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THE SEATTLE STAR ‘ SYNOPSIS OF PREV CHAPTERS /aunt to Hargreave's daughter.” ! There was no use denying It; the| when he sensed the petulance in; her heart bursting with the miner At the s ” 1 ne Mea “wt*tne| “She sald something to me about world had suddenly turned at alher voice, his shoulders sank of the thought that she wa ! ar 1 of » milrecelo: he ot the : ' 4 t - { oulde ¢ 6 ry of betilinnt thieves Known ae the that the other night. You never new angle, presenting a new face, |spondently and he sighed deeply If| instead of glad. Over bis should ser t | Hundred, lives the life of @ ree know where you're at in this world, 4 roseate Vision, It rather subdued | silently she sent a glancé about the room , . ght enters ' | te i ' table, some ror ¢ Trond do you | his easy banter At quarter to & Florence, betng | The as & sofa, & tH y A there comes os “ eg i “face with the gangs leader,| Tho German pancake, the toast, “What news?’ she asked alono for @ minute, set fire to a ri, nnd an enormous clock, th during whiten | ‘B® Coftee disappeared, ant the re None,” rather despondently, “I'm| vell end stuffed it down the reg of which was — Why, a , t eit ont -al FI porter passed his cigars. | me ay other sorry. | had hoped by this time | ister hands hopelessly tangled. WHY: wt a wit IEE vtaraves ob | “The president visite town today thie, YOU GT A CHANCH TO WIN to get somewhere. But it appears! “Jones,” whe called excitedly, “1|#e2 & moment he shou Phas Some . d feat Riverdale home and lays plane for! and I'm off to wateh the show, | that I can't get any further than | gmeit something burning! such details disturbed bi _ J » , P bY Te he airie’ schest in New |SuppOwe T'll have to Interview him this house. ' chanced to look into the) ot 8 out of th pot . about the tariff and all that rot. She did not ask him what he! 4° dashed into the room, § mirror. In it she saw sey) Oe om whict ‘ Banain When you start on a new book let! meant by that | sniffed, and dashed out again, head. faces, all masked, ‘These men = om which y bad com . me know and I'll bo your press) Shall I play something for you?” ing for the cellar door, His first) wors peering at her through the is door nme 6 surprised agent.” hk she said thought was naturally that the d6¥-| nai¢ closed door behind her men heard the key ¢ k. r e Yr of the Wet , . |ils incarnate had wet fire to the ey wee eturn home ar 8 was free. But she was no hat's a bargain | ter in published 4 Please | | : SOR: See ees longer a child Thanks for the breakfast.” | jer in published tn He drew a chair beside the piano |house. When he returned, having,| pring me the money,” went on tho longer a child, ir Sear —ahe. Braine picked up his newspaper, | whieh of the many solu- | and watched her fingers, white an|f Course, discovered no fire, be) wretch who dared to perpetrate) (To Ii Bi Breave was known to have drawn that day | gmoked and read, He smoked, yes, Nothing of « Mterary . ivory keys, flutter up and down | found Florence gone, He rust such mockery It is all that — gene, Then some one ey ney but he only pretended to read, Tho onthind board. She played Chopin for| {nto the hall, Her hat was missing.| stands between me and death | had been punctured am young fool was clever, but no man him. Mendelssohn, Grieg, and|He made for the hall door with a ion she knew! The insistent is infallible, He had not the least) Chaminade; and she pla them | speed which seemed incredible to|gaiy warnings came home to her suspicion; be saw only the news fn a surprisingly scholarly fashion,|the bewildered Susan's eyes, Our inderstood now, She had de He had expected the usual achool-|{nto the street, up and down which into the spider's paper story. Still, In some manner vatels wal fhe might stumble upon the truth, wit! appear te | «irl chotoe and execution; Titania,| he looked, Far away he dincovered t. But inet of terror, an ex }and it would be just well to Ue ~* a Le ° Gees. 3 the Moonlight Sonata (which not|@ dwindling taxicab, The child Was) traordinary calm fell upon her. vn great pianists have| sone Very well, father, 1 wi he | the reporter's hands effectually. half a do; ‘The rancor of early morning had 7 of the winner, | ever played correctly), Monastery| In the house Susan was answer-| get it.” Gently she re been subdued; anger and quick Helis, and the like, He had pre-jing the telephone, talking incoher-| self from those horrible arms i temper never paid in the long run, , pared to make @ martyr of himself; | ently Wait, my ebild, till I see if they | and no