Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Se a si a re mn ee a eee Sa of Newspapers Pubtished Dally roy COLYUM UPLIFT OOZE RY HERBY COUGH-MAN Do! Do with all your might; anybody; anything! ; What yood are you, if you can't do! If you are married, do as you please if you dare to do it. But do, do, do; Every minute of the i! precious day— Even if you have to do Nothing! eee This shows what the vartous tate conventions have promul gated in behalf of obtaininy de cent law for mothers’ pension: OUR OWN TRAVELOGUES was captured ttxelf free Atm GETS PLENTY Do yon give your dog any exer : Yes, he goes for a tramp every day.—Burr. Russia ts so cold as they say It | “What makes you think so?” “T've seen the Russian ballet, and those costumes were never made for sero ‘weather.”—N. Y. World, ° UPLIFT ooze Herty Cough-man) u tter whet happens be Nobody loves a grow You may annoy some people by Deing always happy. But you should fret. Gu “Mad jor— eee POLITICAL ADVICE (Dedicated to the delegates golng to Chicago.) 1. Many an ass {s mistaken for @ dark horse. 3. It doesn't require practice to pags the buck. 8. T. R. does NOT stand for “Tired Running.” 4 TELL the wage earners you Jove ‘em—it doesn't matter what you have DONE for ’em or wil! do. Be sure to praise Abe Lin- coln. There's no risk attached to odors they bring; ‘When the dew ts but wine from the roace ‘That drenches the Iily and clings, as as lps clung to mine on that On! again bat to frat th repose— And yield te your spring- co- Fesses, Drowning youth tn the blood of rose. eee Answer—Yes; we were just jok- ing. Alas ond slack! DON’T YOU FEEL LIKE A PICKPOCKET ‘When you Walk out of the barber stop and don’t tip the feller? When the conductor on the street car forgets to grab your nickel? When you earn $5.00 on the side and don't tell your frau about it? When you use one of the firm’s 2cent stamps on a personal letter? When the clerk gives you two. bite too much in change? Say, don't you? Iron Is Greatest of All Strength Member of the Serippe Northwest League by The Star Publishing Oo, gress. of the nation. may be checked. need not worry congr WILL E. HL Next Week “THE UNAFRAID” By Eleanor Ingram (Continued From Our Last Iseue) And now the doctor made no se cret of his curiosity; this matter on which he could not ford to forego enlightenment. ir, “I can't tell you much about tt myself,” said he “I was wonder. ing if I could, now on the lawn, That's w it happened, you know.” “1 didn't know.” “Well, it was, and the funny thing ts that I was there at the down the cellar | time. I used to go out with the dog for a cigaret when they turned tn; last night I was foolish enough to fall asleep tn a chair on the lawn. I had been playing tennis afternoon, and bad a long bike ride doth ways. Well, all I know ts that I woke up thinking I'd been shot; and there was my aunt with a re volver she insists on carrying—and poor Muggins as dead as a door nail.” “Did she say {t was an accident?” “She behaved as ff it had been; she was all over the poor dead brute. “Rather a savage dog, wasn't it? “I never thought so. But the general had no use for him—and no wonder! Did ell you he bad ‘bitten him in the shoulder?” “No.” “Well, he aid, only the other day. But that’s the old general all over. He never told me till the dog was dead. I shouldn't be surprised it” “Yes? “—{f my aunt hadn't been tn It somehow. Poor old Muggsins was such a bone between them!” turning on her?” “Hardly. He was with her, poor brute! Another cigaret was lighted; more inhaling went on unchecked. like a kitten there—but for you?” “Well—yes.” “Does that mean she wasn’t?” sald young Paley, frankly, “Tt @ moment I thought | saw some body in a sort of surplice affair. | But I can only swear to Aunt EF gown, and it wasn't white.” Dollar did not go to bed at all He sat first at one window, watch. eventually a variety of sunny down at the pretty scene of eed Builders, Says Doctor A Secret of the Great Endurance and Power of Athletes ‘Weeks’ Time ia Many Casen. NEW YORK, N. Y.