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Bead STAR—THURSDAY, AUG. [IMPORTANT MATCHES SCHEDULED TODAY IN BIG TOURNAMENT 2 12, 1915. PAGE 7, COURTNEY RE TT EARS| WHERE THEY COME! U H R COVERS |'; How They Stand MAY Y IS 36 Y Browns Get a Good} Lind | G WILL COACH AGAIN In the Leagues} OLD FODAY = |_——Ptecher_ Thru FR | Accident Poort hannnannnannannannnannnnn Ernest Koob, the Yeetern Nor R. H. PO. A ma! college pitcher, picked up by eo ie the St, Louls Browns, was landed 1 o : by accident ® ’ 4 . Branch Rickey, Brown manager I ODA y a Tne wen| to Amp Arboi, Mich, to look . eS ee ae | at George Sister, th Michigar __ ® J : university star, before signing him Good tennis is expected today adie EN atl. at ny Sinler pit rap be ge - ‘ “re 7 0 to 0 game against Western Ne a reeuneton state | teens RoWwPO 4 mal with Koo» (n the box ermament, as several of the best st Koob allowed only two hits that will meet in the fourth a : ie am day, bots of which were ma Je by He : 4 0 8! r Rickey immediately grab Send emacgp dan r ‘6 » 0 bed Roob, and be tina made good apoleon Lajois, the gre © at the Tacoma Northwest tour ent, 3 4 6 - ond baseman, was a hack driver at faces the Seattle champion,| eres th er ae as a | Woonsocket, R. I, his home town, A Fulton, this afternoon, and | Monner, p Rade ae ee |HEILMANN TO GET befere he brok » tute baseball, ie ght catch my “i : ppokol Sa Charles E, Courtney, coach of the | fm", NEW YORK, Aug. 12.—Chriaty | sapdb pret pace Wiebe Pe log dh tt himself that Tyler d | Cornell crews, who #1 ffored a frac | dmamary Mathewson is 36 today, Frequent peryye ve " ¢--|home and farm just outside Cleve stand. tured skull when he hit his head {i |r ly he celebrated his anniversary}. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 13.—| tole One vere al flate in Cleve Gam Russell, ruonerup at Ta-/ disembarking from a train at the with a baseball victory; what he'll| Harry Hellmann, former gfe Stoney Ea ’ ‘ coma. fs to play Taylor, state) june regatta on the Hudson at} wwert do today remains to be seen. j utility player, will Li vin re 8 champion, Other important| Poughkeepsie and whose lifo was smith bale Only once has the old master | next season, the Tigers having ex ator between Miss Sarah, de¢epatred of, has so fully re Ott emer & eet Senne 9 Bivgek out sorted with Dame Defeat on his|ereised their option on him yes NOT FAST ENOUGH fone, the best woman play-| tat he has been re th lbirthday, This happened in terday, Hellmann was wit! De orthwest, and Miss Anne} hospital. He anco would BASEBALL RESULTS trolt in 1914. He is hitting close to ‘ rates } in the Northwe: coach again thts fall t A ‘ 400 for the season PORTLAND, Aug. 12.-—Practical Roth of Seattle; Mise Jane vebesen: conch «has turne eaten nh admission that Shortstop Bill Rodg th of Seattle, Woodland park| 3 winn eel ‘ ers, now with the Cincinnati Na @, and Miss Fording, Port: ¢9 years of age. tte i ie ‘ STANFORD TO PLAY |tlonals, may return to the Coast fee Wide bolder; Mrs. Bragdon| " ” = : veland iS }leaue and wants to play with Ver Miss oda negro! Uy TIGERS TAMED | Pntiadeiphia o 38 ONE RUGBY CONTEST |: was made today by Manager champion, both o! attie. | | McCredie. Rice won again yesterday. | _ ceeensh teen i aiigoe ced Sereene in full: , VANCOUVER, B.C. Aug. | ‘ Gs STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Aug.| RACING REVIVAL iret wi tayler beat Bec wri |The Beavers beat the Tigers again| Oakland 1, Loe Angeles 6 ee |12.—Stanford and Santa Clara will 4 sr beat Lazare, €-4. 6 4 to core a —————— tet ‘|meet in Rugby football at San = a ee w a Francisco November 18, says Grad-| SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. ow, " 2 6 bt uate Manager E, ©. Behrens, of|eireult of thorobred race m “i Batteries—Smith and Cheek «8 Stanford for the Pacific Coast to revive in- Metkle and Stevens. . pet nnn sim terest In horse racing In the West ; wreaths se | ff | vaeevalles:, rg EASTERN TENNIS 's.the per ct, tne Saclden Gate st WHITMAN CALLS | NATIONAL Lmaous eS Pry rr | Breeders’ ociation, announc- - 4 | Phiiadetonia a a an Hi fa ed here today. 5 nro a +4 a »| CHICAGO, Aug William M seen WALLA WALLA, Aug. 12.—Vin-| }}! sore ‘ 4 Johnson and Clarence Griffin of YACHTS RACE json beat Auen cent Borleske, coach of Whitman, neo 1 AM san Francisco will meet Dean] 6-1, 8-2 has notified football talent to re) \*") Sore °° : Raymond Alexandor, pitcher, bas | Mathey and Geo. M. Church, North-| ee and Watson. | port at Hill Camp, Blue Mountain, |(incionatt 43 6T ~—480|been releasod by Ontaha icy | western champions, in the second) SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 12.—Six ingle beat Wailer | September 6 The first game will shows Raymond can't draw ary|round of the elimination play in| yachts will start over the 14-nau- one deat | be played at Walla Walla Octobder| AMERICAN PRAGU® ney jit Omaha for what Brother Grover|the tennis doubles tournament at|tical-mile course for the King * eDonait | 2 with Multnomah A. C mi Mra Northrup. 4-6 Mins deat Miss Baker, deat Miss | doudles—Mise Livingstone and Aaa deat Miss Todd and Miss #0; Miss Atkinson and deat Mins Frye and Mise Mins Burritt | have taken pleasure wnere ee —Miee Fenwick and Dy. | Tat Miss Landon and Groen. #-¢.| to the casual women that | S Miss Tyler and flarmon deal pPritchard and Rants, ¢-¢ ¢-2; Mra | aesociated with. Mansel-Smith beat Mise | {ja “good fellow.” looked directly at me. | Mis eat ‘Sloe Lamabuth ; Miss A. Green and Fulton beat Bion? and Le Blond. 4-1. ¢ 3 Tyler beat Miss Lam- ‘Turenne, ¢-4, $-1; Miss Ford! beat Miss Conner and Stat. | a ae CHINESE thought little of it. after that and severa' tim: and was greatly moved. to speak. tunity to speak. conscious of me, didn’t look at me. too busy to be jady killer.” By dint of adroit questions considered a quiet, woman. But by that time, | w: seriously me an opening, | was Letters, To Gunthin, Grov Q—! am a man peop ag 30 and have lived the life of the average man. found it and been liberal and kind have | have never pol- luted Innocence. But ! rather en- ar- | Joyed the thought that | was quite Lately | passed a woman who sensed Just the usual! lure of Invitation and We met often caught her eye with little effort, 1 thought opportunity would be made for me Then | sought an oppor. | felt that she was} oly even when she) Something seemed to stop me from making ad- found out that she was married and “ unobtrusive involved in an emotional | 0° madness and tho she never gave) ready to! Roston ¢16 (does tn Philadelphia this woman to stay good, I give you left three to be dragged into the credit for having enough manhood] divorce court, where, after 20 {to kill this emotion on the spot and| years of married tife, they agreed never again go out of your way to|to disagree. see her, and when you do chance to| Thru inharmonious conditions at meet her, never to betray your) home, one daughter made a great feelings, even by the flutter of an| mistake while seeking congenial eyelid. If you haven't the fortitude, company and her little daughter to do this, then you had better| wonders why her mamma di leave town, and the sooner, the|tuck her in at night, and where better. | papa is. | The other daughter loved a home life and her ideals we In a divorce court. T Q.—Will you please tell me how to frost glass, If possible to do 80) weil, in thelr present conditions, at home? C.D. C. |eociety takes a man’s life for Onwentsia club this afternoon. George gold cup here Saturday. FRED M’MULLIN TO BE A MAJOR — “BONNER BEATS WICKER’S MEN LO8 ANGELS Aug. 11 Zed, Terry, shortstop, and Fred MeMul-| lin, second baseman of the Lo An merly with the Seattle and Tacoma clubs, ar ated for t ute In the major league next season, Cast bids for the two men huve been Al Bonner was the whole made by the St. Louis Natlo show at Spokane yesterday. Washington Americans i New (45 jumited she Spekcene cul York Americans The ( « Americans have an option 1€ to a pair, their hits to seven, men of the Los Angeles te and with two lusty swats, one must be exercised by Aug. 15, of iid. elearal’ tha ae |if Comiskey doen not take elther of | field barricade, with Morse on, jthe men, Dille aid they would be; and a second that fell a foot {801d to one of three bidders | short of sailing over the wall Moree, accounted for three | Smith doubled and set sail for third so fast that Brennegan made a poor shot and then let Kaylor's throw to the plate slip thru his legs. Raymond pre- viously had scored from sec- iamnonds | | first to complete a double play. The above facts indicate the Gt The rules and regulations of the| ants have not cracked wide open Pitchers’ union have gone to smith-| Probably the balm of yesterday's Jereens. Walter Johnson, Jim) victory has already healed the | Scott and Babe Ruth each won| wounds inflicted in two straight de- their own games with base hits in| feats and made Tealy’s athletes |the same week | ragttes a. Maile ‘wilt Miele Packey McFarland will get $17,-| Piteh today and if he is near right 500 and Mike Gibbons $15,000 for | the series will be even a ten-round bout in New York. Gee, — {t's flerce to be a vulgar pugilist The Indian had no license to win | yesterday as dispatches from Spo- Capt. David Shaw of Cleveland | kane indicate. Bonner had the best turned down an offer of $30,000 for|of the pitching and his hitting Peter Mac, the young trotter. Some/| alone would have brought victory. horseflesh. The Giants were better on the de- | fense, and stronger offensively. If Charley Somers, owner of the Cleveland club, sells Joe J. | It: begins to look as if the Red as it is reported he will, he Sox were going to win that flag give his ball park away, instead of | 82 fore the last month rolls around. having to pay taxes on it | They have gained a game and a There has not been a single l halt tn two dai story that the Feds ed Sanaa $1,000,000 to Jack Ness al Dell does not seem to be getting new record by hitting in 49 con-|by these days ve runs in one secutive games for the Oakland, | inning recalls certain afternoons in Cal., club. 1913-14 MRS. FELS TO TALKSHED A TEAR FOR POOR PORTLAND HAS Mre. Joseph Fels, widow of the eminent single taxer, who has taken up hu single tax dinner at € A.—Clean the glass thoroly, and | granted, moisten with hydrofiuoric acid.| The parents married again and When frosted enough, wash thor-|are apparently happy, while the |tles that bound them for 20 years Dear Miss Grey: 1! do not with are drifting. DAUGHTER, to influence “J. B.” nor do | say! that your advice is not very good | Q—! am in love with a woman MEDICINE Co. 15 years older than myself and she | vances, tho more moved at each in the majority of but | y y' M13 Yeslee Wey) meeting. | am not a street corner, would like to cite a case | knew of, loves me dearly; but she will not flirt. | have made by hard appli- This married couple found out| marry me on account of the differ. cation all | ha and have been before a year was up that they ence in our ag What advice cas but they thought | you give? READER. ” would be the| A.-—-It is most fortunate for you 2 arrival didn’t |that the woman t* possessed of at seem to lessen the breach any, but | least part of the sense you are so they felt that the child needed| sadly in need of. I advise you t th of them, so they quarreled on|rid your system of the matrimonts! until they had five little ties, fever until you at least will know God knew what he was doing) better than to marry some one al- throw aside all my former scruples when he took two away, but that| most old enough to be your mother. against married women and grasp madly at the least encouragement. She feels my emotion, and is moved by it, | know, but holds herself with such quiet dignity that | couldn't make up my mind to ap- proach her. Lately, she avoids my! e, flushes and grows pale when im near, and once our eyes met! by accident, and | know now that! she cares, too, but Is too good and) (corrreted daily by J. W. Conute & Co) straight to encourage it. | Apricots e Now | don't want a licentious re. A"eauseu™ 'P - lation any more. | want her to stay” seem, wack good; but | suffer a heart-hunger| that | have never known since |) was a motheriess boy. that al) Ss engrossed me is odious. 1 am afraid | may miseeeceing her. | 14-1b. box and get clear out of town, only to rush wildly back to pass her on her usual erran She lives at a <: downtown ind | find that | Cucum legitimate errands cause her to go {*!\\c. and come at unconventional hours. \ioney, new Her hours caused me to misjudg Joupes, case | Honey, straines . MARKET REPORT MN ER to ERAT ei b Paid Wholesale Dealers for Washingt twine . au v commana aod Freoit Young America . as if bene — o Kane Belect ranch ae a 1 spend my evenings where | may « Yakima, 54 ae get a glimpse of her. | have tried) *" ‘ |to work to stay away. | take a car|*iniownem Yakima, ¢ 1.50 WHEAT CROP TO! BE OLYMPIA, Aw acreage is given 12.—Increased 8 the reason for be. on in a ar na Nu 7 increase of 25 per cent in the IO METHOD IN her at tiret. | Tettuee, hothouse ad heat crop of Washington this . DENTISTRY Shall | leave town altogether? Al ttees head lettuce, @ do os year, by State Grain Inspector R. month ago | would have told any 3 reed D. Jarboe. This year’s crop will is are replaced by| one in my present state of mind to 480 | total approximately 55,000,000 0 Mars by artificial teeth| forget It. It is easy to condemn o - bushels Last year it was between ‘are natural as your original) one who ls swept away in folly, if eo” 43,000,000 and 44,000,000 bushel: Examinations are now being| you ares ded vg chit ar Ald ume deed without char; and esti-|folly’s way—bu' jose who have y plume . o-. furnished in all cases. | !aid down the laws of conventional- r are @ ise WHA TS MONEY ? AND BACK OF OUR WORK ty have never been tried. Can you fanny au , . 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE | Offer any suggestion? | am com. fipinsch, local 109 It’s labor put into cur- Set of Teeth, EE | pletely demoralized. | Fomatooe erhoues i @ 1:9 Teorey, You work, get paid, CAP AND BELLS, > permis an 6 oO 68 r nteed ... 8 A—You are wrong. No one n|ryrrips, toca, don...) 48 @ 30 {and then put your pay at Set of Teeth, $5 particular laid down the Inws of|Watermelone .... 5... ° |work earning money for conventionalit, Every o tion |. —er * * oo OES ar someth ot ito aert thne eels i aaoles, ganas i” $12 |you. Put it at work with con Pe or $4 pertesee, 10 you disbelieve 1t, you! , coerriet sos @iso jus. We will pay you four celain Crown .... ave only to disobey one of these Onions Gold or Porcelain rules to face the startling truth. |ontone, erean so. sss 6 dollars a year wages for! : $4 I can at least admire you for your| California, new ts |every $100 you leave with dge Work ........ sincerity. You are experiencing | Auten browne 76 Gold Fillings ..$1 Up! the reaction which eventually Potatoes us. Fillings ..........5O¢ | comes to every one at your age who| ew souls red: neo nt has lived and tolled unceasingly to Hours, 8:20 to 6. Sundays,| get a foothold on life; but beware—|%-p5-, paid Pro Interest 4 Per Cent 9 to 12. you are on dangerous ground. Emo-| | Poultry, Vent and Pork | i C t tional love often carries ita vic \o ommend - °° ——_ uit-Rate | tims out on a delectable sea of joy,| neleian bares ..... on HIO Dentists |" 't has never yet been known) Bealls eee | UNION SUS) 15 rescue them when they were)? 1 207 UNIVERSITY 8T. drowning. \¢ mH Vi SORNER SECOND AVE. Because you admit that you want a SA NGS & was a more> aoe o@ boring ducklings, ‘TRE JST co. c1SCO ood blow hogs ss. 08 8 Re OF SEATTLE ot ae ‘ Fair ot i ES Capital and Surplus $815,000 | selling Prices Retailer tor i OTe Ui e Visitors | Metter, i nd'Cheese’”” | | JAMES"D, HOGE, President Native We on N. B. SOLNER, ar or 2) (8 ROY te W aah ne co a a Vice President and Trust Officer SOLN, HOTEL 2) HOTEL creamery, wolld pac pastes 2 min. trom Ferry Depot. 893 Kearny. pune HOGE BUILD ys ahede a” LDING pel ALAMO INN : At | tn the Heart of the Finanelai $1.00, 92.00, 82.60 per day. 824 Kearny. vy District awell-headed original post-graduate knoc his ite office in one year. sistants in a most insulting mann 2 PERCENT LARGER ‘: jelates were registered in states In this union when Shark Knew what a Dental Office wa this young professor knew one-half standard of my work be with own mouth, body De tiets and after they were registered, my personal ownership ment over 14 years. 1 anteed for 15 yours, the cudgel laid down by her late sband, will speak Friday at a d Bats cafe. gins at 6:20 is Invited. ta, m., The dinner b and the public DENTAL KNOCKERS AND DENTAL SHARKS By EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. There ts a broad tween iatinetion ntist who noses In knock other Dentists replies and expones shark who butted an to knock hark refers to the knocker his advertisement, but who in ker wall and he hangs on the reason. It fe a shame that I not allow little Dr. Shark to er and knock all other I in Seattle without exp As I have said before, the ofensor of the fake dental col- where they guaranteed Dental ork for 100 years and closed their