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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 Mar 1923, p. 2

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I? felii shops, Mnm «•* $¥$?•: ;"J-vV EATON SUSPECTED Gabriel Warden. Seattle capitalist, teTIs his tootlef he la expectm* a caller, to be admitted without question. He inform# his wife or danger that threatens him it ne pursues a course he considers the only honorable one. Warden leaves the house in his car and meets a man whom he takes into the machine. When the car returns home. Warden la found dead, murdered, and alone. The ".alter, a young man, has been at Warden a house, but leaves unobserved. Bob l.onnery conductor, receives orc'ers to hold train for tt party. Five men and a jrirl board the train, the Eastern Express. The father of the ffirt, Mr. Dome, is the person for whom the train was held. Philip D. Katon, a younjf man, also boarded the train. * Dome tells his daughter arid his secretary. Don Avery, to find out what they can concerning h!m. The two make Karon's acquaintance. Dome is found nearly dead from ft murderous assault. A surgeon operates. Dome is revealed as Basil Santoine, a great corporation lawyer. CHAPTER VI--Continued. oilted continually by men eonln great projects, lmraeised day and night in vast affairs, capable of living completely as he wished--he had been, at the age of forty-six, great but not famous, powerful but not publicly known. At that time an event had occurred which had forced the blind man oat unwillingly frrm his obscurity. This event had been the murder of rty great western financier, Matthew Latron. There had been nothing In thl« affair which had 11 any way shadowed dishonor upon Santoine. So much as In his role of a mind without personality Santoine ever fought, he had fought against Latron; but his fight had been not against the man but against methods. There had come th^p a time of uncertainty and unrest; public consciousness was In the process of awakening to the knowledge that strange things, approaching close to the likeness of what men call crime, had been being done under the unassuming name of business. Scandal--financial scandal --breathed more strongly against Latron than perhaps against any of the other western men. He had been among their biggest^ he had his enemies, of whom impersonally Santolne might have been counted one, and he 1 1mm} bis friends, both in high places; he was a world figure Then, all of ^ a sudden, the man had been struck down--killed, because of some private qiiarrel, men whispered, by an obscure and till then unheard-of man. i The trembling wires and cables, Which should have carried to the walttog world the expected news of La- Iron's conviction, carried instead the news of Latron's death; and disorder :? followed.. The first public concern had been, of course, for the stocks and bonds of the great Latron properties; $ and Latron's bigness had seemed only farther evidenced by the stanchness *• wtth which the Latron banks, the Laf trom railroads and mines and public utilities stood firm even against the ehock of their builder's death. As- ®; aural of this, public interest had shlfty ed to the trial, conviction and sentence of Latron's murderer; and it ^ was during this trial that Santoine's name had becofne more publicly i- known. Not that the blind man was inspected of any knowledge--much lass of any complicity--In the crime; Has murder had been because of a { purely private matter; but in the eager questioning into Latron's circumstances and surroundings previous to the crime, Santoine was summoned Into court as a witness. 'The blind man, led Into the court, toting sightless In the witness chair, revealing himself by his spoken, and e*en more by his withheld, replies as one of the unknown guiders of the destiny of the Continent and as coun- Sor to the most powerful--himself then hardly heard of but plainly qpe of the nation's "uncrowned rulers' --had caught the public sense. The (ate of the murderer, the crime, even fcatron himself, lost temporarily their blterest In the public curiosity over y . the personality of Santoine. ^ It had been reported for some days that Santolne had come to Seattle dl •flfectly after Warden's death; but When this was admitted, his assocl •, ates had always been careful to add that Santolne, having been a Hose personal friend of Gabriel Warden -Ifad come purely in a personal capac .jjfty, and the impression was given that JJantoine had returned quietly some days before. The mere prolonging of ®ls stay In the West was more than .a - Suggestive that affairs among the I>owerful were truly in such state as '"Warden had proclaimed; this attack Opon Santolne, so similar to that t?" './Which had slain Warden, and deliv- % fcred within eleven days of Warden's P. |leath, must be of the gravest slgnifii|-" •• cance. Connery stood overwhelmed for the E. moment with this fuller recognition |fr of the seriousness of the disaster which had come upon this man lntrusted to his charge; then he turned 5,^'^TV/p? the surgeon. """" v"- ^ "Can you do anything fOrhim here, P&J£'7^I>octor?', he asked. * 1 The surge011 glanced down the car. .