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Mamber of the Bertpps North ot a Dy matt, out of elty, Mr. Vail BAYS Theodore N. system: “All consumers a service or commodities shot to pay a fair price for other service, and then they can ge for their own.” Fine, Mr. Vail, very fine Vai But we've seen the good applied, exclusively, to the so often that we would like a questidn or two, Mr. Vail ting for their services? How many hours in thei Are fellows in the Bell just below you in position the pay than you? Without intent to be at a or personal, Mr. Vail, we ca _ ing that we've noticed that est in proclaiming the ble Rule are usually most loyal "the infernal Greedy Rule please us much to be assu great Bell system is, indeec exception. WRITE ON O _ THE PAPER ONLY, MR. YOU N DON’T MIND | STAMP FOR RETURN. The Irresistible and Immovable APANESE troops are b I Asia Minor, says a report ington. would result should an irre: military sense. to an irresistible force by while the German army has any yet discovered. He Sure Can Dig _ INCE war a la mode h into more or less of a ition, we se@-no reason 4 wouldn't be highly qualified to Garrison. ere has t ‘succeed Secretary jously speaking, th an administrator. a OUR NEW destroyer, the Con: "are rejoiced to learn that we boat which can outrun a Staten GERMAN PRESS says the Fo tricity.” There, now! ‘would be the goat. Q—Do modesty and just being ever pay a girl? My chum) I would like you to answer thii ti Miss Gre Our friends call upon us a second time. OT A PARTICLE _ OF DANDRUFF OR > A FALLING HAIR Your Hair! Double Its Beauty in Just a - Few Moments. “Danderine” Makes Hair Thick, Glossy, Wavy and Beautiful. Within ten minutes after an ap- plication of: Danderine you cannot) ‘find a single trace of dandruff or) falling hair, and your scalp will not ftch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks’ use, | “when you see new hair, fine and | § downy at first—yes—but really " “new hair—growing all over the seat | | | Ip. * Danderine’ is to the hair what} | “fresh showers of rain and sunshine Y ‘are to vegetation. It goes right to| the roots, invigorates and strength “ens them. Its exhilarating, stimu Jating and life-producing proper ties cause the hair to grow long, * strong and beautiful. A little Danderine immediately | + doubies ti uty of your hair. No| difference how dull, faded, brittle ‘and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. fis amazing—your hair will be light, nd wavy, and have an ap- pea spparable luster, softness and luxurt- — ence. + Get a 25cent bottle of Knowl-| ..ton’s Danderine from any drug) store or toilet counter, and prove | that your hair is as pretty and soft | as any—that it has been neglected | or injured by careless treatment—| that's all—you surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you . will just tay a little Danderine, 4 Hntered at Meattie, Wash, We Lend You Our Ears, salaried head of the Bell telephone beautiful Golden Rule, put in new words What are the Bell girl operatives get- Are they permitted to unionize—com- ? of the work and getting much less of way of Vladivostok to the Suez and 3 We may, therefore, soon witness a so- lution of the mooted problem as to what meet an immovable object, at least, in a The Jap soldiers have been likened to be as nearly an immovable object as mo better man mentioned for the place. _ Goethals is an organizer, a builder and If there are any three qualities more ial in the man who Fs of rétonstructing our , we do not know what they can 30.40 knots per hour on her speed trial. We The Seattle Star Postoftion as second cla ONS Year, $3.60; @ months, $1.90) Bo per Mm By carrter, city, 280 @ month imple | prrerrnrnrrnnnrrrnn at his feat, and forgot to be angry i¢ A oing to kis Predicting a Rush | jee a fora moment, “Icertainly did,” he} | At a certain slowness tn alttl Aren't you rains, 10. ia | Thie Is a part of a book- J said tone, Phyllis xprang up. “You must) good-nls ‘ rye he Sha never, somehow, been able 1 1 1 bel | ‘This time she reached up and so tired to death!” she said It| Allan, precisely as he had b ets eur anne neo a | pulled at his heavy silk sleeve as] “And the way you lost your tem nm be nearly 10, Do you feel|doing it ever since she met tim 1, the high to convince any one else that we thie newepene Othere are | she spoke went on Wallis, enthusiastic worn, out?” Evidently that kiss three hou ' | “wy “¢ Allan, it was beau-| Wo > ¢ oated