The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 12, 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)

The N. G. Scandal O NLY a little holiday jaunt of the National Guard to the border; a sum- mer excursion, in tact, and the country reeks with scandal just as it did during the mobilization period of the Spanish-American war. This time it's not embalmed beef and pasteboard shoe soles, but shortage of horses COL UM and wagons, of uniforms and equipment, of guns, of food, even. Six hun- A BUCY MAID ; dred Pennsylvania militiamen en route to the border reached Kansas City dima ideieves A starving, having had no food for 24 hours nor money to buy it. Kansas City was the ops | supplied them. ‘ iwaye bent tne ore of conn te-| Great spectacle, isn’t it? Self-respecting citizen soldiers the recipient —" I of charity; Uncle Sam in the role of beggar! gM Ir THE) Besides, there’s a little item of $1,352,761 worth of government stuff “These shoes are too narrow and supplied the guard missing; disappeared in three years. Some graft; still meee complained the stout more incompetence. If this country must depend upon its state militia, then that militia must be brought and kept up to standard. There’s no two ways about that. ay, The personnel of the National Guard fs all right, the fault lies in the system teats feet’ —-Ledics Home| of office ering the guard. In serious times like this it is folly to call a pt by eee | any other name, Let's be square with ourselves. RIGHT IN LINE | The truth is that the officers of the National Guard are, in 90 cases out Sea? panvers have jreghecntre of 100, grossly incompetent, and principally because of lack of any military train'ng. The National Guard should be officered by regularly appointed com- manders, examined by a military board and paid for their whole time and ES services. They should be held responsible for government property and for ery SNAPS 4 the training and equipment of their commands. The National Guard is a costly and valuable part of the machinery of war COME WALKIN’ IN. AN You of the United States. i A You wouldn’t leave the maintenance and operation of an electric power ee SY D0 NOU ONE plant, for instance, to politicians, clerks and lawyers, etc., no matter what ISay “YES HE Goes fine fellows they might be personally. You would hire electricians for the ay Near every job. Uncle Sam wants trained officers and he sure wants them badly. * explained the salesman, know they are wearing nar) pointed shoes this season.” | it may be,” said the stout one | paper states that they spent | ‘afternoon swatting flies.” Beauty, like chiffon, is good to look Union labor is building a monument at, but it is the good disposition and to Augustus Pollack, stogie manufac- common sense that wear like “all wool turer at Wheeling, Why not a smoke and a yard wide.” consumer for his stogies? Mis aad cet OE IER XENON AONE AA AH hah Week PERCY L YeREBNER had just been vaccinated , doctor,” she asked, “will show?” madam,” answered the og mene upon you.”—' (Continued from Our Last issue) ) my island and we very happy until Africa, and Free Camp, and Bass: OON was near, when I heard|™ seu Williams come to destroy | Bassa and Old Chentere and Jobn- ‘A grating under the platform. our forest and make a= Foc } y. The music was it ball at La Che niere, but now Sim, he fixed it He pat two nails in It. Dear Doo tor, the baron is not so growly at all you Yankees as formerly. He > 4 smoKe Then above it arose Laure’s “ head. As she climbed up she mademoiselle, that hyp ed ma aid?” jodded tart! . at aight of ‘FULLY DISCOUNTED nodded tartiy. Then. at sight of] “on, he sit and stare at me—and Husdand—Dar! ling, Thavea) ~ oD ' talk frogs with Papa Prosper! to make. My salary 18} core tc se ne. tt Siwaay. os “Mademotselie.” I said severely, tent less than I told you be-| nave not forgotten.” }looking at that long slow smile of ‘ed! , “| . “five years in the world-- T couldn't forget you. I was in-) 1. convent—were quite enough or you. You know too much now | The safest thing when about you ts to talk frogs. Mr. Williams saw “0; broke at the says let ve a pawty, and serve sherbet anisette and gumbo file.” “Very weil,” I answered, “we so to your pawty.” 