The Lexington Leader (Lexington, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, January 6, 1922 Page: 3 of 8
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THE LEXINGTON LEADER
ci
SAYS CALOMEL
SALIVATES AND
LOOSENS TEETH
The Very Next Dose of This
Treacherous Drug May
Start Trouble.
You know what calomel Is. It's mer-
cury; quicksilver. Calomel Is danger-
ous. It crashes Into sour bile like
dynamite, cramping and sickening you.
Calomel attacks the bones and should
never be put Into your system.
If you feel bilious, headachy, consti-
pated and all knocked out, just go to
your druggist and get a bottle of Dod-
son's Liver Tone for a few cents which
is a harmless vegetable substitute for
dangerous calomel. Take a spoonful
and if it doesn't start your liver and
straighten you up better and quicker
than nasty calomel and without making
you sick, you just go back and get your
money.
Don't take calomel 1 It makes you
sick the next day; it loses you a day's
work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens
you right up and you feel great. No
salts necessary. Give It to the children
because it is perfectly harmless and
can not salivate.—Advertisement.
CATS FOLLOW FISH DEALER
Animals of Sheepshead Bay Regular-
ly Take the Trail of the Peddler
of Sea Food.
Like the pied piper, the Sheepshead
Bay fish denier has a following of eats
as he pushes his cart through the res-
idence section on Friday morning, says
the New York Sun. The cats for
blocks away hear his shrill cry of
"Fresh fish 1" or perhaps smell his car-
go and come slyly through the streets
for a chance at a delectable bit of sea
food. „
When the fishmnn gets a customer
he cleans and scales the fish on the
ground. This Is the chance .for the
neighborhood cats. Their part of the
feast consists of the discarded heads
and tails of fluke and sea bass.
Obtaining a prized portion, most of
the cats break for home to enjoy the
repast, while others not so fortunate
hang on the peddler's heels and fol-
low hiin about until he finally makes
a sale and permits them to profit on
his loss.
DANDERINE
Stops Hair Coming Out;
Thickens, Beautifies.
85 cents buys a bottle of "Dander-
ine" at any drug store. After one ap-
plication you can not find a particle
of dandruff or a falling hair. Besides,
every hair shows new life, vigor, bright-
ness, more color and abundance.—Ad-
vertisement.
An Explanation.
A school teacher asked a class of
82 children, "What is a duchess?"
Thirty-one were discreetly silent,
but an eight-year-old ventured, "Some-
body who talks Dutch."
MOTHER! CLEAN
CHILD'S BOWELS WITH
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP
Even a sick child loves the "fruity"
taste of "California Fig Syrup." If the
little tongue is coated, or if your child
Is listless, cross, feverish, full of cold,
or has colic, give a teaspoonful to
cleanse the liver and bowels. In a few
hours you can see for yourself how
thoroughly it works all the constipa-
tion poison, sour t>ile and waste out of
the bowels, and you have a well, play-
ful child again.
Millions of mothers keep "California
Fig Syrilp" handy. They know a tea-
spoonful today saves a sick child to-
morrow. Ask your druggist for genu-
ine "California Fig Syrup" which has
directions for babies and children of
all ages printed on bottle. Mother!
You must say "California" or you may
get an imitation fig syrup.—Advertise-
ment.
Give Him Time.
"Isn't Charley Castleton one of
Adele's former husbands?"
"Not yet."—Life.
Snowy linens are the pride of every
nousewlfe. Keep them in that condi-
tion by using Red Cross Ball Blue in
your laundry. At nil grocers.—Adver-
tisement.
Poverty often pinches the body and
wealth sometimes pinches the soul.
Coprrtgbt by Kathleen Norrll
"By
KATHLEEN
NORRIS
CHAPTER XV.
—13—
Swept along by a passionate excite-
ment that seemed actually to consume
her, Cherry lived through the next
three days. Allx noticed her mood,
and asked her more than once what
caused it. Cherry would press a hot
cheek to hers, smile with eyes full of
pain, and (lutter away. She was well,
she was quite all right, only she—6he
was afraid Martin would summon her
soon—and she didn't want to go to
him— 1 v
Suspecting something gravely amiss,
Allx tried to win her confidence re-
garding Martin. But briefly, quickly,
and with a sort of affectionate and
apologetic impatience, Cherry refused
to discuss him.
