The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 22, 1916, Page 4

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STAR—TUESDAY, FEB, 22, 1916. PAGE 4, APT ie ‘| Ghe : | A Novel a Week aA a a To > | Start Reading It Today price novi Nothing better for evening No long walts; a@ full installment will <= zr| The Seattle Star Wont League of Newapa nd-claas matter o per month up to € moe ft Year oat Newspaper Fietion Kew e - Ny Margaret Widdemer Copyright, J. 1. Lippincott & Co, 1 reading. come to you every day, rent Nn nn - Next Week's Complete Novel Will Be John Reed Scott's “THE RED EMERALD : pARARAARAARARPP APPAR PRDDD AD, ' Re ine Sik street suit now, or I will know why » image nor a sick chiid—q | ee mi " ° The Liberry Teacher sat silent,| bright! And cou are sure you are] str t know why ' | Punish “Black Hand” Armor Fight for Nonpartisanship This ts a part of a book her eyes on her slim hands, It w so auanelonisons Vonmenne ou can get a half-ds the thought, or rather tm ru: que : rue xood de >| anyhow At this point Phyllis stopped the| a# 1 call ft, perfect we - i ry - — A nd ae ae Cher ealacneeN t eineds) Bopwlat, navel Being fee ee th rg ria not r vil ne w of Mrs, Harrington's conver-| What's Albert in politics for if he|stinct, came a swift ter or of what 5 bs titan sina) en | aasdaa ted | can't friends!” |she had done, and a swift impulng ¢ ; pee : . , or "Ye teed,” she said cheer in effect, It proved that / . ete 1: J 00’ So » t ost earnest aceuracy and strength, ber stock Yes, in And, in 1 Pe rig eel tee shoulded threaten the United States senate afternoon. Some of the m \ to follow from week to week, {1/1 trade, were wearing thin under the| fully, “But you know, if I'm not,| bert was in politics to some pur ana’ thar gacieman'e @alee or Tae workers for good government, men anc beginning each Monday and . Mr, De Guenther can stop all my . up from the|*"d th y in behalf of the armor plate trust was . . ending each Saturda A pressure of too long hours and too) Mr nth, p mi ye for orders ¢ yp fr ar, checked > ccord with y eness. women who have been republicans, so * otae Te " ov | hard work and too few personal in-| allowance, It wouldn't be to my| head office within 20 minutes after ¢ yet,” he murmured, almest im exact accord with appropriatene lists, progressives, democrats, have ; Et {lterests, Her youth was worn|own interest not to fulfill my duties| Mrs, De Guenther had used the et he re oe He was precisely the proper person to persia te J +c that party lines are eer sah be bate a Pingo down, | faithfully.” | telephone on her husband, that Missliit Mee sarrington. ie wheeled : i" oO o ea a a a . * " ‘ { 1 fn do the dirty job and that he was sup — " caw t e 1, wholesome Cpr arank Bg Be And—marriage? What chance of | Yon, that Hae watd Mra.) Braithwaite was to have @ half-day] tom the room” f rshesalll is u a aoe anys ee 3 ve ba arrington. “That waa 004 | immediately - r — uy ported by Lodge of Massachusetts and hones afitant keversmbat. “and “hat seriber and wich te take ad. love and marrige bad she, a work:| Harrington, That was a aL eee i deal iis | Part om veg" o oo Smith of Michi signified harmony honest, ef ; “4 heer vantage of this feature, call ae Birt Grope| See Peoe te one Ser | aed sald was ab cnuseal wormas| , =? bought dociely ‘whatever! the was, her body a shia and o ration instead of being divided into party thie paper's circulation de | thing of the class of men she would] br nA wal ge rs MO | her rected, and woke from|t Allan Harrington's even lies “wt iw i 4 >? Simply that if 8Foups, they should be united partment. be willing to marry? Ail that she| where business wus concerned! a gy entie daze at the/hand just withdrawing from 9 s the situatio ot 3 S : > uD a , And now you'd better see| *, - sa ‘ e|ghoulder, till she heard the clo hat is the situation ime ’ They have, therefore, joined in issuing had to give up in taking this of r| PANTS This is ono of hin good| *fterno find Mr Ml « b ing congress passes certain measures the ar see 4 ren mens | We her freedom, such as it was—| F a Nn f his 00d) Guent g with the w of the door, Then she rose. Allag mor plate trust wit raise the price $200 the call for the organization of the Non . j and those fluttering perhapses that| Gays. Just think, dear