The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 14, 1915, Page 7

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aa NY THOUGHT of|tionals at a salary of $1,400 for the Aberdeen forfelt- | reast of the season ing ita franchise in the Northwest. HAVING BEEN informed the ern league was) Chicago Cubs are a peaceable squelehed Tues) family this season, we expect to day night when a public meeting of the boosters of = the club was held| PETE SCHNEIDER won another in the Gray's har game for Cincinnati yesterday, This bor city. The/time Brooklyn was the victim. Pete Aberdeen maselves to raise $2,000) 3 to 1 Me team thru the season. nes has a hard time to} ans and Rue. ch other, Reports from the minor ends meet, but with the; leagues Indicate the double assured jast night he} Fourth of July acted as a | ck nnd forget one of his finaictal pulmotor and saved other ts how to keep je team from pushing/ ithe cellar position several of them that were gasp ing for breath IRVIN KANTLEHNER, the old, TOGRAPHER returning | Victoria twirier, now with Pitts front says the Canadian bugrh, was on the long end of a are using their la crosse| 3 to 1 score over Boston Tuesday ww hand bombs at the/ Boston got only two hits off bim, ead of handling the h their hands. When used to explode and the k ow it back, the Can-| ( catch the bomb in get amd heave it back before TACOMA FANS are puzzled to/ now why big league scouts iia | up Johnny Butler and Stevens. But- ler has ben playing a great game at) aay damage. short, while Stevens has been pv =| }elouting the ball at critical mo- ; j athletics do no 00d? | ments. | | WHEN SHFORTSTOP WARD and THAT JUDGE who ordered | © MecQuarry collided | ot base in Tuesday's some foud-mouthed bleacher garted to abuse the visiting | ire McGreevy prompt: | officer to put him out | ‘the individual was led by the| to the gate. Such actions | the part of any one at a ball should not be tolerated. Mc- Heine Zimmerman to sign a $2,000 bond in 48 hours or be In contempt, wasn't wise. Heine would sign one for $4,000,000 in two minutes if some one asked him to. ri | — | |. BY THE number of men used be |hind the bat in the second New | York-Detroit struggle Tuesday at | Detroit the scorer’s book must look action. The 8) tke w Chinese puzzle and the game i. x sproval with applause. | itself must have been worse than H BUTCH BYLER had a ifttle tilt | "Ome of these so-called exhibitions “wit McGreery in Tuesday's game | of ersean FF s+ 8 g 4 Louis. Ther beat him fn the sec semt-pro bush 054 game of a double-header, 3 to 0 NO WONDER Jese Willard | never drank; he was broke most of the time and Tom Jones managed him. i the national pastime in the ; lied parvowly escaped being fined. | Northwestern league. New York was. a quieter person after be | won, 10 to 8, and 24 hits were made. -| r down for his hasty words.,16 by the Yankees and eight by ’ Detroit. The following were the 5 -@ batteries: New York, Cole, Shaw 5 GETTYSBURG, &. D., girls key and Sweeney; Detroit, Dubuc, vl formed s club to play real Oldham, Dauss, Steen, Boehler and . | Baker, Stanage. | <i WALTER JOHNSON mot his! 2 Waterloo Tuesday against St J a - | 1 was married | knew | just drifted along, my whole mar- whom | dearly | ried life has. He loved me and we % me all of hie affec- were married, but | still love the B bet never spoke of the future. other man. 1 met a man who Is now! | made an oath to myself to be Friendship with him true to my husband, but, Mise Grey, | | how can | keep it now | have found out that | myself have broken al! _my dreams of love and happine: forever? My husband is satisfied with his| for now he knows has but me, but my thoughts are ways with the one | love, and at) times | feel that | must go to him. | This may sem childish, but still | am human, so please do not over. look this. HEART-BROKEN. | A--Why do you consider your ‘husband's love selfish? He does | not seem to be responsible for your tate of unhappiness, The man who id not even ask your hand, but | permitted you to drift into a wed- ‘ding with another seems to be the selfish one. Read the stories of affinities as they run thru the newspapers and) note the temporary quality of such love. You will be disillusioned—for | why consider