mm*£M MM v ? . > , M 1 „ « -- . V . . . > ' : ^ * .v .7 V - ••>• , ; ,v . • 1 *-. * . »- ,\* •*"' -•-••' -• •-- ' '•• •• •'"*• - - V --' • -^. •.. "ft.. •:•• r*. :. •-lift'Mirtn'-'if , THE IffeHBNRY PT.AINDE^JLER, ILL. The Blind Man's Eyes • . -- * ^ '%.••; "# 1 • .....--*----•--. •. n ' , ' . <>* m, WF WEr "I REFUSE* *.& " dabrisl Warden, 8«*ttle capitalist, tells his butler he is expecting a caller, to be admitted without question. He informs his wife of danger that threatens him If he pursues a course he considers the only honorable one. Warden leaves the house in his car and meets a niao whom he takes into the machin*. When the car returns home. Warden is found dead, murdered, and alone. The Wler, a youn* man, has been at Warden's house, but leaves unobserved. Bob Oonnery, conductor, receives orders to hold train for a party. Five men and a girl board the train, the eastern express. The father, of the *irl, Mr. Dome, Is the person for whom- the train was held. Philip D. Eaton, a young man, also boarded the train. Dome tella his daughter and his secretary, Don Avery, to find out what they can concerning him. The Vtwo make Eaton's acquaintance. Dome is found nearly dead from a murderous assault. A surgeon operates. Dome Is revealed as Basil Santoine, blind, and a power in the financial world as the adviser of "big interests." Eaton is suspected and questioned. He refuses information about himself and admits he was the caller at Warden's house. Eaton pleads with Harriet Santoine to withhold Judgment, telling her h« is in serious danger, though Innocent of the crime against fcer father. Ha feels the girl believes him. WILLIAM MAcHARO " "* •*! *" fEDWIN BALMER awi»» br tittw. i CHAPTER X--Continued. fct* While she spoke, the bloqjl, rising with her embarrassment, had dyed Harriet's face; suddenly now she looked away from him and out the window. "He wotld be called, I judge, a father likable-looking man?" Santoine •aid tentatively; his question pluinly •v Was only meant to lead up to souie- < • tiling else; Santoine had judged In ! f that particular already. "Mr. Eaton"--Santoine addressed tlm suddenly--"I understand that you have admitted that you were at k the house of Gabriel Warden the eve- ^ - Sing he was killed while in his car. •-? Js thafc so?" "Yes," .said Eaton. "You are the man, then, of whom Gabriel Warden spofce Us WlXa?" "I believe so." "You believe .soT* "I mean," Eaton explained IfBTetty, •that I came by appointment to call on Mr. Warden that night. I believe that it must have been to me that Mr. I* Warden referred in the conversation 4 i' with his wife which has since been quoted In the newspapers." •' "Because you were in such a situar Hon that, if Mr. Warden defended lou. he would himself meet danger?" jl; . "I did not say that," Eaton denied iMtuardedly. \ " W h a t , t h e n , w a s y o u r p o s i t i o n 1 A - \ feegard to Mr. Warden?" MJ * Eaton remained , silent. Mi "You refuse to answer!" 8antotne t v Inquired. » " |*I refuse." "In spite of the probability that r< ifr. Warden met his death because ' ft his intention to undertake somen thing for youT* "I have not been able to fix that aa /r -• probability.'* ' "ME. Eaton, have I ever injured yon : ^reonally--I don't mean directly, as ' ; }jnan to man, for I should remember * that; have I ever done anything which Indirectly has worked injury on ymi j . -^,'pr your affairs?" iV • "No," Eaton answered. * ' "Who sent you aboard this train?" "Sent me? No one." ^ ; v "You took the train of your own will because I was taking it?" " ! "I have not said I took it because you were taking it* ' ' "That* seems to be proved. Yon can accept it from me; It has been proved. Did you take Utt irain in order to attack met" ' "No." .. f "To spy upon mef* ° "No." Santoine was silent for an Instaat. "What was it you took the train to J" tell me?" "I? Nothing." "That Is all, Mr. Eaton." v Eaton started back to his compart- -ment. As he turned, Harriet Santoine looked up at him and their eyes met; and her look confirmed to him what he had felt before--that her father, how taking control of the investigation of V'., ^ the attack u^on himself, was not continuing it with prejudice or predisposed desire to damage Eaton, except as the evidence accused him And her manner now told, even more plainly than Santolne's, that the bljnd man had viewed the evidence ns far from conclusive against Eaton; and as Harriet showed that she was glad m,,, of that, Eaton realized how she must have taken his side against Avery In reporting to her father. Eaton had barely finished breakfast when a bumping against the car told him that it was being coupled to a train. The new train started, and now the track followed the