Newspaper Page Text
OUTLAWS Os EDEN
By FNU Servtc*.
PETER B. KYRIE Copyright, by Peter B. Kyna
CHAPTER X—Continued
-—l 4 ~
“I did, sweetheart. VVho’d shoot for
jou if I wouldn't?”
"Good clean shooting,” he mum
bled. "but too low. Did you get Bab
son 1"
“I tried and they wouldn’t let me.
But I smashed Henry Rookby’s fool
head, dearest He organized tha
ruckus at Bnbson's bidding, but If he
lives after the two raps ! gave him
with the barrel he’ll think twice before
tackling another such Job.”
Nate Tlchenor smiled a terrible
smile. "We backfired on the little
cuss, didn't we, love?” He placed an
oily finger on her adorable nose and
pressed it gently upward. “You'll do.
You're a man's woman. I'm going
over to the curb now and sit down
before I fall down. If anybody takes
me from behind shoot him—and shoot
high and for the middle this time. I'm
all out of patience. Look after old
Rube.”
Rube needed looking after, indeed.
He was unconscious and a three-inch
slit on the top of his bald head
told the story. Also he had received
his share of punches and kicks before
Lorry Kershaw's bullets had dropped
his assailants on top of him. The two
doctors carried him over to the little
grassy strip that ran parallel with the
sidewalk and laid him out thereon,
then turned to look after Lorry's vic
tims. As they sat up, Joe Brainerd
photographed them. When that was
( done he wrote the names of the fallen
I on a fragment of copy paper and. In
hia mind, began arranging the lead for
this, his biggest news story.
“Get a truck out of that garage,
Joe,” Doc Donaldson ordered, “and
we'll haul our trade over onto the
grass under the shade trees in the
plaza. I've used worse dressing sta
tions. Every mother’s son of them
got it through the foreleg and some of
the said legs are busted. 'I only wing
tipped them,’ says she—the little
vixen.”
"You've got to grant her the great
gift of charity, Doc. And tremendous
forbearance.”
“Rats. She was saving them for
the bangman. Hello, her hired man
Is beginning to take an interest in
things.”
Mr. Tenney’s little round baleful
eyes had. Indeed, commenced to flick
er. Lorry bent over him and raised
his burly head to her shoulder. “How
about you, old-timer?” she crooned.
“Shot all to pieces but not fatally."
Mr. Tenney murmured slowly. “Where
was you, boss, when the shoutin'
started? 1 figgered you to guard my
rear."
“I guarded It, never fear. Rube. I
did all the shooting."
“ — I" Mr. Tenney murmured. “Sorry.
Spoke out o’ my turn, I reckon. I’ll
be up In a minute; I'll make a hand
yet.”
A small boy came running down the
boulevard as If pursued by a demon.
‘There’s some fellers over to the office
of the Register smashin’ things up," he
screeched.
Lorry dropped Rube Tenney as If
his big body was scorching her and
ran for the office of the Register a
block away.
As she came panting to the front
door she saw a dozen men inside, with
axes. They had smashed the editorial
desk and the counter tn the business
office, pied the type for the next issue
of the Register, upset the fonts of
type and smashed them and were busy
wrecking the linotype when the girl’s
voice reached them above the clang
of axes on metal.
“Put ’em up!”
They whirled, facing her. and be
fore the menace of her gun their hands
went skyward. Thus she held them
until Brainerd arrived with his camera.
“Mug ’em, Brother Brainerd,” she
commanded. "Steady, boys. Not a
move out of anybody. I’ll put a bullet
through the hand of the man that
spoils this picture. This is a time ex
posure, I believe, because the inside
light isn't so good."
Joe Brainerd took three photographs
of the vandals in his wrecked print
shop and turned to the girl. “Where
do we go from here?” be demanded
humorously.
“To Bill Rooney’s calaboose. All
right, men. Come out, one at a time,
ha single file and wend your way to
the lockup.”
They wended it. Bill Rooney was in
his little Jail office, thinking things
over and gazing dolorously at a hole
in a forty-dollar hat, when men be
gan filing silently In on him. “What’s
this?” he exclaimed.
Lorry's gun covered him from the
doorway. “Take his gun, Mr. Brain
erd. Take his keys, too. No non
sense, Mr. Rooney, or you’ll dance to
my music again."
