OCR Text |
Show THE OGDEN WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 30, 1921. i1 BORROWED HUSBANDS MILDRED 1C BARBOUR t LITHE Olivia Takes Danny to the Matinee T .'.- - , YP sm iMGy . aire Rep Rebuilt Like New oa?eori Cleaned ftnd Ciit the HighCost of Uving -- ' VDon't be so damn touchy! Everybody makes love to Nancy. I'll bet the doo mind." here is the latest. Nancy doesn't Before Nancy could frame a crushing xetort, Desmond said quietly: "I think it would be well for you to know, Stanley, that I have askednotMrs. yet Burrard to be my wife.' She has given me an answer, but I still claim the your remarks." right to resent came, out of ' his alcoholic hare Stanley to stare, from Desmond to Nancy and back to the former again. Then he went off Into loud laughter, in peal after peal, bending almost double the little roadster and holding his sides while Nancy and the young officer stared at him blankly. Finally, his mirth subsided sufficiently for him Xo fish a handkerchief out of his pocket and wipe his moist eye. Over its folds, he bent on Desmond' a watery gaze. asked "Tou you Nancy to marry you to marry you?" Desmond inclined his head, his lips grimly set. Mirth threatened to render Stanley Inarticulate again, but he conquered himself sufficiently to gasp: "Gosh, that's the best one I've heard you only knew!" yet! Oh boy. if seemed to grip Nancy. An lev hand She. knew that Desmond was looking at her steadily. ... - tjUiit:ciUhs open-mouth- ed I speed-victims- , ;';:. you V .OLIVIA, CRVIMG LAU6HIK6-TH- f HE-H- TIME ) E- 1 he-h- e vft PLAV NEXT E OGDLN !A 2205 A man writes me that although he has been happily , married for twentyrfive woman to years to a most estimable whom he is devoted, he is tormented by a longing to see once again his first love. of a It has been more than a quartersweetfrom the century since he parted and in all that heart of his' boyhood, time he has never beheld her. or held uny communication with her. He doesn't know whether she Is married or sing-le- , or where she lives. lie only knows that she lives enshrined In the Inner sancand that she is etertuary of his heart, to her. nally luring him Isto come back his to And he feels this wife, disloyalty and he doesn't-knowhat to- do about It because the older, he gets the stronger becomes the urge of this youthful pas' sion. .. . , This man thinks his case peculiar, 'but it is an experience common to humanity. there isn't a middle aged man oHfbman In the world who hasn't some such romance laid away in the lavender our, first loves, that embody for us vro-- ! mance, and all the beauty and the thrills that kc with youth, and as we get 'far ther and farther along the prosaic road of every day life, this ideal of our boyhood and girlhood becomes more and more beautiful and .alluring. The girl that a man marries gwws old. and thin and scrawny, or. fat, and Her face waddly. Her hair gets grizzled. is lined with wrinkles. Her conversation mostly runs to the Jiigh cost of living, and problems about the children. Sh may work her fingers to the bone to make her husband comfortable, but shea makes no pretense of considering him dream hero, and she is more apt to ask him when he cortles home'of an evening if he remembered to- bring the steak for dinner than she is- to demand whether The woman a man marries has pecu-- I linrities that rub the bloom off romance. even the She has temper and nerves that siae-step.' boldest husband fmds is Dest to She has disagreeable' relatives that will come imd visit her. She lias a brutal candor In dealing with a man's faults, and weaknesses, and It often seems to the husband of eve the