The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 13, 1916, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Giicecaeeaadlilis aida a iad Mlb dit lPa Bd i aaa Sse ee ee STAR—SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1916. PAGE 4. Make the Income Tax Thieves Pay Money-Power the Preparedness Bill! HE balance of the earnings of the United States Steel corporation for the | first quarter of 1916, after making liberal allowance for depreciations, ‘ P® PAREDNESS MUST BE PAID FOR. | _ payments applicable to sinking fund and other outstanding bonds, amounted q re) It is going to cost nearly TWO HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS to ,512,872 as against a balance for the same period last year of only g Cc L UM ihis year $915,058. It is expected that earnings for the second quarter will total not The only question now is: “WHO WILL PAY THE BILL?” less than seventy million dollars, which speaks of a prosperity, at least in OUR OWN TRAVELOGUES ‘ ‘ ‘ P tat . : f P ; 7 — - Basil Manly’s investigation of the United States income tax frauds as ane line of endeavor, unprecedented in the history of this country or, in published in this newspaper, shows where all of the needed millions and fact, of the world. SE uae tee that the. more can be raised without resort to new taxation and without burden to But there's a certain menace in that prosperity. A few_years ago, be- cally Pi licensed guides ‘. Z 7 rs ‘ . | a Bete tiltars to various pf 1. tel any honest man fore the disclosures of the investigation of the big life insurance com- Show them where things used to be | The Silver Bow © resort of If t bon-ton nati Hapkin (linen) and a glass of water Secretary McAdoo will collec 000 income tax which annually is being evaded, the entire preparedness reached the point where the tremendous aggre any substantial part of the $320,000,- panies led to remedial legislation, the insurance companies had about gation of wealth represented SAS : bill can be paid quickly and easily. by their reserves absolutely controlled the financial situation in this coun- Raving the Srockedest str The nation’s answer to the demand for more revenue for prepared- try. The whole United States was at the mercy of Wall street, for the TOM ‘ ness must be: “MAKE THE TAX THIEVES PAY THE PREPAREDNESS simple reason that the insurance money was centered there. Great wealth Hy mail, ... of edty, one your, O40; ¢ “=~. EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE SEATTLE STAR 2222222. Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS Q.—1 am a heartbroken mother and | come to you In the hopes that you can advise me about my son who is 15 years old. He strikes me |when | attempt to whip him and calle me terrible names. We have a fine home and he has every ad | vantage. His father Is dead o would not have this trouble. 1 hi tried every way to get along will him, A MOTHER. P. &.—He Is an only child. A.—The fact that the boy's fa is dead and he has no brothers and sisters accounts for his behavior, Since you have lost control of him, | the only thing you can do now in to et the co-operation of some outside BILL.” in the hands of a corporation is more potent than the same wealth in the organization—the juvenile court, for L why h up scandal this ‘anil ilies ‘ hands of an individual. | j Jnited Sts Steel corpora'tion, at the present rate of accretion ‘< PRO RATA _ The United States Steel corpor: m, at the 4 4 ’ According to Judge Frater, love is To Muzzle the Press bids fair to amass a mountain of gold beside which the insurance reserves 00. Evidently the | x z Pan . , . : Thte » ie 4 2 oe : sured out from soup RESIDENT R. B. Kleinsmid, of the University of Arizona, has started Would be a mole hill. This country has a living example of the evils of | ce. to Bute, ge the wellknown st tes something by a speech before a teachers’ convention advocating a law enormous concentrated wealth in the person of John D. Rockefeller. The } Eth ; prohibiting the press from criticising the chief executive of the nation or of a United States Steel promises to put John D. in the also-ran class before