THE PLA tY, TLL. •JW mm Well and •aid u ege table m Benefits From Tanlac in Ending itis Stomach and Rheumatio Troubles, Prieetew, States Tucker. ill wouldn't take $10,000 for the good Tanlac has done me," declared W. K. Tucker, 1120 North 28th St, Richmond, Va, a boxmaker for the Allegheny Bok Co., recently. "I thought I would hare to give tip the Job I had been on seventeen years, but Tanlac has built me up eighteen pounds, and I never felt better In my 11*. was so weak and ran down and had lost ao much weight and strength I Just felt broken down all the time. I got up mornings awfully nervous, with s»o appetite, feeling like I hadn't Slept a wick, and while on the job my nerves were so unstrung that the noise tn the factory Just tortured me. My liver wasnt acting right, and I suffered so much from rheumatism I could hardly use my arms. "But Tanlac has made a clean sweep •f my troubles, and now, with plenty of •trength and energy, 1 am working and (Ming fine." Tanlac Is for sale by all good druggists. Over 85 million bottles told.-- Advertisement. Extending Bombay, India. <- Bxtensive reclamation work Is being Carried op at Bombay, India, says an Illustrated article In the Popular Mechanics Magazine. By pieans of a great Inclosing sea wall, four miles long. 1,145 acres of back bay will be reclaimed. The estimated quantities of material required for this wall in coble feet are: Rubble, 9.223.280; heavy pitching stone, 3.465,500, and concrete, 3,694,090. An additional work of smaller importance Is another reclamation of some 132 acres. The estimated total cost of these enterprises, less interest' during the six years required for completion, la £583333." t- 1 u» m By OPIE READ Copyright, The Bell Syndicate, Tne. *sr CHAPTER XII Drace was far too disturbed in mind to sleep, and before the sun was high he walked out alone In the garden, to mnse upon his situation. Slowly he paced his way along the path. Someone spoke, and, he turned to. tece the man Batoche. V " ' * " "Monsieur, a note." * , J -• Drace took the paper and Into the summer house. The note was brief, but full in the expression of what had befallen Nadlne, something to throb with the telling of It: "As soon as you can, my lore' one, yon must come to me to take me from the man I thought my father, but who ts the awful brute. Yesterday he called me a she-woif and told me I am not his daughter; and when he told me, my heart was light, for then I have not within me the murderer's blood. Come not alone, Virgil, for Tony will be here, and both of them watch. I am locked a prisoner In my room, and tomorrow they take me to Memphis to make me marry Monsieur Boyce. But I fear not so long as I know yon come." Quickly Drace slipped np to his room, buckled on his pistol, found a rope, looped It with a hangman's noose and tucked It beneath his coat. Nadine was not Stepho's daughter; now he was free to act! Swift was he to answer the appeal, but he was set against her caution, the advice to bring someone with him. It was his fight alone, the execution of his oath, which was not dead like the autumn leaf, but fresh like the new leaf In the spring. He would shoot Tony, the dog, and then string np his master. \ No one saw him, not even the watchful Tycie, and he hastened toward Willow Head, not having found a boat at the landing. Never had the river seemed so broad, the current so swift. At last his canoe touched In among the cane roots at the island's edge. He leaped ashore, but was cautious in the cane, an Indian in stealth as he approached the house. He heard not a sound, saw no smoke Issue from the chimney. Perhaps the wolves were In wait for him, to snap him, but he was now in full view, and he ran at the top .of his speed. But near the honse he halted, peering about, looked In at the door of the main room, found it deserted, then walked softly around to the barred window. Nadlne spoke before he recognized her, standing In the twilight of her prison. "My heart was lond to tell me yon would come, Virgil. And you brought no one with you. But of that there was no need now." He stood in pllence looking at her, his strength exerted against a bar at the window, to tear It loose, but the wrought-lron nails were too long, and he could not budge them. "The ax, Vicgil! Is it lying thereT" Acting upon her suggestion, and with no caution now against making a noise, he cut the bars away and helped her through the window. "Nadlne, he said, "my oath must now be kept." • His arms about her, he stood pressing her close, and never had he felt so strong, and surely never so determined. Her eyes half closed, her head on his arm, she did not speak. She looked as If ahe were at rest, and dreaming. He kissed her, and her