one appreciated this fact) inatend, he was distinctly and de-| “Who ts it?” Jones whispered, his| will let you go. may wish to} better than Braine, To put Norton » A Ughtfully entertained | lips white and dry shold you as hostag CHAPTER IV. out of the way temporarily waa Se GclWviname dnae Weeauune “You don't,” he said whimsically,) “The princess * * ° began| When he was gone she tried the th only a wise precaution; {t was not No. 4—What becomes of the ant when she finally stopped, “you! gusan door They were locked. Then The Flat on © ja matter of spite or reprisal Nobody connected elther dire don't, by any chance, know ‘The! Ho took the receiver from her| she crossed over to the window and in He paid the reckoning, left the Maiden's Prayer?” rougnly looked out A leap jfrom the She laughed. “This piece was 6! “foello! Who ts tt?” would till ber ¢ turned her To Floor lrestaurant, and dropped into one ‘ , P latanding joke at school. “Tila tu Olen Perlantt, is Flor lease tow he lamp, wondering if id Mc-|of his clubs for a game of billiards. | candle Florence read the note which |down the corridor, She thrust the | his fn Olga VMerigo 8 Flor-| gaze toward the lamp, won © WGepyright, 1 pie 4 — He drow quite a gallery about the|/had found entrance so strangely |letter into the pocket of her dress,|, "1 Dave never played it. Tt may, | ence there?” The false father returned, d Braine crawled from his uncom-|table. He won easily, racked bis/and mysteriously into her room.|which lay neatly f the | however, be in the music cabinet.| “No, madam. She has fust| ject ~ cue, and sought the apartments of| Her father! He lved, he needed chair at the foot of th then | Would you like to hear it?) mls-| stepped out for a moment, Shall I! “It in all I said. They insist upon fortable loth 4 agra liad his hat the | rincess, her! Alive but in dread peril, and climbed back into the itaeit, | CMevously =a |tell her to call you when sho re-| sending some one. Write down the} Rs were Dr a batr’s breadth he had, What a piece of luck it was that/only she could save him! She |Sho must not tell even Mr. Norton Heaven forbid!" he murmured, | turns?” | directions I gave to you, 1 am very ‘TOOTH FACTS age iraped Tne clever trap laid for|Olga had really married that old/ longed to fly to him at once, then| Was the child spinning a romance | ising his hands "Yeu, please. I want her and| weak | All the whfle the letter burned | ¢ was alive, he had|dotard, Perigoff! He had left hor/and there, How could she wait|over the first young man she had : jusan and Mr. Norton to come to| “Write down the directions your-| By EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. 5. “Thraine was as certain ofa titied widow six months after her|till tomorrow night at $7 Imme-|ever met? In her heart of hearts | s#ainst her heart; and the smile on \teq tomorrow, Good-by.” self, father; you know them better| mineian fact as he was of his own | marriage. But she had had hardly) diately she began to plan how to/the girl did not know her face and the gayety on her! Jong hung up the recelver, sank than L” Since she saw no escape, 705-718 He now knew how to|a kopeck to call her own. ctroumvent the watchful Jones and| Her father! |tongue were forced. “Confide in| into a chair near by and buried his she was determined to keep up the| Last week I wrote on the fitlin a : “ she repeated mentally, “or | face 4 jot teeth, but there was kering Mght In| “Olga, Hargreave is alive. He/the careful Susan, Her father She! She was going to save her father, | 2° 070." # ut ‘ace in his hands. tragic farce no longer A ’ a real Fagan tet warehouse.| was there last night, But some-| slept no more that night | All day long Jones went about | YOU seal my death warrant | “What ts it?” ered Susan, terri-| “I am not your father.” Oo eee tant tee ase ore ‘ancient enemy had been watch-|how he anticipated the raid and| | “My Darling Daughter—I must like an old hound with bis none to| “Why do you shake your head) tieq by the haggardness of his face still with | tists today whe “Bo I see,” she replied, really qualified . fore than|had the police in waiting. The)#ee you. Come at 8 o'clock tomor-|the wind. There was something in| !ike that?” he asked 3 “She's gone! My God, those the amazing ¢ to put in real tantial gold ttl Oy oa ice sastting | question a has he fooled ust Did |row night to 78 Grove at, third|the air, but he could not tell what Did I shake my head?” Heri wretches have got her! They've! B: , in the other room, shook | fo!) Ciliown | a ~ ler were in collusion, In the|he take that million or did