Motion Picture Classic (Jan-Aug 1919)

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MOTION PICTURE “CORNS’’ Lift Corns Right Off! It Doesn’t Hurt a Bit! Apply a few drops of Freezone on a touchy corn or a callus, instantly it stops aching, then shortly you lift that bothersome corn or callus right off, root and all, wdth the fingers. No pain at all! No soreness! Any Corn— Anywhere — Also Calluses on Bottom of Feet You can lift off every hard corn, soft corn, also corns between the toes and the “hard-skin” calluses on bottom of feet. Costs Only a Few Cents — Try It! Tiny bottles of Freezone, sufficient to clear your feet of every corn and callus, cost only a few cents — at drug stores. Trade Mark Reg. wuruTzei^ 1^0 ^ears of instrument makings Play It a Week You may have your choice of more than 2,000 instruments for a week’s trial in your own home. Play it as if it were your own. Then, if you wish, you may send it back at our expense. Trial does not cost you a penny. Convenient Monthly Payments dd^^buy you may pay the low manufacturer’s price at the rate of a few ~ _ cents a day. The name “fTMr/fteer" has stood for the highest d j i lot i-. r quality for nearly two centuries. Every known musical instru ^ ““ dIpu bim *'**" mentsold to you at direct-from-the-manufacturer’s price. We > street, cincmnati. ohio have supplied the U. S. Government with trumpets for 55 years, Send the Coupon Just put your name and address what instrument you are interested in. There’s no obligation. We’Usendyouthebigl60-pagebookfreeand prepaid. Write, / /S. Wabasb Avenue. Cblcago, III. Gentlemen:— Please send me poor 160pa^e catalog, absolutely free. Also tell ^ about your apeciat offer direct from the ^ manufacturer. The Rudolph Wurlitzer Comp^tny, Dept. B155 / 1 am interested in (Name of Instrument here) The Fear Woman {Continued from page 80) plectic, rose in his place, drawing all eyes. The other uninvited guest caught a single glimpse of Helen Winthrop’s face, with the smile frozen on her white lips, then bent his head upon his hand and gazed down at his plate as Scarr began, in halting words, to speak. But when the last word had fallen on the paralyzed silence of the room, he rose and leisurely and with great thoroness knocked the speaker to the floor. Then with the utmost coolness and suavity he walked over to where Helen Winthrop sat stricken at the head of the flowerstrewn table and offered her his arm. “Allow me !” Robert Craig bowed. As tho she moved in a dream, she rose and laid her hand on his arm. He turned matter-of-factly to the breathless onlookers, “You have been a party to a blackmailing scheme,” he assured them, “may I remind you that the law looks unkindly upon the spreading of libel and scandal, and inform you at the same time that this lady here is my future wife, and that I shall take prompt measures in case of any — indiscretion on your parts.” The veranda was deserted, tinted with the amber of a low-hanging tropic-moon. In its mellow glow the two gazed into each other’s face in a silence that throbbed with unspoken things. At last, trembling “How did you happen ” “I was Mrs. Pendleton’s lawyer, and she wrote asking me to come down and save her precious fledgling from a siren who was trying to marry him,” Craig said briefly. “But — after tonight — after that horrible story before everyone. Robert, you cant still believe in me, I dont see how God could still believe in me ! How do you know that it isn’t true ” “Because I love you.” It seemed to settle the question for him, and for the moment for her. She lay against his shoulder, clinging to him as tho she could never let him go, swept with great gusts of sobs. “Bob, Bob, it’s been so terrible — I never dreamed life could be so terrible, but you’re here. You’ve come!” Suddenly the light went out from her face, blown out by the chill wind of memory. “But — I forgot, father’s letter ! That isn’t changed — the fear — oh, God! the fear is still there !” He laughed. “Helen, look at me. Dear Little Fool ! Have you touched a drop of drink since I saw you — have you wanted to touch it?” She shuddered. “No, I hate it ” “Then,” said Robert Craig, drawing her close in his strong, hungry arms, “dont you think you’ve kept me waiting long enough?” She looked up into the tenderness of his face, a glory dawning in her lifted eyes. And in the light of it the dark shadow of fear slipped away and was lost forever, for the shadows do not linger in the sun. And she did not keep him waiting any longer . . . (Eighty-two)