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

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STAR—MONDAY, MAY 8, 1916, PAGE 4. EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE SEATTLE STAR Hy mail, ot of elty, one your months, 21.00; 30 per monti 50,8 Member of the Scripps Northwest League of Newspapers Published Daily by The Star Pubtiani Thome Main 0400 Wise and | | Otherwise | When You're Weill KEEP WELL HAND, whether it is making a shell or Each man has his own particular little In the world’s most efficient armies this i mered into the recruit, and is hammered and his work becomes AUTOMATIC Work in arsenals and na yard ular military requirements in time of war exclusion of everything else by the men enga of them or part of them knocking off w not even if they are attacked. There is no such thing as a CITIZEN force—in this for one purpose and partially for another. charging a trench. tunt to do and nothing the first thing that i frilled into him every day Making an Effective Army |' we must have an army, we should have only one kind of an army— an effective army. An effective army is a real, sure enough army organiz- ed on strict military lines in every sense Many suggestions, now being made instance, such plans as call for the industrial workmen navy yards, etc., two or three days a month, cruises. Such plans are interesting but are not practical. For these reasons: A military organization is different from any other kind tion on earth. Each man has his own little stunt to do—and nothing else. ham until v Another “Article. In thet Star's Health Campaign Boing Conducted With Co. | operation of American Medical Association —+ which would be subje must be concentrated ged upon it. You ¢ to take part in advocate, ut with maneuvers and RY TRUE SAYS: bout our military policy, A man is often prevented from padding his own cance by a wife who rocks the boat. emuenianne an’t have omething e for training of n ill arsenals, : ° TK TUBERCULOSIS People mont Hable to be infected the germ of tuberculosis are an organiza- age—used partially ik | |) _ serine POEM CONTEST | . . ' Everything i varfare is hight necialized thore who live unhygiente Itves, Ht The following poem was the dest He cannot be a navy yard workman part of the time and a sailor the rest verything in warfare is highty speciaized. , or who are compelled, in order to i submitted tn tho reat sprici poem se Suni THE THINGS WHICH MAKE AN ARMY EFFECTIVE HAVE GOT cet lvethod, to work amid it se. Woe, Senureetee | o ; F TO BE CED AND RECOGNIZED ALL PLANS ND YEAS yer tee genie it George Bernard Shaw or Elinor An army cook has got to be an army cook. He must know his job from I BE FACED AND R . 4! A ANI IDEA Overcrowde1, unventilated Awol ih} Glyn 7 ALONG ANY LINES THAT ARE NOT STRICTLY MILITARY, IN EVERY Ings, offices and workshops, i SPRING, the ground up—and nothing else. Any other formula overturns the whole SENSE, ARE ABSOLUTE COMPROMISES eatery gooupetiont om tack of i Ie a beautiful thing. | ; “ I is, exercise “ ; _ { Hear the wedding belle } military theory. ; hat dust whlch, by Irritating the lungs, renee | He must be subjected to the same tasks, the same army discipline, the U d re nese Sr the gia Roa The birds on the wing same requirements, day after day, as long as he is on that particular job. npreparedness and ingufficlent clothing, ‘ncleant i, . pa You cannot take this army cook—not in armies nowadays—and make him HE socialist faction of the Norwegian parliament has introduced a bill be- pega tactore te prediopoett eae ' STING! coe ae a cavalryman, or something else, part of the time. You can't take a marine, fore that body calling for the complete disarmament of Norway and ask- gg Mee conse ntcen; but must | ives ca bias, ‘dadameuel because he has considerable spare time, and let him practice aviation one or ing for a repeal of all treaties with other countries which might be a hindrance actually seuss coniniaction cee | the po satoffice site ta, Dublin two days a week, : ; to complete disarmament. : the entrance of the germ into the EME The7'd have to have a navy to