eyes flashed wide. WI have come to hang the monster that called you a she-wolf." "When I have told you, yes. And now you will listen. Early I thought I heard Tony and my--I mean Stepho la Vltte, go out. But Stepho was not jsckson Blvd. and Clark st. I with Tony the strong man. Boom* with aetacbed b*ui ii.u but was dragged out tn the rocking* mbailh (g2.u00o apaedr daays; w*i>th* •£p•r•i vate Mat -- law II flMtns am* Man*. SAt occlke ayna, rcdos mearfso rdtiarebclte t,o ndeowolry. dtoero orroatded wbiofet e, l.m oAt hsera ofre (pMlaacce. Prevent Fill FOLEY'S DEMIT WUm«wrCA mttuU*--H.T* ltTmOraT g Cuticura Soap The Velvet Touch For the Skin ;Seep 2k, OietaMt 2S aad 56c, Telcaai2Sc. "Your name, leetle gel," pursued Stepho, "w*s Walton--the daughter of a northern man who live in the same town with Mr. Drace's father near Cincinnati. You an' your mother were <ftrrled off by my men; but your mother, she fall from the horse Just as we come to our camp snd she die. About her neck was a purse with money and papers--one that tell where more money is burled. After the war I go back and dig up this money, but I keep it for you, for your dowry. It la here--buried under the hearthstone. . . . Now--now I beg you to go for Father Tahan. You know where he live. Quick, for It creep up." "Yea, I will go. Virgil will stay to keep you company." "Let me go with you," Drace pleadedi fearful that some harm might befall her. "No, my love' one," she gently opposed him. "You must stay here for no harm can come to me now. Stay here and be kind to htm, for kindness ts the will ef the Qne above. You will, yes?" She kissed hlrn fondly, and the old wolf-eyes closed, that they might not see. Now she was ready to go. Virgil steadied the canoe for her and gently shoved It off. She threw him a kiss, and rounding a green cape, raised her paddle into the suallghtftod flsM&ed htm adieu. W r « • t • Drace returned to Stepho's chair, the old man shagging his brows at him. Then thinking of the rope still buttoned tightly beneath his coat, he tore indispensable in all cases of Distemper, Influenza, Coughs, Colds, Heaves and Worms among horses and mules. Used and endorsed by leading stock fanm, breeders and drivers of United States and Canada ior thirty years. Sold in two sizes at all drug stores. £?0Hf, M r DIG AL '0. G0S MEN !ND. 'J 5 A. Grace Hotel CHICAGO • nsos COUGH?| Try Piao'a--aafe . hUkIt qaick r*>| Hef.AiyrnponHke I ail otkere--pUaa-l a ill iliiee pot np-1 . ./ As c\ <;>AA I opiate*. 3Sc aad I feOc everywhere. ] & * I Suns in the 3orning I The Harvard dentists working at like astronomical observatory in Peru •Jay that they have discovered and pho- 'tograjihed 2,000 ew suns which are , (Just being launched into existence and \ "Which will some d?y In all probability 1 * full-grown suns like our own, each •With Its own solar system. The nebu- 1®® arc in the shape of whirling spirals I* t ®f what looks like luminous vapor. »t Is supposed that they condense In II' *he course of ages into suns and throw gr )®ff pieces that condense more rapidly v ^®n the main body did, being smaller, «nd so become planets. Nearly 25 /Shears ago Professor Holdeta of the •kick observatory estimated there were •at least a half million uncharted nebu lae to be discovered, so that those* which have been discovered are only a amall part of this numbe* Bees Have Hip Pockets. In the bee's legs are pockets for holding pollen, each pocket being '3;; closed by rows of bristles which Inter '*& lock in the most wonderful manner, so ' preventing the pollen from falling out A Logical Inference, "Have a cigar, Tom7' "No. r~e given up smoking." "Well, tell us about her." Look §0 Your Byes Seitttifol Eves, like ftu* chair; for some time In the night come the strange stroke, and Stepho was paralyzed." "Nadlne! What are you saying?" "I am saying that you must listen. Tony came to the window and told me what was happen'. I ask him to let me out, but he would not, for he wants to please Stepho till the last, on account of the money that may be somewhere hid. He went for the doctor, and he came but has gone away again, for I hear him say he can do no good. The old man was out in, his chair where he so often sit; and we will go see him, for it will not be for long. Let us forget all and be kind when death was come, Virgil." "Yes, but where is Tony wmf* "I think he is looking for the money. Let us go now to the poor old man." "You forgive easily, Nadlne." She looked at him In wonderment "Sow can we not forgive when the heart say we must, Virgil? He use me for the trap, which I will explain all to you, but he give me the chance to be with you, and for that I thank him and for not being my sure-enough father. . . . Come with me." Old Stepho sat in his chair asleep' but as they approached him, he opened his eyes, looked at Nadlne, then at Drace. ' "Monsieur was ver* strong. An' kill you if I be not struck down like the beef. An' Tony kill you If he here, but I send him off for something. Ah the leetle gel, she hate me now?" "Monsieur," she said, "I cannot find It in my heart to hate. It Is the poison. Many times you \«ere kind, and I remember them." He bowed his head, and through his tangled lashes looked up at Drace, lire gleaming through brushwood. But he spoke to Nadine, turning upoo her less malignant glance. "The paralyze, it begin down here an' creep up. When It touch the heart, I was go. I say Just now that Tony, •2BW&r *No Mercy New!" It ort Bail threw It away. Nk&W*; he reflected, had usurped his task, and he could eafely turn over to her his claims. A slight noise behind him; be looked quickly about, and there a few feet behind him at the edge of the Cane stood Tony. Upon him the vision of Drace's countenance came. It seemed, with a startling flash. Instantly he fell back, through the cane fringe, Into the bayou. Loudly be cried for help. "Oh, monsieur," implored the old man, "please he'p heem queek. He can no swim. An' he die befo' hees sins they was forgive. He'p the po' wretch, monsieur. Queek, monsieur." Virgil threw off his coat and his pie* tol-belt, and leapejl into the water. A moment before/ne would have shot the beast; now he would save him.* Tony was not In sight. But soon he arose, swimming, and Drace saw a knife In his hand. In the water Tony was as much at home as a beaver! He dived, and Virgil knew now that It was his aim to dart beneath him and with the knife to rip him as a skillful swimmer rips a crocodile. But in the water the strong man, young Drace, was at home, too, and turning about with a quick swirl, he waited. Tony came up; and now they came toward each other, like rival otters--grappled and struggled, treading water, shoulders up. Virgil caught Tony's left wrist, wrenched his arm limp and helpless, seized him by the throat, his left hand steel-gripped about the murderous right wrist, the knife hand. No mercy nowl Fire and water, their game! Down, gasping, down! The head beneath the surface, the hand still out. striving to stab. Slowly the hand opened; the knife dropped; the hand closed--half opened, was limp.' Drace turned looee his grip. The body sank. Virgil swam ashore and came dripout of the cane. The old man spoke: "Tony! Whar he?" "I have drowned him." \ "Monsieur was ver* strong P* . "If I had brought him to die he would have sneaked a chance to murder me." "He was the bad man, yes. He' ought be dead. yes. J[ was to keel heem blmeby. He keel the man here not long 'go. Twice he go keel you, an' once he snap the pistol. I set the trap for you to be stabbed in the water. Then there be no blood to tell the tale. Now I am so sor'. Will monsieur pull me Into the house?" "No. You would reach for a pistol to shoot me. Stay where you are." "Monsieur havestill suspicion. We wait" • a • . ' •»' '• * Virgil put on his coat, his belt, and sat down on the grass. The old man was silent, his eyes closed. He might be dead, but no matter. More tha» an hour dragged by, the breeze moaning In <he cane. Virgil arose and stood near the chair. Stepho opened his eyes, but was silent. ^Virgil sat down again and waited, the wind tangling the tops of the cane. He heard the canoe coming. /Father Tahan was kindly and soft of voice. For many a despairing wretch he had held the Cross. At sight of him old Stepho's eyes were still hard. Time wears granite away, but does not mellow It. Not yet had he granted mercy, and for no pity could he hope. "Father, this Is the man I would keel. I hate heem, the carpetbagalre." "It Is not true" said Virgil, standing near. "I fought against the carpetbaggers In June, In New Orleans, when they were hanging a man." I cut him down." How great can be an Instant change! The old wolf-eyes dewed soft "Oh, monsieur, I was that man? They hang me. I hear of the brave man, but I not know It was you. Please forgive me. . . . Tek the leetle gel, an' I know you be kind to her. She love you. For you she would die. Monsieur, I beg you not to think so hard of me} . . . No, my leetle gel, you must not cry." "I did not know you," said Drace. "A cloth was about your features. Think not of It now. Listen to the one who has come with a message of pea be and forgiveness." The priest devoted himself to hts sacred offices. The wind moaned softly In the cane. . . . The priest spoke presently to Virgil. "She must not stay here. Take her away, arid I will see that everything Shall be done." Nadlne stood with Virgil's coat -polled close about her face. And into his heart she spoke: "The sun is low, Virgil. ' Bill you leave me now no more." [THE END.] se for Mummified Cats. • ...s3ls;; to Be' Voeue years ago a considerable $&&} was carried on between Great Britain and Egypt in mummified cats I The cat was a semi-sacred creature among the ancient Egyptians and because they symbolized Wakefulness, stcalthiness and craft they were held to be special favorites of the gods of sleep and of the land of the dead. When they died they were carefully 'reated by the undertakers of that day, and after careful embalming were burled In great varlts. The degenerates, or more enlightened descendants of the ancient Egyptians--however one cares to consider them in their attitude toward their forefathers' beliefs--made merchandise of the mummies of the cats, and Bold them in shiploads to be ground up and converted into fertilizers for the soil. There was found to be no truth In a story that human remains were occasionally found among the embalmed pussies. The approaching season promises to be one marked by. the predominance of printed stlks. Last year, writes a fashion correspondent In the New York Times, we had a few of them, and we adopted them spaMngly, Just a little wary of their brightnesa But this season we are In for It and, whether you have planned It or not, before the season ends you probably will have at least one printed dress if you have not managed to adopt trimmings of printed silk, sashes of printed ribbons, linings of printed brocades and many other brilliantly patterned accessories. The vogric tor printed silks Is new, snd women as a rule have not become accustomed to them. Fortunately the designers have made samples which cannot help but be followed, for they are Inspiring. In the models that have already beee created (though there pSA- 'W silks. First come the lighter-weight taffetas or radiums, as they ate called. They are 'he smooth variety of silks, and they «how the printing In such clear detail that for those whose tastes call for an expression of detail they are eminently suited. Then there are the crepes de chine, which this season are showing the same all-over and small patterns that they had last year, only In more variety. They are-- most «f them--regular little calico prints, with all the softness and draping quality of silk added to make th^m the more charming. The real pongees are printed gorgeously ; that is, the finely woven allsllk pongees that have, usually, been bleached to a cream white. The prettiest of them are patterned with Japanese and Chinese scenes in all the bright tones for which those countries are noted. They look like veritable china plates, for the patterns from those famous bits of pottery seem' have been transferred bodily to We silks which today ere a popular art expression. The shantipigs, or the heavier sorts of crepe weaves are printed, and they have, a series of designs all their own, among which the Egyptian motifs hold a prominent place. Tlfey, too, are as colorful as can be, but they are done in darker, richer and more telling shades. The designs are repeated continuously, and they make the most formal little parades across the silk, with one motif following the other in quick succession. There are printed chiffons, printed georgettes, printed surah silks, printed crepes of every quality and weight. In fact, every silk that is the least susceptible of printing has been handled In that manner this season. And many which one would never have supposed to be printable are bursting forth, their surfaces completely covered with the most fascinating deslgna. feat bottle 11 work far * all my v think to to run my done all my feel that were It not I would not be hftre by hah£ I truly for your mwBctoo Simple Dinner Gown of Green and White Printed Silk. are but & few of them) there Is not an extra whit nor a jot of trimming or decoration; there is not one unnecessary edge or lapel. When there la a print, In the category of the smartest fashions, that is all there is to the design. The print alone Is the thing. For all sorts and -conditions of frocks they are being used, from the simple morning dresses to those more elaborate creations that can be worn for the most formal evening occasion. And for every event during the hours between It is possible to find a printed silk that Will be effective and Ul££reetlng, , To Plsase All Tastes*' These prints are helping to* make the American woman's dress a more individual and characterful thing, for a woman in a print that Is not fh harmony with her personality might just as well stay at home and n< attempt to shine In the world. On tl other hand, if sh% does at all suit her print to her character she will find her personality expressing Itself so much more readily than It could through the medium of plain materials more or less Intricately put together. The beauty of these prints after they have been made, up, is that they are so extremely simple in line and design. They are the acme of our recent trend toward elimination of extra decorations. ^.^ere pe m*ny sorts of printed . Smock Dresses Liked Will Cherish Patterns. :- A allk of this character is IQ the nature of a possession. Once you have really found a pattern that suits, you will want to keep it. As one woman said, displaying her new handsomely woven and printed silk, "I expect to use this, in years to come, for wall drapery, lamp shade, table cover and what not." And It will make trimmings for future gowhs until time has sent It Into shreds. The dresses are, perhaps, the prettiest of all the things made from printed silks and this Is so, probably, because In a dress there is more space to show the design. There Is more area, as it were, over which to spread the idea; not so much possibility of having Its life cut short before It has really begun to bloom. And the dresses, as has b*een said, are done in anything from morning frocka Jo evening gowns. A simple sort of a printed silk design Is made up as a dinner frock. The only point that takes It out of the class of the simple dress Is the way the skirt is cut Into circular pieces at the sides. The sashes that tie Inconspicuously at either side of the waistline are put there Just to break the flowing lines In a more or less decorative manner. Around the edges of this frock there f- Is a plain binding of green, and as the printing Is of two shades of green on a cream background, the costume, Just by that extra touch on Its edges, has a highly decorative effect, as the binding serves to set off its color and patterning. The girl who wears It, very happily, carries a green feather fan that Is only a bit of a background around which the printing of her frock 1b pleased to shape I|self. •1 .i -a£St OaiNk. N. T. ~ Fro* upon Requett men" will be sent you free, upon tea quest. Write to the LydU E. Ifakhastf Medicine Co., Lynn, ltaaaachusethit <, This book contains valuable information that every woman should have. $ Piles are usually due to straining when constipated. Nujol being a lubricant keepa the food waste aeft and therefore prevents straining. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it not enly soothes the suffering cic piles bat relieves the irrita^ tioa, brings comfort and helps to' remove them. N u j o l t o a lubricant--not a medicine or laxative -- «o cannot gripe. 1 Try it today. ' AUJOW^N^JOTAtAXAnve OfilSC0i05(7*JLA GRIPPE^ ^81^ tMSJOtof* I--CftSCAM^ QlllllliEr Slanted eotd remedy world over. Demandl f box bearing Mr. Hill's portrait end denature.] At Ail Druggi»tm--$0 Cents J if 116799 DIED in New York City alone from kid- ' ney trouble last year. Don't allow* yourself to become a victim s by neglecting pains and ache|s. Guard against trouble by taking'*. LATHROP'8 HAARLEM OIL Convincing. Plugwlnch--Congratulate me. Fm engaged to the wealthy Mrs. Orabster. Plgsnuff--So glad, old man! But-- er--are you stare she is really so rich? Plugwlnch--Sure? I should say sol Why, she was arrested for shoplifting and acquitted as a kleptomaniac- Pearson's Weekly. Effect of Age. A young man seems to feel sheepish when he has to wheel a baby carriage, but have you ever noticed how proud a septuagenarian is to do It? The simple little smock dresses are,1 after all, the favorites of all. We find the designers making them again this season with the same avidity that they put Into the task last summer. And there Is no type of frock which suits the average woman bettei than this one. She has everything In her favor, for It can be provided with extra fullness to suit the full figure or It can be as slim and scant as can be for others. 8ome of the dresses made of printed silks are finely plaited, and tfils process Is attended to in so workmanlike and artistic a manner that, as far as the pattern Is concerned. It does not In the least seem to be Interrupted. Ton must understand, however, that the plaltlngs are the narrowest sort of lines that can be Imagined. For Instance, there was shown a skirt of Japanese printed silk In a black design upon a white background. It was made with one vfride plait about four Inches broad and then came a space of two and a half inches, say, of the fine little plaltlngs. It was one of those semi-dress sports skirts and tt was worn along with a sweater of fte-froirs'fra-ftsftoftefte'ft'o'fro-fto'frsti-e-fcafto'fre-fro-fto'fro-fts'fre'frofre'ft.efto'froft IS STILL A MYSTERY TO CHEMISTS Men of Science Have Not Yet Discovered