The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 8, 1916, Page 4

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STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAR. 8, 1916, PAGE 4. pent ag THE RANCH AT THE WOLVERINE Member of the ' Rertype North br Neatdew thing week om ain Nothing better © The Seattle Star otfloe ae second-class matter * $2.90; he per month up to # mos elty, he @ month Wntered at Reattia Ward. ; Complete this week tn By matt, our of city, one year, # ‘ hy By B, M. Bower—Copyright, by Little, Brown & Co. BY LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE | come to you every day. || NEXT WEEK, “THE OUTSIDER,” watts; © fall tnetetl- come the sooner when he insist on sharing all the les of bis Withelmina-tmine. here?” she asked trrelevantly, Just|been working on it this summer bie as Ward was hastily choosing how)! believe , J tro he would answer her without saying Uh-huh bu bis mi ing. |} too much |this morning Meantime the girl faced the situ } ‘ some, way?” |above his place his, 1 with all her usual bravery | Ri ay gl tly Toate lost Yeu,” said Billy Loule he confemed to herself bey : her nerve when she naw the light! been putting his wages Into cattle Joved Ward, and with the vision of | leap into his eyes. “To see|for « year or so, Ho worked for/that lone rider igaving the corra |whether you were dead or not,”|Judkins last winter, Why?" — | jin the canyon, strove with all her sho revised hastily, “so mommie|, “Oh, nothing, 1 guess! Only power to put him out of her rt would stop worrying about you,| he's the only stranger in the « and devote herself to her mother. Mommio has pestered the Ife ont! ty, and his prosperity ain't ac Hesides that, there was an un counted Gy dere ent of gossip and rumors of of me for the Iast month, thinking | C@Unted for reurren gonsly were over there Them Y6 cattle uf we sized, popular novel being run comp! thie week In thie newepaper. Othere are to follow from week to week, beginning each Monday and ending eaoh Saturday, A COMPLETE NOV®@L EVERY WEEK! If you want back copies of the paper, or THE TAX ISSUE Gu and the old Morning Flunky say the tax issue did it. The tax issue did it, indeed. Study the returns, Mr. Gill, Note that you swept Griffiths off his “feet in those precincts that used to be called the Clancy stronghold. NOTE ALSO THAT EVERY PRECINCT WHICH of you Ore nek & Fauelar came? pagan ‘and rumors GRIFFITHS WON IS A PRECINCT OF HOME OWNERS, A DISTRICT Vantage of thie feature, cali {|ZoU miant be alok or hurt or some) cous. it ony "wih Tr bad alt night and_stayed with them until WHERE TAXPAYERS LIVE. eh lata peeing i wayeanyway: and” ee Sa clear A Lickel. viton; aad ev.|moraing, after the opes-handed ons Study the returns, Mr. Gill, and you'll perhaps realize finally what the 4} real payers of taxes thought about your taxation claims and promiges. tom of the rangeland. Billy Louine| tn very ery dollar he gets hold of be puts) aig not talk with him very much. | Aart liga wey ai very |in that ranch. We've known him aid . 208 ta as much alive. I'm sure glad to kno’ | | | ation ‘The te a part of a book. Only Charge No Interest But We Pay Hut John Pringle told ber afterward | a long time.” (Continued from our last seve.) You Interest i that somebody takes an Interest in} “Well, of course, if you know prem ag chen ten yo Ad _ cert CHAPTER VI. =e it 1 were a real buman.”|no5 ali wtraight, that settles it.” v A When Emotions Are Bottled Ward's eyes watched furtively her) you run stock in bere, too, do you, oy et pete to eee if he could H ‘. face, but Billy Lonise refused even) Miss MacDonald?” nda out anything. Gasoline Business Is ¢ day, when tho sun was ’ . warm, Ward straightened his Everybody’s Business “Think It Over” UT on Chicago's North Side there's to nibble at the batt | big Ds,” answered Bitiy|_ (Continued in Our Next teeue) — “Why didn’t you come before.|rouise and smiled faintly, “I've , back, waded out todry/inen? You know mommie Hkes to) been range-herding them back here | n to rest a few have you.” lin these foothilis this summ a quaint grog shop where the chief attraction for those who seck to while away idle moments is an old fellow who barters crude philosophy for “the drinks.” One of his choice bits of advice when an argument is started is: “Go out in a _ rowboat and think it over.” And by means of this advice he has prevented many a serious quarrel. Silly as the expression may sound, it isn’t. How many of us would not have avoided many unpleasant hours and memories if we had just “thought it over” first! Sunken Liners Tell No Tales mp EAD men tell no tales. Nor do sunken liners, as to whether they were armed or not Tf you are a submarine commander you can assert that she was armed and you sank her. If there are survivors it's only their word against yours, a question of veracity which can be argued over for months and never settled. There is no f. That’s one of the chief reasons why the president is right in refusing to stand for the March 1 decree to sink armed merchantmen without warning. N I much too apt to “let business alone” even bad business Gasoline, however, has a way all its own of interfering th a good many kinds of profits, big and little. And nobody who uses gasoline, no- body who pays to have a bag of flour or a new Easter bonnet sent home by auto, nobody who has watched his own gaso- line bills double in the last 10 months is willing to let the gasoline business alone, now that the government has started to investigate it Dealers are quick to give off-hand excuses when you pay your astonishingly big bills, You have undoubtedly been told that the increased use of autos, motor boats, motor trucks, farm tractors is responsible for an enormous increase in the consumption of gasoline. And then there’s the war, the usual handy excuse for an advance in the price of anything. The United States exported in 1914 over 5,000,000 barrels of gasoline, and in 1915 over 6,500,000, or nearly five and six times as much as was exported five years ago. Those who believe in “letting business alone” will probably pay their bills with- out complaining, but the persistent will find Dut that the market value of the stocks of the 38 oil corporations has in- creased remarkably in the last six months. while profits and dividends have in some TIMES of great prosperity, we're §f) | {and he made them up after he had anything ike that. She tried to minutes and make a smoke, I'm gotog vis iting for a change.” He concealed the goldpan, his pick and shovel. That did not take more than two or three minutes, swung tnto the saddle on the far th hillstde, nd so he onl clattering down the steep trall into the little fiat beatde his cabin. He turned Rattler loose fn the hay corral with the bridle off, rather than spend the extra min utes {t would take to put him tn a atall and carry him a forkful of} hay Then he Mung open the door of his cabin and went white with/ sheer astonishment “Lo, Ward!" Billy Loutse had been antanding behind the door, and she jumped out at him, laugtr | Just as if ehe were 10 years) Inatead of nearly 20. Ward tried to say, “'Lo, Till,” In return, but the words would not) come, His ips trembled too much. His mind refused to tell him what he ought to do; but his arms not wait upon his paralysed.men tal processes. They shot out of thelr own accord, caught Billy Louise, and brought her close agninet his pounding heart. Filly Loulse had not expected pull herself free. “Btop, Ward! You —1I— you haven't any right to—"* ‘ell, give me the right, then,” Ward managed to find rolce enough to make the demand, and/ then he Kissed her many times be- lhome and “How about mommte's chil?) you want to Ward's look was dangerous to his) good resolutions “Listen here, Ward.” Billy Loulse took refuge behind her ter rible frankness. “If you make love,|1 haven't I won't like you half as well. | “I don’t want us to be anything) “Nobody 0 good, just being friends. once We get away from that point,| that Charile “t go back to tt again, ever.”| hard-working going to be quite a con-| think?” Tt tract, Wilhelmina.” Ward = still looked at her with bis heart tn hin) “he seems r “ jaway and bi won't! ly aa she wf Billy ‘Ob, no, It You've had} lots of practice,” Louise as pot ab like a hungry fish sured him confidently and began ae Oe invade tenet Billy patting the few dishes in a neat) *t each little pile, “So the next thing on| insly BR the program is to bring a bucket! from the ta of water, Did you notice anything! different about your cabin? Why,} you hadn't swept the floor, even, since goodness knows when. And I've made up « bundle of your dirty} shirts and things that I found under the bed, and I'm going w take them let Phoebe wash them! heen tappe She can do them this evening 04) nieney fin have them ready for you to bring) with ‘rerap back tomorrow, Don't you feel like) coming down to the getting @ square meal?” Ward rode home with of relief. T ready now value ber Ward with the fea Well, I lioped off uy Bily| “Bark up Louise and brought bis laundry) yon two!” abe said, with a twist | ips, when back with him the next morning./of her according to the Indy’s schedule.| away from But he left behind him a rather) ed idiots out of sorts and worrted Wilhelmina | Ward's mine, which was his latest name for| take a shot an } the love making he! them nosing ‘Oh, no, not at all! * dering if you had lost any | from a lady, I hope? mninsed | folks down in the Cove hi “Yea, I heard but pals; not for a long while. It's breed rode over to see if he could And) get a line on them. to unless the two men place, er, Do the bunch?” I was won| look thru rustle At any rate, any yet. The @, tho That would cattle at | they had, | It's hard luck; | seems @ fine, | don't you) Fox boy, “Yous,” anid Billy Louise shyty, | eal nice She looked t her lip self-conselous | The two men swallowed tho bait They glanced | Loulse saw them} 1 of her downcaat eye, | and permitted herself a little sigh | doesn't eat, sleep or act naturally, bey would be the more accept at tts face! statement concerning they credited her t of being in love with | at the same time. j ne Charles Fox has off, too. He'e a declared Floyd chay nt heartiness t Steal sect be acta” anid the|tem, and you have a well and piay-| your health and your efficiency ranch 884) young woman self-consciously, and| > the ridge that tree for a while, | j well) darn. | she w them. “You-——yo' ! To go prowling around | the bottle. just as if-—Ward'll | at them !f be catches | thru his stock!” | LAUGH AND PLAY IF CONSTIPATED If Peevish, Feverish and Sick, Give “California Syrup of Figs.” Mother! Your child {an't nat urally cross and peevish. See if tongue is coated; this ts a sure sign its little stomach, liver and bowels need a cleansing at once. When listless, pale, feverish, full of cold, breath bad, throat sore, DR. L. RB. CLARK DON’T NEGLE! YOUR TEETH has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, re- member, a gentle liver and bowel cleansing should always be the! first treatment given. b Nothing equals “California Syrup of Figs” for child fils; give a teaspoonful, and in a few hours all the foul waste, nour bile and fer. | Leet! menting food which is clogged in| yo » bowels passes out of the sys- | can rts of your body. Are ably not, bee to large nu do not attend to till forced to by the pal aching teeth. We attention to the fact that Kreatly imerease your eo of people ful child again. this harmless, delicious “fruit lax-| ¢: atl and it never fails to effect | beyond t & good “inside” cleansing. Direc- If you have decayed teeth, ia leases out of ten our modern n tions for bables, children of all | an @ them and make them agos and grown-ups are plainly on | teatly as good new. And the [will be very LL, indeed, A| parison with the benefit you derive from 1t. © une the bent of materials here—we hi jhaving your teeth put into All children love | or aition. Thy 4 we can Keep it handy tn your bome. little given today saves a sick child tomorrow, but get the genuine. Ask most atientific and up-to- They are one of the most tm ttention they question of a doubt. 7) while she YOUr druggist for a 50-cent bottle |lens methods, which enable um PACIFIC COAST police are looking for one Quithoit, wanted for marrying nine Terre Haute women. He must be one of those shrewd Terre Haute politicians you hear about. CARDINAL GIBBONS eays he wonders how Billy makes euch big audiences hear him, The cardinal never heard Billy roast an umpire. LEMME GEE—whom did Geraldine Farrer marry? PITY NICK LONGWORTH. He's got to chocee between Ohio's favorite son and Nick's favorite father-in-law. CALUMET REPORTS copper Is being sub- stituted for tin In manufacturing. What are the Lizzies made of? instances increased as much as 100 per cent They will also learn that 15 per cent of the total pe oa of crude oil in 1914, about 45,000,000 barrels, went into storage, and that there are now 200,000,- 000 barrels of crude oll in storage. About peed cent of this is gasoline. bviously, the relation of supply to demand has not been such as to Bocot the price of gasoline. What—who—has raised the price? The more interest the consumers show in this question, the quicker the govern- ment will find an answer for it. LEAVE IT to the police! When they're off oes trail, they always discover a “nation-wide plot.” e, be’ — am a young gir! 19 years; ful condition, and bulld up your|used tn place of money, ‘of age and my hair is turning gray.| general health. i been told that sage tea is use good In such cases. Is this bette: Please answe: f ated; , as this means much immedi-| ring? to me. RUTH. | A—Sage tea is a tonic and not a/ bol of dry scalp with dandruff. Mas helpful. There was a day when foasted rye and other cheap substitutes could be ground and sold for coffee. There was a day when the coarsest flavored coffee could be glazed and made to appear fairly well, and sell for the best. 1 bb etnias 2 Ib. Not so today. You 24% Ib. know better. You are 5 Ib able to discriminate — to judge by the flavor rather than'by the label, Tie You are demanding delicate aroma, refined flavor, full rich coffee taste, That’s why we find a growing marbet for Fol- ger’s Goldén Gate Coffee, the highest priced in América, because the cAality is in the cup. ‘ Hf your desler does not carry Folger’s Golden G, resident salesman who will give you pame M. H. JONES, Office Western Ave. and Yesler St., Q—Can you tell me why some can you tell me something wamen object to wearing a wedding ‘action was completed. It A.—There are some women Who sent today. consider the wedding ring a sym-| Ps lavery, They say that the | dye. It is very good. Of course,|/ring was at one time worn by bond-| band’s people. derstand that hair turns|men and was put on the finger of al ; resalt of a <iseased con-| wife to denote that ‘dition of the roots, usually showing|the property of her husband. As a means to introduce FOLGER’S Golden Gate Coffee to a wider circle of families we offer a saving to you of ten cents a pound for one week. Grocers will collect the difference from us. Tees Specs! Next week you'll have to pay the regular price. Buy a quantity. well in the airtight tin. Save ten cents a pound. Telephone or send your order to your dealer today Coffee, telephon desler whe does. Telephone: Elliott 3958 Residence: 32 16th Ave, Telephone: East 86 J. A. FOLGER & CO., San Francisco And no, |when ® girl was sold by her father |to a husband, a ring was put upon her finger to prove that the trans A MAN. |mignificance which some women re ™, Q.—We are living with my hue My mother-iniaw Ia an old lady and believes in old she had become | fashioned ways, eo she gives our 16-month-old baby tea, coffee and * Among primitive people, the ring | food which is harmful for a child | #age, brushing and oll tonics are|is often the most convenient form}of that age. 5 Make every effortjof keeping and carrying gold and/|have It | now to cet your hair into a health-'silver, and !t was therefore often ‘opped without a rumpus. YOUNG MOTHER, A—You will have to arm your. self with the authority of your doo tor and tell your mother that peo ple who have atudied health mat ters have decided upon a certain improved diet for children, and that you mean to follow it. Read her the articles on care and feed ing of children you will find in newspapers and magazines. Buy one or more books on the subject and perhaps you can reform het ideas. Q.—A boy friend of mine Ie ti! in the hospital, Do you think it would be all right for me to go and see him? GIRL OF 16, A-—It is proper !f your mother or some friend accompanies you, 35 65 75 A—A 1.50 Q.—In It possible for a poor girl to get Into the movies? BLANCHE, poor girl may become an actress if she possesses the neces- sary qualifications, She must be mentally and physically trained, » adaptable, and have a face which expresses emotion easily and pho- tographs well. Q—I have heard several ple remark that swimming Is benefi- lal to thin people. Do you think t really is, and will It develop the hest? ELSA, A.—fiwimming !s one of the beat xereises for developing the nuscles of the chest, back and nbs, It is not a fat producer, on he other hand, It gives suppleness, race and strength to the whole body It keeps Q.—Please tell me how | can dolleh my piano case. JUNE, A.—If the piano case 1's of ma vogany, simply wash it hamois and warm water axe of other wood the same as furniture, Mix equal parte of vicohol, Hnseed ofl and vinegar, ap ly with a clean cloth, and polteh ith another. Clean carved work vith a stiff paint brush Q.—How should a bride sign her »ersonal and business letters? BRIDE, A.—Bhe signs both with her own ame, often using her name as a middle name, like Ella Clayton Smith, ¥ Clean a c o F F E E fa this lease tell me how to with aj maiden | Ibe fore he attempted to say another word you, Wilhelmina?” against her ear. “You know you! belong to ma, don't you? And I/ iH to you--body and soul. You know that, don’t yon? I've known it ever since the world was made.” an | Louisa, by a visible effort, brought the eftuation down to earth She twisted herself free and went over to the stove and he murmured | Ward stood and looked at her Ib You'll give me the right, won't] it himself after her re at the cabin. After Ward had ridden Billy Louise rode out on the range to watch her cattle, Her eyes had deen open to the improvements at Ward's claim the day before, and when she qnestioned him he told her about finding the wolf den and that his extra funds came from the sale of the pelts. Now Billy Loutee did not believe the wolf story and when she met Charlie Fox and he nald that several ranchers, among them Seabeck, had been losing |antil the food was all on the table,| more cattle, she felt a fear clutch | When she pushed a box up to the| her heart. Where had Ward gotten | | | table and sat down upon it, he| Grew a long breath, hunched his) hoalders with some mental eur-| render, and grinned wryly. | “So be it.” he ylelded, throwing his hat upon the bunk. “I most! humbly ask your pardon!” He} bowed farcically and took up the! washbasin from its bench just | outside the door, | “You see, William Lontes.” he went on quizzically, when he had! seated himself opposite her, “when| & young lady Invades strange ter.) ritory, and hides behind strange doors, and Jumps out at an unsus pecting but terribly well-meaning | young man, she's apt to get a sur prise, When emotions are bot- tions. me what you've been doing all this while.” Billy Loutse spoke lightly, even fippantly, but her eyes were making love to him! shyly, whether she knew {t or not Working,” answered Ward promptly and briefly, He was thinking at the rate of a million thoughts a minute, ft seemed to him, and he was afraid to let go/ of himself and say what he thought One thing he knew beyond al! doubt, and that was that he muat be careful or he would seo his air castio blow up tn smal! fragments and come down a hopeless ruin. He needed time to think, and Billy Loulse was not giving him even a minute. So he clutched at two de-| cisions which tnatinct told him! might help to win to safety: would not make love, and he would not tell Billy Louixe about the gold “Why don’t you show some human | around,” that money? Surely he would not Me to her, but—! Suppose the rustiers should help themselves to her cattle next? What would be come of her and mommie then? She rode up the long ridge which gave her a wide view of the sur rounding hills, and stopped Blu Far over to the eastward a black dot moved up & green slope and slid out of sight beyond. That might be Ward, taking a short-cut across the hill to bis claim. Billy Louise sighed“with a vague dis quiet and turned to look away to the north. Here came two other dots, larger) and more clearly defined as horse men. They must have seen her sitting still upon her ho in the midst of that high, sunny plateau for they turned and rode up the slope toward her. Billy Loutse waited, too depressed to wonder greatly who they were Seabeck riders, probably; they proved. At least one of them was a Seabock man—Floyd Carson. The other man was a stranger whom Floyd introduced as Mr Birken. They had deen “prowling according to Floyd, try Ing to nee if they couldn't pick up the trail of the rustlers, It was not until he had talked for ten minutes or so that Billy Louise be. came more than mildly interested in the conversation ‘Say, Miss MacDonald,” Floyd asked, “how about that fellow over on Mill He worked for you folks a year or so ago, didn’t he? What does he 4 “He has « ranch, Creek? wald Billy inquisitiveness about my being Loulse with a careful calin, “He's It Cu x IF ALL res Through the Pores THE PORES IN THE SYSTEM WERE PERMITTED TO PERFORM THEIR FULL DUTY AT ALL ‘Table SWS SAAN EUR Joints and muscles are quickly re | Louise made a sound.that was close HMeved by rubbing the New Pore Treatment | to a groan and rode on, the affected over absorbed out of th TIMES, THERE WOULD BE NO SUCH THING AS DISEASE. New Pore Treatment Takes Piace of Pain te and Other Inter Medicines in the Rellef of m1 y¥ ALGIA and rheumatism of the parte until it is well It takes the aches and soreness he irritated nerves and tiasues in a few minutes, and there is no danger asso- elated w finding the achin along th the legs, rub it over the bottoms of the feet! ith {ts use. If the trouble ts long or chronic, rub ft plentifully over ng parts and over the nerve centers © spine, If the rheumatiem ts tn The pores of the feet should be kept open and acti sediment ve at all times. More potsonous sare drained off through them than all of the others combined. What They Say: “Hod a bad cough tor months, Cculd hardly speak. One #mall size cured me, It sino cleared my forehmud of pimples and pore ob structions.” Yi ki ae Uo le ae ba atment is simply magtenl f sore lungs, nagging eatarrh, Rub it over the k for bronchitis and sore throat o try It for the skin and com It cleara them right up. Ask for > PORE TREATMENT at any drug now have it In both small and away and so] Her satinfaction Ins rode to the next ridge, Then the little devils of doubt came @ swarming and a-whispering. | She turned, upon the crest of the ridge, and looked away toward the | pinedotted height, beyond which | Ward's claim lay anuggied out of wight tm ite little valley, “I've a good mind to ride over there right now, and make him tell me,” she said to herself. “If he caree—like he says he cares—ho'll tell me,” she murmured. “I don’t believe it's wolves, And of course {t isn‘t— what those fellows seemed to think | But—where did he fet the money | for all that?” | She headed Biue down the slope jas straight as she could go. | There was no trail that way, jand the ridges were steep and the canyons circuitous, But Piue was @ good horse, he carried his lady) safely; and he carried her willingly./ He splashed both front feet Into | the creek Just before the cabin and | stopped to drink while Billy Louise | stared at the silent place. | | By the tracks along the creek |ehe knew that Ward had come) jhome, and she urged Blue across the ford and up the bank to the cabin. She slid off and went tn boldly to hide her inward embar. rassment—and sbe found nothing | but emptiness there. | She waited for an hour or tw: sitting in the doorway, trying to read a magazine. Then she re- | saddled Blue and rode away, more depressed than ever. | CHAPTER VIL The Corral In the Canyon Where the trail swung to the left that it might follow the easy | slopes of Cedar creek, Blue turned | |off to the right of his own accord, jas if he took {t for granted that j his lady would return the way she had come. | Quite suddenly just at sundown, |her journeying was interrupted in | most unexpected manner. She |was dreaming along a flat-bottom. Jed canyon, looking for an easy way across, when Blue threw up his jhead, and sniffed with widened | nostrils, | They had come to the point of the hill’s shoulder, and Hilly Louise tightened the reins {nstinct-| tvely while she stared at what lay revealed beneath. The head of the gulch was blocked with a cor- ral—hidden from view on all sides save where she stood, by the jag- ged walls of rock and heavy aspen thickets beyond. | The corral was but the setting) for what Billy Loulse stared at so unbelievingly, A horseman had rid | den out of the corral just as she ame into sight, had turned a sharp corner, which hid him completely | after that one brief glimpse. | Sho had had only a glimpse, but the horse was @ dark bay, and the rider was slim and tall and wore a gray hat. The heart of Billy Loulse paused a moment from its ateady beating and then sank heay- ily under a great weight. She was range-born and range-bred. Billy] | “Oh, God!” she said once aloud; and there was a prayer and a pro-| | test In those two words. | Billy Louise did not: remember! anything much about that ride, John | Pringle was standing by the gate| waiting for her, which was unusual, | if Billy Louise had been normal} enough to notice It. | “Yor mommie, she's sick,” he an nounced stolidly | And #o there was yet another! burden for Billy Louise's heart and] hands. For two months she nursed her mother, who the doctor said} was In a serious condition. | During that time Ward came! jseveral times to the Wolverine, and! each time he found her strangely} distraught, He told himself that it was her worry over her mother's} {liness, and went back to his claim each time to work harder than ever im order (hat ne might make the of “California Syrup of Figs,” then | perform the most difficult look and see that it is made by the | OT* without hurting the pati ., ay i w h of “California Fig Syrup Company.” | S\oestn every. cme at whom | graduate man, who has his | gate from the ate dental: han on eo wall of his Senta! chatr. \to take our word for! po ag work done by : ntiet here—the proof ba ou. Our prices are the will permit will not be undert “NOVO-CAIN™ te tin} to the pi painless § dentii ample Ask for it. HORLICK’S, THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheap cubstitutes cost YOU came price. Dr. L. R. Clark, Manager 1405 Third Ave, Ww. Cor, and Union. PICTURES DE LUXE EDITION aS TODAY—Held Over by Popular Deniand RUSSELL A MAN’S MAN —and— THE VAMPIRE WOMAN BURTON In the Five-Act Sensation THE CRAVING A Great Picture—with a Great Moral ia Ss LONE STAR DIETZ Famous Washington Coach, and Helene Rosson, Beautiful Co-Star, Appear Along With More Than 100 Others Admission 10c COLONIAL You don't t that you wi lowest—es our invariable rule, from which ne deviation, thet 4 . We have an ply of it. Mont dental o: fices have none, nor can they get it. Regal Dental Offices , i /

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