he hide|floor. Confide in no one, or you it was. Somehow or other, no mat- heart fluttered wildly, “I was not/ got her!” his 1 eavag ther and|some easier, w es tittian or al of lights at the end of the/|{t? There is one thing left; to get seal my death warrant |ter which room Florence went into, | conscious of it Florence was whirled away at daughter; the same in the| geld or elain crown, sooner he had caught the profile | that girl. No matter where Har- Your unhappy , |there was Jonos within earshot. And Are you going to keep Your)top speed. Her father! She was\nerves, Could they bend her? than labor to insert « gold filling the reporter. Here was a dan-| grea hidden, the knowledge ¢ FATHER.” |she dared not show the least im-| Promise? oe actually on the way to her father,| Would they have to break her? He| poy cue ao mu Who mest be watched will bring} What child would refuse to obey|patience or restivenoss. It was a| “What promise whom she had always loved in|did not wish to injure her bodily,| @stractiss Teeth and Making Plates, man, & summons like this? large order for so young a girl, but| “Never to leave this house with-| dreams, yet never seen |but « million was always a million, | «sts were extracting wit ieee, Same “No more blind alleys. re A Nght tap on the door started | she filled It. jout Jones or myself being with) Number 78 Grove street was not|and there was revenge which was| ood and bad, and making’ false “What's on your mind?” er. ral She rather expected that the re. you ‘ vy, | 4M attractive place, but when she| worth more to him than the money | ‘e*th for the patient. The alleges, “She has never seen her father.|. “I# anything the matter?” asked | porter would appear some time dur I couldn't 1¢ I wanted to. I'l arrived she was too highly keyed to |{tself. He listened, motioning to| A°.tst# then, as today, pimced @ an good luck neager value o: 7 eoth, Tmore serious than a cold|Sho confessed to me that she has| ‘he mild voice of Jones. ing the afternoon; and sure enough|wager Jones is out there in the rote of its sordidness, She | the others to be silent | Today the oct Gentit weves aa i “No. I got up to get a drink ofjhe did. He could no more resist} ball this minute. I know ft is al) ow . ” | tract tooth if 1 ‘and a galling disappolntment./not even seen a photograph of| .. 00, line Ganon t6 P= oe U|was rather out of breath when she Write the directions,” com & tooth If it can be saved and i / ‘ : k to herifor my sake. But {t bothers me. ee - made to do the service of masticae ‘crawled alons the top of the him, — heard his focteteps die away than. be could restet Drea thine Sonce wen indend {nthe hail: eq |feached the door of the third flat.|manded the scoundred, who had| tion, ae , ex, sending his dark-ec-| ‘There was a long pause. She She knocked timidly. The door wa: arded the broken man style. | s rand thither.) “Do you understand me?’ she icant a : ed. as her father; a message handed * * # * F gtglay i loo bi =| instantly opened by a man who wor know of no hidden money | IS THIS FA }@ black mask. She would have “Then your father dies this night” | * * to her tn secret; dire misfortune if 5 she whispers a word to any one; that her father’s life hangs upon the secrecy; she m" confide io jturned then and there and flown Grange put a whistle to his lips no one, least of all Jones, the but- sked. By the Lord Harry, I do! You've |a head on you worth two of mine. The very simplicity of the idea wil! win out for us. Some one to pose | but for the swift picture she had of | “Sign, write!” | ting of teeth by ja Weil dressed man at a table. Ho, “I refuse!” with ‘the old tus lay with bis head upon his arma, “Once more. The moment I blow/| took out tooth, jawbon “Father!” she whispered. this whistle the men in the other | fhectatist Tho man raised his careworn|room will understand that your|twenty-five years |fa0e: #0 very well done that only father is to die. Be wise. Money| of a specialist, “we menu 't the closest scrutiny would have be-|is nothing; life is everything.” | Practitioner devotes ail his time an: traynd the paste of the theatre. Ho| “I refuse!” Even as sho had) {i?47 to & particular branch of den rose and staggered toward her with | known this vile creature to be aa| wor! . It all depends upon how the : sag f outstretched arms. But the moment | impostor so she knew that he lied,| years letter gets to er. Bved tn Che-oven- ay Jim is lost! they closed about her Florence ex-|that her father was still free. {houses try, she probably sleeps with her et despair not! A Star correspondent is ransacking