thriftiest wife, that marriage is just one darn bill; after another. . It is the inevitable disillusion of.rnatrl-mon- y that makes the ideal of our first love retain its enchantment. For the years never touch a man's first -- . Wsihinfiton URIriQ YOUW BROKEN OE WIT BROS CO. iaaiSBBBaMiMBBaJattBSa-a- Store Ne, Hudson Ave. and t Sth sweetheart. She always stays sweet and twenty. Her figure is always lithe and slim. Her Jhair never loses its nor her cheeks their roses. She luster, is al ways a Creature of moonlight and thrills, babbling of celestial things. Somehow, a man feels that If he had married her he would have escaped the sorctid cares or She would have been alwaysdomesticity. beautifully dressed and mooting him at the. door of a vine wreathed cottage that : would have reShe would quired no money to never have been support. sick, and haggard faced. Her babies would never have ha-the colic. She would never have reminded him of his faults, and no biJTcol-lectwould ever have crept into their Eden. Of course in his sober senses, the man knows that if he had married his first love she would have made very much the same sort of wife that his second love has, and that he would have had to pay the same price for domesticity. Neverthe less, he cannot help contrasting the two omen to the detriment of the second, many a man s life is made bitter by his regrets over the woman he didn't marry. Women are subject to this same folly, and many a wife, unsuspected by her husband, has her little private altar before which she worships the image of the man she didn't marry, and who. she is sure, would have treated her very difthe way in which the comferently from monplace man to whom sne is united in the holy bonds oi wedlock, treats her. He would always have been a romantic lover sighing at her. feet. lie would always have appreciated her and paid "her flowery compliments. He would have kept her a goddess on a pedestal Instead of turning hf into a cook in the kitchen. rn n n . A 2 Kllla IT. linrn .tlu of and handsome, instead win -bay getting cowed ;and baW as has the man she has mistakenly chosen So she, too, sighs for what mifrht have out in longing been, and eats her heart for the old romance.- There is one sure cure for this silliness. Let every man and woman who long for their first love, pack a bag and start forth in search of them. Iet them go .once more to the shrine of the old romance. The man will, find that the girl he remembered as light as thistle down, and as pretty and fresh as a rose bud, has grown fat. - and honieiy, and dull. When ho seeks revive tne old romance, she will talk to htm about her children, and how trifling servants, are now. and she will bore him to tears with her platitudes. The woman will find her Romeo with his mind ob3eseed - by the green grocery trade instead of sentiment, and le will tell her how she has changed, and she will feel like murdering him where stands. he ' No people are so strnngw to us as all those who were once dear to us and from whom we have long been parted. Xo one seems so old to us as tnose whom we have remembered as young and beautiful, and so probably no one ever meets one's first love without thanking God fpr the escape from him or her. Giving- the once over to that old sweetheart is guaranteed to remove the last lingering regret that one didn't marry him or, her. oo 4 ADVENTURES . I J No More Gas in Stomach arid Bowels! 