your own nature an} exception to all rules? Cultivate | loyalty. RY OF QUALITY 4 4. BROWN, D. DP. 8. Viret Ave, Union Block od applies to Dental ‘Sppiies to all things cise. _— @re not so you co: to have your fared for, nor so that I have to Your work. 1 +9 pete with $28D Dentists, but mee Quality of work I give rth ~ wore for “ paid to Je the secret 8 volume of i profits iness in Q—i am 22 years old and have) been going with woman seven years older than | am. Would it be| a mistake to marry her on account| of the difference in our riopt < A—Probably it would, for her rather than for you. Ten years from now, when you had settled down to the commonplaceness of every-day matrimony, you would discover de cided disadvantages In a wife so much your senior. Then the woman, | rather than yourself, would be the loser. | Q—t! am a girl 27 years old, and have been keeping company six monthe with a man two years younger than | am. |! do not know attentions are serious it fair of to en- My friends tell me yet Will save money to my of- your work done by a or not. courage him? 1 ought not to permit him to call regularly nor accompany him to places of amusement, as nothing can come of it, they say. | should hate to lose his friendship, At times 1 feel that | even love him. Please tell me what you think Is best in such a case? ue. : b A.—A man 25 years old should be| d J, BROWN, D. D. 8. 3 sal ave, Union Block. enings until & and Sundays People who work. Phone able to take care of his ows heart affair. If his attentions are not yet so pronounced that you are able to determine whether or not they are “os serious, there seems to be no rea Far Ms Taeendoet: y fon for you to worry! And if your Pan Blood, Asthma’ affection for him {s intermittent, Paral- Tuberculosis there.seems to be no reason why he should worry. So why not let mat | ters drift? Q—i have been going with a | young man, and know that he cares lfor me. He is a gentleman in every respect, but | have been told that one member of his family was not any good. Would you advise me to give him up for this reason, altho it would ILL TRY TO SWI fans was touched for nine hits, but | | should @ STAR—WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1915. ELLIOTT BAY WITH HANDS AND FEET TIED T 2 —_— | | } Left to right—Dean Mathey, R. Norris Wiiliam star and intercollegiate title holder, and W. M. Washburn, Easterners, slow to acknowl. edge that the West produces as good athletes as those from the Atlantic coast, must have got ten an awful jolt from the downfall of their pete in the Nama-Pacific tennis tourna | ments now in progress at | The above picture shows four of the fastest players in the country, but W. M, Washburn lost to Dr, Long, a Californian, Monday, and G. M, Church lost his maten Tuesday to Clarence Griffin, another Californian, DUG’S HIRELINGS BREAK ANOTHER SEASON RECORD; BEAT ABERDEEN AND MAKE IT FOUR STRAIGHT WINS, Will that Seattle team ever quit Kippert. ef a ae Be ee breaking season records? They set Mo\re'r, + } £4eterG another one Tuesday. Beat Aber ais fete deen again, 4 to 0, and set a new ’ 4 : 4 +4 : mark of four straight wins. That '***9ees Pp .. AE Cs: BI A tes is the first time they have played Totals os ¢ 9 wt sod enough ball to do that this foore by innings Re season. Ab . A couple more wins will put the “Winans te ‘ | Gianta in fifth place. They're only Brooks, Gutent, Kip: < fiy—« ir tfice hit Dy Mestiey 2, by Narkne: Ott Rastiey 1, off Mark & game and 1 half behind now. With Pat Eastly, who will hob nob with Connie Mack and the ne Wid = pitch Bastley rouble Athletics for a while next year, in D!8y—Gulent te Morse to Brooks Umpire | the box, the Giants Janded on Spec ~~ “°OT*ery Tme—t 8 Harkness fn the first inning for NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE five hits and amassed three runs oo Leet by mh 5 but ™ oi) ty That was enough to win, but they Fheuen eo | (ee added another tn the sixth for good Vancoaver a ‘ ont measure. The score’ Saad ty 4a 7 Ld ann Seattio- ABR HPO A é a Me * | Smitn, if a BR ity cea . Raymond, o» . oat oae ee NATIONAL LEAGUE | Shaw, of Ss FS Ww Lost. Pet. | Barth, rf. oe ease saz | Brooks, 1b . Ce) te 9 nan Cadman. o . ' e 1 ' . oe Guten, a ® : ' ‘ ¢ Hrookiya Mores t> . 4 6 © 6 6 © Pittebure . | Bastier, » ’ ° 1 . 1 . Totals... ‘ $7 19 “me Aderdean— ABR WPO A FB | Diadings, 1d ‘ . 6 ‘ ’ e H Weary, tb ....0..6 8 8 3 8 Oo Pet. | Bennett, fb ...... 6 © & 8 8 @ Chicago ean break my heart to do se? JO. |necret ta, you don't want to forget A.—Of all the foolish {deas, this | You, ike most people, are laxurtat one caps the climax. Pray, why ing in your grief.” one person be held a&| “Have your forgotten, Mollie?” countable for another's behavior? », | have not forgotten, but I Judge the man by his own conduct, | have learned the sun can still shine not by that of a member of bis/ without him. When he went away, family of whom some one had made |} thought 1 could not lve, but you a bad report. Trust to your OWN | see, six months afterward, T am stil! opinion, not to hearsay here, and can jest with Jim on the |value and results of unexpected Q—My friend and | are in doubt Kisses, when you know it was an as to who the Shriners are. He wnexpected kiss that made all the |says they are a separate organiza | trouble for Chadwick and me.” tion and | think they are Masons. Which Is correct? A READER. A.—The Shriners are affiliated with the Masonic order, insofar a a Shriner must be a 32d degree Scottish Rite Mason. HReyond this, the Shrine has no relation to Masonry “Are you getting over loving him, Mollie?” . “I don't know,” she answered, soberly, “I don’t know just whab love is, Margie, so 1 am not sure just when I possessed {t—or if, hav-| ing it, I have now lost it.” | “But you did love him?” | “T wanted him—I wanted him to be with me. I wanted to feel his Q.—What will be nice to serve at the monthly meeting of a Sunday school class of young ladles in| caresses, I wanted the sound of his Augue! KATHIE. |Yoice. I even wanted to catch A.—Chicken salad in cucumber | asain that look of utter weariness white and brown bread sand. !n his eyes that was always there peach ice cream and small | when he did not know that anyone cakes; coffee or grape frult punch.| was observing him, I wanted his) Or nut sandwiches, olive nd- | little attentions, I wanted to bury wiches, a fruit salad in orange bas-| my face in the box of roses he nent kets, or apple cups, coffee and | caremcersgaee ran marshmallow cake. | ; DOCTOR Call at the Right Drug Co, 169 Washington Second ‘ave, land have the ex-government physl-| clan nowe your ease and prescribe | for you, absolutely without che 1 ‘@ want your p fe and fer you the doctor's | inducement. SS . | MOLLIE CALLS ME A peiulacas (Copyright, 1915, by the Newepaper| Enterprise Association.) “Margie, you're a coward!” “What do you mean, Mollie? son nett Hh qq, OHO METHOD IN opher DENTISTRY osopher and adviser I know, when the trouble doesn’t strike you. But Missing teeth are replaced by when it does, you collapse like a folded fan You're not only a| The Ohio Method by artificial teeth coward, but you're very selfish,| that are natural as your original Here you have been for three| teeth. Examinations are now being months keeping us all in hot water, | Conducted without charge, and esti- trying to keep the breath of life in| Mates are furnished fn all cases. you, and when you have come back| WE STAND BACK OF OUR WORK to yourself, you make us all still) FOR 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE unhappy, because you will not see - one ray of light in your little world. | $15 Set of Teeth, $8 Don't you remember telling me:| Gtaranteed .......... ‘We can't die when we want to, Mol $10 Set of Teeth, $ Me; we must go on Iiving, and it is . 5 very nelfieh for one to always play| Guaranteed .. tee Death's Head at the feasts of all} $10 Solid Gold or those about us’? Sounds fine when Porcelain Crown .... you say {t to me, but It's very dif . care ferent when I say it to you, isn't 1t%| $10 Gold or Porcelain 4 I don't mean to be cruel, my eH Bridge Work ........ but one’s philosophy t* not worth | solid Gold Fillings ..$1 U the breath it takes to volcet, unless! Other Fillings ay :84 cored “an Ay it to one’s self in| time of need, You did me a lot of} oa, i good when you talked to me at the | Oftice Hours, 8:30 to 6. Sundays, time that Chadwick went away, and| 9 te 18, Cut-Rate now I want to pass back the good | OH I Dentists you did me to help you in the time 207 UNIVERSITY 8T. of your trouble.” my baby, CORNER SECOND AVE, “But [ can't forget Mollie.” “Yes, you can, but the whole ' EASTERN TENNIS CRACKS BEATEN EASTERN TENNIS CRACKS ENTERED IN PANAMA-PACIFIC TOURNAMENT, national tennis champion; G. M, Church, Princeton's Friaco. ' |me daily PAGE 7. AT FRISCO | It’s Just Play for Swimming Elliott bay Is only | apractice stunt for H, &. Horan, & former physical Instructor at Harvard, who Tuesday swam across the bay from West Boe. attle to Pier 1 with no notice able harmful effects from the exposure to the cold water or exhaustion from his efforts to negotiate the distance. Horan has been in Seattle for a " training for the feat. His | success yesterday, announced to the papers after {ts performance, was nothing for him. He has been mak- ling the ewim every day for the last |couple weeks just for enjoyment of |being in the water, Yesterday's on |deavor was on a wager. Slorau did jit easily He left Wert Seattle at about 2:16 and a little more than two hours later he crawled up the lad der leading to the float at Pier 1 unassisted and was met by a number of Shriners and friends. A few minutes later he stepped into a row while Washburn and R. Norris Williams were beaten in the doubles by a team composed of [boat and rowed himself back to one Wi nd an East. | West Seattle. orner. Mathey, the fourth Swime Again Friday orack In the group, still stands | On another wager Friday Horan In the doubles, having won his | will attempt to swim Elliott bay firet_mateh. with his hands and feet tled. He | will arrive at Pier 1 about 4 o'clock, g depending on the tidal conditions w ” | Horan ts a big man, 6 ft. 1 in. tall, eshingtoc a weighs Ibs. and ts 38 years old nana 45 193! He is an all-around athlete, but Cleveland = {379 | specializes In boxing, wrestling and | swimming VEDERAL LEAGUE Arthur Cavill, an Australian, lost Won Lost Pet |his life from exhaustion in an at- ia ts7 | tempt to swim Elliot bay and one ae ssa [other man accomplished the feat, “ 2 62 | but died later from the effects. 33 ‘\°) Horan has made other notable ines 48 43a | rT) ‘ jor Swims, the most important being mG tet |across Hull Gut, @ perilous strip of water {n Boston harbor, about a COAMT LEAGUE. | mile wide, with his hands and feet fan Francteco . yale | tled Los Anaeies Another time, while swimming In Point ra = 4% Boston harbor, darkness came on Verndn “ 4) | and Horan was over 24 hours in the Oakland “o ose | Water without reset or nourishment . | before he reached shore e _ —2 MANY STARS ENTER > AMATEUR GOLF MEET JAND, O., July yers in the Middle and Far t will start in the Western amateur golf championship, to be land 4-5 Geiphia © YEDERAL—WBrookiyn 6, Chicago 1, Mt Lous 0 Vittebure © COAST.Onkian@ 2, Salt Lake City 1 Baltimore & ene City 1 here, beginning next Monday. The entry list, just closed, shows 158 golfers, including “Chick” Bvans, Warren K. Wood, Kenneth Edwards Charley White ts not having the jsoft pickings that he had for aland Mason Phelps of Chicago, and /reason he suspended him. while. Young Saylor got a shade|K. B. Davis, Jack Neville, E. 8 over him in a 12-round bout called | Armstrong and Robin Hayne of the a draw Tuesday night at Boston. | Pacific coast. I wanted to hear him expostulate when | ordered merely French pastry and a cup of coffee for luncheon. This want was an ob- session, but I am not sure that ob- | session is love, and, Margie, the want’ is not so great now, as it was. You see, 1 can joke with you, and can enjoy the company of Pat Sul-| livan at the office, and yesterday I buried my face in a great bunch of roses that were sent me by a man erted Gatty Uy Apricots : Asparagus, id. Beans re whom I met a week ago, and found, Bert an Bal them fragrant. The whole truth of |; the matter is, Margie, there is abso- ¢ lutely no place in this world for | lemons, per crate ‘al. grapefruit grief. Trouble comes—we must { bear it; and we find in the end that the by does not break.” "y I said, “Mary told me yes- terday that a wound fn the spirit | ¢ was the same as a wound in the) Fior flesh; that it either killed or healed | Geese» i Garlic, new vee 16 in time. | Money, new. case. Per “She's right,” answered Mollle,| Honey, strained om “and if anyone has had a chance to | Lettuce, hothouse — find out the truth of these fallactes 10"! on" }*' 1.00 in regard to love and life, {t's | Nave: orans Mary.” Pe “Mollie, dear, you talk much too old for your years.” “I have lived years in the last | # — . two, since father died. No girl can| Spinach. toe work out in the world knowing she | tursips ioc must depend wholly upon herself, without making some plan by which to Hive—laving out some course by which to shape her dafly existence. Royal Annes, The girl who just drifts will never, ?'* amount to anything, and she is Ha-! onions. ereen ble to strike a hidden rock any day’ that will send her under; but, dear| 4 Margie, we were not talking about)». spuds, red . mé—but you. Don't let me lose) New spuds, white, | faith in you. You must live out |?) o- ‘a your own theories, or you will make me believe that I have been cheated into thinking your false ideals were | true.” “I'll try, Mollie, I'll try!” I said, as she went out of the door, to go to the office. (To be continued tomorrow.) Piume w apples Rrotlers | Ducks, tat 3% Ibe. ° 3 ibe, and under .. ducklings, over & COUNCIL OPPOSES MILK REFERENDUM Councilman Lundy's resolution to submit the McBride milk ordinance as a referendum measure to the voters at the March elections will not find favor in the council, when it comes to vote, according to a poll of council members, who feel that its action in passing the ordl- nance should be counted as final The Lundy resolution comes before the judiciary committee Thursday, and if reported out of committee at that time will come up in council Monday. ——— CORONER SUPPORTS MURDER THEORY A post-mortem on the body of Hiram P, Wickham, night watch- man at the briquetting plant of Baker & Baker, on Mill st., who was found dead Tuesday morning at the plant, convinced Coroner J Tate Mason, Tuesday night, that Wickham was brutally murdered. He had a fractured skull and sev- eral bruises besides the one over his eye, as mentioned Tuesday, Spring Is, GEN, CARRANZA _ KEEPING ORDER counts regarding the present situa tion In Mexico reaching Washington. today strengthen the conviction that Gen, Carranza will be recog- nized by the administration as the provisional head of the govern ment, With the fall of Mexico City, the “first chief” has adopted a policy which has met with favor here. He has shown a desire and ability to restore order. Late dispatches reported Mexico City quiet, despite the fact that Carranza forces have been in con trol but three days. That he will have trouble Gens. Villa and Zapata, his enemies, is considered inevitable. It was in timated in official circles that this withholding recognition, By per mitting Carranza to tmport muni exportations to his enemies, such differences can be speedily ter |minated. This Man 14—The | held on the Mayfield club course, | WASHINGTON, July 14.—All oo with | will not be deemed as ground for} tions and placing an embargo upon | BOSTON COULDN'T GET ALONG WITHOUT EVERS BY GEORGE R. HOLMES | | | When he came tn to the bench, | atter | CUiihbed Prada etn cotrentondaat the Giants had been retired, ‘eee Stat! Corresponcent) | the crowd ar the Boston bendh NEW YORK, July 14.—Johnny |{mme his neck,” rid- | Evers is the most valuable man to ing him bis team of any player in the game.; Johnny came right back at them, That statement has the whole-souled | feering at them, ridiculing them, support of sport writers, critics, stat-| bragging of what he would do first isticlans, just plain fans, and, in| time up | fact, Ty one of those 16,0000dd| He shouldered bis bat and went spectators who saw the diminutive|to the plate dynamo break back into the game) He addressed a jagainst the Giants here recently,, mentary remarks to Jafter a nine weeks’ lay-off with a) was catching for th few uncompll- who told bum ankle Rigler to “Wake up threatened New York fans hate Johnny Young Stroud, pitching for the Kvers—from a baseball standpoint. Giants, and then proceeded to slam The reason is they fear him. the bail into center field for a The Giants and Braves were) clean single | playing a double-header. New York) That day he got a single, a dou- |had taken two games from Stall-|ble and a homer, and his four-ply ings’ crew the day before, and had| swat drove in a man ahead of him |taken the ftret game of the second —the only two runs scored in the | double-beader, |game. The Braves won, 2 to 0 | As the teams lined up for the; Maybe Detroit couldn't get along second game, a slim figure slipped| withont Cobb, maybe the Red Sox |from the Boston bench and made| would fall thru the bottom of the its way, limping, to second base.