the Real Nature of the X-Ray. It was lh 1805 that Prof. Conrad Roentgen, the famous German physicist, announced the discovery of the fact that If a current of electricity be passed through a certain kind of glass bulb, from which the air bad been exhausted, the resultant "light" (so called in spite of the fact that tt is not apparent to the eye), would penetrate th» flesh and other semisolid substances and reveal objects on the other side. For want of a better name to give to this disturbance of the ether, Profeaaor Roentgen The r®y Itself is generated by a battery, the wires of I'hich are connected with two eleccalled it the X-ray, being the ache would kill the strong monsieur. He t cepted symbol for an Unknown qnantiwould not Bs be scared whan X-vas I gfc* nil nature ec the X-cay hi still undiscovered € trodes, one of which is a concave disc of aluminum and the other a flat disc of platinum. The current is then discharged through a glass vacuum tube and produces the ether disturbance which renders flesh or clothing semi-transparent, while glass, metals, bones and mineral substances are generally opaque to Ife •*« "" . '• For Mltdewi^r When any of your clothing has become mildewed, put it in a bucket of buttermilk and it will come out looking like new. very thin white wool, made In a aorl of overblouse effect. U was a Charming costume. Blouses and Jackets lend their lines charmingly to the medium of the printed silk. And for these newer frocks which must be made of two materials, and must, It seems, cut one off In the middle, they are In the nature of perfection itself. You can have everything in a printed blouse from the most dressy style up to the one that Is so simple It Is Just a slipover smock. The prints lend themselves to the construction of decorative blouses out of which one can make a picture of one's Belf without a bit of trouble, or they can be ever so simple with no attempt at the picture and still never managing to escape, entirely the class of the picturesque. ^ The Jacket blouses are still very good and they are often made as parts of what might be called a twopiece dress, or they are made up Into veritable coats under which some sort of a plain blouse must be worn In order to cowjet? ^ppie rf t|«t thing. '• / 11 n'm-rt 'Iffe "1 "~* T|*ii'l ~ "li FANCY SHOES A FUTURE FASHION The world'a standard remedy for Iddneyj ' liver, bladder and uric add troubles.-* Holland's national remedy since 1696. All druggists, three sizes. Guaranteed. Look for the nam* Gold Medal oa bos end «cc«pt no imitation fir your CKddreris* C0tf>sJ GREEN MOUNTAIN ~ ASTHMA COMPOUND quickly relieves the^ t log paroxysms. Ueed 55 yaAre ud reeult of loac ezpeoleiiee 1b treatment ef throaS Mid lung diaeaaee tf Dr. J. H. Ouild. TOM TKIiX BOX, Treatise on Aitbae, Us causes, treatment, etc., seas • • upon request. »c. and SI.W •tdruggists, a. H QUELDCO., KUPKBT, V* New Hair S_Doat get bald, get Q-Saa tady--j <4^ fg Yakutat, a flahteg village 9g tu north Alaska, has a newspaper which picks np its news tram the wireless. Color of Frock, Hose and Slippers Should Harmonize, According to Style CHtiea. Fancy shoes as the future fashion for women, instead of flat-heeled, broad-toed styles affected last year by young women, were reported from the convention of the National Shoe Retailers' association In session recently at Chicago. High curved heels, daintily pointed toes and Interwoven colors of fabric predominate this season. Style critics offered the suggestions : Military and "baby French" heels or graceful high heels, may be worn with afternoon gowns, but colors of gowns and, shoes must harmonize. With a gray squirrel coat, gray suede slippers are correct, brown or tan for mink, and black for seal. •Soft, dull colors, perhaps of two tones, distinguish afternoon walking Dainty hit foqtwea* of brilliant hues should be worn with simple black frocks. Hose of the same color, but with lighter shad«p, should be worn with'the gown and slippers for semi-evening wear. Dancing slippers of the material In their gowns are popular for the younger women. Large metal bows and buckles fastened upright to the vamp of the slipper are favored while especially eccentric women may select fans made of monkey fur, Inset at the center with sparklers for fqfmal wear. High-heeled white shoes are correct for sports, the shoes reaching to the calf in small circlets held together by a vertical strip in the | rear.. Each band is cut and perfor- j ated fnd buttons at the sUe- Xbe shoes are - faced in black. . --: New NwgllgeeSt Some of the smartest new negligees are made of heavy crepe cut on Grecian lines and trimmed only .*§Kf. wide double hemstitching. f COUCH. \ r'irf* Kemps' ^Balsam; • ,i*. '"i