Brainerd secured the deputy sher
iff’s gun and keys, unlocked the two
cells and closed them again as the
wreckers of the Register filed dis
consolately in. Then Lorry ordered
Mr. Rooney to go home to bis fam
ily, and Joe Brainerd locked the Jail
“The remainder of this party Is
yours, Mr. Brainerd," Lorry then an
nounced. “I’ve got my boys to look
after now.”
“Thanks a lot, Miss Kershaw.”
“Not at all. No trouble to show
goods,” she retorted merrily. “If I
were you I'd see that old Idiot, Anson
Towle, and swear out warrants
enough for these twelve lunatics to
keep them in Jail till Christmas I'd
scare Towle If I were you. Threaten
him with a mysterious fate so he'll
make their ball the limit."
"Babson will ball them out, of
course.”
“I suppose so, but he’ll not like it.
The action will tie him to his gang.”
CHAPTER XI
The succeeding week Nate Tlchenor
spent in a hospital at Gold Run whither
Doctor Donaldson had ordered him for
observation as to possible internal in
juries. When at last Nate came to the
Circle K ranch again. Lorry saw that,
outwardly at least, he appeared to be
normal.
“Doc thought my backbone bad been
tramped out of alignment,” he an
nounced, as he kissed her, "but it was
only a couple of ribs sprung loose
from my spine. Doc warned me not to
move around, but I couldn't stay away.
Outlaw that I am, I couldn't neglect
you for another week.”
“I wasn't ready to be a clinging
vine; I’m accustomed to man’s work—
and If you’re worth having Mr. Tiche
nor, you’re worth fighting for. I en
joyed it.”
Tm almost afraid to marry yon
now,” he teased. “You’d be a tough
•wife to handle In a family row. Have
you been arrested yet?”
"No, dear. Joe Brainerd appears to
have smoothed over the aftermath of
that ruckus. He traded with Babson.
Babson loaned him the new plant of
the Forlorn Valley Citizen and then
‘ty iiwN,
“But I Am Curious to Know How
You Accumulated All the Money
You Appear to Have.”
had a talk with the men we Jailed.
Babson levied an assessment to pay
for the damages to Brainerd’s plant,
and Joe absented himself at the pre
liminary hearing of the case, so Anson
Towle waited five minutes for Joe and
his counsel to appear and then turned
the men loose for lack of evidence.
The men I winged are all going to got
well, although they'll be on crutches
for a month or two; I think they are
glad to let the matter drop. We’ve
all had enough undesirable advertis
ing throughout the state."
“As for undesirable advertising, you
and I haven’t had any of It We’re
heroes.”
“Oh, do tel) me, Nate. I’ve been
afraid to read the papers.”
"When a mob sacks a newspaper
plant the entire fourth estate regards
the act as a direct blow at the free
dom of the press, and Instantly the
fight’is no longer a private one. The
Gold Run Nugget has burned Forlorn
Valley to a crisp and so have all the
other county newspapers. The Forlorn
Valleyites have been called thugs, mur
derers. bad citiz.ens, rioters, bullies,
and cowards. I am advertised as a
peaceable, well-meaning citizen and ■
distinguished ex-soldier of whom the
county Is proud. I sought to do For
lorn Valley a signal service and was
mobbed and brutally beaten and
bruised In return. All of the pa
pers have cried out upon the sense
less brutality of visiting upon a
blameless young man the sins of his
forebears —and they have done as
much for you. In fact, they’ve made
a heroine of you. You are commend
ed for your great charity in ‘wing
tipping’ my assailants instead of kill
ing them. You have a nickname.
You’re Wlng-TlpLorry Kershaw now.”
She turned to him suddenly. "But
I am curious to know how you ac
cumulated all the money you appear
to have. For you do look like cash
money, Nate."
"Well, the fact that I have a few
dollars doesn’t imply that I’m a
financier," he protested. “The Hens
leys had great veneration for cash
but I'm only half Hensley. My fa
ther was a paleontologist. He came
up Into these hills one summer to hunt
for fossils. Nothing would do but he
must be our guest and have a horse
to ride Into the hills and a man to
protect him from the Kershaws.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GEORGIA
“My mother was twenty-four years
old at the time and already begin
ning to be regarded as a fossil, so
father added her to his collection and
stayed on In Eden Valley and wrote
some books nobody ever read, and
resolutely refused to learn the cow
business. He did manage to put a
little bit of culture and uplift Into
the Hensleys. I made up my mind
to stay out of Eden Valley and forget
cows as a first aid to making a mil
lion dollars.
