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-1~ “Let’s llt 4 ee'ntun Wifi the dropped e o8 e tnunm:hl':b < ptlh SPECIAL TRIPLE FEATURE BiLL No matter how weak a man's charagcter or how mean he is, one can be reasonably assured. that sooneér or later, the strong and good traits wi him are going to overwhelm the evil This is a strong point clearly Fon- veyed by WALLACE REID {ALIAS MIKE MORAN" A Fi c P-rt P-mmum Drama of sgeneration uA'run: No. 2 and ”fi.f 123 YEARS OLD ”“-..w-l‘)" . - S I you kno' ‘that's. :x?gt hqv I rnx tb-nt & you —kind of like I'd always known you! I felt that way the very first time I ever saw you. As for thinking about food, why, over there in the trenches I used to get to thinking— well—it was pie mostly with me—and 1 used to think of s and then of her pie_and then of ma He laughed and ahe JMnod him, but in a rather tremulous way. “It's funny, isn't it?" she said. Then quite suddeniy her voice broke and in another instant her pretty head was buried on his shoulder. “Oh, I don’t want you to go home,” she wailed. *“I know it's mean and selfish of me when you want to g0 so badly, but I'm just—going to—die—of lonesomeness when you're gome. I told you I was thinking of strawberry shortcake when I wasn't really. I ‘don’t care if I never see any but T could stand that if you weren't going. Isn't there some way you could stay? I just can't bear it if you don't. It had grown quite dark and the faint lights didn’t penetrate to where they sat, so, a little awestricken, he drew her close to him. “Why, kid,” he said, “you honest mean that, do you?" “Oh, of course, I know you couldn’ She squirmed around in an effort to Zet her handkerchief, but he held her tight. *And, kid,” he went on, “did you real- Sh | her “It's just that with yeu, somehow, I feel so— kind of—at m ‘don’t you Today and Saturdey EARLE WILLIAMS in “THE USURPER” From the Stage Play of the Same Name Made Famous by the Late Nat Goodwin. ALMA RUBENS “A MAN'S COUNTRY A GRIPPING WESTERN DRAMA PATHE NEWS Showing the Signing of the Peace Treaty at Versailles. avenue. Both from western towns they had met in a loeal military hospital where she served as nurse and he was convaleseing from wounds received overseas. “So_you're really % home next hed a little. week ?” she said and “Sounds good, doesn’t it?” he quer- ied, but the little thrill of happiness in his voice rang not quite true. “T'd like, awtully, to see the people at home,” the girl replied ‘“just be there, don't you know? Not that I don’t per- fectly Yove 1t nere she added hasti: ‘'only sometimes protecting but when it is realized that nearly a million scres were burned over rhat year 14 can be appieciated what might have reszited he vice nat been meir tain same time the necessity of giving it every reasonable aid at all times and especially during such emergencies as the present. FIGHTING TUBERCULOSIS. Although John Gunshanan, who is ‘well known among the older people as a former baseball star. has been more closely identified with werk in behalf of stamping out tuberculesis than he is at the present time, he has | not lost interest in the tremendous opportunity that exists in such efforts or the great amount of good that has been accomplished in this state since the determined fight was opened against the dread disease. It is interesting to note in this con- nection, however, that he declares that there are more incipient cases in the slate at the present time than ever before. It is fully understood that there never was a time when the I think, now that t) war's over and I don’t seem to be need- ed so much, that maybe I'm getting just a little homesick. Lots of bovs in the hospital, yes, but not so many as we thought there would be.” “I bet you are homesick, You poor kid, you.” Impulsively he laid his hand on hers and gave n a gentle, sym- pathetic squeeze. _ She let her hand remain in his, some- the warm clasp made her feel not qune S0 much adrift and away from unmu things. - In the gathering dusk crowd sui by them mmnaug She was silent for a mom- ent. Then she laughed. “I said I was thinking a lot about home lately, but I wonder if you'd ever ‘what I've really been thinking about most. 3 e —IN— “YOU NEVER SAW SUCH ‘With your nmu' You can lift off . A GIRL” any hard corn, soft corn, Or corn be- tween the toes, and the hard skin cal- luses from bottom of feet. | A tiny bottle of “Freezone” costs lit-l tle at any drug store; apply a few drops upon the corn or cailus. In- | stantly it stops hurting, then shortly | you lift that. bothersome corn or callus right off, root and all, without one bit of pain or soreness. Truly! No humbug! —_——————— don't i FEATURE No. 3 FORD Sl T G HEARTS AND FLOWERS Two Reel Mack. Sennett Comedy CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING JULY 19TH 10,088 TAKE THE BULLETIN ALONG Subscribers and readers of The Bulletin leaving the city for the seaSon, or a vacation, can have threatened to wreck all Frazer's ma- chinery and blown him and all his|, crew up to the pearly gates. After persistent effort to cork the well, they gave the task up as hopeless, wish- ed it luck