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Member of the Sertpps North Entered By mali, out of eit Vote for the Belt Line At Myattia Wash The Seattle Star Postottt Published Dally Hy The Star Publishing Co, Phone Main ond-claas matter 400 9 per month up te € moe, oo an Vj OTE for the transfer of funds to construct the belt line. It takes the approval of 60 transfer of funds ALREADY APPROPRIATED and make them available for the belt line. per cent of the voters to authorize the Otherwise this $285,000 will be spent for additional warehouses. The opinion of the port commissioners deserves your support. Their knowledge and experience has been applied to study the situation. have said that the belt line development i They order if Seattle wants to break away from the. strangle hold of the selfish railroads and dock owners who have squeezed excess charges from the shippers all these years. Joe in the Scrap HEY “they Joseph Weldon say can't ~ who retired from _ tional investigation by the Bailey, United States senator from Texas, office after a sensa- back.” former and come Texas legis- “Restoration” N EDITORIAL writer calls the nom ination of Brandeis “an attempt to restore the United States supreme court to the people.” About as /hopeless as an attempt fried to the hen to restore a that F lature, which proved to the satisfaction ‘of many of his true and tried followers, 'that he had been receiving large sums = of money from the Waters-Pierce Oil “company, thinks he can He has finally announced his candi- | dacy for the United States senate in the coming elections. | The result will be attentively watched | everywhere, for Joe Bailey's reputation is a national one. As an orator and an » authority on international law, he ranks as one of the greatest. Perhaps Bailey has Hesson that no man can serve two mas fers and serve each well. If so, he may render inestimable service to his country pif elected. But the people will have to ~ he shown. been taught the Making Officers congressman os KAHN, c California, and a dominant figure on the house committee of mi from litary affairs, > 38 advocating the selection of commis- ' sioned officers of the national guard by examination, conducted by the general staff of the army, instead of election by the enlisted men, as at present. No doubt this will meet with de- | termined opposition by the | the national guard as leges. But real military members of curtailing their men will dily agrée with Congressman Kahn I likes and dislikes play much too | important a part in the selection of com- officers in the national guard, and Tu ie esa em for the ote rack « the militia’: » the admitted in- line officers. a high standard of military national guard must be i This can only be brought by selecting those officers upon _merit alone, Post-War Trade HE inner circle of the British cabinet is said to be determined upon pro- _ hibition of imports from Germany, after the war. Before the war, Germany’s balance of trade against the British was something like $200,000,000, and she has been get- ting along without that for 18 months. But, suppose that Great Britain imposes such prohibition upon other nations to which she can dictate, after the war. No _ wonder the Germans fight hard, with the _idea that militarism isn't the sole issue 4 1 kept company with a man for a year, but when | sc“ egg laid it So originally organized against the people, recently ‘thoroly packed against the people is that court that con- gress is trying Louis Brandeis for being “a lawyer of the people” and, for the first time in history, they're throwing open the senate committee’s doors to anybody who wants to declare his un fitness. Restore that court to the people, for sooth! That court consists of nine mem bers not appointed by the people or by any particular representatives of the people, since there change of presi dents in short periods and that court 4s unaltered save by death or senility of its members, Four Brandeises on that bench wouldn’t restore that court to the people. A majority of one anti-popular judge does the business. One Brandeis on that bench may be a good but when we accept this as a poss of such a cataclysm as restoration court to the people, we're admitting that all the people can be fooled all of the time. It's “restoration” to the people with about eight 10-inch ropes tied to it. What for, Anyhow? HE state department is surprised to learn that Great Britain asserts the so is thing ity merchar to Washington dispatch Consarn those armed merchantmen, anyhow! They get us all rattled. One set of B.. seorgred contends that putting ns, ed by navy crews, on them jes make t warships. Another set contends that it does. And here are others who are surprised because those guns aren't carried for looks only. How- ever, maybe the guns are carried just to frighten submarines. tmen resist capture,” says a MR. SCHWAB saya he gave a bonus to one of his employes amounting to $600,000, for faithful and efficient service. The question is, would not a gift of $1,000 to 600 lesser em- ployee have produced better results In the long run MR. BARNES seems to have appealed his libel sult against Roosevelt to the republican state convention, and secured a reversal of the decision of the lower court. GERMAN EXCHANGE in New York is sink. ing, sinking. Looke like the kalser’s turn to come over and borrow, ize To Cussthin. Gr eH am yf good family and weil] What do you advise me to do? UNHAPPY GIRL. A—Your best course ts to ig-! ree ng salt, one and one-half pints | Ba Vinegar, bottle and seal. To make from this satice take two that his mother objected to| nore the woman and what she says.| tablespoons of the above and one! 4 discontinued our acquaintance.| A bad matter is often made worse! dessert spoon olive of! and one of same woman.” 1 hear that she continues to, ‘ disrespectfully of me. ‘Mo reason for this. | value my rep- | Mtation and cannot let this go on.) RLS! ACT NOW! IR COMING OUT MEANS DANDRUFF 25-cent “Danderine” will save! your hair and double | its beauty. | Try this! Your hair gets soft, by agitation. cation. Q—Kindly ai umnsa if it is not against the law/ish there Is. | for employment agencies to operate, |advice about what to use? In this state? Rely She has| that your character needs no vind!- dvi upon the rg prepared mustard, aawy complexion Is bad. | have “d and about every blem- Can you give me some H. 8, A—-Absolute cleanliness, external your col J.C. PL A.—It is against the law for an/and internal, 1s the first step in the employment agency to charge any|removal fee for securing positions. i, this would prevent them from/possible to obtain a except the federal and city | w | existing, bureaus. Q.—WII you please answer the mended by a physictan following question for me? 1 purchased some property and followed by cold recelved a warranty deed, signed|wash thoroly and apply a soothing Tide a good deal thru the hills, I've by the president and secretary of the company before a notary public. Were these signatures sufficient, or should there have signatures besides. | of these disturbances. Natur) Drink quantities of water. mild spring ater containing fron, sulphur and |magnesia, drink it If not, take these minerals {tn a form recom Serub the using hot water In the morning jface every night, jlotion or cream. Saturate the ag pores with a solution of alum. fo| not eat too heavily of sweet or acid been wi am |ulants. If it ts} food, @rink coffee or other stim} STAR—TUESDAY, MARCH 7, A Novel a Week 1m full tewentt~ ment will come to you every day, This te a part of book- tized, popular novel being run complete this thie newspaper, Others are to follow from week to week, beginning each Monday ane ending each BSaturd: COMPLETE EVERY WEEK! If you want back copies of the paper, or if you are not @ regula wor soriber and wi Vantage of thie feature, o “f thie paper's circulation de partment. (Continued from our last Issue.) FTER Ward returned to his A claim, Billy Loutse had hired aman, John Pringle by name, land his little half-breed wife, Phoebe, Mra, McDonald had been alliog all winter, could not afford and as the girl to hire snother man to herd her cattle, she felt that [having a woman in the house while she was away riding was a neces sity, | That was a busy summer for the jetrl, She did not in the least real ino that she was attempting any: thing out of the ordinary when she took a half-developed ranch in the middle of a land almost as wild an it had been when the Indians wan: dered over it unmolested, a few cat tle and horses and a bundle of debts, and set herself the problem of wrosting prosperity out of pov erty, She rede, up and down the can yons to watch the cattle on their summer range and keep them from straying. She went with Johny} Pringle after posts and helped him | fence certain fertile slopes and hol lows for winter grazing. She drove the rickety old mower thru the wav- Ing grass along the creek bottoms, and hummed little, contented tunes while she watched the ¢rass sway and fall evenly when the sickle shuttled thru. When sho sold seven fat, 3-year old steers that fall and paid a note! twice renewed, managing besides to | the winter supply of “«rub"| and a sewing machine and a set of silver teaspoons for her mother, ob, | but he was proud! . | | Ward rede down to the ranch that |night and Billy Loulse showed him |the note with {ts red stamp, oblong land Imposing and alightly blurred “paid” side, Ward was almost as proud as she, If looks and) tones went for anything. | He spoke of his own work and| as well, He was going tnto also, as fast as possible, he a few years the sheep bably come in and crowd} them out, but in the meantime there | |was money tn ecattle—and the more leattle, the more money. He was |going to work for wages until the winter set in. He didn't know when he would eee Billy Loutea, eald. |but he would stop on his way back. To them that short visit was more than an incident. 1t gave Ward new stuff for his buy dreams and new fuel for the fire of | $9! lambition. To Billy Louse it also ‘furnished new dream material. She rode the hills and saw in fancy whole herds of cattle Where now wandered scattered animals, 8 dreamed of the time when Ward and Chartte Fox and she would poo! their interests and run a wagon of} thetr own, and gather their stock from wide ranges. Mentioning Charlie Fox calla to mind the fact that he was changing more than any of them. Billy Louise ‘did not see him very often, but) |when she did it was with a deepen. Ing Impression of his unflagging tenderness to Marthy. “Mommie, that nephew goes at everything just as if It were a/ game,” sho said, after one visit |"You know what the cabin has al |waya been; dark and dirty, and not |a comfortable chair to sit down in. or a book or magazine or anything?! Well, he’s cut two more windows! Jand built an addition with « porch,| |if you please, And he has a book-/ caso he made Jimselt, just stuffed with books and magazines. And he made Marthy a rocking-chatr, mom. }mie, and—she wears a white apron, and has her hair combed, and sits land rocks! Honest to goodness you wouldn't think she was the | Billy Loutne sighed and pushed! jher hatr back {mpatiently. “I wish| I were a man and as smart as Charlie Fox,” she added. “A man 1 get out and do things Charlie Fox didn't have any more to do| with than I've got, and he's accom-| plished a lot more. And, besides, | he started In green at the whole! businoss,” And yet, when Charife Fox rode! down to the Wolverine, a week or #0 later, it wag he who seemed en |vious—and of Billy Louise. | “You know,” he said, “I am wor ried, Miss Loulse, I came over to} ask you if you've seen anything of| four calves of ours, I know you been looking all thru the hilis, but I can't locate them.” Billy Louise had not seen them. “IT don’t see how they could get away from your Cove,” she said, ‘OR CONSTIPATED 1916. PAGE 4 . THE RANCH AT THE WOLVERINE By B. M. Bower—Copyright, by Little, Brow | | NEXT WEEK, “THE OUTSIDER,” been up the gorge, nor had any one} come to the ranch while I was gone So, you ms, Mins Louise, here's « very pretty mystery.” ple laughed, but Milly Loutae saw by bis eyes that he did not laugh y deeply, and that be was really worrled “You think they were driven off don't you?" Chariio Pox shook his head, but h es did not complete the de nial “Miss Louise, I'd work every other theory to death before I'd ad. mit that possibility! 1 don't know Ml of my neighbors #0 very well, but | I should hesitate a long, long time" “It needn't have been a nefehbor. There are lots of etmange men pane. ing thru the country. Did you look for tracks?” “L hunted every foot of that Cove twice over, Then I began riding outside, Thero fan't a trace of them anywhere. I had just bought them from Seabeck, you know.” After Charlie had ridden away Dilly Loutse went down to a shady! nook by the creek, where she had always liked to do her worrying! p and hard thinking |) If those four calves were stolen, then there was a “rustler” tn the country; if there were, then no one’s stock was safe. And Billy) f Louise could not afford to pay toll t to a rustier out of her 47 head of | f cattle, | CHAPTER V. Ward Hunts Wolves The fate of the four heifer calves became vermshentiy wrapp mystery. Billy Louise watch them when #bo rode out tn t and spent a good deal of time b tofore given over