1 1 1 .1 - ao. U . JUST FOLKS l ets - - . ts. . beg your pardon," she began again. "I didn't mean. to ktp you waiting." "Oh. y she N'ancy started. Nancy sat in the middle of a. queer cirmis- about to say. when Nick put a cle, for-al- l except Nick were-iglyai-of every age. that, of finger to his Up. - She had almon shapen gnomes the forbidden word. "4 beg your pardon" every age over a hundred yers. J When gnome is' born, you know, he aivuvly he began again. "I didn't mean to ker a hundred years old. and so, of course, vou waiting. How many questions my t I fiulte grown up. She couldn't help Uh-in- g that they wouldn't stare so, fjr they were peering at her with unblinking, grotesque eyes. "Butonethen." she thought. may epccu .N "It is Just what doubt they've had no bringing uj at alls ruu-ana nave ntvur ieen ioiu inai n. comto stare at company." pany to be sure, she and NlclTwere, but company just the same. The little gnome who had oyened the he'd gate nodded at her finally Wiien with waited and waited, and N'ancy. busy her thoughts, hadn't said a woTd. 'Why he demanded. "Ion't don't you begin you know how to play 'truth?' You told me you did. In the . Self-lnvlt- M LITTLE BENNY By LEE ... , " Da- a- nmm If" , . -- -il an-taclo- ue no coo kin a jfirAyoicl ImlUlions & SoLstitnles t " Standard-Examine- r A CO. fhone SM-- W wow 2141 Hints to Young Cooks Taken by permission from the copyrighted cookbook, "A Modern! Manual of Cooking. Send the coupon for a free copy. HOW TO MEASURE INGREDIENTS. r ... THIS IS THE BIRTHDAY OF MARK TWAIN. November 30, Mark Twain Is the literary name of Samuel Langhorne OImeis. lie was born at Florida. Missouri, a little town n the Mississippi. When he was 12 hla father died and he flcked up hla education as bent he could. Moat of the time he vandered the country an n Journeyman printer, even reaching New York. At 1? he went back to the .MltHiasliipt u work on the river boats. U thl part of his life which was of most early value to him. for after hi experiences he wrote "Tom tUwfr." "IMdd Wilson" and "Hucklelrry Therein he ha a preserved Finn. trutha vanished clvliiiatlon. On there fully books hla fame will undoubtedly rest, although he Is known as a "humoruus" WTlter. , liecauie of the mixture of pathoe and humor, and the sincerity and truth of these hooka Mark Twain haa beeo and Moiirre. compared to Cervantes for a tlm on a Kn Fran-clao- o lie workedwhich allowed money enough paper, for him to Join a party roing to th Mediterranean towns. The letters which he wrote of that trip were gathered toand mad the "Innocent Abroad" gether on which he flrt won fame. His hooka came out steamy alter tnat ami in the fortune for him end made a falr-!re- d in spite of vn dlattroua experiment In He died In Conaectlcut in publishing. 151U. He tried a serious !ory auccessfully when he wrote "Jean of Arc.' - . . - -- For Neuralgia 1 For Rav Sore Throat At tKe rt ia of a raw; sore throat rub oo a little LIusterole with -- your fineen. It toes ribt to the tpot with ten tie tingle, loosens congestion, draws out soreness and paku Muiterole is a clean, white oictrnmt made with oil of mustard. It has all tntts-tar- d the strength cf the plaster without the blister. Nothing lllre Murtercle for croupy children. Keep It handy for instant use. 35 andCS cents in jars and tubes; hospital eize, $3. d fBAUME IBEWG1JE J BETTER T1U-- N A MUSTARD FLASTOt - a Relieves Hanctu a TubePiin . . , w - 1- -3 hslf-eron- ar-oo- l. Ci-vi- 1 -le 3-- tlm 2-- 5 1 1 J" 1- -1 nt .....! .!' 