and let it spout. It has beex spouting ever since. Dancing Tonight ASHLAND CASINO igher wages. i Thus you find_that, although a fish frier is offered 5 pounds a week (an occupation, too, that suggests %ong intervals for rest, with possibly seme free fish meals), clerks are still in de- The Nenana Coal Ficld, Alaska. The Nenana coal field, which lies said * genially. The Bulletin sent to their addre: by mail for any spesifed period at the regular rate by netifying the business department, telephone 480 e e e — = REPARATION COMMISSIONER. In connection with the matter of the peace treaty a new question has state was. doing more to keep down the white plague than right now. The state is maintaining several highly efficient institutions, more interest is being shown in the treatment of such cases from their earliest stages and before the vear is over another sana torium, for the purpose of giving pro per treatment to the cases of bone tuberculosis in children, is to be I might as well tell vou, for I woke up thinking of it, and T've thought about it every time I haven't been too busy ever since, and it's made me feel simply the emptiest thing on earth.” She slipped her hand out of his and clasped her fingers to gether tight. “It's—well— it's straw. berry shortcake as mother makes it, buttered when it’s hot, don't you know, and with lots and lots of strawberries mand at 35s., while the sum of 10s. is offered for an cashier.” Which sets.us why some of our out-of-work poorly-paid clerks do not take 1y mean what you said just now about being lonesome when I'm gone? Be cause if you did—of course, you're a whole pile above me, because I know I'm a kind of roughneck and like that, but I could maybe learn to be nice and refined like you if you'd teach me and, kid, I'd be awfully good to you—— She made a queer little sound of protest. —The London Chronicle. Gas Well Spouting 30 Years. £2 “experienced wondering or off thei rcuffs and learn how to fry fish. For thirty years, a gas well at Peli- can Rapids, on the Athabasca river, abous 200 miles north of Cook Inlet, Alaska, and 'will be reached by the new government railroad from Seward 4 miles distant, has been examined y G. C. Martin, of the United States| Geologica] Survey, Department of the Interior, whose report on it has just been published. The field is about 100 miles south of Iairbanks, the inland terminus of the railroad, and s more accessible to the gold mines of the Jewett City MUSIC BY ASHLAND ORCHESTRA Six Pieces Casino Not Open If Stormy Tanana River and possibly on some of “It isn’t that,” she said in a smoth ered voice, “it's just that I just about— proposed te you—you couldn't arisen as to what this country will do in the matter of partieipating in the work of carrying out the terms and sugar and whipped cream—O, dear me, T am a pig and it seems like a kind of complaint, too.” has been running wild and spoutingiTanana Valley than any other coal gas into the atmosphere at the rate|field in Alaska. of two-and-a-half to four million cu-| The coal is a lignite of good grade opened in this county. But tuberculosis is a disease that the boats on the Yukon. The report gives the classification of thereof before action has been taken way or the other relative to the ptance of the treaty. " raaiseit Wilson has asked the for- eign relations committee of the sen- ate to sanction the appointment of a member of the reparation commit- tee to serve with the appointees of other countries in carrying on the work assigned to such a board, the appointment to be with the under- standing that it is only temporary and simply for the purpese of keeping this country in touch with the prog- ress that is being made and to do its part in carrying out the terms. From this request we are to ghther that the president doesn’t consider he has the authority to act and seeks the sanc- tion of a senate committee that the responsibility for making such a tem- porary appointment may be placed thereon, but In view of the fact that the committee finds that it has no mutherity for giving any such appro- val there can be no surprise in its statement to that effect and its refu- sal to comply with the request, re- gardiess of the efforts that will be made to treat it as a political move. It seems to be a case of the president asking the senate committee to do what he doesn’t consider he can do himself, and it is strange that he should seek this from a senate com- mittee when he has shown no dispc- sition to follow such a course in sueh matters in the past. Titere have been emergencies when President Wilson, or other presi- Gents. hag actad¢ where ne authority ppeared to have been provided and is not imprabable that such can be cone in this connection but it is not a case where the forejgn relations com- mittee which is having trouble to get in touch with the doings of the peace conference in order to act on the Peace treaty, should be made the goat. BRING THEM HOME. Apparently France is not in such great need of the supplies in the pos- session of this country and distribute France as one might suppose,| if we are to judge from the