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STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1916. PAGE 4 The Seattle Star Entered at Beattie, Wash. Postotfion ae second-class matter By matt, out of ctty, one rea @ monthe, $1.00; fe per month up te @ mos By carrier, city, he @ month By Carolyn Wells.-4+Copyright yp by the little ovte and) the earl'’s seal must have over thus he need not see Philip at all, | looked the tiny spangles a» 1 found Where the Uz Ss. Must Stand strict account. in international affairs. FTER short constderation, 1) py “ | later, But she might hav fe did this, and ft was Mr, Mor-| them later thi : sperity for our people decided to go at once to Mise | 4 that the earl saw that| found others of the same sort when E do ft re To insure prosperi i lec! : aunt's car that the ea W de agers _ of the occasional we shall demand a front position in the |<; Gardiner and, aa for the night.” OGY the had usted ithe room, and I , . shie . : r : 4 f " | “Phep Judson come up on| determined to ank her er ore 1 oe Ween Oe great commercial game that is coming Pi) so 1 waited until after the meni ie veranda, Monday might at 10| went In search of her and put clares that our excursion into Mexico after this war. | was pver, when IT asked her to cM) oiolock.” aaid ‘Tom Whiting; “and | the question, At first ahe couldn't should be followed by the subjugation of Foreign commerce we must have on itr with i ae be ne ma and miyeet’ | yet you say he had nothing to 40| remember, and then she recollecte ic , y sc | She agreed willingly nov | with the shooting! having picked up two or three near - the Mexicans and the annexation of their an ever increasing scale : we went to the music room |v sAbeotutely poe aid aoa hey ng plok Dp country. Our trade will decrease rather.thay in- | “I'm going to tell yon frankly | « Sees ba Uae Uika boda Bt the| “ticee you ‘doy (4ee,” 1 one We don't think that the few editors crease unless our international position | why wo asked for this conference | he tee from the brary, nd be te |“where they could have come Ti . . ‘ a ieleiee 4 abso! nsurec w you, Miss Gardiner mained with me not more th. wolf , in the United States who are bags er 3 We Cachan de fle % iat sn peaktion toe I have learned that you have just | minutes. Ob, 1 know where they have tack have properly gauged the opinion ¢ cannot allow our a c leone a totter to Mr, debe Judson.” | “Why puch a short stay? asked) cas’ the “bright ounlight, and of the American people distracted by the glitter of an armexa- “Have I not a right to send lot | Tom. }drew Hunt's attention to the al ters to whom I choose?” “Becaune-—because T was crying! most invisible spots on tt | “You certainly have, But when!) whea he came, and I didn't Want to| “He looked at them fn sflence a laueh a letter proves that you know | see him anyway, and I begged HIM | moment, and then sald, abruptly [the address of the man we are) to Pe away at once ) "Get some more blotters.” tion argument WE CANNOT AFFORD IT. Public opinion, ‘as we read it, very largely endorses the attitude of President WAison in this matter. " : . . , jlooking for, | ha’ r t to ask at were you erying about?’ We da sned the blotters and We have a police job in cheer rte Jim Ferguson’s Prophecy you what you know of him, and| asked Whiting, gently | applied them, The result snowed army is down there to punish Villa an T WILL be recalled that one James [f| ¥8¥ you conceal from us the fact) “I was upset and nervous, and 1) strong evidence that the stains that you do know him, To begin) couldn't contro! myself.” | were similar to those on the car his gang of desperadoes, to clean up the ruffians who are making life miserable Ferguson, governor of Texas, issued a JI} with,” I continued, “I'm posttve| “You have heard from Mr, Judson | 14 ; : that John Judson fe the man who) since?” } egy ” Munt and dangerous in northern Mexico and warning just a moon of two ago, that Bl snot Philip and Mildred.” | eree—and of course he has hoard] ann ete, cost, It mid Mun’ over the border in our own homes, and “the danger of invasion from the south- | aud 1 equally positive he! of the murder, but he haa no {deal ome trom.” she eaid quickly to put an end to a situation which has west not to be treated lightly.” ol t! doaares Irene, me ee he was seapected of et wanted | ; ; - * An fs reat aring; “and