The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 9, 1914, Page 8

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. ; be i i pa et “: - : ~ , § THE SEATTLE STAR 34 rn | aa cities on the Mississipp! and ports! but the worst is over, and they're T i of in the Hay of Fund steppin’ out into the sum—out into] : } h G t Another spring came, and then|the sun e ues the early summer the first of earned me ‘ 1 nd - i > s June; and then the end fell sud ant ye i re That Tarried oll RR AB ot goer ad me ’ } the house of Brennan one bright I owe thim for t 1 The Vagabond and Dreamer, Seeeaee he iat Ie tan tani al hOwe thee ce ! . ! Who Heard the Call of uoyant ' a ands a Hie » : ' oO BY RALPH N, FARIS AR Manhood canvas bag io ql po tmen wr Bye Cae ; I - ' aor 7 Twenty-Four Year-Old Train Bandit = ormen tse, and in his eyes was a| you two | y Awaiting Death San Que By Sir Gilbert Pork r light of humor and oakernonn and own, and 1 fo, | of the open door and| “How d'ye an to dott - No. 3 | ; ent As he did so a figure came | that ee Fam twee | (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper slowly from the other room, bent Well, first, I'll be wett . : age : mate,” and Enterprise Association) and feeble and gray-hatred, At in any bus that ‘ ‘ ee wae > thet f sight of the bearded stranger the | you're filled out again » { falling, but t M . ; slow 8 A soft rain was falling, but, sew rd ete Rigg in a a lite Lege Bags gl de die mabe rot Ned : : 1 ur . ton the at » of a maple, whieh Pe . the sme River aha se Ba le gr pel Bee gr depen « bewildered. and troubled, and then spirit & ht | to exiate gsr algae Puente pare of She eee we with a moan of Joy he stumbled for-| “Norah's a fine woman—oh, the see Alscouraxe “y firewood, the singer took no cies es snd finest To thi that ‘ ‘ ‘ That was wy i % . His leather met, - Sepa Terry—Terry—Terry, me own|I've come into sich a far k r 1 A reetly respon j tor him by one whore eyes were Ot pe sl pio ANG wate eked b Medicine lfe von orp> gy Aol re 2 gor SO fact that today San Quer not so bright as those of Rosleer Tet utronit crate ua boat tae i've f .| don’t y ‘ shall either get a new ¢ « heavier storm ¢ at th 1 and vin i tema eens, ond; booed} bande on @ prisat a inte ia i 4 swing at the end of a rope fag was turned to the south oD eadeac ties woidaat tat tee fia: sah fine’ ne ik - poee ht : Dad helped me to borrow $150 whence the spring semed to come 7 ER art hogy yi gta dm a Be from the bank face a man, a young w-let Thy servant 4 t in ota blasted But : " T bought a horse and wagon and . k eyed man De ; ce, according to W he to choke bac O Ve M 3. With a few dollars left, got my window of the house be: added, Then, after an instant foMat ‘ ti a firat stock of ve nd t. It was the Young Doctor who nald Let me break it to her Nolan sat in the sun ' at and began se! Bakers | had lately come ¢ miptiger your mother, Terry. Oh, God, be front of the) with Kid ree ‘ field, Cal. from How apy yea you say praised! ‘Tis just in time you've elf fight stop police 1 Tk was good “ | asked of & woman standing me, for you'll set things right h her hand in| the 13th : ieee, even in & amall way him, and nodd towa Totes Tere any” tak Chea jes iy I took a lot of pride eing singe But the quick ears of oe had hal WV Ate FOR TIRED honest about smal nd Fifteen years, doctor heard; the ears that had le ned #0 a ” we footed It he tes t t AND DETERMINED UPON MY He's no relation long had grown acute beyond all the gras KO Kreen when t ; x , houses would sa [have no | FIRST TRAIN HOLDUP None. He's Irish and we're omc gens ak =a char a ed PR i midancd id change; I'll pay you ¢ rrow I decided to talk to somebody that’s all R | voice of the old worlan calling from hom: was the guest that se why, I was glad to trust t! who knew something about the How did he come to plant him: | the! betioce tear eS T was paying cash f ery- | holdup game or read papers | self on you | Terry, my son—oh, my son, my What t you've sineth’, Me-| Or eee pasnidir Seek. ewetion thing and was proud