The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 1, 1916, Page 4

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Phone Main 0400 a \e] a i< € = geome of our offi- cials, frinstance.” THR AFT T am looking fo th Wilhelm. en missing November 15, 1915. (Butcher trade.) Don't know whether he Glive or dead. Anybody heartng Or finding him will be rewarded Math, if you are | anawer, me. ys IF to go after you. “You dont] id t ewer ine pune. = - —« |ERBERT MUNTER’S IDEA OF USELESS EFFORT 4 ar” WHAT ARE YOU Goin’ Yio DO WHEN YOUR) ENGINE BALKS AN’ NOU HAVENT oT A WHIP? R pleat +, A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME ~ WOULD SING AS SWEETLY We are all familiar with the| le words: “There's many aj that's born to blush unseen, Waste its fragrance on the | OYSTER BAY—Oveter Bay is for a bivalve closely related to i lar crustacean which is chietiy | (Cont in that re resemble the just sed me court atorementiones. The| Heretofore he had invariably kept fe entirely im in the md in no way ras oyster or the clam. There| te who claim t The but probably e fakers.” h Bay | Londo’ have been too timid to ven-| ment forth frog: thelr watery retreat Since a certain well known for- | Sport. Government en | regret the West T with bh they will be ea ’ nut-eating bir For UPLIFT OOZE | think. Don’t fritter (doughnut frit- fer, we should say) away (die att Hf you must SPEND money, | taught ‘spend SOMEBODY ELSE'S | At i0 The only way to get to be a He millionaire Is to SAVE money or STEAL it. Hands Member of the Sorippe Northwest Longue of Newspapers MEAD scowled down into the e court. Th | brilliant sanshiny street. Bay, however, “ What fool instinct had pos tac l exposure had made him restless | land reckless. ‘s‘not| brought him up with a jolt; @ club} Bay wou! > supreme courtly sient if they/ loafer, a society tea drinker, bad & chance to get a word 12 | fellow who bought his clothes {n| ° he had had little else to do but yy. Herby Cough-man) | thoughts had come full tilt against SAVE. o Tee var gullies nad tuuipticn:|ths gallery play. You ask me what|/ only a boy-and-girl kiss—clumsy, | ordered his plans for the future. He recalled the boy when he had money. his elders and hold his own. At 15 But put your own money in |he had a head ke a seasoned Then, in cold, level tones the bank. veteran. quire the polish he himaelf lacked. Published Dally by The Star Publishing Oo, Parents Wanted ITTLE MISS ROSEMARY TEAL of Milwaukee, an extremely pretty girl of 20, an accomplished musician, graduate of a Wisconsin convent and possessing an independent income of her own, has arrived at Los Angeles. Miss Teal is not seeking adventure ‘in the far West, but a home, Alone in the world, she wants to adopt a father and mother. “LT have absolutely no relatives and the world is SO lonesome,” says Miss Teal. “If some couple as lonesome as | am, will adopt me, | will return, in love and devotion, the care they bestow upon me.” It is worth mention if only because of the novelty of it. In this age of female independence, most girls of 20 are trying to rid themselves of home ties. They yearn to face the world alone, not realizing that the maw of that same old world is greedily swallowing up thousands of their sisters each They will not believe that the world is a “lonesome place” until too late. “Home and Mother” is, alasXl appreciated most when lost. There’s a heart throb and a moral in Miss Teal’s unusual plea Johnsonian NOTWITHSTANDING that It has a three-cent street car fare, the city of Cleveland, Ohio, which municipality operates its own street railways, voted an increase in the wages of the carmen, including shopmen, amount- ing to $532,000 in two years. Thug in that much-blessed city, more than a quarter of a million dollars a year of: strap-hangers’ money finds its way annually into the pockets of the wage earner and thence into the tills of the Cleveland merchants, instead of into the safe deposit vaults of the plutocrats Every one of those dollars, as it goes round and round, carries good cheer, happiness and contentment with it. And every time one is turned over, the smiling goddess winks the other eye and murmurs “Tom Johnson.” Tom's shade goes marching on. Worse Than Dante Detamed oe gorges where the Austrians and Italians are battling