1- -3 'l 2-- . J-- m 1- -2 fur tf X FREE COOKBOOK COUPON Sign name anJ complete address, and brine to Standard Examiner. ORdra. Uuh. Cook book will be lect to you In about fen Jays, ttis delay being cecesiary because fl rat supply exhausted. Name . Address , , I t . City " - v - ; - v '' 1 A . j SvA a f MENDING 1 . - . CHINA, l i!bL w 111 WORLD RECORD IN china. men! that there ia rg GUNNERY ATTAINED dust rn the china,. Then put a little flake whi'e on rne broken piece and hrviJ it aan.at the other. Then put the tlehtly broken dsl ai1e for n A . Nov. 2. days or two ANGW.n,c Cal weeks while the. flake white harden a. n n e rv eatabwoild's in record j .f turrr-- Nn. 4r.o crew il.aned the tun ty SAND WICHES. can keep I tke u Ttu esabW wakK f etc i ssa after ssk pff 'arSor here, accordinr ti they are"15 made If roi will rut them; to sa earthen- - olflcers of the fiSaahip. In short ware rererttar'.e. rotr It and then put ranee director practice five shots we" tt to a pan cf coi 1 wrvr, . flred from three f ourteen-lnc- h fimi r? ' Jthe turret No. 4 in - one minute ' dire-tr.CLEANING PIPES. i ondt a'.l tt C0l vi-- h, When the 0 a 'iUrdL The tifevlntii rrvirrf was ona . oW aVle.1. e...a atl lt niinuxe i. ecct i.ia. and then pour boiling-- water. A Another shinlni riaup.e of treatment may be r.e:ery to thorof a- -l J) c.ean them. tranship was 17 o :t of 29 direct hits.. Lieutenant at .000 ilrrIs commander of the record Kuni JUGGED STEAK. ?an . rtave a round aeak cut th'n. Then Screw And Kn.;fn Alherton IcCam- ltn ."r. Mvtrar. fecend In command. . Ir.v1': !" " lTini nn. sa t a i:;t; rr.oppen onsen ard tp.i oou:. Tut ail In a bean pot w.th r.o visiter. Put the bean pot In a kettie cf teiUnr . Iay on Xlars Is 41 minutes lon- - r water and steam ttre-- houra. than one on earth. flake white, D ordinary surs - X . a O Hi I-- i '' CARL GOLDMARrC sk GOLIM.ItK Austrian Compowr of tiie Irrwxit Ir. was Carl GoMmark 1S:0-19IKrest AuMrtan cornpwer of the modern school. Ho llcd nut of his life In Vltnns, A Hur.ajarlan-Jcby birth. Goldnuirk's music Is always lnJlvld-ua- l because f its orlentsi tone color. Goldmark stoH In all forms. lit his operas. "MrUn." "Cricket on th Hearth. and "The Queh of 8heba." ara the most popular. Of Uoldmsrk's " S w "works. irm orchestral overturfs nd "In 'iUpho., Sprlnc' are often Rlvea. His irresteat orchestral work Is "The Country Wed-dln- r which la. In Fymphony a modern suite In five --numbers. rrality. a (tirxmY i.v thi: ;Mtrn:x. Vin)l)IN( KYlpHONY.-Th- is symphony ronJsta of five short movement, descriptive of a country "In the Garden' la supwedding-posed to represent the tender conver satlon of the newly married pslr, who have etolen away from the weddJns; example of rarty. It Is anInexqulslt sons form. poetic thoujht rmr , aJ -- ai . rw.. d, jie -- e r.' - Ti?u slat11 T' f Jt - I a r ej' k as I a ' as ss !!!S:i iliCal S3 8 J a C SB m , LOS ANGELES rrcwal Amrrvso tiw western worid. Cc-itiro- rjround "csVi tt H, oo IF YOU ARE WELL BRED Tou will not aaalt t a ma a Jn pu'tlnc n hla OTrrot. Teu will not wslV tsto the veaChule to receive a man csUer. Await tlra la the parlor. You will net Invite a man to luach before he has called at leaat once. Tou will not rrolr.r a formal ' call more thaa 20 fnfnutf. . - oo - 1F YOU ARC WELL BRED Tou win nevr pt5rpr.se y last wtxxi tn ulrrrHfiKvirrn hotel sreheenfrt, c5m service, licre one mrf trjcy cf.net trscruincss w Lndule In the partin social He in ia pyrst arJ mcst rrrieJ trrxvl 'rrcrc -- , a frw ."khfn nxtfufrsriJ of the hcrti U the Amisatixlcr Gotf Ccsjetsc, coavcrxicd by yrv'arcruj to be cr.c live Crtrst fur d "'' ' Ajufce rm Lur-ipraa- fw w A3 Tie stOECRATE . ly i - m Amdcx. "cut' an always wrrd an tavl!s?lmj cr-dlslcourteous, .a any Invitation i a COmpi'.Tnent. the txim are Yf.n will inairste in the ccc heatre, or In a when tnltz-taininat a theatre party. uo SAVE THEM. Bavo the lltue bare In which your aalt. susar and ps""ry crtne. jup thrm anil u. thrn a 1ut .tien. vianh and a'isert. cltl.s. Vify trr verr-sc-fy ru will T9 ff Keep ':' - w-".