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Member of the Sertppe Northwest League of Newspapers Published Dally by The Star Publishing Co. Phone Main 9400 = ~ _« Pw. BULLOCK'S IDEA OF , A SOFT SNAP MAKE “TH’ SUN MAD GY WEARIN' ONE OF ~HESE ANTI-SUNBURN BONNETS | Y ‘4 on ING SUN BONNETS IN A COAL MINE — SIMPLE FOLKS Sedgwick is the kind of a town where a young fellow brags about Kissing his girl—The Peabody; (Kan.) Gazette. | eee oe | j HE ADMITS IT | Actor named Ben Harney |} spends $100 for page advt. in | a theatrical weekly to admit that he ortginated ragtime fn Louisville in 1898, Is burning alive too sympathetic-like? ‘ anal _ spring rome } ean stand for the girl With the tango curl IT can stand for slicked hair; th: Is getting my nanny for fatr. eee the dame with Fourteenth regiment is ordered to Mexico, One battalion is in Se- ‘attle, one in Spokane, the rest in Alaska. Seems like Uncle wil! have} to issue a mobilization order first see j Dear Sir: The other day I no-| ticed you were supporting Harry if w for president and C. Allen " for vice president. I think you Must have made a mistake. It should be C. Allen Dale for presi- Gent and Thaw for vice president. : M. ARSH MALLOW. ‘Thy will be done, sweetness, and $0 let it be. Dale for president. Bkiddoo, Wilson; and beat en @ ‘This is a prime favorit 3 indeed, He—The wild women of Hilo have their tongues cut ow Thin Folks Who Want to Get Fat Weight Tes Pounds Tmecrease tn Welsh: or “Ta cértéiniy give most anything fo be able to fat up a few pounds an that way.” declares every ex- cessively thin man of woman. Such “& result is not impossible, despite failures. Most thin people are ims of mal-nutrition, a condition prevents the fatty elements of from being taken up by th as they are when the Rutrition are normal. Inst ting Into the blood, much of th and flesh producing element: “@tay in the Intestines antil they “pass from the bod ‘To correct this condition and to juce a healthy, normal amount of fat, nutritive processes must ; artificially supplied with the Prowse which nature has denied F This can probably beat be ac- hed by eating a Sargol tablet ry meal combina ot similative agents. y mix with the food to turn gars and starches of what you fate eaten {nto rich, ripe nourish- mnt for the tim , and Fapid effec _ €ases reported remarkabd' e4 gains of from 10 to 25 pounds in ingle month are by no means In- went. Yet its action Is perfectly a —_ absolutely ol erense or money back. NOTE —Sargol is recommended only as a flesh builder, and while! ults in cases of nervour | ton. have heen reported, | care should he taken about using it unless a gain of weight Is desired — Advertisement. —How to Prepare Yourself Good wages and advance. ment await the man who can not only operate, but 9 thor- oughly understands the Gas Engine. Its use in the Marine, the Commercial and the Agri- cultural field is becoming greater every day. The big, Modern Engineering School of- fers you the chance to take advantage of these ever-in- creasing opportunities. You can start any time, attending either the Day or Night Classes, and Special Rates will be available during the next few months. Visit the School right now— or send for our New Iilustrat- ed Catalogue, which Is self-ex- planatory to ambitious men and boys. x - SEATTLE JENGINEE HOOLe f 4|from the esoteric principles of his | again; dL AK—WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1916. PAGE 4 It’s Tough Business Being Neutral ODAY the editor received a letter from a woman who signed herself as Florence Forder. She “panned” us everlastingly because Dr. Waldo Richardson, just back from hospital duty at the front with the British, said in an interview in The Star the other day that the insular British had lost their stamina as war- riors—had become a d ecadent race. She writes that Dr. Richardson said the British nation is “degenerate.” She then picks The Star to pieces with considerable finnesse and at great length. Every “derogatory lie, scandal, rumor, and suggestion hurtful to the allie. she says, has been given unlimited space in this paper. Citing from the history of the war to date, she heatedly demands to know if “degenerates” British arms. could have achieved the victories that have come to the She speaks, quoting supposedly from The Star, of “degenerate” British Canadian troops. as we will have neither the heart nor the nerve to print And then, as a parting blow, she informs us that inasmuch she is her letter, going to read it at the next meeting of the British-American association. his neutrality business is tough for a newspaper, all right. Day before yesterday we got a letter from a German reader who said we had been giving the allies all the better of it ever since the war began. parting word to Florence Forder. Before you have your letter read at the meeting of the British-American association, dear lady, please look at the Dr. Richardson interview again and note that the word “degenerate” does not occur in the article in any place.” And—oh, yes, Also that Dr. Richardson pronounces the Canadian fighters in all Europe Next Week “THE UNAFRAID” By Eleanor Ingram (Continued from Our Last Issue) Dollar bowed over his bit of #! tubing; but this time put it down so hastily that it rolled off the table. Gen. Dysone was towering over him with shaking hand out-| stretched. | “J can't say any more,” he/ croaked. “You must come down could do the talking and | shouldn't feel such a cur! It's aw ful, talking about one’s own wife; like this, even for her own good! It's worse than I thought it wou be. 1 know it's different to a doc-! tor—bdut—but you're an old soldter- man as well, aren't you? Dida't I hear you were in the war?” | “T was.” ' “Well, then,” cried the general, | and his blue eyes it up with sim- ple cunning, “that’s where we met! We've run up against each other this next week-end! Can you m age it? Are you free? I'll write} you a check for your own fee this minute, if you like—there must be} nothing of that kind down there.| You don’t mind being Capt. Dollar! again, if that was it, to my wif His pathetic eagerness, his sen sitive loyalty—even his sudden and solicitous zest in the pious fraud Proposed—made between them an| irresistible appeal. Dollar had to} think; the rooms upstairs were not empty; but none enshrined a more | interesting case than this sounded. | On the other band, he had to be on his guard against a weakness for mere human interest, apart | People might call him an empiric—empiric he was proud to be, but it was and must remain em: | piricism tn one definite direction | only. Pxychical research was not | for him—and the Dysone story had a psychic flavor. In the end he sald quite bluntly: “Tl hope you don’t suggest a ghost behind all this, general?” “I? Lord, no! I don’t believe tn ‘em,” cried the warrior, with a ner. yous laugh. Does any member of your house hold?” “Not—now.” “Not now?” “No, 1 think I am right in saying | that. But something was worry: | ing him. “Perhaps it is also right,” | he continued, with the engaging candor of an overthrown reserve “and only fair—since it take it you! are coming—to tell you that there s a fellow with us who thought he saw things. But {t was all the) most utter moonshine. He saw brown devils in flowing robes, but what he'd taken before he saw them I can't tell you' He didn’t stay} with me long enough for us to get to know each other. But he wasn't just a servant, and {t was before the poor gardener’s affair. Like so many old soldiers on the shelf, Doc tor Dollar, I am writing a book, and I run a secretary of sorts; now it's Jim Paley, a nephew of otrs; and thank Heaven, he has more sense. “Yet even he gets depressed?’ “He has had cause. If our own kith and kin behaved Iike one pos seased—” He stopped himaelf yet this time his hand found Dollar's with a vibrant grip. “You will come, won't you? T can meet any train on Saturday, or any other day that suits you better. I—for her own sake, doctor—I sometimes feel it might be better if she went away for a time. But you will come and see her, for yourself?” practice. CHAPTER IV. Mrs. Dysone General Dysone jit was a promive; a hard er heart than John Dollar would have ended all by making it, and putting the new case before all Jothers when the Saturday came. There was no question of meeting jhim at any station; the wealthy | mother of a still recent patient had| insisted on presenting Doctor Dol- Before left today. the best troops What the Rate Fight Means rT} NOCK OUT THE DIFFERENTIAL!” What does it mean? It means EQUALITY with California railway fares from Eastern cities. in the It means the tourist will NO LONGER HAVI of $17.50 to travel via the Northwest to the Pacifi It means that 80 PER CENT OF TRAVELER COOL NORTHERN WAY, via Seattle, to thi It means that CALIFORNIA WILI OLY ON 90 PER CENT OF THE TOURIST TRAVE It means that the NORTHWEST WILL BEC SPOT renowned the world over. It means that $200,000 MORE CASH WILL BE IN THE HOTELS, RESTAURANTS AND SUMMER OF SEATTLE ALONE! It means MORE FIRST CLASS HOTELS, MORI NEW HOMES! .« / THE TREASURY comptroller of the secre tary of agriculture of the United St govern- ment has ruled that government employes on publia business, accompanied by thelr wives, shall be allowed expenses only for single berths or hotel rooms, Indicating that the aforesaid treasury comptroller is not a married man, or that he has never tried sleeping In the clothes hammock while his better half occupied the two by four berth of a Pullman, sion at Baltimore, President Wilson deliver me from powder dry.” from an Austrian peror Nichol . lose his self-po DON’T BE a siave, Be a free voter. Sup port nonpartisanship. “THE CRIME DOCTOR” | ning he had elouched there like the worst of his kind neither precept nor which had atraightened his back and his look and all about him. He was what John Dollar had al ways nied—the unconscious pa tient whose history none knew- who himself little dreamed that It |and see her for yourself; then you| was all known to the man who treated him almost like a brother The boy had been in prison for dishonesty 1. and vo taught to trust hin He had come in March, a sulky and suspicious clod; and now in June he could talk cricket and sixpenny editions from the Houns low tramlines to the wide white fate opening into a drive thru a Berkshire wood, with a house lurk ing behind {t in a mask of fvy, out of the sun But in the érive Gen. Dysone and, on being directed to the stables, he who had filled It for the last hour drove out of {t for the next 24 “I wanted you to hear something at once fr me,” his host whis the whispering trees should be mentioned and take you aback before the others. We've had another little tragedy not a horror lk one way almost wo shot her own dog dead last night!” Dollar put a curb upon his part ing lps. “In the night?” he stood still to ask. “Well, between 19 and 12.” “In her own room, or where?” “Out of doors ft happened; nobody seems to know and don't you know anything If she speaks of it herself, His fine face was streaming with perspiration; yet he seemed to have been waiting quietly under and he a big elderly man. Dollar asked no questions at all; dropped the subject there in drive. where out of sight, It was already late in the long June afternoon, and the guest was taken straight to his room. It ivy-darkened casement overlooking a shadowy lawn, the other facing a forest of firs and chestnuts. Dollar found his things laid out and his shirt studded, and a cozy on the brass hot-water can, with as much satisfaction as tho he had never stayed in a country house be. fore. Could there be so very much amiss {n a household where they knew just what to do for one, and just what to leave undone? And it was the same with all the other creature comforts; they mean good servants, however short their service; and good servants do not often mean the mistress or the hostess whom Dollar had come pre pared to meet. He dressed In pleas- urable doubt and enhanced excite- ment—and those were his happlest moments at Valsugana, Mrs, Dysone was a middle-aged woman who looked almost old, whereas the general was elderly, with all the appearance of early middle age. The contrast was even more complete in more invidious particulars; but Dollar took Mttle heed of the poor lady's face, as a lady's face. Her akin and eyes were enough for him; both were brown, with that almost ultra-Indlan tinge of so many Anglo-Indians, He waa sen- sible at once of an Oriental im- penetrability. With not quarre we conversation he could what there was of it eri unstudied, understanding the little dinner did her the kind of credit for which was now prepared; but she only once took charge of the talk, and that was rather sharply to change a sub Ject into which she had been the first to enter How {t had cropped up, Dollar And lar with a 15-horsepower Talboys, | which he had eventually accepted, Jand even chosen for himself (with | certain expert assistance), as an| incalculable contribution to the! use the had the: of work; and on every errand his heart was lighte and his faith fortified by) vastly en | Already larged his the wonderful case of the young chauffeur who sat no upright at the wheel beside him. In the begin could never think, espectally as his former profession and rank duly obtained thruout his visit. He had n warned his chauffeur that he was not the doctor there; it could not have been he himself who siarted it, but somebody did, as somebody always does when there is one topie to avoid It was probably the nice young nephew who made the first well meaning remark upon the general want of originality, with reference ; he was being sedulously | to something or other under eriti ) at the moment; but it was er he nor Dollar who lald it down that monkeys were the mont arrant imitators in nature—except criminals; and it certainly was the general who eald that nothing would surprise bim lees than if an other fellow went and hanged bim- self in their wood. Then it was that Mra. Dysone put her foot down r forgot ber look e it made nel one of them co smallest firearm made; but gold padlock did dangle raised her glass of water; a tiny when ah jand at the end of dinner there was again, and I've asked you down for | stepped back Into the doctor's life, | | | Don't ask me ho*{an abundance of rich, the|hair fine and trees, he was not short of breath, | trous, they | of! the|cheap, and a few ounc Tho the sun was up some} ply | Was a corner room with one/ } ening & second little scene, this time with Soap should be used very care fully, if you want to keep your hair looking Ita best. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkall This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins ft The best thing for steady use ts just ordinary rmulsified cocoanut oil (which ts pure and greaseless), and in bett than the most ex pensive se or anything else you can One use. of two teaspoonfuls will Cleanse the hair and scalp thor ong’ § ply motsten the hair with water and rub it {n. It makes creamy lath. er, which rinses out easily, remov ing every ticle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive off. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft, and the silky, bright, Ius- fluffy and y to manage. You can get mulstfied cocoanut at any pharmacy, it's very 6 will sup. member of the family ~Advertisement every for months Hopes Women Will Adopt This Habit As Well As Men Glass of hot water each morn- {Ing helps us look and fee! i clean, sweet, fresh. ‘ 1 Happy, bright, alert—vigorous and vivactous—a good, clear skin; a natural, rosy complexion and freedom from f{llness are assured only by clean, healthy blood, If only every woman and likewise ev- ery man could realize the wonders of the morning Inside bath, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of the thousands of sick ly, emlc-looking men, women and girls with pasty or muddy complexions; instead of the multi tudes of “nerve wrecks, “run: downs,” “brain fags” and pens mists, we should see a virile, op timistic throng of rosy-cheeked people everywhere. An inside bath is had by drink- ing, each morning before break- fast, a glass of real hot water with & teaspoonful of limestone phos- phate in {t to wash from the stom- ach, Iver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the previous day's indl- geatible waste, sour fermentations and potsons, thus cleansing, sweet and freshening the entire all mentary canal before putting more food Into the stomach Those Kubject to sick headache, billousness, sty breath, rheuma- tism, colds; and particularly those who have a pallid, sallow com- plexion and ‘who are constipated very often, are urged to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phos. phate at the drug store, which will cost but a trifle, but ts sufficient to demonstrate the quick and re: markable change !n both health and appearance awaiting those who jee internal sanitation, ¥ remember that inside clean is more important than out side, because the skin does not ab- sorb impurities to contaminate the blood, while the pores in the thirty feet of bowels do, unsettled an innocent mind had the} opposite effect on his. There we He waa holding the door njelectric lamps in all the rig for Mrs, Dysone, and she stood a) places; there were books and bis. moment on the threshold, peering | cults, a glass of milk, even a minia into the far corners of the room.|/ture decanter and a bottle of He saw what {t was she had forgot Schweppes saw it come back to her as she! He sighed as he wound his watch turned away, with another look! and placed it in the little stand on! worth remembering the table beside the bed; but he Either the general missed thet,| *as only wondering exactly what or the anxieties. of the husband he was oing to discover before he were now iberately sunk in the; wound ft up again. ' duties of the He had got Outolde " Jub in the doctor's | merry er playing casta mat over it together till | nets in thone dre It was! ly time for bed the other blind th | out words, which went far to dis pel any doubt arising in bis mind 1 t « window the » fi were r; they was ne shade more rubicund, and | viving glow of a clgaret gave glimp-| good to hear him chat with-| ses of a white shirt front, a black out restraint or an apparent care.| satin tle, the drooping brim of a Yet tt was atrange as well; again| Panama hat. he drifted Into criminology, and his} It the nice young nephew, own after-dinner defect of senstbil-| who had retreated before the Ju- ity only made his hearer the more|bilee port. And Dollar was stil! uncomfortable, wondering on what pretext he could | Of course, he felt, ft was artly | KO down and join him, when his out of compliment to himself as| knock came at the door. | lerime doctor; but the ugly subject] “Only to see if you'd everything | |had evidently an unhealthy fascina-| You want,” explained young Paley,| tlon of tts own for the fine full. | ingenuously disingenuous; and shut blooded man. Not that it seemed | the door behind before the in An inveterate foible; the expert ob- | vita to enter was out of the| server thought {t rather the reflex| doctor's mouth. But he shut it very attraction of the strongest possible | softly, trod like a burglar, and ex \hotror and repulsion, and took {t|cused himself with bated breath: | jthe more founly a count. | “You are the first person who has} | Of two evils, it seemed to him] stayed with since I've been here, |the less to allow himself to be|Capt. Dollar!” And bis wry young |} Pumped on professional generall-| smile was as sad as anything In the) jties. It was distinctly better than | sad house. jencouraging the ‘Keneral to ran. “You amaze me!” cried Dollar.