the far interior of Pennsylvania anced o pecutiar shiver. | Gonna. ew. tie: Walaa + Sei st eee . A pebble attached) in hot search for the little fellow, ai, Guidi, mepanred the bro. | etestts, the room became filled with | esteons eteein foe oo ber tossed Into the window. Th ta a , [ken man. “They caught me when|manked men. But Florence was) Wail," ycio: one ti ; ¢ correspondent has a good chance of catching Tiny Jim, for the correspondent is|! was about to come to you. Ihave|ready. She seized the lamp and| to extract teeth with oathe ees wel With the girl in — ome, lithe and agile while Tiny Jim is heavy—and FAT given up the fight.” A sob choked | hurled {t to the Moor, quite indif-) without patn. ; test will be easy. If she ty Tiny Jim, in fact, claims to be the FATTEST! om. | Sepent, whether tf exploded or went) Sai ruth i ight” a does not know where the money ts, He x) h igh 1 800 ty <eny| What Was it? wondered the child,|out. Happily for her it was extin- tal Ti in S Rey. Seat care Gee mead, ys he weighs so close to pounds that by merely putting on a light overcoat —— | BETH ACTION ost acne es . Breat head. She doos|he exceeds that beef cattle weight! He is nine feet three inches in circumference! Rocuapren te Y. Pein eal oman. | traction of teeth without pain is thal not know her father’s handwriting?” rt When we heard about 626- seal which American Dentists have. almost attained. This was 4 THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE |) :i<23%.Seioes conve! ; el nm en ot the ‘She has never seen & scrap of it. I Still] an ‘that Miss Farlow ever recelved| Pound Charles Jackson, we was money. The original note left} were astounded, but not sus- .793 rena on the gd with Engen — pictous. When word came | > te Sia. peed co | tional Den: been lost. st me to make all! grom Pottevilie, Pa., ith: ; | DICK PLAYS CARDS FOR MONEY nich deads ts | these inquiries.” rom Pottaville, Pa., that Jack 5 feet 9 = oa pain hile leaving the patie: “Tomorrow night, then, immedi-| Eckert weighed 739 pounds, ately after dinner, a taxicab will] we began to grow skeptical, » await her just around the corne: for a weight like that didn’t Grange is the best man I can think! quite seem natu’ ot. Ho's an artist when {t comes to| But when Tiny Jim Simmons, playing the old man parts.” colored, crashed into the ne 4| “Not too old, remember. Har-| with his 793 pounds’ pressure b greave isn't over 45." The abo (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper “What do you know about Enterprise Association) that?” was the slang by which Jim I have just learned a most awful | ‘tied to express his surprise. thing. Dick plays cards for money!| “You see,” he said, “Dick and 1 No, dear little book, I don't belleve| Went to the ball game yesterday he is a regular gambler, but when | 4nd I remarked that I had the fifty he tells me he “sits in a game” he|in my pocket. Just then Ty Cobb acres of toast to go with tt. And for lunch and dinner he de- mands ineredible quantities of meat and potatoes. Philadelphi. food supply sim- . . : " the above wonderful discovery, bee Eo ue Tani: Wes natal ay fs playing with chips, each one of came to the plate. 1 He ! ‘Have you had lunch? No?| to stretch out here on the divan and This seeaee some sum of real ‘TH bet you that fifty against| proven by experiment. slure Me jhta tae. snooze fora while, Had a devil of a oe . Passi . money. |{t doubled that Cobb knocks out a “Thanks. Came in for my break-| time last night.” ee i I never understood when he told | three-bagger,’ said Dick. HUMAN JUDGMENT. In the extraction of teeth, as Im | fast,” said Norton, drawing out the| “When shall I wake you?” me that he “was in a hole” that he) “ on, said I jail, Qrerations, human | judgment | chair. Braine was sitting with his| “At 6. We'll have an early din- meant he had lost money, and| “It did not seem to bef Dick’s/£uldes the skilled hand of the opers back to the wall on the lounge-|Ner sent in. I want to keep out when he said that he had lost the |Iucky day,” continued Jim with a| ardet, and the Se ae of everybody's way. By-by!" night before at cards I did not) laugh as he winked at me to notice 1 “| wonder if you newspaper men| In less than three minutes he was ever eat a real trne enough break-| Sound asleep. The woman gazed I should think the hours you|down at him in wonder and envy. would kill you off. Anything|If only she could drop to sleep like think it was real money—that is,/ Dick's lowering face, “for Cobb| cosa money to any large amount. And struck out, and so you see I don't| {nto the bons terion. Ring