- llllllm? f.f.l r . small ptecet "ftikuntala. over the throat, . rero!e ccw-'k- I 1 nhd .....I tst teaaj.ocTifyl X table tpoonfuis Cr.tform reaults la cooklsc depend on uniform accuracy Ins meaaurtec Irsredi. mill, vr . slnrcUMful ents and It la the who thie 1 tMivrDfula ..1 . 2 fact that have tho least "bad luck- with eliia ..I jr'v i 2 c upfula U.elr cookies;. ...-.. ..1 n-- tti:tt All lncredlnta ahould be rneaaured 2 rials . ..i level. tmss the recipe atstrs otHerwia. T quarts . . . 1 on nf tatletHKtr.fuJ aalt A Ipvel rneAsure Is obtslnel hy fHIIng . e wr. ( .r,XT fyla spoon or cup more than full end lvtl!nc 1 IlM;orr. a M poor. fwr CfiiMtun- tt off with a cim knife, even with the 4 1ahk-.rjoj...1 . ... 1 flrur top of the container. t':.t . .S li'i jfi J To measure flour, meal, nrar and sim- 1I latiaroctiful t h c oco'.a e ... 1 C .. r. t aoyare ilar Inrredlents. sift lightly into the rota-sur- e cur.rul cr.cppe i cut treats (tla.nchr '. and then level. Kever parJIt dry In1 rur.c run. rredlents of this k!n2 Into arwvn or a f To meaaore , I nurful carranfa ul. f.H the n ;u-- l i hear-lnr- . level It. ax.d vtivide It In hatf . I cnrful mmt 1 I encth- le: for a quarter-tpoonfu........ I pour. i curfula rrf.'re t the half crriaiae- cupfuls utr.. 1 jx nrwl Htandard tneaaurlns rupa made rf in. S rutfut Hour ........ n or abminum hoisjirc half a pint 2 J rupfuls vlmul ... V s:U. ael . . . shoulJ always be uaed. Coffee and tea i cupf ala tcjfled ....... 11 ; ue .SI c tips vary o much that correct proper-ll.-n- s 4 curfula r e meal . pur can ohfsln br us.'nr them. 1 Te rice po.ia it Wa r.a .1 f The fr.Ilowlor table will enable the 5 cupful dry hmaekecter tn measure the parts cf a S ci;rf aranulated aurar .... .1 I o mstter in wtat Z 1 rupfu'.s trown extcar .1 recipe Itaccursteir. Is emjehed: I J rurfula piwdered f:rir .. 1 pry .l trrn.a 1 WEIGHTS AND MSEASURES. , t rar'ul vrd-j1 dram I ST 1 1 5 trains atr lujful ccf.ii 1 ounce 1 rtnt butter IS drams . ..1 1 Ut 1 1 ounces Is ...1 pound ...1 1 . . . 1 JX- -J ; ......C9 droits 10 ma:i cr medium teaapoonful Lesson on Music IS IT YOURS? V VAPORUD Th "Food -- Drink" for AU Ages. Quick Lunch at Home, Office, ao4 Fountains. AA for HQRUCKS. - - mla-lnfnrm- - . HOARSENESS n -- - said. "It's the most .Important thing In the world. , "Oh. as for that." answered Crooka-bon- e, ythts lun't th world. Thl. is Falry-an- d and with us It l a matur of wits. W tell the truth without telling anything at all." "What a iueer speech." thought Naacy . tTo lie Continual) Infant . S PILLS gnome, "only you must stop when one tell you an unTruth. Then n rm! pay you a forfeit. I'll be Judge later on and lmpo penalties for flbbliuf." I m glad approvlnfcly. Nancy smiled you think so much of truth telling, she . WALT MASON . "As many as you like." answered the some- irmmmmmm for-you.- - Countless leelorra of Ignorant and people regard a coll as a harm-l- e ailment, to bet- txrne with more r leni patience and be allowed to run It courw until It dlaappeara. The fact la that there are few dlstaces that do not el their marl from a trivial coll. a coid always weakens tn acme extent the realtting lowers of the victim's body. o tht he can easlv "catch" any cnntasloua diieate tJiai . arxmt. The germ cf a cold, of courae. la aJ- rreaent. ways the chance'to rut i la If i work. Ifawaiting your body la always ncr- fit. the germs are Ineffective. It la j mally w hen one's realatance is lowered that It i is reany to strike. Overheating the hfvly. either by heavy, tlsht ilothinjf rr hot rocir.a. weakens the aW'.n. Then when one emerge into the open air, he "ratrhea a tru." TMa l the reaaon for the "draft" lUea of catching cold. It la not a draft that makes one catch cold but the lowering of power by the quick changes of temperature. Iuick of frtsh a!r Is another reason for co'd. One should Bleep alwa-with a large amount of freeh air In circulation. Outdoor exerclae and Uep breathing la traenttal. Conntlpatlon rend era the body low In f colda. liaW vitality and read! Overheating and - fatigue alao produce conditions In which one Is Cable to Infection. On of the heat ways of getttne rll of a cc-lIs to ro to tel If Thta the bxJy and keeps toeihi. It at an Trn leta temperature. A swl cathartic should Ih taken to eliminate the poiaon In the i)i!(m. The diet during a eiJd thou!! be simple and in a small nuantlty. Irlnk a glass cf water every half hour. If the coll Is severe or If a pain 'In the cheat develop a physician ahould t summoned Immediately. MeUcl treatment will ahorfen the duration of the roki and prevent complication which might ilevelon from the continued weakness of resisting powers Cf the- -Uody. co- PAPIi , FRANK FEERNOTS DULL. DAT A Flay. Scene. Frank ' Feemot -- tandlng on a corner. Frank Feemot. I wish a runaway horse and carriage with wlmmin and childern In it would go rast so I could stop the horse. and save the wlmmin and childern. Theres too meny automobeets nowadays, thats the trubble. .Ferst boy going- past. Hello Frank. Bin doing enythlng brave lately? speshil. Frank Teernot. Nuthlng Ack 2. Scene, the same. ... ' Frank Feernot. Even If It was.only a runaway hore, and a huckster wagln If I It would be better than nuthlng. ouldent save the wlmmin and childern at lecst 1 could rave "the vegltlbles. 2nd boy going Tast. Hello Frank, have bravo- - today?- yoir did enythlng Not so far, Frank Feernot. Ack 2. Scene, tho same. Id even be Frank Feernot. glad to stop a runaway horse without eny carrldge or or enythlng. thats how desperate waggln I feel. 1m jest walsting my time standing heer. Newsboy going .past, t ,Exter etter all runaway irain about tne DOy Slopping and saving 609 lives incloodlng wlmmin and childern. exter exter. Frank Feernot. 'Aw heck. The End. . JIT ask?" I 1 T . HAMPTON aecong axrsei Jtffsrton Avanut. Tetepheno :4. Stovs. Range and Furnace Repairs, stc Csatinga fitted In by A.I workmen, stove repairing for 50 years mesns something Stoves tsth new and second hand. Homer Plpsless Furnscet. Me II orders so4Iclted. FRED SUMMERILL, M;r. INOirrERCNCE TO COLO. '1 . : Offic. Store and Works I re-atstt- rg . - y-- tfJi SUMMERILL FOUNDRY AND STOVE REPAIR WORKS ! BISHOP. a vsr. - - - -- BY DR. R. M. SY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON .If you wish to be permanently relieved of gas in the storhach and bowels, take Baalmann's Gas Tablets. are ' prepared Baalmann's distinctly for stomach gas, and for all the bad .effects coming from' gas pressure., That empty and gnawing feeling at pit of your stomach disappears,"" that anxious, nervous feeding with heart palpitation will vanish and you will again; be able to take, a deep breath, often prevented by gas pressing against your heart and lungs. Your limbs, arms nd fingers won't-fee.void and go to sleep because Baalmann's ." ; prevents - gas interfering y EDGAR a! GUEST." with the circulation; .drowsiness, aleepy feeling" after dinner wilL be replaced by a desire for some form of entertainment. MARSHAL FOCH. our distended storaach- will reduce be.Why do they cheer for Marshal FochT' cause gas will not form" after using Baal' A small boy asked his dad. ' mann's Get the genuine in the Yellow" Package ''Why do they wave their hats and shout? from llclntyre Drug Co.. or. any reliable p Why is the town so glad? . druggist. Price one dollar."-J- . Baalmann Mvhy are the flatfs flung out for him? Chemist, San Francisco. Advertisement, Why is the Tnusia played? Why do the people clap their hands And soldiers all parade? Don't Keglect' Your;Eyes ; "He looks to me like men I know Like you and Uncle Jino. Mr. mlth who lives next door Or Vhalever You Do! Why do they cheer for him?' , And the father said: He kept, the faith dangers great arose. Neglect causes bM eyes. ; bad teeth, HeWhen served the truth through bitter days nleless hair. Some people show all these And conquered freedom's foes. of neglect, others onlyva few, but signs more have than poor eyes .of the ;Men cheer because he kept the faith. others a statement proved byany the And if you're faithful, too'. number of people who wear glasses. large serve your country to the end, ,And so do ..Why many people neglect their The throngs will cheer when eyes sight is 'the most" precious of (Copyright, 1921, by Edgar A. Guest) all the senses and when strong eyes and oo ,. clear, perfect vision mean so much to and success? happines The Bon-Opt- o system of caring for the eyes. Is used by, a million people. Ask your druggist about it or ask your doctor; then get a Home Treatment Outfit and follow directions. If tho results do : not surprise you and satisfy you your drugWINTER-WORRIE' gist will refund the purchase price. Bon-Opt- o is sold under a guarantee of satisfWinter own its brings diseases, calling i ,.T action.;"; rem-for a. change of pills; when the climate NOTK: Bon-Opt- o is not a secret " cdjv The formula is printed on every ups and. freezes, there's a brand new set is harmless tot the of ills; so I put away the bottles that the package. Bon-Opt- o most sensitive eyes and may be used summer saw me buy, for the frigid winfreely! , Ask any. one; of .the million ail the ailments of . July. who ter throttles , . ; ,. , use And with jubilant emotions to the phar-vnaey I scoot, and buy up new pills and potiorfs. .hoping they are worth a hoot. Thus- - the winter time is riving satisfaction manlfold;,for a makes life worth living, and its ohange routine makes us b9 unuon bkakb Tne eld. Every form of stern endeavor 14 lc I Aak r r Drscrlsi for be 'mixed with harmless Tuay; doshould K-metaiiic" aad d Illla ia ;ia ' Rlbboa. ing one old thing forever takes one's pp bo 3 o. sealed witkt Blue and vim away. I wa tired of takirg Take tkr. Itmr f jnmr bitters for my sunstroke and my hives. DIAMOND BRAND PIIXS. for that human critters must summerNdope yean known aa Best. Safest, Always Reltabla consume or lose their lives; now I hay BY SOLD DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE ray winter ailments, rheumatisri. croup and flu. with the usual derailments of a wishbone or a thew: ailments mote or less distressing, foreign and domestic ills; but I count it quite a blessing to confiont E9 to Tikeoifk ( Itiim new kinds of pills. There Is always something CATARRH in this happy life we lead: al cheering, of the some attraction If we only V ways iL heed. When nearing. the cold no longer give BLADDER seems & .SafifcSacccaifcl pieases, ana toe. winter in diseases of agrind, new spring, will usher rnd piquant kind.