to dreaming tr¥ing to solve the riddle of thetr disappearance. Charlie Fox insist-| ed upon keeping to the theory that they had merely strayed, Marthy| grumbled sometimes over the lows,|" and Ward—well, Ward did not pnt! in an appearance again t or winter and so did not the Incident War@ as a matter of fact, had a very good reason for his absence. | He was working for a rancher named Judkins over op the other side of the mountains, and when he got leave of absence, it was merely that he might ride to bis claim and sleep there a night tn compliance with the law, and see that nothing was disturbed. Then, tn April, he left Judkine and drove home a nice little bunch| of ten cows and a two-yearold and two yearlings which the ranchman had wintered for bim at a nominal sur, Ward promised himeelf that he would ride down to the Wolverine; the very next day “and see how the folks came thra the winter.” He wanted to tell William Louisa that he was some cowman himself, a t hear of a! dull the hunger of the wolves that howled o' night# among the rocks and stunted pines on Bannock/| Butte, Ward swore a good deal and) resolved to ride with his rifle tied on the saddle hereafter. When the recond calf was pulled) down in spite of the mother’s de} fense, within half a mile of hts! cabin, Ward postponed a trip he; had meant to make to the Wol-| Yerine and went out on the trail) of the wolves. In the loose sot! of the lower ridge he tracked them) easily and guessed that there would be at least one den. If he} could find {t and get the pups well, the bounty on one litter would even his loss, even if he | were not lucky enough to get one} of the old ones. He had a shovel) tied to the saddle to use in case) he found a den. So, planning a crusade against) these enemies to his enterprine,| he picked his way slowly up the aide of the deep gully that had a little stream wandering thru rocks) at tho bottom. | luite accidentally, he glanced across to the far side, his eyes at-| tracted to something which had/ moved. Ward lifted his rifle and pulled the trigger. The object over | there leaped high, came down heav-| fly, and rolled ten feet down the} bill to another It level DON'T BE BILIOUS .. HEADACHY, SICK | Enjoy Life! Liven Your Liver and Bowels Tonight and Feel Great. Wake Up With Head Clear, Stomach Sweet, Breath Right, Cold Gone. and wolven, & little. as she h lor pensel manny bottom, a jumped the creek, ultantly to where Maybe you playing out for the banch,” he said Leaving the wolf where he climbed to the rocks where had first seen her, The dep tunneled into the earth, It where the shovel was needed Ward went back to where Rattler waited, He was jubilant over bis good luck, With ap average litter of pups, and the old wolf besides. the bounty calves the most profitable animals in the bunch, reckoned on the basis of money invested in them It wan after he had dug the neat out and sent each one of the eight pups into oblivion with a sharp tap of the w and waa resting on the } side the pile of dirt he had thrown out, that he first sought narrow and ¢ the wolf la imbed ex were look she lay,| he was was a became conscious of the pile of dirt] | as something the and ob the more than stacle between himself wolf pups. He lifted a handful picked something out looked at it Intently ‘Humph!" skeptically prawled over that pile of grave! sand and searched with his ingers, as young girls search a hick bank of clover for the magic four leaves. “Looks Itke there's money in he said aloud and laughed sand, and He said Then he of of it, “I've got to pl safe on this,” warned himself, while he calped the last of the pups. unp Ketting rattled looks fine. She'll boost my little bunch of cattle, 1 ain't going she's nd that's all I want © £0 hog-wild over it, do.” would make those two) “Nol If she’s good! n & Co. BY LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE \AND Let YOUR WIFE Slave LONG KEEPING BOARDERS — Tro SUPPORT | } i Itke so many! He had no goldpan of his own,| ince this was not a mining coun try, and his ambition had run in He, therefore, tin washbasin down to vk and dumped the handker- of sand which he had with him into it Then, equa ¢ on his bootheels at the edge filled the basin with water and rocked it gently with @ rotary motion that proved him no novice at the work. “Coarse gold, and not such a damn lot,” he id to himself with careful impartiality. “But it's pay dirt, and {f there's enough of it, it'll jhelp a lot at this end of the cow busines: is first Impulse to the Wolverine and show Louine these three tiny nure he rejected as a bit of foolishne He was perfectly willing to tr Billy Louise with any secret he possessed, but he knew that he ‘all brought away Billy to ride straight) ! | i |work the thing systematically. One day he would pan the sandy gravel, and the next day he would) something comparatively easy. He went out in June and bought a mower and rake. He hired a man for a month. Together they a complished much, | pan lay hidden under a buck brush jand Ward's waking moments were filled with an uneasy sense of wasted time. Still {t was necessary would be feeding her tmagination| ——~ with dangerous fuel. She would be- gin dreaming and Magn ges and prospecting for herself, likely; and that trafl led oftendet to black disappointment if he made good, he would tell her— when he told her something else Ward set to work the next morn- ing in @ead earnest, with pick, shovel and pan, to make the most of bis little find. After a couple of weeks he stopped long enough to make a hurried trip to Hardup, a little town 40 miles farther up) jin the hills, In the little bank there he exchanged his gold harvest for coin of the realm, and he was wel) satisfied with the result. It wa not a fortune, nor was he likely to find one tn the hills, But he bought a team, wagon and harness with the money, and he had enough left over for a two-months’ grubstake. Nothing startling, but still not bad that wolfden find. After that he settled down JOHNNY WRITES’ AS FOLLOWS :- to mundy—there are some wr nes that you wood imajine any od rite a storey about and 1 of yrweia is base ball games & do it in a hurrey too for the teecher In gorge medders room says that all you got to do befour you com mense to rite is to learn the sub. ject & when you know all there ts to know about it the words will flow rite outer the end of your pen which ever you to be doing your riting with of korse she {fs stro theeory stuff which all {in practise the ays aint so solid peepel alreddy know the other afternoon she says to the class 1 want all the boys to rite a essay about baseball & the gurls to rite 1 about dolls happen | as & good | HELP HOMEFOLKS FIRST Editor The Star: I am an Amert can, residing in Seattle, and as & citizen of this country | ask you why in the name of common sense do the people give and continue to jgive charity to foreign countries when thousands of American fam- ilies are starving dally? Here in Seattle there have been thousands of dollars given to war sufferers, siow much of this would help the poor people of this city, who are Americans and who pro- duce the wealth of this country (when they have work). Does America want publicity, or |does she think {t is her duty? Cc. W. KEHOE, |BLAMES PROHIBITION Editor The Star: In Karl Fick- letser’s letter, published in The Star February he gave a good reason for reducing assessments on Georgetown real estate. But Mr. Fickeiser omitted to give |what I regard as a better reason for reduction of property assess- ments this year tn Georgetown. The large payroll of the big brewery plant is a thing of the past, and the unemployed men are gradually leaving this suburb seek- ing jobs elsewhere, and many houses have already been vacated asa result. The effect on property values here as a result of de |stroyed payroll is well known to all small house owners, The taxes grow but the rents decline. MAX G. SCHMIDT. WHY PREPAREDNESS? Kditor The Star: As one of the! readers of The Star I would like to know why your paper is an advo- cate of “preparedness.” According to authentic records, our navy is |second only to that of England |This 1s the admitted testimony Admiral Fletcher before a congres sional investigating committee. {Neither is thie ancient history, but |very recent. It means that, in so so far as our navy is concerned, we are prepared to all intents and pur- rest his back digging post holes or] while the gold-| of) Start It Today | Hentaes (hinges Oe cs SSLEY, WHY 1S IT le Wwe, /M NOT’ lTHat ‘YoU LOAF AXOUND TOWN VERY STRONG | AND HEALTHY — 1 DON’T KNOW EXACTLY WHAT'S. THE MATTER Of ME. CASE AND I KNOW WHAT'S THE maTTERL £ SHALL NOW Go To THE | enat he should put up what hay he | conse. There would be calves to | feed next winter, he hoped. He was thankful when the creek bottom was shaved clean of grass, and the stack beside his corral was of a satisfying length and height. After that be