"I shall not go back to him!" she
said, breathing hard, and with the all'
of being more absorbed in what she
was doing than what she was saying.
"But do you mean that you are
really going to leave him?" the older
sister questioned.
"I don't kqpw what I'm going to
do!" Cherry half sobbed.
"But, dearest—dearest, you're only
twenty-four; don't you think you
might feel better about It as time goes
on?" Allx urged. "Now that the
money Is all yours, Cherry, and you
can have tills nice home to come to
now and then, Isn't It different?"
Cherry was looking at her steadily.
"You don't understand, Sis I" she
said.
"I understand that you don't love
Martin," Allx said, perplexed. "But
can't people who don't love each other
live together In peace?" she added,
with a half smile.
"N-n-ot as man and wife!" Cherry
Btnmmered.
Alix sat back on her heels, In the un-
graceful fashion of her girlhood, and
shrugged her shoulders.
"Think of the people who are wor-
rying themselves sick over bills, or
sick wives, or children to bring up!"
she suggested hopefully. "My Lord. If
you have enough money, and food,
and are young, and well—I"
"Yes, but, Allx," Cherry argued
eagerly, "I'm not well when I'm un-
happy. My heart Is like lead all the
time; I can't seem to breathe! Peo-
ple—Isn't it possible that people are
different about that?" she asked
timidly.
"I suppose they are!" Allx conceded
thoughtfully. "Anyway, look at all
the fusses in history," she added care-
lessly, "of grande passions, and mur-
ders, and elopements, and the fate of
nations—resting on just the fact that
a man and woman hated each other
too much, or loved each other too
much! There must be something In
It all that I don't understand. But
what I do understand," she added, af-
ter a moment, when Cherry, choked
with emotion, was silent, "Is that Dad
would die of grief if he knew you were
unhappy, that your life was all broken
up in disappointment and bitterness!"
"But Is that my fault?" Cherry ex-
claimed, with sudden tears.
Allx, after watching her for a trou-
bled minute, went to her and put her
arm about her. "Don't .cry, Cherry !"
she pleaded sorrowfully.
Cherry, regaining self-control, re-
sumed her work silently, with an oc-
casional, sudden sigh. She had opened
the subject with reluctance; now she
realized that they had again reached
6 blank wall.
• • *••
Three days after their talk In the
moonlit garden Peter found chance
to speak alone to Cherry.
"Are you ready?" he asked.
"Quite!" she said, raising blue eyes
to his.
"It's tomorrow, then, Cherry!" he
said.
"Tomorrow!". He saw the color ebb
from her face as she echoed him. Thls^
was already late afternoon; perhaps
her thoughts raced ahead to tomorrow
afternoon at this time wheft they two
would' be leaning on the rail of the
little steamer, gazing out over the
smooth, boundless blue of the Pacific,
and alone In the wtirld.
"Tomorrow you will be mine!" he
said.
"That's all I think of," she an-
swered. And now the color came up
in a splendid wave of flame, and the
face that she turned toward his was
radiant with proud surrender.
He told her the number of the dock;
they discussed trains.
"We sail at eleven," said Peter, "but
I shall be there shortly after ten. I'll
have the baggage on board, everything
ready; you only have to cross the
gangplank. You have your baggage
check; give it to me."
They were waiting In the car while
Allx marketed. Cherry opened her
purse and gave him the punched card-
board.
"I'll tell Allx that I have a last
dentist appointment at hnlf-past ten,"
she said. "If she goes In with me,
we'll go to the very door. But she
says she can't come In tomorrow, any-
wny. I'll write her tonight, and drop
the letter on the wny to the boat. To-
morrow, then!" wag Cherry's only an-
swer. "I'm glad it's so soon."
• * •••••
"Good-by!" said Cherry, leaning
over the side of the car to kiss her
sister. Allx received the kiss, smiled,
and stretched In the sun.
"Heavenly day to waste In the city I"
said Allx.
"I know!" Cherry said nervously.
