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FROM THE SEA. By FRANK H. SWEET. (Copyristt, 1902, by Dally Gory Pub. Fecamp, ts a long stretch of desolat At low tde It ts dotted and wrink! FP 'teccm. the open sea, between s. Valery and oomy rocks and long sinuous lines of seaweed. and there are bits of spars and wreckage that have been cast up by the reluctant sea, seaweed, and Ani Overhead seamews and ospreys whee! about, and make sudden descents among the sea- weed aftet dainty morsels which their keen eyes have espled. But when the tide comes sweeping In over the black, irregular outer-reefs and over the flat which the fishermen cast thelr bass-lines, almost to the very base of the sand lines themselves, long yellow ribbon, which swirls and sifts tts fine sand under the flerce the beach narrows down to a las “gs of the north winds, One morning, as the ebb tide was gurgling from rock to rock, a woman e the dunes and went slow here and there to pic en washed up by the waves, pocket and made the pieces Into a strong this slung aco + her shoulders she moved the dunes, Suuuenly she paused and gazed eam water, draw It ashore. Only then did she discov was a small metal box, twelve to fourteen Inches In length, securely lashed to the plank. The strong ocean currents which set in the little pools of water that are Ungering about the bases of the rocks, are small crabs and shell-fish, and queer little jelly-like things which scarcely seem to have any substance at ail. along the beach, stooping up bits of wreckage which ha When she ered atl she could carry she took some rope from her | It was only a plank she saw, falling with the waves, but {t was fue}, and dropping her bundle she waded out unt! she could reach and ey) north shore of France wreckage, and the woma Ing them. e white sand. led ‘by black, Here | much precaution was not wituout 1 box was valuable, and If no owner was f @ among the] perhaps it would help her toward the thre francs she had been longin, But when v..c box was In th at th it were unavailing. marks, She peered head. 1 and circle her. the mimic mountains of battered houses, They we wreckage, and had neither exposed sides. rocks from and up, up. sipping and} sated on the ground, merged from | | as she approached “He: he growled, men: had gath-/ de. Mals, Sandie, With |, He took the box and exa back toward grasp “Non, non, Jacques!" she break it! The box is not 0! owner."" He laughed, jeeringly. ‘We will not look very truly, estiy at the rising and er that there toward the your husband and children, But none the less eagerly did her fingers work at the fastenings which secured the box. was securely locked, and that all her efforts to open Weil, she would take it home to little J He could read and would explain the little marks to Over behind the dunes and hidden from the sea by Behind them were drying benches and other apparatus for curing fish. The woman passed around one of the houses and threw her bundle down near the door. A “you have must have my breakfast so that I Elise, what have you there? he tried to open it, but without euceess. picked up a hammer sie snatched the box from his Elise, you must not think of giving {t up. The sea gives to those who find. You should remember ng in many strange bits of had had her share jn find- g for for so many released she found t 9 cover were strange little em eagerly and shook her sand were several storm- re built of rough slabs and doors nor windows on the man was ding a net. He looked up come at last! 1 y cateh the low amined {t carefully. Then When he a TREASURE BOX 18 NOT OURS YET. TROVE. ment your a WE MAY FIND THE OWN paased unnoticel, In H among the fist bat at hom: FY First, “ q loved aa Fra and H wh Hike the wind; and Ss» was the color of the ur owed In tem, he all of And ti alery But, curlously cy one would think, 1 almost as large as (ui protested. “You shall not urs yet. We may find the} contain jewels or money. Bien! “T shall let Mf. le Cure have It hard." he sneered. But] go to town," she said, firmly. “Perhaps he will find the owner. If he does not I suppose the box wil! be mine, But it will not go for a boat and a keg of wine, if ma chere. The box may TI can tell you that, mon aml, who knows but It would buy me a new boat/and a keg of wine. to-morrow when T| ly I have