I can prove him to get away, for to detain him 4 been a thorn in the flesh to both re- There's fifteen million hungry Mexicans “Y¥¢ int” exclaimed Tom Whit-| cag, mene inquiries. would onty | Gardiner low do you know?" “Because Miss Gardiner carried the black fan ‘that evening, She jeft {t on a seat on the veranda Mexico and the United States. south of the line whose eyes have been jing. “You know this Judson, then,| mean trouble for an innocent man WE ARE GOING TO CARRY IT fixed longingly on the flesh pots of the | Mise Gardiner? So I wrote him and warned him to} ace Rrarine mot | “Yes, I know him very well.” 4 " THRU TO THE END. OUR COUN- hated Gringoes. | “Then you knew he was an en OO uc wasans shor, Mien Gard. | eons with appetites accumulated thru five story, He has heen a friend of “ get that fan just before she and 1 will, be! ‘a mine for some years, and tho he| hit episode, 1s Is only because |) Walked together on the upper [haw asked me several times to mar-| Cidn't, wish Mr. Judson name) veranda. Then I left her, afd she ry him, ! have always refused him, | brought aed Peeve ume after|Temained up there, and Judson |Lant week he went to see me at| We talked for some time after | round her there, crying. Meantime |my home in New York | thls, and we agreed that as Judson hat fan had | out of it, we must look in| %™* spangies from the told him I was dowf here, He was| W8# no : making a motor trip with Mr,| #me other direction. dow! | Mordauot, and on their way to At-| But I determined to do a little | ais not tine to face her with lantic Clty, they stopped here at| More investigating by myself. I) it pcos and ask an explanation Mr. Jadson’s request. He wrote, went up to the brary, hoping that But {t seemed to me that 1 must |me that he wanted to see me once| from the scene of the crime I could | 4, tig pefore going any further | more before he went West, but he| set some bint of which direction) ey 'yont on my distanteful er. did not care to meet Philip. Bo 1) to turn }rand, and found Miss Gardiner tn | wrote him that I would be on the; As | rat there, something brought ine music room with Miss Max upper veranda Monday night at 10| back to my mind the Ddlack| wo o'clock, and that he might come up| spangles. The maid who had found) But no matter—interference brushed aside with a hand as hearty years of famine and whetted by the ‘and as heavy as the hand that will wipe smell of the good things in easy strik- F out the Villa bandits. Other Mexicans ing distance in Texas and New Mexico, should understand this from the start fe not to be sneezed at. . | and stand aside. The locusts of biblical history didn’t If they don’t, all the worse for the tote guns either, but what they did to "Mexicans r the Holy Land is a matter of record people do not hanker icone “They prefer to see them tree How's This for a Keynote? independent. We don't want to ALIFORNIA is considering, in a geize their territory. The greed for the feeble way, a proposition to sneak | gunny lands and the rich mines of Mexico =» behind the Octopus and give it a jab may tickle the gizzards of the rich mo = that no dignified Octopus could receive : ists and the Hearsts, but no such = with pleasure Be animates the mass of us. California's legislature might declare I E You know,” 1 said, speaking to |the girl, “it ts our duty to invests Says Woman’s Beauty eae Fe trembled nervously Depends Upon Health waits. Misti’ ita te *President Wilson has sized up public gasoline to be a public utility. This ketbook and explaining Opinion about right. would put regulation of gasoline prices in ff! @here | had found them But he has not been unmindful of a the hands of the state railroad commis- | Health and Vigor Necessitate “And you think that turns sus, consideration—the place of the ion, a body promoted, selected and | Regulation of Organs picion toward me?” Irene rose, and United States as a world power. pretty much run by Uncle Hiram John- ff! of Elimination veep 8 hv cee, Me ihe, 90 | He knows that if the United States son,” c } Skin foods and face creama and to your suspicions! They may be goes into a great war to conquer Mexico On with that California proposition! ff) Powders cannot make « woman a 1 Rig eae Rage dgcet Bove t beautiful, because beauty Hex deep-| er than th it depends on health. | In moat casos the basia of health) and the cause of sickness can be) traced to the action of the bowels. and annex that country, we shall not only Let's declare every public necessity, in ' upon ourself a task that will eat up which there is corner or mondpoly, a " Billions of dollars and snuff out the lives public utility, and regulate it! ; \ of hundreds of thousands of American but I was in and out of that room during thw carly evening, long be fore the time of the tragedy.” “But you didn’t have the E soldiers, i The headache, the lassitude, the! ; with you, then,” I persisted; . but that we cant amie ba THE SHIELDS bill te well named from & and the Iuateriese eyes! wh. cause I remember you went to @ great wall between this nation an Stone-Webster standpoint, but, take it from are usually caused by constipation. | va your room for {t, when you and 1 3 rest of the world. Senator Poindexter, It shields mone of the pud- An ideal remedy for women, ° were together after our dance. Misa Gardinér swayed as if about to faint. Miss Maxwell sprang to her ald, and Jed her from the room. this poor girl tor “S can’t hi tured, Peter,” eaid the gentle old We will be so busy whipping Mexicans, iic'a water and power sites in this state. lone that fs especially suited to| unable to do anything else, that their delicate eruaieme, fs found we will our voice in the great inter- YOU JUST can’t beat foxy old John D. Rock- tional game that is being played and atelier. 1 te J a iy he A ‘om 7; gasoline. ' ‘will be played stronger still when the day © Fn i"S ne wetster dividends scription. Mrs. Gertrude Jordan, om "5 , and they went away, leaving of days—the peace day—dawms across £22 North Liberty st, Indianapoll tase me to face a new suspicion that the Atlantic. a + fgg Chay imply fn MRS. GERTRUDE JORDAN | Was an unwelcome as it was unex The nations of Europe now under- have never been able to find any-| Dr, Caldwoll's Syrup Pepsin ta|Pected thing to compare with Dr. Cald-)sold in drug stores for fifty cents) NAVY CIRCLES at Washington are shocked by “the revelation” that Japanese are employ- CHAPTER X Stand that we are determined to have our — 94 on U. 8. nav 9 i OS SAVY SU TEN pe vovetation So well's Syrup Pepsin. I started us" a bottle; « trial bottle can be ob- | Say, that we propose to be taken into any one who has ever visited one of such ships. ing ft for the baby, and now it in|tained, free of charge, by writing Red ink Spots my family standby in all cases to Dr. W. BR. Caldwell, 454 Washing- 1 resolved to say nothing more where a inaxative ie needed lton at., Monticello, Hlinots. about the fan or the spangles to hay een nn, = ee + ——- R ANKRUP’” J. B. Robinson Store 1424.7 Av:. GOES BROKE (~ ordered sou by the assignee money to you right i= the begtaniog of ¢ q Stock and fixtures have changed hands at less than 50 cents on the dollar. That's the cause of this stupendous —the mightiest bar | gain event ever heid in this city. No sale can be compared with this monster sacrifice. Cold type never told of a more daring butchery of high grade Merchandi: and you, in your wildest dreams, never da hope for such marvelous ins. Thousands and thousands of people have been here already. Many hundreds more will_be here tomorrow. Have you had your share of th gigantic ba ie yet? If not, follow the big crowds tomorrow. There still remain thousands of doliars’ worth of Fine Clothing, Hats, Shoes and Men's Furnishings to be sold or given away. But hurry! Orop everything and get here—no stock can hold out long in the face of such terrific demands. Read the Prices mentioned below, then come at once. This great bargain event is for 25 days only. Hurry! SALE STARTS SATURDAY AT 10 A. M._ i. Notice ts hereby given that the stock of merchan- diss, furnt ee _ and fixtures of J. BK Robtnson, doing business at 1424 Third Ave. eattio. Washington, wil offered for le and # (if eatief ry bid ts recel by the t signed assignee, bide to be in writing and to be sub 1609 Hoge Building, Seattle, March 10th, 1916 Further inspection of n he undersigned, RGENT, Aasignos, 1509 Hoge Buliding. FINE CLOTHING SACRIFICED! 