the European war ends, with the added peril that, whereas Rockefeller plays his i | At that rate, the office statis er X state. The kernel of the nut appears to be that the remarks of the eminent ou ‘ thor? The ‘ ; re money power straight, the United Steel plays its across the board. tielan says, kisses aren't worth Bede hug? That's thrown in educator were inspired by local political conditions. Gov. Hunt has been under old every ty worth ef cscu:| the steady fire of most of the Arizona papers, of all political persuasions, “ ae | MUI ithete act ult ext pay Coy. for many moons because of his so-called socialistic tendencies, and his sup- Let's recruit a regiment of New! sessions of the legislature, or that rot- a ae port of the striking miners in the Clifton troubles, York and Chicago gunmen, send ‘em) ten emasculation of the mothers’ pen- phant and the moose, Will the ‘ Coquancaan) mg i tba aEdences-stiOt ory clean influ- Gown to exterminate the Villistas, S107 law would not have occurred in animal emblem of the new ences in all cases—after the Arizona governor's scalp. He has been roasted - 1k teen Voaractill: there's tot q\ Olympia in 1915. Peace party be the squirre!? by the press on one side, then turned over and roasted on the other, until he nk ‘4 gag thes sg br heres Not 4 aca Se ig is F yandit or gunman left! T » Nex ; Food prices are rising—but is about cooked to a turn. : : : £ The Lady Next Door wants to know cheer up! Summer's coming, * A lot of good folks sympathize with Gov. Hunt. But if he is really be- —o why congress doesn’t expel Philly Bus- | a cooownry we ean hind this dark-age suggestion to legislate free speech out of the Sun-Kist Sunday is Mothers’ Day. It’s too|ter—if all her husband and the board- } ete state, quite likely their sympathy is misplaced. : bad it doesn’t come around duringiers say is so. | ee CAPT. ANDERSON’S IDEA OF | “ait! “THE CRIME —— ———— B es a J “ tsb pian Bt ir aT toatiae L || By Eleanor Ingram _ (Continued From Our Last Issue) | CHAPTER X. | Mr. Edenborough on his way home! glad when I get him away for a real) his chatr. jnot done all night. “I don’t want | | Her Story from the admiralty, He ne good rest.” But the politician had not the to hurt your feelings, but did that | UT Edenborough was not Me) 1k slipped thru. the /KH@™ exactly where it was stolen, ¢ bad refused to hear another | temperament to wait for the tele boy of yours speak the truth when B tening to a word; he was) | o po atop Bee oobi dog ' ¢ but | always thought | knew word from Dollar in explanation, or, phone to talk to him; he talked re he told me he had seen Mr. Eden- | talking to himself, and he) vo Dollar banat 4 the |, "You are a bit of a detective, Doc-| of regret, and she made her depart-| peatedly into the telephone, set a borough out?” jtalked aloud as soon as he was |) iit Oo Amman yr lr se tor Dollar. Well, so am I in my h all abruptness of a round dozen of myrmidona by the He did not, sir, and his father | given a chance. to darkness; and the door eoened way. You have not let me into the nally decided person. But she! ears, and at last was rightly served thrashed him for it!” erled the “Now we know why she was so keen on my wretched job * ° on the whole navy. * ° ° of your @uccess, and I ed once at least in the by being sent off to Hammersmith 800d woman. “And that was very think of boring you with last few minutes. And the doctor to identify the dead body of a de ‘rong of Barton, because I was as mine, I thought it happened at ran back Into his den with singing | faulting clerk, just recovered from b#d as the boy, in not telling you even as the curtain was drawn tn o desperation, with a last signal to ; | Edenborough to sta his ground is eee upon h ‘ t the time. So we" not a lifelong fraud like that and at least by: il and I suspected Rocchi,| heart, ready to fall upon his pa-|the Thames, “ 0 we've all done rene se olen OP ANY And she pretended to dislike that fosi ake nas) > : all, It was last #pring.