so desperately at present are the region which Dante described in his hideous phantasm as the mouth of Inferno. As awful as was Dante’s word-picture of the jaws of hell, if he could look on the scene today, he would probably conclude that he mixed his colors entirely too tame. The horrors of the fighting in this region “seamed with gorges cleft by an avalanche” are said to cause Verdun to look like a sham battle. Next Week EEE RT inued from Our Last iseve) | “You thought you were going to! sald as he noticed the license num-| Where was the bie fel when you married the mother.” ber. “Shall we return to the farm? With amazing suddenness the! The sun is getting low.” +) man reached out and caught tho away the flying strands of hair young man by the wrists, whirling Not a word of rY not a him to his knees. sign that she recollected his rude “You puppy, stir and I'll break ness your wrists, so help me® What the Was he really sorry? No! He detil's got into you? Was stubbornly glad. The contact In Smead's heart there was ad- of her shoulder, the subtle perfume miration for the nerve of the boy from her hair, the vell of green not a flicker of the eye, nof.did the, water shutting out sky and lps even stir. horizon him to mi this trip background. But the crutch only man who had ever m and wore spats; a govern sneak who had «polled his He would make Cranford the day he had meddied im. more than three weeks now, “Ti admit that. You were too arrived at the farm. iw thinking about her of late.” ed an od toward the farm The boy got oup, brushed his hed the door. clothes, rubbed his wrists, and She laid her hand upon her cheek wiped the sweat from’ his forehead.| How briskly he strode away! He I've a notion you'll be sorry for| had kissed her; but it had been It seemed to him that his ttude disturbed him, It dis-|! 4l@ with the emeralds. I dropped awkward, diffident, honest h m in the poorbox at Monte The thought of tt warmed her Carlo.” heart a little. | “Low, I call it.” She found a letter, and took ft to told you about it; never let you tn.”| “What fools we poor women “Tl tell | are!’ was her only comment upon you ‘the truth about the Princess | finishing the missive. Xenin’s emeralds. Two men she It was a busy mind Cranford sent to Hades were friends of mine; | carried back to the hotel. He could 1 sold the gems and| RO more have helped stealing that jad sent him to college to ac ome, graceful, polished—a| OnC* honest SAVING your own money 18 | chap who spoke French and Itallan| “vided the cash between the wid. #Weet than he could have stopped SAFER than STEALING oth | equally well, and who, on the other ows. It wasn't legal restitution, | breathing and STEALING Is | side of the water, moved among the | but they'll never be any the wiser.| She had chosen to ignore tt, with yway, because this is full of BOOBS who | 0.00) will lend it to you. a MISER? DOLLARS are your best swells. And the women went mad| 494 &* for the princess, there are He looked at his watch. Eleven| “How's the leg?” the wisdom of her sex. Why had “4 | some millions of fools left.” he not taken,a good kiss? His whistle ceased in the middle PUT AWAY EVERY |,, n at te b | Bt ie es of bar, What were these chaps NICKEL. aby gt hit og doed a CHAPTER Xt up to? The short, wiry man with What do you care if some “Hat” said Smead with satisfac-| The enormous gray-green rollers | the stubbly black mustache he had low-brow calis you a WAD or came charging, in with the pre.| Instantly recognized as one of the tion. Jeision, alignmeht and velocity of| two men he had seen in the hotel STAR—THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1916, ROBO MRE IK IO OER KOE K IS Me Mad CMI MBIU E26. OIG FBI CHIE DOI GAM EK Re IK i HOG CK OE BEAR KO OWI OK HOOK great powerful hands of the seated She put on her hat and tucked | look “Too strong for you, eh?” It was a quarter to six when they | strong for the mother. I’ve been) “Tomorrow,” she said; and turn-| Smead flung him aside house, stopping only when she|bis pipe, a PAGE 4, Pintered at Benttie, Wash., postetfire ae secund-cinee matter Not a Peerless Follower M* BRYAN declared, at Saratoga, that he has “about reached the point where he can no longer follow a political party which refuses to indorse national prohibition,” lhis does not