ippii &'• p THE MoHENRT PLAINBEALER, MeHtHIRT, IM* UMENTSOF WING GIRLS in % CLIVE ARDEN fvpriW' V W= •#»: mm a»K:? RdieTwl by Lydia E. Pink- - :1 ham's Vegetable Compound School Teacher's Experience <-#.-rtvE k~:: ^ Eranston, Wyoming.--"A few years ago I had troubles every month such as girls often have, and would suffer awfully every time. I was teaching school and it made it hard for me as I had to go to bed for two or three days. One day my mother suggested that I take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which I did, and it did wonders for me. ,' In the course of a year I married and /: after my first baby was born I got up • too soon and it caused a displacement. This troubled me so that I could hardly ' walk or do my housework. I knew what » the Vegetable Compound did for jne be- * "• fore so I took it again. It strengthened r.«e and ROW I have fife little kiddies. The eldest is six, the baby w fiva montlus ." • . old and 1 have twin boys three years old and a boy of five years. I do all my own •. housework, washing and ironing, and 1 • -': never felt better in my life. I owe my health to your wonderful medicine ana 3 I recommend it to all my friends."-- Mrs. VERBENA CARPENTER, 127 2nd Avenue, Evanston, Wyoming. DISTEMPER COMPOUND Record Beauty Parlor New York city claims to have the largest beauty parlor in the world. It occupies the entire floor of a half-block building and it cost about $500,000 to fit it up. It is possible for a patron to upend $114 at one sitting. PART THREE--Continued. f both ton cues indiscriminately, shakling the Englishman's hands again and Croft deemed it expedient to wait f again, kissing those of the girl in their for Babooma to attack. To attempt J demonstrative exuberance. a return with these tired men risked j They had. It transpired, been swept meeting the enemy in the interstices | from their bearings in a thunder of the forest, where open fighting j storm, having accepted a bet to fly would be Impossible. Given at last ; from America to Honolulu, thence to the excuse, he deter/nlned to take no Australia, in their small seaplane, avoidable chances in attempting the | While ehdeavorlng to recapture their extermination of thq growing menace route between the two latter places, to the prosperity of the tribe. He therefore inspected their weapons, arming those who had forgotten sword, spear or arrow; afterward, with Roowa a.8 adjutant, he posted part of faced with engine trouble, they had perceived the beacon flaring below. : . . They Introduced themselves-^ Philippe and Louis de Borceau, thirsting for adventure to enliven the mohis little army round the tent, and is- j notony of post-war existence. sued directions. A few men were sent Advancing a few steps Croft adin search of fresh fruits along the i dressed the bewildered natives in north of the forest. Alan busying him- j words whose utter unihtelUgibUlty self with the remainder in strengthen- ] caused the two strangers to gaze at ing the hut and palisade. With the him, then at the girl, an uneasy suspirevolver, loaded with its one remain- ' cion rising in their minds that the ing bullet, in her belt. Barbara found ; Knglishmaa's brnin had softened. Howher time fully occupied with the prob- ever, a relief was obvious among the lem of preparing sufficient food for these nninvited guests. Suddenly she' started from her peaceful employment, and her cheeks blanched. A shrill group of blacks, and a murmur of v o i c e s b r o k e f o r t h . . . . Croft returned, and further explanations were given. Bit by bit the excry of fear had sounded beyond the cited Frenchmen grasped the main garden. , . . Another arose, yet i facts of this extraordinary situation, another. . . . She hurried out of "Votre noni?" cried the elder. "En the hut, meeting Alan running from Ae landward end of the palisade. route to l'Australie, you tell us? But I remember--dites-inol--quick--your where he had been working. Outside j name, M'sfeu ?" » Upon hearing It, the ^tttle French- Say "Bayer Aspirin" INSIST! Unless you see tho •"Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 24 years. , Accept only a 5^ Bayer package whichcofitains proven directions Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100--Druggists Aaptrin 1* the trad* mirk of Baypr MannfketBM of MoooaceUcacideater of SAlicjllcacid If people only knew ^ the facts about their skin fHE real cause of skin . trouble--rashes, blackheads; •Bcessive oiliness, etc.