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STAR—FRIDAY, AUG. 4, 1916, PAGE Pstesiiitisesssats sasssessssessssssses | || A Novel “Prudence of the 66 99 Kate Trimble Sharber : ek ” WwW Parsonage en 914, » Wee Mesnen oF 6 or sonirrs _ NORTHWEST LmAGuR or NKW PAPERS | A eek ETHEL HUESTON The Bobbe:- Merrill (o 9 Telegraph Nowe Service || BTN ii iii ete eoeg beetes eettssssttsotisrettes oosoesbbees , °) , ee Saturday morn-{ which | carried in nm love for ‘¥ (Continued from Our Last issue) | ble Sept ey co YUM 7 PTER this it took ny new 88 eived my first damper at the | again ‘ “ ‘ L ; A quaintance about half a a oe At this I turned away sadly anc ute to propose that I go and tleket window sudbe she Way eka toa a : GREETINGS, HAS ANYONE |meet her father and mother Hannerle the agent repeated Vutine ty abes \ train had | “DISCOVERED” ANOTHER LE We'll find them in the library,” Bannerl yt 3 oS hs - bootee alatterlog taeda 11 toe TER WRITTEN BY GEORGIE | she vel d wo di ertainly, Bannerley nme | atock-atill now ewed the loco-| LEE? : True to the ‘People | q rhe Bown gg el Ww ed, “It's not so very difficult to Mockenull t 1 view S Ted rae he South! How nice! We love | aa wotive iistl enough, but my) 4 wre Georgia a jury re IS votes in congress are the true index of Sen. Poindex-| Americans!” they both exclaimed, a to yaw: abo ed eA interest was aroused axl came upon! 1 yicre: ve inquire {to = chee M b fe be - ae e platform ne appearance of | C@RUyY met te ter’s value to this state. ' ane oaveiind 1 al alee joo—not in a general way,|the platform‘by the appearsn fhe of nulelde. After sitting thru the 4 0} » one FY yg ie me (a Ker in dinentangng | | iaence the men retired, and, His votes have been consistent—and always true to the} The daughter, whom they ad-| oe i ao ey po gr from one of the compartments a pr wr asiwerat eturned with § ” » the ‘ains has been as scarce and : ee “latter dellb i interests of the people. He took the position after his elec-| dressed as “Hilda,” made the an) better ae ae youngsters teeth ai; sult-case and leather hat-box, The| toe atowing verdict ; Jt ‘nouncement promptly | look of the traveling paraphernalia The jury are all of one mind— § me tion, as well as during campaigns, that his votes in congress} Indeed?” sald the mother, “In-| shedding time eer pribsign dd opin: he jury @ @ Should be governed by the merits of the questions rather! deed } He's just an old grovel! 1 told Soule tt bein te an keen ee arily insane.” than by mere partisan consideration, He has therefore sup-| "My word!" said the father, “My| | rl noone Cased leaded 1 mused NORFOLK, Va., Aug. 4.—-Nothing ported Wilson measures when they were worthy as well as) *ord | Then 1 forget all about bis) The servant deposited the canes! pa, been ween here so far of ti Eenublic ’ , Then he turned to his daughter 1 warnings! $ the train 00 the platform, and J looked at the | supmarine freighter, Deutschland, publican measures My dear, the American women moms Wareines, h ae " y beautiful smoothness of the leather HUMPHREY DUCKPON He voted against the Payne-Aldrich tariff of 1909, and the | are so capable!” he said Fombled across © thoussnd street | "Mor course they're American!” Il what te 4--it hasn't showed Uh ¢ rn 0 o ne fash, At h | mation approved the course taken by Poindexter and other] “And you do not mind beng Leogp Scena Mee ie re civilized cided, fi ou must know that! pore either i , | ge je . ai © e insurgent republicans who attempted to save the republican mae yl A lh at world, and—it was summer! early 6 Englishman's Jugeage 2 ae is sateen y fi e s ’ e ns c beg “ a i go 1 7) would compare unfavorably with| pyp EXPPRIENCE N- member that the republican platform of declared for a} jut We must eee to it that you're pee inch her when she comes up to the etty | pHInc 3 ed to esthetically, I have lived to learn . NG Tevision of the tariff downward and the Payne-Aldrith bill was| Not too lonely,” she hastened to as jestnetionliy rm eet for @ week's mortification to her re i ure me. “Where