sound at all like William. It prompts us to ask what party he has been following, when we fully understand that he has been peerlessly leading #he democratic party for 20 years. It is late for William to pose as a mere follower. For a decade, he has been head pilot in the head boat headed up Salt river, for a party that was his’n. He may have reached the point where he can no longer lead the party, but down at the bottom of the pit of political oblivion are a whole lot of perfectly fine demo- crats who, will swear that William never followed their party a minute, in any direction, ,. Maybe William's declaration that he is a follower is just the first act in an insidious flirtation with the prohibition party. John in Full Regalia S OMETHING unknown, but surely tremendous, has chirked up good old “Uncle Rockefeller. He is appearingg these days, on his Pocantico Hills preserve, dressed like this: Black frock coat, with tight-fitting striped trousers; derby hat of latest style; bright necktie; baby-blue scarf around throat; light bamboo cane. Every day cheery things happen to Jotm that would cause us to seek relief from over-exuberance of spirits in striped pants and a red necktie, notably the daily exhibitions of loyalty given by the Octopus to the busi- ness of octopusing, but this sort of cheer must be real ordinary to Uncle John, and there must be something real phenomenal in his sudden resort to sunflower effects. The thought suggests itself that, usually, when a man of John’s age and domestic instincts goes in for a derby hat, a rah-rah cane, gay necktie and barber-pole trousers, the little god, Cupid, has been monkeying with his sensitive heart-strings. Can it be that Uncle John is going a-sparking? Full Provision the national republican convention is to have five chaplains. Thus the conventiog pill have talent enough present to ask God’s blessing on what it is about fo do and His forgiveness on what it does—pro- vided the five don’t get to fighting or bolting. My mall, ovt of ity, one your, 61.00) @ months, 81.00; Ete per month up te @ the. Wy curring, eliy, 260 = manth, Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS Q—! am engaged to a young fellow and think the world of him of me, but for about three months he has been acting kind of funny, He seems to think he is the only one to be pleased. He never ai me to go to any of the large shows) or any place that will cost money, but will take me to @ couple of tdime shows once or twice a week.) He never taken me to have any re- freshments, but when he leaves me he goes and gets something for himself, and the same way about the large shows or anything that should happen to come. He will go once or twice to eee it. | am not working, and can’t go to see any of these things, and § certainly would not ask any fellow, 1 don’t care who he is, to take me. | suppose if | were to speak to him about these things, he would gay, “Why, girlie, I'm saving my money to get married; you know | am not earning a large salary.” Now, | think he is selfish, don't you? Oh, Miss Grey, | think so much of him, and yet, these thing hurt me so badly that | am ne happy. | wouldn't mind if he woul@ stay at home once in a while, too. | don’t expect him to take me to everything. Some people have told me that you write and answer your own fet ters, so if | did write | would re ceive no answer, but | believe you, 80 please answer this at once, WAITING. A—Selfishness is your fiance’s middle nam Even tho you do think a great deal of him, you would very short-sighted to marry him, because the divorce courts have pro over and over again that no love is strong enough to endure or survive wanton neg- lect You are probably one of the girls who will be unhappy if you don’t |marry and just as unhappy if you do. It's up to you to analyze close- ly your feelings and determine | which unhappiness would be the Fate ___1] |ereater, then act accordingly. By Harold MacGrath A Novel | .2—! am making painted studies ISLAND” Ea en figs A Week! (to know why they burst, and if Muneey Co. SO Oe IO: jow who] “Di, iw it your” had offered the toast that night? Posntbly with Smead. He must/was here. Rallying her scattered|a sequence of | perfectly logi nATD. |forces, she stopped and waited. | du ais Up here, out of the beaten track, | a oung man kindly. ing for them, what was simpler) ‘What are you doing up here?” | house. ee rere rs | pe : Uneless to run, The inevitadle| His amorous Attack had been but rene when he had learned the pressure inside the bubble and t | he truth he had had manhood outside are the same. But where no one would dream of look. | CHAPTER Xt. enough to be ashamed, to leave the | balance or equilibrium {s so |of soap bubbles, and | would ilke i there is anything | can use to make ick together longer, JESSICA, | A.