| anck hix long experience for mem-| Indeed, it was the flank attack of) orien of decent people who had done|@ new kind of amazement. “I dful deeds. Best of all to as-| Should have thought and his sure him that even those unfortu-| glance made a lightning tour of the |nates might have outlived their in-| luxurious room famy under the scientific treatment] “I know,” said Paley, nodding |of a more enlightened day “I think they must have laid them- | If they must talk crime, let it] Selves out for visitors at the start. | be the Cure of Crime! 80 the doc-| But none come now. I wish they tor had his heartfelt say; and the|did! It's a house that wants them.” | general listened even more terribly “You are rather a small party than ho had talked; asking ques- | aren't you?" | tions in whispers, and waiting} “We are rather a grim party'| breathless for the considered reply And yet my old uncle is absolutely | It was the last of these that took /the finest man I ever struck.’ | most answering “1 don’t wonder that you admire And which, doctor, which would | him.” you have most hope of curing: a “You don’t know what he fs, Capt. | |man or a woman?” Dollar. He got the C. when he | But Dollar would only say: “T| Was my in Burmah, but he de-| | shouldn't despair of anyb who | #erves one for almost ry day of | jhad done anything, if there wag| bis ordinary home life atill an intelligence to work upon;| Dollar made no remark; the| | but the more of that the better.” | Young fellow offered him a cigaret And the general said hardly an-|and was encouraged to light another other word, except “Bless you!” |bhimself. He required no encourage- outside the spare room door. His|Mment to talk, wife bad been seen no more, “The funny thing is that he’s not | really my uncle. I'm her nephew and she's a wonderful woman, too, in her way. She runs the whole | place like book; she’s thrown away here. But—I can't help say-| ing it-—-I should like her better if I didn’t love him!" “Talking of books,” sald Dollar, “the general told me he was writing one, and that you were helping him.” “He didn't tell you what !t was about?” “No. “Then I mustn't, 1 wish T could It’s to be the last word on a cer tain subject, but he won't have it spoken about That's one reason why it’s getting on his nerves,” “Is it s book?" “It and everything, Doesn't he remind you of a man sitting on a powder barrel? If he weren't what he is, there'd be an explosion every day. And there never is one—no matter what happens!” Dollar watched the pale youth swallowing his smoke Do they often talk about erime?” “Always! They can’t keep off it And Aunt Mssie always changes the subject as tho she hadn't been every jbit as bad as uncle. Of course they've had a good lot to make them morbid. IT suppose you heard about poor Dingle, the last gar- dener?” “Only Just “He was the last man you would ever have suspected of such a thing It was in those trees just outside.” The crickets made extra merry as he paused. “They didn’t find him for a day and a night!" | “Look here! I'm not going to let} you talk about it,” said Dollar, But the good-humored rebuff cost him| an effort. He wanted to hear all} about the sulcide, but not from this CHAPTER VY. A Mysterious Woman But Dollar saw her in every cor jer of his delightful quarters; and the acute contrast that might have a Stearns’ Electric at Roach Paste Exterminates quickly and thoroughly. Directions» in 15 lan cr peckage: Five ots: Sotana Bold by retailers everywhere. TOO WEAK | TO FIGHT a appetite and the refr tial to rtrength hing sleep GOLD MEDAL lem Of] Capsules, the National Remedy of Holland, will do the work, They are wonderful. ‘Three of theme capsules each day will put a man on his feet before he knows ft; whether his trouble comes from urto poisoning, the kidneys, gravel or stone in the bladder, atom ach derangement or allment that befall the over ® Amert- cn Don't walt u i are on-| jt down-and-ov ake them} toda Your drug will glad refund your ne they do not help you Oo and $1.00 per box, “Accept no substitut I for the name GOLD MEDAL every box, They are the pure, or a Ha NO LONGER HOLD thirsty savages, and, plea as to ession,” which is the nice Ger- man way of saying Czar Nic of a year's growth by one m worn lad with an old man’s smile, iginal, imported Haarlem Oil Cap-lire knew and lked the type too well, sules, For sale and guaranteed by the Owl Drug Co, By mall, ont of city, one vemr, & month matter of round trip TO PAY A (Coast S WILL COME st, in summer. A MONOP- L, the year around. SOME A VACATION BONUS THE SPENT EVERY YEAR PLEASURE RESORTS PEOPLE and MORE THE PRESBYTERY OF POTOMAC, in ses- , Invoked the Divine aid for In the European crisis, Re- calling the supplication of the old backwoods man, surrounded by yelping Indians—"Oh, Lord, the hands of these blood. Lord, keep my BERLIN REPORTS that a bomb, dropped airship, fell so close to Em- use him to “entirely was scared out y little bomb, ByE.W.Hornung | COPYRIGHT, 1914 The Bobbs-Merrill Coy] I'm Paley Dol Jim ba it’s all I don’t suppose the gen- eral told you what happened last | night?” | “Well, yes, he did, but without going into any particulars.” | (Continued in Our Next Issue) sorry, Capt looked sorry very well! Acid Stomachs Are Dangerous t Acid” stomachs are dangerous because acid frritates and inflames | 4 Mining of the stomach, thus h ing and preventing the proper action of the stomach, and leading to probably nine-tenths of the cases of stomach trouble from which people suffer. Ordinary medicines and medicinal treat- ments are useless in such cases, for they leave the source of the trouble, the acid in the stomach, as dangerous as ever. The acid must be neutralized, and {ts forma- tion prevented, and the best thing for this purpose is a teaspoonful of bisurated magnesia, a simple antacid, taken in a little warm or cold water after eating, which not only neutralizes the acid, but also prevents the fermentation from which acid is developed. Foods which ordinarily cause distress may be eaten with impunity if the 1 is followed with a little bisur- ated magnesia, which can be ob- tained from any druggist, and should always be kept handy. Socom cole eisaes. R PRICES: RSON C9 Broan + POPULA FRASER-PATE Lanch at Pike.—Adv, the Hollywood, No. Preparedness for a good smoke and a half hour’s solid Peace for 5c. The price of divided by so many cigars that Tom Keene can Come on in—the smoking’s fine! sy [OM KEENE gar with that Presado Blend the ci Schwabacher Brothers & Seattle, Washington. £1.00; ae per month up carrion, city, te @ month, tle, Wash., postoffice ae Q—Can you tell me why the School board allows certain girls of the “popular set” at high to give “spreads” in the high ech especially in the lunch room? Thig practice of giving elaborate birth day parties, etc., is one which eaq, not be entered into by all the gir in the school, for they cannot af. ford it, and therefore some iif ing is caused. A STUDENT, A According my views, to 1 @ practice in oUF pub. in in direct oppositiog m and equal Lers strived to Our publie en the one in clase rule’; he rich meet 28, not wealth, ition fron where the poor and t as one br nate s who are strong for the schools on such @ hould protest to the school Q.—Will you kindly inform we @ Mt. Rainier is a small volcano? G, AND R, peak ‘is of voleanis crater still sends out ses, but ft ts classed volcanoes, where bra must predor ins basis board. tainin, A origi vole wit This and § Dear Mics Grey: The party whe signed Eva will get directions for making a log cabin quilt by calling at 1012 Sturges road, or phoning Beacon 2514. MRS. R. E, A—I am sure Eva will appre ciate your kindness. My Dear Miss Grey: | am minded by a plague of ants that frequently have requests for meth ode of getting rid of them. 1 have everything, and several years ago | discovered a sure and simple process. | find that the soap suds in which clothes have been washed will destroy ants of any kind. doses will destroy the nests and kill every ant. | usually shovel the top of the nest, so as to let water run in. If at the foot tree or bush, | mal of around the nest to keep the water The suds will not hurt any tree or shrub, and the ants will never try that place again. By destroying the ants in the yard, you can keep the house free from them. A FARMER READER. A.—Thank you for the inform» tion. Q—Suppose that Mr. Stubderm | ness takes his friend Mies Criticlem to an assumed place, at which place they meet Mr. Talkativeness, am companied by Miss Quietness. The frequent speaking of Mr. 8, and Ma T. during intermissions causes anger of Miss C. Later Miss censures Mr. S., which results Ia disagreement. From the viewpoint of Justice, and the Christian epirit, by whom should an apology be of: fered for the rudeness? PEACEMAKER. A.—By nobody. Why increase the | Present confusion by more words? "Albert Hansen | Jeweler and Silversmith | 010 Second Ave, Near M ~ cost of delivery, profit, bookkeeping and bad @m counts, Bri sT LOWER FLOOR, | Selalalalalnislelalaiaicinldelaieinielssin Is TOM KEENE for “Peace at any price?” that Presado Blend is be sold for only 5¢ Co., Inc., Distributors, Mh a ah ah hh a hah oh a a Oe OO OO i 3 et eb Ot Oe 3a3:=s= 0 = | S88. FES _SEELISE_ESEBESE HW. eee e ac PIII III AIA IAA IDA AAAI AAA