—Most foolishly ing to strength from some ati medicine, # nostrum or nar- eotic drug, id Dr, Sauer, a well-known specialist, who has studied widely both tn this country and Burope, when, as a mat- fer of fact, real and true streneth can onty come from the food you But people often fall to get the out of their tood because they haven't enough tron in thelr blood to enable it to change food into living matter. From their weakened, nervous condition know something ts wrong, can’t tell what, so they commence doctoring for liver or kidney trouble or symptoms of some other allment caused by the lack of fron In the blood. This thing may go on for years, while the patient suffers untold agony ou ¢ not strong orwell you owe ft to urself j@ make the following test how “ng you can work or how they generally a. ired, Next take two five grain tab- jets of ordinary nuxated fron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see for yourself how much you have gained. T have seen dozens of nervous, rundown people o were ailing all the while, dou en triple their strength nee and entirely wet rid ptoms of dyspepsia, liver but they | stomach, | ‘ou can walk without becoming | and other troubl: days’ time simply by taking tron in the proper form, and this after they had in some « months without obtaining any bene fit. But don’t take the old forms of reduced tron, tron acetate or tincture of Iron simply to save a few cents You m take iron in a form that djcan be easily absorbed and anatmi- lated I!ke nuxated fron If you want it to do you any good, otherwise It ‘ove worse than useless thlete or prize firhter has abor by Dr. Sauer ts ret remedy, but one which ts 1 Arugi«ts, and whore tron @ patent medi conatituen: Inent ph rman of indigestion, McAdoo is asked to expl: Nor was it like raking up an old hor- ror; ft would do the boy more good }than harm to speak of this last NM the “You don’t suppose he'd ended by | “Was Mrs. Dysone by herself out | “Upon my word, I don't know!” sounds most awful rot, but just for sie, and she was tn her dreasing-| ing the black trees turn blue, and) greens; then at the other, staring | in from 10 to 14 ou been doctoring for STAR—THURSDAY, n why ress a great deal. Hooray for Tennessee! OME forth, valiant sons of liberty, join the loyal band and boost for— ’, CANDIDATE FOR VICE PRESIDENT OP JMPHRE THE UNITED STATES! Let the people of Washington send their hearty thanks to the handful of valiant Tennessee republicans who, gathered together in state convention, conceived the lofty idea of showering Will with so noble an honor, He, the unbroken backbone of a nation going to the dogs! He, the builder of frogponds and cattail conservatories. He, the patriotic, platitudinous oracle of national righteousness. Why did we never think of it before? Why did we leave it to Tennes- E CRIME DOCTOR” 66 ugly tn itself, but uglier tn the pe culfar quality of Its mystery. A dog; only a dog, this time; but the woman's own dog! There were two new sods on the place where he supposed it had lain withering. But who or what was ft that | these young men had seen—the one the general had told him about, and this obviousl: truthful lad whom he himself had questioned? “Brown fis in Mowing robes” was per haps only the old soldier's pic turesque phrase; they might have turned brown tn his Indian mind; but what of Jim Paloy’s “somebody in a sort of surplice affair"? Was that “body” brown as well? In the woods of worse omen the gay little birds tumed up to deaf ears at the open window. And a cynical soloist went go far as to ng, “Pretty, pretty, pretty, pretty!” tn a liquid contralto. But a little sharp shot, fired two nights and a day before, was the only sound to get across the spare room window alll. The bathroom was next door; tn that physically admirable house there was boiling water at 6 o'clock in the morning; the servants made tea when they heard it running and the garden before breakfi almost a delight. It might have been an Eden ° 2 = was * * © with the serpent etl! in the grase! Blinds went up Ifke eyelids ander bushy brows of ivy. The grass re mained gray with dew; there was not enough sun anywhere, tho the whole sky beamed. Dollar wan- had taken him the day before. was the way thru his library. Libraries are always Interesting; I dered indoors the way the general) Manly’s Charges Start Something OW the exposures of Basil M. Manly in regard to the income tax swindle, printed in The Star and its sister papers thruout the country, are stir ring the thought of the people, is reflected by last week’s action In con- This took the form of a resolution by Rep, Keating, of Colorado, dl- recting Secretary McAdoo to answer Manly's charge that $320,000,000 of in- come taxes is being dodged every year by the superlatively wealthy men he has not recommended to the president full publicity for all income returns, so that the extent of the frauds This resolution, The Star predicts, is Just the beginning of an agitation that is going to result in a mighty overturning of present Income tax conditions and which will result in the saving to the government of many millions every year; enough millions, perhaps, so