—A soap bubble is made up of millions of tiny molecules of water al de-/ which hold together so long as cate that the molecules separate than sending & motor boat out from | the man asked impetuously. | She had chosen the simplest hat /and the bubble breaks at the lease Kingston to Pidgin, ostensibly to| “Have you any right to ask|and gown, taken only the money | disturbance. For instance, as the meet another boat from the Amert-|¢ can side’ Smead over there and Messrs. Hanchett and Dennison here, He knew at least where the key lay, and all because Smead had en the wrong moment in which n him: anda | She breathed with difficulty./on the Atlantic line in her purse, and fled. T have no right, Di; yet I have, even if ever so little.” {In these teeming six years ounded. his voice, giamor in his use of it. Diana Always wanting to fieh | Her anger dimmed a little. | business. ing. Came back vividly that noon| this God-forsaken hole?” when the game wardens’ boat put| “it is not God-forsaken!” quietly j!n—the spell of dizziness which had/ “] wish I could see your face.” [seized her. Diana Wynne! At! He struck a match. wise, which end of this tangle did she! She did not flinch. The flame |leave him, to forget him, and | stand | burned tll It nipped his thumb. |him forget in turn. Had the gift of clairvoyance ood nerves, Di. Not afraid of been his that moment he would/ anything, are you?” | have wits a little scene which | She did not answer, | be | Would have still further bewlldered| “Truth is, Di, I despise myself ve him. Cranford had made several | as heartily as you do, Byt I've | Pilly ways succeeded in eluding CHAPTER XII fota, Donald Smead!"|had been her occupations—shop | bubbles. ds jett—Mr. Hanchett, it/ irl, stenographer, nurse, governess, | on the Kingston ho: | you please!” companion to old ladies, stewardess | Q—Supposing | were writing a | , Which she letter to a relative and wished to |, Tomorrow! He had laid down) There had always been music in|still followed ostensibly, but in Sign my husband’s name as well as lity a8 a blind for a more daring | Mine, which would be the proper must go to Pidgin, Uncle |tempt to learn, My friends ne warm breath which fills the bub believe I have. You may think | She learned quickly how to deal|Dle cools, the equilibrium of the with men and half-men and beasts,| Dubble is destroyed. Glycerine many |added to the suds will meke strong way to sign it—Alice and George, always watching and walt-) “What are you doing up here in| And now the burt she had aj-|0r George and Alice? had GRATEFUL. finally come. She cared more for} A.—When speaking of another |this comparative stranger than was|party and yourself, it is courtesy and the {issue was how to|to mention the other person’s name make | first. Q.—I am a young girl of 16. 1 cannot swim and am afraid to at- have succeeded in getting me to go into a rowboat or a canoe. | have journeys by night to the farm, but) made my bed—of hair-cloth and| “Any reason y'd like t’ tell melhad a couple of mishaps on the At precisely a quarter to nine she | thorn—and I must Ne on it.” of?’ had gone in | “Oh,” she burst out passionately 4 f She was tired, it hhad been along|“if you only had been weak,|.