other use for it. as he for?" have rmen on the «t (ome ers ame: “VICTIMS OF THE VOL. | CANO,” a Thrilling and Time-| ly New Serial, Will Begin in! NEXT MONDAY’S EVEN- ING WORLD. it will f ow | sharply, Elise did not answer, but the next day she wrapped : th, which she | the box carefully tn her shawl and carried It to Mone M. Dcoux, | leur le Cure at St. Valery. { we a And now the days and weeks went smoothly oy i urna vs. | Jacques recovered bis good humor, and amoked and 1 irom | sang and told stories, and now and then saunteret! [ " way. | down to the beach and caught a few fish, or mada ‘ s. whol himself centre of a group of admiring friends. , > Toen there ere | One day as they sat down to dinner the Cure em mild ra. it f the beach | tetred. and He Whese hair] "Bien! Tam just in time!” he orled gayly, as they As a chalr for him The placed owne Taeques look itt to noi at the table. "I have good for you xox is in the possession of Sts ed anything put ple embarrased, sed, and even Blate Put the Cure Cid not omer ‘T had a letter from the owner a, as he toc this morning," he 2 roll of dills from his pocket. the 1 the opr Hie writes that tae box is very valuable, and that far above all the rest the finder must accept this asa slight reward,” hand- telghbors lowered th tng the bills to “1 congratulate you, Madame passionate reques. Four hundred francs is a good day's work’? head and minuy | Jacques caught his breath sharply and half rose to #0 V befor that even Bile herself had shared (his feet; then he sank back and tried trs*urn off his their opinion and thought of her precocious boy with ation ina laugh. But after the ¢ "s departure he misgiv lowed his enthusiasm to again break forth. But one day M. le ur hes “Four hundred franes!” he erled joyously. “Four had spoken so wart and t hundred francs! Bion! blen! It will buy me a new honor In store for pont, and a seine, and two kess of wine: and—and by the sudden rush of you can get @ new dress, Elise, ma chere. Four hun« | overwhelmed her dred franca! Vratment, we are rich!” APleptie Rood henhads “1 four Ox, daouue sid Hilse, quietly. Thies Eines ’ ih she | “Out You must have a new dress and—und 4 ed by: the ehitte oming from school, And] What else ma chere? ter that she had atwa tioned Jean first t “Let me said lise counting on her fingers, of last. Rut as the days went by an unspoken dread | “T shall use one hundred francs to buy new cloth Degan to trouble her At the end the year Jean} and sabots for the children, and a dress for myscit vid Git ud be 4 to attend the partsh| and some hens for the hen yard." <ER would hing for them but tof "Vr impatiently, “but the three hundred | home and help their father with the fishing. It| france? “Bah! the miserable three hundred tr was all rieht and proper for Guillaume. But Jean? They are to buy a scholarship for little Jean at forever dinning into one's ears!” he grun In the eventing eho called Jean from his books and] Beauvais. T have spoken to Monsleur le Cure about picked up the seine and re: neked him explain the marks. The boy gnzod at} it, Three hundred francs will pay for his education “How much haye you got of St, Bllse, and what Ie it | them intensely for some time, then spelled out: “Hon-| at the good F He will have to leave us, of — ” ore Perresaux, Rue St. Martin, Paris? course, but he will come back a man. Surement, — twenty francs,’ she answered, placidly, | Jacques raised his head angrily. Jacques we have had good luck from the sea, But it “But never you mind what it Is for, Jacques. Ret “Yon will be a fool tf you give ft up." he sald, is le bon Dieu who knows our needs." QUESTS FOR BURIED MILLIONS. The story that appeals most strongly to us to-day {s that of the wonderful treasures of Cocos Island, a rocky, des late spot in the heart of the South Pacific, which is yet Invested with all the fascination of the Arabian tales. For nearly a century thls sol{tary island has been the focus of countless eyes in very part of the world. ‘The story of the hiding of these treas- ures reads like a thrilling chapter of romance. In the early years of the last century one of the most‘successful of the pirates who preyed on Spanish ships was Don Pedro Benita, whose brig, the Relcempago, was the terror of al! honest men who “went down to the sea in One rich prize after another fell into his clutches, Spanish galleons laden with treasures of all kinds, and after filling his ship with them Don Benita would take them to Cocos Island and bury them there while he sought for more. bee ? Among his spoil were 130 tons of sil- ver, nearly 1,00 heavy ingots of guld, vessels full to overflowing of gold colns, and hundreds of swords incrusted with Jewels. But neither he nor his crew ever survived to enjoy their {ll-gotten gains, for they fell out, as thieves some- times do, and slaughtered each other, and those who were left were captured by a British warship and hanged, to a man, from the yardarm. A few yeare later, in 1835, when an English ship, the Mary Dier, anchored in Callao harbor at a time when Peru and Chill were at war, the Peruvian Government sent {ts treasures for secu- rity on board the vessel. But it proved @ false security, for one night the Eng- lish ship disappeared. Bhe, too, made for Cocos Island, and there her piratical crew buried the mill- fons that had been intrusted to them— cleven boatlonds in all, and each load representing the ransom of kings, But thelr shrift was short, for the vessel was driven by a storm on the Peruvian coast, the crew were captured and all but three were hanged. Of the survivors none ved to reclaim any part of thelr spoil, but one of them, a man called Thompson, before his death revealed the secret to a ¢riend of the name of Keaton, and he, a company with a Capt. Bogue, went to the Jsland and carried away $60,000 in gold. As they were leaving the island, however, thelr boat upset, and Cant Bogue sank under his burden of gold, while Keaton, clinging to the boat, waz ultimately saved. In the South Atlantic there 1s another treasure Island, Trinidad, which ts sald to hold as many millions even as Cocos, and a sunptuously equipped expedition 4a now being being prepared to discover them. For those who wish for & new fleld of treasure hunting there 1s an unlimited chotce; for the beds of the seas are crowded with deposits of gold and Jewels. Off the Peruvian const there les an old Spanish galleon in whose | hold are forty cases of gold, 700 cases of | silver each containing $4,000, and jewels and plate valued at half a million pounds sterling; and near Texel is a foundered East Indiaman with three- / quarters of a million in gold on board. | Off the Spanish coast Hes another ves- se] laden with millions of crusados tn gold and diamonds, and near the Cape Verde {slands a Spanish register ship foundered in 1783 with 4,000,000 plastres, 200,000 ounces of gold and jewels and plate valued at $10,000,000 on board. PLACE WAS TOO SLOW. “Reckon not.” |The Magistrate asked them as to thelr ‘could take a deck of cards, shuffle them IF YOU LIKE TO LAUGH, HERE ARE FIVE FUNNY STORIES. When Rudyard Kipling was last In. the United States he dined with a party that included several other well-known writers, a fair proportion of men and women who knew something about lit- erature and a larger number who knew very lttle and made up for their lack of knowledge with pretense, says a Story-teller In the Philadelphia Times. Hiry, salesman “drum countered a party of Senators and Represent terlor town at table. at the dinner hour. ritable or {Il-mannered was the travel- who en alf a dozen State tives In an {n- They were thelr way to Harrisburg, and were com- Delled to lay over for a change of, cars Thelr convers soon reveajed to the other guests the Ville have fact that they were newly-elected So- ms, full of the dignity of thelr po-| bread? and “Do the gentleman from sition, and anxious to make an {m-| Nowhere Junction care for the pickles?” ssion on each other and everybody |and “Did the gentleman from Sign- on | with whom they came in contact. Their | board ‘Township enjoy the tri aven | ponderous diction at table brewed con-/ the grangers present began to squirm tempt in the breast of the salesman. j under the excessive formality of it all, jon | Tt was “Will the gentleman from Bilge-!so0 that there was a reward of plentiful, the butter?” and “Will the) hearty jiaughter when the Several of the last-described kind started a useless discussion concerning Spellings, pronunciations, synonyms, anonyms, & and, apropos of nothing at all that had been eaid, one, firing her remark straight at Kipling as the lion of the occasion, declares “I find that ‘sugar’ and ‘sumac’ are the only words beginning with ‘su’ that re pronounced as though beginning with ‘sh.’ Bored though he was, Kipling’s polite- ness did not desert him; and, assuming an expression of Interest, although his eyes twinkled behind his glasses, he asked: “Are you gure?” eee A New York City Magistrate recently had before him the case of a galr of confidence men accused of robbing a farmer on a visit to the metropolis. side of the story. 5 “Well, Judge,” explained one, “we simply offered to bet him $500 that we so that he could sec us, and make two| Jacks come out together. He lost. That was all, Judge.” “What ls your name?” the Magistrate asked the spokesman, ack O'Hrien, uJdge.” “And yours?’ turning to the’ other prisoner, ack Devine, Your Honor.” O'Brien," sald the Magistrate, “I give you four years; Devine, I give you three years, And now, gentlemen, I'll STYLISH LINEN FROCK FROM LONDON. k walter, at the turning to the bls fine burlesque of w ° nd manner “Will the gentleman from bring another cup of coffee?" eee Three young men of Lancaster, Pa fun at the an elderly living In the suburbs of that town is a religious old fellow, with the high- est regard for the expense of am nelther Isaac, nor Jn- cob, nor Father Abraham. I am Seth, the son of Saul, who hath sent me out to find his lost ass. lo and behuld! 1 have found three! eo ee A gentleman visiting a Coplay (Pa.) minister was asked to attend Sunday school at his host's church and address a few remarks to the lilldren, He took the familiar theme of the children who mocked Elijah on his Journey to Bethel —how the youtigsters taunted the poor old prophet und tw they were pun Ishad when two she me out of the wood and ate forty-and-two. of them, “Arid now, child er, wishing to le produced any moral effect, thls story eho “Please, sir, well down in front, was this: said the speak if his talk ha “what does from a little girl t shows how, misy mi gentleman from Painted Post pass the salesman, asked with French call Ethiopla ni undertook the other day to have some man He iptures, which, he can quote by the hour, As he passed the trio by ene of them called: “Good- morning, Isaac," the second, “Good- morning, Jac the third, ‘'Good- morning, Facher Abraham.” He turned to them, and they eri ly awalted what he might say. And what he sald TTCHING HUMORS SPEEDY CURE TREATMENT PRICE ONE DOLLAR, Bathe the affected parts with hot water and CUTICURA — SOAP, to cleanse the skin and scalp of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle. Dry, without hard rubbing, and apply CUT:CURA OINTMENT freely to allay itching, irritation, and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and lastly take CUTle CURA RESOLVENT PILLS, to cool and cleanse the blood. _ This pure, sweet, and wholesome treatment affords instant _ relief, permits rest and sleep, and points to a speedy, permane ent, and economica§ cure of the most torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, and scaly skin, scalp, and blood humours, eczemas, rashes, and Irritations, from infancy to age, be. loss of hair, when all else fails. MILLIONS USE CUTICURA SOAP Assisted by CUTICURA OryTMENT, for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and svothing red, rou; and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and clafings, and for all the pure poses of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women use CUTICURA Soap in the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, and — excoriatious, for too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanatiye, antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, especially mothers, CUTIGURA RESCLVENT CHOCOLATE COATED PILLS 25¢, Are a new, tasteless, odorless, economical substitute for the celebra ResoLvext, as well as for all other blood puritiers and humour eg Leap 5 capped pocket vials, containing 60 doses, price 2c, Curicuna PILLS are alterati antiseptic, tonic, and digentive, and beyond quostion tho purest, sweetest, mos successful and economical blood and skin purifiers, humour cures, and. yet compounded, 1 was stopping for the night in the just bet $600 that you two Jacks do not i nes cont ae a Wentacky mounteinesr, and| ‘Shoo! ‘That's coor shootin’, Come)| em bee Mn Wee te AE QE Sees gariiateaetaet ee Peer, Gar ROTI, Pru, Me, tlh Depts soon after midnight I was aroused by a| along to bed." oe e ‘Props, Boston, U. 8. knock on the door. It was a one-room| Next morning I asked the man Who! nemocratic in spirit rather than fr- SAME OLD STORY. house with three beds in it, and I saw) his midnight visitor w and why he = Now with hustle und commotion we attempted murder. eon. wh P the mountaineer got out of Ded and ere he replled in answer to botn| THREE GREAT RIVERS, Soy Peng Mien te gecon welt EYE SPARKLETS Amossroent iam Maia beta net cokrT ealked, ae he | Avestions: . A Russian explorer has solved one of summer on the beach, and Complexion Pellets, PROCTOR’S 5 Ble Comedy end Vaudey Na eani wea ral tbelapors “But does dt happen very often?” | the puzzles of geography In finding the And fr rest and recreation we tmagine, Marvellous harmiesa beautifer. Not to be 9 } IDEAL se mit 2: VAUDEVE “ 4a. sti + ne repliea’| “Not skassly, sah—not skassly. I've] situation of the upper parts of the with elation, we will find recupera. |f Soyounded with iMeachee, Creams, Cosmeties 30 SI, 3 ‘Some one did, stranger,” he replied!) 41, iin’ here in this cabin gwine on [rivers Hoangho, Yangtse and Mekong, Hon and grow portly or Mpol reg Paurtiver abotess YH AYE t CHE GRUNT 8 YARRA “But what are you going to do With) iniog yiars, and I don't reckon that|which have thelr origin In the high SAY a AS Par aaa c es | SGapte Sw th "pie else ned eee that gun?” Q he! ae But for our ambition! We ere lt Carlsbad Chem cal Co. (STH Ni Capt. Sw £,"Big Stock and Veude - ge, Yor | {RINE has happened over twenty times | plateau of Thivet. The first two of these Drought tolcatcEniton atioum aise aid ert [de Taadiis” “Surtalr statinces Dally. ‘Gwine to open the door, of oo'se. Yo"! heto', It's such a mighty peaceful nay-|rivers traverse China, the Mekong run- tul posiulon when wo're ready for IEDR BATE Ni Yor Salles are out of rango and needn't de afratd.”| perhood around yer® that I'm thinkin’ |ning to the sea between Anam and the roam, ‘Pp ASTOR’ Ss 1TH at, He moved to one side of the door, | of movin’ into some of the ively coun-| Siam. The explorer found that they And our wife remarks: “Why, Ch arb avers, made ready with his gun and then | ¢o miltow soni then eucacal ofeihecareat what about Maude, me atid Molly Have You an Ache or a Pain? , 2 & Co, raised the wooden latch, The Instant | — plateau, 12,000 feet above sea level, aud It's the eame old tale, by golly; par SPs ise ihe the door swung open a charge of buck- are separated from one another*by par- 9 Pals got to st t home! . Will shot was fired Into the room, but they DAILY FASHION HINT, allel ranges of mountains, running Baltimore American Sam inerane it a8 buried themselves Orth Wane lead eoutheael: Any Cure It. ws Bana Carnal ald ni ret ereot and me {A second later the mountaineer fred] For Women Readers of The SS THE MAN “TH THE HOE, Ali Dr gyiss', 25c. and 52c, DQ iat gadiences 10 : eal at some one tn reply, and I heard the Evening World. ~ or NEURALC 20,, = footfalls of a man running away. D 2GwocoD. Vandewate Y. City. (5th. Bona 8.5, Sats, Wed. aed “Did yo! git him?" asked the wife in By such @ pool as mountain trout ee CH APERONS, careless tones, love best, . Where noisy brooks pause rever-. ‘ye, Best Beat, Ge, ent, she stood, | iF WINNER OF Phe enowy ,White-Witeh of my Ml amtyastan eae say ata enkie THE 85 PRIZE fancy's quest— MRS. FISXB bv A$ : A nun from Spring's own forest Vis ruse drawiuan « t Ld Eiivie LAL. “Which Would You Save~Mother isterhood ‘bo “sane ee or Wifer” Mane Gilbert Dickinson, in Bien SE dee in Wome: i9 Raat NCE GARDEN. "2S cs ae o Here te a London mode! that will interest falr roauuss a. wae ioe. It te of days of Pharaoh th net Lax. Ave ‘The prize of $5 offered by the Evening rybody's. dark-blue linen, with applications of rnerald-green embroidered white linen; tas- Hoe’ was even es ao BOSCACCIG; World for the best apewer to the ques- sels of green'a and wehilte, And transparent indersieeves" not white lawn: now A mente: aa < » tion as to whether, in extremity, a Sane Se nusemen = = man should save his wife or his mother, i on RICAN ‘ oe Pl AT. DAL RL has been awarded to Eugene F. Dufty, 'p 4 June june $4. HARRIET HUBBARD AYER REVEALS BEAUTY SECRETS, DALY DNs iret 4 , N. J Mr. Duffy! let Be Menai, Be ds Me Hef, Masia Like the Needle in the Haystack, using sali of tartar. Please | 1 it Cs pap ISRO RROERER, Would Save Mother, Dear Mra Avar [how much peroxide of hydrogen to wet! Wilute with about angpunce of w sabe a ' aralcauidtavatiaevad nie (nother Can you toll me of something which |and what it will me Apply to the rovis of Yh hair ini’ latmenticued ha ; i Mecaiins; | Wha da tia cloeees, sbanohbat, will reduce the hipa and abdomen? 1' Jt depends altogether on the h eyelant ia thie ta ' . truest and best friend? To whom be- 40 not care winallor anwnsre else, wich: {he peroxide’ je. ar Several Questions Answered, | y f . pe ht il as 3 A 1 LAN TIC | omer ee SOnaD Dia Hllal lbta’ (fo wham (dobsihe 1s there something to apply? I think 1 case. T shoul! sa OM used per + Mee A my the sea ae a uh ie ; : De Mot owe his very existence? The answer ‘9 have read somewhere of a French po- half and naif w 1u kindly publish an eyebrow | Into shem. iI 4 F n'a @imp.e—his mother. Furthermore, hie made which actresses use to keep them- than once @ mor Aino what te good 10 keop the| 4 God ‘Tooth Powder—c ao ve a aiatare his, if injured, would doubtless be felves in nice proportion, If there Js aly take a er tint 0) hd FE Lr ar OS f CASINO : Vives 616 uf road better able to survive her injuries than ech a thing where can tt be found and know tha 1 always come nelinaises ta noms eed doorihe ? ie OuUneea?) ia , POTTS nis 4 : ! Hon, would his mother, on account of her Wat ts'lte price? Mee WW or it IA now at tlie root | 5 TAVERNA nee: of nh CniNESE HONEIMOON, OW iN TOWN, age, &0. The fireman solved this ques- There are several thousand French) The pair should be shampooed ust] 94 x sorsnluth Canapakeoa ataman|(Gatall At ; Brie} my tion correctly by hie action, Without pomades and of course I cannot tell tolonce a week. D Palantuoud FSW a etree Pe aE Goa Une seme \ i , hesitating an Instant he chose the be To cut this blouse for a woman of] Wich you Intend to refer ammonia with the {de Unless you s black Ltd ‘ EY aUrSInna ter plan und saved his mother fret. | medium siza 1-4 yards of matertal| tf You can give me a better descrip: | wish 0 jive h ve up Is certat fred tok Myint r oie EUGENE F. DUFFY, 4 inches wide, 8 1-8 yardy £7 inches | HOH Of the pomade 1 shall be wad to | bleached hy anya 4 pay x ‘ ! ( NY 1 Newark, N. J. | wide, 27-8 yards 82 inchen wide or 2 1-2) 00K St up for you the textu f ould very careful to eeloct vue | ounces of Jurnat MAMAN Ad 00 Air _ FREE EXC “U; SION, y ere yards 44 Inches wide will bo required,| Peroxide to Brighten the Hate, | 4 litle with wa ' 1 of moap and he « ket — = 1] Ta AL HEULRALUN OF AMER CA : TO KILL THE ANIMALS, with 2 1-2 yards of chiffon for full ¢ront| Omer Mrs Aver mak 4 ' erh{eh edu 5 An ‘ MAT Eb INU ta ALN EY 4 5 “It's rainips cate and dogs,” ex-|and under-sieeves and 6-8 yard of con-| ‘indly let me know if by using perox-|moves aii 8 for a bland soap | PROVED MEER Love \ tA] I BOCCACCI’. rene ‘ a ier fa ie claimed Mrs, Hunks, who was looking|trasting material for collar. ide of hydrogen sparingly or once In al hair a} ‘ | 1 sh Grower—Roa] ChiraWa r = ‘ » sine and address fun) oan wet out of the window, ‘Phe pattern (No. 4146 is out in slee for] While It can be noticed alr was at}time, But salts tartar ua ly . t pa i ry AL cyte He, #8 | B street, NV, 1 “Thén I hope itll rain pitehforks] a 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40 Inch bust measure) }OD® Mme a very light almowt}used with discretion, You can r ' oe; oll of laven wud TE * vt r $i Wf bith Pree « | soue and Houghbs iad r next,” growled old Hunks, without look-| will be sent for 10 cents, Bend money to] Yellow. Now it has o od to almosi| peroxide of any druggist | tor 1 of xemar Nfteen drops | wave UP A posit paylig a awary of 4 : iy ar hy ‘Cashier, The World, Pulltser Bullding,|& dark brown. I should Uke to dring it] If you lave a great deal of hair youl yusn App'y to tho eyebrows with a \815 4 week to marry has tiny EDEN | MOKED IN WAR | New Groupe Day tis se alan ar ta ing. up from bis paper—Chicago Tri- back to ite former color, Have & will wed about dp ounce for MALBEE, | Orehomiral Concerta Voce! Bullets, Sita, os oD appli welling B—Chicago Daily News 3 04 Mh 40d West ae ew York City.” ‘ tiny tooth brush voce & day unui the