offer that has been made for them. And yet on the other hand it is possible that France looks at the situation as one where this country will not undertake ! to bring the supplies back home and| that regardless of the need for them in France a rock bottom price for them can best be obtained by making such an offer for them that would ereate the impression that France doesn’t care whether it gets them or net. There is much military material in France. It consists of great quanti- ties of lumber. locomotives, railroad cars, passenger autos and motor trucks, besides the docks and the many miles of railroad track..France considers that it is liberal when it offers thie country a fifth of what the cost to this country was in obtaining them, declaring that the docks will soon have to be rebuilt, that the rail- road equipment doesn't meet its re- quirements and that the auto equip- ment could not be dumped on the market without interfering >with the industry in France, while there would be no thought of permitting the cars to be sold there without paying a duty of over 60 per cent. But it camnot be understood that this country is required to make any such sacrifice on price. To bring them home for disposal in this coun- try would be far more advantageous than to sell them for a fifth of their cost. ° We need locomotives, freight cars, motor trucks, lumber and rails and surely they would be worth more to us than a fifth of their cost and the additional expense of getting them back. Just because they are war supplies is no reason for throwing them away or junking what is fit for other use. FIGHTING FOREST FIRES. What a menace the forest fires are to the timber supply of this coun- try to say nething of the danger to towns and lumber camps is piainly disclosed by ravages that ar: being causéd by the flames in tha valuabl timber lands of Mon‘ata. Idaho and Washington at the prasent time. Se- rious conflagrations are raging in several sections of the mnorchwest over 40 square milss having been swept over in one sictid> where nul- Jions of feet of pine wers deetroved while in the Madison national forest a fire is spreading over 25,000 acres, which are enly two of the many points at which fire fighters are doing their utmost to bleck the spread of the-flames. Under such conditions it is not sur- prising that the secretary of the inter- jor should ask eongress for an appro- wages persistent warfare. We must constantly be on our guard and pre- sent a strong front against its rav- ages. The fact that our efforts are extensive and our faeilities steadily increasing simply mears *hat every advantage should be taken of them | to better conditions. We are in a position to do even better work than has been done in the past and it Mr. Gunshanan is correct in - his sta: ment that is what it called for with every community and every indiviiusl doing itsand his part to see that these growing incivient cases are given tae treatment thcy Ge:erve for the good of those endans:ved :nd the safer: of the public ‘n gercral. WHY CONFINE IT TO NEW YORK? We have heen given a lot of reasons for the high price of coffee and why the tendency is still upward. We have been told it was due to the price fixing arrangement that was put into effect here during the war, to the poor crop in certain sections of Brazil. to the control that is held over the com- modity in that South Ameri>an coun- try, to the lack of ships and now comes the latest to the effect that there are 300,000 tons on the docks j Rio and Santos, with ships Iyving idle in the harbors because the Brazilian merchants will not send 1 goods to Necw Yorc witncut a :zrantee of wiirfage. This last anl most recenily miven re.son does mot )be witi ths ex |nation offered by the captain of a s (hantman that recent. - brought a huge coffee cargo to this country ex- cept in part. He maintained that there was a great quantity of coffee in Brazil but he didn’t have anything to say about the lack of wharfage here or the ships lying idle in Brazilian harbors. It was his statement that {the best coffee was to be had in plen- ty at ten cents a pound up but the reason for the high prices was the difficulty experienced in getting ships te bring it to this country. “Send lown vour ships and there need be no uch high price churz-d for coffee ‘here. ‘was the statement of this skip- per. i But it Brazil isr’t restricting the isale, has plenty of ‘dlo_ =hips anl wants to do business, it.should un- ! derstand that though New York may be cramped for docking space there are many other excellent harbors along the Atlantic seaboard which can and would be glad to accommo- date such business, and even though there might be an additional transpor- tation charge here to get the coffee to the waréhouses it would not he so great as to put the price out of sight when no shortage exists. It would Le a good time to encourage the devel- opment of other harbors except New York. f l EDITORIAL NOTES. Sunshine is_always welcomed but it gets an extra glad hand just at the present time. The real sport these days is trying to locate the six best cellirs in the