--is way down in the lower layers of the •kin. It cannot be expected therefore that mere surface remedies can reach the disorder. ,<£: Thousands of physicians are «" 4aily prescribing Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap. They know this gentle, yet effective treatment does sink deep, and ' Will often soothe away in a few days the most stubborn rash as _ , well as a trifling blemish. No Vome should be without these products--the soap for general ' toilet use--the ointment to check the first bit of skin eruption. At all druggists. RESINOL ^5 How to luild up your Weight rPO BE under w L-J •.» often proves «•> low flghting-po In t he body. It often means you are minus nerve- Power, minus red-cells in your blood, m i n u s h e a l t h , minus vitality. It is serious to be minus, but the moment you increase the number of your redblood - cells, you begin to become plus. That's why lias meant to thousands of nnderwefeht I held thelr breath *m*"e*n" "a"n*d' women, a plus In their S trength. Tour body fills to the p o i n t o f p o w e r , your flesh becomes firmer, the age lines that come from thinness disappear. You look younger, firmer, happier, and you feel tt, too. all over your body. More redblood- cells! S. S. S. will build them. S. 8. 8. Is sold at all good drug: stores In two sizes. The lartfer size Is more economical. 'rw Booklet Send name and address to 8 8. S. Bldg. Atlanta. u«-. for (pactal bBoloookdle. t on tha the seaward entrance, a group of natives clustered together, chattering excitedly, staring at some far point in the sky. At sight of Croft, their agitation increased. "A-aa ! a-aa ! Great Chief, behold !* they cried, pointing upward. "See! A great bird approacheth. Hearken to the sound of his wings, the cry of his wrath! A-aa! A bird of ill omen, O Mighty Chief!" They began to wail and moan, striking their breasts. Others joined them, taking up the cry: "A bird of ill omen ! A-aa ! a-aa! A bird of ill omen, O Mighty Chief 1" He shaded his eyes with his hands, searching the dazzling blue. Suddenly his arms- fell to his sides; and he turned to the girl. "By G--d! It's an airplane! Coming this way, too!" He called to Roowa. "Go, Roowa! run! Take fire to the beacon upon the hill! Make it to blaze fast and high! Go--swift as the lightning flash-- l* tar off, the noise of her engines bat faintly audible, the unmistakable outline of an airplane showed at a great height, flying toward the island from the north. . The natives, forgetting all instructions, clustered together, full of superstitious terror. The women and children left the garden and huddled near their men, a few moaning, the rest silent from fear of this new Unknown. Alan's fingers gripped Barbara's arm, and they ran down to the shore. With faces pale and tense, they stood there motionless, their hearts racing chaotically, their eyeB fixed upon the speck growing ever larger, looming nearer and nearer. . . . The distant drone of the engines became louder. .. . From the hilltop a column Of smoke rose Into the clear air; soon a leaping flame mingled with tt . . . another shot up higher. . . . As the machine whirred, loudly and swiftly, to within a few hundred yards, still flying high, the pile of sticks and leaves, branches and undergrowth-- quickly dried in the afternoon sun--burned, and roared, and leaped, the red tongues of fire and billowing smoke showing clear against the blue of sea and sky. "Will they see It?" muttered Alan. He waved wildly; but the airplane flew serenely on, skirting the island, toward the west. "D--n them!" he ejaculated. "They must see that Are I" Barbara held her breath, every neire taut But as the strain seemed to reach breaking point, the machine slackened speed. With sudden cessation of rfolse, her engines were shut oft, and she came swiftly down In large circles until low over the water; then she turned and flew slowly back outside the barrier reef. Turning again, she rose a little, flying up toward the beacon--then round again, and back to the reef. Alan could recognise her now for a seaplane. Seeing two figures upon her, once more he waved, shouting vociferously. . . . With a graceful swoop down, again she turned, sinking, lower and lower; until at last she rested upon the calm waters of the lagoon, and came skimming lightly tow a r d t h e s h o r e . . . . A silence of horror had fallen upon the natives. Some dropped on their knees or flung themselves on their faces, not daring to look seaward; others stood still as death, their glittering eyes never wavering from the figure of their white chief, their bands grasping their weapons--ready at a word to dash forward, with their blood-curdling yells, to his aid. . Then one or two rubbed their eyes, as if unable to see aright . . The white chief was wading out, unarmed, into the rippling wavelets, to meet the awful bird of 111 omen. . . . They looked tearfully at one another! then He bad returned to land. . . n Two queer figures enveloped la much clothing, with fearsome goggle eyes protruding from their heads, were descending from between the vast wings. . . . The man danced. "Ciel! I remember!" cried Louis. "All de vorld was interested! It was thought you all perish. But you and --" He paused. He glanced at Barbara, at the hand which, instinctively, she had clasped round Alan's a r