1 went down to the dredge at that—he won't pay any attention to/ dusk, when the lIean-faced and) his canal built. | weary crew was coming off. Ciel! e’ll chuck you and| came down from the crane where Papa Prosper’s. | BAD BOTH WAYS She felt roal a mother was reproving eve’ try that. A Yankee fel-lo! The) for not being more tidy about! deep swamp, m’sleu"—she looked |)‘ Picidy thinking to soothe biel litte chenlere. on this. side Tale| PAPS Prosper off this island, And|/he had dosgedly mastered the esd: | Bonne they call Joha-the Fool.” | tbe baron—" shovel thru the weeks. I got a cur. Cha: don't you wish you| “Excellently named,” 1 murmured,| “Ab, the baron! He say, with Bis /jous new impression of him, his ‘as bald as I? Then you! and sho disregarded me | word, he will protect me’ easy slouch and ease and assertion. in’t have any hair to comb.” | “Don't you eve’ go no farther than| _ “Williams will pull bis castle| Silently they had watched him, ‘m. “Don't you A down under him.” | Virgil and the big engineer, for the Cha heaved a long sigh of | Jottae sion eg! ‘Come to nee I “Ab. then, M’sleu Clell will pro- break Shes never, sete. But they “4 1 ject me pig Shews ote gee % 1 wouldn t,” he sald. “There a coe feed the daron as he) UP...” 1 retorted grimly, “works| Virgil was harassed by other| be that much more face to/ ‘ee | for Williams—and, anyhow, you things as well. The men he had/| Ladies’ Home Journal. The end of the following week 1/ n't work him!” |hoped for from the city for his| NOT MUCH made the second of the reports to! “Ah, then—dear Doctor, you will| night ehift had not come. He Nites iano, | don’t f hat| Mary which I had promised. The | Protect me You will help me find | brought down black men for his} Is jon't feel that week had not made me more enam- | ™Y fortune?" fire room and the dynamite crew— | mi $e touch the hem of your | Week Or Jonn-the Fool | “Exactly! Where fs tt?” jand saw them desert, one after) * “I don't know. Messieur le Baron | another. “Well, you wouldn't have| 1 wrote her: lia. peach distathed. Ho hab: bad| “Jone fire"-he was wurmaring ‘Btoop much to do It."—Puck. That is the name of the place, ap- y x 10, el b .*e parentiy, ‘Althe there ts ho longer | negroes dig in Bayou Jobn-the-Fool | to mo, “we'll be thru the Iaat of the any piace, I am roosting between |—ah, but wher dead timbeh—thru to salt water. | Neyeerige three! trea aa lot of poles thrust “Hal” 1 shouted. “That's !t I'm going to win, Doctor Dick. | ‘8 got a headache, into the water on which is the castle) where? }nee it now—but last week! Well of o ; Vedrinnes. | 1 oe ther’s feeling ill, Eon ask me of Ciel. My deat, the| Toro was a scraping at the plat-|1 feel Itke celebratin’.” I Og eg 4 FS a i sO a er’s got e 4 an re oem e. wheezy inquiry from Messieur le| “Saturday night You're all tn. c it ot, 3 New York World.| atch each other tf that. Clell has| Baron. Then her soft answer. | vited never whimpered when he worked| “Messieur le Baron, I have nes: | Allesjandro came to the dredge RARRRERLS RARENRRADRRRR KKK aR STAR—WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1916. PAGE 4. Some Good Votes Going to Waste ? ONGRESSMEN who supported the Hay army bill because of the Na- tional Guard vote are beginning to believe they stepped on their own feet, so to speak. The bill gave promise of being politically fruitful. It looked like a rosy- tinted vote-getter. Congressmen had reason to believe votes for the Hay army bill meant votes for them in November. The bill provided a means to crack open the pork barrel to the tune of over $50,000,000 a year for equipment and PAY FOR OFFICERS AND MEN of the militia. Would the militiamen be grateful? Would the 130,000 National Guards- men give their votes to the congressmen who voted them from $45 to $500 a year? Yes, they probably would! So the national army plan was tossed into the discard and the Hay army bill, so time-serving and political, was placed on the statute books. Now these congressmen are wondering if they did not leap before look- ing. The National Guard of the nation, if administration plans do not go awry, will be down on the Mexican border until after the November elec- tions. The guardsmen won’t be able to go home to vote for the congress- men who voted for them. So, the supporters of the “federalization” bill are asking: ‘‘What good are 130,000 votes if they are to be wasted on the desert air?” But Why? aay PHIs paper has told the story of the Lewis machine gun, a United