- Novelties are to us Each Cacsule trooping, always something new ani pears name strange, and the old world goes down the ringing grooves of change. Copyright by George Matthew Adams) Gas-Table- ts YOUR HEALTH OF THE TWINS i.tst-trstat- msdt carrots cleaned laid, ftathera rsncvat-- ' ki--r d or rumttyro repair. ing eee mi. Prtcee Siturac-tlo- n reas&nabie, pvaranteed. . C ths.tlty. or -- CHICHESTER te Phsna Til For ucheuttrtnfl, PIPE . We fls thsm Ilka ts nsw. Bt08at StscK f sttma In . - . tae' OOOCN FELT AUTO tUPPLY CO. 2235 LAYING GHOSTS ; m "CPAIRINO tCC tit. Ws rssle any make. We are dtrtHbutere fee U. a. L. Datlery. battery with a guarantee. ' Talk s . CO. ef Olsmsns Ttrsa te By DOROTHY DIX, the "World's Highest Paid Woman Writer Gas-Table- lfk TOR BATTtRY - 010 Gas-Tabl- thtrn . r . ruun i AUIO SUPPLY Distributors Avtnye Wahjn0i HOME.J t T-! -- T wreen tlree r eaalna to ua. Ws rtpa Rctrsatfing wwk aiae ewr apeciaity. will leave Woo -- a ri ru i or TT S.TT'TrKTr A yeor ( TAKE. YOU TT uuuruiu.uia i SPOILED THAT ' RADIATOR REPAIRING swIck. lura, aafe, ausrsnttsd esdtafer rspatrtno, wa. r reien. beaktn, Hsky rad atr repaired rssaonsbJs. OGDEN AUTO RADIATOR CO. 2329 Hudjon Phone 201 . Inquired-cheerfully- I The StjmdarrJ-Exjuniner- 's Repair EHrcctory gives all principal place where an article can be cleaned, repaired or rebuilt like new. Hoover wvc. Here where ayi . you can do it - . - ' . 71 : .Jr that r it Langwell?" flushed crimson. " Nancy She dared not look at the young officer, but out of the corner of her eye, she could see his hand tighten on the steering wheel. When Stanley started to speak again, Desmond said quietly: "I think you'd better drop the subject, Stanley." The latter stretched comfortably back in the car. "Tha's so?" he : 60 LooC PAMMV! P01MT LIKE. A -'- MOT HA I MU5TNT - ..Judith had elected to eo with the doctor InTrre limausine. She conquered her aversion i to suffering to the extent of being able "to support the cushions which surrounded the unconscious Pleurette. though shjf kept her eyes averted from the "girl's face. The little man with the pinkly. bulbous nose rode in front with hi chauffeur. Nancy looked back pityingly at the c'Rwer,, car as Desmond sent the small roadster speeding ahead. 'She was wondering what would take 40a ce there between Edith and Dr. Lang-wfc- jl across the body of the unconscious Had Edith deliberately. chosen to make the return trip with the doctor and his that she might miss no detail of client the glrl'sawakenlng. no look, or word,-o- r gesture? de"Bad luck to look back, Nancy," Des-i clared Stanley jovially. - "Let 'er out mond. She's got a lot of speed. - 1 want to go like the devil to get the bad taste of this affair out of my mouth."---"think the doctor has his hands full without giving him any more enough ," laughed Desmond. He had insisted on taking the wheel for the return trip once he had glimpsed face and blazing eye3. Stanley's flushed "Great man. the doctor!" approved his Stanley, nodding his head solemnly, "I'm- - for utterance slightly thickened. ' him!" "You're tor any one who has a good stock," said Nancy crushlngly. private "f Aren't you ashamed to drink the brandy that was meant for a poor unconscious girl?" Stanley winked ludicrously. j "Shame to waste good, stuff like that on anybody that's unconscious," he defended- himself. "If I'd known he had a cellar,- I'd have been out last night.'.' . . "Thank Heaven you were in ignor - Lookit! OH "I had one ance!" murmured Nancy, HUSBAND. went back to "Loiter. Ijong" in peaceful evening." leered at 'her happily. and -..-Curtis Stan-,lewith Desmond ' Stanley "Desmond making love to you or was . BY ALLMAN'f TT INCORRIGIBLE Iicy thtar . i THE DUFFS STANDARD-EXAMINE- R a a nw. fn. AMkkK. The Aszimm Joe, end and rnrwm ba-- S JSC urariwm-i"U'mir fee RATES Cm men prntom ' - e hml'irt aeJ tact fiwv evaL!w dxict htm tc.f l,r: 1 TLe Anribaai Ji.r Ikwtk Jhpsraa T firm Yck Ar'ju-.- a T La Aaera Ajrri.Ta. Lot A-:- 0-- w. Ajr-ir- a ' |