Mississippi river. Eaton, looking forward from his window as the train rounded curves, saw that the Santoine'car was (j"w the last one of a train--presumably bound from Minneapolis to Chicago. At nine o'clock in the evening, some minutes after crossing the state line Into Illinois, the train stopped at a station where the last car was cut off. A motor-ambulance and other Tmousine motor-cars were waiting in the light from the station. Eaton, seated at the window, saw Santoine carried out on a Btretcher and put Into the ambulance. Harriet Santoine, after giving a direction to a man who apparently was a chauffeur, got into the ambulance with her father. The surgeon and the nurses rode with them. They drove off. Avery entered another automobile, which swiftly disappeared. Conductor Connery came for the last time to Eaton's door. "Miss Santoine says you're to go with the man she's left here for you. The porter appeared with his overcoat and hat. Eaton put them on and 'Stepped out of the car. The conductor rt•fJE"f*n-r,t-f' *<1* *""* ±Q « Hmnimlnn O%J*t*r# "TAahfMinP is the gentleman," Connery said to the chauffeur to whom Harriet Santoine had spoken. The man opened the door of the limousine; another man, whom Eaton had not before seen, was seated In the car; Eaton stepped In. Connery attended' Ills hand--"Good-by, sir." •"Good-by." The motor-car drove down a wide, winding road with tall, spreading trees on both sidej>--v,The man In the car with Eaton, whose duty plainly was only that of a guard, did not speak to Eaton nor Eaton to him. The motor passed other limousines occasionally; then, though the road was still wide and smooth and still bounded by great trees, It was lonelier; no houses appeared for half a mile; then lights glowed directly ahead; the car ran under the porte-cochere of a great stone country mansion; a servant sprang to the door of the limousine and opened it; another man seized Eaton's hand-baggage from beside the chauffeur. Eaton entered a large, beamed and paneled hallway with an immense fireplace with logs burning in ^t; there was a wide stairway which the servant, who had appointed himself Eaton's guide, ascended. Eatori followed him and found another great hall upstairs. The servant led him to one of the doors opening off this and into a large room, fitted for a man's occupancy, with dark furnitqre. cases containing books on hunting,'sports and adventure, and smoking things; off this was a dressing room with the bath next; beyond was a bedroom. "These are to be your rooms, sic" the servant said. A valet appeared and unpacked Eaton's traveling hag. Eaton went to bed, but amazement would not let him sleep. 9b was In Santolne's h/qise; he knew It could be no other that Santolne's house. It was to get Into Santolne's house that lie had come from' Asia; he had thought and planned and schemed,.all through the long voyage on the steamer how it was to be done. He would have been willing to cross the continent on foot "to accomplish it"; no labor that he could Imagine would have seemed too great to him if this had been its end; and here it had been done without effort on his part, naturally, inevKably! Chance and circumstance had done Itl And as he realized this, his mind was full of what he l.ad to do In Santolne's house. For many days he had not thought about that; it had seemed impossible that he could have any opportunity to act for himself. And the return to his thoughts of possibility of carrying out his original plan brought before him thoughts of his friends--those friends who through his exile, had been faithful to him but whose identity or existence he had been obliged to deny, when questioned, to protect them as well as himself. As he lay on his bed In the dark, he stared upward to the celling, wide awake, thinking of those friends whose devotion to him might be justified at Th« First Gray of Dawn Roused Eaton, and Drawing on Trousers and Coat Over His Pajamas, He Seated Himself by the Open Window to See the House by Daylight. last; and he went over again and tested and reviewed the plan he had formed. But it never had presumed a position for him--even if It the position of a semi-prisoner--inside Santolne's house. And he required more Information of the structure of the house than he as yet had, to cor* rect his plan further. But he could not, without too great risk of losing everything, discover more that night; he turned over and set himself to go to do; for the night's stop at Minneapolis and Santolne's unexpected taking him into his own charge must have made Eaton's disappearance complete; for the present he was lost to "them" who had been "following" him, and to his friends alike. His task, then, was to let his friends