a |he also bets sums of money on|OWe you anything for your beauti-| the tooth Into close proximity to lar« other things, That is where much | ful furniture except to tell you of| #er arteries and nerves and the de- on the Hargreave story?” that! Very softly she pressed her of his salary goes. jmy deep appreciation of ite charm | Sart of bone will be qeveneary Heres ; not handling that,” the re-\lips to his hair. Jim Edie came over last evening| the last few weeks.” Foot te $0 be remeved tt esdy shan } _ porter lied cheerfully. “Didn't want| At 11 o'clock the following night and in his usual laughing manner| “I can’t yet understand how Djck me advisable to allow the root 4 I knew him rather tntimately.|the hall light in the Hargreave ‘ : : or ee. ia he said: “Well, Margie, you've got |1s able to let you discharge your] {7,,"emain until such time as the | a horror of dead people, and| house was turned off and the whole 2 i os SS a to get your money for the rent of | debt to me just because some ball he surface a0 that a noid Senos. | Gon't want to be called upon to|interior became dark. A shadow ; : . : your furniture from Dick.” player you call Ty Cobb ‘strikes the body when they find| crept through the lilac bushes with “What do you mean?” I asked. out’—whatever that may be. EXTRACTING TEETH WITnovT — out any more sound than a cat “Cut it, Jim,” I heard Dick say| “I never intended that Jim i PAIN. 3 you think they will find| would have made. Florence's win- under his breath. Evidently Jim|should pay anything for the use of| .,P*fracting ts an easy thing for | & dow was open, as the archconspira- did not hear him, for he said: |our turniture. I was glad for him| scenes of anaesthesia, nate etosee | tor had expected it would be. With “Well, Margie, 1 am here to tell/to take the rooms off of our onditions under which he oper: & small string and stone as a sling you that I have already paid that|/hands,” Dick spoke gruffiy, 1] 4t¢* and knows his Pathology and * Anatomy and applies his loc money to Dick could see he was much annoyed thetic ge get wen by saecathenal “I can’t understand why you/at Jim and, man-like, he was tak-| where it Is needed should pay money which belongs to| ing {i out of me. I thought I had| ,1 said that I make a special tgs | me to my husband. But as you|better let the matter drop, but 1| 9% °Xtracting teeth without pain. he sent the letter whirling skillfully through the air. It sailed into the girl's room. The man below heard no sound of the stone hitting any- “Yes, I read about that. What were they after?” thing, “and concluded that It had have done so, I'll just say to him|had been counting on that’ money| Soatne Lier id rent te eae “You've got me there. No one) struc’ 1e . ‘pass it over, and as long as I get|to help me buy things for my new| this particular branch of den _ seems to know. Some cock and bull| He waited patiently. Presently a f if he giv partme: gery. This ts Dr, wavering light could be distinguish. ’ it It makes no difference if he gives} apartment yg FO imatcable. ‘There was gaiwed the olll of tha wind 4 4 ; ‘ a : {t to me or you do.” It rather astonishes me to see|in this work st “Wh ? irl wa: k: 4 had " ‘ - 1 held out my hand and smiled/ with what ease a man will throw/rior in Seattle or él . iat was {t? The report in this| 6! 8 a © an Ut the can- at Dick away YOUR money while he usu-| Dental. profession in Seattle may well be proud of this able mai Slo ix Sore Teet Paper does not say.” die. This knowledge was sufficient thousand bags of coffee.” for his need. The tragic letter Braine lay back in his chair and| Would do the rest, that is, if the % girl came from the same pattern “If you want my opinion,” said|4# her father and mother—strong Norton, “I believe the gunmen were| Willed and adventurous. out to shoot up another gang, and} He tiptoed back to the lilacs, the police got wind of it.” when a noise sent him close to the “Don’t you think it about time|sround. Half a dozen feet away he the police called a halt fn this gun-|#4w @ shadow creeping along the men matter?” ward the front door. Presently “I haven't the money, Margie,”|ally makes you account for eve: ’ “J penny of the y Dick said with a frown. ; im did } ~ money he thinks A conten condition miter not give me any money 8 his. : tion is a sloughing sore mouth. I€ “What is it you boys say under (To Be Continued Monday) ia usually caused by lack of proper ideke cipcamutanced? Tent” Si: preparation before extracting, and failu on the part of the dentist to ‘You'll have to show me? have all instruments clean and ster- ‘Come across, Dick; come GOO ies tie tain years that T have i across,” said Jim with a laugh, and | been extracting ho seemed to be thoroughly enjoy: MTL ES ON HORSE sss sie: csestuhe beekiee tt | my instruments a ing something that 1 knew nothing thoroughly "0, so long as they pot each|the shadow stood up as {f listening. about Sloane One 8) pave ae i other the police look the other way.|He stooped again and ran lightly I still held my hand out to Dick! No hothouse plant {s Miss Gladys SE ae k s It saves a long trial and passage|to the steps, up these to the goor, for the money, because I knew if/ saray, who has arrived in Seattle,| EX has proved that extract. Jj ; which he hugged. I did not get {ft while Jim was]. °°°% ; gamigateag) suctonned (MLS uld not be done in the same room Ww e other dental work is done for sanitary reasons, Making Artith Teeth. up the river. Besides, whenever they are robbed some big politician| Who was this? wondered Braine. manages to open the door for them, | Patiently he waited, arranging his Great is the American voter.” posture so that he could keep a there I would not get it at all.) ater traveling 400 miles on horse- And, although Dick looked decid-| back from Spokane. She's been | y annoyed, yet I held my way| the road since June 16, and thought “Take Mr. Norton's orter, Imigi,”|lookout at the door. By and by the hough it were a joke |{t great sport. She came in second | g ANY (ontist will tell yon that the gaid Braine. door opened cautiously tell you Jim did not pay me|in a cowboy race on the Fourth at} of dentistry is required fn making @ perfect artificta ure, The obs |} impression t MEN WHO HAVE AN HOUR J 2): '9<208 0 8 inet ne teeth must be of proper length and size to give natural expression PA *A German pancake, buttered | holding a candle, appeared. any money,” reiterated Dick, Waterville. , and coffee,” ordered the re-| vaguely recognized Olga's’ = x tion of the butler. The man on the “Man, eat something!” veranda suddenly blew out the “It's enough for me. light. “And you'll go all the rest of the| Bralne could hear the low mur day on tobacco. I know something|mur of voices, but nothing more. of you chaps. J don’t see how you| The conversation lasted scarcely a “ # oe r manage to do it.” minute. The door closed and the 4 " should visit the weed the articulation and. cccluatom il used, and contour, so as to restore the “Food is the least of our troubles.) man ran down the steps, across the must. entifically correct, ‘Thu By the way, may I ask you a few | lawn, with Braine close at his heels. you notice that an éndless chatn o| questions? Nothing for print,| “Just a moment, Mr, Hargreave,”|hind him, we grew downright in-|kle as a little star in the middle|ply can't keep up with Tiny Jim, detafled mechanism must be ob- unless you've got a new book com-|he called fronically; “Just a mo-|ecredulous! of the vast and measureless ex-|and so prices rise. & perfect artificial ing. ment!” His ckers claim the gold|panse of Tiny Jim's bosom | But James Simmons, at present, about a year ago at a reception|fiat. When he regained his feet|and VERIFY his weight |greatest factor of increasing de-|trail and, having located him, will given to Nasimova. A very attract-|the rumble of a motor told him the| If Tiny Jim's claim to 79: ive woman. I see quite a lot of her.|rest of the story. ._ * «© @ Fire away.” The man he addressed as Har-| medal! | James Simmons is a resident of|has left Philadelphia and {s tour: where all the latest pictures are run at Sc yeecialiat a ‘What do you know about the| greave turned with lightning rapid | We sent out a correspondent on| Philadelphia, and is the chief rea-|ing the state with a traveling car- F . 7 ‘ on this partloul ¥ Princess Perigott?" ity and struck. The blow caught! the double quick to FIND this Tiny|son for the high cost of living In|nival, spec ntal art, Let me nec. H’m. Met her first| Braine above the ear, knocking him | Jim, put him on freight-car scales |that city, for he is Philadelphia's| ‘The Star correspondent is on his my P acptaee tae k B a e Dr He demands one dozen chotce|be able to give to the world veri- mand fot food pork chcps for breakfast, He demands gallons of tea and with 6 pool tables and service counter in connection eh 206 OCCIDENTAL Aue ay ort 705 and 713 First A EDWIN J, BROWN, Just two is proved offices * * ¢ *)the grand gold medal of the. fat A fication, or disproof, of his claim “Well, she claims to be a sort of By the dim light of her bedroom man contest will undoubtedly spar to being a 793-pounder-——America’: fattest map ’