|league without Speaker, or the The crowd knew him instantly.| White Sox go flooey but for Collins, There was a bediam of Jooring, hiss-| but the diminutive, dynamic Evers’ ing and yelling. Johnny Evers isl worth to Boston’s Braves simply back ed. cannot be estima ‘SIR TOM AND MYTH [NESS BEATS RECORD | HAVE FIRST RACE | ON BAY WEDNESDAY SAN FRANCISCO, July 14.— Ty Cobb's record was broken this afternoon. Jack Ness, Oak- land first baseman, got a “Texas leaguer” in the fourth inning in yesterday's game with Salt Lake, making the 41st consecu- tive game in which he had got a hit. Cobb's old mark was 40 games without a miss. The first of the sertes of races | between the Sir Tom, designed by ‘Ted Geary, a Beattle boy, and the Myth, the Everett speed yacht, de-| leigned by Eastern experts, takes | |place Wednesday. The first race is over the 12-mile triangular outside lcourse. Thursday at 2:80 the boats will be sailed over the inside course, making three trips of the course inside of the harbor. \BIG RACE STARTS The Everett people have always | claimed that thelr boat was the| ON BELMONT TRACK fastest yacht on the Sound. It ranks in a higher cli than the) NEW YORK, July 14.—Eleven Sir Tom, carrying 135 square feet | more sail, but Ted Geary has oq thorobreds will start in the Suburb- to race the boats even. This puts |@n Handicap this afternoon on the the Seattle boat at a disadvantage, Belmont track. One of the largest as the extra sail gives the Myth crowds in the history of the event added speed. Seattle yachtsmen are already |'* expected to attend. m making plans to raise a fund to sy enter the Sir Tom in the races at jthe Frisco fatr. The Sir Tom will! | jbe entered, whether she wins or EASTERNERS WAKE UP | loses in this week's races, as he is American polo authoriti the fastest boat of her class in are already preparing for the Puget sound waters | end of the war, when interna- || tlonal contests with Great Pau! Strand has been indefinitely | | Britain will be resumed. suspended by the Boston Braves. | | It Is planned to select a: | Manager Stallings says that Strand | | team of the best players of the | ‘hadn't got Into shape, and for that! | Paciflo coast and Middle states | Strand) Instead of having a team com- | \started a game Mond but was posed only of Easterners. | \Jerked tn quick order for poor box | | { | work. Markos Modern Mingle Rooms Z6¢ Lares, Modern Outside Rooms for One of Two, BOS EXCURSIONS \-DAILY-— P.S.Navy Yard One Hour’s Ride on Puget Sound Native Washington creamery, brick a | [Native Washington | ereamery, solid pack .. 28 Cheese | Domestic wheel | Limburger won triplets . twine {Select ranch ... S S. H. B. Kennedy and Tourist Leave Colman Dock 6:30, 8:00, 10:30 a, m.; 1:30, 2:00 op. m Visitors Welcome Daily FARE, 50c ROUND TRIP Children, 5 to 12, 25c, Phone Main 3101, or Information, Main 3993. Country Hay (Wholesale prices) Alfalfa, No. 1 Bariey ..... Eastern Washington oate. Paget sound oats . Btraw, ton Timothy u Sets Ms SNE Fe RAE i helieetteeieteieteateete! | 5 Canadian Pacific s : Low Round Trip Fares East @ Minneapolis . | Winnipeg ... New York... Ei " E ‘rrr irrrereree.. ( CAN SAVE YOU MONEY “eoauso I dei ds before attempt! -$ 60.00 Toronto .... -$ 60.00 Montreal .... -$110.70 Boston ..... Correspondingly low fares to other points. Tickets on sale daily May 15 to September 80. Return limit October $1, Unexcelled service. -$ 72.50 -$ 92.00 a - $105.00 - $110.00 B For full information call or write E. E. PENN, Agent, Passenger Department. 713 Second Ave., Seattle. General rmine your n Veins, Blood and 8! and Bladder, Vartcocele, m@ to me for reliablo W: ONAWAY, 802-8-4 Liberty Building jon and Third, Opposite Postotfice Office Hours, 9 a. m, to 8 p,m. Bundays, 10 a, m. to 12. Liberal stopovers. a %

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