know where he was without letting "them" learn it; and thinking of how this was to btf done, he fell asleep again. ( At nine he awoke with a Btart; then, recollecting everything, he jumped up and shut his windows. There was • respectful, apologetic knock at the door; evidently a servant had been waiting in the had for some sound within the room. , i,^ 4 "May I come In, strt" • "Come In." * > > The man who had attended him the evening before entered. "Your bath, sir; h?t or cold In tbe morning, sir?" "Hot," Eaton answered. "Of course, sir; I'd forgotten you'd Just come from the Orient, sir. I shall tell them to bring breakfast up^slr; or will you go down?" the man asked. Eaton considered. The manners of servants are modeled on the feelings of their masters, and the man's deference told plainly that, although Eaton might be a prisoner, he was not tp be treated openly as such. "I think I can go down," Eaton replied. He found the hall and the 'rooms below bright and open but unoccupied ; a servant showed him to a blue Delft breakfast room to the east. He had half finished hTs bacon and greeos before anyone else appeared. I This was a tall, carefully dressed man of more than fifty, with handsome^' well-bred features--plainly a man of position and wealth bu£ without experience In affairs, and without power. He was dark haired and wore a mustache which, like his hair, was beginning to gray. As he appeared in the hall without hat"or overcoat, Eaton understood that he lived In the house; he came directly Into the breakfast room and evidently had not breakfasted. I am Wallace Blatchford," the stranger volunteered as Eaton looked up. / He gave the name In a manner \yhlch seemed to ^assume that he now must be recalled; Eaton therefore feigned recognition as he gave him his name in return. Basil Santoine is better this morning," Blatchford announced. . "I understood he was very comfortable last evening," Eaton said. "1 have not seen either Miss Santoine or Mr. Avery, this morning." I saw Basil Santoine the last thing last night," the other boasted. "He was very tired; but. when he was home, ofjfcourse he wished me to be beside him for a time." "Of course," Eaton replied, as the other halted. There was a humility In the boast of this man's friendship for Santoine which stirred sympathy, almost pity. • Eaton finished his breakfast but remained at the table while Blatchford, who scarcely touched his food, continued to boast, in bis queer humility, of the blind man and of the blind man's friendship for him. He checked himself only when Harriet Santoine appeared In the doorway. He and Eaton at once were on their* feet. "My dear! He wants to see me now?" the tall man almost pleaded. "He wants me to be with him this morning?" "Of course, Cousin Wallace," the girl said gently, almost with compassion. "Yoif will excuse me then, sir," Blatchford said hastily to Eaton and hurried off. The girl gazed after him, and when she turned the next Instant to Eaton her eyes were wet. "Good morning. Miss Santoine. Yon are comThg to breakfast?" "Oh, no; I've had my breakfast; I was going out to see that things outside the house have been going -®n well since we have been away." "May I go with you while you do that?" Eaton tried to ask casually. Important to him as was the plan of the house, it was scarcely less essential for him to know the grounds. She hesitated. ... "I understand It's my duty,at present to stay wherever I may be put; but I'll hardly run away from you while Inside your own grounds." This did not seem to be the question troubling her. "Very well." she said at last. She was abstracted as they passed through the hall and a man brought Eaton's overcoat and hat and a maid her coat. Harriet led the way out to the terrace. The day was crisp, but the breeze had lost the chill It had had earlier In the morning; the lake was free from Ice; only alonfc ttfft flttle projectlng break* waters which guarded the bluff against the washing of the waves, some Ice still clung, and this was rapidly melting. A graveled path led them around the south end of the house. Eaton saw at a little distance a powerful, strapping man, half-concealed-- though he did not seem to be hiding--behind some bushes. The man might have passed for an undergardener; but he was not working; and once before during their walk Eaton had seeh another man, powerfully built as this one, wHO had looked keenly at him and then aw6y quickly. Harriet flushed slightly as she saw that Eaton observed the man; Eaton understood then that the man was a guard, one of several, probably, who had been put about the houM^ to keep watch of him, Had Harriet Santoine understood )iis interest In tke grounds as preparatory to a plan to escape, and had she therefore taken him out to show him the guards who woitdtt prevent m The American woman looks to the designers of her own land for her best expression in clothes, and .this season much has been done to please the smartly dressed woman, writes a fashion correspondent In the New York Times. The designers say we no longer must be extremely yoang In our appearance, neither must we $h« Halted Suddenly As 8he Saw Him, and Grew Very Pale. him? He did not speak of the men, rind neither did she; with her, ho Went on, silently, to the gardeners' cottages, where she gave directions concerning the spring work being done on the grounds. Then they went back to the house, exchanging--fpr the first time between them--ordinary Inanities. She left him in the hall, saying she was going to visit her father. , As Eaton stood, undecided where tb go, a young woman crossed the main part of the hall, coming evidently from outside the house--she had on hat and jacket and was gloved; ^he was approaching the doors of the room he Just had left, ,and so must pass him. He stared at sight of her and choked; then he- controlled himself rigidly, waiting until she should see him. She halted suddenly as she saw him and grew very pale, and her gloved hands went swiftly to her breast and pressed against It; she caught herself together and looked swiftly and fearfully about her and out into the hall. Seeing no one bft himself, she came,a step nearer. "Hugh!" she breathed. Her surprise was plainly greatrf than his own had been at sight of her; but she checked herself again quickly and looked warnlngly back at the hall; then she fixeS on him her blue eyes-- which were very like Eaton's, though she did not resemble him closely in any other particular--as though waiting his Instructions. "Stay where you are, Edith," he Whispered. "If we hear anyone coming, we are Just passing each other in the hall." "I understand; of course, Hugh! But you--you're here! In his house!" "Even lower, Edith; remember I'm Eaton--Philip Eaton." "Of course; I know; and I'm Miss Davis here--Mildred Davis." "They let you come in and out like this--as you want, with no one watching you?" * "No, no; I do stenography for Mr. Avery sometimes, as I wrote you. That is ajl. When he works*here, I do his typing; and some even for Mr. Santoine himself. But I am not confidential yet; they send for me when they want me." "Then they sent fop you today?" "No; but they have juqt got back, and I thought I would come to see If anything was wanted. But never mind about me; you--how did you get here? What are you doing heref "Yes; It was an attack. The man in the car meant - to I1## Mr. Eaton down." • ,r The Three-Tferfed Skirt, Indicative of 8pring Styles In Daytime Wear. make any effort to be too noticeably dignified. . We are to be allowed, it seems, to choose our own styles from among so many models and designs that it will' be our own fault If we should fall to find Jnst the proper and most becoming thing. Among the many creations we find high lights. They are Important in that they go to make up the fashion, but none of th&m Is so startling as fb constitute a complete change, tfhe gowns as they appear to the casual eye are still straight and rather long. Bftt the stmlghtness ls»made up of more fullness of material than has been the case In the past. The length Is a static thing that stays where It was through the last season, and, In some cases, Is shorter by some inches. The tailored suits of tweed, for instance, will be quite short, and as the skirts are tight they are often silt at the left side, so that the leg appears when walking almost up to the kfifee. One designer goes so far as to believe that American women eventually will wear bloomers. Instead of petticoats, under all of their daytime dresses. She Is making models of printed vyccrree pe, of white broadcloth, of rajah sNks--In fact, of any fabric flouncing* and panelTngs, -tb« aleeVes sink hito a secondary place, and then» in tkeir humility, are made short and tight and with no trimming whatsoever. / Draped dresses are the order of the day. The silk or crepe or the light woolen material Is taken In hand by the clever designer and the folds are swirled aftd swooped about 'the figure until there results a frock that Is simply a series of beautifully conceived lines put together In a miraculous way. For these dresses there is little or no trimming. If there is a girdle or a buckle or a bow to finish off the epdlng ofv their folds, these decorations are done In colors and shapes that harmonize *splendldly with the general design of the frock Itself. Evening frocks are In two distinct glasses. One of these is the draped class, and the materials