She had been so strangely nervous
and distracted In manner all morning
that Allx had more tlinn once asked
her If there was anything wrong. Now
she questioned her again.
"You mustn't mind me!" Cherry
said with a laugh. "I'm desperately
unhappy," she said, her eyos watering.
"I'd do anything in the world to help
you, Cerise!" Allx said sympathet-
ically.
"I know yon would. Sis! I believe,"
Cherry said, trembling, "that there's
nothing you wouldn't give me!"
"That's easily said," Allx answered
carelessly, "for I don't get fond of
things, ns you do! My dear, I'd go off
with Martin to Mexico In a minute.
I mean It I I don't care a whoop
where I live, if only people are happy."
"How about Buck?" Cherry said, as
the dog leaped to his place on the front
seat and licked iiis mistress' ear.
Alix embraced him lovingly.
"Well—If he wanted to go with
you 1" she conceded unwillingly. "But
he wouldn't!" she added quickly.
Cherry, going to the train, gave her
an April smile, and as she took her
seat and the train drew on Its way, It
seemed to her suddenly that she might
Indeed meet Peter, but It would only
be to tell him thnt what they Had
planned was Impossible.
But on the deck of the Sausalito
steamer, dreaming la the sunshine of
the soft, lazy autumn day, her heart
turned sick with longing once more.
Allx was forgotten, everything was
forgotten except Peter. Ills voice, his
tall figure, erect, yet moving with the
little limp she knew so well, came to
her thoughts. She thought of herself
on the other steamer, only an hour
from now, safe In his care, Martin for-
ICIS'I!
J
In Utter Confusion She Looked Up.
It Was Martini
gotten, and all the perplexities and
disappointments of the old life for-
gotten, In the flood of new security
and jo£ I jOS Angeles—New Orleans-
France—It mattered not where they
wandered; they might well lose the
world, and the world them, from today
on.
"So that Is to be my life—one of
the blamed and Ignored women?"
Cherry mused, leaning on the rail
and watching the plunge of the re-
ceding water. "Like the heroines of
half the books—only It always seemed
so bold and so frightful In books!
But to me It just seems the most nat-
ural thing In all the world. I love
Peter, and he loves me, and the earth
Is big enough to hide us, and that's
all there is to It. Anyway, right or
wrong, I can't help it," she finished,
rejoicing to find herself suddenly
serene and confident.
It was twenty minutes past ten, a
warm, sweet morning, with great hur-
rying back and forth at the ferry,
women climbing to the open seats of
the cable cars, pinning on their violets
or roses ns they climbed. Cherry sped
through it all, beside herself now with
excitement and strain, only anxious to
have the great hands of the clock drop
more speedily from minute to min-
ute, and so round out the terrible hour
that joined the old life to the new.
She was hurrying bUndly toward the
dock of the Los Angeles line, absorbed
in her one whirling thought, when
somebody touched her arm, and a
voice, terrtfyingly unexpected and yet
fnmlllnr, addressed her, and a hand
was laid on her arm.
In utter confusion she looked up.
It was Martin who stopped her.
For a few dreadful seconds a sort
of vertigo seized Cherry and sho was
unable to collect her thoughts or to
speak even the most casual words of
greeting. She had been so full of her
oxtrnordlnary errand that she was be-
wildered and sick at its Interruption |
her heart thundered, her throat was
choked, and her knee* shook beneath
her. Where was she—what was
■
known—how much had she bo-
trayed—
Gasping, trying to gmlle, she looxed
up at him, while the ferry place
whirled about her and pulses drummed
In her ears. She had automatically
given him her hand; now he kissed
her.
"Hello, Cherry; where you going?"
for the third time.
"I came Into town to shop," she
faltered.
"You what?" She had not really
been Intelligible, and she felt It, with
a pang of fright. He must not suspect
—the steamer was there, only a short
block away; Peter might pass thorn;
a chunce word might be fatal—he must
not BUspect—
"I'm shopping!" she said distinctly,
with dry lips. And she managed to
smile.
"Well," Martin said, "surprised to
see me?"
"Oh, Martin—" said her fluttered
voice. Even In the utter pnnlc of
henrt and soul she knew that for
safety's sake she must find his vanity.
"I'm going to tell you something
that will surprise you," he said. "I'm
through with the Bed Creek people!"
"Martin!" Cherry enunciated almost
volcelessly. She looked from a flower
vendor to a newsboy, looked at the
cars, the people—she must not faint.
She must not faint.
"Well—but where are you going?
Home?"
"I was going to the dentist a min-
ute, but It's not Important." They
had turned and were walking across
to the ferry. She knew thnt there was
no way In which she might escape
him. "What did you say?" she said.
"I asked you when the next boat
left for Mill Valley?"
"We can—go—flnd out." Cherry's
thoughts were spinning. She nmst
warn Peter somehow. It was twenty
minutes of eleven by the ferry clock.
Twenty minutes of eleven. In twenty
minutes the boat would sail. She
thought desperately of the women's
waiting room upstairs; she might
plead the necessity of telephoning
from It. But it had but one door, and
Martin would wait at that door.
Suddenly she realized that her only
hope of warning Peter wag to send
a messenger. But if Martin should
chance to connect lier neighborhood
with the boat, when he met her, and
her sending of a message to Peter
here—
"I think there's a boat at eleven
something," she said, collectively.
"Suppose you go and find out?"
She glanced toward the entrance
of the Sausalito waiting-room, a hun-
dred yards away, and a mad hope
leaped In her heart. If he turned his
back on her
"What are you going to do?" he
asked, somewhat surprised.
"I ought to telephone Allx!" Her
despair lent her wit. If he went to
the ticket office, and she Into a tele-
phone booth, she might escape him
yet! While he dawdled here, minutes
were flying, and Peter was watching
every car and every passer-by, torn
with the same agony that was tearing
her. "If you'll go find out the exact
time and get tickets," she said, "I'll
telephone Allx."
"Tickets?" he echoed, with all Mar-
tin's old, maddening slowness.
"Haven't you got a return ticket?"
"I have mileage!" she blundered.
"Oh, then I'll use your mileage!"
Martin said. "Telephone," he added,
nodding toward a row of booths, "no
hurry; we've got piles of time!"
She remembered that he liked a
masculine assumption of easiness
where all trains, tickets, railroad con-
nections, and transit business of any
sort were concerned. He liked to loi-
ter elaborately while other people
were running, liked to pull out his
big watch and assure her that they hud
all the time In the world. She tried
to call a number, left the booth, paid
a staring girl, and rejoined him.
"Busy I" she reported.
"I was Just thinking," Martin said,
"that we might stay In town and go
to the Orpheum; how about it? Do
we have to have Peter and Allx?"
Cherry flushed, angered again, In
the well-remembered way, under all
her fright and stir. Her voice had
Its old bored note.
"Well, Martin, I've been their guest
for two months!"
"I'd Just as soon have them 1" Mar-
tin conceded, Indifferently.
But the diverted thought had helped
Cherry, Irritation had nerved her. and
the reminder of Martin's old, trying
stupidities had lessened her fear of
him.
"I've got to send a telegram—for
Allx," she said.
"What about?" he asked, less curi-
ous than Ill-bred.
"Goodby to some people who are '
sailing I" Cherry answered, calmly.
"Only don't mention It to Allx, because
I promised It would go earlier 1" she
added.
"I saw the office back here," he told
her. They went to It together, and
he was within five feet of her while
she scribbled her note.
"Martin mot mt. Nothing wrong.
We are returning to Mill Valley. 0.
L." She glanced at her husband | he
wbb standing In the doorwuy of the
little office, smoking. Quickly she ad-
dressed the envelope. "Don't read
thnt name out loud," she snld, softly
but very slowly and distinctly, to the
girl at the desk. She put a gold piece
down on the notfc. "Keep the change,
und for God's sake get that to the
Harvard, sailing from Dock 07, before
eleven!" Bhe said.
The girl looked up In surprise; but
rose Immediately to the occasion.
Cherry's beauty, her agonized eyes
and voice, were enough to awaken her
sense of the dramatic. A sharp rap
of the clerk's pencil summoned a boy.
"George, there's a dollar In that for
you If you deliver It before eleven to
the Harvard I" said she. The boy
seized It, stuck It In his hat, and fled.
"And now for the boat I" Cherry
said, rejoining Martin, und speuklng
In almost her natural voice. They
went back to the Sausalito ferry en-
trance again, and this time telephoned
Allx In real earnest, and presently
found themselves on the upper deck of
the boat, bound for the valley.
Until now, and In occasional rushes
of terror still, she hnd been absorbed
In the hideous necessity of deceiving,
of covering her own traces, of antici-
pating and closing possible avenues
of betrayal. But now Cherry began
to breathe more easily, and to feel
rising about her, like n tide, the halt-
forgotten consciousness of her rela-
tionship with this man In the boldly-
checked suit who was sitting beside
her. She had thought to escape the
necessity of telling him that she was
not willing to return to him; she had
been wrapped In dreams so great and
so wonderful thnt the thought of his
anger and resentment had been as noth-
ing to her. But she hud that to face
now.
She had It to face Immediately, too.
She knew thnt every hour of post-
ponement would cost her fresh humili-
ations and difficulties, and as the boat
slipped smoothly past the Island that
roughly murked the halfway point,
she gathered all her forces for the
trial. The one distinct Impression she
hnd from Mnrtln was the appalling
one that he did not dreum that she
had decided to sever their union com-
pletely and finally.
"Well, how's the valley? Bore you
to death?" he Interrupted the flow of
his own topic to ask carelessly.
"Oh, no, Martin!" she quivered. "I
—I love it there 1 I always loved It I"
"Allx Is a fine girl—she's a nice
girl," Martin conceded. "But I can't
go Peter! He may be all right, all
that lah-dl-dah and Omar Khayyam
and Browning stuff may be all right,
but I don't get it I" And lie yawned
contentedly In the sunshine.
After a few seconds he gnve Cher-
ry an oblique glance, expecting her
resentment. But she was thinking too
deeply even to have heard him. Her
mind was working ns desperately as
a caged animal, her thoughts circling
frantically, trying windows, walls, and
doors In the prison In which she
found herself, mad for escape.
She blamed herself bitterly now for
allowing him, In the surprise nnd fear
she felt, In the shock of their unex-
pected meeting, to arrange this do-
mestic and apparently reconciled re-
turn to the valley house. But It was
too late now 1 Too late for anything
but a bald and brave and cruel half-
hour that should, at any cost, sunder
them.
Quick upon the thought cnine nn-
other: what should she and Peter plun
now? For to suppose thnt their lives
were to be guided back Into the old
hateful channel by this mere mis-
chance was preposterous. Within u
few days their interrupted trip must
be resumed, perhaps tomorrow—per-
haps this very night they would man-
age It successfully, Meanwhile, un-
til she could see Peter alone, there
was Martin to deal with, Martin who
was leaning forward, valnglorlously re-
citing to her long speeches ho hail
made to this superior or that.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
Temperature of Ocean Water.
The surface wnter of the ocean va-
ries In temperature with the latitude.
The hottest wuter—about 80 degrees-
Is at the equator, and the coldest at
the poles. At a depth of several hun-
dred feet, however, the ocean, even In
the tropics, becomeg extremely cold.
This Icy water has drifted down from
the poles, spreading Its chilling effect
over the entire sea. In the lowest |
depths the temperature Is very close
to the freezing point. But there la
no danger that the ocean will ever
freeze, becauso the wnter Is In per- I
petual motion through waves, tides I
and also becauso the warm water at |
the equator, Constantly rising to the [
top, keeps the general tempera tur*
from dropping too low.
BUVfcHS
INDIGfSTW#
is cck2
. - 6 Bell-ans
I - - Hot water
Sure Relief
Bell-ans
25$ and 751 Packages. Everywhere
DID PAIN DISTURB
YOUR SLEEP?
THE _ pain and torture of rheu-
matism can be quickly relieved
by an application of Sloan'a
Liniment. It brings warmth, ease and
Comfort and lets you sleep soundly.
Always have a bottle handy and
■pply when you feel the first twinge.
It penetrates without rubbing.
