Happy Again "Nothing seemed to r,ras r'ottT Joan," says Mrs. James W. Nolen, 313 Ceanter St., Dallas, Texas. "Sh as feverish and fretful. Her appe tlte was poor; she seemed bilious. "A child specialist recommended California Fig Syrup and It certainly made my little plrl happy, well npata In hurry. We have used It over three years for all her upsets." Mothers by thousands praise this pure vepetahle product. Children love it Doctors recommend it for feverish, headachy, bilious, consti pated babies and children : to open the bowels In colds or children's" diseases. Appetite Is increased by its use; the breath Is sweetened; coated tongue is cleared ; digestion and as eimllation are assisted ; weak stom ach and bowels are strengthened. For your protection the genuin$ always bears the name California. LAXATIVE-TONIC fur CHILDREN; -- On Shipboard ' Aff alle I'assenger Your husband's a poor sailor, I believe? Imposing Ditto Indeed he's not lie's a rich produce merchant. New MedJdaa CaWaat BaHlle FEE..A-MI.T rdu SOi DILLARD'S ASPERGOf Tba tiitht ud Fjnf Way MUkaAapirta Talut 2it Total Tatut 73 Feen-a-mlnt UAmeriea'smost Popular Laxativa. Pleasant, aafo, dependable, con-habit forming. Keep it Bandy in this attractive economical bottle. Aipergum Is the new and better way to take apirin. No bitter tablet to wallow. Effective in smaller doses for every aspirin use. At your druggiat's or HEALTH PB0DICT3 CORPORATION lit Nfta Hi Street Newark. N.J. An Old Friend In a New Dress I.TDI E. PlftHAM'S SCKTABL1 CoMPOLNB is now prepared in con vrnient, palatable, choo olate coated tablets packed in small bottle, feach bottle contains 79 tablets, or 3j doses. Slia a bottle into your hand bag. Carry your tnedi cine with you. During the three trying pere iods of maturity, maternity and middle age, this remedy proves its worth. 93 out of 100 report benefit after taking it. These toilets are just as elec tive as Vie liquid, Ltj&aRPLrdciarrrs Vegetable Cb&qxnmd WHITE SKIN BREMOLA make old akin young. It positive!) accomplinhra four things (or it u a akin tonic a tissue builder, banuhe pimples; and a tkir vhitener and rVjfl'irtiator or money refunded Thousands of women detx-nd on Kremola tc keep their tkin youthful. Ask your Druggist, 01 direct by mail prepaid. Price $1.25. Write for FREE"Brtj Wr to lane Kay. cart Dr. t. H. Berry Co., 2975 S. Michigan Avt.. Chicago. Id. Sad "Sad about Grace." "What dow?" "She's assembled the clothes for mountain climbing and now she's In vited to go on a yacht." asii Coqs and colds wear down J your strength and t.'-tr vitality. Iioschee'8 V 1 V V Syrup soothes instantly ends coughs quickly. Re- A J lief GUARANTEED. Boschee's Syrup PARADE by Evelyn Campbell (Copyright by Kvelyn Cambll.) WNU Service CHAPTER Vll 12 Love's Labyrinths Her Slop laujjed m Utile, hut she StUTeiied as she entered the hotel. The elevator was directly before her and she could have gained It with a few stops. She turned, however, ami walked toward the grilled eneloMitc where a gentleman, a lesser gentleman with other dimmer llgurvs, was stalled In that curious haughty si lonee that Is nocullnt lo high miceil hotels. Linda's walk was one of the rarest qualities she oossosed, She wax tall and slender (Hat she seemed hi ways about to liend anil hreak timloi the demand of effort. Her wraps were always slipping from her shotiU'-rs but never did. Her eyes, halt vein-d Rppeareil. lo see nothing, hut slie tool een dislimtly the looks that followed and greeted her. The bellboys on their iench were wtitchlng tier turilvely ; Hie eeond genlleinan Ht the desk leaneil on his pointed elbow lo listen to her iiid watch. All of them saw the new expensive hat and the pearls Kllpplns from her rich fur. "My letters, please." Linda's voice was sweet and wry low. She spnke as little ns possible to such persons as these. The lelters were in her hum), S"d she was turning away before he jald "Thank you" In a negligent f ine as though that grilled-ln group had no oieanlnu for her. They looked after her hopelessly. She seemed rich and prosperous. The clerk looked doubtfully nt a letter that had been separated from the rest; 3nally he tucked It away In a private pigeon hole. It would not do to make I mistake In this case. T.ut Linda knew nothing of this. She passed on to the elevator, leisurely ex (mining the letters In her hand. Linda no longer occupied Cousin Amy's house when the family were jw-.iy. The fiasco of her marriage w.is a half-told secret, discreetly Ignored by her relatives, whose number seemed to have