neighborhood. Not what one might consider a very auspicious time for urging the exten- sion of trolley lines. I: hasn't been so dry since tha first of Juiy as a ‘ot of people helleved with fear and trembling that it wou'd be. From the way they are closing it looks as if John Barleycorn was the chief suppert of a number of Boston hctels. The man on the corner says: We are rapidly approaching the time when Sunday will be the same as ev- ery other day. An airship of the airplane type has heen provided for an antartic expe- dition, but thie is the easiest part of the undertaking. ‘With mothers-in-law following the brides who have been brought to this country by our soldiers, it/ is time to leok out for squalls. ‘With the farms providing cider and buttermiliy,_ the country is geoing to have great-attractions for those seek- ing alcoheiic rations. Having been made {ll by his enter- tainment in London Field Marshal Haig will think worse of social affairs [ comfortable. than General Sherman did of war. Svthin variety of weather has gratuitously furnished not a few cellars with an addition to the wet stuff aiready stored there, but iL is not the kind that iy kept on the spelves. The St. He took advantage of her momentary excitement to possess hi of her hand again. help asking me—" “That’s all right, kid, just so I know. —Chicago News. and gas experts estimate that, cents per 1000 cubic feet, the ol Gleaned irom Foreign Ex-. changes Had Goethe's conception of German unity, sketched roughly at Weimar in 1828, Tound a lodgement in Bismarkian brains, history might have been writ- ing a different chapter, and no nation- al essembly would have been neces- sary today. For Goethe's idea was that Berlin and Vienna, as exclusive centers of influence, formed a peril to culture. He would have had freedom to move at will through the 36 states without having his traveling chest opened. Dol- lars and groschen should be of equal value everywhere. There should be no frontiers and no talk of inland and outland among the German states. His idea in short, was tl Leagueof Nations, high roads and railroads—then thing of the future—he put in the front place as empire-making mate- rial. The Mailed Fist he does not mention. Houthulst Forest, in the shell-pock- ed recesses, of which President Wil- son and his party halted for lunch during their visit to the Flanders bat- tlefields, had an evil reputation during the years of war. Situated on a dom- inating ridge, it overlooked a wilder- ness of mud and water-logzed swamp. and was approchable only by means of a tortuous duck-board track. Railway street, as this track was named, was the longest wooden road | on the western front. Seven miles it ran from Boesinghe Station to Pass- chendaele, and, as the cnemy’s guns had been registered on every section. 1t became the best-hated stretch of country in Flanders. Where the road crossed the canal a mnotice board had the grim wordin “To Houlthulst— and Hell” The law, which defines “youth” so mere consistent about the term “person.” When recently the Royal Astronomical Society decided to admit women as Fellows the Council found that, under their charter, it was impossible to do so. Those eligible for election were described in the so- ciety's byv-laws as “Dperso: gal opimon ‘was obtained to the effect that a “person’ wns strictly of the maseuline sex. i o the society had to get its charter altered to make it clear that. so far as astronomers were concered, there were male and female “persons,” and not until this was done was it possible to grant the honor of fellowship to the clever women astronomers who had worthily earned that distinetion. Mr. Bertram McKennal, who de- signed the coinage of the present reign, and also the new <£1 pound currency note, has been entrusted with the execution of the memortal to mem- bers of both houses of parliament who fell in the war. The memorial will take the form of a group of statuary. the central figure being Eternity holding the roll of honor in her hands, and other figures will inlude the pa- tron saints of the countries forming the United Kingdom. The sculptor is one of Australia’s most distinguished sons, and was the first Colonial to be elected an Asso- ciate of the Royal Academy. Mr. A. G. G. Liddell, who is retiring from the House of Lords, where he has served many chanceliors _ from Lord Halsbury onwards, is a strikingly handseme man, as may be seen from the sketch of his head made by Sir E. Poynter. Oddly enough, he was sometimes A Real Hair Saver and Beautifier Found at Last—Shows Results Once or Nothing to Pay If your hair is thinning out, prema- turely gray, brittle, lifeless, full of dandruff and your head itches like mad, quick action must be taken to save vour hair. Don’t wait until the hair root is dead, for them nothing can prevent baldness. Get from Lee & Osgood Co., or any good drugsist today a package of Pa- risian Sage—it doesn’t cost much and there's nothing else you could use that's so simple, safe and effective. You will surely be delighted with the first application. Your hair will seem muck more abundant and ra- diant with life and beauty—all itching ceases and your lel.