precede amiqanted t6 much-as « political propliet to follow fram week to week, || en" tald “icy repens ail a You Mr n't been more than | Before he could say anything,| bad create a 8 prec aenty °F but we still like to prognosticate, for our beginning each Monday and if from an infinite distance. It! Mrs, De Guenther had also risen,| colored to her ear nd users of ild be eager own satisfactic STAR—THURSDAY, FEB. 24, 1916. PAGE 4. A Novel a Week A standard, high-class, book-slze novel, complete this week in thie pape No long waits; a full Inetaliment will come to you every day. Besides all the other good things thig: + will give each week # standard ¢ novel, Nothing better for evening ae matter onth up to € mos Higarst Newspaper Fiction Featw - cots "THE RED EMERALD” “Sho certainly ts.” “Goodnight, Allan,” she nid, to way gnarly since the accident! “Would yon mind,” asked Phyllis you used tO cross Allan, tired as gullelessly, “if Wallis--we moved mustn't and was sweeping away her hus must be! band ending each Saturday. A way COMPLETE NOVEL was #0 like the on, now and then ‘ We look to seé a regular stampede in EVERY WEEK! If you want you—a little? I can tell you all/throw hair brus Wallis had appeared by this time, jood-night, Allan,” the s’ goods and ranks of the true: and tried republican back copies of the eet oh About, everything, unless you'd! Tut at the mention of his lost| Wallis had appeared by Gi tte) sm edately, and” kissed ta fair price * " vel | r t rather not have the full details of|temper Allan remembered to lose it had a chance tol ch as she had done & mo ar old guard to get aboard the Roosevelt | if you are not # reguiar aub 7 I further, He demanded present-| room before re | 3 4 : E: tiber and wish to take ad- the plan still furth: h of anything but good-|ago—years ago!—when they 1 It is the band wagon about the day and date the Vantage of thie feature, call Anything.” said Allan weartly,|ly where he Was going oA allie been married, Then she fled, Colonel returns from his West Indies thie papers circulation de. {| “only don't bother me about It!” “Not more than two houra’ ride,| ME ding herself fulliength| “Wallis,” said bis master dre jaunt partment. Phyllis jumped to her feet, ®/ gir, 1 heard Mr, De Guenther men-| it ' Thy billows before the| fly, when his man appeared ag Golden Rule © i whirl of gay blue skirts and cheer-|ijon,” answered Wallis at once, OA) fi) Tt he a nove further “| want some more real clot other fellow Watch and see. Laaerrrrrrrnrrrrnrrene}| fully toning blue feathers. "Good-|iittle place called Wallraven—quite | fire, too tired to make Tt it) aa oF pleeping suite. Get me to ask you piaietace te 8 pee by, dear Crusader!” she anid mith | country, air, 1 bel lehe had wished for on that wet| some, please. Goodnight.” i ) High Order of Talent CHAPTER VIL. | cath tn her voice that might have! go the De Guenthers are in It.) Peteuary day in the brary, Per ove At Last a Rose Garden | been etther a laugh or a sob. oo!" 1 Allan What the dic’ e : ke “ 4id Mr. Allan pass Th New York World has sprung a Outside the sitting room door) next time you see me you'll prob lne has thin iri gone to them 10) the, Harrington ike Could moch| night?” Phylits asked Wallis Se pd ach "it bab woes Go 6 stood Wallis, who had been lying ably hate me Dil ine of | BYPnotize them #0?” aon i liton did. If she could] {ously, standing ontside bis Glam r work-day? sh it oe ‘oant : nd ane ts “show 1 be ted t iat 4 Pi eae Tite nll right, Wallis,” | “But I've heard eay it's # very | atay brave enough and kind enough| next morning. She had been whole lot of trouble ane 0 x “t wanted to explain, madam, right, a place, air,” wan all Wallis | SRY “eet enough * * * her| since 7, speeding the parting guegt up” one Jean Harold Edward St. Cyr, about the plans,” he sald. “It wore) She sats and ee —_ ated to this, The De Guen-| S00 orite ed? % * Wallis|and interviewing the cook who married a rich and aged widow, rica Mr. Allan. You see, madam,|e. citato the bedrood thers, were not the only people | S7cllds droopen. stully over her.|chambermaid. Her town ho management 4) Refield, 1909 on the strength of [| the late Mrs. Harrington was 8) °lTn ote going to be moved, |Phyilis had hypnotized “Mrs. Harrington,” he was #ay-| keeper's choice had been cheerful] doing most rs. Refield, in ‘ B Breat one for plans, She had, if 1) 0) = Hn toed a. iittie| Phyllis’ rose garden house had.| Vien a really masterly ignor-|to w degree, and black, al! of tt his high-sounding nomenclature and fi} may say so, a new one every day, youd Deller oe UT ot same | among other virtues, the charm of | ie’ or her attitude on the rug, “Mr.| fat Virginia cook, ® slim y aristocratic ways, and who, upon the and she'd argue you deaf, dumb and| heavier, wir: ae ee hich Phyllia | being near the little station. There |i rinvion says you haven't bid| ‘Tuskegee chambermaid of a p sus ous a reg ‘8 vay Pe ‘0 e' Mn } | Allan's quick passa » H ' he ame £ nt es his inconsolable grief, evidenced by black ing it. Then you'd settle down to|, getbeee igr ogre A the long old carryall (whose ae egy borg N gr a4 nga ee Age pote! tellowe tied: crepe underwear, silk crepe coat and it—-and next day there'd be another! - ection to the word. seats had been removed to make| been in tie 00! ‘mall boy? But] useful now he was here. Ph 5 f sui ssed Golden threats of suic in practicing widow of one Tt would of New York’ his anguish by marrying the $55,000,000 one, with Mra, Harrington rooting | for It just as hard, and you, with} your mouth fixed for the other plan, | ®o to speak, would have to give in to that.” ba room for his cot) than he had re- ide, and who then assuaged phe bad re: she sprang up and followed Wallis nj into Allan's room. He was lying \back in his white silk sleeping things among the white bed drap- had seen them al) this morning, found them should be. Now she was look after Allan, as her duty was, Allan let him go on in unnoticing silence till {t came to that totally millar thing these seven years, remembered existed. the flapping black ofleloth curtat in front rolled up, 80 he could see out, and secretly enjoyed the drive, “Silent” Smith, a member s four hundred, Now the h?” inquired Allan " . j - oh s he always had be- Wallis beamed from against red that the World proves, beyond a reasonable doubt, Wallis’ carefully impersonal ser) ocening from bis lethargy, “i{Unforeseen tho it had been His looking a doorpost, his tray in his hands, 1, a splendid cry Harold Edward St. Cyr is in [j]Y&88tEnatish had slipped trom him.| 100 head a collar and tie to keep |*Pine never said a word. Perhaps) fore, 1 Lean eagerly, as| “Mrs. Harrington, It's one of IDE OF eer eee Seer: Ser ) and he was talking to Phyllis t tting cold on a journey |it, too, enjoyed having a change Phyllis,” he ber Ys 08). Cre, Be . it's one of 4 reality one Jack Thompson, ex-hotel m man, bi 148) 0 from eee 1 , city poom,|#be sat down ‘beside him, “what) best sleeps Mr. Allan's had VAIL, AND sO gr man to man, but she was very glad] scros the house, And where did |from a couch in « dark city r beet sown ackiensd ‘whan. Tihogre-etraiget. aad then sled NCLOSING “lerk of Waco, Texas of It. There were the sort of facts! you get those clothes? They look| They saw no one in thelr pas: Hille Nol wet saat worrled| «till, if broken, till 6! And NCLOSING T " she had to elictt e thru the long, low, old house. | first came , . 5 son, it has been shown, bein | sage thru «. * an Fhompson, | “When Mr. Allan was well.” he! Waits taid his now fully dressed |Phyilis evidently had learned that | You had he taking interest in things. rather up aga New York, changed his name, borrowed $500 for a wa a rich widow. and when she him ample we the cing sent by other right of from Wash- hattan’s tallest social tree w Went on, “he used to just Inugh and! nestor back to a reclining position |Allan didn't like his say, ‘All right, mother darling,’ and) no had been propped up—and|about done before people. pet her and do his own way—he/ tucked a handkerchief into the ap-| Wallis seemed to be ac inst it in hard-hearted old a meta “and thank you for erous about it all.” ma‘am, you should have heard yesterday on the train, as fu as furious! It was beautiful!” “Oh, no; | saia Phyllis. ting un-| being #0 gen carryings rdrobe and set out to bag c + lways ht } “I wasn't generous,” sald her “Then his spt wasn't jai He succeeded, all right, oo tae ht ae bet shee Be Sade ge Hh 9 pea Pie coerce ond Arndale very captigs 00) ges husband. “I behaved Ike every-| said Phyllis thoughtfully pt t considerately died, leaving was hurt, of course, he couldn't Ket|aiways deal.” And he wheeled the |a long, well-lighted room at the end| thing to o}d Wallis about it. Well,| believe there pein ry s orking capital, he shot an- ff} away, and the old madam, she'd ait! couch back to the day room, over|of the house, and deftly transfer-| What was it, then? pooges pve enecid os ee PSY : f the highest limb of Man- by his couch by the bour, and helt its very door red him to a couch much more con-| “I—I—only—you looked so dif-| the doctors realised. And ¢ bet nearly wild, making plans for him.| “1¢ did not occur to Allan, as he venient. being newer, than the old| ferent in-—clothes, vienser) Tae SS cask, a beer, ; - : , She'd spend weeks planning details} was being carried downstairs by/one. On this he waa wheeled to “Nke any man my age or olde D It is not charged that Thompson, or it of things over and over, never| Wallis =| Arthur, another of thé|his adjoining bedroom, and when|——a* !f you fhight get up and go to/a masseur and a wheel chair ' any nature. sistible force skeletons hidd of New York's war critics, 2nd proyed itself big guns in E At the risk anarchists, we admiration for young Thompson and unaided, as déveloped prestige, he in “digging in” Col. . And, ser- hus far been le “but a manifestation of American eccen- St. Cyr, committed any legal offense of shaken as hard shaking this one, there would be a rat- tling which would drown the noise of the Gotham and got what he went after. brought home the bacon. He shrewdly capitalized the mania of New York's’ newly-rich for title and made it yield big interest returns. Thompson may be a social buccaneer, but he has a ment: of traits which surely must be delectable to Wall street, even if it causes Fifth avenue to gag and sputter the next things to get.” contint Phyllis decisively, servants, that anything mote than| Wallis bad made him comfortable| business, or any- a change of rooms was intended; \there, he left him mysteriously for thing, and | getting tired. And then off again le is simply a social faker. |to the next thing! It was all be- a little with sheer joy of bet nd prettily dressed, with a dear house all her own, and—yes—@ jdear Allan a little her own, too! | (Continued in Our Next Issue) son except that he cood buckel rite down to the job or he wood take care of him alrite, alrite, johny keeper's mistaken idea that drives! roseshaded, Allan noticed. There! would be good for him. was an old-fashioned landscape Allan.” Hut when Wallis and Arthur car-|story paper on the walls, with very “1 think 1 understand,” sald|ried the light pallet on which he jig repeat Sec: i bak aal Phyllis thoughtfully jo that |lay swiftly up a plank walk laid t0| wnere they interfered with tracing, ® |why! She herself was doubtless | the door of a private car—why then out the adventures of the paper| the outcome of one of Mrs, Har-|{t began to occur to Allan Harring-| \oonte wore a good many pictures, | | rington’s long-detailed plana, insist-|ton that something was happening. | ciite ibecnardves, foe that Gon ed onto Allan till he had acquiesced| And—which rather surprised bim-| 7 1. pamington type men ike for quiet’s sake! self—he did not lift a supercilious |p ,"Ne Remington ype voetheless.| ayant veal page ee = = or a ones The *reraitare was chintz-covered | Sho was somehow sure he woulta’t| voles, “Very wee ¥ } ‘have sald tt if it Soa ast been tae, turned his head toward the devoted peel og cl pay moe oe ove thing It was Phyllis Harrington's firm| Wallis, and what he sald wa this: ee ow tet J — 4 am a. belief that Mr, De Guenthervcould|, “What the deuce does this tom | 1t, | Arg Rab yee to produce anything anybody wanted|foolery mean?” As he spoke he felt in that 7% ) wast ave pot a at any time, or that {f he couldn't|*b® accumulated capacity for tem- ag br eS jeliberate wor! koe his wife could. So it was to him| Per of the Inst seven years surging | ie Fe No je lay contentedly, | that she went on her quest for the|"? toward Wallis, and Arthur, and|Watching the gtate fire, and try- Tose garden, with {ts incidental aby fp — the carriage horses, awk Page brat yet Don the and everything else. G 6 . ry la she ® Seif Pett heated “Well, sir, Mra. Harrington, she |found himself at length, much te elderly manston, preferably Colon- thought, a! A ee teat . B pn slg OF Lnisived bo Bdge Sacer wane tees bitead Tne eaier Sitatt want to be bothers vectbin tray, He was thinking of it more didn’t want to be bothered, sir——" | many rose trees around !t a8 posst-|"““notnered!” shouted Allan, not at and more interestedly by the time TT vari cause whe was so fond of him, you)nor, as he was carried out at M8) _ while you! That's all, truly!” eo lis went singing on do era a Pe a eae see. But if you'll pardon my say-|door to a long closed carriage, that!” jt was growing dark by" now,| “Why, that ‘sounds truthful!”| the sunny old house, swinging social faking robably, if all the old filing so, madam"— Wallis was fe-(it was anything worse than his NeW land the lights were on. They were| Said Allan, and laughed. It was|colored muslin skirts and pi | len away in the dark closets the first time she had heard him, | and she gave a start. Such a clear, | cheerful, young laugh! Maybe he | would laugh more, by and by, if be worked hard to make bim. uming his man-servant manners it was not always good for Mr, aristocracy were hauled out as the World is i urope of being classed as social must confess to a sneaking Alone without money or social waded the holy of holies of He A French officer who Is a prisoner In Germany hae, on | two occasions, managed to | Eyratecing a iatar tot | HOT WATER THE: smcarar care »| BEST LIVER AND ( We make a good impression on them, but when It comes to being issed good-night we lose out, be- cause we do not permit it. We are considered very good company unti! hey get sentimental. They put us o the test, and we are found lack- ing. Now we ask, does it pay, if we must live alone all our lives? TWO GOOD BUT LONELY GIRLS, A.—Yes, dear girls, it DOES pay, just bow much you will never real- ize unless you should barter your) self-respect for a little cheap senti- mentality. To a certain extent, ev-| ery one lives alone. One's real life is that he lives with himself. How much better, then, to have self-re- spect and a pure conscience than all the inferior companions in the world. Modesty and “just being| good” do pay. There's a lot of life in which they are the very best in- vestment, Q—Recently | became acquainted with a nice young lady and called on her once, but when | went again her sister met me and told me she was ill and could see no one. | did not believe it, and got very angry, thinking she did not wish to see me. Now | ha was very ill for several weeks, | am ashamed of myself and feel that 1 did wrong. | think of her al! the time. Do you think | could call on her again? s Me A.—It would be well to write the young lady a note, telling her frank ly of the mistake you made, and asking permission to call. You evi dently had very little faith in the truth of your friend or in your own ability to please on your first ap pearance. Hereafter, of course, you will not be #0 quick to take offense will not be #0 quick to take offense Q—Can you tell me who Is the The effect | author of the “Cyclopedia of Social) America, and where can | obtain the Usage,” who publishes it, and the price per copy? IGNATIO, A.—Helen 1. Roberts is the au- thor of the book, and it is publish ed by G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York city. It costs $1.50. Q.—BSome time ago | acted as a witness in a case in court. Whére can | collect the fee due me as wit ness? Ww. D, A.-Inquire at the courtroom where the case was heard, | |to contradict the advice of a girl's! Just found out that she| takes on the —_ mightily. ble. And she wanted it a8 near! ay ike @ bored and dying invalid. |Wallis—trayleas—came back. verry sore at his littel boy gorgie ; national de- and as soon possible. By the) 5, b 4 h |"1 should think T did, when a change Mr, and Mra, De Guenther and Ps |help of Mr. De Guenther, amused ' because gorgie wont never study : ma . eo eae in my whole way of life is made! |the young madam are waiting for 7 A Good Definition but effictent, Mra. De Guenther, ef:|qno gave you, of Mra. Harrington, |you in. the living room,” he an-|more than he has too which is only [po F THE hyph ‘ ki fictent but sentimental, and 8h| permission for this outrageous per-|nounced. “They would be glad {f| when the teecher has got her lamps Gr 6c 1E hyphen means ancestry, I'm soya taty ee he pate Fhe | formance? It's sheer, brutal, insult-| you would have supper with them.” |on him or when his dad says he's) co.. Glass of Hot Water Be ne yngham, made for it. If it means allegiance, I'm ¢ sd ° nied. jing idiocy!” “Very well,” said Allan, amiably,|got to choose between studying his| P#Y' ps t Allan Ft "Nobody, sir—ves, sir,” replied | stil] much to his own surprise. lesson & a lickin fore Breakfast Washes a * Han Harrington lay in his at-iwallis, meekly. ‘Would you care) The room Wallis wheeled him in-| evry since skool begun last fall Poisons from System ache war Thus briefly does Francis Hugo, sec- bare en ite Sean 70 Se Sones ft drink, sie—or anything?” to was a long, low one, wainscoted|gorgie hag, pulled down more poor on island ferry. { y . » clear-cut face od Allan. 4 pr rry retary of the state of New York, put the a little thrown back, eyes half} «0 } a es and bare floored, It was furnished|marcks on his report card than] Physicians the world over vecaes = best ‘possible definition of a much dis- 4 ra fa » ®P-| with the best imitation of Chippen-|/anny other kid & in that respeck! mend the inside bath, claiming t rd peace move seed little word ba iis’ proaching near with that article and 4 ina hurry, but|he is the champion of the class|is of vastly more importance than dat cusse ittle word. a. yilis’ gay, sweetly carrying! jaying it on the coverlid. Alla: there were cush-|put that dont make no bit with mr| outside cleanliness, because the WEE a voice rang from outside the door. ed the fan angrily—and |joned chairs and couches enough | medders atall vf skin pores do not absorb impurities of We knew Uncle Sam THERE ARE 13 sadder but wiser candidates ‘The 3:30, then, Wallis, and 1 he thought he had hurled {t/for solid comfort. There was a fire! pyt the other nite when his pop| into the blood, causing {ll health, fo today. feel as if 1 were going to ateal/at Wallis. Weakly, it is true, for It|here also, An old-fashioned half-|comes home gorgie busts into the| While the pores in the ten yards of fr Charile Ross! Well Hehted ingloriously about five feet |tadle against the wall was covered z bowels do. 7 di On the last word she broke off but he had thrown it, with a “ b konversasbun with a mouthful of sd waht the mettan race e . with a great many pienicky things |;ow well he was doing in spelling}, Men and women are urged to nd p oor} movement that put to use the/to eat. And there were the De|@ wood his dad buy him that air drink each morning, before break- n softly open and slid in. She crossed| muscles of the long-disused upper|Guenthers and Phyllis. On the! * rs fast a.glass of hot water with a tea- a , rifle he seen last week down in the e straight to the couch, looked around] arm. Wallis sat suddenly down and | whole, it felt very like a welcome- hore for $8 cen spoonful of limestone phosphate in ce for the chair that should have been| caught his breath. home. ssa ths n it, as a harmless means of helping t ° q ° by it but wasn’t, and sat absently| “Mr, Allan!” he sald. “Do you| Phyllis, ina satiny rose-colored|, *0 200 have finally got it threw |i wash from the stomach, liver, f down on the floor know what you did then? You/gown he had never seen before,|70\ girin ene? “Pel MS POP) kianeys and bowels the previous | —— << Allan!" she said. threw, and you haven't been able to|came over to his couch to meet |"*d Sarkas day's indigestible material, poisons, f yes pop, replyd gorgle, 1 was) verry neer getting to the head of my class today is that so, mr medders said & he was verry pleesed, | always kne that you had it in you if you wood try hard for 1 was the best speller in skool when { was a lad of your aige, & now you can tell us all about it & he looked at mr sanders who was a naybor that come over) for a game of peenuckel why, pop, a big word came all the way down to me because none of the other kids cood spell it yes, inkwired mr medders, go on and if ! cood had spelled it 1 wood been at the head of the class, replyed gorgie then mr medders sald where is that peenuckle deck without saying No answer. “Allan Harrington!” Still none. Allan was asleep, or what did instead, in one use more than your forearm before! sour bile and toxins; thus cleans- ir. Allan, you're getting bet- ing, sweetening and purifying entire alimentary canal before put- ting more food into the stomach. Just as soap and hot water leanse and freshen the skin, so hot water ant limestone phosphate act on the eliminative organs. Those who wake up with bad breath, coated tongue, nasty taste or have a dull, aching head, complexion, acid stomach; who are subject to Dilfous attacks or constipation, should obtain a quarter pound of limestone phos- phate at the drag store. This will 7 cost very little but is sufficient to demonstrate the value of inside | bathing. Those who continue it each morning are assured of pro- nounced results, both in regard to bim. She bent towards him with her hand out, seemed about to speak, then backed, flushed, and| acted as if something had frighten-| Jed her badly | “Is she as afraid of me as all that?” thought Allan, Wallis must! Q—I received a watch-bracelet a birthday gift from a boy | have | known for two years. We are only 16 and 17 years of age. It did not seem right for me to take it, but my mother said | should. Was it right or wrong? NEVA. | A.—Seldom do I find ft necessary Allan himself lay In aston!sment have given her a lurid account of} how he had im behaved. His quick| alse was to reassure her “Well, Phyllis, my dear, you cer- jtainly didn’t bother me with plans |this time!” he sald, smiling. “This lis a bully surprise!” | “I—I'm glad you like it,” said his| wife shyly, still backing away, “Ot course he'd like ft,” said Mra. De Guenther's kind staccato voice behind him, “Kiss you husband and tell him he's welcome home, Phytlie child!” mother, and tn this case there may | be some circumstance of which you did not tell me which makes it right for you to accept the gift. But in most cases, to accept a gift of much value puts a girl under obligations | which she does not care to bear and, to say the least, it is in ques tionable taste. | Q-—-1 have some old black crepe which Is perfectly good, exagpt that y no more about gorgie’s spelling les.' health and appearance, ltt te rusty looking from Tying oo Now, Phyllis was tired with muth wie wa jlong. Is there any way | can re- hurried work, and overstrung. And Allan, lying there smiling boyishly up at her, Allan seen for the first time in these usual-looking gray man clothes, was like nether the marble Crusader she had feared nor the heartbroken little boy she ‘had pitied. He was suddenly her contemporary, a very handsome and attractive young fellow, a little | her senior. All her little pieces of feeling for |him, pity and awe and friendliness and love of service, seemed to | spring suddenly together and make | something else—something un placed and disturbing. Her cheeks burned with a childish embarrass ment as she stood there before him Jin her ruffled pink gown. What should she do? It was just then that Mra, Guenther's crisply spoken advice \eame. Phyllis was One of those | people whose first unconscious in |stinct 1s to obey an order, She bent blindly to Allan's Ips, and kissed him with a child's obedience, then straightened up, aghast, He would think her very bold! Most of the short evening was spent celebrating the fact that Allan had thrown something at Wallis, who was recalled to tell the story three times in detail, Then there was the house to discuss “Let me tell you, Allan,” said Mrs, De Guenther, “this wife of yours is a wonder, Not many girls could have had a house in this con dition two weeks after it was bought. Allan looked at Phyllis. “Yes,” be said consideringly, store the black luster to it? M. J. H, and water,| made scald-| ing hot, 1# excellent to restore old! rusty black erepe; {f well squeezed and pulled dry, like muslin, it well llook aa well or better than new | A—Skimmed milk | with a bit of glue tn it, Q.—We have Prices Ordinarily Charged ON ALL CASKETS We Manufacture arnl Maintain Our Own veral large cakes jof bitter chocolate which have been |laid away for some time, and have! turned white. Can you suggest a} lremedy, or some use to which to | put it? EDNA, | A.-Candy makers atate that such chocolate is not Injured, The fading | is caused by the heat of summer which brings the cocoa butter to the surface, You can use this choco: late in any way, but ft would be particularly good for fudge, or some candy which shows a mixed grained surface Q.—Where is the national head \quarters of the Boy Scouts of 1 Don'T MIND EATING. UNION BREAD, Bur r DRAW THE LING AT EATING THE LABEL THAT YOU'RE Too LAZY To Remove! D'YOU TAKE MG - FoR A GOAT 2 De Sur Y,) 7/ $47.50 Including the use of our private parlors and the use of cur own private crematory. (NOT A PAUPER COUNTY CREMATION). Because we are manufacturers of caskets, and because we own our own modern crematory in our own building, we are enabled to give this remarkably low price on a complete funeral. We invite you to visit our establishment and see for your- self what we furnish. BLEITZ-RAFFERTY UNDERTAKING AND CREMATION CO. G17 Kilbourne St. Lady Attendant. Phone North 525, handbook of the soclety? ART. A.—The headquarters of the Boy! Scouts of America is at No. 200 |Fifth ave, New York City. The {manual of the Boy Scouts can be found at the leading book stores. |The price in paper covers is cents, in cloth 50 cents | USE STAR WANT |ADS FOR RESULTS! 4, _jf) v fal |