cap, You can’t, in short, take a man from any job, from making bread or At present the socialists control only one-third of the assembly, but the It is commonty said that. certail ture the one Will Humphrey wished | onto Seattle. shoeing mules, or working in an arsenal, and put him at SOMETHING ocialist movement is spreading With such rapidity in Norway that it is very ee arcane, + , - Ty ' . . - ‘co. ‘ ~ . is beyond pub a c TooTRgOME | SE, even occasionally, WITHOUT DISRUPTING THE ENTIRE SYS- possible that they may secure control of parliament at next election. If so, the tution predisposed to cossamntl A gold tooth tn a ple at the) TEM, which is an endless chain of routine, starting from the lowest and bill would undoubtedly pass. In which case England will doubtless also take may be inherited, but the real rem ‘social the ether event son that generation efter gener i get came from Mt. Hh —6 working up to the highest and back to the lowest. to sinking Norwegian merchant vessels, as a matter of pastime and target ation in some families has died of <a Military. organization means CONCENTRATION ON THE JOB AT practice, as Germany is now doing. the disease Is generally that, the k members of the family have infected the well. | No matter where the germs are cee Roosevelt got one delegate tn the Massachusetts primaries, which, up- on the theory that a chain is no 7 |secldentaliz. todced, Bhat pvry ¢ stronger than tte weakest tink, - = |! 8 eee or ee Murder, St! clothing or utensils, their vitality s abundant trouble for the j founds like; there's somebody been if - ee. | Anda Wet | “THE CRIME DOCTOR”) 4S Fatwe (Eby et a , nd even as he spoke somebody Mines AnoUT THE DUCK standard, high-class, beok- the other goed | jooned off againg The terrific shine, pure alr and cleanliness are re a” aia on novel, complete this week ta per will give each ' = J : most valuable means of resisting ee ee! oa IE thip papes. By E, W. Hornung—Copyright, 1914, The Bobbs-Merriil Co. rice ne port was followed by screams with-|and destroying the infection and duck is a low, heavy-set btr@ Ne long waits; a full tnatall- — - vot in and a shower of glass from the|of curtailing the disease when He is a mighty poor singer, having a|| meat will come to you every day, NEXT WEEK—"THE UNAFRAID”. BY ELEANOR INGRAM faniight. But by this time Doctor | early recognized. coarse voice. caused 7 Dollar had his latchkey in the lock But the only sure way of pre venting infection is to destroy all the sputum of every consumptive, \for it is almost always by means of the sputum that a consumptive fn | fects another person. q frogs in bis neck, and he lik and carries a toy balloon in to keep him from sinking ‘The duck has only two lees and they are set so far Dack on his running gears by nature that they come pretty near missing his body Some ducks, when they get dig curls on their talls, If the door had opened outward, a tangled trio would have fallen into the street; as it was, it hardly would open for the man in white who was struggling with a woman ({n red flannel) and a boy (in next all others whom I could wish to convert to my views. But already I have kept you up too long. If you would grant me an appoint ment—" “Not at all,” interrupted Mr, Vin- CHAPTER L | The Physician Who Healed Himself [* your watch didn reminded with more spirit, “I could gue: whose {t was by the crest and monogram, and I decided to make sure instead of giving cha ite owner was eigns and a florin into too many of| “And what form would the treat- thetr ttebing palins, But not a man|ment take?” Jack of them was ashamed to| “It would depend, of course, upon pocket his guineas for politely tell-|the case. They don't all know that ing me I was as mad an a hatter | they're being treated for incipient) to think of such a thing as really|criminality. The majority think| the course of his meterolc career as secretary of state for the home department, the Bave to set or Right Honorable Topham Vinson) “You did admirably,” declared 6 settled himself even more was the matter with me they are in an ordinary nursing |‘? Bothing) on the mat. qmethenet weryt ht y « ; [lee tare s dock T would'rather be | instituted many reforms and earned |the home # 7, in be -/comfortably in his chair. “The 4 in the end?” home.” Dollar exclaimed, “Barton!” in| With # smot toe sl beto ' B drake They have @ wide bill lke they | the reformer's whack of praise and preciation. “Come in, plea’ ight 1s atill young—so is my cigar.| “In the end I struck a fellow! “A ho erted the secretary of | blank amazement. But it was not| goog caiman silly,” sald aaa BUTEn: saan, ‘they boence blame. let me thank you with all the hon: Pray say all you care to say, and with an open mind—but not in/state, “You don’t mean to tell me,|the unlucky Barton who had TUD |tor under rg ™M. "ial F le to It in matter for thanksgiving that | ors possible at this time of night.” say {!t as confidentially as you England—and if I said that he) Doctor Dollar, that you actually run | @muck | Mrs. Barton, you shall tell fe the 4 Wey flap }the majority of his indiscretions And he ushered the savior of | ple You interest me, Doctor literally opened mine it might be,;a nursing home for unconvicted| On the stairs, at the end of the! 101. thing in the mornin Qeake a pass at singing | Were unguessed while he and hi*| hts property into a charming inner Dollar; nor can I forget that I am|an exaggeration, but that’s all. Holcriminals?” harrow passage, they beheld an| tovn to bed ike « ar oe jheld office. He was never so un-| hall, where elaborate refreshments | much indebted to you.” 1 go prospecting tn my skull otential criminals, Mr. Vinson, Chormous revolver, against a back- Bobby!" ” § OUR TICKET |conventional as in the company of | stood in readiness on a side table.| “I don't want to trade on that,” | risked his reputation as against my |! have at present no patient who is|8Tound of pink wleeping-suit, with “ He turned roun@ as the unpre Harry Thaw for president. }that kindred spirit who had so| Mr. Vinson, explaining that he/returned the doctor, hast! “But | life-—but we both came out on top.”| actually wanted by the police.” a ferocious eye looking down the| table pair made off, The street | ©. Allen Dale for vice president. | much to do with their inception. [never allowed anybody to alt up| tt is an old dream of mine to tell| “And you've been your own man| “And where {s this extraordinary | barrel tor peed but; the home “ : 99 It was early in an autumn ses-/for him, led the attack on food and | you, sir, about my work, and how |¢ver since?” establishment?” The crime doctor slipped between |) 04 “ pore Bia of the mat. THE PROPOSAL sion that this remarkable pair be | drink with schoolboy gusto and | and why I came to take ft up. 1| “I was cured,” Doctor Dollar) “Under my own roof here in Wel-|¢¥erybody and the armed man—| A!) t08 . an unconvincing jokel™ said the doctor, wiping his fore | head with the back of his hand came acquainted. Mr. Vinson had been tempted by the mildness of| In the meantime there had been the night to walk back from West-/some mutual notetaking. The minster to Portman Square. He|home secretary, whose emphatic |Crimea—Scots Fusiliers. I joined had just reached home when he! personality lent ttself to the dis-|the Argyll and Sutherlands the heard his name cried from some/creet pencil of the modern cart-| rear before South Africa—where, ittle distance behind him. The | caturtat, was in appearance exactly | by the way, I remember seeing you votce tempered hoarse excitement/as represented in contemporary| with your Yeomen.” with the restraint due to midnight| cartoons; there was nothing unex-| “I had 18 months of {t without in a quiet square; and as Mr. Vin-| pected about him, since his boyish |a headache or a scratch.” son turned on his doorstep, a young | vivacity was a quality already over-| “I wieh I could say the same, man rushed across the road with @/ exploited by the pres: His frank-|Mr. Vinson. I was shot thru the | gold chain swinging from hie out-|ness was something qualified by a head at the Modder, ten days after Shaking his head with an expres- sion that nobody else could see. “Oxzig, I'm surprised at you!” they heard him