of : and find out how other bar Well,, you mee, doctor, It wan} own son lan?” naid Norah's voice behind him. |! splat vey et Rape life and my new-found honest pull Jobs before I att pourin’ wet, that day, 15 years ago, | A moment later her arma wer Oh, just little anth of the | > $y pin of ealiohéen ce benious be" Ded was happy and mother ed to rob & train an’ he just stepped in out o th round him, drawing him close ef | happiness t's coming to 0 pain 8 CORRS, % iy eried for jo It was great Kh ne evening | walked down rain arms were round him, for thus Norah, dear But he winked slyly Mpg * But in just three months those | to the Union station in Kansas The Young Doctor turned and ymuch had Norah and Nolan d to himself what alls “Pn pay yor people | Cit , with an {dle curiae , 100 At her closely, reflectively. | cee wah & stseo te 3 Gees (The End.) your feet, oF had me broke pusiness. { pass the gate. | Was she mocking him, trying to be Gade th Ga’ leauerni. ast’ Gren de tne te wh under « The “honest” people wouldn't het. 1 aid humorous, with this dismal tragedy | serong wer Gen *'he ont ot tat “Eine ne #uD : y , : 1st pulling out | behind & darkened roor 2 thei nna gre aaa heilesiat Lalo abinane paeabbeed th toh you've tried an cei. Wiheieetd ‘4 the rear Pullman car door | Where two people lay stricken and | it was, and I came as quick without get- Bild os fain, ove Praying Wan Open man car door | oaten—floteam of fate left to the! “I took the shillin’.” picture of the dark days ahead; of| outa” | ought to have « brains ting relief, wild impulse came over me and | " Iwas hit by that {mpulse to go |SPort of the monstrous sea of paln| “You took the shililn’? You were tho misery and trouble and awful |foula. | | Thine work dean witelios a thalinat. see I hopped a freight—and then it | somewhere, so I swung on, 1 | @2¢ helplessness? in the army everything, end doing all with 8) “i, pa for some one was en-| judges’ foreheads before they pick- | “TZ. > was the beginning of the end didn’t have the faintest {dea of | “How old are yout¥ the Young Satdenly eames Git to beg head bans ge oblgy ge tte baa ON Pg m—the ghont ed the winner in toe-dancing| “TIZ" draws Paloam ere I bi oldir up. 2 o elim | Doctor asked curiously, but with |for the firs@time looked the Young hardship, and the sickening burden | {rink the room-—the ghost ee ore, * kirmess | out all the GES axo, where I be. holding Kup 1 meant to lim | his face turned. toward the bed-| Doctor in. the eyes, and saluted. “I. which m wat tall upon the shoulders eenc ne tell Aad Mure ae et contest at the rend’ iirmees | Oot ous ‘ae ‘: a staurant and dec! oof) and bes . he p eyand of Norah Bren: of the killing ex of dd Fello tar Bulan ‘re |room, where a woman's volce was|was helpin’ hold the pass beyand of Norah Brennan; of th fos ues tte tates ‘ Be nat night dations 4 i toThen 1 went te Detroit, where | | dhint ceca nnere—anywhere— | sobbing softly and @ man's volce|Poshawur whin you was ridin’ the pense, and only Shannon's four dol atv Rig a rarbara Kelley, and *he| which putt up the feet; “Tizn pat to. Detrett, where dato neakia . tis leray mare barebes ‘ound the lars a day to meet It is ! cup. | : ne” a grand: “Tie ; Fetteehe “enn was speaking In gentle wheedling|gray mare barebacked round t sin teint” Le aake ; a ait magical: “12” {a +. lcontracted disease and went to an the Pullmar ‘con aa the viene Bantrim Ridges. There was work I'm goin’ to help,” said Doyle. a pe nea 3 and x. ubhard, we ne Pre will Gate: youl, S00 techie Hot Springs, Ark porter came out on the rear I'm 31," she said with a toas of |doin’ then beyond Peshawur, You're t are you going to do? can take my place, Terry, for I'n: ‘nner ¢ Scotch | You'll never limp or draw up you Atter Hot Springs 1 beat tt to | platform and I pulled my gum |... hea: end by that the Young|a tor now, savin’ & man or two rae them—In there,” he Can take wen “gt eer winner of the Scot ch | tice in pain. Your. shoes woul ty, w > 4 wv vorter and the “c er head nd by ‘ ¢ Young} tor ne yee