{ title: 'The advertiser-journal. volume (Auburn, N.Y.) 1913-1931, June 04, 1920, Page 3, Image 3', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031374/1920-06-04/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031374/1920-06-04/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031374/1920-06-04/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031374/1920-06-04/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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*5 ' Tbe isig s r s r t t f ■ J “iS v IV ■ T he ■% *i»j- r Jjal o»« »' jn a mod- ’ ’ crossing the K * J 5 ? w 4 minutes, 1 “ hinteS 'accidents j**1' y^nitie’s main sheet JJS her a few seo- ^ffSU*010 j?W* ^ l S ^ toftbC t - 0vbf on^ r m!; <$> , iOOSU pmsx GAME- \ «0®° 0 2 n n /WO 7 * -?J2 u £ » £ «< ^ McQulailaD and O’Neil 1 0«Q'0'0 0 8 1-5 U 4 \ VwYork, Nehf and Sny- * Baddpbi Heame and -,K o 1 0 0 0 0 1 %—2 7 2 oo 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—0 7 1 Jirook&n, Pfeffer (Hllla, Betts and -*fwet grounds) Pittsburgh. (Not scheduled) SL Ixmis. -flOUCAN LEAGUE. f*^U t 111010000—4 6 1 ,. 10000400*—5 ,6 1 - philideflpliia, Moore, Jgry nnd Perkins. New Xork, ud Haanali. tails: „ 000111030—6 11 O \... 000100102--1 8 1 - Chicago, Wilkinson and It lods, Bndweii, Davis nnd 000220200—6 12 O '■...,000000210—3 6 1 -Detroit, Leonard and OwdMd, Boehllng, Ahle, n! O’Neill. ’“gton: ... 100000000—1 6 1 00000002*—2 9 1' Boston, Russell nnd Wal- ^hhlngton, Johnson and Id Gharrity, ORANGE OARSMEN AND BASEBALL TEAM PREPARE FOR FINAL TESTS Syracuse, N. June 4.—Crew and baseball are the two major sports holding the main attention at Syra cuse University now with the end of the college term rapidly drawing near. The schedules of tooth, will be complet ed after commencement week, the baseball men leaving oxl a New Eng land trip on June 14, while the blade wielders participate in the Poughkeep sie (Regatta on July 1. The bail tossers have but three re maining games one with. Colgate, time- honored rival of Syracuse, in the Archbold Stadium on June 12. The other two aro with Vermont at Bur lington and Williams at Williamstown, Mass. The Colgate game will maTk the third of tho season between tho two colleges, Coach. Carr’s Syracuse University men having already won the first two. The Orange crews are working hard every day in preparation for the Hud son River races. Tho defeat at tho American Henley by the navy after having won.from the middies on the Severn two weeks before was a severe blow to the Orange oarsman but they back at tho Intercollegiate Regatta. Coach Ten Eyck’s varsity eight won tho championship in 1910 but has not been called upon to defend it since the Poughkeepsie Regatta was diseon- j tinued the next thrco years because of 1 tho war. Two minor sport seasons, tennis aud lacrossei, came to a successful close last week. The racquet squad came through their schedule with but three j defeats, winning four matches and j dividing four others with their oppon ents in draws. Theodoro LeGros, who captained the quartet was individual high man with seven victories to his credit out of ten games. The lacrosse team added another championship to Syracuse University's list of trophies by winning the title in the Northern Division of the Inter collegiate Lacrosse League. The Orange twelve won tha title 'by de feating Cornell in the deciding game. The sport has been active hero only a few years but has made wonderful strides. are determined to stage a grand come- “CINDERELLA’S DAUGHTER” By HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR Copyright, 1919, by Public Ledger Co. NATIONAL LEAGUE. 3, Rochester 1, 11 innings. !, Toronto 3. 13, Baltimore 3. «, Jersey City 3. , } o f THE CLUBS Nitiooal League Won. Lost P. C. 25 16 ..... 23 ..... 2*1 18 ..... 19 19 ..... 19 20 ..... 19 22 ...... 17' 23 . ..... 15 20 Games Today st Boston, li at Pittsburgh. J >t St Louis, to at Philadelphia. American League Won. Lost. ..... 27 13 ,610 .603 .571 .500 .4S7 .463 .425 .360 ^H o n a l League Won. Lost Ciiy P C. .675 .619 .564 .550 .512 .37S .366 .303 P.O. .750 .625 .610 .514 .487 .395 .366 250 SYNOPSIS. Virginia West, in boarding school, becomes Intimate with Kathleen Fos ter, one' of the older girls. This friend ship lasts through Virginia’s marriage to Jimmy Anderson, although on Kathleen's side there is nothing deep and sincere. She has been engaged but has broken tlie engagement be cause she wants to marry wealth. Virginia’s husband dies shortly before their baby is bom and Bill Lyons, Kathleen's former fiance, befriends Virginia in her desire to get work. He, in the meantime, has bad a legacy left to him, and Kathleen is eager to ensnare him a second time. Virginia decides to use her one talent and gets a chaaco to go on the stage in a minor port Kathleen has told her that she and Bill aro engaged again, and Vir ginia wonders at the fact that she feels so strangely in regard to Bill. CHAPTER XLV H . In Which Comes News of Barbara. It seemed as though Kathleen know intuitively'just when B ill called on Virginia for she nearly always ap peared as though by magic. On that afternoon Bill and Virginia had not been alone five minutes with that un dercurrent of feeling- between them' when tho bell rang and Virginia’s neat little maid admitted Kathleen—Kath leen in a ravishing street gown and with a bunch of violets pinned to her coat Virginia wondered if Bill had sent those violets*. 'She remembered how Bill had idolized Kathleen long ago and tried to be glad that he was to be happy at last She tried to make herself believe that it was bat ter for Bill to have Kathleen on any terms than not to have her at all, and perhaps after all she would make him Lke Throwing Away Money it is to discard yonr used, worn auto tires. Wc can vulcanize the holes and bad spots and return your tires to you practically as good as new—good for thousands of miles more. It pays to save on tires these days—vulcanizing is the way. HALBRITTER’S 24 Water Street ag good wife. She certainly would if there was money enough to give her everything she wanted. They chatted a few minutes and then Kathleen carried Bill off with her. Virginia sat alone feeding out of it. She felt old experienced, as if she had passed through all of the sordld- ness of life and Kathleen was etill fresh -with everytliiiig to look forward to. After a time she got up and went Into her bedroom. She sat down be fore the dressing table and looked at herself. ‘She picked up different arti cles mechanically and put them back again. She was restless, ill at ease and she did not know why. Quite suddenly she determined to go down to Crystal River and get Barbara. The thought gave her immediate relief, stimulated her. Sho began to make her plans. Sho would go down Sun day morning for her baby. What fun it would be to have her in the apart ment Then she would have no time for gloomy thoughts and forebodings. In the midst of her thoughts came the whirring of the door bell and she heard Emma go to answer it. A mo ment later tho maid appeared with a yellow envelope. Virginia’s heart con tracted as she saw it and she tore it open with trembling fingars. ‘'Come at once, baby is ill.” The words leaped at her from the paper. 'She felt suddenly dizzy and the sympathetic Emma helped her to a chair and ran for a glass of water. Barbara was ill, her baby was ill, very ill; the thought beat itself into Vir ginia’s brain. She must go to her at once, and yet how could she? There was the evening’s performance; she would have to go through that and then take a late train for Crystal River. Virginia arrived at Crystal River after 1 o’clock. She had gone through the performance at the theater ia a daze. She had been whizzed to the station and had caught a local train that stopped at every small station along the way and when she finally stepped off into the darkness she gave a sob of relief that the nightmare trip was over. There were no conveyances at the station, it was too late for that, but Virginia sot off at a brisk walk through tho country. She gained the town and walked quickly through the deserted streets. Her footsteps rang out clearly as she hurried along and she turned down the street where the Andersons lived, almost running. In the hallway of the ugly little frame house a light was burning. There was also a faint light upstairs. Virginia hurried up on the porch and rang the bell. It echoed through the house with an eerie sound. It seemed ages before Virginia hoard footsteps inside and the door was thrown open, but in reality it was only a few seconds. And then she was pushing past Mr. Anderson and was flying upstairs. Mrs. Anderson, with a woolly bnth- rode over her nightgown, appeared at the landing nnd stared at Virginia. It w;as then that Virginia realized that she still held her small traveling bag and she dropped it and said plead ingly : “Tho baby; how is she?” (To bo continued.) F R E E KBSBE3 THIS WEEK ONLY A t the Store Nam e d Below A 10-Day Tube of Pepsodent T h e y H a v e F o u n d th e W a y t o B e a u t i f u l T e e t h A ll Statements Approved by H ig h D e n tal A uthorities Dental science has found a way to combat film on teeth. It has been tested for years by able authorities in clinical and laboratory tests. Now leading dentists everywhere advise its daily use. The method is embodied in a dentifrice called Pepsodent. This week we offer a 10-Day Tube to every home in this city, and we urge every home to get it Let it prove itself. Film is W h a t Discolors You can feel on youf teeth a slimy film. It is ever-present, ever-forming. It clings to teeth, enters crevices and stays. The tooth brush doesn’t end it. The (ordinary dentifrice cannot dissolve it. So it accumulates and may do a ceaseless damage. Most lootH troubles are how traced (to that film. And now it is known why brushed teeth still discolor and decay. ,The reason lies in that clinging film which vthe old cleaning methods omit. I Cause of Decay That film is what discolors^not the teeth. It is the basis of tartar. It holds food substance which ferments and forms acid. It holds the acid in contact with the teeth to cause decay. Millions cf germs breed in it. They, with tartar, are the chief cause of pyor rhea. Thus fee film, is the teeth’s chief enemy. It Can Be Ended Dental science has |or years sought a way to end that film, and the way has now been found. Pepsodent is based on pepsin,* the ai- gestant of albumin. The film is albumi nous matter. ,The object of Pepsodent is to dissolve it, then to constantly; com bat it. The way seems simple, but if is ho?. Pepsin must be activated. The usual method is an acid harmful to the .teeth, so pepsin long seemed impossible. .What has been found is ai’ harmless iactivating method. Now pepsin can be applied twice daily and left between the teeth. And millions of teeth are now being cleaned ;as. ;they never were before. W atch the Effects W e ask you to watch the effects. Pre sent the coupon for a 10-Day Tube. Note how clean the teeth feel after using. Mark the absence of the slimy film. See how jteeth whiten as the fixed film disappears. Compare this method with the old. Read the facts about it, Then decide fo? yourself what is best. Tartar and Stain arc faased on film. This 10-Day Tes? will show you that they are avoid able. And so is tooth decay. T h e N e w - D a y D e n t i f r i c e An efficient film combatant, based on pepsin, now endorsed for constant home use by leading dentists everywhere. Look in Ten Day* See how white the teeth are—How they glisten. You can see that the film is gone. You will know that teeth can be kept forever whiter and cleaner and safer, T h e Store N a m e d B e lo w W i l l Supply the Free Tube on This Coupon WELD & CO., Drugs C o r . G e n e s e e a n d S t a t e S t s . A u b u r n , N . Y . 1 1 0 - D A Y T U B E F R E E f Present this coupon, with yonr name and address filled in, to / store named. It is good for a 10-Day Tube of Pepsodent. Your Name. Address Out-of-town residents should mail this coupon to The Pepsodent Company, 1104 So. Wabash Avenue. Chicago, and the tube will be sent by mail. A d v r t l s e r - J o u m a l I I I I I E G O L D B E R G ’ S B O O B S - A S L O N G A S C O N G R E S S I S T H I N K I N G A B O U T G I V I N G B O N U S E S B Y G O L D B E R G TKe l^ E A T e s r P<££>K.e OM €AC5.TH G L s e -SEEMS [T O K-MocO IT BOr ^(o o R s e L v /g s I -3CfcA£>€b T H € MAR-NMSH O F F T rtS Pi A M O BoiLefcs. \T u j r r H A MfXTQR-g O F © A Y ROM A Mb. 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