dwindled perceptibly. It is Dtie thing to clmpen n and champion n youi g girl, very beautiful and pathet ically poor, but quite another to he responsible for a widow, however young and beautiful, whose affairs, to say the least, ore lu a muddle and deeply mysterious. Cousin Amy ltulston told some of tiie others that she always felt a cold chill dojvn her back when she heard Linda's voice In the hall, so it bap pened that by degrees her own voice became so cold, so brief, that Linda, not wlfhing to give pain, refrained nl most wholly from communication with her sensitive relations. She had plenty of friends. Any woman free and pretty, dressing more than well and seen at her best every where, Is bound to have friends nini Invitations. Only to Llndn the peop'e who took her nhotit and entertained her seemed oddly less like friends than adversaries. It was a curious foe! ins that bad grown upon her lately. S!i wus always on guard, always htandltu off a little while she smiled and talker softly. It was as If n hundred pairs of eyes were seeking for a crack In hoi armor which fhe was determined they should not find. For a long ' time she had had s splendid time. She was not In the strict sense of the word a woman of society. Rather, she took what she wanted of society and let the rest, the bores, the dull parties, Hie commit tees. aloo. The people Rhe was seen with were usually charming, tlmugl some were a little vague about them selves. There were always pletiiy ot hosts, dazed by the ease, the grace ot Linda and her friends, who were quite ready to pay for the pnrfy. It had puzzled them all that she had not married ugaln There must have been plenty of men to marry her rich, desirable men who could give her the setting she deserved. Cut Linda was faintly amused tv this won der. Talk of marriage always brought poignantly before her the vision of the aftermath of her twenty-four hour honeymoon. fr It had lusted no longer than that, she knew. Hut after she met Brian Anstey she began to think of marriage again. Not Consciously, though. Marriage as a form or ceremony dlrj not enter her mind. She would have checked the Idea In Us birth. If her conscious self had not been drugged by the art ful subconscious that knows so well how to take Its victims unaware. Linda could have argued herself out of lovt with a poor young man If love had riot stolen upon her and blinded her eyes with lieaiily and silenced her lips und deafened her with dreams She never thought if marriage but she began to chafe ul the life she led. The handsome rooms she occupied strewn with costly trilles. prisoned her restlessness. She wearied of going about and wenried o( her gowns aid tb meaningless jargon of her friends She hegar to think ot quiet, cool, sltn (ile spits; to vlsnall.e what she had never known. She found herself re rnemlierllig every step ul thai (ill g'lmnge made with Uriah Anstey in that siiowy dusk, and the little houses Willi il.eli lamps and red fires. She would h ri uce herself from these mem orlca try to elude them, try to hate them, bid It was no use. Time and lime again they returned, each time Kith Hie humble plea of pen' e. Kbe dressed herself carefully for Nut lh t dinner with Brian. II would be simple, because be must not spend much money entertaining her. She coniantly remembered that he was poor. She chose the plainest frock In her wardrobe, anil had . ii--tii-tnue to look mere lovely than ever against Its plainness. er beauty shone starlike; she had not quite lost that faint exag geration of every point that women always found a Haw. At the last njo. nient she Hung the double strand of pearls Courtney Itoih's sardonic pres ent around her neck. She was trans formed at once to splendor, but when she saw this she tore them roughly off and tossed them Into their cn!. She wanted nothing like that lo have a place lu their hour. She knew from the llrst that Hrlan adored tier, and so sweet was the knowledge ol this unaccustomed gift that she yielded deliberately, ehedmt her eyes to consequences She thought she couhl draw hack In time One night there was a party with the I'Yittivsses, and she watched Hie pretty hb-iid gill grow pale and llusli under a word or look liom Itrlaii, who was eniiicly inu onsi Ions of It all. ' "She loves h;iii." th. light l.lnda. Tool little thing ! She li .s everything, she bus done everything to please, and I who h ive d aic nothing -" She f.-U suddenly b'ni.blcd rtftd ashamed She ought to g-i away and m "Because She Has Money." Linda Finished as Frankly as He. leave these two alone. They would come together as naturally as two birds alone In the sky. "I'tetty. aren't they?" said Simon Fentress at her ear. Ile was watching I'.rlati and Palsy with a rather sar donic smile that he ufterward turned upon l.lmla. "Youth Is always charming," sha said. How those beady black eyes looked into her. "Ni'W. you are youn?. too, only a couple f years older than Pulsy. and vet you are not youthful. You've been taught things my girl will never know." 'i'.etanse she has money," Linda fin ished as frankly as tie. "Not entirely. It isn't In the child to know She likes musliu frocks." His eyes traveled over he'r long, grace ful figure. "How shortsighted nature Is! If you had been born my thilgh ht" HI kindling face, bold with the light of adventure, said what a splendid life they would hnve had I What worlds would have been con quered ! "You think I hate muslin gownsl" said Linda with her faint smile. "Unless they are made In Paris." "You think I could not endure pov eity'f" she persisted. Ile looked at her a long time. "It would be a great waste, my dear, he said gently, as If he was sorry for her. Senator Converse did toil remain In Ignorance of all this. Ile fell at tlrst into the natural error of Imagining that Linda was attracted by therlamor of the Fentress millions, but this im pression did not survive watching her dance with Brian Anstey one night (TO BE CONTINUED.) Scotch Freebooter Marie ' Hero of Song and Story Itob Itoy (Hubert McHregor or t'umpbell), Scotch legendary hero, was horn In Iluchanati parish, Scotland. IH71 ; died at lialquhldder December J 17:51. He was the younger son of liotmld McHrcgor. a lieutenant colonel In the urtny of .lames II. He got his name Hoy from his red hair, and adopted Cumpbell H bis surname. After the accession of William III be obtained a commission from James II. and in HilU made u descent Stir llngshlie. In 171- be vus evicted and outlawed on a charge of embe.'.lemeul. Ile became a Highland freebooter, and was Included In the act ot attainder. Under the protection of the duke ol Argyll he continued to levy blackmail on the Scottish gentry. Ile Is the suh lect of a novel by Sir Walter Scott, published in 1N1S; of an opera by I'lotow (IS.".'.') and ot several plilji Washlngton Star. Wrong Start If more ami bettei home training were given to youngsters between the ages of one and six, less respotisl tdllty and blame would be laid umd school teachers for giving them t "wrong start." Omnln Hom. f'Mil W rS-V' i A and TORNADOES iwu i twin li v v I ' .J What a Tornado on (rrrrwt by th National Dm.tiihlo S,'lt). ulillull, li, l') W1IST INI'IAN hurricanes are not new factors In the life of the Caribbean. In the season that Is peculiarly their own (there are "hurricane growing months" Just as there are "corn-growing months") they hnve probably been Mowing up from the Culf of Mexico, the Caribbean sen and the tropical Atlantic since thoo bodies of water and the American continents have existed a matter of some hun dreds of thousands of years. The first such storm on record devastated parts of Cubit In l i:H. I'.ut only a relatively few of these many poten tial destroyers actually work their destruction on land and even fewer reach the territory of the Culled States. TlioM' destroying winds are confined almost wholly to a period of three mouths of the late summer and early autumn. Thus they leave the West Indies, Florida and the other gulf states frcu from danger during the late autumn, the entire winter, and the early spring when that area attracts Its greatest crowd of visitors. The warm seas eastward and south eastward of the Uulf of Mexico are the birthplaces of the hurricane. They are the rsentures of atmospheric pressure and ttnperature ; and these, two factors are varied by the sun beating down on the expanses of At lantic water and the land mass of our continent They are probably jretitle little ed dies of air at tlrst. but gather mom. entum owing to differences In tem perature and air pressure, until they become gigantic whirls sucking air toward their central vortices like nar gantuan vacuum cleaners. Swirling Winds of Great Speed. The observer In the path of a hur ricane can hardly believe that these destructive winds are swirls, lie sees the effects of, ami feel, a straight blast of air moving at great speed, overturning ships, trees and buildings. If tie watches long enough, he will lee this destructive blast almost com pletely reverse Its direction. These winds are created by the pumping force of the central sw irl ; ami while the center Itself may be moving across rountry at the leisurely nite of eight or ten miles an hour, the winds rush ing Inward from all directions to dis appear ti(i the "spout" reach terrific i peed. The usual maximum speed Is 100 miles an hour. The fact tbnt the hurricane at San Juan. Porto Hleo, a few years ago blew nt a rate (if 1,'!2 nd perhaps 1.7) miles an hour stamps this storm as of extraordinary vio lence. One of the most striking facts In regard to West Indian hurricanes Is the marked concentration of the real ly destructive ones within a few weeks of each year. A study of the hurricanes that had occurred since 1SS7 was made by the United States weather bureau a few years ago and It was found that In this long period not one torm of known hurricane Intensity bud visited the West Indies and (iulf regions during the months from he remlier to May Inclusive. Two other months can practically he eliminated: November, with only two hurricanes In nearly forty years, nnd June, with six. Not all of the few November und June storms reach American terri tory. July Itself is rather u pour hurri cane month. Less limn a doy.en July hurricanes have been recorded In the Inst forty years and only part of them reached shore. The real hurricane season starts In August, reaches Its peak In September, and ends during October, One reassuring fact Is that when the hurricane season In at Its height the greatest percentage of the utonns falls to reach the gulf or At lantic coasts. Many curve hack Into the ocean even as far east as the IiertiiiidUH. Their Origin and Course, r.etweon July and October of every year from (J to 10 hurricanes are born somewhere between Florida and Afrl cb, usually to sweep westward, then northward, and finally hack iiortheasi ward, their paths forming pretty Ue curnte parabolic curves. The primary Vv f's"." Land Looks Llka, factor In the careers of these stormn Is believed to be an area of high at mosphcrle pressure, or "high," that exist practically permanently over the Atlantic north of the tropica. a other words, a great blanket of heavy, sluggish air lies continually over this area. Along Its southern edge In the tropica heated air, rising, latise lit- tie swirling disturbances which are the si-eds of poKslble hurricanes. Put there Is a certain Infant mortality among these stormlets, especially In winter and spring. Then the Atlantic "high" extend In a broad bund ou Into the North American continent, forming lu effect a wall of heavy air i Inch the Ntorms cannot pa- s. Con fined to the tropics, they are dissi pated without causing the I'nited States any concern. Put when the bent of S'tmmor has warmed up the land the "high" with draw to its ocean home, Jutting out like an air peninsula toward America. The atmosphere over the land be comes an arena for shifting "highs" and "lows." !t I as though an at mospheric football gtmiB were In prog ress. The newly born storm of the tropical Atlantic regions seek, because of the general drift of the attnospherp, to move northward. The "highs," whether stationary or In motion, fur nish the Interference which they must tlodge. The weakest place 111 the de fense Is between the permanent mid Atlantic "high" ami the American roast. A great many tropical hurricanes, therefore, move east to avoid the mid ocean barrier and then dash northward well east of Urn coast, causing no damage on land. Onco around the end of the "high" they swing northeastward, and some con tinue tn even Into F.uropv, Some of the iiorms do tmt have smh plain sailing. If the Atlantic "high" extend farther weslwurd than usual the disturbances most awing over the hind to round the end. It Is upon such rather Infrequent oc casion that the Atlantic and (iulf coast sutTer. Tornadoes Are Local. Quite different from hurricanes are the tornadoes that cut narrow swaths from time to time In the Interior of the United States, The favorite haunt of tornadoes In the United Slate In clinics the states of the lower Missis sippi valley and the eastern portion of the Croat Plains states, poll) to the west and east their occurrences are fewer. Tornadoes are strictly local storms, bred usually by sultry and humid weather. They strike most often In the afternoon, and almost always take n path from southwest to northeast. This direction In the United States results from the fact that "lows" drift across the eastern part of the conti nent almost always from southwest to northeast and that the tornado (a secondary disturbance attached