“When my mother and aunts died
I was the sole heir to the Bar H Land
and Cattle company, and the corpora
tion was In excellent shape. There
was about two hundred thousand dol
lars In the bank and no debts; there
were twelve thousand head of cattle
and the ranch was unencumbered. I
decided to sell the cattle and lease
the ranch. Rube Tenney, who was
in command of the ranch, classed the
cattle, so I knew what I had and
what they were worth. I wrote my
attorney to see youi* father and try
to make a trade. It seemed the fair
thing to do to let him have first
chance. He’d always wanted all of
Eden Valley. So he bought all the
cattle and leased tne Bar H ranch for
thirty thousand dollars a year, for
five years, with an option to buy the
ranch at any time prior to the expira
tion of the lease and on very easy
terms.
"The result was that early in 1920
I found myself foot-loose and with
about a million dollars cash In bank.
Now, while I was in France 1 secured
a commission. My captain and 1 got
along splendidly together. 1 got to
know this man and to trust him and
admire him. In Civil life he’d been
general manager of a large New York
stock brokerage house. He had about
fifty thousand dollars and he wanted
to buy a seat on the New York Stock
Exchange and go Into business for
himself. But he didn’t have enough
money to buy the seat and finance his
operations.
“I told him Td finance him—one
hundred thousand dollars In cash
against his fifty thousand in cash, his
experience and ability, and we should
be equal partners. We made money
from the day we opened our doors."
“And you say you’re not a finan
cier."
“The lust for money has never
overwhelmed me. I find, too, that I
love Eden Valley. I’m going to close
out my Interests In New York and
return here in the fall."
“I shall be very lonely while you
are away, Nate.”
"And that reminds me that I’ve
sent down to San Francisco for a
ring and here it Is. If It’s too big
we’ll have a tuck taken In, and if it’s
too small or you prefer some other
stone I’ll change It." And he slipped
on her finger a square emerald worth
at least a hundred steers. It was the
first piece of Jewelry she had ever
owned and her hot tears of emotion
baptized it; her warm lips caressed
it in a silent promise he knew would
never be broken.
"Suppose we get married in a hurry
and make the New York trip a honey
moon," he said.
She shook her head. “Impossible
until dad’s estate has been settled.
I can’t leave here now. I have to
work this outfit out of debt, because
I can't afford a trousseau until I do
However, dear, you run on to New
York, complete your business there,
and when you return we’ll make those
two mergers you spoke of. I’m too
busy now. I've got a lot of those
early calves still to brand and I’ll
have to brand about a thousand late
calves In the fall. I don't want to
leave any worries behind me when
we go on our honeymoon.”
“And we'll spend our summers In
Eden Valley and our winters outside,”
he suggested.
She leaned against him a little
Insects Take Huge Toll in Damage to
Books, According to Some Librarians
Insects of various kinds take a year
ly toll In book destruction that
amounts to millions of dollars, says
Scientific American. Perhaps the
worst offenders in this respect are
Bookworms, the larvae and an Insect
known generally as the "drug store
beetle,” and scientifically as Sitodrepa
panicea. It seems to have a particu
lar fondness for practically every
thing, and thrives on arsenic, lead, pep
per, and other poisonous and irritat
ing substances.
Once this beetle lays its eggs In a
library and the larvae begin feeding,
librarians are likely to age overnight,
for the larvae feed voraciously on all
parts of books whether they be cheap
modern editions or priceless ancient
volumes. Many poisons have been
used, by various methods of applica
tion, to defeat this foe of books.
Thomas M. liams of the Henry E.
Huntington Library and Art Gallery,
San Marino, Calif., in the Library
Quarterly, told of several Infestations
of the larvae In that library and the
attempts to destroy them.
wearily and held him tight but did not
answer.
»••••••
Somebody once remarked that noth
ing can be of surpassing Interest for
a period greater than nine days. For
forty-eight hours following the unex
pectedly painful and highly dramatic
denouement of his plan to sway pub
lic opinion against Nate Tlchenor and
Lorry Kershaw, Silas Babson suffered
acutely, not because he was sorry for
what he had done but because the
effect had been so wholly unexpected
and pregnant of disaster to him.
