Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 22, 1914, Page 9, Image 9

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    TiTfi BEE, OMAHA, FHTDAY, MAT 22, 1914.
9
f
J
i
I - ------ - - i 1 mrsrr -m ami .jiiNtfmitim. ' m
THE PROFESSOR'S MYSTERY
WELLS HASTINGS 42 BRIAN HOOKER.
AMT"H lliiiritt-.in.n . ....
"hi ituuoi ilMMUNa by HANSON 1UOTH
COPYRIGHT 1911 WyTHE OOBDS-MCRRILL COMPANY ?y
You Can Begin This
Great Story To-day
by Reading This
First
Two
of the Latest Styles from the Paris Shops
Described by Olivette
Prof. Crosby cnsua.t.v encounter at a
suburban trolley station Miss Tabor,
whom he had met nt a Christmas party,
both being bound -for tho Alnsleys. On
the way thes trolley Is wrecked, near the
Tabor home, and there Crosby goes to
spend tho night. After retiring he Is
summoned and turned out, to find ac
commodations at a nearby Inn, no ex
planation being given him. He en
counters Mr. Tabor In a heated debate
with u rough looking Italian the next
day, and learns the Italian Is one Caruccl.
Later at the Alnsleys he meets Miss
Tabor again, and they ate getting on
famously, when Dr. Walter Held, Miss
Tabor's stepbrother turns up, and carts
her off home. Crosby Is warned he must
not try to see Miss Tabor again. He
persists, and is invited to accompany her
on a midnight trip to the city, where
they rescue Sheila, Miss Tabor's old
nurse, from tho effects of an assault
committed on her by Caruccl, who turns
out to be Sheila's husband. In escaping
from the city with Sheila, they have u
brush with the police, but avoid being
detained or Identified. This gets the
newspapers Into the game, and one of
tho reporters, who comes closest to the
trail, turns out to bo Maclean, an old
pal of Crosby's, who Is persuaded to sup
press tho Tabor name, and to assist In
cleaning up the mystery. In the mean
time Crosby has gotten Into the good
graces of the Tabor family, has learned
ttiat It Is Margaret who wedded Dr.
Reld, while he Is In lovo with Miriam,
who answers to the family pet name of
Lady. Ho and Maclean locate Caruccl
working with a gang of gratiers near the
Tabpr home, and manage to stir up
quite a row with him, when Shelln Inter
venes. Crosby returns to the Tabors,
where he gets into an intimate conversa
tion with Mrs. Tabor, only to be inter
rupted by Lady and her father. -As a
result of tho conversation that followed
Lady U left with her mother, who seems
unduly excited, while Crosby and Mr.
Tabor go to have a smoko and talk over
tho situation. Tabor explains that his
wires health has been shattered since
the- death of a taughter several years
prior, and that conditions are becoming
unbearable. Caruccl in the storm-center,
and they agree that he must be gotten
rid of. Sheila Is to help. Crosby goes
back to town and encounters Maclean,
who has dug up some Information as to
Caruccl. Maclean explains the situation,
that is leading tin to the ninHm, .if
mystery. It Involves a visit to n splrltual
atlc seance, which Crosby makes under
.nacieairs guidance it developes the
medium Dretends to tirniln h onirit nt
Mrs. Tabor s dead daughter, the wife of
Dr. Reld, Leaving the scene of the
seance, Crosby sees Caruccl on tho street
and follows him to a drinking place,
where theJtatlan meets Dr. Reld and a
giant, and drinks are served for three.
It becomes apparent that Reld has a
scheme on foot, for Crosby notes that
Carucct's drink Is drugged, while neither
of the others is drinking. A large roll of
bills is handed Caruccl Just before ho
collapses and Is carried out. The giant
comes back with the money and gives It
to Reld. Crosby accosts Reld, and they
quarrel., - -
Now Read On
. ' ij
CHAPTER XIX',
In AVhlrh
I Cannot HelleTc Half I
Ilenr.
(Continued.)
"There's plenty of time for that," I
ald. lowering my, voice Instinctively, as
I felt my own temper slipping. I'll ask
ou just one more question On your
word, Is Miriam Tabor alive, or not?"
I never saw a man so broken by a word.
He turned from red to greenish whit",
the perspiration shining on his forehead;
for a moment It eqemed that .he could not
peak. Then ho dragged the words out
hoarsely and unnaturally.
"You've taken ft damned, cowardly ad
vantage Miriam Tabor was my wife, and
she's dead. Now are you satisfied? Bi
cause I'm not."
There was nothing to add. rose In
silence, and wo made our way to the
door. On . the sldowalk, he waited for
me to choose my direction: then without
i word, turned pointedly In the oppoalto
one, and walked quickly awn).
1 set out for the Caruccl tenement In a
utate of no great comfort. By forcing a
scono I had gained nothing;, and I had
made an overt enemy of Dr. Reld. Not
that I was particularly concerned over
that development; 1 had never liked the
man from the first; and I was impressed
not so much by what he had said as by
his open and disproportionate confusion.
Think what I might of my own side of the
affair, Reld had confessed to a personal
roncovn with Camccl; ho had flown into
a rage upon my asking for an explana
tion; and the name of Miriam had
itrloken him like a blow. He had told ma
nothing, after all, and had made me the
moro anxious over what he refused to
tell. If he had been absolutely In the
right, I had nothing' worse than to
touch upon a grief brutally, and
would have said precisely what he did
fay If I had been Justified and he had
ben lying. Well, Caruccl was out of
reach, and Held worse than silenced.
What chance remained to me of an an
swer to my problem depended upon
Sholla,
I had no time to doubt If I should find
her; for her window was lighted up, and
tho herself plainly to be seen, leaning
far out to watch the street below as I
turned the corner. When I was still
half way up the block, she called to me
by name, bidding me to come up at once,
and I answered as I picked my way along,
trying to reassure her. The scone for n
moment resembled a ludicrous burlesque
of a serenade; nor did the street miss '
anythlna of Its humor. With one accord
the wc-.nen In the doorways, the lounging j
men about tho lamps and the scurrying '
screaming groups of youngalcra under
foot caught up the Implication, and began !
a babel of Jocoso advice and criticism In
a dozen languages. And although I un
derstood but little of It, and was some
what preoccupied with graver matters,
yet I was fain to dlvt hurriedly Into tho
doorway with a heated and tingling
countenance. The llttlo room was Itself
again, save for a dull spot upon the
clean scrubbed boinilp; nnd the canary
In the window paused In a burst of sing
ing as t ontertu.
."Sheila," I eald, "l am ery much
afraid you won't like my news."
"Well, sir, what's happened him?" she
asked briefly.
'You're right." I answered. "It's your
husband, but It's nothing to be alarmed
about, nothing at all dangerous. You
must"
"For the love av God, do'n't thry to
break things t9 me, sir. Speak right out.
He's not hurt, yo say; well, he's pinched
then, I suppose."
"No. It's not the police. He's been
shanghaied. If you know what that
means."
"Crimped? It's thruc for ye, I know,
't's tvlce before he's been, but who done
it I never could tell. Av I thought anny
av my folk that's afraid av his silly
tongue wud do that dhlrty thrlck " sho
stopped short, her strong face working.
I was rather angry myself. "Well,
Sheila, I don't believe they had anything
to do with It before; but it was Dr. Reld
who had it done today. I was there, but
it was over before I understood what was
going on."
"Reld? 1 shud ha- known 'twas Reld,
the shamblln' scun he is. an' smalt good
thorn that loved him best ever had av
him. Now, the devil hould his dhlrty
little pinch av a soul. For why shud he
harm my man?"
"That's what I want to .know," I said.
"He's afraid of what Antonio says about
him, and you know"
"As far as his story ever goes It'll
harm no man," she burst out, "they know
well he's all bark an' no bite. If they
weren't all crazy afraid together, an' a
truer man anny day than that blagyard
body snatchln' pill roller. His own guilty
heart It Is, whlsperin' over hln shoulder,
an' me poor lamb that he married an'
murthered, and the child av his own
body on the one day! An' the poor mother
they're callln' .craay, with the soul av
the daughter she cudn't let free standln'
between her an' the sunshine. Crazy she'll
never be untU they make her so, .with
their" tloctors "an' questions an1 whispers,
an' that death-fetch Reld grlnnln' be-
I fni-A her fnr n-lth thn hlnnri nnt rlhrv nn
- - - . ...... -. . w - ...... .
hlml" She paused for breath, walking up
and down the room twisting her hands.
"Sit down, Sheila," I said, "you know
this is absurd, I'm trying to get a little
truth about people wo both care for", and
If you say things like that, how can you
expect mo to believe anything?" But my
knees wore trembling as I spoke.
"Mudhered It was all the same," she i
said sullenly, dropping back Into a chair
nevertheless "When a docthor with all
the learnln' that goes beyond the knowl
edge av a woman lets his wife die an'
an innocent mlto av a new-born baby go
down to the grave with her, 'tis black
murder It Is, no less. How could she rest
quiet after that, an' half her life callln'
to her, an' the mother that wouldn't let
her go, and had tho powor to see? 'TIs
no docthor she wonts, but a priest, an'
no medicine but a handful av holy
wnther, like my own sister's cousin Nora
that used to sit an' talk with her lad
that was dead evenln's by tho byre wall,
nn' Father Tracy came behind an'
sprinkled the two av thlm, the one he
could tee an' the one he could not see."
"Who Wf.s it that died?" I asked
sharply. "Was it Miriam? Did Reld lie
to me when he said so, or did Caruccl lie
No afternoon costume could bo found that would be more charm
ing than this combination of green and white taffeta frock and cupe
of plain green charmeuse shown on tho left.
The dress has a bodice made with bib nrrnngement laid in broad
tucks and fastened by a row of tiny white bowls. The underarm and
sleeves are of white chiffon. Frills of tho chiffon finish tho sleeves
in the turncd-up fashion of cuffs. Tho rolling collar of chiffon has a
double frill and fastens with a tie of tho striped material.'
The skirt gathers under a belt of plain green charniouse and but
tons In a line to continue tho bodice fastening. Stitched pockets
trimmed In the buttons cross tho side. Under this tunic upper skirt
Is an underskirt that buttons over tho right ankle.
The graceful cape of the green charmouso hangs straight from the
shoulders and is topped by a "Coqulllo" collar and fastenod by a cord
and tassels of white silk,
Tho afternoon frock on tho right combines linen and tulle In a
fashion that Is at once cool, charming and smart.
The bodice Is a simple blouse of fine linen, turned up at the fronts
In two scallopod rovers, hand-ombroldored, Tho neck. Is finished by
a double collar of black and white tulle.
Tho short sleeves are finished by a band of the ombroldory.
Tho draped girdle fastens at the middle front undor a huge bow
of black tulle.
Tho skirt is gathered at the waist and has three flaring founces
of tho harid-embroldercd, scalloped linen .outlined In bands of tho blank
tulle, Tho skirt Is gathered Into a puffing at the botton and above
this Is sot a woo puffing of the black tulle. OLIVETTE.
!
Changing Heavens
By GARRETT V. SEHVlSs.
"That spectacle,"sald a friend of mine,
one night, pointing up to the starry sky.
i "always overwhelms me with a sense of
when he said that Reld was married to ur.changeablcness."
Lady?" , "Yet," I rcpllod,
She grew suddenly quiet and cautious, j "It it the grand
as if shu had said too much already, and hi typo of ron
musr weigh her words. ' tlnual and atupend-
"Reld told yo the tTUth for once," she :ous change that the
muttered. '"Twas Antonio lied." 'imagination could
"Then Miriam was his wife, and possibly conceive.
Lady" Us apparent un-
"Ycs," she answered, "It was Miriam," jchangeableness Is
but she did not meet my eyes. Then j that of a distant
she went on hastily, before I could speak j landscape. Feen by
asaln. ' a flash of lightning
"Ye see, sir. 'twas like this: When (the wheel of a rac
Mlriam died, her mother's hrart nearly Ine auto seems to
went with her, an' so because the poor
dear loved her "more than enough, she
dirt not go quite away. "lis mo some
Try Skin Absorption
Instead of Cosmetics
The constant use of rouge and powder
invites a coarsened, roughened condition
of the skin, eruptions, enlarged pores
snd wrinkles. If you've learned this from
experience, suppose you quit cosmetics
ind try the following:
Ask your druggist for an ounce of ordi
nary mercollred wax and begin using
his tonlsht. Apply like cold cream,
nashlng It off in- the morning. Keep this
jp for a week- or two. The wax will lit
erally absorb the coarse, colorless or
.lemlshed top skin, but so gradually
whiles, when the llvln' holds too close
by the dead. She used to talk to her, an'
when the villain that' let her die got
he doctors an' looked like judgment, an' said
my poor soul was wrong In her head, an'
ought to be taken away, an' they moved
her out there In the eounthry where they
had no friends, an' kept her hidden as If
there was a shame upon her. sure the
lovln' oul of the dead girl followed her
mother. They said she was crazy when
she made thm move her daughter's
room, an' keep It up In the new house
as It had been In the old. an" would lt
an' talk to her there. Sure, 'twas no
sign at all, an' a black lie in Reld's black
heart to ret the husband an" the daughter
agaln'her. Some folks are that way,
that can see the fairy folk an' the gob
lins, an' speak with the wandhertn' dead.
j A good' priest Mrs. Tabor should have
. when the power tire her, an' not a lyln'
schemln' brute av a dorthor that wants
to put .her away. 'Twas not much at
first anyhow. But he turned their heads
with his talk av asylums an horrors to
lead them away from his own wicked
ness." "Is that the secret, then?" I asked.
"Is the trouble no more than their fear
that Mrs. Tabor Is Insane?"
Secret? What secret? There's no c-
j
vibion, as restless and as swiftly vari
able as a winter storm-sky fiUul with
eddying flakes.
"I'rsa Major the Great l!d, l,fo the
Lion, Taurus the chnrging Rull, OHoi
tho mlghtly Hunter, the .o.ithtrn Crf'Ss,
the Northern Crown, the Lyre, tho
Whale, the Scorpion, the Scales, Virgo
the Virgin, Hercules the Doer of Deeds,
Draco the Great Dragon, Ophlu
chiis the Serpent Hearer, the wholo re
fulgent ryrln of the Zodiac, from A'irg
round to Flsces, all these, wltn.iul ex
ception, and every starry uompanj In
Our Great Debt to the Turks
be motionless. Your
whole lifetime Is
but a lightning flash against the spinning
wheels of the -universe! The entire his
tory of the world since the traditional
time of Adam Is hut a lightning flash in
the existence of the sidereal systems.
"They are all In motion, and thoy are
all changing within themselves. Ixiok
yonder at that rich part of the Milky
Way, there the millions of apparently
crowded stars resemble luminous clouds.
If you could stand watching those star
clouds for a million years, Instead of a
few moments, they would shift and roll
bofore your eyes like tho whirling vapors
of an advancing thunderstorm.
"The astronomer arrives at a know
ledge of the fluctuations of the universe
by projecting his Imagination hack Into
the past and forward Into the future. He
gazes through a telescope which pene
trates time Instead of space. Its lenses
gather together, and bend to a focus,
beams of age .Instead of rays of light.
With its aid he sweeps all pant and com
ing neons Into the field of his mentl
visions, and strives to view them In the
mass, as they nro een by the "Anclent-
!of-Days' himself.
"It Is In this way that we know that
all these brilliant oonsMlHtloru. uhich,
to the eye of the caual !ookor. have, not
altered their outlines ainoo recorded bin-
SS i ... V. . .. V. . fr all nr.li, . 1 n r-v j n , tifph klifinil HAttfn i1 AMiIIIm'
. JUmm. ..nil .11 -lll.f am I ",r " ' ".vnt.j "C. , - -
tradnallv lhe dear, velvetv. natural! v. She was growing e-irenn again. 1 Is all i lout i.ore me nans 1.1 i rv- nn ne
tinted underskin ome to the surface, i that dorthor that's never happy but doln'
And merrollzed wax boeomes you.r ever- i ),arrn. She1 no more eraxy than meself,
'"U&Le wrinkle, and lore onres. 1 n' no one thinks nor fears It. not even
pake a fa'e bath bv dissolving an ounce mm iney omy say w. necause
rf powdered saxollte In half pint wltrh 'stopped herself again
hazel. 'Vhls lus remarkable astringent i
and tOnK properties, and beneficial re- ,, ., . .
s ilts c-.aie qukkly.-Advertlee-T.ent. To Be Continued Tomorrow.)
!he
are shining tonight on the tenti of our
soldiers in Mexico, are In rwlty i
mutable and ephemeral n so "nany
swarms of snow crystals.
' Yes, It Is no xaggi'rati'in to afflipi
that the firmament of -ta would up
pear, to an eye endowed with Immortal
toy REV. THOMAS R. GREGORY.
Tho piece of work for whUh the world
will ever ho In debt to tho Turk was -e-gun
on April , HJ3 and ended, fifty
three years later, with the fall of the
City of Constan-
tine.
When Constanti
nople fell before
the mad rushoa of
the Mussulmans,
the barriers of
darkness fell with
it all o,er the
earth, and the
dawn uf new day
was at hand for
the long-benighted
humanity.
Whut Athena was
In the age of Peri
cles, what Alexandeia was after the
light of Athens had expired, l onstan
tlnoplo was for the three or four cen
turies preceding tts capturo hy Mahomet
II the head-eenter of the world's Intel-
rJf
start, and the Italians were beginning to
learn a Utile something about the long
forgotten achievements of their Illustri
ous ancestors. And what Petrarch, Boc
caccio nnd one or two others were doing
In Italy, little groups of kindred spirits
were trying to do In other countries; but
the progress was distressingly slow, and
In the main Europe still lay In tho Intel
lectual equator of the dark ages-the.
plghtmare period of history, when the
intellectual life of the people was well
nigh extinct.
But when the- Greek scholars, driven
forth from Constantinople hy the Turks,
brought their aid to the work, thlnKs be
gan to forge ahead by leaps nnd bounds,
Tho splendid literature, of the ancient
I Greeks (thanks to the newly Invented
: printing press) began to be disseminated
.abroad, and 1t was ss' good as settled
.that th battle was won. The darkness
was rouiea. run Dats and owls were
driven away. The long nightmare was
over. Touched by the Ithurlal spear of
Greek genius, the long dormant, degraded
humanity vtarted Into a new life-a life
of thought, of decency and self-respect
lectual light, the home of the great
seholars, the haen of the eholec spirits!0' freedom and progress.
'VI..
a --'"i.uouim- m
Kadtiuvc Isdlclts
"Scauiy Lesson
I.ICSflON VIII PA ItT IV.
The Hnnd Their Possibilities.
Provide yourself with a loose, Pr-
. feftly clean pair of white kid gloves.
I several sizes too large for you, and sleep
I In these at night. Before putting them
on wash the hands thoroughly with pure
! loap and warm water, dry them well and
I rub In cold cream, or. It wrinkles are
forming, a good massage cream. Take
! each finger neparately and work the
cream well Into it. twisting the linger
sliRhtly and working from the base to
tho finger tip. Then cover the back of
tho hand with .the cream and treat It to
a series of little patting movements, be
ginning at the wrists and running up
over the knuckles, getting all the cream
Into the skin that It will hold. This will
fill out hollow and take away wrinkles,
and sleeping In tho kid gloves atnlKht
will Induce perspiration whlcn will
Whiten the hands. If there are discolora
tion on the hands, apply peroxide of
hycirogen once or twice a week, no
oftener. as It Is drying to the akin.
In largo cities the regular weekly Visit
to the professional manicure has become;
to be a habit, and with one thorough
treatment K week It Is a simple matter to
keep the nails In good condition. How
ever, It Is quite possible for a woman to
manicure her nails herseir. It she has the
Implements that a professional use and
practices the manner of properly using
them,
The proper tools are not expensive, but
It Is best to purchase them separately and
avoid those that come In set. Ask for
the best quality and the . style used by
professionals. They consist of a pair of
scissor. w'th curved, narrow blades, a
long flexible file, a thin cuticle knife and
a buffer of good size with a chamois
cover that can be easily removed. In ad
dition to these are some Inexpenstva arti
cles such qs orange wood sticks, a wide
mouthed bottle of peroxide ot hydrogen,
emery boards, a polishing cream or pow
der, a nail brush nnd a bowl of warm,
soapy water.
Note-Tha subject of "Manicuring" Is
to be continued In tin next article.
Lesson VIII Is divided Into five parts
and should be read throughout to ob
tain full Information on the subject.
(Lesson VIII to be continued.)
Advice to the Lovelorn
Ry BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
Gifts from n Mnti.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am n girl of IS
and have been receiving attentions from
a young man, but am not as yt on
guged to him. Another young man of
my acquaintance sent me a present ot
some wearing apparel. The first young
man asked me to send this other young
man's present buck to him, telling me he
didn't wnnt me to receive any sifts from
any other fellow than himself. What X
want to know Is, shall I keep tlje present
or send It back? I do not wnnt to hurt
the young man's feelings -who sent me the
present. Do you think tho first young
man had any right tq asl; me to send it
back? T. H. D.
You must never accept gifts of wearing
apparel from men. If the first young
man la seriously Interested In you ho
would naturally resent your receiving
such a gift. Return It with a grateful
little note, saying thtt you appreciate his
the whole sky that mankind ;i admired
and mnde legends about, are triildng
up. crumbling, drifting asundar, nnd pre- Kindness, but feel that you ought not to
paring to assemble In other forinHtluni, I nr HdyantaRo of It
who treasured' up In their dvvoted minds
and precious folios the wisdom of the
ancient times.
The fall of the city forced these men
to saatter themselvea over Kurope. The
greater part of them went to Italy,
though some nf them sought refuge in
Clernwiny. France, tln British Islea and
elsewhere about the continent; and
everywhere they were of Immense value
to a movemont that had already set In
here and there about Europe, especially
In Italy.
That movement was the renslssanee
of Utters or. as we call It In English,
the revival of learning. Thanks to the
Immortal Petrarch snd a few other
Of hII the missionaries that ever wont
forth none were so holy, so snored, so
worthy of our eternal respect, love and
gratitude as were those Greek scholars
who fled from Constantinople to find a
refuge from the. fury of the Turk.
Thank God, then, for that Turkish fury.
Jt hastened along that Intellectual free
dom, without which the world and our
life in it Is not worth the living
Cut the Plab'a Viewpoint.
Griggs The last time we went fishing
together I remember you caught the
hook In your jaw and I had the dickens
of a time getting it out.
BrlggsTes, from that little accident I
got the fish's viewpoint on the sport and
,, , , . . . , ii nnven i. neen imuns B'nce uosion
Italians the revbal had made a fair J Traijicrlpt.
like the new heaven that Is to ahlni rpon !
tho new earth of the Apocalypso.
"But It Is not only changes hr.iiuht
about by the "cross-drift" of thj t.irs
thnt tho astronomer's eye can perceive.
Equally astonishing changes era iiktrivr
place In the distances between our itar.
the. sun, and his brethren.
"l.ook up at Alderbnran, the red first
magnitude star In the eye of Taurus. I.
Is going awny from you at a apeed r.fl
thlrU'-tlve miles per second, seventy
tlincrl as fast as the swiftest cannjo
ball. Every surcesslve night It Is 3,000,0X1
miles farther than It was twenty-four
hours before, and yet Its distance Is so
great thnt It has not appreciably dimin
ished In brightness In 1,000 years.
"Then fix your eves on n l'ttle star
under the feet ot Orion, which astrono
mers call Delta Leporls, It Is flying away
from us nt the rate of sixty-two miles
per second. That means a retreat of
more than 6,3.10,00) miles botwen on
night and the next nnd yet Delta Le
porls does not sensibly fade. It Is like
a d'stant steamer's light so far away to
begin with that no alteration of its dis
tance can produce a change In Its ap
parent magnitude until the time elapsed
begins to bear some appreciable propor
tion to the spaoe that Intervenes.
"If you will regard another little star
In the Whale, called Kta Cephel, you
will be looking at a projectile as big as
a sun, which Is rhnotlng toward us more
than fifty miles per second. Tho great
Dog star. Blrlus. which crossed the Milky
Way hundreds of oenturles before his
tory began, Is speeding In our direction
at the rate of fifteen miles a second, and
the Little Dog star, Prooyon. I chasing
after him with the losing stride of ten
miles per second.
"The magulflctnt Areturu Is retiring
Into the depths of space with dignified
step-three iiiIKk a secondwhile Alpha,
f-'entaurus, a twin star, each of whoso
components equals our sun. la drawing
a m'llion miles nearer flvery twenty-four
hqura. The nst Orion Nebula Is retreat
ing eleven miles a second., but that whirl
ing wonder cnllud. tho Andromeda Nebuls
Is rushing hit her ward 185 miles a second,
or moro than ll.GOO.OOO miles per day.
"Luckily for us, It has plenty of sky
room.
'"In view of all this, do the heavens
still aeem to you so placid and unchangeable?"
Von Cnti Do Nothing.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a girl JO
years old nnd have a great many friends
of both sexes, but there Is one youner
man of whom I think a great deal. He,
very seldom linn a position and If he has
one he Is always grumbling about it. He
also Is Inclined to alcoholics and gam
bles. What can I do to cure htm?
DISTRESSED.
You can't save him, but you can wrack
! your own life If you .choose by marolnc
him and making the effort.
Suppose you show him ou have some
good common sense by rutting such a
man off your list of acquaintances. Your
love for hlni docs you no credit
esm
9 V
stops itching
instantly
THE moment Reiinol Ointment
touchei ny itching ikin, the itching
tops and healing begim. With the
aid of Reiinol Sotp, t quickly remove
all traces of ecxema. raib, tetter, ring
orm, pimples or other tormenting, un
tightly eruption, leaving the skin clear
and healthy. It ia equslly effective for
orei, boili, fcurni, -d, rough handi,
dandruff and piles.
RetlDol Ointment Is so nearly f
er4 that It can be ued on eipead sur
faces without attiaetingiidue'attantioa.
IleInal has bn preaeribad by dottor for It
years. All drugxuu tell JUsiool Ointment (40a
and 11.00), and Reiinol goap (JJe). For trial
ne fiee. write to Dept. 40-S, Realnol, Balti
more, Md. fiewtreof uselats "aubatHutM."
4l