to the "low") takes the same direction, The rapidly swirling column of air which Is the heart of the tornado Is usually marked by a funnel shaped, black cloud of vapor. This whirling mass sucks air from all sides to Its lower end and then up'vard. Kven heavy objects fly toward the column as dust panicles and hits of paper fly Into the throat of n vacuum cleaner. Most of the deslruciiveness of tor nadoes Is traceable to their reduction of air pressures when their centers pass over or by an area. The press ure being suddenly reduced outside a building, the air Inside It expands and pushes the walls down or the roofs up-1 be buildings really explode be cause of the release of what amounts for Hie moment to the "cotnpresHiid" air within them. Sometimes tornado clouds go skip ping or bouncing along, working havoc where the lower end touches the ground, and leaving tverylhlng unni Jurod where the end lifts. A distinction must be made between the velocity of the air rushing hito the funnel, mid the speed of the fun nel Itself moving over the earth. It has been pointed out that the former velocity, close to the funnel, may ha that of a rille bullet. The funnel It self, however, seldom moves more run Idly than 110 or 40 tulles un hour. li i,i ', I If ... . 4 ' ' i. DOCTOR'S Prescription gives Bowels Real Help (Train your bovvela to bo regular j to move nt the aamo time every day; to bo to thorough that they pet rid of nil thQ waste. Hyrup l'epsln a doctor'" proscription V 111 help you do this. When you tako this compound of laxatlvtv lierbs, ptiro pepsin nnd other val liable Ingredients, you are helping tho bowels t help themselves. Ir. Caldvvell'i Syruji Pepsin I the Biinslhlo thing to take whenever Jcu ore headachy, bilious, half plck from constipation. When you Lave no appetite, and a bad taste rr bad breath shows you're full of I'oUououa matter or t-mir Idle. lr. Caldwell studied howcf troubles for 7 years. Ills pr rcrtptlon always works quickly, thoroughly; can never do you any 1. a nil. It Just clean you out nml Fvveetens the whole digestive tract. It gives those overworked bowels tho help they need. Tako some Ir. CuMwcir fyrup l'epsln today, and e howr fine you Jiel tomorrow and for days to come, (ilve It to the kiddles when they're sickly or feverish; they'll llk the taste Tour druggist baa tig bottles of It, all ready for use. Da. W. B. Caidhih i SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctors Family Laxative Posthumous praises t,re like gold arlp- on a hearse, t : ry Real dyes givo richest colors! FOR every home use. Diamond 1'yrs are the finest you can buy. They contain tho highest quality anilines that ran U produced. It's tho anilines in DlnmonJ I'yes thnt Jtive such ft, bright, row colors to dresses, drapes, lingerie. Diamond Dyes ire easy to use. They go on smoothly and evenly; dj nt spot or streak: never give things that re-dyej look. Just true, even, new colors that keep their depth and brilliance In spit of wettr and washing. 1J J c a ages. All drug stores. Hist! Qua!V 6r 50 Ytcrt Have Clients with $1,000 to $1,000,000 to Inrcst In Patents, Formulas, Copy, rights and Partnerships any where. What have you? UNITED PATENTS, Ltd. 130 Bush Street San Francisco Calif. A genuine Hotter Half Is not al ways trying to nsike the Other Half admit It. KILLS 103 RATS ON NEBRASKA FARM A Nebraska farmer killed 10.1 rata fn 12 hours with K-IU) (Kills Itat Only), tho product mado by a special prooesa of sulll, an ingredient highly recommended by the U. 8. Govern rnnnt. It la sure death to rats and mice but harmless to dogs, cats, Iioultry or even baby chicks. K-Il-O i todav America's most widely used rat and mouse exterminator. Sold by druggist on money back guarantee. PROOF RESTS WITH PATIENTS tjftrri and namn anil aihlreiMt nf humlrrili nt grateful pallcnU contained In nur I KI.li IIOoH on Ktnal ana Lelon aiunrntu alio drtalla of lr. C J. IXal non-turiilcal method of trrat mcnt, which wa uu eulutlvf i. Stnil for It today anil learn nt our Witrn i;n assukani h i TO t:t IMINA I IC I'JLUS UK V V, K KKMINIH 'II UECTAl COLON CLINK r" A T T CT.rs wsiTind VOli'il If ATI II A I CAUff . rT M man. wrnjntvi "- 7 J V I ri i u - II. t- ir.nf..J -rsTD7 atWUIUfSiBiiuruii nuiim uaair vbuihih Hi? .1 lmn.rU Color and I f 1 Baaiit? to Gray and Kd.d llalri ft3rf wr and 1 .mi RC oratf sl.M. '" " "" ' JLUKt.il UN SHAMPOO Mrl for uh In omncctlon with I'arlmr'allairtlalaam.Mukaa lh biCr anf I. and Unify. 60 rent by mull or Kl droit" (lata, illacoxCbtuiical Wurka, l'uU;hususM,)b ri