worked in my let the professor go because while the professor had only been in Den- tal school a short while, he knew more the Dentists who had b ractice for 20 years combine I suppose that the prof ts now giving vent to his ingrown grouch. Poor boy! THE REAL SHARK METHODS Dr. Nut Shark referred to my w week, but many of my the Dr. was wearing ute or. ‘eanes, and before much about the and set be #0 top-heavy that he would be compelled to walk on his hands with feet In the alr. THE FACTS ARE PLAIN materials at ‘anteed, has ¢ 000 satinfled patients boost- for’ my offices he Dentists at mely Why should lttle young Dr. Shark cast who. are of his it Some vould not think of insulting or Offices established 25 years; and manage- 1 work guar only by the Real Gall Dentist, Dr Nut Shark, EDWIN J. BROWN, D. PD. &, Seattle's Leading Dentist, now re- quiring @ staff of 15 people to care for my patients, Open evenings until 8 and Sun days until 4 for peuple who work Vhone Main sd4o, FREE ADMISSION AT DREAMLAND DANOING BVERY EVENING EVERY ONE WELOOME he is the | uitle Nut Shark n If| Stobach-shaded. As a totem I can’t Dental profos- piles ine to| Mark all my feathers and the two who are associated me have but one instruction, to do thelr work the best— just as they would do tt for their and not to graft any- reflections on the associated with assistants have pn Associates of mine both before and under and slandered ‘This ts the sixth of » series « written by Fred 1. Boal on ® trip to other interesting parts of the Olymple peninsula. By FRED L. BOALT This story is written In the that it wil be read by Kalser Wilhelm, Theodore Roosevelt and other jingoes. It is the story of the War Totem of Sahqualk, or Fireman dim. Fireman Jim ie a Vancouver Island Indian, who was cap- tured by the Makahs in a long- since forgotten war. Chief Peter of the Makahs brought Fireman Jim home with him as his slave. By and by Uncle Sam came to the Olympic country and set Fireman Jim free. But as Jim was a very little boy at the time of the raid, he can’t re- member now where his people lived. So he has become as one of the Makahs. During his slave days his work was to keep burning the fires on the beach at Potlatch time and on fete and holy days. That's how he became known as Fireman Jim. ore When Jim was a toddler, his father told him to keep his eyes open for a powerful totem. A totem is sort of a fairy or spirit. One day Jim was running along the beach on the west coast of Van- couver island. The tide was low. The wind was strong and cold, and the waves were breaking on the sand. Jim met a “great little man with Portland office as Inboratory hoy | feathers all around him.” He had efore he owned the college. y Pee ald tte tate he “had 42, | feathers on his head and about his waist, and he held a feather in each hand The little man progressed by mighty jumps, Sometimes he would jump right over the waves into the sea, and back again. The beach shook beneath his feet Jim knew right away he was the totem he was looking for, So he walked up to the little man and sald: “I am looking for a totem Are you a totem?” The little man sald: “I am be beat. I live on people, I eat their heads off. The more people | kt, the better I feel. If you wish, 1 will be your totem. If war should break out, you plow right in and don't be scart. Go and kill all the e. heads. If ‘The facta are well known that 1|Deople. Feast on their have acquired the latgest. private | ¥ou are wounded, it won't hurt you. Dental practice In the world, right) {am the one who will suffer, All 1 here in Seattle, The ask is that, {f you ever cut a totem pole, you cut me just the way I am, big spots on my breast. When you cut the totem pole, put me standing on a big animal with a man in his mouth, with only his feet sticking out, and with plenty of room tnside for more Indians» For that is the HYPNOTIST BARRED; NEW ACT IS ON BILL belittling them: they are not. re- sponsible for the spells of male hys- teria and the fits of rage that trouble Dr. Nut Shark. My! but he ts! A law passed a year ago prohib nervous about my business; he's all . “ |fuxsed up, but he ts young ana win |!ting any pie tae outgrow {t, His trouble ts common | Work of hypnotists serve: ednes- to Dental infants, so while the pro-|day to bar Barnum, the hypnotist fonsor is having his nervous spellitrom appearing any longer at the you etter call and see me per- ‘ x rt abaut your teeth, and get a |1ols theatre Police Chief Lang is- real bargain in Dental work sued an order announcing that any jfurther exhibitions would not be tol- jerated, As a substitute for Barnum the Lois Wednesday night added Ponny Moore's quintet of dancing girls and the blackface comedian, Best (Gene) Melbourne. NO FREE ICE CREAM == AT LABOR’S PICNIC Because the big kids “hogged” all the fee cream cones and the small boys went without at the last Labor day picnic, the Labor Council Wed- jay night voted not ‘to give ‘em away free this year, FIREMAN JIM; HE HAS LOST HIS WAR TOTEM! $110,000 BLAZE PORTLAND, Aug. 12.—Revised lestimates today of the damage way I feel. No matter how many |done by the fire which destroyed ~4| People 1 kill and eat, I always have |the Theo Bernheim & Co. ware- plenty of room for more.” house yesterday placed the loss at Jim was glad, for he felt sure the | about $110,0 totem would make him a great | More than 600,000 pounds of wool fighter. jand mohair stored in the ware- To this day he really believes he Teg will be a ' bea total loss. met the being? = rca beach. Most tates nave: totems of one ‘OREGON MAN CASTS kind or another. Some bring luck. LOT WITH ALLIES | Some are gentle totems. Some give After debating a year whether to | skill in doctoring. | When the Makahs made war on! | Jim's people, Jim got an arrow thru | | his shoulder, His totem had /fight with the Germans or allies, H. promised that he would not feel|W. Bauman of The Dalles, Or., | wounds, but he is a wise Indian |decided to cast his lot with the al- now, and his very words (o me on |lies. He passed thru Seattle Wed- the subject were that “it hurt like |nesday night, en route to Victoria, hell, you bet!” | whe) re he will enlist. He says the |fact that he Pee ” la d foul A few weeks ago Young Doctor, pnd four a very skillful workman among the|" tis father and father’s father Makabs, cut a wonderful totem pole | were of Teutonic origin. The rest of 30 feet high. He cut on it the 5 totems of all his friends, including [were of the allies, ee ee Fireman Jim's war totem, “the ae EE FORMER CHIEF OF is two parts German parts allies determined great little man” standing on a big | animal with a dead Indian in his mouth and plenty of room for more inside. Young Doctor set up the pole in POLICE DIES HERE the yard in front of his home, Then he violated reservation law, and the | Albert Stacy Munger, 79, former agent, to punish him, made him take | chief of police of Minneapolis, and it down. He’s still sulking about it.| politician in that city 20 years ago, I found the totem pole lying wet aa here Wednesday at his home, in Young Doctor's potato patch. 4022 Holly st He had been confined The nose of the war totem to his bed for several months. With buried ignominiously in the dirt. his wife he came here six years ago. jE BIG GAME BUNT ER enovee capes HE KNOWS THE REAI LL around you, men are talking about it. You, your- self, are probably telling your friends about the Real Tobacco Chew. No user wants to see his friends go without it because it gives a man real tobacco satisfaction and comfort. A little chew of pure, rich, mellow tobacco—seasoned and sweetened just enough—cuts out so much of the &rinding and spitting. ‘THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW IS NOW CUT TWO WAYSI! > | W-8 CUT 1s LONG SHRED. RIGHT-CUT Is SHORT SHRED. Take less than one-quarter the old size chew. It will be more satisfying than a mouthful of ordinary tobacco. Just take a nibble of it until you find tha strength chew that suits you, then see how easily and evenly the real tobacco taste comes, how it satisfies, how much less you have to spit, how few chews you take to be tolfrceo satisfied. That's why it is The Real Tobacco Chew, That's why it costs less in the end. he taste of pure, rich tobacco does not need tobe covered up. Ag c0ese of licori id sweetening makes you spit too much, One small chew takes the place of two big chews of the old kind, 6éNotice how the sult brings out the rich tobacco taste.99 WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY. 50 Unior Square, New York City BUY FROM DEALER OR SEND IOS STAMPS TOUS