say with severity. “I thought you were a better sports- man than to go playing the fool the oné night I'm out. If you want to frighten people, do it where you high spirits. answered with tense simplicity. “It was a miraculous cure, and yet no miracle, Anybody could perform | w: ite like, given the nerve and skill Yot it seemed to me a new thing; {ts possibilities were almost Lal | palling tp their fascination. I re solved to qualify, so that at least 1| “How?” might be in a position to do as I| “By writing many times to tell | 4on't damage their property; {f you had been done by. I had already | you all about myself and the home,|™mean murder, I'm your mark, my |°"S t the service; but my fighting | Mr. Vinson.” lad! Aim at my waistcoat buttons P were not over. I was going| “Then I never saw the letters. you'll get me in the to fight Crime as it had never been|A home secretary stands to be that's better; now blaze | was not Intended for medicine, you my people are army people My father was an ensign tn the He was a morbid youth and a Bervous lover. Often had he wish- ed to tell the maiden how he longed fo make her all his own. Again ‘and again had his nerve failed him. But tonight there was a “door-die” om * - his eye. ie started for their usual lig ‘one rested awhile upon his favorite seat, @ gravestone tn the Village church yard. <A happy in spiration seized him. “Maria,” he said, hundred yards from where } and, yet this {s the first I hear j of it!” “Lcan see that. It's not my fault, sir, I have done my best to bring lit before your notice.” 4 “Does ft look like one? Yet this {s the sort of thing that’ | Mable to happen when one’s back is 7 turned, and always will be until—" — in trembling accents, “Maria, when you die— | stretched hand. gaze of habitual penetration, but/I landed.” fought before!” jahot at by every crank who can “Yes?” sald the home how would you like to be buried) “Your watch, sir, your watch!” ! «till tt was there. and his manner; “Thru the head, aid you say?*| There was a challenge tn the/hold a pen. I employ more than s Dollar paused and looked at him. | here with my name on the stone|he gasped, and displayed a bulbous | could evidently be grand or col-|asked the home secretary pause made here. But the listener | one youllg gentleman expressly to| Wa" not lowering his barrel to im-) «1714 you make it at least as over you?”—London Opinion. hunter with a monogram on one|toquial at will The doctor touched the did not take {t mp, and the ha-| divert that sort of fire. You should | Prove his aim. He lowered it alto-| appt ha buy revolvers and am- eae | side and the crest of all the Vin-| The young man from the street| patch in his dark, strong |Fangue ended on a humbler note: |have got an Introduction to me,| ether. And his other wild eye was|' ition Mr Vinson, a8 a dose QUITE A crowp A most ag genes afternoon was passed, sons on the other. “Heavens!” cried the home sec-| was easily pleased tn all such re-|That's where the bullet came slink: | spects; but indoors he no longer|ing out; any but a Mauser would| “Il astudied at St. Mary's under men whose names you know as weil | Doctor Doll The doctor emiled. |open now, and both were blinking | with unlovely woe. of prussio acid! Here's a young man, unsteady, and an epileptic, retary, feeling in an empty w }looked quite the young man. His|have carried all before it! An it|@* they know yours. I was at Ber-| “I am not sorry I waited for the ‘IT didn*t mean any harm,” he Sevninanam." bie az a eating hm: coat pocket before he could believe | hair was dark and wiry, but over|was, {t left me with a bit of a|l!m and tn Stockholm, Refore I was {ntroduction which time has given| faltered. “It was only a rag—and| “0 Mel cee isis ‘Tribune. his eyes. “Where on earth did you! one r was a singular patch of squint, as you can see; otherwise,| 30 1 had put up my plate in Wel me, Mr. Vinson.” I'll pay for the door.” lene is he ripe for one. I must give * 29 @ find that? I had {ft on me when I/| white. , I was as fit) beck st.. and there I am still.” | “You wanted me to assist the} “It'll be a great rag, won't