..t, 134, by Edwin Balraer CHAPTER X Continued ' - ' r t:'!ot James spoke last. "He did t make mere history. ,He made a i ark across cosmos and. infinity. in memory can adequate honor ! paid to bUn. ... Good-by, Cole - "i-rldronrr-v'v':'?;?; V alien, from the city, came sudden ly the sound of earth's voices raised in Rudyard Kipling's "Recessional"; "od of our fathers, known' of bid..-.. ' he tumult and the shouting dies, 1 ' captains and the kings de i part. v ., ;:.... . kVi Vi'--t'-'Xv' Earth's voices ' singing to the skies, where never earth people had been before, , . . , Xony sprinkled earth upon Hen dronarth not of the earth, but of the planet that had! 'come from the edges of Infinity to .replace it The grave was fllledV At the last Eve and Tony stood 'de by side, while the others rolled J great boulder overt the; spot as a temporary marker. -A--'?-' Tony beard Eve .whispering 'te " Jberjelf, "What la Itr? he said. Tell otl" -.in-' ;::A: r "Only the Tenth Psalm, : Tony," she ' whispered : "Why standest thou afar off, O Lord? Why htdest thou thyself in times of trouble!" : And In the far Sky a speck passed and vanished beyond the hill, an ab rupt ana vivia reunuuer m iae ex igencies of the present k 'v i s;' ' ' v Eliot James sat In the. apartment ' which he bad. chosen for his resi dence, 'and looked from its unorna- : ;meuum t gray yvtuio ' uui urerruiv city of Hepdron. Presently he be gan to write. In a cabinet at his side were drawers filled with note books upon which was scribbled the history of the migration from earth. "In summary," he began, !"slnce " 'here has been no time for, detail, will set down an outline of pur conditions since our- perilous re. noval to this city of the Ancient people. -, , ; -' .w "We have shelter,' the-gorgeous . shelter of these buildings rising In a hundred hues under their transpar ent - dome. We have: warmth, for although we are moving1 Into the cold t a prodigious speed, the air - sucked . into : the " city , is heated. Around the ' rim of the dome are situated eight tremendous ventilat ing and alr-condltloning plants.. We have light in abundance -our city ; In the long dark of night Is like day. Underground is food enough for usj for pnmeasured generations. some of that food disagrees with us. Some" is Indigestible. -' In some there Is no nourishment which bur gas tric juices can extract. But the vast bulk of the stored produce is edible, delicious and- healthful. ,Cfci4;qS. "We have a plethora, of tools and : . mnrhtnM. Tn tha riAVAlrmmenf. of electricity - the Other People have far outstripped us. Also In the ex tension of what we called robot """control The manufactured almost Jiio machinery which needed human ' attention. ' A technique of photo electric cell Inspection and auxiliary engines make every continuous me chanical process Self -operating. The vast generators which . run under ground to supply light; the power ful motors of the ventilators, and the pumps which supply processed y water f ronj the , river for our con sumption, not only run by them selves, but repair, themselves. : "The northwest ventilator cracked a bearing; last week and In the - presence, of Tony and Bansdell it stopped itself, took itself apart,' re moved the cracked metal, put on a new bearing, reassembled Itself and went Into operation again. They said that the thing1 reminded them of the operation of one of those earthly : phonographs :," which : stops automatically and, has a ' moving urm to take off played records and put on new ones. " Only the-ventilator motor was thirty - feet In height and ; proportionately broad and long. . . . '''-rJ''?''-rif; "We have clothing." Eliot James THE STORY FROM Under tbV leadership of Cole Hendron, Amerlonn eolentlat sorae WO ti(.r.one escape tn a Space Bhlp Just before a oo.mlo eolltelon that wipes nt the earth, shd land on Bronson Bet. The appearance of an airplane, -Bhich disappears without making an attempt to communicate with the rofueeea. leave a feeling ot alarm. The newoomers realise they are not . lone on the new planet, and that their visitors mar be enemies. Tony i rake and Eliot James, on an airplane flight, come upon a city, enolosed ,iBr what seems like half an iridescent glass bubble. Among.thelr finds, ,,. ,he 0ity i, n edible grain millions of bushels. On their way back -v atumble upon the camp of more than JOO persons who left the earth . . i.'n they did, In a second Space Ship piloted by Dave pansdelL Tony - , that Russian . Japanese, and German Communists bavs1 xeached iBon Beta and probably sent the .mysterious plane to spy on their Hendron's outfit la gassed by unseen enemies, but all recover. The ire make an aerial raid. Tony and his men annihilate their armada terrific blasts from the Space Ship's propulsion tubes. Hendron's h falling, he ordersvTony to remove everybody to one of the Sealed which is done. Hendron dies on the way. The Americans And they ! their power of light and heat from a plant in another city, and he Asiatics control It and plan to trees them Into submission the intensely cold winter. Von- Belts, a leader, disappears. , Cole i le burled with appropriate honors. , i ' . and Philip Wjrlle-WMl Service contlnped In his diary. "In our first camp there is still much more lot h ing from earth, but we have not reclaimed It The Bronson Betans wore very light' and ; very thin clothing. ;! With domed cities, al ways warm, : they needed . clothes only for ornament as do we In reality. But they left behind not only vast stores of garments-and goods,' but the mills In which the materials were fabricated. V We are using the materials now. No one ' has 'yet appeared, ' except for amusement in a Bronson . Betan costume. Their shoes, of soft mate rials, are all too wide for us. Their garments Were like sweaters and shorts both for men and women although the women also wore flow ing.' robes not unlike hegllgees. However, we do wear portions of their garments, and we use their materials all intermingled with the remains of the clothes, we brought from earth, so that we are a motley mob. ',x;Ji-' ,!;WySi':H , "All 'Bronson' Betan clothes ' were of the most brilliant colors they must have loved color to live tn a paradise of it . I saw Tony yester day, for example, In a pair of old brogans, old corduroy trousers and a shirt (made by Shirley Cotton, who Is now in scharge of -Textiles) crimson in color, ornamented with green birds about a foot high by all odds more strident and stun ning garment than I've ever seen on one of New Jork's Four Hun dred. - "We have baths of every temper ature private, and public. The Bronson Betans were great swim mers,, Jack Taylor made a study of their athletic records and found "He Mads Mark Across Cosmos and infinity. Only In Memory Can Adequate Honor Be Paid to H I m. Good-by,! Cole Hendron. them superior in almost every kind of event to ourselves. ; , "We and when I say we, I mean a score of our number have mas- tered the language and much of the science of the Other People. Of course, we have not delved; Into their history deeply as yet; or Into their fiction. Or their philosophy or their arts into their biography or their music. . --And their poetry Is still quite incomprehensible to us. "We fly their planes now.- We run their machines." ;! , ; ... Here Eliot James paused before contlnngji,;;!:.;'::-;?' f.ft: "Our personal relations re Inter esting at this point 1 have given them little time In my diary hither to, because of the pressure of my acttvittefc:;fes'; Our- most' notable romance the love of Tony and Dave Bansdell for Eve Hendron has reached a cnl mlnattoAv' "Tony is going to marry Eve. ' 'V' ; here was period shortly.be fore our desertion of our original camp when it appeared for a little while that Eve would marry Rans delL That was immediately after his. dramatic return to our midst Eve Indubitably still holds Bansdell In high esteem and even has a place of sorts for him in her heart But Tony is her klnd of man.' Tony is nearer her age. Tony is pur lead erand she was the daughter of the greatest leader of all times. Tony worships her. They' an nounced that they would celebrate the first wedding on Bronson Beta tn the near future!' ' And it will be the first The Asiatics have, accord ing to! Lady Cynthia, made a com- THE BEGINNING I . lit . njttrr!atd-r-1 1 ) was apparently unknown to tiie Other People.. ' "Bansdell, I think, knew always that Eve was not for him. He Is a silent person, usually; but I believe that occasionally -his love for Eve: most have been very nearly Indom itable that he was more than once on the verge of : asserting it wildly and insisting on it He has. that : kind of passion but I, believe! it will never be seen . uncontrolled.! Now he is resigned or at .least calm. Aiid be has been not only one of Tony's ablest men, but one of bis closest friends If not, bis clos-: "Shirley qotton, the siren of the city, is still la love with Tony, She talks about it in! public, and tells Eve that when the biologists even tually, decide, that because: of the larger number of women than men, two women will have to marry one man, she Is going to be Tony's sec-' ond wife. An odd situation be cause some day that: .may -be necessity or a common practice. There are now-,- nearly ninety more women than men in our city. Eve Is so brave and so broad-minded and so fond of Shirley, that if the situ ation evef became actual, I almost think that she would not mind. We have passed ' through too much to stoop now to Jealousy.' And all of ns feel, I think, that we belong not to ourselves but, to the future of man. fk'Si&'i - "Van and Dorothy, Under Wester ly are goings to " Bronson , Beta school learning the language ' by the talking-picture machines, Just as the Other People's children -did. And they are the only ones who are beginning to be able ; to speak It naturally. ' In two or three years they would be able to pass as Bron son Betans except for their, minor physiological" differences. - ' "Oodson is; having' trouble with the language. ; . He : goes about the city . talking to ' friends, eating In the central dining room' and mum bling that you can't teach an old dog new tricks.' He never was a good - linguist as Duquesne has proved by talking in French with him for. the amused benefit of all who spoke the language. But Pod son Is most eager to learn, because from Illustrations ? in the; metal books and In the screened lectures on the1 subject be has found that surgery on this planet was a sci ence far beyond terrestrial dreams. Working with him are five women and eleven men doctors .: , -: - "Jack Taylor. Is theH sheik: and Borneo of Hendron. ! About, twenty I.. .I 1 ' i ' - 'i i of our handsome girhr and women (they are handsome again, the long strain of onr first ' rugged months having ended) are-wildly vying' for his attention. The tall, red-beaded college oarsman takes his popular ity with delight and he Is seldom seen without a beautiful lady com panion. When he was absent on a mission for Tony, the number of blue damsels was appalling, . .They could not even write to him, which seemed V to I distress '. thenj I enor-noMly.;'?- "Duquesne" has moved next door to the German actress ;who Joined us tn Michigan. He Is working on the mystery of our power source and 'cementing the .bonds of inter national amity,, he !isays.(:;;!!;!. , "HIgglns . has. .found', some--carefully preserved seeds In the radium warmed cellars of the ity, and- he has planted them. - He keeps dig ging them up to see If they have sprouted which, so. far, -they have not ; and he-, goes tn , k . perpetual dasfc?.'i;'K Again Eliot James paused. Again he : wrote: "All those factors are on-; the pleasant .side ' of. our ledger." .We are a civilization again Love and clothes and ! cosmetics and -fancy desserts and gossip and apartment decoration have returned to ns. Our animals have been collected from the encampments, and . they' are in stalled lna'barn! made from a very elaborate theater. We have harvested and; dried, a quantity of the spore vegetation as bay :,for them.. They thrive. , We are' wakened by a cock's erow In the morning, and is we serve 'fresh- .eggs," as a badge of honor , with' great cere mony at the rate of four or five a day. 'Pan and Dorothy have milk. We've made butter to go With the eggs.- We should be perfectly hap py, perfectly , content ' Butr- f "Where is Von, BelUT --y "He vanished the day Cole Hen dron died the day we arrived here. That was sixty Bronson Beta days ago. And nothing has been seen of blm or learned .about him since : s "And- ,:J I", f I v : -Si "Who dwells secretly In our city Who stole one of -our three roost ers? Who stole Hibbs' translation of a book i on electricity? Who screamed on the street In the dead of night , three days ago turning out the people In Dormitory A to find no one? Do the Other People b.:u lite t - i us, wait ing to txu t ust Do the Uldlanltea have e i bstc? ' "We Are virtually agreed ns that theory.iv yet we cannot find where they hide. But we do know tor our sofrow that tbey have sples.-ln other ,clties. irvt1. iv;'i. , "After learning to fly the planes, we armed . them.' Then Tony dis patched a fleet of six to make a thorough -Inspection - of . the sur rounding country and the neighbor ing cities. , He , wanted;, full in, formation of the Mldlanltes and Ot the territory around us. ; , "There are two clUes south of where Bansdell . landed., his ship. There are several inland. All were entered and explored, In the south ernmost city ; the crew of a plane commanded ., by Jack Taylor was sniped nponi and two of his men were killed. , ' t ' "A thlrd plane did not return. It was subsequently sighted near the northern city occupied by the main Mldlanlte colony shot ' down and wrecked completely. , . "We have been spied upon sev eral time by planes flying over the city. A i request- for. surrender to the 'Dominion "of .Asian - Realists' was dropped twice,' and-our failure fo reply brought : one tremendous bomb -which, however, did not pen etrate our tough, ' tranpsarent en velope, 'although- It was unques tionably Intended for that purpose. ' "It is not safe to leave the city," Eliot James diary continued. "Twice parties on foot exploring the geology and flora outside the gates have been fired at by enemy planes which appeared from the north and dived at thenii' isii. vlt is evident that the Mldianltes are engaged in a war of attrition. They mean to conquer us. They mean to have Bronson Beta for themselves or at least to insure that all human . helngs upon the planet will be governed by them and Will live by their precepts. And Lady Cynthia has left' no doubt in pur minds about their desire for our women. They need what they call breeding females. - I think that 'need In itself would be sufficient to cause , every man and woman here to fight to the-death. : "Tea, we could and should be hap py here now. But- ' "More than three hundred Eng lishmen and Englishwomen are liv ing In subjugation,- and we are uri able to set them free... They are onr own blood and kin. They are living under conditions at best odi ous, at worst horrible to them. We cannot be happy while they are vir tually slaves, v.. , ; ."And also Bronson Beta moves ever Into cold.- Bitter cold I Sixty days ago the surface ot the planet was chilly. Then, for a while It warmed again, so that we enjoyed a long fall or Indian summer,-: But now the chill is returning. Onr sea sons are: due not to an inclination of our axis, as on earth, but to our eccentric orbit The earth in win ter was actually nearer to the sun than in the summer, but In winter thei earth's y axis caused the -sun's rays to fall obliquely. Here on Bronson . Beta we move from a point lose to the orbit of Venus to a point near that of Mars and the change in . i distance from the sun will bring; extremes of temperature. "That Is hot alL That Is not the only problem anxious problem which faces us in these autumn days. ; Shall we. turn back toward the sunt ; Our scientists say so r but shall we? This planet has hot done It yet : Its specialty seems to be a drift out Into space. ' ' ' "Our astrophysicists and mathe maticians bunt their lights far Into the . night of this new planet In or der to anticipate the possibilities In our state. They are not romantic men..j:;!j:i;::.(: ; .', "Meanwhile as we move out into space toward Mars, that red world Increases In size and brilliance. Al ready it la a more vivid body than was Venus from the earth, and its color' is malevolent and ominous. "So the days and nights pass. ! "Yes, onr colony is returning to the happy human pursuits of love and knowledge and social relation ships. But we are surrounded by mysteries, terrors, spies within, our' city;, enemies who would conquer ns; and always 'the red planets draw nearer as not long ago the' two bodies from cosmos drew! to ward the condemned and terrified flartJk:-';,; As Eliot James finished that en try in bis diary, he was Interrupted by a knock on Ma' . "Come in: he:caUed.vJ.M:;?!W; Shirley Cotton entered. . ' She said something that sounded like "Ho paytoto.,::!'; 'tfS&'iog : "Hopayiato yourself,'' Eliot James answered. ,,r , , ' .."That's a Bronson Beta word," she said. "It means, 'How the devil are you? or something like that !' "Sit said the writer; Tm fine. What's newsT"-. -ir . C tTO BS CONtlirOBD.i fV ; -.' -(".- rJi' . .-. -' ; -' haciuiiful Radio Towers Crown Prepared by National 'Oeorraphle Society. Wuhtmton, D. O. WNU Servloe. CHANGING seasons do not touch Madeira, the beautiful Portuguese Island on the fringe of the eastern Atlantic. Its velvety green mountains cleft by deep ravines, its terraced hillsides, brilliant with flowers and flowering vines are the same, summer and winter. In December the peaks of the towering mountains, which rise like an amphitheater back of Funcbal, chief city of Madeira, are some times tipped with snow ; but all else is vividly green, with a riot of multi-colored blossoms on every ter race of this quaint old town, which climbs the hills above a sapphire sea. Gardens are the striking feature of the Madelran capital. They hang one above the other like balconies; radiant with flowers of many climes. Stiff Brazilian araucarla pines, tall Australian eucalyptus, and leafy Asiatic mango nod to palm, mimosa and magnolia. The Indian fig, with Its wide-spreading branches, grows beside the flamboyant of Madagas car, the coral tree of the West In dies and the camphor tree of Japan. Most effective In winter are the flowering creepers the deep magen ta and brick-red bougalnvtlleaa and the blazing orange blgnonla, which form solid masses of color on the high walls. Flaming polnsettlas and red, pink and white camellias grow as tall as trees. Clinging to the sheer face of the cliffs which bor der many of the gardens Is a vari ety of aloe which thrusts out star tling scarlet flower spikes above the blue sea. To the gorgeous huges of the flow ers add the gray and black of the rock-strewn shore, lapped by white sea foam; the deep terra cotta of the soil In the ravines which Inter cept the town; the pink, buff, and cream of the bouses, with their green shutters and red-tiled roofs; the brilliant chrome-green of ba nana and sugar cane which grow in nearly every garden, and you have the "natural color picture" of Fun chal. Automobiles, motor busses, and trucks now crowd Funchal's nar row streets, but It Is the native "carro" or sledge, drawn by a pair of patient oxen, that catches the eye. Riding In an "Oxen-Cab." In one of these two-seated, cur tained and canopied "oxen-cabs," which resemble big baskets on run ners, one may glide over smooth, polished cobbles to the cog railway that climbs a steep incline to pine clad heights 8,300 feet above the sea. A feature of the ascent is the shower of flowers tossed by blossom-laden children, who scamper after sledge and funicular. This graceful act unfortunately, Is marred by tbe Insistent clamor: "One penny I One penny!" The descent from the mountain can be made In a toboggan sledge, which offers an exciting ride. The speed of the passenger and cargo sledge Is slow, but the downhill "running - carro" provides real thrills. Tlie broad armchair on run ners is uued In descending selected routes of tilted streets. Two men bold the sledge In leash by guide ropes; as It starts down tbe slip pery stone path they hop onto the back platform and the slide, begins. Then! come flashes of town and sea, gaudy blossoms draping high, sunlit, courts, dark-haired women and big-eyed children framed In vine-hung doorways, pedestrians flattened against the wU. As the I. sledge approaches a curve, the crew Jump off to guide it with vigorous tugs ' around the 'corner, checking the speed when the lower level Is reached. .;. . ' '-: . Madeira Is , an oceanic Amazon Whose height from her crown, on the summit of Pico Rulvo, to her base ''In the briny ' deep south of Funchal Is nearly 20,000 feet Only about-' one-third of , this mountain queen Is visible above! water, her head and shoulders draped In a .vivid, emerald tmt'tsjt.:'uft: r The Islands forming this archi pelago, Madeira, Porto Santof and two uninhabited l groups, are of r i i : : ! i ' " f : ,. .Acdeira Funchal's Ancient Fort volcanic origin. Considering the depth of the surrounding sea, and the abysmal chasms which every where cleave Madeira's mountain ous surface, it is evident that a vast period of time must have elapsed since tbe beginning of the countless eruptions which went toward the making of this Island. Today no live craters exist In this group, as on the Canary and Cape Verde islands. Early History of Madeira. Much traditional lore is asso ciated with the discovery of Ma deira. Romans, Arabs, Italians, Spaniards, French, English and Irish have all been credited as tbe first to glimpse the island. The most romantic of the legends con cerns two English lovers of the Fourteenth century, Robert Machln and Anna d'Arfet, who eloped from Bristol in a small craft and were blown southward to Madeira's east ern shore. With the coming of the l ifteenth century history Is on firmer ground. It Is known that the Portuguese ma riner, Zarco, sent out by Henry the Navigator, reached Porto Santo In 1419, then sailed across to a larger Island, 23 miles away, braving a dark cloud which hung over It an evil omen to the superstitious sailors of that day. The forbid ding cloud proved to be vapor hang ing over the mountains of a beau tiful, densely wooded land. Zarco and his followers landed on tbe shore of a sheltered bay about 12 miles northeast of Funchal. Be cause of Its forests the new land was named "Madeira," the Portu guese word for wood. A world-renowned figure stands out In the early history of Porto Santo and Madeira. Christopher Columbus, restlessly sailing these seas in search of Information re garding the then unknown western ocean, came to Porto Santo. He married pretty Phlllppa Uerestello, the governor's daughter. The house where they lived in Villa Balelra, the only town In Porto Sa,nto, can still be seen. Columbus ' devoted himself to chart-making, from time to time visiting Funchal to gather Informa tion. In the Madeiras,, Canaries, and Azores he listened to the tale of ever; adventurous sailor be en countered, picked up valuable nau tical hints and pondered deeply on the drift borne lsiandward from tbe west. Sugar cane, Introduced from Sicily, was responsible for Madeira's pros perity during the early years of Its colonization. Negro and Moorish slaves were Imported from Africa to work on the sugar plantations and to build roads and aqueducts. The stone Irrigating canals, or "levadas," extending for miles down the steep mountain sides still render efficient service. Without them tbe lower regions would be waterless a large part of the year. Origin of Its Wine. Soon after the colonization of Madeira, the Malavesl vine was Im ported by Prince Henry from Crete, and other varieties were Introduced at a later period. Today one type of Madeira wine bears the old name, "Malvasla," or "Malmsey," fa mous In England when western Eu-. ropean wines of that name were well known, and later when Ma deira wines bad taken their place. Our naval hero, John Paul Jones, was at one time master of the Two Friends, a Madeira wine ship. The finest wines of the Island were In demand In the American Colonies. Ships from Boston, New Xork, Phil adelphia, and Savannah, laden with pipe staves, timber, train oil, dried fish, and rice, brought back pipes of Madeira to the wealthy Amer ican merchantsnd planters. Madeira Is a small Island, little more than 80 miles In length and less than half this in width; but It is so mountalnous;nd so gashed by deep gorges and guarded by gi gantic headlands, that access is difficult to certain of its sun-kissed coastal ' villages, ' cool,' ; mist-enveloped uplands, and deep, fern-hung canyons. Motor busses, which con nect the villages on the pavedTUgh ways, have made a. marked ..coange In the manner of life and outlook of the country people. ; -.v. 1 , LESSON IN TRADE COSTS ,' Here is a story of Japanese conv V petition t - A pawnbroker in Bavaria In the Dutch East Indies accepted a -new bicycle' as a pledge and then found himself besieged with young men bringing him . new . bicycles to . : pawn.--Inquiry' :; showed that the price be was giving for bicycles In pawn was 40 per cent higher than the price charged by the Japanese for selling them new. London New Statesmen. ' BOYS! GIRLS! v Bead the Grape Nuts ad in another column ot this paper and learn how ; to Join tte Dlsxy Dean Winners and . win valuable free prizes. Adv. j u '''' 1,'.t:il Requiem . "When he died what did he leave ' his wife?" f "A very happy woman." TV Vturem'm Tavorita Pmasrintloa makes weak women strong. No (cohol. Bold by drngguta in tablets or uqujov AQV. , First Requisite ' , . One has to be Dretty 1 comfortable to philosopUlze. . r , ' make your garden A SHOW-PLACE .r-m::'-..':!':-''' t-- YOU may be tare your garden will be a real show place if yon plant Ferry' Purebred Flower Seeds. Like produces like, and Ferry's Seeds are selected from perfect plants whose forebears, generation after generation, have produced flowers of re markable size and color. The Ferry Seed Display Box will help yon to choose your favorite varieties. Can't Be Otherwise In war, heroism and brutality go hand in hand. Twice Cardnl Helped "I was in a run-down condition, very irregular and had cramps and nervousness," writes Mrs. Albert Pike, of R.F.D. 5, St. Joseph, Mo. "When one has a home and children to look after, and the work on a farm, a woman will worry if she feels bad and I surely worried. I decided to take Cardui again, as it had helped me one time. It also helped me this time. I never have a bad day when using Cardui." There are many cases like this. Thousands of women testify Cardui benefited them. If it does not bene fit YOU, consult a physician. A STRENGTH BUILDER "I had ttomach dtorder. Indigestion, Kaawy condi tion after eauns, and felt weak and too tired to do much work." said G. T. Boar man of 346 McLean y, no 0 vv ., v Miuiintuu, D. C. "But Dr. Pierce Golden Medical Discovery soon corrected all thla weakness leaving me with im Droved digestion. I soon picked up In weight, strength and health." New sine, tablets 50 cts., liquid $1.00. Large size, tabs, or liquid, $1.35. All druggista. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Baanni Dandruff -8toM Hair SWUlw J a uapanauuoraM jL iBeeartrto Gmrud Faded Hair ir -ja weuMK.ooatunuwlata. 1 mum Cham. Wkl.. P.tehMnM. N.T, FLORESTON SHAMPOO Ideal for on hi eimBeetknwithPralm'eHairBalaain.Makaitba hair soft end fluffy . 60 cent, by mail or at draa ieta. Hiaeox ChtroicalWorki, Fatehocoe. n7y. HELP KIDNEYS F your kidneys function badly and you have a lame, aching back, with attacks ot dizziness, burning,, scanty or too frequent urination,- getting up at night, swollen feet and ankles, rheumatic pains . . . use poan't Pills. Doan't are especially for poorly functioning kidneys. Millions of boxes are used every year. They are recommended the country over. Anili or neighbor t , - DOAH'S PILLS Si .... ijJ en li CLASSIFIED AD3II I1 PIPB SMOKERS ' - New kind of pips cleaner, "White Cerna. tion." Sampl. l(e I doien 11.00. B. F. Banrorae, SS Tmr St., Ntw HamawCean. DemetMtrate ptlMo-Sprayw. Whltewajher. Autowaaher, Xi,infMtr. Devla took 14 er. dere la 14 hours. Profit 184. Money maker, Writ. Bailor laMrporetod, J.hMtowa, Q, e3 r tf f.lAf -- it:

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