i» in‘ ' " After suffering pearly all day ahe remenibhred how she had nervous h 7n» oncadopped a h with - nnqwiaifepivu ole m st. rubbed some _ in. throb- bin temples and. Gbulllg. soot "nl lotion vi larnrn. soon lessened the~pa i She» xvarainceleta N,‘ lest r- " She nope is and bruises gent lt ia antiseptic, too. hurl-arms; a‘ a Mo. lass, ‘ The Ianlbelat— Bridgehnr , Ont. ‘_ . awed:- 1 '1' should realize that they ' havein Lifebuoyasafe, healing, inexpensive, and absolutely pure Soap that will make the children's skin glow with the bloom of health. LIFEIIIIY HEALTH SOAP lts pure, free latherinfl vege- table oils make it the finest and gentlest of cleansers for Bath and Toilet purposes. TM tarball: alanr In Lllskay L: l ‘ I'll n! m "mm" (aallllar- vaelrlrht Illrlly a/m are. Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto, Ont. Don't prolong I: grluahl. (golds. Ssmi Tar-oat. amps. l. rl s. sir“ Bronchitis. Tonlflliiaehi. I ohnson’s Amodyne l Lmiment a doctor's on to from,‘ rin- ls vresefiofl ierual and‘ external use with Q record of over I00 years of solen- l are mosses ‘ snodyne upon I safely nine et Well- i: .f .~ . w o n d e r f u l I y soothing. heslinlrnoin banishing hfili 1U! (ill <-. ~Q§§§O§§§O§§O© Complete 0pticai Service; _~_ ‘ Our Oxpnri system of eye- . examination. coupled with our LENS GRINDING QIIVIGI wars a complete service, sq- Ill to the best procurable. “That this service la apprec- ted is‘ evidenced by our tonstantly increasing volume 0i business. ‘ We sincerely thank our pat- Mls. and will continue to give to merit their confid- co. G. F. lluichescn Optometrist and Optician .\ 4| ii ' in s. common fund. _ I r 'ing of it, Gerry. Mentholatum hfitqjrurna ' ' Y n vvv-VV" ‘For... we. Loved and Earned Iv JANI PHIL" A Modern ltery of Home and business cattisss CHAPTER 71. Robert ordered the sionplest sort of dinner. I,\ preforcs, did the same. When the check came he paid it. but offered no objection after we reached home when I gave him my share. "l wish you wouldn't act this way, Robert," I said. “You know that I smr. willing to put all we have If you earned more than I did I wouldn't feel as you do." - "No-a woman wouidn't." "I can't see any difference." "Well/I can. It is no use talk- I mean just whai I say. Mean it for all time. I have despised mylself miore than you have despised me. I know that I haven't paid even my half of the expenses for some time. But now we'll ‘go it alone. I can at least fccd myself, and ‘pay for my bed.” Robert spoke so bitterly that the tears came to my eyes. I brushoo them away. so he would not see them. But I pretended to be busy and left the room. I’ couldn't trust myself to talk any more just then. fir‘ had scarcely returned to him ‘ When I heard voices in the hall, and than a tsp‘ on our door. "Come in," I called, thinking it was the maid. ‘To my surprise it was Mary Ryan and Gardner Ken- YOII. "Caught you, lazy bones!" Mary exclaimed as Robert jumped up to greet them. "The idea of liying down at 8 o'clock." "I know it seems ridiculous, Mary but my social duties are so tiring." Robert replied, loculariy. “We thought you might take pity on us and play bridge." Mary said after we had greeted Gardner. "Mr. Kenyon came to call, and there wasn't a blessed thing we could do but sit and lock at each other, so I suggested Ito come over here." "What's the matter with Mary? Dost you gift of Robert queried. "No, Robert, only laid it away for ‘s. while until I can gab, as you call it, more correct. She flushed an she made the honest confession. "Oh, that's it! Well, I'll get the table and we'll play. You'll be my partner, and I'll forgive you if you don't talk. “He'd not forgive you if you did! I broke m. Bob was a crank when he played cards. I-Ie played all games well, and had no patience with anyone who did not pay atten- tion to the game. - “Oh, Robert and I always get along, “Mary replied as we took our places. It was‘ the first time I had seen Gardner since I had gotten him the invitation to Betty Weed’; party. At first I fsit a little embarrassed. I knew. and he knew, that we were becoming interested in each other before he me‘t Mary. And because she never dreamed of such u thing, she naively allowed me to know that he had been with her a good deal since then. I played badly—s‘o badly that Ro- bert spoke of it several