rs no’ lin’ so w as I might; but danc yntest this afternoon will! 7 é Kansas City, where I got a job tn oe th the ged and the “con Doctor knew beyond: peradventure|here and there; 1 was a soldier answ aa vada Oc kao ot tee fancing y= - ee . preg ar seem tight and your feet will nev zo Eemenrant Vatew dp thelr hands vat }that whe loved the man outside, for|then heipin® save the English pride "Could I earn as much as two hos take thé shift. Turn and|ot Canada and the Uniied States, never hurt or get sore, swollen I still had a hankering to be | ‘The “con” said “Holdup!” and |ihat fue (ave? the man ou Lee ratte feeae Gant 13 wiiaens na'd want pay for? What ff youll ta of Canada and th s ra ee eee ey | tanto inten And what for d'ye ask? Couldn't | from Rosslare to Gravesend © peat-oulter and & sol Yes, ‘twill be all right now,| Best modern outside rooms, 25c| Get a 26 cent box at any drug or Se ee ere eet.) Stag. Brongn with i tthe {78 tell by lookin’ at me teeth? | ‘The Youmg Doctor's eyes opened ut I can nurse. Nolan,” he said with a ¥ urred.|to 50c. Stewart House, 86 West department store, and get instant self again and not trust anybody, train was barely out of the | T4geq’ maliciously | inn dae teow nished and “I'm going to pay for the last fif- |" aint need good care yot,” Nolan | Stewart.—Advertisement | relief Pie ook strictly cash: buatuess the bitte, wad tf clthee of thant | She showed her teeth not un-|inguiring. “You eame from In- teen years’ bed and bread,” he wald a EERE 5 AE SNE RB I worked hard, did the best I the putts, and {f either of those | pleasantly, and she could have no|ricnilien “then--the song you you sure they’l} ° q knew how and saved every cent two chumps had made a grab for | aason to regret doing It. for they “re a it to Mrs. Brennan A negro bus boy working in the | me or even sworn at me, I would fee peg» Rpers 4 Oh the ‘nong—well, can't the, #lad to have me by her. She says { DPF Geaigtatacs so the yrcoricnet wae T Oat ot hot to go through | C¥#® and white and beautiful @ set |truth to,be told in a song, anyhow?" |!t kapes ee from frettin’ too much on ~~ . m . t 4 * you oO about Terry Z About it, but he said I would have | with it, so I marched them |fagc™ as ever woman bad. is he ital peo And 1 suppose Terry was a to look after my own tips thréugh the car ahead of me and | panantiy “ on ef than cuttin’ | Waster.” I watched the negro and caught | went through the passengers who | ©, P4%) int a yoke Maas suit Or etlitia Terie a Terry? Terry was a man, ivry him taking money left by a cus--| shoved Bp before I told them to. | ehat of a girl meppin’ home alc your name—Nolan Doyle?” inch of him. He a good as tomer for me. I got $24 and dropped off the road down by Tralee—steppin name then was Phelan. ¥°U an’ two of you. Wid a head . train as It slowed down for, a : | th * T hit him on the nose and—got | | hffne from school. Faith, 1 hope! Fane your heart ts as young, for there's | | wtiff work band.” block signal. Taking my last cent—$4,1 went | And there's how “the most to your He | ber! |cared for: and, God's love! but the | back will not break nor the hand | go. palsy }. “Your father may get well per-! desert? haps, but it will be slow, and he! put in can't help himself much"-—he nod ‘Six and a suspiciously “I desarted.” “A deserter, THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE j A MAN’S CODE. CHAPTER CL. | the man-made code both Bill Tenney | After Mollie went to bed on the made his wife miserable for yea! ‘understand that both he and ! owed some responsibility to her, and he ‘Was furious with his mother for not paying more attention to her. tentions on them. ! know Bill Ten-! only move one arm, ag@ even that ney would not steal, and both he| may go with the rest—but, there, own eyen, and Harry Symone would protect | we'l! hope for the beat. She has tojone that did any woman from every man but) be lifted often and often, and you/truth . a for you as he can; but.she—your! he was, that man! in our sitting room, Dick, for and ruined the