After having arranged to prevent the
expose of the whole affair in court
with probable penitentiary sentences
for a couple of dozen hitherto respect
able but mercurial citizens, he began
to view life with a less Jaundiced eye;
and when, at the expiration of the
proverbial nine days, he felt morally
certain that “that Eden Valley gang,”
as he now referred to Nate, Lorry and
Rube Tenney, was going to cling to
its ancient tradition and have nothing
whatsoever to do with legal reprisals,
all of his old Jauntiness and optimism
returned.
He waited two wec’.s longerand when
at the expiration of that period Henry
Rookby, looking Jointly reminiscent of
a potato sprout put forth In a cellar,
returned to his labor*. Babson left the
business of the bank in Mr. Rookby’s
hands and proceeded to motor forth
among the forlorn Valleyites and ar
gue them Into signing the petit!®* to
the county board of supervisors for
permission to organize the Forlorn
Valley Irrigation district. Having had
a surveyor de-limit the areas suscepti
ble to surface irrigation, he knew the
Identity of every farmer whose signa
ture was necessary for his purpose, so
a week's time sufficed to acquire the
number of signatures legally neces
sary, and at the next regular meeting
of the board of supervisors, of which
Babson was a member, he presented
the petition In person and addressed
Ills colleagues at some length and with
unusual eloquence on the desirability
of favorable action by the board.
The chairman of the board rapped
with his gavel. “The pros appear to
have their innings,” he announced
smilingly. "Are there any cons to be
heard from?"
A man rose In the rear of the hall,
walked up to the railing in front of
the dais upon which the board sat,
and bowed first to the board and then
to the audience. “Mr. Chairman —gen-
tlemen: My name Is John W. Gagan,
a member of the San Francisco law
firm of Brooks, Gagan and Brooks, and
I appear as the legal representative
of the three riparian owners along
Eden Valley ereek, to wit, Estate of
Ranceford Kershaw, deceased, the
Bar 11 Land and Cattle company, and
the Mountain Valley Power company,
the last two companies, as is generally
known, being owned In their entirety
by Mr. Nathan Tlchenor. On behalf
of my clients, I desire formally to pro
test to this honorable board against
the formation of the Forlorn Valley
Irrigation district and will stat* my
reasons briefly.”
Gagan Immediately proceded to do
so, painting to his auditors precisely
the picture that Nate Tlchenor had
painted to him, challenging Lon Mor
ton to gainsay one single legal state
ment. Gagan spoke simply, earnestly,
arraying bls facts in logical sequence.
When he had finished his addres*
Gagan bowed to the board and started
to leave the chamber. There was si
lence until he was half way down th*
aisle, then a storm of hisses and boo*
broke around him. Gagan looked back
as he reached the door and saw that
Silas Babson was on his feet, hi*
hand raised for silence.
“So you’re going to refute my state
ment, eh?” Gagan called back. “Well,
before I depart I’ll give you and your
deluded followers some very good ad
vice, free. The man who acts a* hl*
own attorney has a fool for a ellent ”
TO BE CONTINUED.
Acting on the advice of Dr. Tracy
L Storer of the University of Califor
nia Agricultural college, hydrocyanic
acid gas and several other powerful
fumigants were used but with indif
ferent success. It was then dec'ded to
resort to vacuum fumigation. Thl*
would give perfect fumigation Into ev
ery crevice of books, of which large
numbers could be fumigated simulta
neously. Also, this method would de
stroy the microscqplc eggs of the bee
tle, as well as the larvae, by rupturing
the thin membrane at one end of the
egg and permitting entry of the poi
son gas.
The problem of an ideal fumigant
was solved when Dr. Arnold O. Beck
man of the California Institute of
Technology, discovered that ethylene
oxide and carbon dioxide could b*
combined In a liquid that Is neither
Inflammable nor explosive.
Can Make 60-Mile Wind
At Teddlngton, England, Is a high
pressure wind tunnel, 50 feet long. la
this a 60-mlle wind can b* created.
^"“'''improved’' J
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
SUNDAY I
chool Lesson
(By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D^
Member of Faculty, Moody Bible
Institute of Ohlcarox)
• by Western Newspaper Unloa.
Lesson for August 5
ELISHA HELPS THE NEEDY
LESSON TEXT—II Kings 4:1-44.