times. could not fix my thoughts upon the game. I knew Mary had come over purposely to lrelp me keep Robert contented for the evening. I knew also than he bad been very little dis- posed to talk or exert himself in Y0“. gab ?" b-s game as a relief It hurt me to think of this-to know that he had come to a place where ho cared nothing about chatting with mo. It had been a long time since we‘ had had any of our happy evenings together, longer than I cared. to think. He mo of late, and when at homo nun been silent if not morose. So in- stead of playing my best, I played my worst because my mind was-up. on him. “Ton o'clock, Gardner. We lnugl; go after this rubber." Mary said ~— l "::t -::: __g '4 4 3 Muscles Mean Nothing when the nerves fail down The ncrves control the Inuacln- The stomach feeds both. ' ' - HA NERVE I STOMIOII TONIC has no equal sa a nerve food, blood maltcr and invigorator. It is an excellent remedy for depres- sion and despondency. _ liead who! Mr. F,- L lilting, of the u-rll known Si. John finn of ' Y/nirrliury unrl llislng, lill Q lay: “l have used llawlrer's Nerve aml Stomach Tonic_ in my family for yours, auil consider it has no equal na a blood builder and agape- llml, 1|, wna especially bone cral l0 my rlriirlrru aflcr an attack oi’ . Yours lrul M" s. rjhrsruo." VQLI Ivy g” druuim and gfllnll ROM u gee ‘The mne price w . Mm Feline vi/bmu Company a our, MIMI‘! lItiI Alli iiflli IMMI -s a err: me srncev cunt sol Ati. couena am» coma. HIWIWS Ilflll U78 fill! was ati. sronaea rtLI. TIIILANADIANIIRUGCO-ilfloi. If. JOIII. I. In , 3 any way, and that he welcomed the . had spent many of them away from. mason Isl-Nos o r _‘ un- srar-rrtv, 1's. u w "ro _ arm a nsrtv The woman with tender ‘skin dreads March ibecsuse it is» likely to cover herface with ugly freck- les. No matter how thick her veil the sun- and winds hale a strong- tendency to make her freckle. Fortunately for her peace of mind. Oilliuey-double strength, makes it possible for even those most s sceptlble to freckle __to keep ther akin cioar and while-T." No matter how stubborn a case of freckles you have, the double strength Otbine should remove them. , ~.; Get an ounce from your drug- gist and ban-lab the freckles. Mon- ey back if it fails. an the clock struck. She had called him ‘Gardner’ ‘so naturally that it bespoke practice. Robert was right. They were becoming very friendly. rShe and Robert won it, and al- though I urged them to stay and let me get them something to eat they refused, Mary pleading she must get home. "Can't you see they want a few niinutes inlupe more [than they want eats " Robert growled. "Judging by yourself, dear?" "Perhaps." Ills ‘tone as he spoke the word was so peculiar it set ma thinking. Did he mean that he cared nothing about being alone with me any more? , Chapter 72. "Oh, Gerry to _think it should have happened to me!" We were at luncheon, Mary and l, when she suddenly leaned across the table, her eyes alight, and made the above remark. “What has happened, Mary? Something good I can tell by your face." - "Good! Why It" is wonderful!" Thou more quietly: “Gardner wants me, Gerry, want me to marry him." “Well, are you going to?" "Yes, Gerry, and I am so happy I um almost frightened. I have liked him so much all the time, but he ls so much smarter, so much better educated than I um, that I don't know how he ever came to like me——no, not quite that either, but how he came to want me for his wlfe." "I am glad for you, Mary. I do hope you will be‘ very happy," and although I sighed, I meant it. All thouhgt of any jealously of Fardner had suddenly left me. The ,sigb was because of my own unhappi- ness and the remembrance that ~I, too, had felt just Be she did W119“ Robert hari asked me to marry him- "I only hope I can make him happy," Mary answered‘, blushing charmingly. "I am going to -try to make myself more his equal, Gerry. It would be terrible if he was to be ashamed of me afterward, wouldn't it?" . - “The-y say love is blind, Mary." “Before folks are married. per- haps, 33m when they get used to each other, used to the love. I guess they begirrto see. Leastways it looks that way to me." "Don't worry aJbout the future, just be as happy as you can," I told her. ‘I-"could not help the thoulilll- that perhaps her happiness, like mine, wouldn't last." “Thinking of whnt I can do, and then trying to do ‘it, isn't worrying. Gardner goes to some sort of 8- club two nights a week. I am Zoing to have an English teacher those two nights to learn me t0 £81k 110i‘- rectz" I "Say correctly, Mary." "There, you see! I knew some- thing ailpd that word» lt din't sound right, but for’ tho life of me I couldn't tell what it was. ‘It's that way with iota of things ain't it, Gerry? We know they are some- way out of gear. but can't. toll oxacfly whnt ails them." "‘I guess so." When ‘Mary star- ted moraliziug I usuilly paid very little attention. - _ . "Mary and Gnrdnor-Hf6-flfl8889d.'