paid the man off, and breathed thanks that he was alone again, and could go back to his plan jof digging a nice little bunch of cattle out of that bank before snow flew. (Continued in Our Next, leeue) IN THE EDITOR’S MAIL poses. In times of peace even, 4 could not spare more than one-half of her navy to send against us; and certainly our navy is more than a match for hera, when thus divided. Under present conditions not one of the great European pow- ers would be able to send any por tion of their navy against us. Let none mistake this one fact, that when the present conflict is ended, not one of the nations now involved in this great and awful struggle, will ever go to war again if they can avold ft. This talk of “preparedness” ema- nates from those who hope to make money out of it, at whatever cost to the people in general. It is the same old story, born of the Just and greed of power, of those who desire to rule or ruin. W. HL W. H. SCOTT. ‘ BELIEVE GORE VOTE RELIEVES TENSION BY CARL W. ACKERMAN BERLIN, March 7.—Americans who have canvassed the situation reported today that the senate vo! tabling the Gore resolution warning Americans not to sail on armed merchantment materially lessened the possibility of a German-Amer fean break on the submarine issue. Berlin newspapers differ in their interpretations of the vote. Most of them agree that the sen- ate would not be likely to interfere | with the administration's plans un- |less the negotiations seemed lead- ing straight to war, HE FOOLED A ROBBER OAKLAND, Cal, March 7.—Bii: Josephs played dead when a bandit’ attacked him and took his watch, He “revived” suddenly, trailed the holdup and caused his arrest. ') Healthy Old Age Brings Happiness Simple Remedy Promotes Health By Overcoming Tendency to Con- stipation. wavy, abundant and glossy at once. | told it Is not now considered neces-| | sary to have the signatures of wit-| nesses, but wish to make certain, | MRS, H. M, A.—In order to make the deed valid { must bear the signature of at least one witness. The notary | public may act as witness, but his signature must appear as «| | witness as well as that of notary. “unleas your bars were down.” “The bars were all right. It was Foam” candy, and oblige last Friday, | think. I was away HIGH SCHOOL GIRLB, |tlat night, and Aunt Martha ts a A—Take 2 cups [ght brown/little hard of hearing. I came home sugar and 1 cup water and bol) to.|the next forenoon—I was over to body but gorgie with hi: gether to the soft ball stage; pour! Seabeck’s—and the bara were tn lin over the beaten whites of 2 eges|place then. Aunt Martha had not ra | and add 1 cup of nuts. Drop in| ca ‘ |spoonfuls onto a battered platter. am bring you a welghty | problem, at least It means much |to me. | am married to a woman Q—Please print a recipe for “Sea in about 2 bats of an eye winker the gurls had ritten theres and fhe fellers comed |with most theres too jiewiek until there wasent across purty anny n to hand Save your hair! Beautify it! It} ‘S ts only a matter of using 4 little | Danderine occasionally to have a _- head of heavy, beautiful hair; soft, lustrous, wavy and free from dand- ruff. It ts easy and inexpensive to have pretty, charming hair and lots of it. Just get a 25-cent bottle of Knowilton’s Danderine now — all drug stores recommend !t—apply a little as directed and within ten min-| of the state of Washington or Ore “tites there will be an appearance of| gon? 1 N, abundance, freshness, fiuffiness! A.—Al Jennings was a candidate - and an incomparable gloss and) for prosecuting attorney of Okla ire, and try as you will you can) homa county, state of Oklahoma the matter, gorgie, his teecher sald, why don't you get Wash Away : Tesi will, gorgie replyed, but 1) Advancing years impair the action | Ski S jwhich { beginned { cant ‘end rite/of the vital organs. Old age should 1 do not and cannot love. Shall | icing es = 2 = . EWORK WHILE YOU SLEEP, ang the other which | know how to/be the period of greatest happiness, | live with her In this state of mind, utterere 6? skin dis Take one or two Cascarets efid | cant begin |but good health 18 necessary. Con- well, inkwired the teecher, |stipation should not be tolerated— | 0M account of my children, or shail the Hquid wash, has 1 leave her? What do you think f ar ue’ | night and enjoy the nicest, gent liver and bowel cleansing you ever you ante “Be say ep ie tp ; jit is often the direct cause of {ll m | do, said gorgte, for 1 am| health captan of the teem & { can le al : feet, find» trace ot gy he or} Later he was candidate for gov-| would be beet for ail of us under 'y can de- | put the english on the bait|,, tieadache, pegs! bOjonsnese,| | failing hair; but your real #urprise|ernor of the same state. He iost| these circumstances? 4 peate, $9 | A ean you just ask anny of the |l0at, drowsiness after eating and} will be after about two weeks’ use,| in both elections | UNDECIDED. . , 2 ; ble rene, |exberienced Vake up feeling other symptoms of constipation can] when you will see new hair—fine, a’ te not vieht.to leave the rin ¢ 1 fr. | grand, your head will be clear, your | that no, the . teecher salt readily relieved by the use_of a © and downy at first—yes—but really) @Q—My maiden hair fPrn is In-| woman ‘whom you promised harmless to the | tongue clean, breath sweet, stomach | sariastically, well you can just put |S!™ple laxative compound sold in| S|) mew bair—sprouting out all over|/fested with a small white Insect.|iove and cherish, for better or ped auieaiin cottons jregulated and your liver and thirty! a little of the english into the ex. |a'e stores under the name of Dr.| your pg ears is, we serene you suggest a remedy? M.M. | worse, so long o# ye both shall sufferer from feet ai here i tive, Get a i atloay & 1 will give you Just 6 minits|Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Mr. J, A Wiieve, the only sure hair grower;| A—Tobacco kills plant pests,| jive,” because of a fancied change) “Maine wleers jany drug store now and Ket! more to rite it or you can stay aft-| Bristol, 1412 Geddes Ave, Ann Ar meeores of sore and —s for | either in bd form of tobacco water| in your love for her. Your children} wit aot Shines eon: raged erating 5 at Phop et skool |bor, Mich. who is 88 years old, says itehy scalp and it never fails to|/or in smoke need both parents. Make up your the test and today ts af ee Senne, | erat Rati how gorgie had to} “Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is the} stop falling hair at once. | mind faithfully to make the best) Preparation for al colds and bad days, Feel fit and! nuckel down to the Job he says {|best remedy T ever used for consti-| If you want to prove how pretty! Q@—How can | put up horse-jof the situation and you may find in te ready for work or play, Cascarets| wi) rite about the last baseball /Pation and T always have a bottle|of a century it has been the stal _And soft your hair relly is, moisten / radish so that it will keep and re-| your love coming to life again eee ee econ |game 1 seen & the teecher said of it in jthe house to use when Tjard household remedy In thousalas “a cloth with a little Danderine and| tain its color? C.J.K. | venience you the nbxt day Iike salts, |that will alrite but do it In ajfeel the'need of ft; it never dis-|of homes. Druggists everywhere “ear@fully draw it through your hair A- Southern housekeeper pre-| Venus is the most brililant of aii pills or calomel, They're fine! burrey jappoints.” jsell it for fifty cents a bottle, A |” taking one #mall strand at a time.| serves horseradish in this way: In the planets. When east of the sun Mothers should give a whole Cas . > Your hair will be soft, glossy and|the fall mix the quantity wanted in|she appears in the west after sun caret any time to cross, sick, beautiful in just a few moments—a| the following proportions: A coffee|set, but when near the western bilious or feverish children because } it will act thoroughly and can not injure. whats Q—Did Al Jennings, the excon- viet, ever run for office of governor dont | » the many te | the A 3 lbe action. If erust thin remedy | Tt hae stood the maste kin disen pimples, senlen, e MR. J. H. BRISTOL For 15 Years @ the Standard Skin Remedy Swift's Pharmacy, Bartell’s Drug Stores. a % later handed it tn mild laxative preparation, positive|Pepsin can be obtained, free of the teecher read it out loud in its effect, acting easily and nat-|charge, by writing to Dr, W. B it was urally without griping or other pain| Caldwell, 454 Washington St, Mom rain, no game today or discomfort. For over a quarter!ticello, Illinois, ; a minit and gorgie| Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is atrial bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup delightful surprise ayaits everyone cup of grated horseradish, twolelongation she gt only matinee Vise tries this. ~ _ htablespoons white sugar, half tea-| performances before sunrise, Johny