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STAR—THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1916. PAGE 4. OF T Hy mallyout of ety, one your, 0840) ¢ months, 81.90; Be per month ap to months. Dy cnrrier, ety, 260 month, Fintered at Beattie, Wash., posteffics an second vines matter Member of the Sorippe Northwest Lengee of Newspapers STAR Published Daily by The Star Pabtiatiag Oo Phone Main 9400 _ COLYUM : EVERETT TRUE SAYS: ¥ © “The ract tha ery young © inks = he Wing goes a long way toward ox Ing ar ?° OUR HEART-BALM DEPART MENT © Dear E. D. K.—Three weeks ago il met a nice young man who sald/ Was a banker from Kalamazoo. | > DWe became fast friends. He asked #me to let him have 5 to pay bis Tear fare to New Y to ‘bee his Biriend, J. P. Morgan, as all of his “ was tied up in war stocks raw I haven't MD you think he loves n Answer—-Yes, dear heart, we ‘think he loves you—$3.75 worth. Dear E. D. K.—A young man who Syeays he is a moving picture actor Wbas asked mo to marry him. When PY asked him if he could support a eWife he replied that I could go to i the moving picture shows free. You think I am justified In ac ting him? Answer—Ask him if he serves with his free moving pic-| shows. Dear EF. PD. K.—! Inds and have a 22-inch ches fm love with a young lady who 220 and does heavy lifting hand dry. When I told hat I wo always be her pro she laughed most annoy: fy. Why did she do it? w—Gosh, Percival, if you weigh 115 MCCA HOM DOIXERDO ODOR OCCRE BE °C C38 COOKIE HK COTE CDTC COE S202) EGE IOC OTRO ROO COICO OOM UIOC OOD OO CE IOCUOCOUUCIOC XU0IKNe aE NORDEA tocemmeccex | COC eee Oa IS ERICK OK CHM “SON OF THE WIND” ” A A Week! EDITORIAL Missouri as Usual OVERNOR MAJOR of Missouri is being boomed presidential candidate on the democratic ticket Same old bunk the democrats have been handing Missouri ever since the civil war, Every four years, regularly, whispers of a vice president from Missouri float around about three weeks before convention time. But Mis- sourl has never had the pleasure of voting for a “favorite sdn” yet. Still, Missouri seems to like it and swallows the whole blooming outfit from the hook to the reel. : However, it ducked out of the democratic column a fore it went to Wilson, proving that it is getting shy. Some day soon, one or the other of the old parties will be called upon to “show” Missouri and then the political star of the empire will begin it ward wend. It is considerably overdue, at that. ‘as a potential vice couple of times be- west- So Are Rates ITH ocean rates the highest in history, and fr on ‘all the docks, the 9,000 Pacific coast long chosen the psychological moment for demanding more pay The president of the Waterfront Employers’ association demands of the stevedores for a raise are “unreasonable.” We beg to remind him that most of the shippers who pay the freight bills are equally ready to aver that the ocean freight rates now exacted are reasonable. Anyway, no demand should be classed off-hand as “unreasonable” where there exists such sound premises for the belief that they will be granted as in the case of the longshoremen. They ask for a more equable division of the “spoils of war’—literally speaking. Unheard of and cruel, perhaps, but hardly unreasonable! tht piled mountain high horemen have clearly that the says Next Week ‘The Duke of Oblivion’ By Jenn Reed Hoot Novel HE SEATTLE Perfectly Plain N! ARLY all the warring countries have promptly put a quietus on the ru- mor that President Wilson would consent to act as mediator by deelaring that his overtures, if made, would be rejected If there can be produced any more conclusive evidence that the attitude of the United States during the present conflict has been one of *real neu- trality, we do not know what form it would take. . It is equally convincing proof that this country can look for no assist- ance from Europe in any trouble it may run into as an aftermath of the war. We will have to fight our own battles, if any unhappily come our / while our erstwhile European friends stand aloof and ‘‘sick on the dogs of war. To fail to adequately prepare to meet post-war conditions, when those conditions are so clearly forecasted, would be the very acme of folly. Europe has translated the handwriting on the wall into terms of plainest English. Autonomy Nothing * INDON papers say “the allies are fighting for the autonomy of nations.” Of course, this is only war time guff. For a good many years, Britain and Russia have been enjoying, with profit, the knocking of autonomy out of Egypt, India, Africa, Poland and such, and the world will have to have solid proof that the kaiser has re- formed the present allies by pitching into them. Justice Brandeis INDICATION has been given a fine man and justice done him, in the confirmation of Louis Brandeis. The people have lost their lawyer. The supreme bench has gained a member whom it can out-vote by 6 or 8 mdjority, and we guess it will often have to. Copyright, 1916, by Bobbe-Merrtll Co. A Week! edge of the clearing and lifted [head high. He looked large, large, being slone to ad 6 down @ yf st a gait a little fantegl An undulating mow ent thru the whole body the trod air, The maneg aved with it, the tail drifted Ike 1 plume. Carron could see the quick ripple of museles under the) |eatin skin. That was the back that had never felt weight, the neck like a that had never |bent except at its own will | At the lip of the water he stoop. jed his head, stretched out hig 3 eck, shining while the mana lew in a vel| against it, put maz @ zie in the current and drank. (Continued in Our Next Issue) When You're Well | begar an wa KEEP WELL Another Article in The | | Starve Health Campaign Being Conducted With | evocation of American Medical Association SKIN The skin is one of the principal organs for throwing off waste which the body fe © constantly form ing, just as fire forms ashes the process 5 3 burning. 4 The and lungs SKIN all play |part in getting this waste out the eystem. In the case of the skin, there are millions of little pockets called the sweat glands, which this work to do, for at is nothing more than a watery extract of the waste products of the body. 5 Another of the very impo things which the skin does is a oe help regulate the body ture. This ts done by au! changes in the size of the vessels of the skin and by (Continued from Our Last Issue) (that coquetry of the moon, was|night, of which she had spoken. Spaces ot e! RESENTED with the practical furled and gone; the sky stood deep| Within Carron, too, tide stood at like a drum be- —" we're too kind to put ec me forward easily, keeping one hand) was drawn about the entrance, and] tiplied, growing louder. on the solid rock. At first he could |once they were both in, she pulled/earth sounded ADVT NATURE WONDERFUL! : v ural Histo: cr AE “Oh, ne known | and we have. dear, I hate to. that r long enough.” 4 | You can tell her that.” “No, you do ft” not have made that flippant remark + for any considers spected that the/ that sound, a swish and a soft thud. to Mrs. Rad tion, but he wicked girl knew It. “I have to see your father,” he/looked attentively. said with great dignity. that will just be fun! say?” ain't a eleyphunt! Sure Tt looks more Ifke « heltf- observation balloon tA é n. es arrow points to a giant flea to the relative size of the ele- and the flea. The elephant slow thinker. It takes him a} ig time to make w mind, but! @lephant has nothing on con-| { have great hopes of heaven.” They used frivolous, things to each other, their lips. member the time. have we been here? may be wanting me stair, m a time the elephant e @ corner on the !vory ¢ lost out on account of ition. Ivor: quantities ant doesn’t © ‘ory, but fvory nowadays 1 under derbies. e elephant used to be the big ction circuses until they Thi was still, it recurred between the sentences of his Rader, Blancho's been fulfilled telling the sch care) want to do t It ha " lar iwn't big enough to tak Bis wardrqye ORATORY A REAL GIFT announced himself as wan Clyde Rodkey, who ts becoming! marry his daughter famous as an after-dinner speaker, @t least three families had been able immediately the other to gt proposition, Blanche began to show signs of wishing to evade She will say we haven't The j | Short time is a distinct advantage “He will say that like all sinners, mirthfu! words, but their eyes sald deeper| and half) pushed the curtain wide. spoken sentences were forgotten on She was the first to re “Oh, how long | Rader was standing And mother/ She fled, her feet rushing on the | Never before, perhaps never afterward, did they have quite that| a cool palm and he wag drawn {nto wild music of joy in toes and heels. | the shadow He thought of it in his room| | that night, after the whole house! his mouth Like a refrain of delight | kissed her soberer | but slipp: discussion with | treated b prophecy had been fun| mured, and pulled him after her. “What do you followed. | at for?” he had de |“Where are we going” he whis | manded of the young man who had | pered ng to Carron, who, two weeks ago, would have put the himself a real favorite with | same question to any acquaintance, and clear above the pines. The moon's self was not high eno yet to be visible, since to be vis from where he stood she must reach nearly mid-heaven, but her radiance was upon @ hing. : He let the curtain fall, and tarned back The hour was acant 11 | o'clock, but the house was still, He Carron would | Was not tired, rather preternatural ly wideawake window screen A bat struck his There tt was again, His coat off, he turned and In @ moment, |upshooting from below, plop, the She looked at him quaintly, “Oh,| small, dark object came a third 1 can't imag: | time. ine father ander such circumstan- | happening. cos, What do you suppose he will oS of earth lightly against his pa’ He realized now what was Some one had thrown w pane. CHAPTER VIL The Middie of the Night He went quickly forward and Down tn the angle of black cast by the out- side stair. the figure of Blanche He slipped thru the window and down the outside statr. Reac © the foot of ft, Immedt ately his fingers were grasped by She laid a forbidding finger on when he would have He tried to clasp ber, ¥ an quicksilver, she re- re him. “Come—this way,” she mur. Half running, he Sh-b-h! the edge of the clear He had ado to keep her in sight Now the white back of a neck fsleaméd, now a hand shone, laid day, when he plowed their gardens| reasons as to why he was wiser|an instant against a tree trunk @nd refused to be paid for his|than all men. _Work.—Biue Rapids, Kan., Times. | shaken his head. see | going to say to your profession?” | _.REGULAR STEADY Guy | / * Triplets, two girls and | were born to Mr. and Mrs. Tom| had snapped his fingers. _ | Johnson, who live a short distance! _ » Morth last week. Mr. Johnson is a miner| {nto his room from without, m and works at Granby, coming home’ the pointed flames pale. He d every night.—Neosho, Mo, Times. a curtain aside. The fan of cl Ir EFFICIENCY 3 I A EDIGESTION In order to build up the system there must be, first of all, effi- ciency in digestion. From this source comes proper nourish- ment of the body, enriched fv etees vive tes C8T¥E ss reese Pee tee bloods liver and bowel regularity, a strengthening of all the forces that stand for better health. TRY HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS as soon as any stomach weakness develops. It is for Poor Appetite, Indigestion, Cramps & Constipation. The scholar had} but chiefly “But what is she | animated Here he had struck a point truly; a boy,| but Carron had ridden it down. He He blew out his candle, since al of Neosho, on Wednesday of| ready a brightness, which sifted he tracked her as an shadow gliding rapidly |among shadows that were still. House and clearing disappeared | behind them. A fretwork of white and black streamed upon their |faces. They passed the gate posts that rose upon thelr progress like phantoms | The fork of the road brought a momentary halt | “Won't ¢t gone?” he asked. “Well, we will have gone,” she |answered, and laughed. The incon | sequent, reckless note made him un jeasy, yet it excited him She began to walk rapidly up the |road, which stretched Itke a thin white wand between high walls of trees. The frolic of the woodland deity | seemed to have settled Into an tn tense purpose. It was carrying her forward at a pace that did not |slacken to the crest of the slope Here they dipped over into a dim ple of land. know we have trail was easy to follow. Fifteen minutes, and he heard @ sound his ear recognized. “There are horses!” he said, “Yes.” A few steps farther and he rec- ognized Blanche's mustang, droop- }ing like a stolo—but could that be |the chestnut—his mare? Farly tn the evening he had left her safe in stable. | “How did she get here?” | “Down the trail. It was quite Jeasy,” Blanche answered "y |brought them before dark,” | | He lifted her bodily into saddle| and stood holding her with both | hands, She leaned down, resting hers on| his shoulders, “What time 1s it?" she whispered. The white silly little face of the timekeeper with busy hands meas. uring Moments was to be their last | glimpse of the common world that night. They had left the common world behind on the other side of} the forest, and were riding out thru the raveling Bj naked and radiant plain | Moving in the thick atmosphere of light n felt St like a de licious nt more volatile than| \ fringe of trees into a water, more palpable than alr, trav. eling in gradual ways that floated toward him, It was the floodtide of On this side the rise of land the} flood, the tide of spirit and blood that sweeps will, and with {t, makes a triple etrength. Close beside him, swaying a Ht tle in the saddle, her Ips just part od, as if to t . of the wind, into it y from him herself to the} was losing his exact }sense of direction. He was un aware of how far the objects tn the landscape had retreated from hia conscious vision, unt!) her hand upon his arm startled him. He had halted before he looked. They had come up almost to the foot of the wall of hills, Imme diately In front of him a great mass of rock rose, Ther pproached it over the |lovel fn a gradnally slanted course, | for at no time had he seen ft In jfront of him. Blanche ratsed ber eyes. Fol lowing her gato his remained fixed. It was not fn this faaiiion he had expected to come to the yfeet of the Sphinx Again Blanche’s fingers touched his arm. “Keep well out until we © on the left of her. We can ide in there 5 Seo that rock on th nd, the large one with the ne We can tle the horses there.” It was this girl pointed out the 8 had surveyed | must when he had {nx from afar, it with unreo- ognizing eyes, and turning her back, passed it by tke a clandes- |tine friend In a crowd Now she moved around tte feet as if the ground ‘here were fa millar to her fore his aston ment could shape itself on his the out of saddle and nning across the interval of space, her shadow flying small be- neath her feet. Her feet were mbing in the slide of stones be- fore he had done fastening the} horses He was scarcely halfway up the ascent when he saw her reach and catch the first firm ontcropping Edging cautiously up over treach. | eroulooking terraces, of mixed | shale and earth, she rested her knee and both hands on a little ting with a spring drew her #0 paused, kneel ng; and, human, looked dark upon breast of the hSphinx For a moment shé remained bal anced perilously against what ap- peared the sheer face of the rock. | In another moment she had yan |ished. She seemed to have melted jinto the face of the cliff. He| shouted aloud tn horror, Immed} ately her head and shoulders reap. peared. She was waiting for him He drew himself up beside her, and found her sitting on a broad ke of rock perhaps five foet deep | They stood on the e of the wir |dow of the Sphinx, and the short locks on his forehead were stirred by a wind from nowhere. The rock closed in on three sides | of them. It was like dipping into| black velvet. The footing was firm | and only a ttle slanted. He went the Hard and Soft Coras Bunions jspring covered by th 4 “Knob Joint” see nothing. Blanche was present | !t only a wkirt presently he began to j a nguish the outline of her body, mov front of him, agains’ a faintly bright distance; suddenly his companion stopped. She was no longer in front of him, but be-|! side him. In front of him was a| sheet of deep blue hazed with white. Ho saw neither what was above his bead nor beneath his feet, bat) only what was tn front of him, too far to reach, yet not too far to be real, not painted with the colors of distance, but still overhung by the Glamour of {t—the poetic and ter rifle spectacle of the great brood of mountains. a Thelr multiplying summits were | all in plereing silver light. On thetr ledges and divides shadows like | wings were folded. The arch of the sky above him was immense, the canyon was the converse hollow. At the first his ears had taken fn only silence. But that dweit high among the peaks where his eyes had been fixed. Now he became aware of a sound rising from be neath. He looked down upon the} running backs of leaser hills each | outline painted by the moon. Over there he had looked into the great canyon, Be ot these the river wan dered ‘and complained; and into| these the Sphinx'’s pedestal de ascended. Again the woman stretched ont her hand and led him uanhesitat- ingly They went down over long shal low terraces. The moon had sunk | away until it stood above the Sphinx’s head. The great canyon | sank behind the company of hills. | In their black hollow a bright spot rippled like prismed glass. That) would be the river the moon had fraught leaping a rapid | Tt was strange to come down! upon soft ground again, to feel it} yield beneath his feet and see leaves above his head. He was) traveling again on broad earth | down an abrupt slope, his com-| panion soft-footing, a pace in ad vance and threading rapidly among the trees. He no forewarning of the broken white which glimmered yond the trunks of the It was a line of boulde tossed up in a low irregular wa Blanche pressed between the rocks or over them warily, looking back to point him a secure foot hold evidently known to her, tried, and to be depended on, Edging along cautiously, mov ing her feet carefully as a cat, she stopped and stooped, and gather. | ing her skirts, crept into an open- | ing in the rocks. It was one of those wave-worn caves sometimes to found in the walls of mount rivers, {n water which now ran some four feet below. As | he followed her tnto the black hole, sliding feet first, be could feel its sides rough and clean as| coral; but earth had been loosely | sprinkled over its surface, and dry moss, pulled up by the roots, | idenly be French Heel Cramp Cal-o-cide Gives Instant R r All It acts through th yes the cause t truly remarkable. age from any thorized one not fully satisti the name; get the to refund | (a®, : | Compound Calle druggist; elief Foot Troubles © pores and re Dy oring the the results are Get a he ts ou money to ony L led, Romemie | genuine art | Ingrown Nails || as an echo and the flutter of opening, leaving room enough for | stones, the ringing was clear and thelr eyes to look out. pont jeve stretched upon it out 0 vibrating by its Like a gong, It assailed the senses in waves, at first beating {n upon them from without. Then, as Car- ron above it, a light some distance made all the vibra tion ceans blow struck in the secretion of sweat. When ft is hot outside, the up in a heap, hiding half the|neath the tread. Again, among sharp. To those proud feet silence cave was al-| was a thing to strike echoes from that as they lay| The sound of the approach set they could look | the Hstener’s heart to its measure the opposite bank, or down rhythmiq wild, irregular, a row he river. |lade of liberty beaten oyt upon the ir, sick for vibrations, was|earth. Carron was shaking like a own emptiness.|man with a chill. But the girl lay The floor of the larger amount of blood thru skin to be cooled off, while” is discharged freely and cools body by it» evaporation. so ner parts of the body, while ed as pale, and her eyes were freely as in summer. large with expectation of delight. stretched his ears to hear faint nolee at| the last fringe of pines. A shadow |winter. If too much heary ran out from the trees and rested, ing is worn, it makes the body quivering, on the bright ground,| warm and weakens the Mt rang first ot ® single a challenge ong the mountains Now it mul- forelock and pricked ears. kin with the result that a pe The horse paused at the upp feels dul! and sh py. SIS Yj, % Wf f S| All out-doors invites your KODAK Kodaks $6.00 to $77.00. Brownies $1.00 to $12.00, At your Dealers, EASTMAN KODAK CO., ROCHESTER, N. Y. PREPARE FOR THE PARADE Special No, 00 Premo Roll Film Camera and 3 Rolls of Film, only.. . sence -» OD frank 8 witsoN ARCHWAY BOOKSTORE ~ 2? s blood vessels expand and carry In winter the blood vessels eon tract and keep the blood in the as still as moonlight, tho she look- sweat glands cease to discharge For that reason the question A rapid trot sounded just within |proper clothing {s importast lulijand the moon shone on a biack of temperature regulation in @ Bs,