reputations of @|mothereean't make At easy, no ' first time in-his life, seemed to good many girls by showering Ot-| matter how she tries She can ore the Judge. Phelan Fane—ah, now | remem ned the Divil's Own, i You join to a pawnshop, bought a revolver, | daring train robbery since the | gianced toward the bellroom door. land went ~—— with Lord Harry the first | ever owned in my life, days of Jesse James” came about. | through which came only the man’s ur colonel?” a | voice now, pleading and kind | "And Captain Doyle was adju- | “There's a dark road ahead, 1) tant, sir | know,” she said. “But ‘tis meown| “Why did you change your | that I'll work for, and that must be| name?” He looked at the other too! half—sivin was me and I was the only and if I'd spoke the “Your mother, Dick, takes the himeelf.” jean't do it alone. Besides, it's a And your friend?" Wrong angle always. She finds To tell the truth, Margie, I can't/night and day business. Is there “Shure, how. could they hang him, fault with Mollie for the simplest see where Harry has been so awful,” |no sister, or aunt, or cousin—?" whin the evidence was gone away Hittle outbursts of youth and she As Dick said this | shuddered, for! “There's no one at all, at all, of the wide world—fiyin’ and Seems to feel that the girl should | saw the awful possibilities of his! women folk. We were five—father , and fiyin’ twinty thousand Rave the mature judgment of a doing the same thing if the occa-|and mother, the two b'ys, and away? ‘Woman of forty. sion arose. meself, Terry, he’s gone this fifteen Aren't you afraid to tell me this? “Th thing that Mollie did was “You must remember that the|years. Left us one day after a The arm of the law ts long Just a girlish escapade; nothing) Young woman who {a the mother of shindy—father’d eon drinkin’, an’ years do not count when crime's Very wrong about it. The whole trouble was in the fact that she | Harry Symone’s children could nev-|he laid hands on Terry, and Terry / been done er have hoped to have lived in com-|flew off Mke a colt with the bars and on The law goes on and on no matter how far you be Was allowed to co her own sweet|fort and refinement with which|down. Ah, Lord, Lord, he was the flyin’.” way, with no advice on the subject.| Harry surrounded her in any other! pick o’ the posy, wild as he was Hush! Arrah—hush! I'd never _q it is as perfectly natural for girls | 4 Instead of making her lose | And cruel, too, he was tn goin’ for be thinkin’ that one from Inniskillen | ® to want 6 see and do things as it her self-respect and the respect of | him and her”’-—a hand flung’toward would betray me. D'ye mind the 4s for boys, and | am sure, Dick, those about her he raised it. She|the bedroom door—“was niver the day twinty-two years ago 1 filled y'r dear, that you did not always tell; Was known as a very respectable | same after Terry wint basket with fish y’ didn’t catch your mother and father the whole | wife whose husband was a traveling| Her eyes filled with tears, which y'rself? And ‘twas not asy fishin truth about you piccadillos. Now| ™4n, and her life, although it end-|she dashed away, and her face er. Betray me! Shure, wan human nature !s quite as rampant’) ¢4 early, was happier because Harry | turned to the man without. “Twas th mn kin by Rosleen Den in the female sex as in the male, bad entered into it.” & week after Terry wint, he came. nis—ts it that y'd have me think? ‘and the only way to teach a girl to Quite a George Bernard Shaw|He'd seen Terry down by the new Rosleen De do the right thing is to treat her dit of philosophy. One could make | railway, and they'd been drinkin’) Doctor s looked ‘like a human being—show her 4 story out of it as interes as |together, and whin he stepped in A r where she is wrong in her ideas of |‘Mrs. Warren's Profession, if one|Out o” the rain, ‘twas Ike a link life. had the gift of tongue possessed by | With Terry, for he'd seen him since then “You can't command and expect|the brilliant Irishman,” I {nter-|¥¢ bad, and—" “Oh, twenty-« to be obeyed