|tient’s neck tn. deep thanksgiving| “I'm not coming with you,” Dollar| ¥Tong together, and we don't de- a. ~ : brute as much as I did! I belleve| | cod evening, Doctor Dolla: 4 all the summer to think | and even more profound congratula-| had said, even when the description **rve to stay, as I told the both of she did, too, but for bis waltzing. /nalt Mins Trevellyn, | briskly, and about It. | tion. seemed to tally. “Edenborough | em * * © No, never jealous of iss, | ride, Me sasteieg tae cs “But when Prince's opened I net CHAPTER XI | wouldn't drown himself—and this is Th® poor soul was forgiven and and I'm not now * * * but so much | **! to work, for there was Rocchi mak-| No patient was there to moet the| my place.” | Consoled, with an unconscious sym- the worse, so much the more] ‘Is {t possible you don't know|ing up to us both as before. He|doctor, but the curtain swayed lit-| It was a being ten years older Athy not lost on Topham Vinson, | ; WE DROP THAW damnably cold-blooded!” bode eh didn't get much change out of| tle before the open window. Dollar! who opened his sods > it was extended a mo- “They're going to hold a pres!- Dying philosopher could not have | Anything to do with) George, but perhaps I made amends! reached {t at a bound; but there | again at daybreak = er. |George? You're his doctor, aren't! G " Ta drink of your tea,” sald tial ference straw ballot in| displayed a more acute detachment.) 0 nh, eel oA gy when George wasn't there, and was nobody outside on the fron| gray as the wintry dawn, the whole |p. .” 8 Saturday. What's the use?| But the last touch was lost upon Lay coe pe i pageant put | sometimes even when he was! He steps, and the curtain led be-|man bowed and broken. Topham = Bt MS ag good. D. K. is for C. Allen Dale for | Dollar, whose a age Pod ion \ ceatues ametate y a one ree os and = ean 1,” | hind him as the toner door banged | Vinson stood aghast on the step. “T'm going upstaire first.” President and Will E. Humphrey | caught the ting o! jectsre “ po . oa vucy Trevellyn, w' some-| in the draft. “It fen’t all over, is tt” “You" - Bi for vice president. That ought to| “Edendorough,” he said, in the| “He has consulted me, but the|thing like a sigh for her bereave-| The horrid little space at the| The doctor nodded with com- Pee ee a 1 Hi a i! “the | Matter more directly concerns you it. We were gonna make| voice of urgent conciliation, “the Ut tsl lol t ment of the rink. back of the house, between the high | pressed lips. pond Thaw vice president, but|time bas come for you to show | tll, lit no new heating about the| “Yet you copied the other two black walls with the broken pottie| When and where?” fany iamihet er bale ee looking him up, we find he|what's tn you. So far you Mare! ie Goctor with a andden irritation |cond tke fra Zou orem admit you | coping, Iay empty of all life in they “I don't know. Come in. They're| "irsat sanctusty wee en tnt if built a submarine postotfice| kept your head and played the | 10 | iutot, Bil & ancl en rand pout him the coptes 2 plentiful light from the back win-| getting up downstaira; there'll De] ong hoor meq ae, On the sec: IMs life. What bizzness has he|man; keep {t now, and you will /Sh fet siralght, carriage and! “I sold them quite well.” said | qows--but for an early cat that fled| some tea in a minute.” \ Seaced mand it had triple doors so| eh? play the hero! I still can't Imag: |? 'y ee it the Marchese Roceht.” (-1ae_,.rrevellys, with sparkling before Dollar's precipitate descent! “For heaven's sake tell me what Pt A wang each could be shut in eee ine what Missa Trevellyn can have | F ablaze Pre h jeyes ‘and you may guess what | into the basement. you've heard'” | g' fore the next opened. FT POLITICS WILL DO|to say for herself—but I tmplore) iM sandite tae bined «Os aa with the money—bnt {t's not The gentleman's gone,” said) “Haven't I told you? They rang), bare hes might have been fn an naneine rrencitzn bad winced st the|fair to cail inom ‘copies. 1 iade tra, harton. st once, “"He. come |up Just after You went, He'bougnt SOOM, and et one might have ae inaccurate as possible |thra this way some time ago—said | prussic acid yesterday!” os this room without admit-| be SOMETIMES you to hear her out, = iT paiave |_ Headline tn the Morning Grouch| she is being admitted at this mo |) Be orighter and bolder, and the firm | with : ; “ face almost serenely obdurate howl spoiling everything, and/ne couldn't walt no longer out) Dollar had dropped into his elab- |11rk the slightest sound by the door. indeed I couldn't have made them | tere!” ox oliar bad dropped into his elab-\750 window was of triple glast - meng.” “Bone Causes Woman's Death."} “Lucy—here—and you expected *s a ; The Marchese Rocchi,” he con-| vary accurate J nh oath | tinued, “fled th bd urate from memory, and!” «tow jong do you suppose he had tween his hands drooped over Grew Rh eee Aenean aa Se her “ } rountry yesterday, |they were on NEW JOKE 1 told you I had another ap- P m coun re only rough sketches to/ aa fi bh i ‘ here | Miss Trevellyn begin with! | waited own reflection in the monastic writ: |) ‘Teacher—Who was the first man pointment. But you ob oo sad|_ “I wondered why he was not at] “of course Geo: | “Not long,” eaid Mra. Barton | ing-tabdie. | ere thickly wadded behind an in- to use Safety First?” first, one thing led to another, jeorge was wrong to Tr paneling of aromatic pine. The first sensation on entering was one of ineffable peace and “ | Prince’a!” ro “Bi h his tea “Who rang up?” asked the man _ Us—Noah. it is. You were | Prince's let me see them, but h firmly. “Bob here was at his gana Mey oe eet tnia out between you| “He fled because of a scandal tn ling in the best of causes, Roeehi| *hen he had to go up to show the|on his legs pect today. If you wish me to be/ Which you are implicated,” sald) was an expert professional apy, 1, YOUNK lady In; and the young gen- me of your people.” | WC STUFF (Very Ea tt : refs | ; jquiet: next came bi evn Wee Ole otek no heman. being can Dollar very sternly. (“He has been lscon sized him down ae one, iut|teman, it couldn't ‘ve been more| | “Was that all they had to tell Sent. aw of al “Apes great g 7 rafficking in naval secrets—this t v r +m | than three or four minutes before | you?” + Most women marry because |help "i ie country’s secrets, Misa Trevellyn—|thatas eos MAYS! expert—and Tim | Seah Mortara ‘ere a if something|, “That was all; we shan't have|*>4 lastly & surprising sense of isn’t much money in working} “Unless {t's you suggested | aed he swears you sold them tole, well! That‘s my last boast, he was on! Pag ” laced Sh welt tor the rene. - |scientific ventilation, as tho the Wages; most men marry be-|Edenborough in a panic-stricken | Hi! be amelln ot z a pg Dollar; but {t's not unjust. ae raves hi ore Pans aid tie bas et" four sound-proof walls were yet not | Buse they are in love with love.| whisper. “I can't face her alone— | flable, If you come to think of} in't hear " «lie |impervious to the outer air, but Mn either case, it's tough on the|I can't trust myself!” ‘One moment,” said the sir! | George and me between us keeping |. “He Was anxious you shouldn't be At his own chemist’s—‘to put @/tho it were ha tact ae but as Dollar took no notice of a knock | With a first trace of emotion. “Is/q national enemy out of serious | disturbed, sir. -{ poor old dog out of its misery!’ His | oi.) ventiind. ie yn aie pine- bored by aljat the door. “Edenborough, you all this of your own accord. or OM/ mischief, feeding @ friendly power Did you show him out, Bobby?" | very words, Vinson, so they tell me! | uiation here dn th miraculous cir. Be Senatest vice “he said gently; “and what-|>ehalf of Mr. Edenborough?” = | with false plans, and giving the| The master had never been so/I shal! hear them all my life.” lien e in the heart of Lon- ) fe the Placid Pace. (We know!) |ever she may have to say—much | ores pad posta bee hw at /@OReY, to our own dear Nayy;short with them. Mra, Barton felt/ “And it has taken all night tol", tnis would have pas ) _ The quince is an unpopular frutt| or little, and {t may be much—you bu've been ferreting things out | jeague!” that something was the matter, but/learn this, has it, from the chem-| visitor by degrees: b struck the muse it is so little known,| must hear patiently to the end cal ig stage have you a Dollar surveyed the radiant minx | Bobby quaked at's