\p feels cool and at cause it is delicately perfumed, does not color or streak the hand, and keeps it lustrous, soft and fluffy. Be sure you get the genuine Pari- -ua“ Saze ‘(»?n-uux 's) for this is guar- an to give perf tion or nothing to pay. of gas a day. says the mistaken for Parnell. Once, in London | Syndicate. during the O'Shea affair, an Irishman | o came up shook him by the hand and assured him that Ireland was with him. And on another occasion, when he had been walking on the Terrace at Westminster he noted specula- tions in the press as to what schemes “Parnell” had been weaving during this solitary pacing. A site has been found in St. Mar- tin's-place, facing the entrance to the National Portrait Gallery, for Sir George Frampton's memorial to Nurse Cavel. The memorial takes the form of\ a staute of the heroic nurse in Italian marble, surrounded by groups of statuary symbolical of the stronger nations protecting the weaker nations. Sir George Frampton is superintend- ing the completion of the memorial in Cornwall, and it is expected that the work of erecting it in London will be Alberta. up its riches for future use, but plans sky-high. cently sent out H. L. Williams, trol. ‘W. A. Frazer, well on its wild career. ty thirty years ago, he gas. bic feet every twenty-four hours. Oil at 10 spendthrift wastes about $400 worth Inter-Ocean This well is located in the famous tar sands region of northern The Department of the In- terior has made half a dozen efforts to place a cap upon the well and bottle e gusher has defied the Canadian gov- ernment and blown all its caps and The department re- o ‘Edmonton with instructions to do gny- thing possible to bring it under con- the well-known" Can- adian novelest and author, started the ‘While pros- pecting for oil in the Athabasca coun- accidently struck this vast reservoir of natural The gas comes hissing out of the bore with such cyclonic fury and in such tremendous quantities, that it the coal land and non-eoal land in the which, when the field is made aces- sible.. will be used as locomotive fuel on the railroad, for generating power and for thawing at the gold mines, as domestic fuel in the region, and as fuel on the steamboats that ply on field by sections, contains detailed maps showing the areas of coal-bear- ing rocks, and gives detailed state- ments of the conditions of mining and transporation. a commenced in a few weeks. Its trans- port to London presents a considera- ble problem, for the total weight is in the region of 170 toms. “1 wonder,” sighed Goethe at Wei- mar, “what Germany will be like a century hence!” The century is up, and the stock-taking is now possible at Weimer itself. Goethe's despondency was due to his estimate of the physical and intellect- ual shoricomings of the German peo- ple. His friend Eckermann sugzested that a second Redeemer was needed to remove the “monstrous oppressiveness of the present state of things.” The poet did not agree. Germans did not need anvthing so great. “If,” he said, “we could only alter the Germans after the model of the Knglish; if we could only have less philosophy and more power of action, we misht) obtain a good share of redemption Parents on the look-out for careers for their sons must find the newspaper advertisement columns _ instructive reading just now. An outstanding fea- ture is that many of the “brainy” jobs appear to have been hopelessly out- | disianced in the general movement Ior! MARIE DRESSLER in T A GREAT FEATURE Perils of Thunder Mountain TENTH EPISODE SUNSHINE COMEDY With MACK SWAIN in “MONEY TALKS” KINOGRAM WEEKLY DANCING AND FEATURE PICTURES EACH PLEASANT NIGHT AT THE Majestic Roof Children Know How To Get Hungry They run in the open and work up a big natural appetite that only real food will satisfy. Ten times a day they want bread and butter. Ten times a day it is good for them if the bread is made as ours is—wholesome and pure. There is no food equal to the home-made loaf made of the same plain food products you use in your own kitchen. — thoroughly fermented with Compressed Yeast to make it di- gestible and nourishing. —thoroughly baked to a golden brown to make it appetizing. Don’t bother to bake at home. THE LOAF MADE FOR CHILDREN A. E. ANDREWS R S e AUDITORIUM STEP OUT Don’t follow the cowpath this Summer —the rut of heavy, styleless clothes. Stride out along the highway of clever, comfortable fashions. Wear NASCD-NNOO! gfiond Summgtgor Mg The topic of tropical clothes is never rightly discussed without mention of the superb light materials, the suave designs, the flawless fit of “KEEP- KOOL.” Our stock is endless in range and satis- faction. J. C. MACPHERSON QUALITY CORNER Opposite Chelsea Savings Bank The Steamer Nelseco II Will Make Sunday Excursion to Ocean Beach every Sun- day during the season, leaving the Railroad dock at foot of Market Street, at 10:30 A. M, and arriving at the Beach at 12 o’clock. Returning leave Beach at 5 o’clock and reach Norwich at 6:30. This is a brand new boat with Deisz] Engine and ample accommodations for 600 passengers. FARE 40c EACH WAY.