Isabel, hel riiture of the successful shopper,|iay still, with cloned iD orga Sie the T “ay seb ts partisan league, and their letter is well ff CHAPTER It whisper such pleasant promises] Poke to me twice without my] SOA herself the proprietress of #|seemed io her that he } per ton, punishing the United States tc worth the attention and consideration of Jf A Strange Engagement when you are young. But, then,| #Peaking to him this morning biue velvet. walking sult, a hat to| If ever 89 faintly, at the touch of hee the sum of $24,000,000 on the work on i antioens:. ‘idere 26 44% The Liberry Teacher looked un-| she wouldn't be young #0 very much | co m7 heh boars bbe a mate pale blue evening frock,|Iips on his cheek. She laid his f ’ every good citizen bellevingty at the sedate elderly " mayed, “Couldn wait ll—tiil| le & twee with| hand on the coverlet with her own armor now in hand. If this isn’t “black pit : n od longer. | Co a tale Gases barween, aren 4 1 - her hand” methods, what is it? This is a political year. Before it is couple who had made her this wild) Wao) ner mind suddenly came up| ** aeeees Te hy Janghed | J0Vely clinging lines, and a heaven-| roughened, ringed one, and followed 4 ; ended, we shall be called upon, by county, Proposition. Mr. De Guenther took) against the remembrance, that in|, MM. Harrington actually laughed! 1 iis crepe thing with rosy rib-|the others out into the room where Let the issue be tried out at once. If ah ho up the explanation again | hi ¢ yoater.| & little at her shyness ing ap|)¥ be eon ticline dead acuan saa Seon tie there is any gang of corporations in this state and nation, to ¢ loose men w “You see now why I requented her passionate a g = | ike eirt. Phylile 7 tho| Dons anc = i leavin iia @ith hie attondaat country that can go into the United shall make our laws, administer our pub- Investigate our reputabt! a, Poeite ite here money and| she tried not to, that thru it all her se a Friday, about 2, that| (Continued in our next issue.) States senate and boldly and openly lic affairs, and sit se judgment upon our sald. “Such @ proposition! leisure to be rested and pretty, and oop uaa oo hy the sumiions Phyllis had EN GE YR threat Meliew and wet. away with it laws. Important issues will also be at an this, enpecially to a young Indy] 9 rose garden! And here, appar mowgere a the Gra Borge rf eagtBoon nreaten a holdup and get awa sigs ing stake who bas no parents or guardian, re! ently, was her wish uncannily ful Mk cae doce. ain : him,| the call came her over the Ii-| { now is the time for the country to dis ye h h hat, while quires a considerable guarante filled b, my dear, you must see him.| the « eggs fp nd cover it! Experience has taught us that, | ood faith and honesty of motly He expects you,” she antw The necessity for preparedness is press i She lifted her head and cast an oe 1 de ss as badly frightened as she had been i i w who actually make, about It?” Phyllis asked quietly. 6 . for| tree moved down the long room ; ing. Is there no senator with courage resolve, it is the fe 4 | PGuenthers, waiting courteously fo and guid-| rington houne - a ; She did not feel now as if it were | towards a door, Pt . " our laws. Why is ff) her decision. In reply to the look, vs Se re } s. Harrington cannet last out enough to offer a resolution directing Sty oe a gered ha tell ab vats anything which had especially to/ My De Guenther began giving eee ovings weak Veahn| the NiguL” caine MY, De Gesatia’s the government to seize the plants of this? € obse! Ab é do with her, It seemed moro Nk) detatin about the business terms of pr aye adh ge na ice over the telephone, “I have the armor plate black handers? point of time, that privileged interests, jan interesting story she was un | the contract generally, She listened saokes Uke that. In ite, room's bp Beg pape sor Goin F pla a a ' monopolies and despoilers of the people raveling sente nee wy sentence Her) attentively. All that—for @ little oN pegendl : Ae mygpe yn , go at once. You had better! ESSE: oe sin : j a ‘ ore hostess caught up the tale agatn. dianship. a little kindness, and ie A Saige TE on sult case, for you possibly! ‘ She Shakes generally, care nothing 08 peng ma | “Angola has been nearly distract| the giving up of a little plece of life] “arcu a hands . wan: neeriy. the) Pee os atte to aot Geek to yoar| Pome mntemh cattiattic: foe Mam gan calls himself a republican, Ryan @ 44 she said, “And the iden has| (00 Riving up 4 and a few ttle as the whiteness of the couch | may not b y : and bowels, and people RS. WOODROW WILSON shakes democrat, Perkins a progressive, but on come to her that If she could find! hopes and dreama! as sen ‘0 whe ped * oe as ar Wee te ceteen.cnwt Piet know it ae! ' j i i | some conscientious woman, a lady, BS te ee ee Oe en el ee Oe soue aeiees te 11) 7 hands. Nothing remarkable about election day, as well as in the campaign, con & paren egg hago ge Phyllin Inughbed, as she alway*) image that she could have watched| lis felt her feet taking her swiftly they are Morgan, Ryan & Co., and thru their nonpartisan or omnipartisan po- litical methods, they secure the election of lawmakers, administrative officials that, you may say. But know ye that in the past it has not been the custom for presidents’ wives to shake hands at could offer would be a conaiders.| 1d when there were big black! him for hours j rds her goal, as if she were of-|They're fine! Don’t stay bik tion, who would take charge of poor problems to be solved. | “Here's Mies Braithwaite, my| fering h rrelf to be made a nun, or ious, sick, headachy or Allan, that she could die in peace.”| “Then you think you will do {t?"| poor darling,” sald his mother.| paying herself away in some awful, constipated “But why did you think of ask-| asked Mra, De Guenther, beaming.| “The young lady we bave been talk-| irrevocable 4, a shion. She pack receptions. Etiquette demanded only a : r ing met” the girl anked, breath-| The Liberry Teacher rose, and| ing about #0 long.” | mechanically sort of “your face is familiar” nod from and judges, thus putting them in abso- lessly. “And why does she want] squared her straight young shoul-| The Crusader lifted his eyelids Then she went Sho always re the mistress of the White House lute control of the government. me married to him? And how! ders under her worn b and let them fall again | membered that journey as long as| Met the new Mrs. President not only “We deem, therefore, that it would be could you or she be sure that I If Mrs, Harrington t 1 do} “Is she?” he a teens, \ she lived . r gs a ver8 rnd y mrs. wee ot only i ould not be much o h ! for the situation!” she sald gallant you ws © talk to her,) tongue nz on, buyin ickets shakes hands but does it in the old- the part of wisdom for the masses, whose — hy oder - ; — hel pal port aid laughed ag a darling boy?" his mother persisted | giving directions—and her mind. interests are bound up with the common tx Geanthar aaanewen tis pty er | “Ne : F aid the Crusader, still in| like ughty child, eatching at fashioned, waist-level, heart-warming id the Crusader, stilt : ee nid, catching a . | thos jens tones everything as they went, and ’ f good, that they also should forget party last two questions together. Ho looked like a young Cruaader| thone empty, listless tones I'd) everyth : way, and her Bt ges ‘Ate, matet anit, softs) Bites, uniting on men by whatever “Mra, Harrington's Idea ia, and 1]on a tomb, ‘That was Phyllis’ first] father not talk. “I'm tired.” _| screaming to be allowed to go back and clinging, they say. And they belong A ae be think rightly, that @ conacientious| impression of Allan Harrington. He| His mother seemed not at all put| home, back to the dusty, matter-of- name they may be called, who can . 8} imp out | course Nbrary and the dreary little partly to you and me and every other h ich hich woman would feel the marriage tle,| talked and acted, if a moveless man | 00! | co be dreary law abiding, respectable citizen until next trusted to carry out the policies whic’ however nominal, a bond that|can be said to act, like a bored,| “Of course darling,” she said,| boarding house bed room! March and maybe longer which is a nice are essential to the common welfare. It would obligate her to a certain duty| spotied small boy, That was her| Kiteing him. She sat by him still.) They were all waiting for her in is for this reason that we have come from all parties, republican, democratic, pro- gressive and socialist, to make common | however, and poured out sentence|Allan’s great dark room. Mrs. Har- toward husband, t by econd. wo selected you, my dear, my hus| "Mra, Harrington, fragile, flushed,| sfter sentence, of question, ineist [rington, deadly pale, lay almost at band and I have had an interest in| breathle y intense in her wheel.| @2¢¢. imploration and pity, elicit-|length in her wheel chair. There you for some years, as you know,|chatr, had yet a certain resemblance) !%* NO answer at all. Phyllis won-)was a clergyman {n vestments, thought. Mrs. Wilson looks like a lady who would shake hands, and if the president "1 rf rf Ther re e Enjoy life! Keep clean inside : - ic wi on 6 epoks: . ion eiitne te dered how {t would feel to have to, There were the De Guenthers : would sneak a national suffrage measure ne the public weal in a Nonpartisan tite Peigta ” wor pray! thew = one on Fae ane oo lie wtill and have that done to you. As for Allan Harrington, he lay| With Cascarets. Take one or two thru the present congress, it is more than & ars ae tive—"* puzzled Phyllis till she placed it as| {or 4 term of years. The result of just as she had seen him that other |at Gat titer aod kowel taeka an even bet that she would shake him Why, isn't that strange?” eried|the work of that faroff jemi agg tage red en gore a ty ote Bla anne Dy: my ma are experienced. Wake up i i c . a: Phylits, dimpling. “That's je hat} school they had attend: Orgive her unenthusiastic future | ses , “ \? x " ; into office for four years more. Begin at the Beginning ~ prado (ae ae what » ~ Seethionhina nal ingest Imincing| bridegroom for what she had at) ¢ffort feeling grand. Your head will be ht rT ner . x y to slap him. “Phyllis has come,” panted Mra.|clear, your tongue clean, breath S costume sets out to be com- Mra. De Guenther flushed, with a| white wolfhound, which, contrary to ! 4 ’- Mre Harrington's Harrington. “Now it will be—all|right, stomach sweet and your liver Meas ik bl cana ae nun! a oo naan uae tis mee ado breath flagged, and the three wom- | right. You must marry ,bim quick-|and thirty feet of bowels a |"T was about to add that we have| ened sick room at all, but followed|°? Went away, back to the room|!¥, do you hear, Phyllis? Ob, peo. |Get a box at any drug. store |not seen you at your work all these] the one sunny spot in Mrs. Harring-| ‘DY had been in before. Phyilis| Pie never will—do—what I want/straighten up. Stop the [years without knowing you to have|ton's room with a wistfal persist-| Sat and let herself be talked to for) (hem to |, Mijons spelis, Lat cote: aed ae |the kind heart and sense of honor| ence. It waa such a amall spot for|® little longer. Then she rose tm Phyitie, takiie borane asatitee [nr Mothers seta erie | requisite to poor Angela's plan. Mr.| such @ long wolfhound—that was] Pulsively. ly. “We're going to attend to it|Cascaret. to children ‘when cros@, | De Guenther has asked his friend,| the princtpal thing which impressed tay I go beck and see your son tos: away, See, evervining ie “= pivag |Mr. Johnaton, the head of the I1-/!teelf on Phyllis’ frightened mind| 8#%!9 for Just a minute?” she asked.| P pate + everything {8/bilious, feverish or {f tongue | . a ‘cc E Everything, Save the Croak fortable, but fails miserably. Wom- Om ones Cony, this an’s costume sets out to be beautiful, dictum of the National Associa- hut fares just as badly,” says Prof. I. B. tion of Merchant Tailors as to men’s Stoughton Holborn of Oxford univer frock coats: sity. Prof. Holborn is one of the most “Green cloth, with wide red stripes; famous lecturers on art in the world. In extreme evening dress, wine colored coat a recent talk in Chicago he decried the with lavender vest. Green always a prom- way we make over our figures to fit the | ready.’ coated—they are harml: brary, much things as we needed to| thruout her visit, SOO Sek eebe Vetere" HEN: Martiay |". Mies sea. ben Ree, sicken supplement our personal knowledge| Mrs. De Guenther convoyed her| 0% bad finished her permiaston:| 24 ‘4, zs ing ripe or ¥ ” j . 2, a Crusader on a tomb, the iyeént color.” fashions, several times a year. Then he §f! of you.” to the Harrington house for inapee.| She br gee into ~~ ‘gt bp gt 4 easiest way is to kneel down wy - Any lady catching us posing as a suggested that we go back to the best | “But—bdot what about me?" asked! tion a couple of days after ahe had po Nee dh tag suite oaaeh 0d oe bim, Phyllis registered this fact in strawberry-breasted frog has our full - jels of th st for our designs, | Phyllis Braithwaite a little ptteous-| accepted some one's proposal to re ae wf Coueh a£ain\her mind quite blankly, as some. rawberry . ig ha ! per. models o ¢ past for ou SIGNS, jly, In answer to all this. | marry Allan Harrington. She had wp lttrington,” she saldithing which might be of use to re-| mission to take a shot at us with any- But why go so far back as the Greeks? “Unless you are thinking of mar-| borrowed a half day from the future | Clearly, “I'm sorry you're tired, but! member in future. . . The mar thing she can throw. Or oven so far as the Middle Ages? \ringe—" Phyllis shook her head—| on purpose, tho she did not want} !'™ afraid I on going to have to/rying took an unnecessarily long “you would have at least a much| to go at all j ank you te listen to me. You know, time, it seemed to her. When it Why not start right now with the easier life than you have now. Mra.| But the reality was not bad; only| ¢on't you, that your mother plans|came to the putting on of the med human figure as it is? . Harrington would settle a iberal/a fluttering, emotional little woman|‘? have me marry you, for a sort! ding ring, she found herself, very IT’S NOT true Chief Lang has also ordered Artists do not pretend to paint the [itncome on you, contingent, of| who clung to her hands and talked| Of Interested head nurse Are you|naturally, guiding Allan's relaxed the Cops to wear blue ribbons In their pink body, dressed or undressed, until they [J course. on your faithful wardership| to her and asked useless questions | Willing to have it happen jfingers, And somehow having to pajamas. have studied anatomy jover Allan. We would be your only| with a nervous insistence which) The heavy white lids half Iifted/do that checked the chilly awe she = + Drees ual sind b ‘ | Judges as to that, You would have| would have been nerve wearing for) S60. k |had had before of Allan Harrington. - en OA WITHOUT A Lang as chief of police, Gill's Dress designers pretend to be artists |® couple or more months of abso-| a steady thing, but was only pitiful) “I don’t mind.” said Allan Har-| It made her feel quite simply RAINIER Ba 4 vote might have been unanimous, Why not make them live up to the pre- | lute freedom every year, control of| to a stranger rington listlessly. 1 suppose you) sorry for him, as if he were one of KRY tense? |much of your own time, ample nd you are Mins Bratthwatt are quiet and trustworthy, or De/her poor ttle boys in trouble. And f |lelsure to enjoy {t. You would give| who is going to look after my boy?”| Guenther wouldn't have sent you.|when it was all over she bent piti- RESTAURANT only your chances of actual mar-| she ended. “Oh, it ts #0 good of| It Will give mother a little peace fully before she thought and Kineed| 913.2% AVENUE & MADISON ST. riage for perhaps five years, for|you--I am so glad—I can go in| ®4 It makes no difference to me.”|one white, cold cheek. Then, as her poor Allan cannot live longer than| peace now, Are you sure—sure you|, He closed his eyes and the sub-| lips brushed his cheek she recoiled jthat and some part of every day| will know the minute his attend.| Ject at the same time and colored a little. She had felt L B |to seoing that Allan was not neg-|ants aro tho least bit negligent? 1]. “Well, then, that's all right,” sald that slight roughness which a man’s lected. If you bestow on him half| watch and watch them all the time,| Phyllis cheerfully, and started to|cheek, however close-shaven, al. of the interest and effort I have|I tell Allan to ring for me ff any-|®9. Then, drawn back by a sudden,| Ways has—the man-feel.It made her Jusi Printers known of your giving any one of) thing ever is the least bit wrong _| nervous temper impulse, she moved | realize unreasonably that it was a/ fe a dozen little immigrant boys, his| I am always begging him to remem-| ack on him. “And let me tell/man she had married, after all, not| 1013 THIRD aAIN 1043 | e ° mother has nothing to fear for|ber. 1 go in every night and pray| 7OU, she added, ball lecghing, haif| re ee CE eee es him.” with him—d¢o you think you could| !™pertinently, “that if you ever get —— Mr. De Guenther stopped with a| do that? But! always cry #o before| nto my quiet, trustworthy clutches| eat es C. y C. = grave little bow, and he and his| I'm thru—t cry and ery—my poor,| YOU may have an awful time, You're] wong oe a—t reat hers. He may, In sorrow, confess|tained at the county court couse; | wife waited for the reply helpless boy—he was so strong and] Very spoiled invalid.” Meat eaters are apt to have wea! ine ‘thay had ves te. aa mene divorce ™ ira | Sai dean eo We tok what [bat octor may write im premcrt p< | me She whisked out of the room be. and tame, achy heske, AIT Rawent haa te tae — by wife and married again. Iran after he bas done, and they may forgive |tion which calls for lquor. fore he could have gone very far y meat diet increases the pro-|for my back or kidneys since, lis secend woman for four years, | him. But nothing can atone for the lew CAPT. PAYSSE should worry! He still has his job as port warden. ERICKSON HAS a perfectly good alibi. The people needed him most In the council. IT PAYS to advertise! Ask Doc Brown. with his reply, apparently, He lay| duction rapa acid so greatly that) FreryAeture ‘ lyears that are lost, nor bring back} @Q—PI i Oo b E | unmoved and unmovt j in time {t ts likely to overwork and | eames Giacn, | + peek line happiness waich has gone with|the vice president of ‘the ‘United utbursts of verettTrue |" Phyllis discovered, polsing breath-| Weaken the kidneys. | q r’ 4 ‘ them. States; also the names of the mem jless on the threshold, that some-| A lttle meat is good, but persons | Blame them. One thing | did. ate “ bers of President Wilson's cantons how she had seen his eyes, They| Who work inside should cut down fe first wife and children || Q—! kept company with a girl) OUT-OF-TOWN, | MR. TRUG, MeeyT Aw, DELIGHTED, MR. TRUE, had b & little like the woif.|On Meat as soon as they begin to| Raiclerved to the second. She has ff and on for two years, until about) A.—The vice president is Thor ° 4, 1 AM HEA To See THE jhound’s, a sort of wistful goid-|feel heavy after eating, and are| no children, 80 some of my money|@ Year ago. | now learn from an-|as Marshall: secretary of state, | LORD ALGERNON WONDERFUL SIGHTS OF YouR |] | brown |having backache, headache, dizzy | * | For some reason she found that| SPells, rheumatic. pains, nervous Allan Harrington's attitude of ab-| {roubles and irregular action of solute detachment made the whole| @e kidneys. affair seem much easier for her,| Neglect of this condition leads to may go to her relatives. Is there | other party that she's engaged, and| Robert Lansing; secretary of thu| || DESIDNEY. =|COUNTRY, DONCHER KNOW, | nything | can do to atone for this Would like to know If it would be|treasury, William G. McAdoo; at - “a . CONTRITE. |Proper for me to send a wedding |torney general, Albert 8. Burleson A. This letter tells its own atory.|Present, altho | received no Invita-|secretary of the navy. Josephus This man sees his error too late for |t!On, nor any word that a wedding|Dantels; secretary of the interior, And when Mrs. Harrington slipped| &Tavel, dropsy, and Bright's disease is to take place. B. J. B. | Franklin K. Lane; secretary of agri " s ‘ 7 reparation. Sorrow has left its fi ; ag a solitaire diamond into her hand Strengthen the kidneys by using mark too deeply on the heart of the ait’ ts to Cone circumstances no bie ag B satu wine cone | as sho went, instead of disliking jt] Doan'’s Kidney Pills, Thousands | | ered wite to be a ard A ea field; secretary of labor Wille | she enjoyed its feel on her finger,| Will tell you how good they are. \° | have the Insurance put back In he ; ; “ and the flash of {t in the light | U She thanked Mrs. Harrington for {t/ SEATTLE PROOF: | j with real gratitude. But it made] A. H. Dafoe, baker, 6246 Ellis | her feel more than ever engag | han ever engaged to! Ave, says: “I had pain, lamenen: | marry her mother-in-law 5 gp ney, name. He may give property to his| @—Can a doctor or a minister| Wilson. children, provided he does not do|give a permit to anybody to get ——— | another wrong by depriving the sec-|liquor ata drug store? E. P. S. Q—Piease teli me which city has ond wife of that which is legally A.—No; the permit must be jthe Greatest population, London or New York city. | a and ‘soreness across my kidneys, A sharording te, tue tient ofl wien walked home rather silently] and it was hard for me to bend d R d ficial estimates, New York has a/ | the por cs a gy “ea Only at)/over or bring any strain on my 4 e tan ar. eme y population of 5,253,885, and London | the mando on Gheont pleat ba Steps./back. My kidneys were too fre quent fn action, which showed that they were disordered. I used|“Why can't | enjoy a meal any | Doan’s Kidney Pills, and tn a short more?" rf | al ‘ in Countless Homes owns ucdeves coum ts : i a blonde to wear? A BLONDE. A A blonde may wear the deli cate shades of pink and blue. brown, tan, and usually black “He must have been delightful,” she said, “when he was alive!” | CHAPTER IV. And Then They Were Married | After a week of the old bustling, | Relieves Constipation Easily; Without Griping or | i However, if you have blue m1 dusty, hard work the Liberry! uc possennala blue darker than ten cians Be fei * | Teacher's visit to the De Guen-| SUM crctitione that are cosets se eyes 18 your most becoming color : AND YOU'RE HERE TO TAKE AN ins Hariagiea weet ern wo conditions tha lonely re pa = : gtons', seemed part o fated and the cause of much phys-| Q—I am just beginning to learn| AMERICAN HEIRESS AND A MICLION queer story she had finished and feal suffering. | wireless operating and would like ==| OF AMGRICAN DOLLARS TO BOLSTER || | put back on the shelf. Only once ; The tendency to indulge one’s | |to know where I can get a book = UP YOUR |MPOVERISHED ESTATES! | in. & while would come to hor th ‘ appetite 1s more or less general | giving the call stations of the = D WHILE You're TAKIN | vision of the wistful Harrington Band most people sutter at one | | United States and of the boats, : aN pala laby: sty sree gy onine hia inadequate SAVE YOUR TEETH time or another from rebellion of | FRANK. patch of sunlight, or of the dusky! the overtaxed organs of digestion | A.—"Radio Stations of the Unit room where Allan Harrington lay| OHIO CUT RATE DENTISTS 4 and elimination. A pleasantly ef. ed States” is a bulletin published | inert nd white, and looking like 20T University st. Opposite Fraser-Paterece fective remedy, that will quickly jby the United States bureau of |a wonderful carved statue on al relieve the congestion of poisonous navigation, department of com. | tomb. stomach waste and restore regu larity, is the compound of aim laxative herbs sold in drug store for fifty cents a bottle under tt name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pe sin. This is a mild, pleasant lax merce Ny extracted absolutely withent pat free from She began to do a little to her] clothes, but not very much, be Jcause sho had neither time’ nor money, Mr. De Guenther had want-| ed her to take some money in ad. Q—Kindly tell me whether or not a married man should wear a jwedding ring, and why, or why c not? é 4 . B, vance, but #he had refused ative tonic, free from oplates or MRS. OLIVER YOUNG A-—-The wearing of a wedding “And it tan’t as if I were going to narcotic drugs, and has been the ring by men {s not general. The ox a lover,” she defended herself to Miasash household femedy is|younger; her work séems |change of rings, however, {sa Mrs, De Guenther with a little wist.| thousands of homes for many|and she has regained her ar pretty feature of some wedding ful smile, “Nobody will know what} I have on, any more than they do| now Mra, De Guenther gave a scan dalized little ery “My dear child,” she replied| firmly, “you are going to have one pretty frock and one really good pment Filling, ate. Gold Crowns, $3 Nothing but the best matertal used—gisranteed fer 15 yoars Amalgam Fillings. 800 to @1.00 | Best Gold Crowns Gold Alloy Fillings. 91 to | 150,000, ~. Syrup Pepsin she feels ten years | Monticello, Ill, e Cee eae 4 years ° Get a bottle of Dr. Cal ceremonies Mrs. Oliver Young, Merriil, Wis.,| Syrup yin from your drugeiat writing to Dr. Caldwell, saya she 1 n the house. A trial rs knows of nothing so effective for | bottle, free of charge, can be ob Three hundred years ago thet regulating the stomach and bow-|tained by writing to Dr. W. Population of London was only a> r LZ ls; since taking Dr. Caldwell’s|Caldwell, 454 Washington st.,| AY i” ————e LORE OW TE BET WIRY BRANES

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