tli «#* '" * -1 * I . - ' > - •'•»„ • , v ^ \ > _•' * s •*.•;•'• V. .*? TW1? #pH1??mT PT; A T?fT>FA T,Wft, #cHTBNRY^ ft* " ' ^i v> ' "» )'•"•'• •. f ' • Aspirin Say "Bayer" and Insist! Unless you see the name "Rayer" Ob package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians, over twenty-two jfears and proved safe by millions fife Colds . Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia ' Pain, Pain V . Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" OBly. Each unbroken package contains piroper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacideste* of Sallcylicacid.--Advertisement. ft -- ' • The Limit. *My ma won't let me go anywhere •without washing my bands first." "She won't?" "Nuw. Every time we're going out •be chases me upstairs to g^t cleaned up." "Is that all?- "All? Isn't that enough?" > "You're lucky. My mother makes me wash before I go to bed. and that's the foolishest notion yet." The Blind Man s By William MacHarg, Edwin Balmer f >2" i & V pyrlffht T.lMlw, Brown aivl V CHAPTER XI11--Continued. --11-- Eaton was distinctly frightened -by the revelation he just had had or Santolne's clour, Implacable reasoning regarding him* for none of the blind mail's*^deductions about him had been wrong--all lyjd been the exact, though incompletC^*truth. It was HOW'S THIS? HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will do what we claim tor it--rid your system Of Catarrh or Deafness caused by 'Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE consists of an Ointment which Quickly JRelieves the catarrhal inflammation, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood on the Mucous {Surfaces, thus assisting to restore normal conditions. Sold by druggists for over 40 Team ' F. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo, O. Electricity to Heat Water. 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Try it toda A LUBRICANT-NOT A LAXATIVE - . tfc ^ clear to him that Santofne was close --much closer even than Santoine himself yet appreciated--to knowing Eaton's Identity; it was even probable that one single additional fact-- the discovery, for Instance, that ^Ilss Davis was the source of the second telegram received by Eaton on. the train--would reveal everything to Santoine. And Eaton was not certain that Santoine, even without any new information, would not reach the truth unaided at any moment. So Eaton knew that he himself must act before this happened. But so long as the safe In Santoine's study was kept locked or was left open only while someone was in the room with It, he could not act until he had received help from outside; and he had not yet received that help; he cou'd mt hurry it or even tell how soon It wa likely to come. "'As his mind reviewed, almost Instantaneously, these considerations, he glanced again at Harriet; her eyes, this time, met his, but she looked i away Immediately. As he jwent [ toward the door, she made no move to accompany him. He went out without speaking and closed the inner and the outer doors behind him; then he went down to Blatchford. For several minutes after Eaton had left the room, Santoine thought in silence. "Where are yon, Harriet?" he asked at last. She knew it was not necessary to answer him, but merely to move so that he could tell her position; she moved slightly, and his'sightless eyes shifted at once to where she stood. "How did he act?" Santoine asked. She reviewed swiftly the conversation, supplementing his blind apperceptions of Eaton's manner with what she herself had seen. "What have been your Impressions of Eaton's previous social condition, Daughter?" he asked. "You have talked with him, been with him--both on the train and here: have you been able to determine what sort of people he has been accustomed to mix with? Have his friends been business men? Professional men? Society people?" The deep and unconcealed note of trouble In her father's voice startled her, In her familiarity with every ts^e and every expression. She answered his question: "I don't know, Father." "I want you to find out' "In what way?" "You must find a way. I shall tell Avery to help." He thought for several moments, while she stood waiting. "We must have that motor and the meri In It traced, of course. Harriet, there are certain matters--correspondence-- which Avery has been looking after for me; do you know what correspondence I mean?", "Yes, Father." "I would rather not have Avery bothered with It just now; I want him to give his whole attention to this present inquiry. You yourself will assume charge of the correspondence of which I speak, Daughter." "Yes, Father. Do you want anything else now?" "Not of you; send Avery to me." CHAPTER XIV Donald Avery Is Moody. ' Harriet went down the stairs into the Btjidy; she pi.ssed through the study into the main part of "the house and fofand Donald and sent him to her father; then she returned to the study. She closed and fastened the doors, aijd after glancing about the room, she removed the books In front of a walltake to LONDON PARIS BERLIN fietioea From Old French Canada-- Montreal and Quebec--to Old World Capital^ Frequent Sailing#. Everything Cana* <kan Pacific Standard---the ultimate* In travel comfort. Two last train* Connecting with ships--"Dominion Overseas" jnew), leaving Chicago 6:47 a.m.--"The Canadian," leaving $140 p. m. Further information from local steamship agents or BOnEBT EI.WOKT1IY Gen. Agent S. S. Trattle Dept. U K. Dearborn St., Chicago, IU. Canadian Pacific IT SPAMS THE WOHID 1 tion of tlie principals concerned In this correspondence; too often, she knew, one man or one group had carried out a fierce Intent upon another ;„ and sometimes, she was aware, these bitter feuds had carried certain of her father's clients further even than personal or family ruin; fraud, violence and--twice now--even murder were represented by this correspondence; for the papers relating to the Warden and the Latron murders were here. She had felt,always the horror of this violent and ruthless side of the men with whom her father dealt; but now she knew that actual appreciation of the crimes that passed as business had been far from her. And. strangely, she now realized that It was not the attacks on Mr. Warden and her father--overwhelming with horror as these had been--which were bringing that appreciation home to her. It was her understanding now that the attack was not meant fpr her father but for Eaton. Though' Harriet had never believed that Eaton had been concerned in the attack upon her father, her denial of it. had been checked and stifled because he would not even defend himself. She had not known what to think; she had seemed to herself to be waiting with her thoughts in abeyance; until he shoul I be cleared, she had tried not to let herself think more about Eaton than was necessary. Though he was Involved with her father in some way, she refused to believe he was against her father, but clearly he was not with him. How could he be Involved, then, unless the Injury he had suffered was some such act of man against man as these letters and statements represented? She looked carefully through all the contents of the envelopes, but she could not find anything which helped her. She pushed the letters away, then, and sat thinking. Mr. Warden, who appeared to have known more about Eaton than anyone else, had taken Eaton's side; It was because he had been going to help Eaton that Mr. Warden had been killed. Would not her father be ready to help Eaton, then, if he knew as much about him as Mr. Warden had known? But Mr. Warden, apparently, had kept what he knew even from his own wife; cad Eaton was now keeping It frojn everyone-- her father included. She felt that her father had understood and appreciated all this long before herself--that It was the reason for his attitude toward Eaton on the train and, in part, the cause of his considerate" treatment of him all through. So, instead of being estranged by Eaton's manner to her father, she felt an impulse of feeling toward him flooding herr-a--feeling which she tHed to explain to herself as sympathy. But it was not Just sympathy; she would not say even to herself what It was. She got up suddenly and went to the door and looked into tho hall; a servant came to her. "Is Mr. Avery* still with Mr. Santoine?" she asked. "No, Miss Santoine; he has- gone out." "Thank you." She went back, and bundling the correspondence together as It had been before, she removed the books from a shelf to the left of the door, slid back another panel and revealed a second wall-safe corresponding to the one to the right of the door from which she had taken the papers. The combination of this second safe was known only to her father and herself. She put the envelopes Into It, closed it, and replaced the books. Then she went to her father's desk, took from a drawer a long typewritten report of which he had asked her to prepare a digest, and read it through; consciously concentrating, she began her work. At three she heard Avery's motor, and w.ent to the study door and looked out as he entered the hall. "What have you found, Don?" she Inquired. • "Nothing yet, Harry." "You got no trace of thetnT* "No; too many motors pass on that road for the car to be recalled particularly. I've started what Inquiries are possible and arranged to have the road watched In case they come back this way." He went past her arid up to her father. She returned to the study and put away her work. Dinner was served in the great Jacobean dining room, with walls paneled to the high celling, logs blazing in the big stone fireplace. As they seated themselves, she noted that Avery seemed moody and uncommunicative; something, clearly, had irritated and disturbed him; and as the meal progressed, he vented his irritation upon Eaton by affronting him more openly by word and look than he had ever done before in her presence. She was the more surprised at his doing this now, because she knew that Donald must have received from her father tho same Instructions as had been given herself to learn whatever was possible of Eaton's^ former position in life. Before Eaton's1 entrance Into her life she had supposed that some time, as a matter of course, she was going to marfy Donald. In spite of this, she had never thought of herself as apart from her father; when she thought of marrying, it had beten always with the idea that, her dutyMo her husband must be secondary to that to her father; she knew no\y that she had accepted Donald Avery not because he had become necessary to her but because he had seemed essential to her father and her marrying Donald would permit her life to, go on much as it was. Donald had social position and a certain amount of wealth and power; now suddenly she was feeling that he had nothing but these things, that his own unconscious admission was that to be worth while he.must have them, that to retain and increase them was his only object in life. She had the feeling that these were the only things he would fight for; but that for these he would fight--fairly, perhaps. If he could--but, If he must, unfairly, despicably. She had finished dinner, bat she hesitated to rise and leave the men alone; after-dinner cigars and the fiction of the masculine conversation about the table were insisted on by Blatchford. As she delayed, looking across the table at Eaton, his eyes met hers; reassured, she rose at !! "Will You Come Down for a Few Mlftutes. Please, HarryV? the three rose with her and stood while she went out. She ; went upstairs and looked in upon her "father; lie wanted nothing, and after a con versation with him as short as she could make It, she came down again. No further disagreement between the two men, - apparently, had happened after she left the table. Avery now was not visible. Eaton and Blatchford were in the music-room. With a repugnance against her father's orders which she had never felt before, she began to carry out the instructions her father had given her. She noticed that Eaton was familiar with almost everything she had liked which had been written or was current up to five years before; all later music was strange to him. To this extent he had been of her world plainly, up to live years before; then he had gone out of it. She realized this only as something which she was to report to her father yet she felt a keener, more personal interest In it than that. Harriet San toine knew enough of the world to know that few men break completely all social connections without some link of either fact or memory still holding them, and that this link most often Is a woman. Toward ten o'clock Eaton excused himself and went to his rooms.. She sat for a time, idly talking vjth Blatchford; then, as a servant passed through the hall and she mistook momentarily his footsteps for those of Avery, she got up suddenly and went upstairs. It was only after reaching her rooms that she appreciated that the meaning of this action was that she shrank from seeing Avery again that night. But she liad been In her rooms only a few minutes when her house telephone buzzed, and answering it. she found that It was Donuld speaking to her. "Will you come down for a few minutes, please, Harry?" Some strangeness Id his tone perplexed her. "Where are you?" she asked. "In the study." She went down at once. As he came to the study door tc meet her, she sa^ that what had perplexed her In his* tone was apparently only the remnant of that Irritation he had showed at dinner. He took her hand and drew her into the study. f •*," You don't mind my calling you down, Harry; it is so long since we had even a few minutes alono together," he pleaded. What Is it you iHmT the asked. • • . "v".. "Only to see you, dear--Hafry." He took her hand again; she resisted and withdrew it. "I can't do any more work tonight, Harry. I find the correspondence I expected to go over this evenipg isn't ^jjere; your father has it, suppose." "No; I have It, Don." "You?" "Yes; Father didn't want you both' ered by that work just now.. Didn't he tell you?" He told me that, of course, Harry, and that he had asked you to relieve me as much as you could; he didn't say he had told you to take charge of the papers. Did he do that?" I thought that was Implied. If you need them, I'll get them for you, Don. Do you want them?" She got up and went toward the safe where she had put them; suddenly she stopped. What It was that she had felt under his tone and manner, she could hot tell; It was probably only Irritation at having Important work taken out of his hands. But whatever it was, he was not openly expressing It--he was even being careful that It should not be expressed. And now suddenly, as he followed and came close behind her and her mind went swiftly to her father lying helpless upstairs, and her father's trust in her, she halted. "We must ask Father," jshe said. "Ask him!" he ejaculated, "Why?" She faced him uncertainly, not answering. 'That's rather ridiculous, Harry, especially as It Is too late to ask him tonight." His voice was suddenly rough in his Irritation. "I have had charge of those very things for years; they concern the matters in which your father particularly confides in me. It is impossible that he meant you to take them out of my hands like this. He must have meant only that you were to give me what help you could with them! Harry, don't you see that you are putting me In a false position-- wronging me? You are acting as though you did no', trust me!" "I do trust you, Don; at least I have no reason to distrust you. I only say we must ask Father." "They're in your little safe?" She nodded. "Yes." .. "And you'll, not give them to me?" "No." . He stared angrily; then he shrugged and laughed and went back to his desk and began gathering up his scattered papers. She stood Indecisively watching him. Suddenly he looked up, and she saw that he had quite conquered his irritatloru or at least had concealed It; his concern now seemed to be only over his relations with herself. "We've not quarreled. Harry?" he asked. "Quarreled? Not at all, Don," she replied. She moved toward the door; he followed and let her out, andshe went back to her own rooms. I ' Slayer Murders Family He Suspected of Stealing Hat London. -- • farm laborer named Bonuefemme, who recently murdered four members of a family named Dueasse, for whom he was working, In a village near Toulouse, when confronted with the bodies of his victims--the farmer and his wife and the farmer's parents--showed no regret, and declared that he had shot them all with a gun because he suspected one of them of having stolen his hat, says the Paris correspondent of the London Dally Express. GIRL SPY CHAINED TO • BOCKS AND LEFT TO DIE Vengeance Wreaked on Agent Is Discovered Cave by Peasant. fied in London.--The skeleton of a 'beautiful girl spy chained to a rock and left to die of starvation has been discovered at Hotin, Bessarabia, writes the] Berlin correspondent of the London Daily Express. A peasant who sought refuge from a storm in a, cavern was horror-stricken to see a human skeleton secured by chains riveted Into the walls of the cavern. A notebook, half burled by leaves, revealed the story of Russian vengeance. • The girl was Magdalene Frlsch, the daughter of a Jewish chemist of Petracow, Poland. She was the fiancee of the Russian airman Sa\ro, who under her influence entered the German spy service, and later became a Bolshevist spy in the armies of Deniken and Wrangel. Magdalena carried messages from Savro to the Bolsheviks, In which the military dispositions of Deniken and Wrangel were disclosed. Every effort was made to discover the source ®of the disastrous leakage, but without success until Savro was wounded while serving with Petluni. Papers were then found on the airman which revealed not only his treachery, but the part played by his fiancee. Savro was shot, but Magdalena made good her escape. She was recognized some time afterwards in the street at Hotin and kidnaped. Her captors carried her to the lonely cavern, chained her to the rock, and left her to die. The girl set down in her notebook full details of what had occurred, and then, In.order to escape the tortures of starvation, took poison, with which one of her more compassionate executioners had supplied her. The notebook is dated "October 23, 1921." , Why That Bad Back? Does spring liad you miserable with an aching back? Do you feel lame, stiff, tired, nervous and depressed? Likely your kidneys have weakened. Winter is hard on the kidneys. Colds and chills and a heavier diet with less exercise tax them heavily. It's little wonder spring finds you with backache, rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness and bladder irregularities. But don't be discouraged. Use Doan's Kidney Pills. Loan's have helped thousands and should help you. Ask your neighbor! An Illinois Case Mrs. J. C. Blackburn, 615 s. Ottawa St.. Dixon, 111., says: "I was tired and run down and I could hardly do my housework. My back feit as though it wc • i give out. I beca.rn« so dizzy I had to fit down until the spells passed. My kidneys a c t e d t o o o f t e n . Doan's Kidney Pills cured me and mad* me strong again." Get Doan's it Any Store, 60c • Bos DOAN'S *V,Di.~.V FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y. Every Pic• lure T«U$ Story* IS FINDS HUSBAND'S DEAD BODY Remains of Man, Dead About a Month, Discovered in Box in Tinsmith Shop. New York,--The body & G. Service was found jariimed box behind the counter of Charles in a his tin- ALLENS FOOT=EASE >r Corns, Bunions; ired and Achii jeet Trial package and r i ' Kr,si. Walkini S0.1! "eni r™.r- A,'f '•I'KN-S FOOT * isadE, Le Roy, N, FRECKLES Don't Hide Them With a Veil; Remove, Them With Othine--Double Strength This preparation (or the treatment of freckles is usually so successful In removla# freckles and giving a clear, beautiful com* plexlon that it is sold under guarantee to refund the money If It falls. Don't hide your freckles under a veil; Vet an ounce of Othine and remove them. Even the flrst few applications should show a wonderful Improvement, some of the lighter freckle* vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask the druggist for t|M. double-strength Othine; It is this that Hi •old on the money-back guarantee. Must Be So. The late William Rockefeller said In an Interview given not long before his death: "Rich men have pretty well regained the public's respect, but do yon remember how, 20 years ago, every rich man was universally conceded to be a villain? "No proof was produced; xmly Lawson said so, the (muckrakers by the thousand said so, and accordingly the public accepted this. say-so for the truth. "It reminds me of the schoolboy who was asked by his teacher to give three proofs that the earth was round. He replied promptly: "'You say so, father says so, and mother says so.'** -- The superior man thinks of virtue; the small man thinks of comfort.-- Confucius. smithing shop in Brooklyn, by hs wife, Mrs. Mary Carden Servicie and Louis Struttwolf. An ambulance surgeon Said that the man had been dead about a month. The box is about -four and a half feet long, two feet deep and two feet high. It was closed and the hasp was down over the staple when Struttwolf unlocked the door of the shop and found it behind the counter. Probably nothing will be known of the manner or cajise of death until an autopsy has been performed. Mrs. Service told the police that her husband frequently left her and stayed away for weeks at a time and that the last time he went away was two and a half months ago. She visited his shop several times, but found the door locked, and Struttwolf, who had a key, was notified. He unlocked the door and the body was found. For Infants In Use For Always bears the Signature of FORD OWNERS IMPORTANT l Special lntroiiuci") y price on Wright Storage Batteries with Rubber Case. Guaranteed 11 months by old eatabUahed manufacturer. Special Regular Car Price Price ford, Chevrolst, etc., 6-rolt. .118.60 , 127.00 Bulck. Nash, etc., 6-volt.... IS.60 It.00 Dodge, lt-volt 17.00 »8.00 Radio. 120 amp. hoar 11.SO 10.86 Tou get thl* chance but once. We want batteries In your territory to prove their quality Ju»t stop and think--a fully charged battery, rubber case, delivered toi your door tn 2 days--we prepay express charges. Tell your friends. Bend money order with letter a*4 car model, or we will ship C. O. D. Write •t Once. WE WANT A DEALER, TOO. WBJGHT BATTERY CO. 8he Removed the. iks In Front-of*a Wall 6afe to lti« H.jht of the Door. v^afe to the right the door, slid back the movable panel, opened the safe and took out a bundle of correspondence. She closed safe and panel and put back the books; and carrying the correspondence to her father's desk, she began to look over It. This correspondence--a considerable bundle of letters held together with wire clips and the two envelopes bound with tape which she had put Into the safe the day before--made up the papers of which her father had spoken to her. These letters represented thff contentions of willful, powerful and sometimes ruthless and violent men. Ruin of ^ne man by another-- ruin financial, social or moral 'or all three toy--her--was the lnten- HONOR SHOULD GO TO CONFUCIUS Earliest Idea of the "Shadow Show" 8ald to Have Been Recorded 500 Years B. C. That the earliest Idea of a moving picture was recorded in the time of Confucius, the Chinese philosopher who lived 500 years before Christ, is the deduction drawn from study of the question by Will Day, a wellknown figure In the English film world, who has exhibited In London a collection of relics and machines tracing the growth of the moving picture from the first primitive idea to Its present form, says an exchange. The "shado^ shows" of Confucius are the flrst of "all known endeavors to present auimated pictures. The next period of progressive achievement Is found in 1646, when Athanaslus Klrcher published a book In Latin entitled "Ars Magnalycus "t Umbrae," in which a description and illustration are Kiven of a moving lecture which the writer had evolved with mirrors and a tallow candle for llluminant. Included In the collection is the original disk which Eadweard Muybridge used to settle the controversy between two Amerian mHlionalres on the Alio Palto race course as to whether the four feet of * trotting liorsfe were off the grounu a: the same tlme\_ Dish Only for the Rich. The ortolan is a very rare bird, caught only in Italian vineyards. It has to b*1 fattened in a specially constructed dark mom before being killed for market, and If during this process a severe thunderstorm takes place, the little bird may die of fright. Small wonder that at a London hotel a dish of ortolans for four diners cost the giver of the feast $30. CHAPTER XIT Santoine's "Eyes" Fall Him. Eaton, coming down rather late the next morning, found the breakfast room empty. He chose his breakfast from the dishes on the sideboard, and while the servant set them before him and waited on him, he inquired after the members of the household. Miss Santoine, the servant said, had breakfasted some time before and was now with her father; Mr. Avery also had breakfasted; Mr. Blatchford was not yet down. As Eaton lingered over his breakfast. Miss Davis passed through the hall, accompanied by a maid. The maid admitted her into the study and closed the door; afterward, the maid remained In the hall busy with some morning duty, and her presence and that of the , servant In the breakfast room made it impossible for Eaton to attempt to go to the study or to risk speaking.to Miss Davis. A few minutes later, ~4ie heard Harriet Santofne descending the stairs; rising, he went out into the hall to meet her. "I don't ask you to commit yourself for longer than today, Miss Santoine," lie said, when they had exchanged greetings, "but--for today--what are the limits of my/leash?" "Mr. Avery is going to the courtPry club for lunch; I believe he Intends to ask you If you care to go with him." She turned away and went into the study, closing the door behind her. Eaton, although he had finished his breakfact, went baek Into the breakfast room. He did not know whether he vgpuld refuse or accept Avery's invitation ; suddenly he decided. After wait Ing for some five minutes there over a second cup of coffee, he got up and crossed to the study. "1 beg pardon, Miss Santoine," he explained his Interruption, "but you did not tell me what time Mr. Avery Is likely to want me to be ready to go to the country club." "About half-past twelve, I think." "And what time shall ye be coining back?" "Probably about five." (TO BB> COMTXMUSM f* MATCH IN PANTS KILLS MAN Sets Fire to Alcohol Soaked Clothes, Causing Death Before Flames Were Put Out. Wem York.--John Wilson, forty-five years old, was burned to death when he dropped a lighted match Into the cuff of his trousers. When he saw his clothes were burning he ran out to the street and fell to the sidewalk. He was dead before the fire was extinguished. The polfce found pieces of a bottle In Wilson's pocket which, they' said probably had broken and saturated hi clothing with alcohol, causing flames to spread quickly. C A S T O R I A ants and Children >r Over 30 Years VICTIMS " RESCUED Kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles are most dangerouf because of their insidious attacks, Heed the first warning they giv« | that they need attention by taking i LATHROP'S HAARLEM OIL The world's standard remedy for these disorders, will often ward off these diseases and strengthen the body against fiirtherattacks. Thrccsizcs,all druggists, l^vir for th« nam* Gold Medal on tviiy box and accapt no imitation Ladies Keep Your Skin Clear, Sweet, Healthy With Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Talcum th< Mother Avenges Son's Welts. Peoria, 111.--Wheh her son complained that he had been whipped In school, Mrs. Elizabeth Klebach beat a school teacher, Miss Katherlne Koeppel. Miss Koeppel did not paddle the boy, however, and the mother is now charged with assault and battery. • Set Fire to Load of Hay. iledford, N. J.--Setting fire load of hay was a costly prank ^or James L. Campbell. He must pay for the property he destroyed, a $50 fine, and may lose his license to operate NO DYE £VB*o Hair Color Restorer---S»fe »• ' •fpplj It and result*. >t_»U g°o£ *' To r««tore or laded hair to Original color, dou't Ul • dye -- it> dao«*iom-- Get a bottle of water -- BPPlJ it ana waicu 7&e,or direct from HESSIC-ELLIS. rug«tot»« the motorcar In which he was riding when he threw a lighted match into the hay. Five Die in Apartment House Fire. New York.--Five persons are dead and many others, including fflftemen, injured as a result of a fire which destroyed an apartment house. The fire was started from a cigar tossed aside by an Intoxicated man, it is believed. Kill All Flies! TB^SSSr DAISY FLY KlUJ» »«r«t. Md »"-• Neat, cle^. ornamc^hte^a pc o»k«a?s't" >« •>? son. llade of metal, can't spill or tip over; 11 not soil or injur# any thing. Guaranteed. D A I S Y FLY KILL6E ^ at yoor dealer or • $126. j^pnr n 80I&R3sSjSavcBrooklyn, Rl Uses "CutterV Scrum* and Vaccines hefc doing hu best to conserve your interests. 25 yean concentration OO one line couatfoff something. ' The Cutter Laboratory L*hrmfrj thmt Knrws Berkeley (U.iLicta*) California IF YOUR VETERINARIAN Babies Burn as Mother Visits Neighbor. Andover, O.--Three baby children of Mrs. Pearl White were burned to death when fire destroyed their horn*. Mrs. White had left them alone in He home to visit a neighbor Tltcure hoi ei 1Tlartf \