States invention. Briefly, the government ordnance board turned it down, be- fere the European war; after that war had shown the gun’s superiority, the United States ordnance board again rejected it; and now, in trouble with Mexico, Uncle Sam commandeers the Lewis guns turned out by their factories. This story was interesting and important, but what’s more important the Why? of that board’s action. Was the board’s members interested in ancther machine gun? Didn't the board know a good machine gun when shown one? Either that board was prejudiced a‘ier a rascally fashion, or. it was incompetent. And either reason justifies a clean sweeping of that board. A new secretary of war should use a new broom. That board of ordnance needs some housework familiarly known as “a thoro cleaning up.” ‘ MORNE KOTOR 0000 =n sick to have @ grouch around the Redts, Merrill Co Child at the end of the canal to She led the procession that escorted | the forest wall. take us around the lake to Isle | us Yankee fel-los urely this time | ty jean-hippad market hunters from ot year; and there was Mr. Wil | the deep swamp who beached their Hams’ launch, if not so. Ah, this | pirogues and came up in thelg very lime surely, messlour, every one /tight trousers and well-washed |and spoke quietl would lay aside these bickerings \denims. Softly they greeted us, and ae and come to the ball, What was ali; brighteyed they peered within the this squabble in the courte—cer | ball, To each up rose Papa Prosper | tainly Papa Prosper did hoy care, and the baron, one on either side! and as for the baron—well, Alle@-|o¢ the door, and welcomed them And I see no confidence. ‘Tell the old tom-cat,” murmured Virgil, “that the mob will be there would be outdone; if Messieur le Baron bowed twice, Papa bowed thrice, and being as lean as the 7 Mangy.and the new man can hold | sorty baron was fat, he could bow | vsaee ate” lown the dredge Saturday night. | just twice as far in half the time. ; 4 Some one's got to stay wonderingly at him. The night of the bail we reachea| Wondrous was their moonlight] “You knew, I reckon, that there |®eeés sympathy at home, not com- Isle Bonne late, There had been | 49d the south wind from their sea! | are two men sleepin’ on it, and four | Paint and tears motor andy! watehed all that gentle youth | tons of dynamite and black powder some trouble with ¢ when the launch at length 4 out Within until the dingy hall fell away of Virgil's canal into the tidal lakes, |! long vistas overarched by dreams the moon was high j--and then I was aware that my There came the scraping of a|¢Yes Were upon Clell and Lauyfe.| boat turned. The Texan was mo violin somewhere from the shadows | They were swinging slowly in the/ing past me, when Laure came. in the ditch near ‘em? Did you?” beyond Isle Bonne’s shell white|*0ft light; with his all fair oase,| “M'sieu, you did not think—you |My father Is not childish, but he shores; then a dim light on Papa| ooking down at her upturned face, | cannot think-—" Prospér’s gallerie, and down the|/@nd she answering him with that) “I know,” he answered. “They |talks against my husband. Some | plank wharf tha guests streamed |#!r of distinction, of whimsicai ap-| did it—the baron’s natives, But |thing must be done about it. Shall, to meet us. On the beach many | PCa! and caressing which she could | you—did you know?" pirogues were drawn, in the offing | ¥8* She did not answer. The Texan |ther, who wouldn't realize it was a rode half a dozen luggers, their sails| Virgil was watching them also, 1| looked resolutely at her. “Did you? sacrifice? imp; and as many tu little gas|saw the dumb wistfulness of the | Say no—and I'll believe you.” boats were grouped about the/man who had given his youth to She could not. She fled past hi wharf-head |fighting years and had, along the| Suddenly to the end of the whart;| WORRIED DAUGHTER AND I did not know the lonely che-|way, forgotten something that | she was reaching her hands to Clell WIFE. nieres held so many folk. But from| might have made them fairer. He|in the launch, when Virgil brushed} A.