¢ Y#* craft on her part, day; she was sleepy. How easy it! harassed by the inability to w calculation, and she knew that the| ~his hand on the flywheel, | water, and, altho not very serious, switt |! have been afraid of the water ever since. A woman who also fears the wa- al is for a woman to send @ man on | straight; if only you had been one | ld guide would credit it to wom-|ter told me that she considered his way when she wante to be rid/ of those pitiable things who are |\anly impulsiveness. |this a warning and that she never of him always being led! But no! You “Unole Billy, you're a good, brave,|goes on the water. She advis Always she entered the village! are as strong as steel.” | kindly man. I am going to put my|me not to do so, either. | love to perhaps a quarter of an hour later | Steel Steel, with a fotten|secret in your hands There is|go launch riding when it is smooth, than he did fiber running thsu ft. What are} something on Pidgin Island I must|$0, Miss Grey, do you think | So! Th «raph operator was| you doing up here alone?” get. Must! If you do not take me/|should stay away from the water? one of the three or four villagers! Hoe caught her by the shoulders, |there you will break my heart. A| BLUE EYES. 5 who did not gossip, Yet this oper-|“What is this man Cranford doing? | hundred dollars if you will land me “Better. I've cut out whisky for. ® Napoleonic army, The picture| bar just before leaving New York.|ator would have given a month’s| Making love to you? Answer!” jat Pidgin.” A.—I do not believe in good or bad omens. Any person who goes f : of battle was all very real to the; The handsome chap was without) Wagos to confide to his family the; 8 , ‘ubl two weeks ! 7 i chap wa 1 uty i his family the; She.put her strong fingers under This double appeal to his courage/on the wat ° ily today! “Everything on my side rune like | Sit! who sat with her feet dangling | doubt the same Warren had advised | nightly advent in his dingy shop of his and flung him back and his cupidity was irresistible. |not more pagtorg te err 5 8A ee Clockwork. I'll have Cranford out om ledge at the end of Tibbet's od oe fear made his xe bei i oA yess eee "i “Cranford is a sneak.” | Do it fer nuthin’!"—knowing/in trains or autos. pgs iath oe tet ‘oin dentity a certainty. onight he shook his head as| “That {# not true.” that h i beaty 7 : * cs RECONCILED Py feel e Teta carl ig She had been rereading Hugo,| Evidently they had thought him| usual at he would be given the hundred) If you really fear the water, you ‘There will be a ball game on| Smei ‘of this week—Judsonia vs. Tucker-| Don't Man. Let's hope for the best. Any-| in the Way, We don't mind defeat We Ti wi » have never known anything else.— The Judsonia, Ark., Advocate Sme eee OF A MARRIED MAN | “You Number 1 “Wh When your wife asks you to| My af! drop in at a downtown department | laughe ) Wednesday, Thursday and Friday) “The right idea. Now listen message.” newspaper clipping. He passed it GREAT CRISES IN THE LIFE Over to his son ad nodded approvingl ae ae ae Jand all the wonder and terror of something of a fool. So much the go fooling around the water morning. That's the time re you, May send a night fore her eyes. see whi “It's fine to be alive on a day| Mr. Han like this,” was Cranford's comment. | Very good! they would lead him. d todk from his pocket | ae Se. Som Se pe flshine as {t strikes thru the creat|thelr rocking chairs, “Hard luck Just before it breaks! What color!’| you chaps are having. You'll get 1 never told me about that.”| “Cast a Blance at this old comber | out tomorrow all right, tho. The y should I have told you?|Salloping in. Some water there,| Kale is blowing itself out.” fair that.” The young man| Shall we move? Wol get a duck-| “I'll be glad to meet Mr, Bass,” ry ing when she hits.” said Mr. Dennison, stroking his Waterloo seemed spread ont be-| better; he would pinay the fool to! nett and Mr. Dennison; | “Ien't it beautiful? See the sun-| “Hello!” he said, stopping before | Nothing tonight, miss,” {friends and betrays them behind | there 'thout any trouble,” squi You are sure you understand the| their backs, and takes his whack|at the north, “Sometimes that Instructions? for doing it o’ sky is on'y a bluff!” Yes, mis Any message from “Such friends as try to cheat (Continued in Our Next Iss |. “He plays the gentleman to his | just the same. “I guess we can git |should learn to swim. There is nting | not a particle of danger if you have nae good instructor, and thousands of lives have been saved by the ue) «art of swimming. }® man named Smead to another |the law—smugglers, He has told named Hanchett to be delayed 24) m jhours, I'm kind of worried. Your Send him away. He may get Diana smiled From the inner “If you injure one hair of his duced a document Read this and} “There's a long score against | spocttie orders from Neuaguartare’ [hunt Astonishing Power of Iron pocket of her outing coat she pro-| head, you'll rue it to the last day.” to Give Strength to Broken- tpn ae wit lhitter SWells tt bore oeieoe. Oras Down, Nervous People store and buy her six pairs of silk| Smead drew tn a long breath noah bike tiated bea” Te re me aie wuts nee bir ‘cael tn ee et pent al! the diame on me. stockings. slowly. “What did you do with | Dig o | | guess if they'll back you fn/I'm not alone, The pater is tn ete ‘ ? 4 ae those emeralds?” She huddled her shoulders and|up here,” said Mr. Hanchett.| Washington I can. Excuse me for|Kingston. If he had hie way. Cran Ausated tro three tines Ser desea WHERE THE TRAIL LEADS “Bmeraide?” twisted one foot about the other. | “Great fishing grounds, but it blows|a moment.” The key was talking. ford would go out to sea, drifting.” | ter meals, for two weeks. ‘Then test M. L. Hord went South to hunt| “Yes. The real stones for which| The movement was neither! too much. : When he rose from the board I hate him, hate him with every your strength “sgain and see far for mules Tuestay, but found him-| you substituted the paste. I'll tell | temperamental nor sentimental; it Try the bay across the river | he was smiling. “A night message drop of blood in my body.” YORK ft have abe Of nervous Ga Self at Kansas City before he re-|you this, my lad-—I never plucked | ¥Aa instinctive, ut the resultant tomorrow. You'll find bass there,”/from your man. ‘Hanchett, Hotel All right; I have warned you.” | aiso Dr Sell. | down D were ailing altel turned § home—-Plattsburg, Mo.,/ anything but fat gulls. I never took |®ffect upon Cranford was like) said Cranford. E Carlton,’ he read; ‘Pidgin today; | He swung about abruptly, and|known specialist hg of el Gy Ged Leader. la dollar from a woman.” wine; madness, rather, for he| “Thanks—we will come at 4, Weather permitting.’ It} was gone. widely both in 7 Oe tage cis ch tues nd entirely i brushed her cheek with his | | Cranford went to his room { " | Europe, sald you were to| Ket rid of their ayn lyspep- ~ pruaees ee Bh aged sa ery ei a is unsigned She never could tell how she got| make an actual blood test on all | Sia. bles in from Forgive me, I did not mean to Cool,” observed Mr. Dennison. “It is what I have been walting| back to the farm, In bed she| people who are ill, you would prob mply by taking: do that!” he cred penitently;| “Good nerves, We may have|for, ‘Thank you. Good night.” |cowld not shut her eyes. Tho voice |Atis he ereatly astonished at the o Cases bean y vi fi 7 bad vs ~ : exceedingly large number who lac s be when it would have been much bet-| trouble, |, She hastened toward the town|of the man had awakened tho half-jfron and who are iil for ho other months without 9b- | tar to say nothing Trust me for that. What do| limits forgotten terrors of the past reason than the lack of iron, The ny it. You can talk ps “We are very foolish—or, rather,| you say to a little game of pinocle| A block beyond the telegraph of-| The peace and serene happiness | Moment, Iron 18 supplied all their W please about all the wonders Motet {|1 am,” she replied coolly. “It is my|to pass the time, He will not go|fice, outside the arc-light zone,|of the white-walled convent, and Mn | iieciiaae, “Ayiaanmerous. symptoms | ro ‘ee Pr sexes / }|ftault that we are both drenched.”| out tonight. We might fake a mes-| she saw before her the vague out.|her innocenée she had dreamed the |at once loses the power to chanes hing like good old iron to pat — fot Fear left him. She chose to tg-| sage.” line of a man, walking swiftly in| world outside was a grand fairy | food into living tissue, and therefor 7Abr cheeks Sad. good, Sauer, baie i hore the temporary {nsanity “He may know her handwriting.” | her direction. He paused story, waiting to be teed! 7 | SOLBIng yeu See dose you any sced Y event neere wet ne ee LUD 3. Boring bata Bit of comen tabial Aetaks doe heen eae 0 & you don't get the strength out of it erve and stomach ; j pit of comedy an au} “ ou know? f | ‘Then into the world, the great| Your food passes through and best blood }|tomobile had drawn up on the far) “How should I know her?” Mr.| An {nciptont paralysis laid hold|house with its paintings and rugs |Your A¥stem lke corn. through iat aie etl Ferment mae §|side of the lighthouse, A man by|Hanchett shrugged, “Come on—| of her > cat lers so wide « hat the old forms of Inor- 2, fie oe wee Oe earene iy | epncnert t besa jand tapestries and marbles; the t grind, Aa at n, tron ee ee ne car watched ne | ets ge! ne me started.” coming of the young men f id- continuous blo people’ "| |two thoughtfully, saw the comber| Cranford put on his slippers, rend | 9"! | 1) mon. ot old mon Kad the in BECEIB DORs ha war t Corns _Dantons and “Knob Joint” Wrench Heel Cramp } | ring and break, saw the inclination|a little while, rose, and walked th, B Y L ki Naver Gi cueiclasinge Mand nel To a nueneis Bana enay ene i} J ed < 8 0 card-pla ae; nd he | dow ane ea y sons they fre 4 $ lof the two toward oach other and|length of the room several times.| © * OUNG LOOKIng | Maaely arawlog wont hh sehe the [eet ae ender ia ete eT Take eed an ea ce =O-Cl e }|Cranford’s Kiss, There was no|Ho recalled two men leaning o |men never brought their wivevith [Another is burdened with unhealthy [of the Newer forms of organic Iron |doubt of it; it was she. againat a bar, one big and the other MArKen Gray Hair them, Came the thunderbolt Sasaiy Wali come CLIRE Ghent aealicen, tor cumin te eh ee Giv | An oath burned his Ips. He|short and wiry; he heard the toast : MeepbONlae MIAKER TAR Hives seach critaia, on Tihinre the Teas es Instant Relief oy plese i ly and easily, A few applica A young man, much in wine, had|dvapepsia, Kkidnoy. or liver trouble;| take, does not t the teeth ana F All Fi | made as tho to step forward, but the fisherman’ 8 toast, ing back Ite dark, glossy|thrown his arms about her in the | some can't sleep at night; others are | 1s almost tmm y beneficial or oot Troubles [held the tmpulse tn check Pidgin Island!” matter how long it has beon| hall and Kissed her; her indigna- | *eePy, and tired all day; some fussy || NOTH—The manutacturers of Nuxated + had ahe 60 gh “Sour oa rh eaked or fade a ak : a d “irritable; s nny nd | tron h ea cantonal It acts through the pores and re |, How had she come to know that} “Square away sich ccc his laughter; the terrible |tioodless, but all lack physical pow. licen. f coaridenes ie moves the cause by restoring the {|idle fool? Rage came again, but] He tingled with the discovery ation and endurance, Th such cases tt |nounc t seb to tlasues to normal; the results aro ; onee more he smothered it He | that it was something far more im ‘Oh, come now! Don't be a ie worde Shan foolishness to take any ¢ able ins ehnat truly remarkable. Get a 260 pack glared at his wrists, black and blue |portant than reprisal; they Were not prude. Do you suppose we chaps |drugs, which only Whip Up your fag: [fackes iron and: ineseces canger £0 whe age from any druggist; he ts au- j | with bruises, It was no time for|after him directly then; only would come here but for a chance | «INK Vital powers for the moment, [200 per « ever In four weeks ne thorized t6 refund money to an | physical encounter, watching him to learn if he knew! . vou? You | maybe at the expense of your life|provided they have no serious organic y a p a | phy A good, old-fashioned ange toa and|to seo you and talk with you? You) maybe at fhe expense of your lite ‘ } « Sf one not fully patisfied, Romember |_ Cranford eapled the car as it}anything. Into what manner of coil|quipnur’ campos mean to tell me you do not know |telle you, If you are not strong and feones in ann ease te whet, etund your the name; get the genuine article. rolied down the incline into the|}had he innocently stumbled? — | no one will know this 18 a private gambling house? | Well you owe it to yourscif to make [does not at least double your wereeetee ay Compound Callouses Ingrown Nails ; road along the shore What were they bringing in a ath Ky. Ta not a dye. Ph to Hay © |"the Abominabla’ eeneadeatat? the following testi See how long [10 dave’ time, Tt ts dispensed in this elty me . ” ? “Mona Lisa” 1! Newark, } Jil nilo . ‘ou can work or how far you canlby ow Bartell Dru me one from the hotel,” he painting? “Mona Lisa"? Not they! 'ginte: ‘artel Drag Go Sho would always remember that! walk without becoming Ured, Next Switts Pharmacy ahd ail vher druggies, and he seems to think an awful lot © ! e, tA

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