^ It's splendid to take the pain out of
tired, aching muscles, sprains and
Etrains, stiff joints, and lame backs.
For forty years pain's enemy. Ask
your neighbor.
At all druggists—35c, 70c, $1.40.
Mnimeni
Pair's
Life's Tragic Moments.
When you work in u small office,
AS WE DO,
And think the boss bus left the office,
AS WE DID,
And begin talking about the "night
before,"
AS WE WERE,
And then find the boss Is standing In
a corner listening to the conversation
AS HE WAS.
DO TELL US.
—Detroit News.
The Literalist.
"Where's your car?"
"In a repair shop."
"Did you meet with an accident?"
"No, it overtook me. I was the vic-
tim of a reur-end collision."—Birming-
ham Age-IIerald.
Far From It!
"Was that your wife I saw you with
last night?" "I should say notl That
was a friend of mine."
Were It not for the bliss of ignor-
ance, some people would always be
unhappy.
How's Your Appetite ?
Headache? Weak?
Good Looks Follow Good Health
Saratoga, Texas—"A year ago I tried
several different medicines, but kept get-
ting worse, and felt that I never would
have good health again. I became so
poor and weak I could hardly do my
housework. I suffered from loss of ap-
petite, headache, constipation, shortness
of breath, also functional disturbances.
Sometimes I would have spells of indi-
gestion and weak sick spells and thought
I would die. 1 never expected to be well
any more. At last I wrote to Dr. Pierce
and he advised me to take Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription, Golden Medical
Discovery and Pleasant Pellets (sold by
druggists) and now I can truthfully say
I am in better health than I have been
for several years. I advise all women
Buffering as I did to take Dr. Pierce's
medicines. If there aro any medicines on
earth that will help women who are
broken-down in health, these will."—•
Mrs Winnie Comer.
Write Dr. Pierce, president Invalids'
Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y„ for free advice.
Heavy Cold? Chest
All Clogged Up?
DON'T let it get a start. Dr. King's
New Discovery will get right
down to work, relieving the tight feeling
in the chest, quieting the racking
cough, gently stimulating the bowels,
thus eliminating the cold poisons.
Always reliable. Just good medicine
made to ease colds and coughs.
For fifty years a standard remedy.
All the family can take it with helpful
results. Eases the children's croup.
No harmful drugs. Convincing, heal-
ing taste that the kiddies like. At all
druggists, 60c.
Dr. King's
New Discovery
For Colds and Coughs
Feel Badly? Bowel# Sluggish?
Haven't any "pep" in work or play.
You're constipated! The stimulating
action of Dr. King's Pills brings back
old time energy. All druggists, 25c.
1~V PROMPT! WON'T GRIPE
JJr. Kinffs Pills
ST. LUKE'S HOSPITAL
Reflnlshlng Nickel Plating,
A new nickel-plating solution said
to yield beautiful results is prepared
by mixing the liquid obtained by evap-
orating a solution of one-half ounce
nickel in aqua regla to n pasty mass
and dissolving It In one pound of
aqua ammonia, with that obtuined by |
treating tho snmo qnnntUy of nickel
with a solution of two ouncos cyanldo
of potassium In one pound of water.
More cyanide renders the deposit
whiter and more ammonia render* If
grayer,
MEDICAL-SURGICAL-OBSTETRICAL
401 E. Sixth Strut. OKLAHOMA CITY. OKLA.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
| Bmbovck Hajioro tf -S t ops H ai r h *11 lug
Restores Color and
Beauty to Cray and Faded Hair
•Or. and $M>0 at Drucclsts.
TTtwcoi Chrm. Whs. l'atcUoKur.N. T.
hindercorns RcmoTflj CVirns, Gal-
lon Hen. etc-, stops all paU. ensures comfort to the
fert, makes walking ran*. Mo. by mall or at Dru£>
flats, lllseox CUemlcal Works, fatchoffue, W. ¥„
W. N. U., Oklahoma City. No. 1-1922.
/
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Denison, Mrs. E. A. The Lexington Leader (Lexington, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, January 6, 1922, newspaper, January 6, 1922; Lexington, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc110924/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.