have they put that this is common to Amerteans | fr. & vai banieaain evrard. lyou tn the dinin ? |who have been brought up to un-| nephews . ’ n the dining-room, my dear 2 I crossed the platform, but at the oe aie © Pat : Tt was this tariff betrayal by the republicans that was)” 1 mentioned my table's location {derstand tk t Kent is the garden-| °c of the little station I was ar Gaaie tomas p cer cedeey ae Feis the first cause of the split in the republican party and sent} “Oh, but we'll get the steward to spot of England rested by a eound. Inside the dingy ata % Taft. The prop i ha y t once!” they chorused | o my journey thru an elongated cottage i f ; M4 'd bes 5 « | ‘yoga cratic tariff was passed. Sen, Poindexter voted against va- |tho I'll see the ‘steward myself,” }mind away from the croakings of| (Concluded in Our Next Issue) | taking lors and is a —— Tious items in the Underwood tariff law. He voted for aj th the ticket seller at Paddington location —The Taft (Cal.) way s s ‘00% ‘ otec a] the father said = taal at havieeals Driller. ) tariff on lumber, shingles and agricultural products | From his pocketbook he produced | op tieiy Poster ebat eat P nei dlgbre. ;: ae On the final vote, he voted for the Underwood bill be-|¢, cand, reroling, hey abl, mt Touma remy a's tet Sos" |] Whem You're Well |] rn. -earetocs Gane” rtoaa : i F a ne rage ee 100 Seattie homes, he says. An: p Gatise it was not only a tariff bill, but was also an income tax! 5 mo side station. . Taw and provided for an increased duty of 10 per cent ad “ “Me Herbert Montgomery, Ban | “Just as sorry as you are, miss renee gs ac nae of shoes in rley Hall, Bannerley, | Lance but this is your nearest hope for a all of 'em— ? H¥alorem upon all products imported into the United States in| nerle a te * . . he ae . shire,” was the way it read |tratn to Bannerley!” the guard said S other than American sltips “Lancashire?” | asked, looking up by way of an appropriate farewell ° WHISKERS Sen. Poindexter, moreover, because he is not a slave tO} so quickly that Hilda mistook my xo off | got Another Article. in thet = — & i f f rs | 2 o . ple ign | party fetish, was one of the first to urge a nonpartisan tariff|emotion for dismay The only moving bodies visibl | Star's Health Campalg | “Yea, we live in Lancashire,| }were a paper sack being blown | Being Conducted With Co Eeemmission to take the tariff out of politics | but | gently down the track, a blue fly'}f | eperation of American | “But we're going on to London | | buzzing around a blackened banana Medical Association ‘he Star Has Another 2 Montgomery assured peeling and a rook cawing over The Star Has Anot Baby syd eas iy head, I looked up at the rook and J age . | me. GAIN The Star has a baby to give away to a couple! «we ses to it that you're put! who will give it a good home. | ave ” . bg ogy Hie im . , | Cross,” Mr. ert 3} omer » The Star cheerfully welcomes the opportunity to serve) finished ‘up. P the baby and the fortunate ones whose heart hunger for a| 1 looked up again, this time in sheer bewilderment P Child's affection and love may thus be satisfied Laveeneol’s ta Lancashire.” Hien And such a heart hunger it is! There is nothing so sad ¢* inne a Sedat SETA TO i ‘ we afraid € ‘ou Jese! you * "@$ to witness the pathos and to hear the pleadings of the/ soon as we docked.” ‘men and women, bereft of children, who want them. There) 1 laughed in some embarrassment 4 “I'm sure I never before heard nothing so wonderful as to play the Stork and make some ae. PAPA, WHAT WAS THAT smiled philosophically | Then, as if in reward of my opti miam, | begwn to scent the odor of escaping coffee | It is inhabited!” I erted. | I darted around to the other side of the @tation, and there, in a clump of trees was a tiny cottage. I waited, and presently there insued from the doorway a man—wiping his mouth reminiscently He expied me at once and came ‘ that Liverpool had any connection | “Pawas in hand ‘couple happy. ,|with Lancashire,” I explained. “But | - Vas you nting something, Yet think of the poor mother who gave up her child!/; was thinking of—something else.” | ing about a villainous old English-| America's excellence extends no | mins?” he oe Rae geen How her heart must break as’ she thinks of the little] “Something elee—hew curious!| man!” she confided, when we were| further than that.” ; A tralia rep ed. mer | she was forced to abandon. | Why, what else Is Lancashire noted! well out of earshot. “One might] Night was coming on. It was the |‘! “v4 ve! —sequooe* 18 ogaay ave! “ Le OD ‘ » of enirit | {oF tn America, pray? j*pend the time talking about/ lonesome hour, when any feminine | Miends there wa c ; _It only emphasizes the need for that charity of spirit) Cy) does it happen that you! ‘Americana—don't you know? thing far away from home haa to| The man dared to smile. “Since hich the mothers’ pension law intended and which a heart-/ pave ard of Colmere Americ = either confidential or tearful the coal strike that's paar what “tess legislature demoralized bey?’ I asked Yea--chas Sashockinn Veuun | Stlka ence eee ed 4 , | folks doe s , plaine ; ' They drew a deep breath, evi-| R nber theld her t There was a moment of strained nder the law in this state, as now on the | ‘ Tt 1 . : en bmw w oro th Under the | : of te hdently rellevad first thing 1 as that f after a whi silence, which was broken by the ose women whose husbands are dead, insane, or in the) “De we chorused again.| loved Ame Daca alg AP ene mig arance of & boy on a bieycle.| Ritentiary may receive pensions for their babies. Mothers|weil, rathe Yes—and your father and| without heart, but when | went into station-measter turned to him. tserted and abandoned, mothers divorced because hushands| “Surely you don't mean to tell me| mother said they did, too—when|the dining-room a little later and| “T&ke this here parcel up to de if coincidence | had gone so far, but they shook failed to support them and their babies, and mothers be-/that It's your own home ed in one way or another, are ignored by the state. They mented, wonteriy Feceive no aid by the mothers’ pension law of this great state, to help them keep their children. -. Somehow it does not seem fair. ey in the Seed Catalogues 1 ID you get a package of seeds from your representative in congress Those seeds are good for two kinds of flowers, the kind| “Mentioned on the envelope and the kind your congrese-| thetr hea “No! Just next-door neighbors.” “Nextdoor neighbors to the place, | my dear young lady,” Mr. Mont: | somery modified, glancing at his wife rather reproachfully, “Not to! the--owner of Colmere!” | Mut I scarcely heard him. I was! |trying to place an ancient memory in my mind. **Bannerley Hall “That's our place.” | ‘ma i ‘But I'm trying to remember Beeeerishes. P . | where I have heard of it.” I #x- You like to see the first kind grow and spread its fra-|piained. “Of course! They men 4 , He has more interest in the other tioned it at one time or another. ince over your garden Bi & They?—Who, my dear? Why jety, the flower that is planted about this time and is in > . ° ‘ Herbert—ian't this interesting” full bloom on the first Tuesday in November You call it} ey lady France Webo—tad [what science has named it; he calls it the “vote | Uncle James Christie.” It’s a valuable flower, the “Vote.” So the government] Their questions and my half-dazed ; . ling appropriates $10,000,000 annually to keep it in bloom poche were tumbling over one Of course, you appreciate your representative's kindness James Christlo~Grade Chris sending you those seeds. does he, for tie?” Mrs. Montgomery asked, con YOU ARE THE VOTE necting our names with a delighted eee D aaeatehnnemeione lopening of her eyes, “Why, my | dear'” Shoeteria What Next? | “They all ‘rode over to Rannerley | ———— ee cee sycetenin foo ge ll Png ite A Seattle shoe merchant breezes along with the) written by lady Frances Webb. newest thing in customers “waiting on themselves.” em af - eter But where, oh where, is the genius who will invent a) ejucidated ‘And James Christie hhooketeria where Friend Wife will no longer demand hubby’s| was your “precious moments at her back during dress occasions? pe = with several ‘greats’ be-| ‘ ‘ ‘ I began telling them my story—| Cleveland manufacturer will pay divorced wife $200,- trom the day of Aunt Patricta’s | 000 if she doesn’t remarry. Not interested enough in [sudden whim, just before her| her to keep her, but mean enough to keep her from being _| death, down to the packet of faded as |letters lying at that moment in the| PPY- bottom of my steamer trunk | Pew “| thought perhaps the present War hath its drawbacks, prominent among which are [owner of Colmere might let me thése who try to write better war songs than “Dixie, burn them there!" T explained “Marching Thru ia” and “Yan | The three looked at me intently Marching Georgii 'Y: kee Doodle.” for an instant, but not one of them | langhed. The pessimist becoities optimist when his audience (1°00 you're carrying them back | coeeenen wees © with him. to Colmere—instead of selling them!” Mrs. Montgomery finally uttered in a little awed voice, an I} finished my story. “How extra ordinary! “Most un-American—if you'll not be offended with me for saying #0, Minas Christie,” Mr. Montgomery ob erved. Then he turned to his wife. “My dear, only think of Lord Pr- skine!” he said She shook her head j Like a B Boy at 50 Bubbling Over _ With Vitality—T aking Iron Did It Doctor says Nuxated Iron is greatest of all strength builders —Often increases the strength and endurance of delicate, nervous folks 200 per cent in two weeks time. NEW YORK, Y.—Not long rel have seen dozens of nervous, run- @ man came to me who s nearly | down people who were ailing all the) “But I mustn't!” she answered, half a century old and asked me tol furance and, entirely peed ee ai] With a sad little smile. “I really ive him a preliminary examination | aymptome of dyapepe liver and|couldn’t think of Lord Erskine | for life insurance. 1 was astonished troubles, In from 16 to 14 days’) while listening to anything #0 Hg find him with the blood pressure) tine, simply by taking tron In the| pretty Of a boy of 20, and ax full of vigor.| proper form. And thie after they | Pretty BB) im and vitality os a young man: in|had in some c been foctotey| caught at the name, curiously aka ner vane he tonite was, for months w obtatr ng any| “Lord Erskine?” notwithstanding his age. The secr enefit. But don't the 0 “ . 4 he said, was taking iron—nuxated| forma of reduced iron, tron aeeters| ., em the Present owner of the fron hed filled him with renewed| or tincture of iron, simply to save a| aDbey. =. hed he ~~ in Lar fams ati few cents, You must take fron in al “But—what a beautiful sounding careworn ond nearly all in. Now,|form that can be easily absorbed and ! 9 1" Qt 59, a miracle of vitality, and his| assimilated, Ifke nuxated tron, if you| ae. Lord Erakine face beaming with the buoyancy of| want it to do you any good, other- I looked at them encouragingly youth, As have said a hundred| wise It may prove worse t but a hush seemed to have fallen Somer over, fron be the greatest of all/ less, Many an athiste or pri -|over their audible enthusiasm strength buliders people would | has won the day simply because A =m only throw away patent medicines| he knew the secret of great strength “Lord Erskine, my 4 Mrs. | and nauseous concoctions and iake|and endurance, and filed his bleod| Montgomery pronounce # nevor| simple nuxated iron, I am convinced | w fron before he went into the cu | that the Itves of thousands of|affray, while many another haa gone Bu one ret 2 Persons might be saved who now | down to Inglorious defeat simply for But, before we get away from a atery ie arom the lack of iron——-B. Sawer, If the subject—what of the Webb fam Srippe, consumption, NOTE —Nuxated tron, recommended | tly?” | begged forlornly, “Is ther¢ and heart trouble, above by Dr. Sauer, ts not @ patent medi-| . Sohn ant true cause which started thelr din-| cine nor secret remedy, but one which ta| 22 O08 Iving who might take an eases was nothing more nor lens| well known to druggists, and whose iron| interest in the story of Lady Fran than a ag gee ae brought] ‘* widely prescribed by em | con? mn by lack of fron in the blood. Iron jane everywhere. Untlke the 4 8 , P absolutely necessary to enable| nic tron products, i, is easily Lord Srakide's mother was & Your blood to change food into liv-| assimtiated, does not injure i ceth,| Webb,” Mrs. Montgomery-explained 7 tesve. jd ut it, no matter make them black, nor upset the stomach “The one fact which can be ‘w much or what you eat, your food|on the contrary, it fe a most potent rem- ed f e merely pasres through you without indigestion, aol ote a shout the old senti pepiy Qoing you any good. You don’t get jown conditions | Which need not be blushed for, he strength out of St, and as @ con- have such great con-|her nusband added, “In truth, he wequence you become weak, pale and ofter| has 6 y pr Y fickly looking just like a plant try- eel cee ae been vaatly proud off ing to grow in a soll deficient in | bis line: If you are not strong or we “Well, I'm sure we've told Miss owe it . Christie quite enough about our following tent: See f work or how far can Ww no serio neighbors—for first sitting without becoming tired, Next take| offer to r Hilda Montgomery broke in at thi two five-grain tablets of ordinary |at least point, as she rose and made a reck Wuxated iron three times per day,| durance in 10 days’ time ens BURR a a after meals, for two weeks. Then|in this city by Owl Dru less suggestion that we go out anc test your strength again and see for! Drug Co rc} Walk a little while, “I don't wish Yourself how much you have gained. druggists to spend the whole afternoon talk DENTISTS you weren't latening She nodded her blond head, energetic delight “They are trying to pretend that it will be « difficult matter to win their consent-~but {t won't. ‘Convent?’ I repeated. “His name fs John McAdoo Car | penter—and he lives at South Bend, Indiana—did vou ever hear of the place? Did you ever hear of him?"| She caught me by the arm and we walked precipitately over to the found the captain's, family atmosphere 1 my place at the table next! the geniality of the| found there / And so the remaining days of the voyage passed. The Montgomery family planned to have me go home with them, after a day in London and I had accepted fervently— when, on the trip from Liverpool down to London, these arrange ments were abruptly upset was ¥ tly cheering. ee | railing. We were a little late in landing. If I don't talk to somebody be-/and rushed straight to the train. fore that sun goes down I'll jump| where, in the compartment which right over this railing.” she ex-| we had to oursel Mr. Montgom plained. “Here's his picture! ery suddenly dropped the sheet of I took the small blue leather case| newspaper he had been eagerly and looked at tne honest, tinguished face it held rather nning My word! * he said. But wh». should your parents es, Herbert?” his wife glanced disapprove of him?” I asked tn such | up Kenulne surprise that she gave me But I say—Lord Erskine | a smile which sealed forever our| dead!” friendship. “Herbert!” They don't—really! It's just] Her tone was accusing, but her |that they like to torment me be-| husband nodded, with a pleased) cause he happened not to be born| look of assurance in either New York or Kentucky.| “You may read {t for yourself, [An Englishman's knowledge of/1'm sure—if you don't believe me!" REAL PAINLESS, He handed the paper over to her and she received it gingerly. Then she turned to the article indicated, reading slowly “Shall you write to the new Lord Erskine from London, Herbert?” Her tone was one of foregone con clusion, conventional enough, but very kindly, and her husband nodded obediently verve | “Oh, to be sure, my dear,” he |chirruped in a dutiful way, “T | shall wire his lawyers immediately and—" “And ask for the pleasure of putting him up while he's in the country? In order to introduce our new| |ertainly! Certainly!” | (whalebone) plate, which is the| “And