1 THE EXTRAORDINARY SUIT BARGAINS SENSATIONAL BARGAINS IN Tremendous Stock of Men’s, Ladies’ and Boys’ Shoes Slaughtered! MEN’S FURNISHINGS ALL FAMOUS MAKES REPRESENTED, INCLUDING HAMILTON-BROWN, © W. L. DOUGLAS, ZIMMERMAN-DEGEN, ETC. IN THE BIG CLOTHING DEPARTMENT MEN’S SHOES LADIES’ SHOES eae = “a | ther” sale price... IC LOT Fine tite and Overoa, GA Qe ME Cor." ef en." $1.49 tater Otero te regia BS | fe Mare worth Ga he ~ .00, ee pacts ed Men's Oxfords, sell to $4 79 Ladies’ Shoes, worth to $8.00; OR @ orl 19¢ | price : 9c COT 2—Aaincoate, worth to Pa $4 89 $4.00; now . Tot adien" Shoes, sell ‘to Dress Gloves, sold Coats, worth to new at OF 91.60; now “ $1.49 $1.50, Bale 69c Sle... 9 cette gad ate hale $2.98 Queen Quality Shoes 98c now Suspenders, worth Sale Men to price Wr Shirts, | regular nderwear, worth to i 29c| price 25c Tor Man's Suits, regula $8.85 W. 1, Dougias Shoes, seit to #40; now *" $2.49 $18.00. Sale price, now at TOT Suits pertectiy taliore ™ $9 85 ny to #1 As Pari j $3.89 to $25.00, Sale price. TOT 5—Biue Serge, Tweed and Wor- .. OF rte Shirts, worth to sted Suits that sel! to $27.50, now. $1 1 85 Vinton worth to wale 29c. rice. pendera and ik Woo r worth up naarey oe Mae ee... ae SHOES "EXTRAORDINARY BARGAINS IN HATS ast ee enn ee new 98c tine, Staee Cot of Hats, worth to $4.00, including $1 49 Men's and Ladies’ Slipvers - well to The; now 19¢c Stetson make. Sale price... ers, Men's, Ladien’ ana ¢ worth to 76c, “¢9 now ree ms 29c nell to, $1.50; now nn 29c worth to 4200; now... @LelD tor now ns... S149 Come-—Buy Two and Three Pairs of Shoes at Almost the Price of One, COME TO THE BIG BANKRUPT SALE—The Merchandise Adjusters Disposing of the J. B. ROBINSON STORE, 1424 Third Avenue 22325" OPEN SATURDAY NIGHTS Beare rane diet sold up to SERS 5c oe te ese bee ee se 20D me. Reserve Pants, worth og —_s. 1.49 eee en... S188 a wath ie aso" Bh howe hg worth to $3.50. : A $1 49 Gne lot of Children’s Knee Pants, worth qe to 50c. Sale price ie oiheke se plies 15c Children’s Shoes, nell to $1 now Wiak 98c Raby 8 1 to 6060 now . 10c One lot Children's Shoes, an as Sinan wow .. 69c Children's 1 Cut Shoes, ‘The Maxwell Mystery!” 1913, by J. B. Lippincott Co. | “they are from the fan of Miss| it seemed pathetic to ride awa TRYMEN EXPECT THAT A THORO It's high time to hearken to Gov. Jim's emy to Philip?” liner.” said Tom, "but of course 1| 824 1 found ft and put it again in ' JOB SHALL BE DONE, COME WHAT warning. Fifteen million peons with ff] “Not exactly an enemy, tho 1! 4o not doubt your word.” her room.” - . i |know they never liked each other, |“ « . | Here was something / definite “AY. antiquated guns may ‘not be considered But” dine Mer Sudeon ten cately| You need not,” said Irene! woe ‘l remembered distinctly that We hope there will be no interference, Particularly perilous, but fifteen million Bilaway, 1 will tell you the whole! aa ee tent convening | Miss Gardiner went to her room to} been dropped by the library win) .. BY ARNOLD FREDERICKS | 2 t | any member of the household, but | this statement?” he | to lay the case before Hunt, when| “Why should I not be, Mayme he came over to the house the next| Hunt?” said Irene, but her voieg morning trembled To my surpriee, be 444 not seem | str, Hunt continued at all impressed with Yhe {dea of| ,,. ee eean a atices e | Miss Gardiner being Smplicated "Were you nest the Lora Sa You let your @dea of clues run| ow at any time during the evass way with you, Mr, King,” he said p—earller haps _ an the Now, it seems to me if w gor Un e you spent sitting alone on thet ing to look for our man thru any east wide é clues, we'd better consider that paid Irene 1 was noel red ink, When Miss Leslie threw | there at all!” ‘ po png and #o much {nk wae) “Then,” said Mr. Hunt, euddeni spilled on the rug, it is extremely |peoqucing the black spangl , probable that some also spattered - ¥ then may I ask, Miss Gardin how these chanced to be found i@ the brary, and on the library wine | dow-shutter?” i rong | ifene Gardiner gave a low cry. and, hiding her face in her handa,/ ned in immediate danger of coby on the coat of the assaflant.” Well, ttexeems to me,” I bald, |*that that’s about the most elusive clue yeu could think of!” Perhaps you're right,” |Hunt, “but all the same I shall try to find that coat.” ’ Then Tom Whiting and his wife | apse J peared at the brary door Miss Gardiner,” | said, “let ma | “We want you to go with us for | @4vise you, as a friend, to tell your a motor ride, Mr. King,” said|#tory frankly and trathfully, (© Edith Whiting to me, “Tom in-|#™m hy will be better for al® sints on my go @ are tak- | concerned pinta on Iny olng, and we are tak: | Raising her head, Irene Gardiner | y| flashed a look at me full of faith § jand gratitude. in Philip's big automobile, but, |'Tom Whiting had said, the ladies| “Ob!” she exclaimed, “I would really needed some fresh air, and|be so glad to tell the truth! 1 he thought the trip would do us|*wore to s falsehood from a sense ~ all good. of duty to another.” | Mr. and Mra. Whiting sat in| “It is always a mistaken sense / front, for Tom was quite as good|of duty that leads to false swear a chauffeur as Philip had been; |!0e.” said Mr. Hunt land Miss Gardiner and I sat be-/| I believe that is #0,” said Irene | hind jearnestly, “but I had no one to ad- As there was ample room for an-| Vise me and I thought I was doing other, Irene proposed that we stop, Mght. The truth is, then, that I for Gilbert Crane, This we did,|4id go nround to the west end of and he seemed glad to accept the| the balcony, and that I did look in he Mbrary window.” What did you see In the It brary?” asked Mr. Hunt. invitation On our return, Mra, Whiting ark ed Mr. Crane to come in to lunch-} leon with us, and he accepted | He alighted before I did, and as) he ntood waiting to help Miss Gar-) 10 diner out, the midday sunlignt) ors mat alt you saw?” shone full upon him Hunt, looking at her intent! 1 looked at him curiously, think’ there no one else in the room ing what a large, fine-looking fe “Yes,” said Irene, ‘I saw. ie low he was, and how becoming bis | crane placing a pistol in Mildred’s fashionable automobile coat was f0) hand.” him. Its color Was a Nght brown-| wait,” sald 1, “was this occur ih gray, and as my eye rested {dly/ ring just as you arrived at the upon it, I suddenly noticed some-| window?" }thing that made my heart stand| “yes.” | till ,| “Then,” I went on, “you cannot | On the front of this same coat,|swear that he was placing the pis- on the lower edge, were several|tol in ber hand. He might have small spots, visible only in the|been attempting to take it away brightest sunlight, which, whatever) from her.” they might be, had every appear-| “I never thought of that,” sald ance of being red ink | Irene, an expression of relief light- I went into the house with the! 'ng up her face. rest, and, finding that Mr, Hunt had| “Even so,” said Mr. Hunt, “he gone, I sent a note to him, asking| should have told of the incident in him to return. his own testimony. What did you He came just as we finished|do next, Miss Gardiner?” |luncheon, and, bidding him go into| “I went to the ¢ |the VWbrary, I’ picked up Gftbert| Veranda. I was so horrified by, | | Crane's coat from the hat-estand| What I had seen that I flung my- where he had flung it, and hasten. (self Into a chair and cried. I was ed to the library. still crying when, soon after, Mr. I found Hunt there, and after| Judson came. And I was still ory- closing the door I held the front|!ng when Mr. King came later to of the coat toward the window to|‘*!l me what Had bAppened. ; “Gilbert Crane's,” I answered, he was,” I sald, “and crying so violently that I was alarmed.” looking ‘straight at the detective! Aiino Irene's evidence had placed “Shall I call Crane up here and/ qq), bt ask him if he can explain these ian fan asd soauie Rese ‘ spots on his coat? Somehow, Tl asking him for the explanation can't help thinking that he could) which I felt sure he could give. do so.” But Mr, H “Not yet,” maid Mr, Hunt. “T|\ me unt did not agree qanm think It wiser to straighten ont a) “No,” he said, “don't let us go ° few points before we speak to Mr.|ahead too rapidly, Let us formu. Crane on the subject. Please bring|tate a definite proposition, and Mins Gardiner here.” then see if we are warranted in | I followed Mr. Hunt's sugges-/assuming it to be a true one. In | tions to the letter, but I was dis-}the first place, whoever killed turbed at his request for Irene. Philip Maxwell must hare had a * and Mildred fallen to the floor alflo, Put she was partly hidden by the Finding Mrs. Whiting in the hall, strong, personal motive for the 1 asked her to say to Miss Gardiner | deed that Mr. Hunt desired to see her in} “The only man we know of who the library. 1 returned to the li-} might have had an ill-feeling to- brary myself. ward Philip Maxwell is Gilbert 1 found Hurt making » tabulated/Crane. We know that an antag statement of certain facts onism existed between the two men “You see, Mr. King,” he sald,/OD account of Miss Leslie. with a very grave face, “while “You saw Gilbert Crane in the | these thingy are not positively in.| billiard room a@t 10 o'clock. Now criminating, they are serious ques- according to Crane's own statement tions which need clearing up. he looked into Mr, Maxwell's study “Granting that the bronze horse|S°me 20 minutes later, was thrown at the intruder and re- With the exception of Miss placed on the desk before you en-| Gardiner on the balcony, the guests tered the room that night, we must| Were all in the music room making allow that it was picked up and re-|® Seat deal ‘of nob placed by somebody. Miss Leslie}, “Miss Maxwell in her own was incapable of this bedroom, and the servants were Gilbert Crane was the first to| D¥SY in the kitchens, of which the find out that the tragedy had oc. doors Were closed. As nearly as curred. There i no witness to say |! cam find out, Gilbert Crane came what he might or might not have|#Uoning down stairs for Dr. Shel- done in this room. It is possible,| 40" & few moments before 10:30. therefore, that he restored the|!f you have followed my reason- heres to ite plack.” ing, you will see that his where “And-the inketand?” abouts between 10 o'clock and, say “You remember that Gitbert| 10:25, are unaccounted for except Crane insisted on spending the} >Y himself night in this house, Is it not, there-| “His coat—the automobile coat fore, conceivable that he ‘should|" Which we have discovered the have waited until every one else, "4 spots—hung on the hat-stand had gone home, Or retired to their| !” tHe bapk part of the hall. He, rooms, and that he should then have| terefore, had ample opportunity come to the Iibrary, found the| to leave the billiard reom, put on empty stand, refilled it, and re-| is coat and the cap and goggles placed it?” which he always carries in that “But,” said 1, in utter amaze.| Pocket, gp up the back staircase, ment, “if he did not commit the|*24 thru’ the ball window at the crime, why should he’ be so careful | 244 of that statrease out on to the about these detaila?” wees. beneony, “I am not sure,” said Mr. Hunt} “The Mbrary window ts directly in a low voice, “that be did not! ®eXt to the hall window, He had, commit the crime.” therefare, 1 say, both time and op- Sueliasios porn te, fire — shots at about 10:10, which woul accord with ORAP TES, XI. Miss Maxwell's testimony. He had Irene Tells the Truth also time and opportunity to return I was still bewildered at the pos-|down stairs the way he came, re sibilities suggested, When a tap was! store his coat to its place on the heard at the library door. Mr. Hunt! hat-stand, and go back to the bik admitted Miss Gardiner. lard room, “Sit down, Miss Gardiner,” said} “This yet left sufficient time for Hunt, kindly I wish to ask you a) him to go up stairs again, and re- few questions.” turn to make his startling an- “In your testimony, Miss Gar-|nouncement to Dr. Sheldon.” diner,” began Mr. Hunt, “you de-| “And that would explain why clared that you did ‘not leave the| Philip cried out, ‘Oh, to think that spot where you were sitting, on the| he shovld shoot me!’” east end of the balcony, the night) “Yes,” said Hunt gravely, “it ex. of the murder, until you came into] plains a great many things. the house, at about half-past 10. Are you still prepared to swear tol (Concluded In Our Next Issue.) BURN ACME COAL I am urging y o burn ACME Coal because I have proved to my own am®many other people’s satisfaction that it gives more heat per dollar than other coals. I am urging you to burn it also because it is such a clean Coal that it saves the user a lot of work. When you burn ACME Coal yeu carry out less ashes afterwards— only 6 per cent. You have no clinkers to bother with and the chimney never clogs up with soot ‘ I'll sell you ACME Coal four ways—Lump, Nut, Furnace or Run of Mine. The prices at the bunkers are: Lamp, $4.00; Furnace, mixed with Coking Coal, $3.50; Nut, $3.25; Run of Mine, $3.00. If you don't | mind doing the sorting yourself you'll save money buying Run of Mine. You'll like ACME, there's no doubt about it, for it gives you less work and more money to spend for other things O, M, LATIMER, MGR. ACME COAL CO.—ELLIOTT 1400 Fremont-Ballard Yard Lesch! Heights Yard Main 5718 con 266 a 3 « “l saw Philip lying on the ff | side of the 7 ? i at