just because you have | Tupted I know, my dear Dick,| Suddenly she opened the front word of her Said it. This is something I found! that, according to man's code, only |400r and put her head out. Michael Kelly out early in my school-teaching|* Woman who breaks the seventh | ‘Come in ont o° the rain, Nolan,” fame—wint to Career. lcommandment and the man who|She sald sharply - But the day “The sooner you teach a child to| breaks the sixth are really sinners | olan Doyle's his name ried I le—what does he 1] what he did not fellow's disereditable to be thrown into outer darkness. As though ob (To Be Continued Monday.) OLDEN ) i=: Feason the sooner you will be able to make them see the right thing to do and the right way to d- it “Well, my dear,” said Dick, “I Suess you and I will have to look Sfter Mollie more in the future.” “We won't need to look af the fame needed no special revelation It was a common knowle he | was a loafer, a vagrant, and a pau 1Prs in a land of work and action. ried?” : As Nolan De breaking off Have you heard of Ros! how many abruptly, nnis!” The Young at him = queerly moment, and then en years ag me years, and niv r Shure, she wint with life and wid him. a lad of the altar that Clancy was mar livious of the other's presence he began to sing again Did you see her with her hand in mine that day that Clancy mar »yle ceased singing. and sank , : . “Shure, there's the garden stuff back upon the stump, whispering to oe Molise Py yO alge |to be pulled, and there's food to be himself, the Young. Doctor came Siltuats to:l00k utter herself What jgot in ie mo APP Meo ad * me chee i him and put # hand on his f k housand people is a “city” in the| shoulder. ne ciple sy Ag eka — “Seattle's Beauty Spot” ;West—“and there's prairfe-hens to| “You needn't have any fear, man, 4 nel agi AbD iedaadlnad Pri be shot, and fish to be caught, and|though Lord Harry Nolan was = Barend Bove she valuce ours, rize Two-Step and all that, doctor dear my uncle, and is still alive; and a] ake a rea “Four dollars a day won't be! Adjutant Doyle is now commanding Pe anion of Molile, and, in doing || Sunday, May 17. Cash || enough.” He glanced toward the|the troops In Canndeche wee onie aw this, dear, th beauty and sweetness ‘ : bedroom door again. You'll need fifty miles from here last week. I'll and purity of girlish ideals and Prizes. help for the sick room and for the mot give you away, But in return dreams must not be tarnished. To Daan i‘ sees Sunday || housework, and help out here is Tis a go0d name you've taken tell you the truth, 1 would not care eReing every unday “ Hl t not care oo ae ayge" | expensive of two unwilling godfathers, as fine to see Moilie with either Harry sy-|| afternoon and evening, rain “I'll do it meself, or die,” she re-|men as ever gave glory to Ireland mone or Hill Tenney. Neither would 1 care ‘to have her in the or shine. Also Memorial sponded stubbornly Day, July 4 and Labor Day. A few moments later the Young We've been palaverin’ of Innis ah, sure he had a head!” Ve way these be at tas Doyle, done, ry well. Settle it your own But if you are going to nurse} old people: avy jo! then 1 warn you ‘twill a dismal and weary en to me, Nolan and hearken hard to what I| say, and take note of what's to be} and how it's to be done, and—* | And {ft was so. Wh | would, Nolan Doyle laid himself out How many vente a4 oe to pay for the bed and bread he had had o } Al : ded toward the other room—"but | time. ~ (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper and Harry Symone have done noth-| tj» 4 kind man, and—" friend in the same flatment, and he|ot ® ; Enterprise Association.) ing very terrible. Tenney has only) well, he will make it as easy! killed a maa—oh, a damned yillian 894 ¢ His open As ho said he ver fifteen years, the time, day and night, the 1 desarted, because I had a| ™4n-nurse, with the fine gentleness : o woman and bis strong arms oaxing volee, contested Inch And V'd futher PY inch the advance of disease and | dewart than sweat false upon the