m . . . . And in that pause, something cold and clammy seemed to clutch the girl's heart, causing her to grip closer the arm she held. : ' •" • Alan put his hand over hers. "My wife," he said very cle«*tf. The world had thrown a shadow across the perfect blue. Proud of their home, they led their guests thither for food, when the seaplane had been safely beached. There during the meal, they explained the native trouble. The idea of fighting anything or anybody thrilled both these adventurous young men. "Vat guns have you?" they asked, "vat ammunitions?" When Informed of the lack of firearms, and shown the hows, arrows,, spears and crossed wooden swords, they sat and gasped. The weapons, no less than the hut, with Its many Ingenious devices for |ise and wmforE, aroused their keenest interest. "Eh! But it is a leetle paradise!" cried Philippe. "Vat you call 'cosayl' All ze chairs! And a table! And ze flowers!" He turned to Barbara, when Alan went out to restore order among the natives. "You have turned ze wilderness into home, Madame! It Is dat you vill not like to leavfe it! Oui?" She looked around the familiar room she loved so well, out through the doorway to the black figures in the garden, which had been such a pride --and again she felt her heart contract The shadowy outside world had once more become a tangible reality. VII The engine trouble proved more serious than the Frenchmen had anticipated. Any idea of a dash to civilization for succor was abandoned. Until the sun had set and the moon risen, the three men worked upon it, Croft with the delight of a child over the return of some lorg-lost toy. When a short trial trip wi made, be took the pilot's seat Another sharp spasm of pain shot through Barbara's heart, as she looked round upon the faces she knew so well. Much as rescue would mean to them both, the thought of renouncing their free life here filled her with grief. The prospect of bowing again to all the little rules making a maze of civilization chilled her. The analogy presented Itself to her mind of being slowly caught up into some huge net Spreading over "the universe, beyond which lay this little wilderness where she had dwelt and learned to love. Croft's Instinct was to send her away to immediate safety; bat that proved impossible. He conferred lengthily with the two brothers, under cover of their work together. Afterward, leaving Louis to finish, he and Philippe went indoors to pore over charts, discuss routes and conclude arrangements. When, later, the two aviators, dead tired after their adventures, were rolled in their huge coats upon the floor, he drew Barbara into their bedroom and unfolded the plans. Should Babooma attack in the night, the Frenchmen, however zealous,,would obviously fail to distinguish friends from foe. Their responsibility, therefore, would be the safeguarding of the women and children in the hut--Barbara's welfare being their special consideration. "Should things go badly, and Babooma manage to do me in," he continued hurriedly, "trust yourself entirely to them: they know what to do and where to go. If, after all. he worse than physical ones!" she assured him, rebelilously. "I hope Babooma attacks tonight. Then we can face him together, and know the result" The two Frenchmen being utterly worn out he forbore to suggest their going at once by moonlight; over which forced delay she secretly exulted. The stillness around was intense. Now and theii it was broken by the cry of a ctyld, quickly hushed again. Within the pulisude, the black forms of the men lay close to the ground, with here and there a pair of eyes watching, sentinels, between the stakes. With the two Frenchmen to protect the girl from treachery, Croft felt pretty confident over the result of any night attack. Well aware of the black chiefs desires for her, he had warned De Borceau of this danger! "If things go against us and you see ipe bowled over, don't wait--don't risk a moment--go!" he had insisted, "even If it means physical force!" And De Borceau. like many another, found himself following this man's behests, with a zeal and fetflty Inspired solely by personality. He swore obedience to the last letter. Laying his cheek against hers, Alan became aware, in the moonlit darkness, of the tears upon It. "Not crying?" he whispered. She buried her face in his shoulder, saying nothing. "It has been very beautiful,"hetnurmured, stroking her hair. i Then rhey began to plan their future --picturing the journey together to England, the greetings, the meetings with those who thought them dead. . . . And ever the man's keen eyes watched the shadowy scene without, his ears alert to every sound, as they had been on that other night long ago. . . . Presently, as before, he leaned quickly forward. For again the faint sound of breaking twigs had reached him. A dotid of Smoke and Crackling Flame Arose. . . . Again, near the outskirts