^7.:, "That stateroom--Is it occupied?" "It's occupied by his daughter." "We'll take him In there, then." The four men lifted the inert figure T of Basil Santolne, carried It Into the drawing room and laid It on its back L C. ?-.» upon the bed. , Po lL* ^*" "I have my Instruments," Sinclair " sam. "I'll get mem; out before 1 de- (Ma to do anything, I ought to see t..„ his daughter. Since she is here, her consent is necessary before any opera* Hon on him.** "Miss Santoine is in the observation «ar," Avery said. "I'll get her.' The Eaton coald not fceil exactly how. Avery started down the aisle. "One moment, please, Mr. Avery!** said the conductor. Til ask you not to tell Miss 8antoine before any other passenger that there has been an attack upon her father. Walt until you get her Inside the door of this car-" "Yon yourself said nothing, then, that can have made her suspect It?" Eaton asked. Connery shook his head; the conductor, in doubt nnd anxiety over exactly what action the situation called for--unable, too, to communicate any hint of it to his superiors to the west because of the wires; being down-- clearly had resolved to keep the attack upon Santolne secret for some time "I said nothing definite even to the trainmen," he replied; "and I want you gentlemen to promise me before you leave this car that you will say nothing untH I give you leave." His eyes shifted from the face of one to another, until he had assured himself that all agreed. As Avery left the car, Eaton found a seat in one of the end sections near the drawing room. He did not know whether to ask to leave the car, or whether he ought to remain; and he would have gone except, for recollection of Harriet Santoine. Then the curtain at the end of the car was pushed further aside, and she came In. She was very pale, but quite controlled, as Eaton knew she would be. She looked at Eaton, but did not speak as she passed; she went directly to the door of the drawing room, opened it and went in, followed by Avery. The door closed, and for a moment Eaton could hear voices inside the room--Harriet Santoine's, Sinclair's, Connery's. The conductor then came to the door of the drawing room and sent the porter for water and clean linen; Eaton heard the rip of linen being torn, and the car became filled with the smell of antiseptics. Donald Avery came out of the drawing room and dropped Into the seat across from Eaton. He seemed deeply thoughtful--so deeply, Indeed, as to. be almost unaware of Eaton's presence. And Eaton, observing him, again had the sense that Avery's absorption was completely In consequences to himself of what was going on behind the door--in how Basil Santoine's death or continued existence would affect the fortunes of Donald Avery. A long time passed--how long, Eaton could not hard -told; he noted only that during It the shadows on the snowbank outside the window appreciably changed their position. Finally the door opened, and Harriet Santolne came out, paler than before, and now not quite so steady. Eaton rose as she approached them; and Avery leaped up, all concern and sympathy for her Immediately she appeared. He met her in the aisle and took her hand. "Was It successful, dear?" Avery asked. She shut her eyes before die answered, and stood holding to the back of a seat; then she opened her eyes, saw Eaton and recognized him and sat down Jn the seat where Avery had been sitting. 'Doctor Sinclair says we Wfll know In four or live days," she replied to Avery; she turned than" directly to Eaton. "He thought there probably was a clot under the skull, and he operated to find It and relieve it. himself to Ms section, he watched car and ontside the windows fo* signs of what investigation Connery and Avery were making. Whoever had attacked Santoine most still be upon the train, for no one could have escaped through the snow. No one cotild now escape. Avery and Connery and whoever else was making Investigatioon with them evidently were not letting anyone know that an investigation was being made. Eaton went to lunch; on his way back from the diner, he saw the conductors with papers In their hands questioning a passenger. They evidently were starting systematically through the cars, examining each person; they were making the, plea of necessity of if report to the railroad offices of names and addresses of all held uf> by the stoppage of the train. -v*.--: *<'"> V-- Eaton started on towarf tte rear of the train. v "A moment. Sir!" Connery Called. Eaton halted. The conductor confronted him. "Your name, sir?" Connery asked. "Philip D. Eaton." Connery wrote down the answer. "You* address?" "I--have no address. I was going to a hotel In Chicago--which One I hadn't decided yet." "Where are yoii coming from?" "From Asia." "That's hardly an address, Mr. •Baton!** "I can give you no address abroad. I bad no fixed address there. I was traveling most of the time. I arrived in Seattle by the Asiatic steamer and took this train." "Aht yon came on .the Tambn Maru." Cohnery made note of this, as he had made note of all the other qnesP tions and answers. Then he said something to the Pullman conductor, who replied in the same low tone; what they said was not ^udible to Eaton. "You can tell us at least where your family is, Mr. Baton," Connery suggested. • "I have no fanggjr." ( "Friends, then?* * . J/," - "I--I lmve no ftfsnds.* ^ "Nowhere?** L had teat acr«S£ £i^\faiin whllefchecklng them up, and now he began to put them back in the bag. Suddenly be noticed that one of his socks was missing; what had been eleven pairs was now only ten pairs and one odd sock. This disappearance, of a single sock was so strange, so bizarre, so perplexing that--unless It was accidental-- he could not account for It at all. No one opens a man's bag and steals one sock, and he was quite sure there had been eleven complete pairs there earlier in the day. Certainly then. It had been accidental; the bag had been opened. Its contents taken out and examined, and in putting them .back, one sock had been dropped unnoticed. The absence of the sock, then, meant no more than that the contents of the bag had been thoroughly Investigated. By whom? By the man against whem the fcelejgram directed to Lawrence Hillward had warned Eaton? - Ever since his receipt, of the telegram, Eaton--as he passed through the train In going to and from the diner or for other reasons--had been trying covertly to determine which, :s a Tin* fttylfts. design. \ There was a time, and not so long ago, when a coat could not be placed In the class of the beautiful. It was a tieavy, cumbersome-looking thing that was deviated chiefly for use. One waited always for a sight of the costume uOderteath before expecting to be confronted with the least claim to beautlfui design.' Now the coat is a part of the costume, often Just as n" v' !J'~ "C«ll You Do Anything far Him HiN, Doctor?" He Askad. "Nowhere." Connery pondered for several moments;" "The Mr. Hillward--Lawrence Hillward, to whom the telegram was addressed which you claimed this morning, your associate who was to have taken this train with you-- will you give me his address?" "I don't know Hlllward's address." "Give me the address, then, of the man who sent the telegram." "I am unable to do that, either.** Connery spoke again to the Pullman conductor, and they conversed lnaudlbly for a minute. "That Is all, then," Connery said finally. ' He signed his name to the sheet on which be had written Eaton's answers, and handed It to the Pullman conductor, who also signed it and returned it to him; then they went on to the passenger now occupying Section Four, without making any further comment. Eaton told himself that there should be no danger to himself from this inquiry, directed against no one, but Including comprehensively everyone on the train. When the conductors had left the car, he put his magazine away and went into the .men's compartment to smoke and calm his nerves. His return to America had passed the bounds of recklessness; and what a situation he would now be in if his actions brought even serious suspicions against him! He finished Ills first cigar and waa debating whether to light another, when he heard voices outside the car, and opening the window and looking out, he saw Connery and the brakeman struggling through the snow and making, apparently, some search. >Presently Connery passed the door of the compartment carrying something loosely wrapped In a newspaper in his hands. Eaton finished his cigar and went back to his seat In the car. As he glanced at the seat where be bad left his locked traveling bag, he saw that the bag was no longer there. It stood now between the two seats on the floor, and picking It up and looking at it, he found It unfastened and with marks about the lock which told plainly that it had been forced. , ^ - He set it on the floor between his knees and checked over Its contents. Nothing bad been taken, so far as he could tell; for the bag had contained only clothing, the Chinese dictionary and the box of cigars, and these all apparently were still there. ^Restored one side and are tied there with a rather wide bow of ribbon or of thes material. - ^b«re is ||0dediy pictupse^ie a S§My get away fl*0»^that outline which it is' W for women to accept an$ gently to subdue any about the hips, with Its long en®! ; where It will do aft world as far as trim It helps, too, In relieving the seventy of line which does no* seem to be at all a part of the season's stylo--at least for a coat of this type. You will find these coats making pert of th turned, and just as often yotil .toff them, In silk or soft kaslm or brocaded wools, made to accompany the dresses of soft crepe and chiffon, for when the flounces of the softer »at«- rials peep out beneath the .coat for a space of ten to twelve inches, they I AfreA^my life, and I'm sir add just that much to the softness of ' grateful that I just can't help the appearance of the costume and | It. Tor nin«r years," declared Mrs, suffering from a wn and, oh, If s just lmi im. s^M food. I lost Jjfi *i> so weak I totttMMNne aft Wf**4 walked. fS fainted dead away. '4Ni! * wink, and I had weak speiliC/'" " *m y hiWlNVMl-^ fOIK - tetfttfeent. Well, tWt for all my have almost-: lit, and I've never I will always "Your Name, 8lrP Connery Asked. if anyone, among the passengers, was the "one" who, the telegram had warned him, was "following" him. For at first he had Interpreted It to mean that. one of "them" whom be had to fear must be on the train. Later he had felt certain that this could not be the case, for otherwise any one -of "them" who knew him would have spokeh by this time. Now his suspicions that one of "them" must be aboard the train returned. The bag certainly had not been carried out the forward door of the car, or he would have seen it from the compartment at that end of the car where he had sat smoking. The bag, therefore, tad been carried ont the rear door, and the man who had opened it, if a passenger, must still be in the rtisr part of the train. Eaton, refilling his cigar-case to give his action a look of ca sun in ess, got up and went toward the rear of the train. A porter was still posted at .the door of the Santolne car, who warned him to be quiet in passing through. The car, he found, was entirely empty; the door to the drawing room where Santolne lay was closed. He went on Into the observation car, A few men and women passengers here were reading or talking. Glancing on past them through the glass door at the end of the car, he saw Harriet Santoine standing alone on the observation platform. The girl did not see him; her back was toward the,car. As he went out onto the platform and the sound of the closing door came to her, she turned to meet him. She looked white and tired,- and faint gray shadows underneath her eyes showed where dark circles were beginning to form. "I am supposed to be resting," she explained quietly, accepting him as one who had the right to ask. "How is your father?' "Just the same; there may be no change, Doctor Sinclair says, for day* It seems all so sudden and so--terrible, Mr. Eaton." Sports Coats Are Maae of Plaid Tweed of Ample Preperttena. drapy and graceful of line as any dress could be. The coat, Indeed, la now considered almost a dress in itself, for the frock underneath its folds becomes a secondary consideration-- something which is in the nature of a background. Of course, this new development in connection with coats puts a new responsibility upon the well-dressed woman. She must, almost of necessity, have two or three sorts of coats to accompany her various types of clothes. Since there is so great an element of design about the outer wraps they at once take on a character which places them in this class or that. And when they are worn with frocks of any opposing character they lose all style and flare and become nothing at all. The problem, then, of choosing a coat becomes a little Intricate. But when you once realize how Interesting the new game is, why, then yon can't wait to begin your plans for your new coat expression. The three-quarter coat Is the newest. It is so new, indeed, that as yet scarcely any of them have been seen. Now, the three-quarter coat is straight of line. It has no flare whatsoever, no sign of a peplum, but its line descends quite simply to the knees or a little below that point. On Lines Full and Drapy. ftome of the three-quarter coata-- they cannot be called jackets--are made on lines that are quite full and drapy. They take their little hint and Inspiration from the jacquettes of the winter and tie at one side at a point that marks a decidedly low waistline. They start out "by looking very much the effect is entirely in accordance with all of the dictates of the modern styles. The neWest £0at» of three-Quarter length are made ef nMr-over embmldery. They are so beaufftM that they Stake the amateur stop to wonder however they have been done. The real truth about them Is that they are made up of solid masses of embroidery--that is, the handsomest of them are--and they form so decorative a wrap arrangement that they are bound to capture the attention and the fidelity of any woman at all Interested In the art of dress. Just as we had about decided that handwork and embroidery had left the field of dress, back It pops in a handsomer expression than It has ever achieved before this since the days of the India shawls. Of course t;.ere are all sorts of Imitations of these embroidered fabrics, and very handsome they are, too. Embroidery la Attractive. Some of the embroidery for tftese newer coats is done upon a foundation of satin. Again it uses a soft broadcloth for Its beginnings. And at another time you will find it appearing upon the surface of a thickly pressed crepe. In fact, there seems no limit to what may be accomplished with this new idea in the way of making the outer wrap one-of the most decorative pasts of the costume. While many of the collars are plain, there are also to be seen an astonishing number of those which are made of fur. Short-haired furs are used preferably, and the collars are made straight and folded so that they form, whether they be open or closed, flattering frames for the faces that are posed against them. The little jacquettes are by no means passe. Very many of them are to be seen In connection with the newer spring clothes and not a few of them are worn as extra coats. They can be tied about the hips, forming them Into blouse effects, or they can be allowed to hang straight, making cunning little box coats that are especially suitable for dressy sports wear. The little short coat makes it possible to change the appearance of one's costume without much trouble. One can have two -or three of them In different colorings to wear with a certain dress or with a collection of dresses. Don't imagine, from all this talk about shorter coats, that the long ones have disappeared.' They are as prominent as ever and will be Worn in large numbers, only they are not so new and so startling as the ones which have taken on shorter lengths. cake the .for sale by-all good drug*-,-.- 30 million bottles His Specialty. course, I am only a small' to«| r t< * r adndtfed Constable gtam TV Slaekputter eg l*§Cunia. "But I wan§£ "j>/i t& 'ttfl you, fh&f&a one thing that can do just as durn well as any of . them big town detectives." "Whatsis that?" asked ar a<£ qualntance. - "Being baffle^, b* gttjr Star. - ~ if'-':'-" rS\-*v m •&, 5ay"Bayer" and Tnsistf •Ai b v ~' feT'v" Show Gracefulness and Charm "You dog!" he mouthed. "Harry, this is the man that did it." (TO BE v-JNTJLNUED.) Long coats. Indeed, give every evidence of being costumes all by themselves. They are redolent of much design and consistent making. Simple though they may seem, they are creations involving much art and labor. They are not to be considered lightly in any respect, for they are made up intricately and formed to show an astonishing amount of gracefulness and charm. Along with the period styles and the great craze for 1880 frocks there has come a rage for a coat which Involves these same principles. It Is shaped and flounce^. It is full and draped. It Is wide of sleeve and drooping of line. In fact it has all of the picturesque charm which Is characteristic of the dresses fashioned after the Ideals of that period. It Is a dignifiedlooking affair and can only be worn where things are very dressy. Some of the sleeves start out from the shoulder to be tight, but when they reach a space below the elbows they usually turn into extraordinarily flared cuffs. The materials of the longer coats are plainer than those which make up There was one, and we have done all we can; now we may only wait. Doc tor Sinclair has appointed himself nurse; he says I can help him, but not just yet. I thought you would like to know." "Thank you; I did want to know," Eaton acknowledged. He moved away from them, and sat down 10 one of the seats further down the car. Soon he left for his own car, ifldd as the door was closing behind him, a sound came to his ears from the car he Just had left--a young girl suddenly crying in abandon. Harriet Santolne, he understood, must have broken down for the moment, aft^r the strain of the operation; and Eaton halted as though to turn back, feeling the blood drive suddenly upon his heart. Then, recollecting that he had no right to go to her, he wenl iwv CHAPTER VII * Suspicion Fastens en Eaton. Eaton found his car better filled than it had been before, for the people shifted from the car behind had been t i l l HfcMlM I* i l l i i u i l i i l t l > H » I I » 11 u n i t i> SEEDS CARRIED FOR MANY MILES Varieties of Wild Plants Have Various Means of Assuring Propagation •v.,. ef Their Species. It is well known that the same crop cannot grow and flourish year after year upon .the same ground. The wild plant knows this and takes care that Us seed shall fall upon fresh ground. Some, like the thistle and the dandelion, havo developed seeds provided with balloone of down, by means of which they are carried for miles. The sycamore and th<> lime grew little parachutes, which send their seeds twisting through the air for long distances. The burrs make n*e of animals to do the work for them. They grow rows of tiny hooks designed to catch In the coats of animals, which carry them away an1 then rub them off against bushes. The poppy has perfected an.efficient form of sprinkler. When the dry heads are shaken by the wind, seeds are shot sandbox tree was the first Inventor of explosives. Its seedpods are fiiledf with gas, which expands until such a pressure is reached that the Sheath bursts with a noise like a revolver shot, and the seeds are distributed over a considerable a ret*, y Oh, Yes! The apparently amorphous agglomtrate of Dostoyevsky's wock on dose inspection reveals consistent and conscious architectonics. The incrustation of irrelevant incidents autonomous interpolations, and unanstssllable sub-plots caomot defeat the linear logic of the crystal which his novels essentially have.?--The New Republic. the shorter variety. They are satins and duvetlnes--anything that has that rich and sumptuous look about It-- and they include the heavier varieties of satins. One long coat worn by a younger girl was made of dark blue satin, and while It was straight in line and wide of sleeve It was made upon lines which were wide and ample In effect. At the sides the satin was shirred in to give a bit of extra fullness there. Then, surprisingly, the coat was lined all the way through with a vivid red flannel that turned back at the sleeves and wide collar, so that It showed with all brilliancy. It made a most interesting sort of coat and one that was very much in accordance with the rest of the new season's styles. " - j & - •--- fiay Appllquee." -* " Large flowers of cretonne In brilliant colors are supplied to the skirts of cream-colored eponge dresses .for young girls. The same bright shades are repeated In a bandanna handkerchief, which forms a collar and tttn on the left shoulder. Unless you see the name "Bayer' package or on tablets you are not ting the genuine Bayer product p: scribed by physicians over twenty-twj years and proved safe by millions f< . v Colds Headache ... Lumbago^' ';S*sltartua* r"' Rbeumati«li <•-" Neuralgia Pain, Pain "Accept "Bayer*Tablets of only. Each unbroken package con proper directions. Handy boxes twelve tablets cost few cents. gists also sell bottles of 24 and 1' Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bay Manufacturer of Monoacetlcacldester 8aHcyUcacid.--Advertisement. , China's New Air Mail 8ervfMi A Dumber of CMneee students a undergoing a special course of traifc ing tcjneqplp them fesr piloting the aijfc planes that are used In the newly-eih tabiished mail route in China betw Peking. Tsinanfu and Shanghai. first It was necessary to employ eign pilots. SWAMP-ROOT FOR v -SPNEY AILMENTS There is only one .medicine that really Stands out pre-eminent as a medicine f<* curable ailmenta of the kidneys, liver sia Madder. ' Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Soot stands highest for the reason that it has pi to be jaal$kr «*«w4y ne***3se: thousan' ' ' •- - - J', ai.i.. --»- «P°n S*WW,,ca(?? Swamp-Rooi Askes fftcals qttckly because its \ immediate effect to soon veslusadJal-BMet ommb. It is a «eS» tie, healing .vcssfcahle oropourid. Start treatment at once. Sold at ml drug stoves in bottles of two sixes, nne4»nm and large. ) However* if yen wish first to test this Mration send ten cents to Ete. Cb., Bin^kUiwn, N. Y., for a %. WhSwrtting be sure a«4 this paper .--Advertisem^afc, THE HATS SHOULD BE INDIVIDUAL Headgear Attractive When Designed te SwIt Heed Which le to Wear "A' K, Expert Say*. ^ Still Another Want. A Swedish Inventor has patented a glass bottle that won't break. Now for some genius to Invent a broken bottle that won't cut an automobile tim. -- Nashville Southern Lumber- •>i -.m* wasfe': The hat should be constwefceA to suit the Individual head which 1s to wear It, says a New York milliner who works on her own original lines who builds a hat on her customer's head. When a customer wants a hat she studies her as for a portrait, then assembles her material and gives her subject a sitting, "building" the hat then and there. "Clothes should be self-expression, not fashion advertisements or a disguise," says the artist milliner. "A woman's hat not only should bring ont the beauty of her features, lit should hint also at her character, her Inner self. "I pay most attehtton to line and color. The color must blend with the skin and hair, and the gown with which it is to be went. It should not be so brilliant of esteem* as to overpower the lad " iiiim iiii'iei^'i*!^"' 'i : -v ' Silk and Lace. , A Mt of black shirred silk, wtth a full crown and a narrow brtn la trimmed with a huge rosette of 1M en the right side. "A small woman never should try to build up the else of her head, but rather emphasize Its smallness. She should keep to the natural Unea of the head and depend upon a snappy bow, a graceful feather, or some bright bit of trimming for her effect. "The tall woman should not feel called on to combat her inches by a flat or too large haL The Russian turban, the full-draped. Oriental turban, or the cloche shape with the full crown that extends beyond the features, Is the best choice for the taB woman." / New Qlnghame. The first gingham frocks of the sea* son come in large cheeked and plaid patterns, and are trimmed with bands tii Cunt HTUKFI A* Federal Reserve Banks* v'- ~ The 12 federal reserve banks a#h ' s located in these cities: Boston, New i York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Ridfr> J aioqd. Atlanta: Chicago, SL Loul* Minneapolis, Kansas City. Dallas a^i * BRA Francisco. SHE DYED k SWEATER; i\ SKIRT AMD CHUB'S MOT ^ r v WITH "DIAMOND DYESft ; * * ' - •*" • r* -•" • - «• - Each package of *Diameed D}**" etatains directions so «up»ple mm coverass, draperies, wnnffi *T*™nw * " rhesas dy*eiag Is sow because Dier Djr«e are gepmtoed net ttrwl or ran. Tsu your whether the artithl yw tiA to dye wool jW.fOfc or whsther it M «n«n, ootta* i A" Misunderstanding. •**H .this a second-haud ' "VinRUBit" •- - ••• ^11. I want one-for toy ar»teh£* : . '--^---- . 4 -r : Don't shorten your nights is ti||> tempting to lengthen yedr days.

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