1 ENO IS THE ANSWER It's the change of food and water Iilill often upsets you inwardly and spoils your holidays. Wise vacaticnists take Eno’: ‘Fruit Salt’ along for a regular dash in a glass of \\.'€ili‘l' before breakfast. Eno insures uincr cleanliness and helps d stiiznach upset. Then too, Iltlllii ovrrcouie an excess acid l niliiiun that often causes there lhmbl ~i liradaches and a dull, ll- ‘S1 l. g. Always keep Eno handy ilizs summer. E N 0'5 ‘FRUIT SALT’ FIRST THING EVERYMORNING Karin Ellis (By Michael Jlokwll) Author n! Popular Stories in National Mlgulnes Emily asked for ice cream and while the girl took their orders, Veronica remarked to the girl. That's an awfully pretty uniform, Kiddo. Thank you, madam. Veronica looked at he: mock and -hooed for You mean it's twenty cents for a lemon pop? Yea, madam. Vemnica called down to Bully who stood at the and of the foun- tain near the cashier, her face taut, her eyes stricken. Listen. miily, Veronica said. Twenty cents hem for a nickel pop! How do you like for the cherry and a nickel for the P0P- Emlly walked quietly up to Vjgr- onica. She lmew that ahe could come back here no more. I'll take Let's go. then. Hurry. We can't get out of here too soon for me. Veronica's voice boomed. At the cashier's booth she added, I don't know why we com; he” the first place, Bully twisted her handkerchief. She could not look up. You know. Veronica said, joking, I kind of You like to talk like a awell. You‘ like to walk along Fifth Ava-me, Hut when their eyes met. Ver- onica saw that she had stuirnbled on r. truth, or a near truth Emily's face resumed its mask in s flash, P-ut Veronica was shrewd. She had 13211031 aomnféhirlisz. Lietgdgo Emily. r s“ su. en i thmlflhtful S w “ed and Tilcv parted at Emily's door with Bristol Tluiéilioini? es nu on the 11love here , n» lira: rcpoi-isct at eight l0 nine LLllla per puuilu. A yer)‘ 800d crop l.» rcporiutl. to cnzei" llci- brother - tor lhe~ .g in the .\li. .\l.l.li.cc Riilzlhuil is having » -. .1. i. 0.i ins properly Aliirell Ezisl. and the buSlW u rixiily l0‘ full ll is Al. ; lllc curly I‘ llnilcvit 10ft recently n Islands to spendl ' ~ _- Mr.’ .~ llili l't‘lll.'illl fit‘ lilo uilill late in the ~-— t . "ls are closed at ' ri-pinrs are, iclcrsiood the ill he repaired iCl‘ iliiscil (Lgfliil before .l ild till-l mills that arc L;.l.\lv'.lll(é alluflilffd will again‘ e \\‘.ilC1' power in slunnier at] Mr. and Mrs. P. R. Sinnott and Ml‘. and Mrs. R. F. MacDonald, ‘were visitors lo Vernon River on 5 v, i l-st: of IVIF. and Mrs.- Jc; . Donald. Mi: n-nd Mrs. Mac in. resided hcrc hcfnrP Mr. ‘MarDcnriii was transferred t0 Vol-r. ' llS C. N. R. agent thcrcfli. ‘ PERMISS Y GRANTED NEW YORK. _ (GP) --Gregg Riw could not race Gunder Haegg} until hr- irccivcri pcltnisslon fr0m| hr ‘l ‘P1111? officer lit the King's, Pure‘ \'. Y.) Merchant Marine Academy. i ' . They were .U1ll‘DOS€S fflll the a brief .r"""i night. And that was tho end of something. In those first few months at Aaron Roth's. Emily was sohappy lit having found a job measure of security. that fur what it was. But soon enough she siiw that she was doing noth- llnlz to better herself. Held to her bench. Emily could not learn all that she wanted to about. this business. The girls lwlth whom she worked were the ,(iIlldl','€5 of the place and were nr-vcr thought of as individuals. lullching on sand wlches one n_oon ivlien Miss Ken- ilrick cam‘- into the room. All eyes widened in surprise when it was seen that Miss Kendrick was i m, cnrrviiig her _ "I hope you‘ don t mind c. little company." Miss. Kendrick said. and smiled. Shc was the one who for all practical place. The girls made room for her. lvliss Kendrick. self-conscious, ex— plnined, "It's Miss Landers. She's ill again. I simply can't take the timegto go out. It always hap- pens just when I'm so busy I can't sec straight." Emily put her sandwich aside and walked up to Miss Kendrick. "Maybe I could help you," she said. "I know typing and short- hand and bookkeeping." "That's thoughtful of you, but —" Miss Kendricks expression showed the impossibility of using a bench girl in the office. Later in the afternoon Miss Ken- drick came back. "Oh, you." she called, and when Emily turned her hvad. Miss Kendrick nodded, wig- glccl her finger and said, "yes, you." Emily rose from the bench and hurried to Miss Kendrick. "Perhaps you can help me. It's very rsimple. You Just read me some figures and I'll check them. If I don't have help, I'll never finish tonight." _ Emilv did her work so well that Miss Kendrick could not complain, and when the checking was fin- ished. Emily was given some let- ters to type. They worked until almost midnight and when she left Mr, Roth gave her a dollar and said. "Thank you for helping us out, young lady." "I was glad to do it. Any time I can help. let me know." _ __ By fall Emily had relinquished 0 (I A “runs IDIAMQND liiS 1s VALMESCDOP 4" -. WELLNEIPS l a... PAIR ' III The pert . are exquisitely Modernistlcally Designed that? But, if outraged, Veno was Qhmmault o; m. U 5 “m ‘u. good-nanred about it all. I up ' ' pose I keep the I,“ than’ l!“ mibrcachfilk of attacks at an airfield joked g: the Blrl. Or may}: "be; Ih o! cause em was a cherry 1m make! "w MrPenaive. Fifteen cents Rtgf/Ira, yet sgibwfild rifiutéklztia it‘. the check. she whispered. M treat. Th6 d” Ill-tr M18 Llndlrl What for? Veronica ughed Miaa Kendrick cams into tho back heartily. You don't "like no more rwm. "Stop in the office at than I do. lunch," aha told Emily. in dera’ work. If everything turns though; you'd m“. n he,‘ an,‘ idollars a week, but her ex naes 'l"l'-‘_Q!&RU°T1TT°.___ QHALQCQN LOWER Pillars stiiwell of tbo 0-3-1 command and seek other work. Nor did shi- dare to leave he: Job. Then. in early December, Miss Lander: an- nounced her engagement, and once more Emily's hopes sound. Kendrick laid. "llknily, Mr. Roth and I have talk- ed it over and we've decided to give you a chance at Miaa Lan- out satisfactorily, perhaps you gay have tho position permanent- Emllyk salary was raised to ten rose immediately, too- No onger could she bring her lunch to work She had to buy new clothes to wear in the office T at was in 1011 Emily Tillotson was on the way up. When. in the aprin of 1912. Emily met Jefferson Elia, she was twenty-one years old, a lean, healthy, beautifully complexioned woman. She was then making nineteen dollars a week and had The market prices on raw furs are steadily increasing. aur NOW 34m: saws, . Ifpollblsiioilriii run coar m you will males a selection I00 coals. . I! you ifalay your choice will be mucli more lhllfed. lfyoubuynouyouwlflwvc ' fmm ova: U Iollari during this AUGUST EVEN . . [Fyoudcfapyoumilllhidfhalfurprbn hlngrcatlybocr she never pailscd to consider he;- work ‘shaggy over the solitaire l; flawless 4 perfect in "HY '99‘ _ m; mountings matched PM i l eaigned. perfect] I l I , I i West 34th Street. Miss was unsurpassed- her. world? Heavy?" “But, really. Mr. Ellis. someone has to see that things are done." "Alwsrvs you?" Jefferson two or three months. commercial aiiist, the first artist of any sort that Emily had evcr met. He was a. short. man, dispro- rtionately broad of shoulder, ck chested, and long Sfllléd» He had lihck tightly curled hair, and thick black eyebrows that. were is face was dark and his beard blue, Across his cheek was a white thread of scar. With his flat nose, his wide, full lipped mouth. his pugnricious jaw, he was al- most frightening. Still, when he smiled-and he smiled often-he was like a little boy. Besides occasional assignments from the slick magazines, he illus- trated layouts for advertising com- panies on which he relied for his living. For Roth. Ellis designed labels and covers for powder boxes, all appropriately senti- mental in baby blues and pinks- Emily knew that he made what she considered lots of money, and for that reason, as well as his being an artist and therefore un- conventional, she accepted his flippant dismissal of all that was vitally important to her. She smiled at ills jibes. Nor did she complain when he sat on her desk. as he did now. musslng her pap- ers. "Just when. my staunch young citizen, will your boss get here?" he asked her. "He said four o'clock." "Yes. But that was four o'clock ylesterday, Mr. Ellis. You weren't- ere" "Four o'clock's four o'clock. I can't wait all day. I have things to do. I'm a busy man. I must g0 out and have a glass of beer at exactly four forty-five." "Mr. Roth just stepped Here he is now." Ellis and Roth went into Mr. Roth's office and Emily sped in her work to make up for the time sho had lost. Half an hour later, Roth and Ellis came out. Ellis was rubbing his hands "Then it's all s , Mr. Roth?” Ellis turned to Emily. "We's Just completed a gigantic transaction. War, going to tear down the building and plant grass and put in bow ing on the green. We'll make a fortune." Roth chuckled. Ellis, I'm telling you, you should be on tho stage that's what." "Ellis did not leev, when Mr. Roth went back into his office. He went quietly to a chair in the corner of the room. and though he did or said nothing to distract her, Emily found that it was difficult to work. He waited until he saw that she had finished the work at hand. " Tollotaon.” he said, gravely, "may I request the pleasure of your esteemed com- pany for dinner?" “I've oodles to do yet." "I'll wait." She considered the lnviatlon to be one of his jokes, but when she returned from Mr. Roth's of- fice he was still in the chair, his hat resting on his foot. "How much longer you going to be?" he asked. "I've a lot. more to do," aha said. "You'd better go." "An Ellis never goes." He made himself comfortable. Emily frowned and went ta her desk. "But I didn't think you meant it. Not tonight." "There is no time like the PN- sent. Proverb." Emily held out her hands. "But I'm not dressed. And it. would take me so long to go home and—" "You are beautifu ly dressed. We will have a quiet evening and talk cf our souls." He did not speak again until Emily was ready to leave. Immediately she aaw that Ellis dropped his exaggerated man- ner when out of the office. No longer did he gesture wildly. And the little he had to say was aald simply. He did not resume the bantering manner until after they entered a basement reaaurant that had plaid tablecloths and wax- dripped wine bottles whose can- dlelight waa exquite on her akin. "Dominic." Ellis told the waiter, 011C» "this young lady hasn't eaten since \he fall of tile Roman Empire. We moved into a two-room flat on Emily was still Kendrick, though no longer in fear of her, and she could terrorize the bench girls with a crisp assurance that Jefferson Ellis was amused byi her seriousness. He liked to chicie "How's the weight of the Ellis came to Roth's about once every He was n. light blue eyes] and styles. than ever before. l Sabledye - Minkdye - Fisherdyo ' Available NOW at = $295.00 A truly magnificant coats: sizes from 14-42, i $375.00 l l l MUSKRAT. CO A T S Choose the coat that suits just YOU from this tremendous range of sizes More beautiful shades AUGUST PRICES $315.00 AFGHANISTAN PERSIAN LAMB selection o‘. loose box styles. large and small curls. AUGUST PRICES $475.00 August Fur Prices" Are Lower, The Selection is Greater’ EXTRA SPEGIAL VALIIEH s only 1942 llunsoll SEALS vyediiusim Fur coat styles have been frozen, all styles shown this year are reproductions of 1942. These 5 coats (sizes from 14-114) are only one of the out- standing values we offer during August. 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Ellis finished the bottle of red wins. He took a tobacco pouch from his pocket. "Mind?" "Oh, no. I like to see a smoke a pipe." She leaned back, filled with well-being. and tinted to take from the restaurant some memento of the wonderful even- ing. But it seemed as if the night had Just begun. for when he finished his pipe Ellis said, "We'd betteiéurirép a cab if we're going m . And then they were out in the night again and she was havin her first taxicab ride. Excite- ment drowned any remnants of apprehension. The excitement mounted in the theatre lobby and clung to her all during tho per- formance, so that aha did not ao- tually enjoy the show an much as the thought that aha was aeein "iIDffIcer 0x00", the moat talked 0 pay of t e year. Nor was that the and. Aftar- ward they walked toward the du- ziing lights of Times Square into a crystal chandeliercd auranr. where she had a strawberry par- fait while Ellis had beer and Welsh rabbit. She smiled shyly. ‘élilve enioyed it all a0. Every- n .- "rm glad. Evan a Puritan should break out now and than. I'd like to know all about you. I'd like to know what has made you ~ " ~ ' "Ill are." ....i\lse aha Ila En, ... to her that she was not odd. She told him something of herself while he " ‘ and quiet. and when ahe finished, say- ing. "I suppose that's all there la, really," h. shook his head. "No," he inalated, “thcra must hava been a reason. You didn't Just coma to New York." And so she went on, telling more than she had planned, basking in the deli- cioua warmth that cams in speak- ing of those things so long locked within her. That was tho beginning of a succession of evenings with Ellis. They always went out alone. for ahe had no friends, and he did not tell her about his. He knew a hiddenlrlew York an delighte‘ in showing it er- l-le never called her in and that was the only flaw in their relationship. It seemed to liknily that she was always wear- unexpected- d into the office Just be- orn cocins time. (To be continued) For Foot Ailments _ consum- H. J. A. BROWN. DJ’. OIIIRUPMIQI’ “IQ. “I'll OIIAILOTIITOWI. Pl-l. Distinguished Flying Orosa to Sqdn. Leader Vlnoe T.C. McAuley, Bombs and Shells Shake Once- Gay Naples‘ In accordance with War time Prices and Trade Board Regulations. PHONE 1177 QUEEN ST. ' _ orrawa Au ia-(or) Air ' u u i ldd' mu“ h“, ha, we,“ ‘ m“. my; mm m“; ._ ‘m; F h ad. t m - _ 26, of Cc" l e, 8., and made The other awards nc 1:30 5-5;“ Th“ w“ "““°5"°“°' “m” lirdutclir-nubgdflzellziiil?! ilk-ii ngiriiiecede .03.‘. if a i1‘? w lilo giislinniiertileoiwfli: ggh-TP-lalogig: s.'3i33lii;?~’%'.. gdirn All‘. and (WEDGE!- Bombcd and shelled by the Allies, Naplm , peaceful panorama shown horn. This harbor, with its foreground) bu been blasted by Allied minim-l. and ahcllad the Itlliln oout near this key port. NIP BM" animal bomber distance from licily. ens, Bridgetown. NS. __a X IODSQT submarine b!" m‘ arltiui 0'11"?‘ us; NIP!" b‘,