GOLDEN TEXT—And th# King iiha.ll
answer and eay unto them, Verily I
say unto you. Inasmuch aa ye hava
dona It unto one of the least of these,
my brethren, ya hava done It unto -na.
Matthew 26:40.
PRIMARY TOPlC—Elisha Helpa a
Woman In Need.
JUNIOR TOPlC—Elisha Helps Thosfc
la Need.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP
IC—How We May Help Others.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP
IC—Our Responsibility for Others.
I. Elisha Helpa a Widow (rv. 1-7).
1. Her distress (v. 1). Her hus
band, a godly man, was taken away
by death, leaving a debt. A certain
creditor was about to make her son*
■lavas because of the nonpayment of
tha debt. We are not told for what
reason the debt was Incurred. It may
have been because of charitable deeds.
2. Her only possession (v. 2). A
pot of oil was all that she had In her
house. God can use what we possess,
and to set that apart is the measure
of our responsibility.
3. The oil miraculously increased
(vv. 3-7). The meager supply of oil
was so Increased that the sale of it
paid the debt There was enough left
for the sustenance of the family.
11. Elisha's Kind Deed* to th*
6hunammite Woman (vv. 8-37).
1. Her hospitality to Elisha (vv.
8-11).
a. Its occasion (v. 8). Observing
that Elisha passed continually by her
house in his Journeys, she was moved
with compassion toward him. She
perceived that he was a man of God
and was called upon to deny himself
of many things. She determined, ac
cording to her ability, to supply hia
needs.
b. She fitted up a room for him
(vv. 10, 11). She equipped this room
with the necessary furniture to make
It comfortable.
2. Elisha endeavors to repay her
(vv. 12-17).
a. He offers to ask a favor of the
king or head of the army (v. 13) This
showed that Elisha had Influence at
the royal court. The woman’s reply
shows her truly to be a great woman.
She would not change the calm and
quiet of her home for a place ever la
the royal court.
b. Elisha announces the coming of
a son to her (vv. IC, 17). Through In
quiry he discovered that this woman
was childless. This in that day was
considered a great misfortune. He as
sured her that in about a year from
that time she should experience the
Joy of motherhood. •
3. The coming of sorrow to her
home (vv. 18-21). The child which
brought Joy to her heart was suddenly
taken away. The cause of bls death
was probably a sunstroke, for th* heat
of the sun at harvest time In that
country Is Intense. When the child
died she laid him upon the bed of the
man of God. Her faith was such that
ahe did not make preparation for
burial but for restoration to life (Heb.
11:35).
4. The mother goes to Elisha (vv.
22-28). Happy la the one who In the
days of prosperity and sunshine has
so related himself to God and his
prophets that help and sympathy can
be given In time of trouble.
a. She took hold of Elisha's feet (v.
27). This was the eastern way of en
forcing a petition.
b. She chided the prophet (v. 28).
"Did I desire a son?" Titis Implies
that It would have been better not to
have a child than to have lost him so
soon.
6. The child restored (vv. 29-37).
a. Gehazi's fruitless errand (rv.
29-31). He hurried away and placed
the prophet’s staff upon the child’*
face, but It did not revive. Doubtlesi
failure was due to his lack of faith.
b. Elisha’s efficient service (vv.
32-37). He sent to the house where
the dead child was and did two things.
(1) He prayed (v. 33). He knew
that no one but God could help so he
closed the door, shutting all others out.
(2) He stretched himself upon the
child (v. 34). He brought bls warm
body In touch with the cold body of
the child. God blesses and saves
through the warm touch of those who
are in touch with him.
111. Elisha Feeding One Hundred
Men (vv. 42-44).
These hundred men were likely
prophets of God. From the meager
supply of twenty barley loaves and
some ears of new corn these hundred
men were fed. How like the deed of
the Master in feeding five thousand
with the barley loaves and small
fishes.
Study the Bible
The more profoundly we study this
wonderful book and the more closely
we observe Its divine precepts, th*
better citizens we will become and th*
higher will be our destiny as a mu
tlon. —William McKlfiley.
Foundation of Safety
The foundation of safety is laid on
the finished work of Christ, and Is
guarded by the infinite power, th*
eternal purpose, and the Immutable
promise of Jehovah. —James H.
Brookes.
MOVE TO CHECK
OVERPLAYING OF
INSANITY PLEAS
The American people have long
been convinced that the insanity
plea In criminal courts Is decidedly
overworked. It is gratifying and
not a little surprising, therefore, says
the St. Paul Dispatch, to learn that
the psychiatrists, whose science has
contributed most to the furthering of
the insanity plea, are now making
an attempt to close this loophole In
the law.
At u recent annual meeting of the
American Psychiatric association In
New York a committee report was
read advocating radical reforms In
legal and penal procedure in capital
eases in which a plea of Insanity had
been entered by the defendant. It
was recommended that “the Judge
shall eliminate nil evidence of the
mental condition of the defendant ex
cept such evidence as makes the men
tal disease so obvious a lay jury can
understand it.” Time and again
juries have been mystified by the
clinical subterfuges anil technicali
ties of Insanity pleas In criminal
trials. On too many occasions the
twelve good men and true have been
overwhelmed by psychological fol
derol and have permitted Justice to
be cheated.
To the ordinary rnn of citizens
who make up jury panels there are
mentally only two kinds of people,
the normal and the crazy. The vari
ous grades and degrees of mental
and nervous disorders which is the
psychiatrist’s field he comprehends
not at all. When an insanity plea is
entered the Jury merely wants to
know whether the accused is or Is
not responsible for his acts. Keep
ing such evidence in an understand
able form will help the Juries and
put a limit on the abuse of insanity
pleas.
MercolizedWax
\ M /
Keeps Skin Young
Absorb blemishes and discolorations using
Meroolized Wax daily as directed. Invisible
particles of aged skin are freed and all
defects such as blackheads, tan, freckles and
largo pores disappear. Skin is then beauti
fully clear, vehrety and so sost —face looks
years younger. Mereolized Wax brings out
your hidden beauty. Ai all leading druggists,
r — Powdered Saxolite- —i
I Reduces wrinkles and other age^signs. Sim- I
I ply dissolve one ounce Baxolito in half-pint I
| witch hazel and use daily as face lotion. |
And Nothing Else!
Joe—What killed that aviator?
Jim —A severe sinking spell.—Ex
change.
KEEP COOL
SAVE TIME t flrjh
SAVE WORK
SAVE MONEY
with the
“THIS Coleman Self-Healing Iron will
* save you more time and work than a
SIOO.OO washing machine! It will save your
strength ... help you do better ironing
easier and quicker at less cost.
Instant Lighting... no heating
with matches or torch... no waiting. Tha
evenly-heated double pointed base irons
garments with fewer strokes. Large glass
smooth base slides easier. Ironing time is
reduced one-third. Heats itself... use it
anywhere. Economical, t 00... costs only
Vad an hour to operate. See your hard
ware or housefurnishing dealer. If local
dealer doesn’t handle, write us.
THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO.
Dept. WUBO6, Wichita. Kunii ; Chicago. Ui.;
Philadelphia, Pa.: Los Angeles, Calif;
Toronto, Ontario, Canada (430®)
STANDARD MASHES
Properly Balanced, Vitaminized
and Mineralized
Ask for and get Standard Brand but
termilk Mashes, containing cod liver
oil, poultry yeast foam and Oberco
soluble minerals (bone meal) and see
for yourself why Standard feeders get
better results. We make a mash for
every stag? of development from day
old chicks to maturity. Get quick, uni
form growth — proper development —
better egg production — less mortality
—by feeding Standard Brand Mashes'!
See Your Standard Dealer Today
If there's no dealer in your section, we
will supply you. Write for full par'
ticulars. Address Des{ E.W.
STANDARD MILLING CO.
8 Fairlie St, N. W. Atlanta, Ca.
Protect your skin with a powder that
is mildly antiseptic and at the same
time fine, soft and smooth as silk.
Fragrant, oriental balsamic essential
oils comprise the medication of
Cutlcnra Talcum. Instantly upon
touching the skin these oils start their
soothing, healing work and you are
protected against irritation.
Price 25c.
Proprietors: Potter Drug & Chemical
Corporation, Malden, Mass.
SORE EYES Eye Lotion
relieves and cures sore and inflamed eyes in Uto 48
hours. Helps tbe weak eyed, cures without pain.
Ask your druggl«tor dealer for BALTJKR’B. Only
from Reform Dispensary .P.O. Box 151, Atlanta. Qa.