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The Seattle Sta Entered at Seattte, Wash Ay mati, out of etty Give Us Majority Rule ESS than one-third of this state elected Gov democrat Attorney Look over Officials Less than General of the Pby a clear nmajority a the votes of the people is rare, indeed | In most the cases, ) three ways, in some cases four ways, / due to the number of national | striving for victory 4 fice—the highest two “the old partisan system in We cast it off. councilmen as “Socialists, etc., as of old the Ernest one-third Tanner state The man who won his election votes Under nonpartisanship, however, a clear majority will prevail in every case Under nonpartisanship, two men are Nominated in the primaries for each of These contest for the fina! election The winner will necessarily have to re- ‘ceive a majority of all the votes cast. This plan, under the nonpartisanship y initiative bill, is the same that we now ‘enjoy in the city of Seattle. There is no one today who wants us to elect our mayors and republicans, In a like man- ‘Mer, our state and county officials should Me iccted on a nonpartisan basis—AND BY A MAJORITY VOTE © Under the present system a minority ome awful effects. dust think of those two Portland barbers lying ‘On the floor, paralyzed by bay rum and hair Postoffice ae tha, 8190)» the & month one vear, $2.50) & m By carrier, city, per of Lister, voters elected republican know the destroyers and county not ported that the were split $795 ,000,000, parties All and game birds will then We had the city and dered. Certain 5,000 ants a day, democrats, ignorance of the snd-elaee ne nth up to # mos value By The ® Pubitehtay The Gardener’s Friends F YOU are planning a garden this year’ you will certainly keep a toad or two All successful gardeners know that toads are their best friends, but all of them do of birds as insect The department of agriculture has re- annual crop loss to the United States from insect pests is over An that certain larvae will consume 200 times their original weight in 24 hours. infant did as much as some caterpillars, he would weigh 40 tons at maturity! investigators expert has estimated If an agree that the are the best of a song pnts for destroying insects, One authority says that it is more than likely that successful agriculture would become impossible, if all the birds wege to be exterminated The work of the friendly flicker, who likes the city almost country, is a good example of what an energetic bird will accomplish if unhin- as well as the flickers who were sub- jected to a survey were found to devour while two orioles feasted on 3,500 plant lice at a single meal The amateur gardener usually comes to his grief in consequence of his complete ways of plant lice By encouraging birds as well as toads to live M. L. ROTHSCHILD, financier, thinks that Europe may finally have to adopt sliver as the monetary standard. What in his garden, he can reduce his troubles with insects to a minimum Prominent Chic: a tovely opening for Lecturer Bryan! his Seattle brother-in- only a cigar salesman, Jonn kels, jr. the Frisco mill is evidently afraid his fe is going to be Speckled. Won-| if he wears a wrist watch. eee surrounded and captured Is Greatest of All Strength Builders, Says Doctor the Great Endurance and Power of Athletes | Ai Secret of ae Nexated Iron Will Make Nervous, Raadews Peo- 200% Streeger in Two ‘Weeks’ Time tn Many Cases. YORK, N. ¥.—Most ple ly seem to think they are go- Get renewed health and from some stimulat! drug, said Dr, of this ety, of fact, real ean onty come from eat. But people often fall the strength out of their food they haven't enough tron in it to change i matter. From their nervous condition they something ta ‘ong, but they tell what, so they generally co doctoring for stomach, ‘or kidney trouble or symptoms other allment caused by the of tron in the blood. This thing on for years, while the guffers untold agony. If you ‘Rot strong oF well you owe It elf to make the following te : long you can work or how u can walk without becoming Next take two five grain tab- ‘of ordinary muxated tron three per day after meals for two Then test your strength and seo for yourself how you have gained. I have seen of nervous, rundown people were ailing ail the while, dou- Aheir strength and endura entirely get rid aymp- of dyspepsia, liver and othe t in from "10 c ais |apect Is her weekly pay check | Now Mayor Gill proposes to dump it all in the bay. What'll some of the fellows who can’t swim do? eee Theda Sta: 80) what she prays for. most effective charm tn this re} Johnson will be here in While we don't want to tare we | @ Gov May George Salisbury's job away nevertheless predict hot weather for partisan politicians “ee At the Jefferson day dance, at/ time simply by taking fron in the! proper form And thie after they had In some cases been doctoring fo months without obtaining any bene fit. But don’t take the old forms o reduced tron. tron acetate or tincture of iron simply to save a few cents | You must take tron in a form that) can be easily absorbed and assimi- lated itke nuxated fron tf you want {t to do you any good, otherwise it may prove worse than useless. | Many an athlete or prize won the day simply b knew the secret of great and endurance and filled bis blood with fron before he went In affray, while many anothe fone down to inetortous simply for the lack of tron. NOTE —Nuweted tron recommended | above by Dr. Sauer fe not @ patent medi. | cine nor secret remedy, but one which Ie | gn, well known to druggists, an@ whose tron | constituents are widely prescribed by em. inent physicians everywhere. Uniike the older Imorgante tron products, tt ie assimilated, make them bi on ths contrary. it fiden > © forfelt $100 a-| tion if they cannot take any man or| woman under $9 who lacks tron and in. crease their etrength 200 per in four weeks’ time provided they have nlc trouble. They otfer to refund your money if ft at leant double your atreneth a Gurance in 10 days’ time. It ts Giap In this city by Owl Drag Co, Bartell | Swift's Pharmacy and all other | man whe weed | JAFET LINDESERG'S Say. girls, arried. And this ts | . Commander of L ptain of Torpedoed Ship They'll be the They'll even be coming from Ta the Dreamland rink, Wednesday night, the democrats hi : fe The reason William Jen- hinges Bryan and Henry wer Bara, writing for The|aomng those Oa says she has an emerald and| Hawthorne, one of our other charms which get herjolors, is that the: Probably the/the use of arms, Pepto weg Present, saya Col. teady bach- What has become of the old-fashioned fo worry for fear the diegele would make ue @ round-shou! dered race? bist eee IDEA OF A SOFT SNAP md IN A KITCHEN the new chiefs not ip year. ee TODAY'S WORST RIDDLE What would Neptune eay if the ese & time tke thie) . rromrt Boat—Here—1 eay! Here's our let- walking circle clear from Arctic now, Charite. | coma, aD Sat roo ‘ NUFACTUREV “The Power ehind the Ask your grocer-He knows : 2B = beat ww. C6 ES MFo Dough’ poony) notton—(am STAR—THURSDAY, A standard, bie’ novel, complete | (Continued from Our Last Issue) Los to the door Madame Fantine paused, “Le pauvre garcon has the fatigue, ye |she turned to Alagwa, “Come with me, Jeune monsteur,’ id Fantine, “and you shall rest.” Without waiting for comment the big French woman threw her arm around Alagwa’s shoulders and hur ried her into the house, and on into another room There she turned on the girl, hold ing out her arms, “Ah! Ma petite fille!’ she cried. “Think you Fan- tine did not know you when you looked at her out of the face of that dear, dear Monsieur De’ roche, Ah! non! non! non! Ah But the men are of a blindness, The wise young man he search, search, and not know he have found already.” Alagwa's heart melted. Suddenly she realized the strain under which she had been for the last four days With a sob of relief she slipped into the French woman's arms and wept her heart out on the latter's motherly bosom. The latter soothed her “There! There! Pauvre bebee,” |ahe murmured. “Fear not! All will |be right. But what bas happened [that you are thus?” She glanced lat the girl's masculine attir "Ah! | But it must be the great t Tell |Fantine about tt, Tell your old nurse, Who adores you!” Between sobs Alagwa obeyed, pouring out the tale of all that had befallen her since the day when Capt. Brito had sought her out. She held back only the real object | with which she bad come into the | American lines. | “But, ma cherie,” the French | Woman Interrupted. “Why do you | sot tell him who you are?” | The girl shook her head tn pantie. “Oht No! No!” she cried. The French woman chuckled, And the wise young man does not | guess that you are a woman!” she gently. eried, holding up her hands. “Have! no fear, ma petite! I will not tell him. He seems a good young man as men go. | read it in bis eyes But truly he @ great fool.” ° How the girl got thru dinner she never knew, After it, when Major ‘Stickney returned, bringing Wells, she pleaded fatigue and left him and Jack to talk with each other and with the men in the hotel, while she slipped away to the room that jame Fantine had pre- pared for her, Till late t night she and the kindly French woman sat up and talked Even when left did not sieer Her duty cumseh lay heavy on her soul to Te |herself a coward and a traitor to | her people. | Yet she shrank from it. What | would Jack say when he knew that she was a spy? And yet she must send Tecumseh word. She mu: Notselessly—as notselessly as she had moved thru the foreste—-Alag- wa rose from her bed and slipped to the door. Slowly she crept to the entrance to the big bar room. Foot by foot she pressed onward till the door was at her band. Thru it she stepped out beneath the mid night sky. Swiftly she slipped thro the brass to the shadow of a nearby tree, Then, raising her head, she gave the soft cry of the whip-poor- will, CHAPTER VUl The Attack Long before sunrise the “ Bondie” was awake and Jack and his party were astir as early as the rest. Amid many calla of adieu and bon voyage from the kindly French people the travelers set off. Side by side rode Jack and Alagwa. The girl's heart was beating high, leap ing in unison with the stride of the horse that bore her. Gone were the fancies and questionings of the night. For good or for ill she had sent the message to Tecumseh. Jack noticed the girl's abstrac- tion and rode silently, waiting on her mood, At last he grew im- patient. “A penny for your thoughts, youngster,” he offered, smiling. Alagwa started. Then she me his eyes gravely. “I wonder much,” she said. “You have come by dim trails over miles of hill and forest to find this girl whom you know never, And the Captain Brito, he also come far, to see her, Why do you come? I do not understand,” “Why do I come?” Jack echoed the words, smilingly. “Well! Be. cause the girl is my cousin and needs help. 1 told you all this be- fore, didn’t 1°" “Yes! But is not the Count Brito ready to help? If he found her, what would he do with her? Alagwa knew she was on pertious ground, but she went on, neverthe He'd marry her out of hand, of course. That would give him the Telfair estates, you see. He's sald to be heavily in debt, and the money would be a godsend to him.” The girl straightened suddenly tn her saddie, “You--you do not want to marry her?” she faltered A cloud came over Jack's face. “No!” he sald slowly. “No! 1 don’t want to marry her.” Startled, the girl looked at hin Then her eyes dropped und for a little she rode ailent. When the talk was resumed it was on other subjects. It was nearly ond day when fort built by Gen nearly 20 years t tion of the Maumee and the Au |glaize--the fort which he had |named Defiance, because b | 1 that he defied “all English, all Indians, and all the devile in hell to take it From it he and his army had sallied out to meet and crush the Miamis at the battle of the Fallen Timbers. | The ruins of the fort stood ten |feet above the water, on the high |point between the Maumee and the | Auglaize, Mounting the crumbling ramparts, Jack and Alagwa stood and stared, striving to picture the scene as It was in the days already ancient when the United States flag had flown for the first time tn the valley of the Maume Camp was rapidly pitched horses fed and picketed for night, and supper | prepared eaten, “The first watch ts yours, Cato,” sunset on ‘the sec: they came to the Anthony Wayne fore at the june the the and alone the girl) She! | muat send him the information tn} |her possession or she must confess APRIL 13, 1916. PAGE 4 By Crittenden Marriott—Copyright, 1014, by Crittenden Marriott N xT WEEK—"“NORTH OF Jack said, “Call me about mid-| night.” “Bob,” he turned to the girl, | as you want to watch so badly lt call you about 2 o'clock | needn't caution you both to be care | ful.” | Alagwa was tired and she slept | |deeply and dreamlessly, She did not share Jack's fears, Neverthe less, when Jack waked her she went to her post determined to keep good wateh, The dawn was beginning to | break, Over all reigned silence Suddenly she started, Simul taneously came a crash. A bullet drove the earth from the rampart into her face, Then from every) tree, from every rock, forms, bait) naked, horrible, painted, came leap- ing. | “Stop!” she shrieked, In the Shawnee tongue, “Stop! Tecumseh commands tt.” The braves did not stop, Relent-| lesaly they came on. One of them sprang at Cato, his tomahawk flashed and the negro went down. But Jack was up now; his rifle spoke and the Indian who had felled Cato crashed acrons his body. As Jack turned, a whirling hatchet struck him in the chest | and he staggered backward. But as the man who had thrown it whooped with triumph, Alagwa's pistol barked and he fell. From beneath him, Jack rolled to Cato's [side and caught up the rifle that jbad fallen from the negro’s flac jeld fingers. As he renewed the {apiiied priming, Alagwa, weapon jews, heard a shpt and felt her cap | fly from her bead and go flutter ing to the ground, Then Jack| marked the man who bad fired] upon her and shot bim down. Dazed, Alagwa staggered back For a moment she saw the sole remaining foe, a huge man, broad and tall, leap at Jack. Then sight and sound were blotted out to gether. How long unconsciousness held Alagwa she never knew. It could not have been for very long, how: she saw Jack and the man still fac-| ing each other Jack broke the silence. . Capt, Telfair,” he said. “We) meet again!” Slowly into Alagwa's conscious-| ness the meaning of Jack's words) penetrated. It was Brito. Brito half raised his pistol, then) lowered it. “You're at my mercy.| T've got a right to kill you, and I'll do it.” The last words were drowned tn the roar of the heavy pistol | But as his finger pressed the trigger, Jack struck him ewiftly and denperately with his stick acrons the knuckles of bis pistol hand The blow was light, but it was sufficient. Before the roar of the pistol bad died away, Jack had sprung in. His fist caught the Eng lishman between the eyes. But for the moment Jack had no breath left to follow up his advan- tage and Briton none to renew the assault, For an instant Brito’s eyes wandered about the ground, seeking for a weapon; for an in- stant Jack's eyes followed the Eng- | Hehman A yell of fury burst }from his Ips and he sprang for. |ward. Brito saw him ceming and threw his weight tnto a blow that would have ended the fight if it {had gone home. But it did not go; |home! Jack dodged beneath it and| |drove his right with deadly force) against the other's thick neck.| Then, as Brito swung round, giddy |from the impact, Jack struck bim on the chin and sent him reeling back a dozen feet, clawthg at the alr, till he stumbled across the body of an Indian and fell upon his back Jack bent above bim, fist drawn back Surrender!” he panted. “Surrender!” “Not yet!" Brito’s outflung hand had closed upon a hatchet that had fallen from the dead brave's hand. Upward he hurled it with despair ing fury. Whether directed by chance or by skill, the cast went home. The) head of the whirling ax struck Jack squarely upon his forehead, just at) the roots of his hair. He sank down. Something mapped in Alagwa's brain. As the Englishman got to his feet, like a cat she sprang to her feet. As she did so her hand |touched the pistol that clung to her belt Brito saw and read her motion The man’s pluck was good, for he lurched toward her, laughing as he suddenly recognized her “No! No! No! Estelle!" cried. “Don't shoot!” But the pistol roared and he reeled back, clutching at his side. MEAT CAUSE OF KIDNEY TROUBLE Take a glass of Salts If your Back | hurts or Blad bothere—M. forme uric acid If you must have your meat ev ery day, eat {t, but flush your kid neys with salts occasionally, says a noted authority who tells us that meat forme uric acid which almost paralyzes the kidneys in their ef. forts to expel it from the blood They become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, diz: |ziness, your stomach sours, tongue {s coated and when the weather is| |} bad you have rheumatic twinges., | The urine gets cloudy, full of sedi: | he de) ment, the channels often get sore|to the and irritated, obligt relief two or & you to seek times during |the night | To neutralize Mese acids, to cleanse the irritating | kidneys and | flush off the body's urinous waste, | get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; take a table- spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kldu will then act fine. ‘This famous salts 1s made from the acid of grapes aud lemon julce, com |bined) with lithfa, and has’ been \used for generations to flush and | stimulate sluggish Kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, #0 it |no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness Jad Salts {s inexpensive; cannot injure, and makes a delightful ef. fervescent lithia-water drink, ys | lay | recommend it FIFTY THREE” Then he crashed down Staggerin, Alagwa made her way to Jack's side and sank down beside him. Into his torn hunting shirt she slipped her hand till it above his heart No faintest No quiver of lip or eye negatived the red wound upon his brow lently her head fell forward Long Alagwa fat, staring into the face of her dead. She knew now, for once and ever more that he was her d, hers, hers, hers alone, He was hers, her mate, created for her by Gitchemanitou the Mighty, foreordained for her in the dim chaos out of which world was shape And he was dead! Gently she kiesed his forehead, his eyelids, his cheeks, his firm, bold mouth, tak ing toll where she would, bride's | kiss and widow's kiss is one. twitched and Bob!” Suddenly his his eyes opened tered Alagwa dead Alagwa straightened forgotten Cato. Anxiously she looked about her. Then, abruptly, she started, stiffening like a wild thing at sight of the hunter. Not a score of feet away sat Brito, clutching his wounded aide, jaring at her with blood-shot eyes. Her hand fell to the knife tn her belt, and she gathered her feet be neath her, every muscle tense, ready to spring The Englishman her eyes but his Then he began to lps screamed He tried own edge to meet dropped himnelf backward, eyes fixed on the girl.) Boon he reached the bushes that concealed the steep river bank and slipped out of sight Alagwa stared at the spot where he had vanished Toward what refuge he was striving she did not know, but he could escape only by water, Both the Augfaize and the Maumee below the fort were nav- able for small boats, and if Brito and hix comrades had come tn one, | ever, for when she opened her eyes) +. might regain it and float down! the Maumee, possibly to safety Once more the negro, She looked about her. Cato was lying face down where he had fallen. Alagwa bent over Cato. His posture, to her trained eyes, spoke eloquently of death Hopele but determinedly she rolled his body over and placed her STOP DANDRUFF! stood up and HAIR GETS THICK, WAVY, BEAUTIFUL Girls! Draw a cloth through your hair and double its beauty. Spend 25 cents! Dandruff van- ishes and hair stops coming out. To be possessed of a head of heavy, beautiful hair; soft, lustrous, fluffy, wavy and free from dandruff te merely a matter of using a little Danderine. It Is easy and inexpensive to have nice, soft hair and lots of it. Just get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine now—all drug stores “apply a little as di. rected and within ten minutes there will be an appearance of abund- ance, freshness, fiuffiness and an incomparable gloss and lustre, and try as you will you can not find a trace of dandruff or falling hair; but your real surprise will be after about two weeks’ use, when you will see new hair—fine and downy at first—yes—but really new hair— sprouting out all over your scalp— Danderine 1s, we believe, the only sure hair grower, destroyer of dandruff and cure for Itchy scalp, and it never fails to stop falling hatr at once. If you want to prove how pretty and soft your hair really {s, moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw {t through your hair taking one small strand at a time. Your hair will be soft, glossy and beautiful in just a few moments a delightful surprise awaits every one who tries this. How to Save Your Eyes Try This Free Prescription Do your eyes give you trouble? Do you already wear eyeglasses or pectacies? Thousands of people wear these “windows” who might easily dispense with them. You may be one of these, and {t is your duty to save your eyes before it is too late. The eyes are neglected more than any other organ of the entire body. After you finish your days work you sit down and rest your muscles, but how eyes? Do you reat them? know you do not something else that keeps your eyes busy; you work your eyes un til you go to bed. That is why so many have strained eyes and fi nally other @ye troubles that threaten paffial or total blindness. Eyeglasses are merely crutches; they never cure. This free pre scription, which has benefited the eyes of so many, may work equal wonders for you. Use it a short time. Would you Hke /your eye troubles disappear as ff by magic? Try this prescription. Go nearest wideawake drug and t a bottle of Optona fill a twoounce bottle with warm water, drop fn one tab let and allow ft to thoroughly dis: solve, With this liquid, bathe the eyes two to four times dally, Just nota how quickly your eyes clear up and how soon the inflammation will disappear, Don't be afraid to use it; {it is absolutely harmless. Many who are now blind might have saved their eyes had they started to for them in time. This is a simple treatment, but marvelously effective in nultt tudes of cases. Now that you have been warned, don't ya day, but do what you can to save your eyes and you are likely to thank us as long as you live for publish ing this ment, You throb rewarded her. | 81. | he mut-| was not) She had} Alagwa remembered | about your You read or do prescription.—-Advertise- ' BY BERTRAND W, BINCLAIR MR, TRUE. NAMG the | 1 CARE WHAT NOUR is? A SILK PLUG HAT hand above his heart. It was beating, strongly. Amazed, the girl sprang up. She raced to the river and back again and poured the cooling water on slowly but that had run down his forehead and had filled his eyes. Instantly Cato gasped and she dashed what was left of the water into his blood-streaked face. The shock completed her work Intelligence snapped back into the | | Whar dem Whar's Mars’ Jack?” eee Fonr days later—for it took twice as long to go from Fort Defiance to Fort Wayne as it had taken to go from Fort Wayne to Defiance— Alagwa stood in Peter Bondie’s house in the room that had served her for # night, watching with dumb, fear-filled eyes as the sur- geon from the fort straightened up from his long inspection of Jack's exhausted form. Concussion of the brain,” he aid, at last. “He'll get well, but | he'll be {ll for weeks. CHAPTER IX, Discovery By August, except for Jack and his party, the Maison Bondie was jentirely bare of guests. | Perhaps it was as well, for one evening early in the month as Fan- tine and Alagwa and Peter's Miami wife ant down to supper Peter came hurrying in, bringing news that destroyed the tastefulness even of Fantine's cooking. Capt. Wells and Capt. Heald and the entire garrison of Fort Dear- born had been massacred. The news had just reached the Miami village. It had not yet reached |the fort or any white man con- nected with the garrison—not even Major Stickney or the priest at the Catholic church—and probably would not reach them until the morrow. With bated breath the Bondies discussed the massacre. Should they at once seek Major Stickney, who was {ll with ague, and tell him the news or should they wait till the morrow? Abruptly a shadow darkened the door and thru ft, into the room, stepped Metea, a retainer of the Rondies, who had suddenly disap- | peared two weeks before. Offering |no explanation of his presence nor of his absence, Ire sat down at the table and began to devour the food which Peter's Miam! wife placed before hit. “Behold,” he said, “my mocca- sins are worn with much travel, I come quickly from Yondotia (De troit), I bring great news. The American chief and all his men have surrendered, Over Yondotia now flies the flag of the white father who lives across the great water.” No one spoke. Fort Dearborn The news from had been stirring but this from Detroit was over- whelming, both in its tmmensity and in the consequences tended Metea had paused and glanced about the room, waiting a reply. It did not come and he went on, j his glance Mng@ring on Alagwa. “Peter Bondie has ever been the friend of the red men,” he resumed “He has taken a squaw from the Miami tribe, Metea is his friend. Metea is also the friend of Alagwa, the foster child of Tecumseh Therefore, let my brother |warning and begone; and’-—he |turned to Alagwa—"“let my sister prepare to go to Yondotia at dawn. Such is the will of Tecumseh.” he Bondies looked at each otlfer; then they looked at Alagwa The imminent loss of all that they had accumulated was a shock, but Metea'’s words to Alagwa_ struck them dumb, Fantine, knowing what she did about the girl, had sus pected t Tecumseh had not been entirely broken, but Peter was ignorant even of her sex, and its revelation took bis breath away. Alagwa, however, was not think ing of herself, but of Jack his head, washing away the blood | it por- | take | the tie between her and | is “Did Tecumseh send no word A Great Feature alt other goed better for evening 7 GOOD MORNING My Co-_— r Never with ANYBODY DSGuISED IN | bout the young white chief?" she faltered, desperately. Metea shrugged his shoulders. “The young white chief?” he “He who slew the Shaw- No, Te cumseh sent no word! Iet the | Young chief stay where he is. Soon |we will test his courage at the stake and see if be is a brave man or a coward.” Metea threw his blanket about his shoulders | disappeared | (Continued in Our Next Issue) Motorman John Moland looked out of the vestibule of an Alki car, lost consciousness, and fell onto the trestle at Spokane st. Wednesday afternoon, while his car full of passengers went bowling on toward the city. The pilotless car rier had gone more than a block when some one in the front sest sized up the situation, ran to the controller and shut off the current. Moland was found back on the tres tle, unconscious. He suffered a | concussion of the brain. CATARRH TRUTH © Told ina Simple Way Without Apparatus, Inhalers, Salves, Lotions, Harmful Drugs, Smoke or | Electricity Heals Day and Night | It is a new way. It is "something Jabsolutely different. No | sprays or sickly smelitn, creams atomizer, or y atus of any kind. Nothing to smo! or Inhule. No steaming or rubbing | or injections, electricity or vi- bration or massage. No powder; no |plasters; no keenine in the house, Nothing of that kir thing n and diff delightful and healt instantly successful. have to walt, and lin a lot of money. You can stop it ver night—and I will gladly teil you how- 1 am not @ doc- tor, and this Is not a so-called doo- tors prescription—but I am cured, and m friends are cured, and you can be cured. Your suffering will stop at once like magic. 1 Am Free—You Can Be Free to Saas My catarrh was filthy and loathsome. —— It made me fll, It dulled my mind, It undermined my health and was weaken. ing my will The hawking, coughing, | apitting made me obnoxious to ail, and |imy foul breath and disg habits | made even my loved ones avoid me se n life was dulled and 4. I knew that in an untimely nent of the day owly yet surely sap- = ful) something You do not rer, and pay out P mt I found a cure, and tel you about ‘It FREE. Weitevne promptly. RISK JUST ONE CENT Send no money. Just your name an@ dress on ® postal card. Say: “Dear se tell me how you cured a how I can cure mine. a to aay write me. turning i for this do for yal what It has done for me. pi . AM KATZ, Room N-684 2009 Indiana Ave, Chica, a