—Your first duty 1s to you past her Into it. He did not|5usband. Do not think of maki all the lakes and shrimp camps and | did not dance; he declined both the | grim swamp bayous they had come to) baron’s studied importunities and | look at her again. Laure's y. Our wood saint was | Laure’s jesting glances “Redfield, Virgil's levers, with his hands 4r1P-| got another one away from Mes. |the next day with many amiable brite. He was expecting the boy to, sieur Wililame’ dredge company. winnie aie break, and Clell has met every de- Messieur le Baron curgied; 'Su-| mand on him. Increases str The only time Ciel! t# himeett 19|Perb, mademolselle! And I have a te. gner-| when he comes over bi grees pias we ef invite them all t rsts verett e jat a more decided and silent re BP china Sort out and around the |that the pe ort will regard OU Bee . to Papa Prosper’s for a ba’ u bu of E I ru | quest from the old man, she slipped | S!¢aming shell point of Isle Bonne | What your father says as the va- r )() Seat ts ton. 6 -| “A pawty! Then I can wear my cross to Virgil. She tapped his | to the lake garies of an old man. ests him—hes like the old Clell of} gown again. Messieur Williams | |gleeve, with a smile, He turned, ; The swampers on Prosper's gal. five yea he's with us. | shall nee tled at the fl vite erie wore listening curiously. In| down among the cypress spik hi Y WEL, WELL, WELL, EVERETT, WS WORE startled at the manifest invitation. | n P pikes she — JRFEIT ie min large| cirates and priv “| was not thinking of the mud | west GOING To Sit Down To GAT. “Ah, if you won't dance with me,|t2e splotch of light ar the door | Shot the pirogue on. Bete tn thie paner [then it shows plain enough. 1 can't/arubber—only to discomfort bim! WHAT IN THE WIRS WORLD : come try. the sherbet anisette.” | stood the baron I watched the play of her lithe understand Virgil saying once he i 3 on “Ah, my fi * “tt te | a your doctor or Grugeist aboutit.|joved her. I told Cleli of tt, and the CHAPTER IV. | 1 BRINGS r. koe ot She laughed as ff daring him t UM aot tire fish nso he said, “it is \ ona Bh swept the needle of brug Co. way he smiled wax not good. The 1 way Vv bend. Won't xou, now, m‘seu?/ > e—compose your- od onward on the unfathomable two of them seem to run to a clash A Baill and a Betrayal | Come—for tonight, a truce. Come|*¢!ves. The gentlemen have gone, | trail. everywhere. It is a sad me Vir-| I had made my first venture into ‘on the other gallerie, where the| DUt the night is young.” “You know the way, mademot- «ils men have not been paid forline deep swamp. Laure took me weeks, and only loyalty to him holds | the p , * about given up tne|in her green canoe, The deep aid from the company to fin-| swamp of Isle Bonne was appalling; | tat hie Giteh, and if anything bap-| Taw Laure amiling at the blank: Caron chaskise Wer Yoece patusel ness of my look when I had drunk | and smiles, 1 ho believe he Je try-|{t all in | im Virgil's) “Are you coming, m'sieu,” she| ob—that's why # ith “ 4 | im #0 outral coquete with! said airily, “to my pawty? Oh, Mary, T wish this abominable| “Party?” I cried incredalously, thing had never hap pene oe, tare on earth?” Still loves you. She pointed a dripping blade Into the sunless depths, “At Papa Our mail goes out by means of a ae pirogue runner, usually to catch the | Prosper They all coming—from from Barataria mall boat which ru down to the south coast overy week, | A A DAGGER: _ erder to introduce our new| *° setting a letter from Isle Bonne | one) plate, which is the|to New York is less certain in time IN THE BACK ané strongest plate. known, | than getting one to St. Petersburg. | mot cover the roof of the| tt Mary wrote me at once. ‘ ics f the Comus ball imported by that | never thought of that, did you! If| th; you can bite corn off the| Very brief it was: she 'gety up in the morning to erate | | Now Orleans annt—with $n 006 4n3 | (207 Ore et ucned anderan (i WILLING SORMN ANDRE Guaranteed 15 years. " ” the day's work. “Oh! how my back merry nonchalance in that rough | a cry she turned and ran | : 7 10 hint fOr Of, An apmearing person lacher™ “GOLD MEDAL, Haarlem Ol NEVER MIND ABOUT YOUR FOCKS—— [B) room in nn endeavor to make the |from me. And T followed. hating || GLABLE MEN; TEN GFOWN 2... sereeeeece $8.00 [loth Tou neve speaker ct har eiry [capaulan taken today eases the | A WeY CAN GAT WITHOUT Nout 4 other girls fool at ense. her as nearly as I had hated any WAGES EIGHTEEN DOL. Get of teeth (whalebone) $4.00 | frini ics wrod. Ofna ae uel day ends the backache for all time RIGHT NOW You AR® GOING. BACK Within the wide hall the droning| one. My boy was there flying into LARS PER : set of teeth 5.00 | pect him te write to monthe preach | What's the use of suf HOMG AND GET THE CAT THAT YoU CORT waltzes went on; but out here in| that fire-filled ditch with death at UP; Vee Gok t [between us was too clear and Sinpas- |} ; BEHIND TO STARVE WHILS YOU AND biota the cool dark I was all but asleep | the farther end 3 MUST BE NON- work, per tooth, gold $3 able, wasn't it, dear Dick? Only te} FAMILY ENJOY 4 VACATION I! ay with the peace of Laure’s isle; one| I found tho girl throwing off tho UNION MEN; WILL RE. WWhite crowns .........