used In making are crepe and satin and moire, the latter being the newest thing upon the horizon. Then there are the frocks with full skirts and tight little bodices. They are made from taffeta or many layers of chiffon and they are particularly quaint in their designs, suited to the more youthful-types of figure, which can affprd to carry about layer^ of fullness and many bowtr with dripping ribboi trimmings. Printed Dress Is Featured. i, The printed dress is one of the features for spring. One sees It everywhere. There is no entf to the pat« terns and designs and the combinations of color that are represented by the frocks of printed silk. They arO made, usually, over the plainest of models. But they certainly are becoming and beautiful ln> the extreme, and every w.oman is likely to decide upon having at least one of them. 'When the wrhoIe dress Is not made of the printed material, then hal' of It manages to show a .pattern,1 and the lower pa#t of the dress is made of a woolen material or a plain silk or something that contrasts with the pattern of the silk above. There'are printed silks and printed chiffons, all of them most Interesting when made up in the plain little frocks which will be popular all through the spring and summer seasons. Dresses for the street are made of the softest of woolen materials, some In kasha cloth, some in lightweight velours and others in wool crepes. One of the newest outlines is, the skirt with three tiers. These flounces are made over a circular pattern, a skirt that is particularly becoming to the slim and youthful figure. The dress of this character has trimmings of black around the edges, and the frock Itself is made of a light shadoof tan. After the black has been applied a'ong the edges there ensues an interval of black and white striped ribbon thaft hq}ps te accentuate the decoration. Wraps for the spring are made along large and ample lines. There Is, first of all, the straight coat, which ties oil the side with a bow of ribbon and usually has a huge bow of satin that Is used for wear during the day- ribbon to tie the coat together on one time: The slrlrts oiieh at one side all the way to the waistline. They button at the hem with three' buttons. They can be left closed or swing open and loose. And the bloomers underneath, made of the same material, serve to complete that dress. Sleeves Large and Flowing. Sleeps are still large and flowing In many of the costumes. They are trimmed gorgeously. In some of the suits and dresses they hold the center of interest, pushing all other features of the design aside. As the skirts grow wider and are trimmed with side. There Is a fur collar, too, and a straight line to the coat which carries out the idea of the silhouette of the season. Some of these coats are embroidered In all-over designs and there is no portion of the coat which • is left without that embroidered ornamentation. Light-colored short coats will be worn with white skirts or lighter* toned dresses. And the dark coats covered with embroidery will |>e wornwith the darker toned silk dresses during the early spring to demonstrate the fashion as It exists at the present time. I Graceful Short Coats Will Be Strongs Feature (TO BE CONTINUED.) 'fc CHAPTER XI The Ally in the House. ' The first gray of dawn roused Eaton, and drawing on trousers and coat over his pajamas, he seated himself by the open window to see the house by daylight. As it grew lighter, he could see it. was an Immense structure of smooth gray stone. Eaton was in its central part, his windows looking to the south. As he watched, one of the two nurses who had been on the train came to a window of the farthest room on the second floor of the south wing and stood looking out; that, then, must be Santolne's room; and Eaton drew back from his window as he noted this. The sun had risen, and its beams, reflected" up from the lake, danced on his ceiling. Eaton, chilled by the '8 wulntained that he represented the sharp air off the water--and knowing i highest type of the Scandinavian Civnow the locality where he must be-- lllzation #f that time which had risen palled off his coat and trousers and above the decadent Roman culture of jumped back Into bed. He realized I southern Europe. The Sagas say that that circumstances had given him I Ericsson was a large, powerful man of tfaio for anything he mjgkt1 wlalt to' twR Imposing aaa tf LANDED HERE BEFORE COLUMBUS Every Reason to Believe That Lief ErlMien Wa» Real "DiMoverer" .. ' if America. '• „ v Ttlfo may have been the first discoverer of America no one knows, but Leif Ericsson visited it over 400 years ahead of Columbus. A recent writer on this matter ha~ said: "The evidence that Lief Ericsson crme to the North American coast in the year 1000 and that he returned to Europe, making his discovery known to* the world, is clearly authentic." Ericsson "is defended aguln' tbe charge of being a "barbarous florae adventurer," though he inlgtit have been all that, and 'also the discoverer of America. It sagacity and just In aU things." Before his discovery of America he had been converted to the Christian faith, and had been cominissione by' Klng Qlaf to proclaim tbe faith to the people of Greenland, which the Scandinavians had settled a considerable period before that time. It is quite reasonable to believe that the Norsemen who had settled lny^jreeniap'l had made .voyages to 4Pwica in advance of Erlcocoa. * Brighter Days Ahead*,.' - ••Don't marry a man who hnffrtt »«iy sense of humor," the Rev. John M. Moore of Brooklyn advises irlr|s. Well, that would solve the housing probtom In time.--New York World. There are short, graceful and draped coats which will be a strong feature of the early spring styles and they promise to carry over Into the summer. A short coat can be made of almost any material. It may be embroidered^ made of some brightly colored fabric, or It cftn have the same tone as.the skirt; made of another sort* of material. The fact Is that there Is so much chance with these little bloused jackets to create differing and unusual effects that they have been pounced upon by the smart women ana wort so^tbat they display the foremost elements of fashion. There are some straight box coats to be seen and these are made of the same materials that go to make, up the shorter boxllne coats. Then we are working our way slown.v toward a three-quarter coat which will be popular about the middle of the summer. Many of the three-piece suits are made with short coats that come to a long waistline and end therei, showing a skirt that is made of the same material and a bodice or a top to the skirt that is m&^le of some brilliantly tresting material. Many of the three-piece suits show coats that a:e exaggerated In theirshortness, J»ut others are displaying, coats longer and more conservative In line. If a woman Is at all large about? the hips she does not want to indulge^ too strenuously In the coat that span<$ acro?s the hips, but she can well af** s£- ford to adhere to the coat that Is ot three-quarter length and without a? belt or anything to acc|ptuate the hlffline or the waist. Many of the cos? tume suits are made on this general plan and they are really the most satisfactory things that the 'American designers have produced. They show a surface that Is dark in color or light in tone with the sa^ne shade running all the way from the shoulders to the heels, and then th^r have blouses ot bodices, as the cafce may be, that art brilliant an<J altogether charming in their coloring. When the coat swings apart In the front, ay It always does in the springtime, the blouse underneath plays a large part In the design of the costume as a whole. LIKE IT WAS PLAY i / ' ' ' - ^ Mrs. Little Declares Tanlac fte* : stored Full Strength After r , ; Overcoming Indigestion. T* ' * _____ .,:+ "Since taking Tanlac my trouble* ' have left me, and I never tire of tell- ^ lng about It," declares Mrs. Johanna LitUe, 8082 n. 17th St, Kansas Cttjr. • Mo. -•ul "My food often caused me much disiteas from gas, sourness and heart- ^ burn, and I scarcely ever wanted to eat. >•* Hegtjaches, biliousness1 and pains In i my back kept me In hot water, and I v.: hardly ever got any restful sleep. Mr nerves wejje excited and I was so ra» ^ down it was all I could do to look after my housework. ' "I searched the city for*the right nfedlcine, and consider vlt fortunate that I found Tanlac. Indigestion, sleeplessness and nervousness never bother me now, I can do my housework like It was rlay, and am strong g and i.»PPy. Tanlac Is simply grand." Tuglac is for sale by all good druggists.^ Over 85 million bottlM s^ld** ^ Advemsement. J. A good front starts a business <t§ promptly as good backing. Thousands Have Kidney t Trouble and Never * Smpect It Applicants for Insunuue Often A: •1 Rejected,. fudging from reports from druggists who are constantly in direct touch with the public, there is one preparation that haa been very successful in overcoming these conditions. The mild and healing influence of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for ita remarkable record of success. An examining physician for one of the prominent Life Insurance Companies, in an interview on the subject, made the astonishing statement that one reason why so many applicants for insurance are rejected is because kidney trouble is ao common to the American people, and the large majority of those whose applications are declined do not even suspect that they have the disease. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root ife on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr Kilmer A Co.,. Binghamton, N. Y., for a •ample bottle. When writing be sure ill mention this paper.--Advertisement. Nearly 2.000 women In the United States are practicing dentistry. CATARRHAL DEAFNESS Is often cauaed by an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining' of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inliamed you have a rumblinff sound or imperfect hearing- Unless the inflammation can be reduced, your hearing may be destroyed forever. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will do what we claim, for It--rid your aystem of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICIHBJ has been successful in the treatment OC Catarrh for over Forty Tears. Sold by all druggists. F. J, Cheney A Co., Toledo, Q, A man may be color hHntf and yet nlvflv* tell a greenback when h« sees It Instant relief from CORNS s without risk - of infection 11 You can end the pata of e*rot, tft OM «unatc. Dr. Scholl'i ZinopacU will do it. faff they remove the cause -- friction-prc»»ure, aa<ft - ' fccal the irritation. Thua you aroiii infection*" from cutting yoar corna or utinc coiroiivA;, •cidt. Thin; antiaeptic; waterproof. S ic* fa# -toraa, caUoutec, bunion* Get a boiled^r** your druggist'* or shoe dealer's. k! ; m Schoti'i hino:pa M*U in the laboratorur of Thf SeitO Mil Comakers of Dr. SchoWi Foot 3 CornjortAtpl\*ncts, Arch Su f ports, tH. Put one on--thepttinisgonet •*» lingerie From-Paria in Winaome Deaig*| •S: -i. Should Slow Down. The kind of man who is always in a hurry is liable to dash Dust a goof thing without Mfllag U. .r i.< i. J jit I..*- »...k Lingerie coming from Paris always holds an especial fascination for all women. Every couturier has his »»r her own idea about the making of lingerie. and they always show new-design* along with each collection of cos- 'tumes. This season one designer has a wonderful collection of anderthlngs. They are designed in the most sumptuous manner, with a gr^at deal of lace and quantities of Soft crepe de chine In the most -delicate of tones. The boudoir gowns are made with trains and sleeves that trail away with the draperies of the gowns themselves. One of these Is made of crepe georgette In a* deep blue, with a huge shawl draped Into a point at'the back and made of mouseiiue de sole. It Is embroidered with Spanish designs and edged with a binding of wide black ribbon. The lingerie here is made of crepe' de chine In the palest shade of rose or In white, with insertions of lace and lingerie embroidery put on very rtnpij. Others are plaiting their chemises and nightdresses of crepe de chine, keeping the trimmings as simple as possible, often using only bindings tor a finish. v Another firm i* showing tleshabille creations so thin that they are almost like mists surrounding one's form. They are made of chiffon and .georgette crepe and huve many trailing panels and long, floating, sleeves. m Short Coat "la Often Whit*. The little shoft coat which la at very smart and youthful comes tn k wide range of fabrics. One particu-. lariy attractive model Is made of white v.-ool, which has a design of ttuy red oblong motifs. Lace Season. Spanish lace, In varied colors, particularly In copper, blue, red ami black. Is one of the most popular ma terials ror spring frocks. All-over lace Is also used for pun«la, flounces and wide btfthaiy ^ > , ^ . . . . ; • . ' J s L ' . In your spare time you can pasiiy make $5^X) a day representing us in this community exclusively, taking orders for Royce quality flavoring extracts and toilet requisites. Royce good goods have been used by housewives in every state tor over 44 years--not sold through •tores. Over 20,000 Royce representatives welcomed everywhere since 1879. Be a trained Royce sales* woman, live comfortably and become financially independent The Royce free "Money Book" tells you how. Write for it now. TMC ABNFR ROYCE COMPANY StrtM D, B«h 6ST. CUft--4. FRECKLES Now b tbe Time to Get Rid of The** Ugly Spots ThnVa no looser th« slightest M«d Si feeling ashamed o( your freckles, aa OthlM --^double «trencth--la (vtnmtMd te miww ttae*e homely •pots. Simply set an ounce of Othlne from U0 druggist and apply a little of It night ana morning and you should soon see that even the. worst freckle* have bugun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It la seldom that more than ounce la needed to completely clear 4Jke skfn and gain a beautiful, clear complexion. Be eure to ask for the double-strength Othlne, as this !• sole under guarantee of WMT task m M Mis t» NWI