=' Itold Robert that nlglu when I got home. "I'm not surprised. Kenyon would have been a fool io have let that girl get away from him." "You seem wonderfully fond 0f Mary lately." “No more than I always have been but I ncvor knew her flood qualities until now. What a wife and ruotlmr she will make." "Hold on thcre, Robert! Aren't you going lvotty fast. They aren't married‘ yet, you know, and there's many a slip. otc." "I don't believe there will be any slip up there. Kenyon saw at once the sort of homey "girl Mary was That fetched him. I-Ie told mo. that night he was sick to death of board- ing houses, clubs and hotels. Guess he was ready for‘ a home and look- lng for the right girl." "Don't take all the romance out of it, Robert, To hear you talk one would think all Gardner wants was n housekeeper snd married be- _ . cause‘ it was cheaper to have a wife keep house than to hire one." "Oh, he's in love with hcr all right and she just adores him. Any- one can see that." "Yes-when I said I hoped she would be happy, she told ms sire only hoped to make him happy Mary is very unselfish. I hope she won't regret marrying him. She seems to fear her lack of education will be a stumbiiil! llmck- She is going to tutor two evenings a week." i "Good for Mary! Although I don't suppose Kenyon would care so very much if she didn't talk correctly if she made him comfortable. Come on, we've discussed Mari’ 1°"! enough. I am going out to est. Want to coma, or shall you take your dinner‘ with the rest of tire homeless ones-in , Mrs. Lanes dining room?" "I'm coming of course!" His ‘sneer about the ‘homeless ones’. had hurt me. Also I knew I must make some sort of an arrangement with Mrs, Lane, if Robert were 80in! to insist upon taking hi; mesia out. We coudn't afford to psy in W" places." - P" Tflcusanomhrowu custom: " rnE' i:_|<trs "sioiivs Luruur never ruts us" ANY‘ mm on woman WHO KIBPO r-r r-rmov wiu. rstr. vouxmir am: THING Especially ‘ those frequently at» tacked. by rheumatic twiuges. A counter-irritant, Sloan's Liniment scatter; tho congestion and penev trates without-rubbing to the af- flicted part, soon relieving the ache and pain. . Kept handy and used everywhere for reducing and finally eliminating the pains .and aches of lumbago, neuralgia, muscle strain. joint stiff- ness, sprains, Ibruises, the result of exposure to weather. Sloan's Liniment is sold by all druggists, 35c, 70c, $1.40. loanifs ‘Li 11 inc r41 [fro]; 11 hourly _,.________._.. REFLECTIONS CHAPTER 73. I talked with Mrs. Lane. Pfe- ‘tending to tako her into my con- ildencc, so that she would break her rule and allow us to retain our room without ‘board. I felt rather small at being obliged to use a. subterfuge, but reasoned that it would be but for n short time. "Mr. Meredith hasn't been well since his accident," I oxpianed, "and he is so restless that I think it would be bcttcr for him to have a little change of some kind. His appetite. too, is poor, and we think that if he went out to his meals to different places‘ for u time. it would perhail! b9 b91191‘. for him." I considered that “we" rather a good idea. M-rs. Lane might take it I meant the doctor. She did. And was really very nice about it. "Certainly, Mrs. Meredith; I have no objections for a short time. Of course I could not do it as a permanent thing. That room would not bring in enough if I let it without board." "Thank you. I expect he will ‘be feeling more himself after a bit." I had accomplished ~my' errand, had reduced our expenses for the present-fl wouldn't cross any other bridge until I came i0 it. I then arranged that we were to have our breakfasts in our room, another concess from her rules that, except in case of sickness. no meals were to be carried to the rooms. ‘but I cf- ifered to pay her extra, as wall as putting the request upon the ground of Robert's health. Even now that I bud it all ranged, I knew our expenses would be greater. While we paid a fairly good amount for board. it would not begin to cover the expense ofeating in a restaur- ant. ' I would have to manage very carefully if" we were to . be at all social, have anything loft with which to entertain our friends, or go to any places" of amusement. As I looked back, it seemed .to me that after the, first few weeks of my married lifeI had been constantly confronted with some sort of problem. I, wondered -if‘ail married _women were so troubled, and wished Iknew someone older, someone with more experience, to advise me. Occasionally.) I recalled things ill‘- Maryh-ad saidbefore, and after we were first married-how she had" said sheknew people ‘ who were tied, and who wished they was untied," And my answer: ' "There are lots" of happy mar- ried people," I- hail said to her “you have been unfortunate in knowing tho unhappy ones If folks are really liapPY no one over hours anything about fhcm. Brit if they are not; everyone sccms to know if." _ I had made up my mind that if over Ilwfkftfllfthuppy, no one should know of it. and yet I had not boon strong enough, . self-suf- ficient enough to adhere to my ‘determination. I had lifted the viol to let Maryhavs a peep info tho unhappiness that bad grad- ualy stolen upon me. She had warned mo that l would bc up against many things, as she expressed it. I had often smiled us I recalled her speech about o. little frilly apron that mudo a woman look like a domes- tic vlllfll, meaning more to a man than marcelled hair and stylish clothes. I had forgotten all these sayings of lit-rs. or thought I li-id, but lately they were constantly recurring and making me wonder whether she could bo in any possi- bility have been right‘ in her promise; that man would rather have wimt he wanted to sat, warnrsiippers and rt wile with 7. an apron, than a wife who could bold her own in the business world, but who knew nothing of domestic affairs. I had felt that Robert was a bit oueeidod. that he did not take ‘into account the pride ‘I had in my ability to earn-or my success in the business. I knew be didn't quite sense the fact that s. busi- ness womnn'e‘ outlook was identi- cally the same as a business man's point of view. I had tried long ago to make him understand this but had failed. Now I recalled, too, the first time I had seen Robert the slight- est bit under the influence of liquor. his excuse: "I was lonely. Gerry- 9b I wont out when you.didrr_'t show up. I ra into some fellows and well — y know the rest." That "I was lonely, Gerry," had haunted me for a time. But that could not have been his excuse this last ‘time he had indulged. I had been got. ting home early for a long time. Could it be that he was tired of me, had ceased to love me, and - rro! I wouldn't even think such a thins. It wasn't fair to him, nor w IHYBBII. Hlldifi. I lllwayg dong the very best I could in every way’! UNGERTAINTY CHAPTER 74. I realized that woman could not her bust socially. I was often so tired I scarcely could drag my- self-home and once there would have liked to flop down on the couch as I formerly had often a business always be at done, and_remain there all the evening, utterly relaxed. But I never had "allowed myself that luxury. I knew that Robert was" sensitrlvc—foolishly, I thought -on the subject. He wanted me to be as gay-or to act so at least— as the other women we knew, who lived quietly at home; or he blamed my being in business for my lack. ‘ Really, when I thought things Over. it seemed tome that Rob- ert had blevmed my beilng a busi- ncsg woman for everything dia- agreeable that had happened, and itwas unfair of'lrim. I never had no real arrangement, which- ever one had money with them at a iiime it had been needed, had paid ihe bills. Before Robert lost his" good position, even when he went with Guiding and did not earn quite so much, he had paid room and board. dent, of course. I had paid for everything. But I had not dis- cussed it, not been at all obvicu about it. ‘ Robert had lost faith in him- self. ' That was the way I thought of his failure to make good ill) busi- ness as" he had given every prom- iso he would when we were mar- ried. I must do something to give‘ lulm back that faith-but what .Na.turall,yi. I predicted either his success or failure upon the salary he received. I-Ie had been earning‘ $40 a week soon after we were married. Now he got $20~jusf half. When one thought a very good" position nowadays, and one which gave a man a good standing. ‘It may seem strange that as my disappointment in Robert in- creased, my love for him grcw also. But it was‘ a different sort of love. Pride in his achievement was gone, and in its place a sort of mothering that real mothers often give incapable children. had come. I felt a certain care of him, instead of a dependence upon him. ‘ There was one thing I. didn't then understand. Now I know it was because I didn't bring my common sense to bear upon it. Robert had loved me devoted]; before we were married, and dur- ing the first fcw months of our married life. He may have loved ms still just as much but he did firings llo~ would not have done then. I had changed in no single particular. That he had expected rue to be different, Icould not inragino; that his love had changed when conditions were the Bilmfl. was an enigma I could not solve. ‘ "l do love you just the same, Gerry," he bad replied ing. spoken. 31mg m5 accl, in most things I proposed. and his cnthusiasms had been one of his most lovable traits. 0t vit-wny it was discouraging, "Yes?" tn 313,115 well u; u, hum More "You don't seem one single bit so, because I had married, him be- l-Yll-ewsled! I 9811'! make Y0" lieving him a clover fellow who '°“t-" ' would noon make a _pl-0n0unced “Don't seem very well acquaint- success as a high-class salesman, ‘id Wm‘ lune“ ‘New’ w“! “n to go home and eat my dinner was afraid as to what he might do. Robert's attitude toward mo SURE test of the value and quality of a product is the number. of years it has been upon the market. _ Red Rose Tea has stood ‘the test of time. given the best of tea satisfaction for more than 24 years. Its high standard of Quality has been maintained under all conditions during that time. same "good" tea. refreshing. Itis Sold only in sealed packages. good tea’ REDROSE run Rich, full-flavored, fragrant and It: has “ always the - i Red Rose Coffee is as generously go as Red Rosa Tea the only time I had .mentioned this feel- But there had been no real in his warmth, no spontaneity 1mg done as 1' we" kmyw some answer. Frankly I felt more cer- wonlen do_mk o; my 8.11am tsin than ever that he had What I earned. While we had ‘illanged. 811d Was‘ sorry I had | It wasn't easy to visit with Robert any more, not in ‘the old chummy way we bad done when first married. short in his answers if I asked] a question, seemingly uninterestedi He was impatient ! He wouldn't enthuse over anything -— "I wish we might have a nice long talk-fest like we used to, Robert," I said one night when, after he finished reading, ht started for bed. ‘There's nothing to talk about except vour success, aiid I know all about that." "l sold Mrs. Van Duzeu hats today. Madame Leets. delighted. have been really enormous. I think I am in lino for another raise, or at least a commission on all over a certain amount." three W85 he said. _ BITT CHAPTER 75 "gvyvrn-vuw-w . an wonne I saw very little of Mary Ryan save at the shop. She was so busy with Gardiner and her Eng- lish teacher that she seldom was free in the evening, and we missed her dreadfully. I think perhaps Bob missed her bright clever chat- ter mors than I did. I bad not told‘ her anything of Robert's attitude toward finances. In reality. I did not think it would last-therefore, why talk about it? But as the days passed and he adhered to his resoiutlon— although I knew he often was without money by tho timo tho week was over—l became worried, then annoyed and a bit angry. Why couldn't he be sensible? I hated this running out every night for my dinner. While it had been a change at first, the season was now in full swing, rmrl tlrcd an I was, it was a terrible effort to brace up and run about to restaurants. I never thought the time would come when I would long for Mrs. Lane's dining room. But there were manyinightswbcn I could have cried. the longing so strong. I never let Robert know this, however. I had become a. .bit in that hurt me the most. He never it was the llttlo changes My sales this month i," a \ i Company, Limit lunches at ‘at: i’ Cakes and Pastry Baked From Western Canada Flour Mills TORONTO-Head 05cc - ,‘s sad ,cu mam-u 'pi“,".1'.'.r,¢'>in:i. st. ii’... oases" r|;ouir o Will Strengthen and Sustain Every Member-Y of. Your Family Old and Young IIS a glinrrucr of a smile lighted his ‘ill somber face. "What are you talking about?“ we reached the street, I com- nnvcrl to cry. "ll/bar's tho uraitcr?" Robert's tono mas gruff, unsympathetic. "You wanted to know what I “Nothing "moi" Tired. l was thinking and I told you." Ruff-Stu" ' “Nonsense,” "l oxpiurt Yfiilvlllfltfl‘ I'll take you a o» :‘".:‘:.r'.::.‘;.‘.‘. ‘.21; .::‘i;..‘:..‘~: .2. ‘tlllaig?’ M d.“ I a liiilc whilv. She ieiephned mo b o1 ‘Birth 5x0 l i’ “we yo“ torluy snc wanted to soc mo." as“ H" "5' , I sizirtori to object, then caught N°' unfomlnmell" n is "my luvsoii’ ltobr-ri had fold me so because z had m’ money t" buy frankly of his inivnrlori visit had u drink Willi that I haven't been. also w“ "f lmlrmnis musing‘! though." “Please Jtobert, don't inlk like that, it makes mo so unhappy when you drink." "I can't are that you are up- roarioilsly happy when I (lo not." >’I‘he fours were very near, and ilr my jealousy. tired I should have offered to go with him. But l longed for rest. at I couldn't iu (loconcy show l-lzul 1 not been so “RPlIl'(‘llll)C'l‘ mo Io Marion, and tell hor I would have come along hail I not been so fired." I was thankful to sec the waiter Rohrzrifg look, as I said thin hovering in the offing with the gnlld as plainly m. wDfd5_ "w," check. I lrnrl (irrlurcri as simply until you arc nskcrl." rm 11ml liohcrt, rind rose from tho iablc, unsatisfied. l would not al- lnw my check to exceed his, and often uto n hearty lunch because of the uecrl of more food Wllun I worked so hard. But I had ro- m} BESET BY DOUBTS “A lot of your constituents are in nana-._.._.,.__. noon‘ s”) o‘ _~ TOT-Oxfo- vl ' I "Robert, you must not be so -u§::-':‘:',,f‘f§: ggum“! ‘Bzflahl: . OaIreusawIrvOLIVBNIIINL - careless" I-le had stalked into P =~ SION hotldlpfullorlleughqlields, I the restaurant ahead of me, then sultry. egn stor , -w-u~-q4ia.--u Run-down I sat down at the Millie before 1 "l - . . l‘ "- - " erg ess a ut what?" tiiii "hiiveimml °' u" Mu" l ca?» lash sari: ‘v hadd l so mfiflllh$l§ulugo bfifflfilei: “WWW “"3" ""5 "About little things. You used ‘ them a time for the r ma and ~ a '93:“- Jl" '“'"“ ‘Mil? to be so polite, so galtant, and _ -*r.u..:i'..":.“::';:"r:recurs. t " "“"' l m w- m crew-w- -- 1' w“ pals hignprogitlsér. Boom“ . \ gm‘ a dfilnnot know what was proper at ‘o r r ' . . . ~ . . ' l 7""“'”'“."‘“‘“" a "I am too busy thinking, I Pratt Peed Casi Canada I Al! Draygfata and guess. Iixcuse me if I have dons Juan-a g tar-q; have". some gsuciiy thins," bought me a flower or a box of candy, as he used to do. I knew he had n_o money. yet I felt ag- grieved that he neglected the lit- tie attentions he at first nover failed to give me. Then, too, ire was growdng careless in his man- ner. Ireallzed now that it was aibsentlmi-rrdsdnsss more than any- thing else. But he failed to rec- ognise the little amenities of so. cial life of which a women thinks so much. lie dldnteven lmow to what l had referred. , "Thinking about what " "Whether to go on working for Ilurrh or commit suicide." Not i maimed at work all that luuciroon hour, one of the girls‘ bringing me a sandwich, 'I‘hat, combined with whnt I considered Robert's unreasonable attitude. mario rue feel so discouraged that as soon lhc ‘front guard." said the secretary. "Thuy wnui you i0 come outside." “H‘m." replied Sr-lrator Sorghum thoughtfully. "Arc they inviting mo. or daring mc'."‘—-Washington Star. EASILY TRACEID Thousands who are none too strong trace the ma“! wea ned state fo in illness. fluenza or some Iilre-debi ifd 4 ‘i Such could not do better than try ifrength-restoring and body-building virtues of Siiiil’ liilllil0ii This efficient tonic is nourishment in a form thni build up e healthy resistance. If you are not fri afrengf your accustomed Ir-rich, nourishing SCOTPS EMULSION will help you. fi-y l . h I. Process." made lnborato ' . The exclusive grade of cod-liver oil used in Scott's Emulsion is the rlcoii R ilowur. < in Norway and refined in nut Md Arn if ls a guarantee of purity mul pnlnlalililly ilnlil Bloomfield, l4, j.