where the poor devil dealt!” | in0 Wing had deri + to John Dol-} LL: Don't try to be @ success | your duty, man! Don't flinch from| ,, Seg are en itled to put It #0, , | With eyes that needed rubbing. Hin| “Yes, sir!” Dollar understood this outburst of | ort aca pa tell and superin- Without a press agent. it, for her sake!” |. “Detective ax well as doctor, \t/ only sorrow was that Edenborough| “Which way did he go—and how | truculent emotion oan Pid etail, it all came oom “But I do fiinch from {t!" cried | sppears |did not burst thru the curtains |—foot or taxi?” | “That was my fault," sald he. “I her and afresh as he JOYS OF SPRINGTIME | Edenborough below his breath. “I| | "Miss Trovellyn, I tmplore you to| without more ado. He onat have| ‘‘I-—please, alr—I never stopped |told them to confine their attention /pmered softly with the home secre. The river shore seems a place! flinch from {t for her sake as much | tell me if these things are true extraordinary self-control when he |to see, sir!” to entries made {n the poison books |‘ and a certain composite ef. Of amusement for the young people |as mine, I'm not the one to shame| “So that you may tell your pa-|itked Dollar flew to his telephone: for-| after 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon. | £Ct Pip satan he beginning | of Gilead, some go down to take|her even !f Rocchi’s telling mats’ Toei wot tel bi sq |,.. Not that George was a conactous | » it for @ taxicab; drew Edenborongh had signed his name rae peo upon him | merece! culture exercise, such as) The door opened in response to| 8 Pcl agin leat tty to the fraud: he wouldn’t| borough's rooms in vain; inquired jand got the stuff earlier in the day.” scree Baye 4 bine it all the ping, standing on their heads | Dollar's decis' It was the with the dbente gent iy Li "| have approved of it, he couldn't pos-|aa vainly (as an anonymous wed Before you had told him any-|)O osug hav a n fatigue; so that Gnd Wrestling, but look out, boys, ttle Barton boy, to say that Mise| With the deeper sorrow. || sibiy, poor George!” sald George's |ding guest, uncertain of the church) | thing? Ge couch oss Atomia ote ‘how you wrestile—The Washing-|Trevellyn was in the waiting room. + aNd | bride. But I shall tell him all!at Admiral Trevelly was at the; “He had his own suspicions, you loomed wretch sinks | ton (N. C.) Progress. “Show her in,” sald Dollar, “| YOU can shout {t from the roof for! anout it now: of course I alwaya| House of Commons by half past six,|must remember. I bad confirmed |into the snow, but for the light in| n Roccht's bare word, | #!! I care now. It's perfectly true!” Ay od . . Mat m : ee (the room and what the light have more the Dollar started, not at the thing |™eant to tell him—after tomorrow |and at Scotland Yard (armed with |them—and her first words left no | \oio0 ight re- Edenborough. but he has had quite 4 fr the & . | more to be sald, that he could bear that had to. come, but at thi q enough both. | written injunctions from the Secre- a SOME SENSE To THIS) the aistractea youtn looked | it in which it came. It meemed {ets of his own, and this was my|tary of State) before seven. to hear! If only he had waited | It was leht of a warm, strong, about him like wild creature in fj in ee een at word In wieked.|8how. I suppose you don't know| At that hour and place the matter |another minute! If only I had Pea 9 nats, that he had found NEW YORK, May 18—The Ap cage, and saw his loophole at The | one impenitent, unblushing, even | Wat's been bothering him, Doctor| passed out of the hands of Doctor |dragged him back to face it out!” | Or : aoe by anne frosted elec: . last moment. r Dollar? He says it's overwork, and | John Dollar, who could only hasten | sroaned Dollar, in a bottomless pit | amps as children dye Easter ° te Dress club of America| , vainglorious to eye and ear alike t Meow “ : ar rate aoe SEG hold ite firet annus) dence ana gh Ah nd see oe aendtene | His glance flew to the curtained |! do think Lord Stockton’s an old |home to Welbeck at., there to enter |f self-repronch. “I call myself a ORES; it was the very softest and card party at