it, if/ - 7) him his Head a little, and this hap left the hou | pens in a minute! “And yet,” said the home secre-| go0d work, I take it?” | you fire bang into your own foot MAKING A — cor. The shaven face was pale, eager. “It wasn't a ci of finding.” | and austere. Dark eyes burnt like} tary, with a faint smile—“and yet “By your countenance and influ-| Better give me that thing before “| shall have to make a 4 Tommy was undergoing chastise-| said the young man, as he fanned| beacons under a noble brow, and| “Physically and even mentally—|the porsibilities are still only pos-|ence—if you could.” | you do.” Dollar held out the stead- Nace to see how things are quisle ment at the hands of his outraged | himself with his opera hat. “T've| aid not lose in character or {n-|from a medical point of view-—but | sibilities!” ‘I must see something of it first. | lest of hands. “Now make yourself | 11> Gown, and should be only tee mother for eating the jam. | Just taken it from the'fellow who/tensity by a distinct tho slight|not morally, Mr. Vinson! Some-| "On the surgical side, yes; there |! must inspect this home of yours, | Scarce.” tad to take you with ma.” “Tommy,” she sald, “this hurts me | took !t from you.” atrabism. So at least {t seemed to| thing subtie had happened, some|I was misled by my own abnormal | Doctor Dollar.” The young man in pink stood |® 4 more than it does yo “Who? Where?” demanded the| Topham Vinson, who was a really| pressure somewhere, some form of /case. Yet there are ways of curing| “It Is open to your inspection day | Wildly staring, then fled upstairs (Continued In Our Next Issue) And when Tommy was alone he secretary of state, with unstates-| wonderful judge of faces, yet had/local paralysis And it left mejeven what I regard as the very/or night,” said Doctor Dollar. | a a Produced a square piece of wood | manlike excitement. seldom seen one harder to sum up.|a pretty low-down type, I can tell| Worst type of congenital eriminal| “Even at this hour? Even to Which he had placed where {t was| “Some poor brute in North Aud. “I'm sorry you don’t smoke,” said | jyou! It was a case of absolute /at the present da | night? needed, and murmured reflective. ley st., I think {t w he, snipping a cigar which he bad/automatiam—but I won't go me “1 with I knew of some!” said| The home secretary sounded as Wy: thought that doard| “That's it! ‘That was where he|extolied in vain | particulars now, if you don’t mind.” |Mr. Vinson cheerily. “But what do| keen as he looked Wouldn't do her hand any good."—| stopped me, just at the corner of} The other was on his legs that} “On no account, my dear doo-|¥ou regard as the very worst type| “This minute, by all means,” said Ladies Home Journal. Grosvenor Square!” exclaimed Vin-|\instant. “I never smoke,” he ex-|tor!” exclaimed the secretary of |of congenital criminal at the pres: |the doctor, with resolute cordiality son. “And I went and gave the old | claimed; “but I simply can not en-| state. “I want to hear every word|ent day?” “There's always somebody up, and scoundrel half.a-crown!” dure your hospitality, kind as !t is,| you care to tell me—and not one | “The society type,” replied the|the patients can be seen without | “He probably had your watch|Mr. Vinson, without being a bit] that you don't” |crime doctor without an instant’s| being disturbed.” } u while you were looking in your) more honest with you than I've “It had destroyed my moral | hesitation. ‘Then.” said the home secretary, | .| purse. been so far. I didn't lose that pick-| sense on Just one curious potnt;| His host permitted himself to! “it's a chance at a time when every A MATTER OF TASTE “But yon must remember, | After that | Edith,” said the young husband ert, | With « white silk handkerchief just] In the depths of his softest chatr|{t was a case of Killing or curing| “It’s rather a sensational age, | The Home 4 er the quarrel, “that my taste {s|¢*tracted from his sleeve. Mr, Vinson lolled smiling. joneself by hook or by crook, {|isn't {t, Mr. Vinson? When society| yar deplorable passion for ad e 0 e ine “But where were you?” asked! “The fellow pitched a pathetic |docided to try the curing first, And| Women make a living out of|),7pat deplorable passion for ad Topham Vinson, taking {n every| yarn?” he conjectured |—to cut a long yarn short--I was | bridge, traffic In tickets for royal Rae cai he, Toph os Vinson “sallied | neh of him, “It wasn't that, Mr. Vinson, | cured.” Jenclosures, charge a fat feo for a|yolcano as Topham Vinson sallied flashed across country paves the married me and I married you.”— I'd just come into the square| should have let him go in any| “Fastly?” presentation at court, and @ small! sion It was to be noticed that ry ry Ladies’ Home Journal. myself, You had just gone out of |case—once I’ recovered what he'd Tho slander may come|fortune for launching an unlikely |}e.00. with him @ thick stick tn way to bigger business. 8 it. The pickpocket was looking to|taken—as a matter of principle.”|home to roost, but I shall never |family in their own set, there must |”, af at ar wane au tho the ag nee what he'd got, even while he “Principle eried the secretary |think much of the London special-| be some reason for it apart from serted streets had become moist j 7 arts hurled his blessings after you. of te. } ist! I've dropped my two _Bover. thelr own depravity with a midnight drizzle. sp WESTERN ION ; ar sikdon % on . Pa 4 ‘And where is he now? Did he ‘The whole thing is,” his guest |———— ——____— “They are no more naturally de-| "11 ag matter of seconds they had : Simother Factory.”—Millville (Als. Jha ros your fingers? continued, yet more frankly, “that | praved than I am, but their purse|s och fetched up at h. britieatiy Times. I'm ashamed to say he did; but|T happen to hold my own views on| tn perhaps even smaller, and their | both fetched up at a brilliantly Day Letters and es of All S h might be permitted to explain them, pat, Cuplidity ts not the motive | Usually ob og ¢ lp velige igh Le rs ig FEN QE) rowever Uriefly, they would at least foes, it's simple shortage of the /Dately Pounding on the door and tte : Builders, Says Doctor afford the only excuse I have to |needful—trom their point of view, | SHittInE the sober kin nt offer for my conduct. If you con as |So we get our good ladie with : 0#) A Secret of the Great Endurance and Power of Athletes |*4er ‘t 10 excuse, and if I have | Musterole Works = Easier,|their tariff of introductions. It's ager Bart atest Fae, aete open a new avenue of a prc to i i put myself within reach of the law,| Quicker and Without the [a short step from that sort of thing . oe ds . Se pe oppaabsd e man you want to reac He} there, sir, is my card; and here| Bli to a ahadetiiok and from 0 shade mority. “Out of the way With you "Wt H Ordinary Nuxated Iron and ether pri ale pg 2d od 10 to 14 be 1 ’ at : ki th | ister trick H ight i But | —this is my house Delicate, Nervous, Ran: aye me simply by taking tron tn mi i, prepare o take e con _ rick to downright crime. But its} : : F ne 0 - " | And the home secretary arrive q ple 200% Stronger the roper form, and this after they | sequences of my act There's no sense in mixing up a|® step often taken by the tyne 1/,,And the home secretary arrived Quicker than mailand more dualid : ; Weeks’ ‘Time in Many monthe without obtaining age tose, | The home secretary leaned for-|mess of mustard, flour and water |mean—tho not necessarily with | vat in time to divert the outraged / i pron aly fit, But don't take the old forms of| Ward and took the card from aljwhen you can so easily relieve|their eyes open. And that’s just!) 4 happetied, “while ha octar reduced iron. tron acetate or tincture | sensitive hand. pain, soreness or stiffness with a|Where the crime doctor should | ¢\\ . : THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO DE so Triy eer te inte tee ee eee Sour must taco irons, & Me™ cents. | “T gee, Doctor Dollar, that you|littis clean, white MUSTEROLE. | |come tn.” let og ee eae re 2 ta! ie to get renewed health and/can be easily absorbed and -|are a near nelghbor of mine—only MUSTEROLE is made of pure oll “In opening their eyes?” | - . \ se | strength from, some atimulating |lated like nuxated tron If you want| just round the corner in Welbeck|of mustard aod other helpful in “tn naving ‘em from themesives | 20° Kicking some broken ES aul ecia’ Bre” Sauer, ih Ma A cae 1 BE te RS st. May I take it that your ex-|gredients, combined in the form of| while they're still worth saving | well;known’ who Many an athlete or prize fighter perlence as a consultant is the basis|a pleasant white ointment. It takes |in that prevention which is better j F gtudied widely both tn this count oon the day simply because helof the views you mention?” the place of the out-of-date mus-|¢han cure.” I tle IR abel Aa : . eeret at ferent strength | “My experience as an allenist,” tard plaster, and will not blister! | “In other words, you would tackle ie streneth can onty come from the| With tron before he went into the| sald Doctor Dollar far as 1] MUSTEROLE gives prompt aracter as ordinary doctors and it food 7% eas ie people ofan at ’ . while many, rious pias|can lay claims to that euphemiam.”| from Sore Throat, Bronchitis, ona devote themselves to the f to get the strength out of thetr tood ow © Inglorious defeat “And how far fa that, doctor?” | Silitis, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma and the soul?” if a peeors, tney bavent eno neh iron ip “In the sense that all crime is| Neuralgia, He adache, Congestion It would come to that, Mr, Vin i) RELIABLE Wah) food into living matter. From their a form of madness.” Plouri Rheumation, Lumbago,| gon. It's a large order, TL know, vt tell what, so they generally prescribed by em “In default of a recognized term,"| Joints, § Sor cles, | delivered In my time. It will take * h d d Ha) Ssmmonce “Soctoring ‘tor ‘stomach siciana ‘everyanere, nile the| sald Doctor Dollar, “f can only |8rulses, Chilblains, Frosted Meet, | hettor men than Tam, and many of He wants to ol your trade ET cots cthor ailment caused tp tha| ssstrlinted, toes ingore the tectn [All Myself a crime doctor.” Me oe ee gest (Mt often pre-|rem, But that’s the {doa, all right.” | | > pth ment caused by th 1, does not injure the te pata ap ausawietee |" neumonia) ' care — ° Mg Sa Seen ok Bee ine oy A tranch, Rot yet acknowledged | At ur druggies, tn 26e and 50c |, What about the practice?” anked | czy and tries to sell you brands Hi f)) bation nutfors untold agony, Te you | either by my profession nor| Mh ands special large hospital) “Rome took lesa building than | | ‘ ‘ ‘ j HAMM) Yourscit to make the following temt |by the law, Mr. Vinson; but both eee ee tg annine |@ London practice, by an unknown | k Il oil | fy) Bee how long you can work or how have got to come to it Just asl MESTEROLI. Rettae meee | man atriking out a new ine for| ne nows you wi 1Ke. LF, } n WA nout becoming }aurely aw we all accept the other A perigaionh Tae | himself | Iv ab | et what you ask for The Mus. |™ ® a BS, “oe scientific developments of the day.” | terole Company, Cleveland, Ohio "1 really don't wonder, Who d d ca 1 he after meals for two| crease thet : | “But have you reduced your hi ‘ would come to consult you about a} He 1S always ready to recommen i! und? eae tie atl Mae ioe caaptone aewanie’ cork | Practice to a science, doctor?” | homicidal tendency, or a trick of 1a Flea nied “1 tate aeae dened to a pee tenn "! “Tam doing #0,” said Doctor | ampering with special offertories?” | run flown at tenet atr Dollar. “I have made a start; 1 “In the first instance, most likely, | e rece : in tht | Ht ly get rid Dese wift's Pharmacy and all other YOu all about it, You are the home might send him to #ee me on Povend| Ss im i Ey @yemptomis of Gyepepsie, Mver* eroasiste secretary of England, the man of other pretext, And the young man dabbed a very good forehead, that giistened in the light from the open door, pocket by accident or because he was too quick for me. I posely packed him off.” | but, thank God, I came to nee the T pur-| cause as well as to suffer unspeak- | jably from the effect open his eyen once more. “Your ideas are rather tonal, aren't they, Doctor Dollar?’ nensa. |moment of the day is full.” "| CHAPTER II

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