of the palm grove, he had caught sight •Qt a shadowy form. Barbara rose with him, aware without words that the moment of desperate action was upon them ; glad of It since now she could face the danger with her man. "1 must go." he murmured. For a moment she clung to him "Take care!" she whispered passionately. "Oh. my dearest, do take care!" Gently he disengaged himself, and kissed her. t "I shall be all right. Go to the women, Barbara, and keep them Indoors." He hurried to the entrance; then turned back again. "Don't forget, if-- Trust yourself to De Borceau if--" Not finishing the sentence she dreaded to hear, he once^more turned to go. A tiny choked exclamation escaped Her lips. He looked quickly round. Swiftly, with a sudden passionate movement, he^selzed her In his arms, straining her fiercely to him; then, as swiftly, he released her, and she found herself alone. • • • • • • • • The battle waged long and furious. For a time the men hidden on the hillside, aften surprising the little army wriggling down the bay. kept it fiercely engaged, away from the hut. But gradually, to the girl's strained ears, the wild struggle seemed to draw nearer. . . . Presently, as she could tell by the excited yells close by, those men guarding the but itself were attacked. . ." . The fighting blood of the Frenchmen tingled within , them; they fingered their extraordinary, clumsy weapons, impatient to hurl themselves out Into the fray--yet Instinctively submitting to their orders, realizing the wisdom of the leader who had appointed each man his task with supreme insight into d e t a i l . . . . . Soon the uproar raged round the palisade. Every now and then, a crashing, ripping sound was heard, proving portions to have been burst through find trampled down. The scuffling feet, snorting breath, muttered cries, bloodcurdling shouts and yells, were close. . . . Penetrating the bamboo walls came venomous spear-points and sharp arrow-heads,' sometimes piercing the shoulders of those standing near. . . The women grew demented. . . •. Barbara tried, unsuccessfully, to keep as mbny as possible In the central hut, where only .the two end walls were exposed to the weapons; these points the Frenchmen guarded, ready for any o n s l a u g h t . . . . Simultaneously, with dramatic suddenness, three things happened to end the terrible period of waiting. With a startling crash, the oater wall of the sleeping hut gave way, and in surged a fighting medley of black figures. . . . From the other side, or liltchen, a cloud of smoke and crackling flame ^aroserr- . . The hut was on fire! All power of restraining the women was'past. As the Frenchmen dashed forward to meet the Intruders on one side, and the black smoke bellied in from the other, they turned with one accord, struggled madiy in their stampede for the main entrance, then streamed out--wild with terror--into the cold gray of the early dawn. . . . At the same time, from without, amid the genei*al hubbub, one loud wailing cry arose. In a mixture of native and broken English tongues--a frightened, agonized cry: "The white chief; A-aa! a-aa! The white chief! . . . . Tl^e white chief I , ' . . A-aa I a-aa I a-aa!" It reached the ashen-faced girl within. . . and of that alone was she conscious. The roaring flames and blinding smoke, the struggling black men and shouting stream of women, faded from her eyes. Her work was finished here, and she never hesitated. Without a backward glance, she drew the revolver from her belt and dashed outs i d e . . . . As she ran, gasping, np the slope, she paid no heed to her own danger-- was unaware of both black and white men from the but following in hot pursuit. . . . Again the dense medley parted before her eyes.' At the same instant a spear sped through the air. Whizzing angrily past her, straight at two struggling forms, it flew with unerring judgment and buried its hideous point in the white man's back. He reeled, loosed his antagonist, threw groping arms wide. With a demoniacal cry of triumph, Babooma made a spring. . . . As twice before, a sharp report reverberated, and the seething mass was momentarily obscured by smoke. . . . A pair of black hands grasped the girl's arms as she tottered backward, dropping her smoking weapon. For a brief instant she recognized Roowa's face, which seemed to merge into that of De Borceau; then her senses slipped from her, and everything faded into oblivion. . . . Not knowing friend from foe, the struggle for her unconscious body was sharp and furious. But the two Frenchmen were fresh and uninjured; and Roowa's supporters hdd rushed on, in wild distress, to that other seething heap. . Just one glimpse of two prostrate forms being hoisted, amid a frenzy of fighting, walls and shouts--and the two white men devoted themselves to their oath. . . . On trembling knees at last, bleeding, helpless, his cries drowned by the noise around and the roaring flames from the hut. Roowa watthed the strangers seize the inert form of his white chiefs wife, and disappear toward the, coast. . . • The thick fighting mass had dissolved into odd straggling groups of twos and threes; the prostrate forms had disappeared. Away near the palm grove could be seen a quickly vanishing crowd of dark figures. . . . The flames belched forth from the burning hut, overcoming the ea^ly dayl i g h t . . . . Presently the steady monotonous drone of retreating engines blended with the rising wind of the daWh. (TO BE CONTINUED.) «X4>X«X*X*X*X*X*X*X<>X*X*X*Z*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X«>Z*X*X*X+ Arnold's Wife Shared in Husband's Dis&race April 8, 1779, Gen. Benedict Arnold and Margaret, better known as Peggy Sh!ppen, were married In Philadelphia. The marriage was the culmination of a wartime romance. The groom, tt.en a trusted subordinate of General Washwhite chief and his wife were talk- I ,ng to leave him in danger, protesting HBalnst being compelled to desert her post among the frightened women. The ii\gton, was later to become the must doesn't "attack, "but waUs"for"us to ^CoHate!!.. move, Philippe de Borceau will take you away at daybreak and send help. His brother will stay with me." She demurred hotly to this, unwlll- OfielAfcricls B<IC6 oloodMrcficiiiB again and again! . , . But lot the huge eyes fell from tbose faces. The natives lifted up their voices In a howl of fear. . . \ Down by the water, a babel of English and French voices, torrents of questions pouring forth in both languages, the replies unheeded in the mutual relief, surprise' and excitement I The two Frenchmen mixed argument waxed long and heated between them. But. when Croft's mind was finally and Irrevocably made up, anger and tears proved unavailing'. Only by reminding lier of the debt owed to another^ by prevailing upon Most every one has heard of Arnold's unspeakable treason, and even of his love affair with the charming Peggy. It was certain that his wife was in absolute ignorance of Arnold's sad adventure. Indeed, as soon as the traitor was sure of his own safety he wrote to General Washington asserting bis wife's innocence, and saying: *1 t»eg she may be permitted to return to her friends In Philadelphia, or come to me, as she may choose." Washington, Who was a just man. believed in her innoship, Vulture. She chose the former and arrived In Philadelphia about October 1. 1780. says the Detroit News. But she had not been there a month when the council adopted a resolution ordering her to leave the city and not to return during the war. Five years later she came home again, but was treated with so much coldness and neglect, even by those who had encouraged her marriage, that she left again, never to return. She remained with Arnold during the remainder of his broken and disgraced life. He died In London, an embittered and sad man, without a country. Firat Quart% Window The first clear fused quarts window glass ever made will be used la the sunroom of the Johns Hopkins all ber rising motherhood, did be at <*nce. He offered to send her with hospital at Baltimore, Md. It excels last break down her resistance. an escort to Philadelphia, or to put ordinary window glass in that it transput. my mental^ agonies will [ aatts. nltraTteft sr Itaaltfa-givlag wmfm \ ' . ' / "• r/ ."VV i I M i l i n n i n i i n n i n n l Halt* Train and Dices 35. Feet to Save Child Laurel, Del. -- Three-year-old Fred Marvel, son of Capt. Fifed Marvel and great-grandson of two former Delaware governors, wandered a^ay from his nurse recently to the railroad bridge and fell Into the Laurel river. pridge Trader R.- W. Dunn held up a fast freight train, made a 36-foot dive from the bridge and rescued the youngster. i i i n i 1 1 i l l i n i i mi I m" CLIMBS ON PILOT TO SAVE CHILD Fireman Makes Sensational Rescue of Small Boy, Pocatello. Idaho.--A sensational irescue of a little child from death beneath tbe wheels of a passenger locomotive on the Payette Valley branch is told in a communication stating that Oregon Short Line Fireman George Ramsay had descended to the pilot of the engine via the running board and pushed the two-year-old youngster from" the tracks where he was crouehing. According to the account of the near-accident as given by J. F. Wba* len, engineer on train 377, the child, Daniel Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orson Smith, was seen when nearing a private crossing by Engineer J. Hutchinson, who thought it was a chicken because of the odd position of the child sitting on the engineer's side of the track, leaning back with his head on the rail. He was dressed in a dark coat and had very fair hai/, and the engineer was confused as the object grew nearer as to whether it was an animal or a baby. As soon as it was apparent that a child was in danger the air brakes were applied and the fireman, George Ramsay, made his way to the pilot and succeeded In pushing the baby from the track with his hand before the wheels could touch him. Other than a few scratches and a soil smudge on his cheek from the fireman's glove, little Daniel was unhurt. The train was traveling at about fifteen miles an hour, according to the report of the crew, an'd was stopped four feet beyond the spot where the child had been sitting. Orson Smith, father of the baby, is an employee of the Boise-Payette Lumber company. The mother was ill in bed, which accounts for his being on the crossing, having wandered there while the gate was open. American Competition Irks British Movies London.--The moaning and wringing of hands over the sad state of the British moving picture film business waxes louder day by day. Perhaps the public cares, but It shows no inclination to cease crowding into the hundreds of British theaters where American films are run off almost exclusively, year in and year out. The British filmmakers protest that that even England's own dominions and colonies are being Americanized by the subtle propagan la contained in the celluloidal products of the studios of California and New York. There is a very active campaign on to have the Baldwin government slap a "heavy tax on foreign Alms. The government has so far kept silent upon Its intentions as regards the movies. Meanwhile dollar-laden magnates of the movies breeze In from Broadway and have even gone sd far as t(> begin building or buying large theaters of their own in the precincts of Piccadilly Gircus. Thieves Ignore Silver for Rare Books, Clock New York.--Theft of 100 rare books and a grandfather's clock that was an heirloom was reported to the Astorist* police by Miss Ruth Lawreijce, president of the Daughters of the Cincinnati arid daughter of Abraham Riker Lawrence, late Supreme court Justice. The stolen books were In a packing case in the home of Miss Lawrence, who lives alone at 295 Howland street, Astoria. Miss Lawrence, descendant of a distinguished colonial family In New York, was unable -to understand why the "literary robbers should have passed up silverware and other valuable articles in the bouse in order to take first editions of Disraeli and Bulwer Lytton, along with the memoirs of the Due de Salle and a tenth edition of the Encyclopedia Brltannica.; Tot Fells From Window; Life Saved by Shoestring Baltimore, Md.--Fate in the'person of an iron'thewed chauffeur and a slender shoestring saved the life of tiny Anita Danzie as she hung suspended, head downward, from a rusted staple insecurely set in a window on the second floor at her home. The rescue of the three-year-old was as dramatic as It was miraculous. Playing about the second-floor apartment in a'new pair of shoes, little Anita fell from the window. Her fall was checked by the slender string In one of the shoes. Gregory Jaklmovick, a chauffeor, dashed up the stairway and just as he reached for the feet of the ° hpnlf* rustv, weatherbeaten staple broke. With a frantic .grasp he s®™ grip on the tiny dress and dre* Antt* to ssfetjr. . ' ^ "failed by Tree ' Kfitt&Orf Valley, Iowa.-Wlllard Gochenour. twenty-two, son of a wealthy farmer, was killed when pinned beneath a big walnut tree which his brothers felled. Gochenour failed to hear the warning shouts. Explosion Biinds Atlantic, Iowa.--Oro Logan, iimityseven, is blind and suffering from severe burns about the face following an explosion of a Jug of testing Hyp he was using in a cr amerfr. ^ MNHS "after every meal Paretds- encoaraft the ddldren to ccaorree ffoorr im e/ dive them Wrigley'si, If removes food ptrtkkf finn the teeth. Strcng the gtuns. Combats asouth. Refreshing MM! beneficial! SEALED TIGHT KEPT RIGHT CHICAGO - BOSTON - PrrrsaufLOH *• MEW YORK There is u lot of brotherly love go- Ing to waste because of failure to find some one to bestow it upon. There is no Better Heel Made Rubber Heels M Better Heel to Walk On ItmrHmkmrntmhommole you U S K I D E ' •Ae Mtomfer Sofa for Wear Vnrttd Stats* Rubber Company Woman Heads Negro Bank Richmond, Va., enjoys the distinction of having a negro bank wbose president Is a woman. INSURE >OUR COMPLEXION 0DLD CREAM POVDER AND FACE CREAMS . ^ ttberal •ample will be aent fires* to any woman anywhere. Write today. C. W. Beggs Sons & Co. 1744 N. Richmond St. CUcaso,m. ^ Hospitals and Orphanages vThere are more than 7,000 hospitals in the United States and Canada and nearly 2.000 orphanages for dependents.-- Science Service. CORNS Lift Off-No Pain! PREEZONU o Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little "I'reezone" on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly yon lift It right off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiay bottle ol "Preezone" for a few cents, sufficient t« remove every hard corn, soft corn, oi corn between the toes, and the foot calluseft, without soreness or Irritation.