when I went oyer there,
while you and Bart was here!"
Saladlne considered, admiring the
old woman's thoroughness, yet per
ceiving anvexplanation of this mat
ter, too. "Bart must have laid a
fake trail," he suggested. "On his
way . back here from will's. But
you see, Zeke got there before Bart '
had a chance to do that after Huldy
died.''- He added: "And If Bart told
the truth, his rod and all would
have been there then; but they
wa'n't!"
And he explained: "Zeke went up
to the ledge, and found enough to
let him make out that Bart and
Huldy had had some kind of a
scuffle there; so he knowed Huldy
had lied about Will, and he raced
over to Bart's hoise, meaning to
kill him; but Bart wa'n't there;
and Zeke come back here and
missed Bart again; and he spent
the rest of the day like a dog be
tween rat holes, trying to find Bart
and to get at him in some way so
Bart couldn't use his gun."
He concluded: "And be finally
waylaid him over at the barn!
That's all!"
Jenny clung fast to Will's arm;
and Marm Pierce exclaimed: "Well,
hgood, riddance!" There was never
any sentimentality in that stout
old woman. "Huldy wa'n't worth
it; but-Tm right glad to know that
Bart got his comeuppance! It was
high time."
But Will said: "Pore Zeke. He
won't live long in Jail !"
"Pore fiddlesticks!" Marm Pierce
protested, "ft sh'd say you didn't
have any call to pity him !"
"I dunno," Will confessed. "I al
ways was kind of sorry for Zeke.
And It wa'n't his fault. He tried
to hold out against her. But Huldy,
I guess she could outnumber most
any man."
Saladlne felt himself an outsider
here. "The sheriff's In a hurry," he
remembered. "We're taking Zeke
and Bart too to town; so I'll be
moving on." And turned toward the
door. "I'll come see you folks
again, sometime," he promised.
"Do so," Marm Pierce assented,
and Will seconded the invitation.
So Saladlne bade them all good
by, and went out Into the night
where the sheriff and Zeke were
waiting In the car, and began the
long, wearisome drive to town.
He forgot bis rod and fish bas
ket; but It would be long before
he came to claim them. Zeke Dace,
as Will had foreseen, did no't live to
face trial He died in late August,
In the Jail on the hill above East
Harbor.
"He wa'n't sick," the sheriff told
Saladlne, stopping at Jim's farm on
the Ridge above Fraternity one day.
"He was always kind of thin and
shaky, .but no worse than always.
He Just died, that's all 1"
They talked together of Zeke for
a little; and then Jim asked a word
of the others folk In Hostile Valley.
"I was out there last week," the
sheriff explained. "To tell 'em
about Zeke. Marm Pierce had
made it up with her brother. Win's
living with her now, and fixing up
bis side of the house to keep the
weather out. He swears he's never
going to touch another drop of
rum as long as he lives, prob'ly."
Saladlne asked for Will and
Jenny.
"They're fine," the sheriff as
sured him. "They're aiming to get
married, here in a week or so !"
"Not married yet?" Saladlne ex
claiined in surprise.
1 Sohler shook bis head. "You'd
ought to go out and see 'em," he
suggested. "They spoke kindly
about you."
"I left my rod out there," Sala
dlne recalled. "Forgot It, that night,
and I never did go to fetch it. May
be I will !"
(TO BE CONTINUED)
Custer Held by Indians
Bravest of Hero Band
In the course of the Sioux war
of 1876, which originate) over the
lust for gold in the Dakota country,
Gen. George A. Custer came with
his regiment upon a fufl force of
Indians camped along a river.
A most courageous youth, Custer
ordered his men to strike, and they
struck, but the redskins were wait
ing for them.
Custer and his men were soon
surrounded, with no chance for es
cape and- little chance for victory
against the savage horde of reds
who greatly outnumbered the
whites.
In this battle not only the New
Rumley (Ohio) boy but his two
brothers, nephew, brother-in-law,
and his entire command of nearly
300 mounted officers and men gave
up their lives. Not one man was
left
As not one white man was left
to tell the story, all Is left to con
jecture, except what may be gath
ered from one touching scene. In
the midst of a circle of dead bodies
lay the corpse of the ybung hero,
with a bullet in his brain and one
in his breast, but he was unmutllat
ed the only body untouched by
the scalping knife.
This shows that of all that band
of heroes who were found lying ou
the field of battle, brave as they
were, Custer may be Judged to be
the bravest For so greatly did the
redskins regard his valor that; they
left ? him untouched. Cleveland
Plain Dealer, ;
.. Anaiant Tree Poets
: Mank fossil trees In the Petrified
Forest of Arizona, show fine! bur
rows and "tunnels' left by larvae,
which seem to have been similar to
pests on trees toAw'SlJ-S j
' ' ' '-'I
! STAR !
DUST J
T 1. X
one Jvaoio
By VIRGINIA VALE
PROBABLY; one of the most
dramatic things that has evet
happened in' : connection with
the making of motion pictures
was the confession in New York
of those six ybung gangsters
recently.
Accused of murdering a collector
for the subway, they had been
grilled aU night without result. A
motion picture executive was in the
office of District Attorney Geoghan
the next day on business. Geoghan
happened tp mention the case, and
added "Want to meet one of them?"
The one tbey called Duke was
brought In sleek, composed, deter
minedly innocent. The movie man
questioned him about himself and
finally asked "How'd you like to
pose for a news reel?"
Duke was delighted; he prompt
ly took out a comb and fixed his
hair. A news reel crew from the
movie man's own organization was
on hand, unknown to him; It had
been sent down Just on a hunch.
So the six young bandits were
called In, and the first thing any
body knew they were confessing the
crime. The excitement of breaking
Into the movies was too much for
them I
It
Pity Adrlenne Ames, who thought
she was seriously ill and found that
her trouble was just hunger, caused
by the need of dieting In order to
go on making pictures! Seems fun
ny that girls with plenty of money
can't eat, when so many people can't
do it because they can't buy food.
That need for dieting has a lot to
do with the retirement of screen
stars. When Phyllis Haver left the
movies, just as her career was at
Its height, (she'd been asked to do
"Anna Christie" remember? and
didn't), and Garbo got the part) she
said to me "Just think! Now I can
eat all the baked beans I want to!"
And she can she married a man
who's head of a big canned goods
business.
k
One star's meat is another star's poi
son. Paramount bought the popular
book, "National Velvet," so that Clan
delta Colbert could play the heroine, a
part 'not very well suited to her, and
she knew it. Katherine Hepburn is
crazy to play it. So maybe Paramount
ill borrow her for it, or perhaps RKO
will buy the story from them for her.
You can be sure of one thing Hep
burn will play it. She gets what she
vants.
k
Put the name of Jlmmle Ravo
down In your notebooks ; It looks as
If he'd be one of our biggest stars
before long.
Known as one of our greatest
masters of pantomime, quite as
great as Chaplin, he long ago made
a name for himself on the stage.
But the movies didn't seem to take
to him. He made a picture for
Hecht and MacArthur, "Once in a
Blue Moon," which was so bad that
he tried to buy It from them so
that it wouldn't be released. He was
fine but the picture was awful.
Finally It was shown In a few
places, advertised as "The Worst
Picture in the World."
You can Imagine how Savo liked
that But now Hal Roach has
signed him up and promised that
he can select his own stories. May
be he'll get a break, and then he'll
land on top. Maybe he won't, and
you'll never see him on the screen
after one picture. He deserves the
best of luck.
He's a delightful person, very good
looking, rather naive, which Is odd
In a man who Los been on Broad
way for years.
it
Ruth Chatterton's career may take
another twist. She left the stage
ten years ago, went Into pictures
two years later, and now may re
turn to the stage again.
She owes her start In pictures to
tubitach, who gave her a part when
nobody else wanted her. She went
straight to the top, aa you know.
Now pictures don't seem to be
quite the right field for her, and the
theatrical managers are urging her
to come back. Nice to have two
strings to your bow, Isn't it?
James Melton, that sweet singer
of the air waves, is in Hollywood
to do a picture. And the first thing
that happened to h)m after he ar
rived was an encounter with a hold
up man. He arrived at his destina
tion a party at Pat O'Brien's
thrilled to death over it
k
ODDS AND ENDS . . . Jimmie Cog
ney u drinking tea afternoons just
happens to like it . . . Jean Harlow
will be a brunette in "Riff Raff . , .
Ford Bond, Kelvin Ketch and James
Wallington are resigning as radio an
nouncers. They're free lance artists
now, thank you . '. Take all your
handkerchiefs to "The Dark AngeT
,. . . Fredrie March almost missed the
boat when he sailed for Europe the
other day i i t Can you imagine Kate
Smith in roles of the Marie , Dressier
type? One of the movie magnates tan,
but esyet Kate hasn't promised to try
titwuj' & .'; .' -n -."yjvi::-'' -
'Vi'S C WeeterB Newspaper Onion, v '
v;iy !'"'-' ''Wrwf;:': '
4 GUARD AGAINST FLEAS
'Fleas will breed In carpets, cracks
In the floor or any, other snltabie
place where the eggs may drop. It
takes only 17 days from the time an
egg Is laid to produce a Sea in good
biting condition. The Insects are
renowned In scientific circles as the
carrier of many diseases. The dog
flea sometimes carries eggs of a
tapeworm, which when swallowed
causes worms In dogs. Occasionally
tapeworms In children are caused
by dog fleas accidentally getting into
the mouths of the children.
To guard against flea infestation
of dwellings animal pets should be
frequently dusted with any Insect
powder made from dried pyrethrum
flowers. This Is harmless tp ani
mals and human beings. If a bouse
becomes infested the rugs, cracks In
floor and other likely breeding places
should be sprayed thoroughly with
any of the liquid spray insecticides.
SIMPLE SIMON ,
MET A NEMAN
AND ORDERED THREE OR FOUR
HI NOW EATS TUMS
WHEN HEARTBURN COMES . . .
DON'T SUFFER ANY MORE I
Stop SAYING "NO"
TO FAVORITE FOODS
rf isn't only pie that disagreet with tome
people. Many say that even milk sives them
a sassy stomach. The very beat foods may
bring on acid indigestion, sour stomach, gas.,
bevtbora. MiUkxii have found that Turns
quickly relieve acid uxiigestion. Munch 3 or 4
riter meals or whenever smoking, hasty eating,
last night's party, or some other cause brings
on acid indigestion. Turns contain no harsh
nHnilift, which physicians have said may in
crease the tendency toward acid indigestion.
Instead an antacid which neutralizes stomach
acid, but never over-alkalizes the stomach or
blood. You'll like their minty taste. Only 10c
rDCts Thla week at your druggist's Beau
r ittte UrulftColor 1936-1936 Calendar Tbar
mometcr with the purchase of a 10c roll ot Tunit
or a 25c box of NR (The All Vegetable Laxative.)
PARKER'S 1
HAIR BALSAM
Bavnortw Dmzxrnifr-StofaB Hair Falling
Imparts Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
60c and 11.00 at DruBfftata. i
HraeoxCbem. Wks.. Patehogne.N.T.,
FLORESTON SHAMPOO Ideal for use in
connection with Parker's Hair Balaam.Makea tha
hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or at drug
gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchoame.N.Y,
ma ear
MOSQUITOES
. FLIES SPIDERS
JiRV OTHER
JJ Jl ,NSECTS
Many Churchee in London
Greater London now has a cliurch
to every 1.810 persons.
Quick. Complete
Pleasant
ELIMINATION
Let 'a be frank. There's only one way (or
your body to rid itself of the waste mat.
ters that cause acidity, gas, headaches,
bloated feelings and a dozen other di
comiorts your intestines must function.
To make them move quickly, pleas
antly, completely, without griping.
Thousands of physicians recommend
Milnesia Wafers. (Dentists recommend
Milnesia wafers as an efficient remedy
for mouth acidity).
These mint flavored candy-like wafers
are pure milk of magnesia. Each wafer
ia approximately equal to a full adult
doee of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed
thoroughly in accordance with the direc
tions on the bottle or tin, then swallowed,
they correct acidity, bad breath, flatu
lence, at their source and at the same
fame enable quick, complete, pleas
ant elimination.
Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of 20
and 48 wafers, at 35c and 60o respec
tively, or In convenient tins containing
12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately
an adult doee of milk of magnesia. All
good drug stores carry them. Start using
these delicious, effective wafers today.
Professional samples sent free to reg
istered physicians or dentists if request
is made on professional letter head.
SELECT PRODUCTS, Incorporated
440a aard St, Lens lelaod City. N. Y.
WNU-
4035
PI I Alfl FOU THE TUMMV
AnrMS
NOT A LAXATIV&eafcjLe 1 BY TP ttsr .
Iff'"' 'H.. 'V.ViM
When In NSW YORK Live sit...
HOTEL EDISON
NIWEST MOST MODTRN HOTTl TUt
HEART Or evtRYIMING Sw
411 OntaMa Boone BADlp TUB 4aiS
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oom SBeawnnnia-a'aaapaaSnan I
loon-Bar ana Cat Jtl I
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