death, ceaselessly vigilant, automat- For, God | !ally py 1 saw the man killed wid |fetful, comprehensive, thinking of} uty sheriff, is sore | life dived in the} SY of any) ine, concentrated, self-for idie without long, alr, * kind had given him a store of en ergy and a reservoir of strength on which ishing of cor he now drew, steadily dimin the supply. There was talk, irae, at Askatoon at first ugly, unstinted talk; for there were days and days when Shannon was away atid Nolan Doyle and Norah Bren-} nan Ww for th Anoth with his sleigh or his wagons, ere alone in the house, save © two bedridden peor er; and the talk became scandal, which at leagt materialized in the definite proposaj of tar-and-| feathers for Nolan Doyle. It was then that the Young Doc tor, who had a gift for acting at the right time—not by any means a! rare thing in his race—went out upon the warpath. First he went to the Rev. Ebenezer Groc Methodist minister in whose “par lor’ much sanctimonious scandal had n brewed, and insisted that he s#he "| of sha The shaded alyzed child that pillows. woman put gently back on her bed. whispering of feal Ne becom the s¢ ‘girl on the other side of the bed with which anything else ould come out to “the me" and learn the truth came to the door of the d wick room at a moment when house woman in his arms like a and a very heavy child at and Norah was freshening the The pious sky-pilot saw the blessings on lan, how thin and worn it had e!—met the dark e; with vt slumbering fires, saw the. that look of single purpose sick-bed watching, more than gives to the faces of and | al dear,” heard the whims-| « replies of the man-nurse, saw | the fac Her ferer fashioned Nolan Doyle was holding the par-| spring, elastic band or what doing and to be perfec Think all those who fight death and decay for! qpeotutely others, entered a new understanding of hu-| man nature . and into his lean soul there the first elimpge of a real revelation of humanity In t sald t “Tve your flock, I'm thinkin’. them. of other room Nolan the bewildered had letters—from he ° Doyle some of Here's wan Read it. It come this) wht is differ tion f preacher: | vice purp) rupture hulling Rupture Lock hold the otly at all thm and per «, under conditions tly and ortable flesh bands to no leg straps of Schuiling KR in all parts o ‘Your Rupture Lock WONDERFUL INVENTION | FREE TRIAL IS OFFERED REPLACES TRUSS the Rupture Now Supported and Actually Cured | Now Is the Time—Here Is Your Chan-e to Without Use of Old-Fashioned, Ill-Fitting Steel Spring or Elastic Harness. ws for you, for every it! Now you can tak flesh-binding. fitting, ever-s lex strap harness felt like times be READ THESE WORDS The following are extracts from a few of hundre imilar Sufte-ed 70 Veors TO EVERY SUFFERER Discard Your Truss Forever and CURE Your Rupture. I ny or taking a Np © yourself b in you there {sj pe with= tters that have been recetved by The h ~ the country fectly while you o Cured tn @ mths about your duties, while th t * ® uw ne oe you. walk, run, strain, bend, about In any way you like and that it never slips. The Schulling Rupture Lock Can't slip, Can't bind, Can't pinch, You will feel like shout- ing, with Joy before You've worn ‘it one day. Read the statements the center of th twist or mov nes 4 it for et@ht months DARD B DICKERSON Now We the wore? kind of ouble her in fa runes without success Was | article from persons who Scho et It ewred my ruptures In have tested it. The re: a8 a ¥ sults they describe are a wonderful. BONY One Thet Cave Reet tothe came time jooking for com: FREE Write’ this very 4 for the Schuiling Bo “How to Cure Rupture" supnort and a wer all who are | wee Remarkable Case red me entirely. The ruptured opening two Angers into It DIENL | killen and of you that’s of no ac-|mornin’.” a wee fe,,lare I a tS te company in which they are wel Ballard Beach or Fremont-Bal. ||Doctor was out in the rain, now|count—for is a man of any speventl The preacher read a Tetigr of af to make vou feel bare | And A niwe Reson NY RONIE CROSS a solentific work im yl lard cars. Transfer to Loyal || diminishing to a fine mist, making| that Jives on bread he doesn't earn, | dozen nes which Drowkat OB boot fee he Pntirety Curea everyday language, tells § I can’t understand, Margie, why |} Vries ite his to Nolan Doyle. Still the! and doesn’t own?” His Votce grew|of shame to his fat face, . He ‘was! constructed nme Rupture Tock sbavt three months age. | ing all about this aw a you have it in for those two men voice kept dreaming of Inniskillen | stern. “I'm ashamed of you, Nolan|not wholly a hypocrite; he had al press direct! Nie are re Into the affitetion, the modert They are not bad fellow ; bap wertieeas oF mt Cow | far away and all that was done and Doyle, 1 thought you a fine fellow|good heart and an illised com.| CMake the ruptured ’ ; RAAB: 8 mekned Of cure ania £ Yes, | know that, according to Jieft undone by Rosleen over beyond the seas, when you. selence: Lock ler : , ly describing the Senay 8 Why not go back to Inniskilien, filled my baxket with fish, and| The Sunday follewing, having! tific and ithat It ie impons Thout | i2& Rupture Lock. With it will be sent full partiiam z where you'd have # chance of seein’ when you beat them all, tossin’ the! Judiciously set the ramor flying that| °Us®: rinvented for the support and | Ps Of the Free ‘Petal Offer, the acceptance of Whim her? Do you expect her to come stone in Willam Conner'’s yard he would preach a sp | onde. will enable you to learn by actual experien f a ARE YOU GOING FISHING to you?” said the Young Doctor You've lived on Larry Brennan |on a special subject of local impor Experien of the moat severe and ag wonders (his modern selentific device is acco * | ae ee ee pl for ray and his family e since you} tance, he toate a congregation that) eravate puld be found has proved that ing. my man. You'd not be a rara avis| stepped in out of the rain fifteen| filled the church to its doord; and| the Sehull re Lock not only holds the rupture Fats. ees Re i TOMORROW? Liiuegs iad nce cae a tack a ioe eae Wheb He.atdod up to preach, 1¢ waa) with soothing firmness and DerThct tomer ae nd aus thee de eeatil, the compen beim We specialize in box lunches, for fish- and you're not Peputer.” ‘You've been living in a dream; |so still that only the roaring ot MeO btn \cuelted ease tundrana’ wheres have i BO SHS PRATOBE ORS NOS card. ; . “T'd be what-T was before, and|come out of it. You've moved from|fire in the huge stove could be| tsea it ant it des bleasing long touked and ae Seip on autinde of all kinds, See ue lit wasn't a ratea¥ie ayther,” sald|olghtcen to near forty years of age|heard--typioal of the flame of the| Lestod tor bs" the canta: wicinsted SCHUILING RUPTURE INSTITUTE about that picnic lunch, |Nolan, still without looking up, since you joined the Divil's Own.| spirit, as he very obviously said, | Bo e 3 W. Market St., Indianapolis, Lad. |though the Young Doctor now stood | There's no going back. ‘There's sor-| when he gave out his text, which| Send Th Today | jt 8m cuer Rend: me sian a a sg hia H | d L h t by Y | mined to © ‘i Re 3 day trial offer and also free b ollywoo: unc Jalmost in front of him row here in the little house, There's! was: “Judge not, that ye be not| - , How to Cure Ruptur | “And what were you before|terrible sickness. Mra. Brennan ts! judged.” the wonders of this: Rupture Lock to all 212 PIKE ST. then?” asked the Young Doctor paralyzed, and the poor old man— The sermon was very fally re-| Write to mem this y Name “As good @ man as anny—barrin I know” Shure, I know yrted in the local papers, and the READ, “The Place That Made Pike St. Famous” ne, an’ he was a lad of Ife and| “Is what yon mean|story he had told was of such an| ot aan, wee ts hetide bart caueises bsp ame to do, Doyle e Young Doctor in-| unusual nature that the sensational | { 1 long enough State “What did you do fora living?” |terrupted. ‘Then he hastily drew a!parts of it. Were copled in paver! of your life awalts you. ieee

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