I'll defer my visit until lightost and strongest plate known, | !ater?” I suggested does not cover the roof of the Mrs, Montgomery instantly smiled mouth; you can bite corn off the | across at me “Just a few days—if you don't mind, my dear,” she said. “I had planned so many delightful things for your stay—and I know that you wouldn't enjoy the period of mourn in, cob; guaranteed 15 years. Gold crown ... $3.00 $15 net of teeth (whalebone) $8.00 | $10 net of teeth -.. $5.00 Bridge work, per tooth, gold $3.00 White crowns . Gold fillings ... Silver fillings Platina fillings All work guares jot 80 much as you would if | you had known Lord Erskine!” her husband put in wickedly, “And I'm . determined to mourn only the brief- + 76 | ost time possible.” ed for 15 years.| “Not an hour later than Satur. nin the morn-| day!” his wife promised generously nd gor teeth same day. Exam: | a few h {nation and advice free. and a few hours afterward, when |they sent me whirling away to a Brides Work We sana’? lady-like hotel in Bloomsbury, it _the Teat of Time. was with minute directions as to which trains I was to take toward the end of the week to get to Ban- nerley. In the meantime I knuckled down cevotedly to London—and sent my deductions home across seas, in neatly typed packets, to the Old- Most of our prement patronage ts ded by our early custom- work in atill giving good Ank our customers who | have tested our work When coming | to our office, be sure you are in the wight place. Bring this ad with you, Cut - Rate | burgh Herald OHIO ..i0: 207 UNIVERSITY sT, raon Ce. CHAPTER XI London on the home I left Glasses $2.50 on Barth ALL AIDS FOR EYE SIGHT h, Should be very carefully chosen. Only the H Most skillful selection will insure the proper help to the vision glasses here, after scientific your eyes and their needs in any other Friday of my hoping to ship. Home of the Best Better obtain your examination of t against To sel ABSES way is a crime your eyes MARCUM OPTICAL CO. 917 First Ave. par Madison, Lord Erskine—and be quicker than you was yesterday!” he eaid. | The boy’s face and mine changed | simultaneously, his brightening, | to mine paling. “Lord Erskine!” I cried, a little | ghostly feeling of fear stealing over |me—for my American instincts |fatled to grasp the rapidity with which dead men's shoes can be snatched off and fitted anew in| England—-“Lord Erskine is dead.”| The little messenger boy looked at} {me pityingly | “"E wuz,” he explained, “but ‘e ain't now! | “And—and do you mean to tell me that this fs the station for Col-| mere Abbey 1 demanded, turning again to the man | Yes, miss.” He tried hard not to look super-| cilious, but there, six feet above! my head, was the name “Colmere | in faded yellow letters against the black background of the signboard | I--I hadn't thought to loc at) the sign-board,” I endeavored to ex |plain. “You think I can't get a train to Bannerley until— Perhaps tonight—perhaps not until tomorrow morning,” he an- |swered with cruel frankness spirits sank But, couldn't I | My | wet a carriage, or a He shook his head We mostly uses bicycles around here—when we don't walk,” he explained But I must get to Bannerley I burst out in desperation. “And I jam a first-rate walker! How far jis it?” “Was you wanting to get to the village—or the hall?” he asked, evi- dently tmpressed by my severity, and my heart softened. “To the hall,” I answered Mrs. | Montgomery is expecting me.” | He tried hard not to show that he was impressed, but be failed Evidently Mrs. Montgomery was a great personage, and I took on a} tinge of reflected glory not to be entirely ignored “The hall is a mile from the vil lage—and the village is three miles from here,” he explained gently The click of the telegraph instru- ment clamored for his attention, so he reluctantly left me, I remained outside, listening to the caw of the rook, Presently he came out again “There will be a train thru here pretty soon—but it's coming from the direction of Bannerley, instead of going toward there—still- “Still, it will give us occasion to hope for better things later on,” I answered cheerfully, “And it has Joceurred to me that I might while | away a portion of the morning by walking up to the gates of Colmere | Abbey. That boy went in this di rection, didn’t he? “Not a quarter of a mile, down in this direction,” he assured me. “Just follow this road, and you'll find the lodge in a clump of trees.’ The “May” hedges were glisten ing with the early sunbeams, and as I walked down the railroad track the distance seemed quite a good deal short of the quarter of a mile mentioned, I found the clump of trees indicated—then a small gray building. There I was halted "Yes, miss—if you please?” It was an acid voice, and | looked | at the doorway of the house, out of | which an old woman was tssuing. She was garbed in profound black, | “I want to get In—to see the} grounds of the abbey,” I explained casually, but she shook her head “But that can't be!" ° But why not? looked at me pityingly.| t you know we was in mourn she demanded, bristling with importance. “You can't go sight seeing in here! miss Not even a little way?" i i © The New Fall Suits A DAY IN BED 1 every one} is on the of {lness such time, if at all possible, a day in bed is the bewt possible med There are mes wher ealizes that he or ah ver: At expire icine and often oftentimes before 1 apires—they at the eleventh | move down under the ears and none, hour will stave lesving the top of the dome looking off siticnane. lke a fleld after harvest, and later _ jon resembling « deserted danc Rest is one of Nature's sim- | fioor Anyone with wine. is plest and most effective aids [on the road to becoming @ milifon- aire, because, with a healthy crop to healing, and if taken in time (Cr ‘timothy adorning the semi-face, may be warranted to “make a [he becomes an unconscious econ- ‘ad jomiet towels, soap, razors, > nigiavnlinal dpe collars, and sometimes shirts | An extremely light diet or a fast are then « Some can use lot of money for 24 hours serves the same pur- ars he same p ‘ne A pose in giving the digestive organs rm ri bis own a needed rest skers trying t an senien The . boast sandwich, but would get a lot o There are come people who boast | Sotrishment out of a bow! of Seen their ability to keep going re-| po gardiess of the warnings which No q ture serves in time of danger. For! EVERY WOMAN IS JUDGE a ile they may successfully avoid; AND JURY UNTO HER OWN © the penalty, but usually they have| HUSBAND. io “pay the piper,” and in full. Better a short, yoluntary rest now and then rather than one en- forced by serious sickness the result of disregarding Nature's warning. aling it thru a garden hose. oe eee NO LADY WOULD APPL’ I—have cherries to pick on the share (next week). No ladies need apply unless they wear men's ap- parel, for the trees are so high. LEE GOODWIN, Curtisville. | The greatest brain is worth. | ~~Elwood (Ind.) Call Leader. less tissue uniess it keeps _ 538 © strong the body that nurtures | WARM WEATHER, PERHAPS It. The Young Ladies’ auxiliary se: ray? marched in the parade and there It will pay you to look over the was 30 of them. Their uniforms Star | consisted of a narrow blue sash.— Newtown, Ga., News, many bargains offered in Want Ads. 6 KK AK KAM AS You Can Buy for Less, Through Our Chain of Stores Are on Display If you wish to buy Fall Suit now will unquestion- be pleased with showing—of new models. Come and them. They are beauties. The Last Word of Style in These New Fall Suits for Men The last word of Style is permanent in our Fall Suits for men and young men. They fit right on first try-on and con- tinue to fit until you cast them off, Yet not- withstanding this evi- dent superiority of style they are marked at Prices That Stand a new you ably ur new see for True Economy Open a Charge Account Your Credit Is Good Apparel for Women and Misses Fall Hats and Furnishings Fall Shoes of Quality 1119-1121 THIRD AVENUE BETWEEN SENECA AND SPRING STs. I accompanied this plea by the display of a shining half-crown,