that the cost of preparedness We feel especially certain of this, knowing as we do the immense amount of ammunition Manly still possesses unused, and which will be used to great effect from day to day in the Scripps papers. punetilious host all day; and Dol lar waa allowed to feel that, if he had come down as a doctor, he was every animal and vog etable on the premises; and after tea the visitor's car came round, Originally there had been much talk of his staying till the Monday; j the eral went thru the form of pressing him once more, but was not backed up by his wife, who had Satowes em suepiclously all ay. Nor @14 he comment on this by so much as a sidelong glance at Dollar, or contrive to get another word with him alone. And the ertme doctor, Instead of making any excuse to remain and pene trate these new m: ries, showed A sensitive alacrity leave. oft who looked ter. ribly depressed at his departure, |he had seen something more, and had even asked two private favors One, that he would keep out of that haunted garden for the next few nights, and try going to bed earlier; the other an odd request for an almost middie-aged man about town, but rather fiattering to the young fellow. It was for the loan of his Panama, so that Dol- lar’s hatter might see tf he could not get him as good a one. Paley's was the kind that might be carried up a sleeve, ike the modern hand- kerchief; he explained that the old general had given {t to him. Dollar tried ft on almost as soon as the car was out of sight of Val- sugana—while his young chauffeur Was still wondering what he had fone to make the governor sit be hind, It was funny of him, just when a chap might\have been tel! |a man’s bookcase is something more |!" him # thing or two that he had | interesting than the man himself, | sometimes the one existing portrait jof his mind. Dollar apent the beat part of an absorbing hour without) ite} taking a single volume from place. But this was partly because thone he would have dipped into were under glass and lock and key And partly it was due to more ac cessible distractions crowning that very plece of ostensible antiquity which contained the books, and of which the top drawer drew out into the general's desk. repulsive gilded {dol, squatting with | {ta tongue out, as if at the amateur author, and a heathen sword on the wall bebind {t. Nothing more; but Dollar also had served tn India tn [his day, and his natural Interest was whetted by a certain smatter. |ing of lore, He was still standing |on a newspaper and a chair when a voice hailed him tn no hospitable tone, “Really, Capt. Dollar, J should have asked the servants for a lad- der while I was about !t!” Of course {t was Mra, Dysone, and she was not even pretending to look pleased. He jumped down with an apology which softened not a line of her sallow face and bony figure. “It was an outrage,” he owned. “But I did stand on a paper to save the chair. I say, tho, I never no. ticed it was this week's Field.” Really horrified at his own be- havior, he did his best to smooth jand wipe away his footmarks on smnly beewnea "88! the wrapper of the paper. But those knew the secret of gree engin | subtle eyes, lke blots of ink on and endurance and filled his blood|old parchment, were no longer |adfray. Wile tamnty ent, into the |trained on the offender, who missed gone down to Inglorious defeat| yet another look that might have simply for the Inck of tron. helped him, NOTE Nuzated reecommentad “My husband's study is rather |holy ground,” was the Iady’s last | word. “I only came in myself be. | cause I thought he was here.” CHAPTER VI A Wonderful Woman | down Senditos Merelfully, days do not al weh great con-| ways go on as badly as they at they offer| begin; 7 ge to forfelt $100 to any a ee eeeies. more strangely, thle tion If they cannot take ony men ue|one developed into the dullest under 49 who lacks fron and in-| and most conventional of country * thelr strength 200 per cent or over| house Sundays of money if It doew not {Only dull, but even a Httle stiff, as ® your strength and became a good Briton who had sald durance in 10 days’ time. It in a 0 much to too great « ange: in this elty by Owl Drug Co, Bartelt| (0 much to too great a str ; Drug Co, Swift's Pharmacy and'all other }OVErnight. Hils natural courtesy drugetate had become conspicuous; he played The distractions were a peculiarly | the road on |§ Surface | | | | heard down man's place. Bot {t was all the more tnterest- ing when they got hack to town at 7 In the evening, and he was order. jed to fill up with petrol and be | back at 9, to