--.. 83.00)" Fhi cor Vitel might Bomehow '¢ very day and he pe tly jj could just make out that she was| line from her cypress canoe Canoes END OF hat dreadful place. \pare pain But he sure to get up leaning to Virgil from the gallerie,| | “I shall go—I can be there before ORK. Ap. Gold fillings .. down there | Somehow, life and work seem mean inglesa of late—-I keep thinking of the three of you and your madness. Dear Dick, how good It was of you MEDA Since 1696 ¢ 1 han bee Holland, t Remed for 18 zeare. | 10,0 MAME: 15° speeat chant A morn-| P. 4-—Tell me more about this %. "Pec! yp eorepes, ha Mexia: | isiaad’ cick Preparation and aaic tad eet teott ane Wife of Holland would almont | ea I intended to write back at once; |s00n , be without [Call ana tee Sametes of Ons Plate) indeed, I was at it when mademot- (fd, ,!iout her, the Test ef Time. selle herself came out of the watery | MEDAL Haarlem Ot ¢ isle in her green canoe. @ one reason why yo 11 find | Most of our present patronage tn | omen and ehildren | Pecommended by cur eacly custorne| She came up, and, finding noone| {he women 208 See ot Mollead | 4 ‘whose work 1s still giving good | except myself, fat opposite in the) Goll MiDAT, are the pure, orig Hote one work When naming | dining hall and looked at my writ-|!nal Hanriem Ol! Capsules imported be sure you are tn the |P& irtfolio, Bring this ad with you. 1 "" " I said suddeniy, where | Jid you get your education?” Cut - Rate | An, m’sicu, 1 have little educa . tion I went five to convent Dentists in N'Awlyins. Th apa Prosper 207 UNIVERSITY sr. he ‘say: ‘Come home to Isle Bonne, |°'j"" Mie Imibatle @ppeaite b reser-Patcreon Cay mademoiselle.” So | come back to’ ow: Drug Co. — _ | the girl, a shrug that indicated Wil-|from the machine? There's ams, And she seemed to hesitate, | CMAnce—just/one chance.” [sherbet is. And there's a little | folly to sue us. It has been ours Spain.” dredge burns, Williams loses h hesitant now at her ardent intent | knew that!” wildered by the closeness of her, quaintly of an exquisite and van-| “They will go in—there are pertness of today. For she could |dredge—did you think William show all of these at times. I was | Would abandon it?” evening’s transformation. She wore | dare approach! cypress jungle. A pink blogm was|__! stepped into the ticklish thin, NATIONA watched this, some one came along the gallerie and leaned to me. It | was Clell, and he motioned to the f “The marsh {s burning. Big Jim |says it must be beyond the canal, and the wind is right to bring it tn. | Where's Williams?” | “There.” 1 motioned to them. | But Cle)! did not go on | “Tell him,” Clell muttered, “the dynamite boat is in the main diteh not thirty yards from the dred and in the fireline as that wind Olive Oil, Macaroni, Groceries, NATIONA olds | Virgil must have heard him. He | was on his feet and by us, staring By mall, out of city, one your, 81.50; @ THE SEATTLE STAR 232252 RTE SOT g or mm ARRARERAAAR WRRRRAEREE | A—You have strange ideas of @ | Festicuiations to extend a formal ' indeed, from her slipper toes to the ,about the end of the gallerie where | stead of deserting him, you should invitation. He would have the Good | wild blackberry bloom in her hair./ now the south was a glow beyond |uo Sour utmost to help and cheer | “Mangy and Al are as) dens—the great big business bur There would) Other guests were arriving, main-| quarter-boat, too.” ey is dens—not the little imaginary saw Laure beyond the |O2eS You are troubling ve and came t me | adout. topped full FB, wn wee When you know that your hi “You asked me here tonight, you showed me the ‘irst rea! kindness in all the years I have been here. I see why you had 5 je m 4 I Jandro waved his hand with wuperb| with thelr grandest airs, Neither | mien permet din as £2 {Re ling day? ‘Tell him if he loses all” woods and the prairfe beyond—the prairie dry as tinder, and my was looking The motor on the launch broke |With me. He is good to me, but out to whirring as Big Jim got the |9°es not © you goin’ in with | Speak to your father about what he all gaiety in a white gown—white,| Presently 1 saw the baron signal|™¢—to drag that dynamite away |!8 doing. He probably does not | watching across her fan; and then,| | Yes,” Clefl retorted, “I'm going.” |mify his talk. You must realize Laure and myself were left on | selle?” seat. We will not talk of Isbe| the end of the wharf. “See here,”| She laughed hardly, “Isle Bonne — Bonne—only nom de Dieu! What! demanded. “That old devil knew! |—my island? There is no leaf in | 1 wondered why this affair was got {ts big woods is not my little | since the days of the viceroys of | UP—and we were asked, If that! friend!” E He went along with her a trifie| contract—and he’s done for. You |———— to please him. 1 knew he was be.| She clasped her hands. “why | did you let them go! They can't ter ales, at once barbaric and | set in—the canal is filled with fire.” ished breeding. touched with the | fireman and a cook there. And the more astonished as I noted her| “The powder boat—they will not her gown—the simple rich gown of} “They will. And look here—you My eyes wandered sleepily to the| them!” she erled, “thru the swamp left where was the impenetrable |—-Will you go with me, messteur?” | against or behind it. And While 1| With @ draw of her paddle swiftl | Always has big money saving specials, Butter, Eggs, Whipped Cream Chocolates, 50¢ Ib. 405 PIKE ST,, NEAR FOURTH $1.00; he por month wp te @ By carrier, city, the @ month. Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS Q—Do you really think it pow sible that the sun 18 a ball of fire, as some people suppor And if it is, what keeps the fire going? ELSA. A.—Sclentists discovered only recently to what the sun owes its heat and light. The sun i» shrinks ing all of the time. Its particl are drawing closer together, and as they hit each other, heat ang light are produced, just as when @ boy strikes two stones together, Once the matter which makes up the #un etretched gut to the edge of the solar system, but that pow er which makes every particle of matter attract every other particle produced the contraction which made the planets, This process is till going on in the sun, and while it laste the sun will burn, | Q—!t have been going with @ young man for over two ye: We were engaged, but he got Into a quarre! and broke the engagement. We have made up again now. § it seems he doesn’t want me to speak to any other boys. | gave up many friends before we became en- once in a while, What shall | do? Do you think it worth while to quarrel all of the time? GERTIE. A.—Quarrels are a poor prepare | tion for marriage. If you two have — not the same ideas about what is right under the circumstance each of you should modify his o her views until you do agree. If you are not willing to do this, you ‘should not think of marriage, for your after life will be filled with | quarrels and bitterness, (| Q—My husband has lost lots of © money lately and is greaty die |couraged over business. He is as (cross as a bear around home and | doesn't sleep at night. 1 can’t stand it any longer. It makes me | house and to be kept from regular Don't you think he ought te AGGRAVATED WIFE. wife's duty at a time like this. In- him. His burdens are your bur band's mood is the result of trou ble and anxiety, why don’t you ig- nore it completely and talk to him in such an encouraging way that be will sleep at night and be ready to meet the problems of the com- he has, you are ready to stand by him and begin all over again if necessary. A man who fs struggling against any kind of adverse circumstances Q—My father has come to five like my husband. v- goes about the neighborhood and © ! sacrifice my husband for my fa-_ Or shall | leave a tone ly old man to finish his life with. | m |Out his only child? a sacrifice of or for either of them. a|realize what he says. Show him how unjust it fs. Then do not mag {s (Continued in Our Next Issue) WAR'S WOMEN A CRY a ns Cooks Wanted PLY ROOM 212 PACIFIC BLOCK, SAN FRANCIS. CO, AT ONCE, | L MARKET Delicatessen and Fancy L MARKET

Other pages from this issue: