Motion Picture Magazine (Feb-Jul 1920)

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(pEE&SS23i ¥m**> reemarVs FACE POWDER TO the woman whose complexion must withstand the critical scrutiny of friend and rival only the finest and most carefully selected powder is acceptable. For 40 years Freeman's Face Powder has remained the favorite with fashionable women everywhere. All tints at all toilet counters 50c (double the quantity of old 25c size) plus 2c war tax. Miniature box mailed for 4c plus lc war tax. The Freeman Perfume Co., Dept. 100 Cincinnati, O. flu 1 Keep your straw hat fresh and colorful witK PUTNAM STRAW HAT DYE Beautiful shades of Red, Green. Navy and Light Blue, Purple, Brown, Gloss and Dull Black. If your druggist can't supply you, write us. We will send any color postpaid — 25 cents. Monroe Drug Company, Dept. AC, Quincy, Illinois PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Removes 1 landrull — Stops Hai r Falling Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 50c. and SI. 00 at druetrists. Hiscox Chem. Works. Patehogne, V.Y. '/? M1 Now Is the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots. There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Oth Ine — double strengthens guaranteed remove these homely spots. Simply Ket an ounce of — double strength — from your druggist, and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear,, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than one ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength Othfne. as this is sold under guarantee of money back If it fails to remove freckles. (114 The Courage of Marge O'Doone (Continued from page 96) about her, filling him with an aching tenderness, a very fierceness of protection. But because he was a stranger to her, tho she was no stranger to him, he said only, matter-of-factly, "I say now, I'm awfully hungry — ran out of grub two days back on the trail. I wonder if you wouldn't invite me to dinner if I introduce myself — David Raine from the States." By the time the meal was over they had traveled a long way on the road to friendship and the man knew almost as much about her as she knew about herself. Hauck and his wife were, she thought, no relation to her, but she had lived with them almost as long as she could remember. Before that there was a vague memory of faces, a woman's tender and very lovely, a man's strong and smiling, a dream of kisses, and a faint, far-away recollection of being rocked to sleep. At the Nest she had been treated callously, tho not brutally, until the last, when "Uncle" Hauck had bargained with his crony, Brokaw, for possession of her. She had always fed "Tara," one of the two bears the man kept in a cage near the cabin, and when she saw the greedy light of ownership in Brokaw's eyes she had hurried out, unchained the great fellow and fled away into the clean, white night. "All the same, we'll go back to the Nest now," decided David, frowning ; "there's no telling what that man is up to. He may be keeping property that belongs to you. Besides" — his great hands clenched — "I'd like to give him a taste of man-medicine— the hound !" Marge O'Doone looked at him with glowing dark eyes of admiration and gratitude. In all her wild, untender years she had never been taken care of and protected before. But she shook her head over returning to the Nest. "You're not afraid — with me?" David asked, hurt. "No," she cried, "Oh, no ! But I'm afraid for you. They're bad men. They might kill you, and I — should not like that." She crept closer to him. young breast rising stormily under her tightpressed hands, gazing at him with virginal eyes. David felt his soul rise mightily within him, but tho his voice shook, he only said, cheerily, "Nonsense ! Haven't we got 'Tara' and 'Baree'? Come on, Marge O'Doone !-" The name was magic on his tongue. In the Nest an oil lamp smoked sootily on the table, and thru the uncurtained window they saw two men drinking sourly without speech. "That's Uncle and Brokaw now," Marge whispered, adding reflectively, "aren't they ugly? I hate ugly things and I love beautiful ones, dont you?" In the woman who had been David Raine's wife such a speech would have been arrant coquetry; in Marge O'Doone it was simple honesty. She was as clear of soul, as wild and unspoiled as the country that had reared her, thought the man beside her reverently. At the entrance of the stranger and the girl the two at the table sprang up and the little, twisted man dropped his glass, spilling a smear of strong-smelling spirits over the dirty table-cloth. His small, pale eyes dwelt on the girl gloatingly, on David evilly. "H'm ! So you got starved out and had to come back!" he sneered, "and who is this?" David took a step forward. He looked