make the same trip over again. “I needn't ask you,” the doctor added, “to hold your tongue about | anything you may have heard at General Dysone's, I know you will, | Albert.” And almost by Hghting-up time they were shoulder to shoulder on more. Rut at Valsugana tt was another dark night, and none too easy to |find one’s way about the place on |the strength of a midsummer day's | acquaintance. And for the first time Dollar was jglad the dog of the house was dead, as he fintshed a cetreuitous approach by stealing thru the far- ther wood, toward the jagged lumps of light In the tvy-strangled bedrooms windows; already every- thing was dark downstairs, Here were the pale new sods; they conld just be seen, tho his feet first felt their tnequalities. His elgaret was the one pin-prick |of ight in all the garden, tho each draw brought the buff brim of Jim Paley’ ‘anama within an inch of his eyes, tts fine texture like coarse matting at the range. Ana the chair in which Jim Paley had sat smoking this time there at the coach- arty | equi MAY 11, 1916, PAGE ‘ see to perform so high a service? But let Tennessee take him in her warm embrace. the rich Southern pasture ‘Ss. Let him graze in Certainly he can perform a nobler duty singing his anthems to the Southern stars than by sticking around the capital and rotting away in the service of the people of Washington. We're with you, Tennessee. Go to It. The state of Washington unselfishly gives up its bravest for the na- tion’s honor. Art—Movies— orship Cens 66 A 26 Movies Art?” asks a leading magazine on its front cover; and, inside, two writers discuss the question from different viewpoints. It seems to us that movies are not yet art. But they have a fair chance of becoming art if the silly censorship under which they now operate is re- laxed, or, better, abolished. With the so-called “national board of censor- ship” there is small quarrel, because this Is a Frankenstein engineered by the movie men themselves, and they have only to say the word to abolish it. But worse than criminal are the state and city censorships, under which some of the best pictures ever filmed have been kept from many states and cities, and other pictures have been cut and chopped until there is little left, Under the unlament screening of Upton Sin ed Funkhouser Chicago clair’s “Jungle.” refused to permit the Shakespeare could not have written his tragedies and comedies under a censorship; Dickens-would have been damned; Harriet Beecher Stowe would have been silenced, No great art can be produced under the club of the police. Movie censorship does NOT prevent the showing of immoral films, which is the object its proponents assert is accomplished. And censorship ts not needed to prevent filmed immorality—there are plenty laws providing punishment for lewdness either | n ANY KIND OF CENSORSHIP IS UN-AMERICAN, FREE INSTITUTIONS. plast night, and dosing the night be fore when the shot disturbed him, was Just where he expected his shins to find tt; the wickers place, Less need now not to make a sound; but he made no more than jhe could help, for the night was | etill and sultry, without any of the |xarden noises of a night ago. It | was as tho nature bad stopped her orchestra {np 4 st at the plot and counterplot brewing on her dark- ened stage. The cigaretend was thrown away; {t might have been a stone that fell upon the grass, and Dol lar could almost hear It neknowledgmen' | drooping Panama-brim would not |have falled to “scratch the brain's lcoat of curd.” © * © How much leas _the ewift and furtive footfall thaftame kissing the wet | at | Inat! It was more than a footfall: there was a following swish of some long garment tratling thro the wet, It all came near; It al! stopped dead. Dollar had nodded [heavily as if tn sleep; had jerked his head up higher; seemed to be dropping off again tn greater com- fort. The footfalls and the swish came on Itke thunder now. But now his eyelids were only drooping like the brim above them; in the broad Mght of their abnormal perceptivi ty, 1t was as if bis own eyes threw & dreadful halo round the figure they beheld. ' Tt was a swaddled figure, creep- ing into monstrosity, crouching ear. ly for fts spring. It had draped arms extending, with some cloth or band that looped and tightened at each stride; on the rounded shoulders bobbed the craning head and darkened face of General Dy- sone. In bis last stride he swerved an if to get as much behind the chair aa its position under the tree per mitted. The cloth clapped came tant over Dollar's head, but was not actually round his neck when he ducked and turned, and hit out and up with all his might He felt the rasp of a 15-hour beard, heard the click of teeth; the lawn quaked, and white robes settled | upon a senseless heap, as the plum age on a murdered pigeon. Dollar knelt over him and felt his pulse, held an electric lamp to eyes that opened, and quickly something else to the dilated nos trils “O, Jim!” shuddered a voice close at band. It was shrill yet broken, a cry of horror, but like no voice he knew. He jumped up to face the gen- "a wife. It's not Jim, Mra, Dysone. It's I—Dollar. He'll soon berall right!" “Captain—Dollar?” 'No—doctor, nowadays—he called me down as one himself. And now I've come back on my own respon. sibility, and—-put him under chloro. form; but I haven't given him much. For Heaven's sake, let us speak plainly while we can | and Knob-joi Cal-o-cide: : , 1 ; It acts through the pores and re Q GIVES INSTANT RELIEF | ching Feet from Congested Nerves Jaflamed Buntons Pe age from an Between Toes: moves the cause by issues to normal; the results ruly remarkable. Get a 2 druggist to refund money satisfied. restoring the are pack 3 au to any horized ye not fully ed as John Dollar took his) as it] She was on her knees, proving his words without uttering one, Sti!) kneeling speechiess, she leaned he continued: “You {s'as well as I do, you may thank Mrs, Dysone; Heaven a doctor has found bim out before the police! Monomania is | not their businesa—but neither are you the one to cope with ft. You have shielded your husband as only & woman will shield you must let him come to me.” His confidence was taking some effect; but she ignored the hands that would have helped her to her feet; and her own were locked tn front of ber, but not in supplica on “And what can any of you do for him," she cried ftercely—“except take hi way from me?" “I will only answer for myself. 1 would control him as you can not, jand I would teach him to contro! | himself {f man can do ft. I am a criminal alientst, Mrs. Dysone, as your husband knew before he came |} to consult me on borate pre | tenses into which we needn't go. “He trusted me enough to ask me |down here; tn my opinion, he was | feeling his way to greater trust, {n the teoth of his terrible obsession, but last night he said more than he meant to say, #0 today he wouldn't say a word. I only guessed his secret this morning—when you guessed I had! It would be safe with me against the world. | how can I take the responsibility of keeping It if he remains at large as he ts now?” ‘You can not,” sald Mra. Dysone, “I am the only one.” Her tone was dreamy and yet | hard and fatalistic; the arms tn the wide dressing gown sleeves were still tightly locked Something |brought Dollar down again beside |the senseless man, bending over him tn keen alarm. “He'll be himself again directly— quite himself, I shouldn't wonder! He may have forgot what has hap- | pened; he mustn't find me here to remind him. Something he will have to know, and you are the one to break It to him, and then to per- | suade him to come to me. “But you won't find that so easy, Mrs, Dysone, if he sees how I |tricked bim, He had much better |think ft was your nephew. My motor’s in the lane behind these trees; let him think I never went away at all, that we connived and 1 am holding myself there at your disposal. It would be true—wouldn't it—after this? I'll wait night and day until I know! “Doctor Dollar,” said Mrs, Dy- sone, when she had risen without ald and set him to the trees, “you may or may not know the worst about my poor husband, but you shall know {t now about me. I wish you to take this—and keep it! You have had two escapes tonight.” She bared the wrist from which the smallest of revolvers dangled; he felt in the darknes#—and left it dangling. “I heard you had one. He told me, And I thought you carried it for your own protection!” erted Dol. | lar, seeing into the woman at last “No, It was not for that’—and lhe knew that she was smiling thru hgr tears, “I did save his life— when my poor dog saved Jim's— but I carried this to save the secret }I am gotng to trust to you!” Dollar would only take her hand | “You wouldn't have shot me, or any 'man,” he assured her. “But,” he added to himself among the trees. |“what a fool I was to forget that they never killed women!" It turned almost cold beside the motor In the lane; the doctor gave j his boy a little brandy, and to- | gether they tramped up and down, alking sport and fiction by the |small hour together. The stars slipped ont of the sky, the birds began, and the same ic shouted atty, pretty, pretty!” at the top of its strong contralto. A last there came that other sound for which Dollar had never ceased listening. And he turned | back into the haunted wood with | Jim Paley. The poor nephew—still stunned But | | man; now| 4d icture or speech. AND A PERIL TO By E.W. Hornung COPYRIGHT, 1914 The Bobbs-Merrill Co, calm—was as painfully articulate 48 @ young bereaved husband. He spoke of Gen Dysone as of a man already dead, in the gentlest of past ten He was dead enough to the boy. There had bees an appalling confession—made as coolly, it ap- peared, as Paley repeated it. “He thought I knocked him down, and I had to let him think so! insisted; she is a won- me things I simply can’t believe. “Yet he showed me a rope just Mike !t—meant for me!” “Do you mean just like the one that—hanged the gardener?” a) He did it, so he swears. tell you himself afterward— can't put my tongue to It!” The lapse into the Dresent tense had made him human. “Like the Thugs?” “Yes—like that sect of fiendish fanatics who went about strangling everybody they met! They were what his book was about. How did you know?” “That's Bhowanes, their goddess, on top of his bureau, and he has Sleeman and all the other awful literature locked up underneath. As study for a life of sudden Idle ness, in the depths of the country. {t was enough to bring on tempo- rary insanity, And the strong man | fone wrong goes and does what the Test of us only get on our nerves!” Dollar felt his biceps clutched and clawed, and the two stood still un- der more trony in @ gay contralto. “Temporary, did you say? Only temporary?” the boy was faltering. “I hope so, honestly. You see, it was just on that one point © ¢ * DANIEL KFLLEHER, President R, AUZIAS-TURENNE, vi enid It made him tell | ¢ o b d a T spr Thi has foll 1 | phy mer nop | jand | tito: nee 4 this the | and | Dollar, with a sympathetic | of his own. “But do you know what he's ing? He means to tell the world now, and let them hang him and he’ ing It's olas net A A new and fight against diphtherta hag er # given indi to diphthe that 80 per cent of the new from diphtheria. why diphtherfa even ‘when exposed blood separate the susceptible from the when diphtheria germs a in the throat well person, to determin “carrier.” cause all germ diseases to dip appear from the world? he might have been thru bath!” “More signs!” erted Dollar, we won't allow that. It would nothing and he has made all reparation. “e take him back with me in the ca (Continued in Our Next Issue) Three-quarters of the 150 or so acres owned by Czar yielding large rentals, and the mining properties, all dollars a day, t individu: When You're KEEP WELL Another Article in The Star's Herlth Campal Being Conducted With operation of American Medical Association DIPHTHERIA iweful afd tg put Into hands of ans and officers by boratory. It ta the of the studles Prof. Schick Vienna, who hag ch shows whet Jal 18 suscepttbly ria or not. ; The results of Its use Prove 4 test, orn, 50 to 60 per cent of chi ren and 90 per cent of the dulte are naturally immune hin throws new Meht epop ead of the disease and explatng only certain person oy # test shows whether a mal sufficient antitoxin fg his to overeome an infection diphtheria germs, of the other uses of < test can be summarized gy ows ! it will enable the p sielan to diagnose d nbranes of the throat. It will enable physictans j» susceptible tndividpal —It will enable health physicians to administer xin to only those who seteum dit It phystetang, will enable of an pparentiy whether person is coming down with disease or whether be ts 5 DO YOU KNOW THATtg In the power of man t for her own sake, too serve him right—he says! as sane as we are up at the brightening sky, * Come, Paley; I want® broad daylight.” of Russta ts rich timb of whic him some half a million world's greater income, warm water well o the Arthur Burro farm emptie y |into the river a short distance Fos | from Ludden, N. D., the water be ing warm enough to keep the ish, stream from freezing at that poiat wal Thousands of fish last winte hav |ewarmed to this point until dro were so thick that they could hin shoveled out by the the Was 7 0, HK P. LA FARGR, Secretary Tr ta W. H CROWTHER, or Cashier Since Opening In Our New Quarters 312 New Savings Accounts Have Been Started At This Bank In addition to giving better service to our 7,000 Depositors, in our new location over 300 additional men, dren are profiting by the advantages of- fered by this Bank; and are earning 4% per cent interest on their Savings. Now in Our Own Building Fourth Avenue, Corner of Pine women and chil-