Chateau du Parc to-| whimpered thru his teeth. “it| Window, but no sound or move | *lave-driver. Do you know, I haven't | upon the most shattering vigil of | crime ieootor, yet I let a Pri Pomme tet con paltry eyes ' night. There Will be an exhibition | there's any explanation, she need |™ent came from the iron stair out-|¢¥en seen George wince the day be- | his life—the terrible telephone at jcreep into space with a bottle of| h perfect ease, ag wie 3 “Drawings made by George Eden-| times to say 80, and he looked bet-| home. It was the measure of a borough for the First Lord of the|ter on Monday than for ever so| born leader; | Admiralty, and shown to you be-|long. But I must own I shall be cause you were the stronger char- | ~ jacter and insisted on seeing them. but only in such confidence as | |might almoat be justified between | thought of, it till this minute! 1I/there tn all his clothes,’a girl's pho- | Was trying to write him a preserip- | tograph beside on the coverlet, and tion on Sunday night, when the ~~ | poor chap suddenly remarked that Shelley was right, and I found him dipping into these I and in the small hours he once dozed for some minutes in Matinees 2:30 __ Nights 7 and 9 BEGINNING MONDAY MATINEE The Great Wild West Show : j salc ac com one | it turned the roo Pn fo eo at Eeiaeelst? | : ste terrible |PFUssic acid, and commit the one |and m into @ little | ; | dance by 12 young women wearing| never know I knew; if there's not, | %!d¢. yg aga a A ne ‘ bis elbow—and still more terrible | time 1 had to prevent!” hall of bronze. ; | gowns not exceeding in cost $6. good-bye!” True that you sold those draw-| “Nor 1,” sa ollar, no Jonger|inquirers on the telephone as the} ° ia. prussic acid, J wonder?”| The simple curtains might hav i 4 ai lings to this m Rocehi?” he| With the least compunction, “from | night wore on! ithe idle question Wie wot asked (been @CldGh lacs, Flonty + tated ard himseif saying at last, in a|that hour to this.” But never one word of news | question was not asked | been | . richly tarnished . “or p , wl om, , , |for Information, but it happened to| With age; the furniture solid co) : tone so childish that he ecarcely| “Of course T know he’s all right, Toward midnight Topham Vinson | DP That Weeline asad loner: the bed ania P wondered at the smile it drew |concluded Miss Trevellyn, as , ed. with the elaborate sand | 70, [00 thst Dollar could answer, /per: od an Mestern divan, and onder, the smile it dr + a8 they | arriv th hop and-/and it brought him to his book-|the form upon the bed a sleepi: | “Perfectly true,” said Miss Trev-| Were parting perfect friends, “be-|wiches and even the champagne | theives with a certain alacrity | Arab as | cause he bas rung n ‘ os ae H ell jcauso he has rung me up several|that he had found awaiting him at!" “1 know,” he sald, “tho 1 never| It was George Edenborough lying ie had the luck to spot tt | future man and wife? | | ti ti P peta 1 aM Arizona Joe & C faiciitiwee ne | Investigation Proves | "9.0" sic a's Miss Trevellyn, impatient! uf y ris real ‘ e 0. alek Wak aie ee lak en that various disease germs have their breeding-place in the waste You kgs course, enter into so- i becars memory, and sold my own efforts.’ products of the body. Don’t, then, let your bowels clog and throw | |lety at Leghorn: should you meet | e In “Pastimes of the Plains Ot course 1 know that! It was| | these harmful germs back on’the blood. ‘Take nochances with serious {With any scientific person, capable | GS: c a slip of the tongue,” he admonish illness. Keep your bowels free, and the bile regulated with jof preparing the prussic acid, or in Roy Mack’s Production of ed her, while marveling more and| essential oll of bitter nimonds, 1] more. “And you can put the whole | jehowld regard it se 8 great hind jness if you could procure me a small quantity’—down to “it would |In coffee it’s: be a comfort to me to hold in my i | hands that golden key to the cham ber of perpetual peace.” ’ Topham Vinson’s only comment thing plainly without so much as a blush!” “I am going to put you to the blush instead, Doctor Dollar,” re turned the lady, with a Ighter BEECHAM’S PILLS which promptly and surely relleve constipation, Indigestion, bilious and sick headache. They are compounded fron drugs af veeseme “School Days” With a Cast of Nine Youngsters ze touch. “You are very clever ugs of vegetable U H Malice oc! wher { ala Syath gris origin—harmless and not habit-forming. The aipetlanice of three was to pick up the book, which had es ers anines e uxe ant ooh sities generations show that Beecham’s Pills prevent disease and are fallen to the floor with the con 4 fhe rh cotltete : Trae where he ood, glancing m The Ten Thousand Dollar Posing Act { must just enlighten you betore| A Great Aid to Health horror toward the door; at that |moment it opened, and Mrs. Bar-| ‘The first drawing was not a| ‘copy; it was the original they got that time, and it was stolen from | Directions of Other Big Features—10c and 20c Sold by druggists ecial value to women with every box roughout the world. In boxes, 10c., 250. “Mra, Barton,” said the doctor, jin a voice that failed him as it had \terested in manly sports. Whate ple who | instance—which will take him une der surveillance and assist you with bis reformation. This task ts worth your whole time and attention. Do not whip your son, but get bi line he likes best may be turned to his good with the co-operation of his teachers and all the good peo- interested in boys Q.—Would It be considered good | taste to wear white shoes with @ green taffeta sult, or would dark — sh be bett ‘¢ buttoned or laced shoe: ? A—White promise most popular color for worn with all kinds of suit#/ shoes are more stylish tha toned ones this season. Q.—What are the birth stones for April and August? Lo. H. A.—April claims the diamond; sardonyx for August. Q.—WiIIl white fox furs be worn this spring? MISS B. A.—Not only white fox but all va- rieties of fux furs will be very pop ular this spring and summer. Q—Every time a certain young man comes to call on me, my sister and her girl friend make things very unpleasant. They stay In the living room and giggle and make themselves a perfect nuisance, It seems that mother has no control r them, and anything ! say has no weight at all. | don’t like to meet my friend on the street, but I can't endure the way things go at home any longer. Can you think ef anything | might do? AGGRAVATED SISTER. A.—Nothing but absolutely ignor- ing her pranks will have any ef fect. Try not to lose your pati or get angry. After a little you your mother may be able to show her that she is doing a very unkind thing. beside the photograph a tiny phial that caught the light. “Stay where you are!” whispered Dollar, in a voice that thrilled his companion to the core. And he stole to the bed, stooped over it for a little lifetime, and so came steal- tpg back. “How long has he been dead?” asked Topham Vinson, harshly; but in reality his blood was freezing at an unearthly smile in that unearth- ly light. “Dead?” was thé doctor's husky echo. “Don't you know the smell of bitter almonds, and have you smelt it yet? Here's the golden bottle he hadn't opened when he lay down— perhaps for the first time since he was here on Sunday night—and this is his wedding morning, and he’s only—only fast asleep!” THE END sinha i e ’. 4] Didn’t Sleep Wel! Stomach feel uneasy, night hot and close, and you were ner us? Wonder. Your foot didn't digest it fermented, a the poisons it gave off your whole syster It wee it, you'd find yox and bowels inflamed. Perhaps it's got chronic by now—real catarrh, Peruna Will Help You & reliable invig- ‘ond place, it h eto 4 ed Let them alone, and they will get worse, Indigestion, " 1 trouble—all fol- down body that Nature restores the balance; you sleep well, digest your food, resist hot Weather, and by, You are well, For forty-four years Peruna has don his for many numbers of them it. ju can't fool the the time—they learn wi and their verdict estabi: Tuna long ago. ead form for your convent- Pertti DSLASES aan ERE A BD ACQUIRE neem rome here’s one best in 8 ton entered with the ten tray J.AFolger&Co.San Francisco 45c Coffee — 45c Quality Rise estates

Other pages from this issue: