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tcia mad w'tl. the blood ivst that is Lurniag churches, school houses, starving or outraging women and , and polluting the minds and hearts of men over al- SEATTLE STAR Next Wee A Novel “The Taming yourself; look out {t don't develop into nothing worse.” “What do you mean?” he sings out. sagesassenserterenee sEeeaaeeeas seat tes sesse eee eseETs ss ssEt: STAR—MONDAY, OCT. 9, 1916. PAGE 4 * of Red “MR. PRATT” do you mean?” “Look here,” says I. “Ain't Van! Brunt and Hartley out of their | heads?” Psitisstissssistisstsseeee tee ses tess B: A Nove y Lincoln and ‘twould have done you good t see the Heavenlies lay into it. When the dinner was over fagsrissssastssertst | What do they do with that?” Wat ft, of red-headed O\the starter—Issachar Tiddit, ‘twas he opens the lid to the pig bor 1| and hollers “Go!” started in to help his lordship wash| ‘The line 4 4. That it 5 age p ° mew, maton | he line dropped. ; ee 4 ot the cork "Ob," says I, “L Judged by the nO Tee ee ete ced te teij| Mises. The Twins sprawled them-|ione pig see twenty odd pair of most al of lilly 7 / |way you kept your mouth shut | 4 ‘twa'nt | P0lves under a couple of pine trees! hands shooting toward him, and he —— ° |about the Heavenlies, and ‘twa'nt/ ang blew smoke rings ; r that you had sore throat and was) and blew smoke rings fetched a yell like a tugboat whistle Pri f Bread afraid of getting cold. Good da: long afore I begun to see that ‘twas Hurry up there, messmate,” says! ang put down the field, with the , rice o re F " t Would you believe tt, he gof up! aaalaes we aan ike tines vom edlgehS anak to wet thru whole crew hehind him 7 iificia > w . :: $ ar a kee ewan biggest 19004) time enough to rt o the xe RYEDERAL. officials who are inquiring whether there i a" off that mackerel keg and chased | rcs — . jostle yale ap ayer ght: alte ip when that pig started he iegal agreement among bakers to raise prices, call after me : ; Seems that the Twins was rich |! ounds and see that greased pig | 1s \etrait caieun. tea ae e . “Hold on, Sol!” he € " - rte coh tai ‘wc - ¥ ald her Ettention to the fact that bread made fron, American flour ts Ps cra Don't sh Sy cae | Yorkers her cheat and high. “Til-go with you;-akiope” sive lower sad « cae f, anes the ; T , F tonedest kind th of ‘em had| yy | celebrators % 3 hi ea _ : a bh ed te to yo artiey ling cheaper in London, Trieste, Lyons, Havre and other mer wen Rigg rr i money by the bucket and more!” Van’ Brunt turned over and|t@ sight of the horses and all n cities than in the United States, which certainly efutes the claim that the increase in prices here is justfied by ar exports. At any rate, it proves unquestionably that there is some- least afford to be pinched. Bread from American flour for less in London than in Chicago is a condition h will surely not be tolerated long. says, “for a man that wants to talk you make the poorest fist at it of anybody ever I see.” “You was speaking of boarders of mine,” he says, come day afore yesterday them “They early.” tle of his own medicine “Yes. Them boarders — they worry me. Me and Huldy set up till nigh eleven o'clock last night talking about ‘em. She thinks may- clear blue and green days that you| eut across Sears’ meadow, and the; | understand you've got a friend old and homely and your bank ac-/ coming,” says I, by way of ground| count is nothing, minus a good deal, divided by naught; bat don’t “I| you never complain again. S'pose you was good-looking and rich, but “Friend? says the big one. don't understand.” | being left to ‘em while you wait. | “But, if they ain't crazy what made ‘em come down here to live jaya I, “at Nate Scudder’s?” Well, that was a kind of poser, even for Mr. James Opper Hopper, ural Life,” the valet called tt Hopper went on with @ rigmarole| about the luxury in which the) Heaveniies had lived in New York | Cutting out everything about him- looked at his chum. Great Caesar! “you don't mean to tell me | and more coming all the time. Hartley gave one look around at the gang and his nose turned up to twelve o'clock. “You wait a spell, Mr. Hartley, Martin,” he says,| that} you're going up into that crowd of | hayseeds to hang over a fence and scared him, I guess, and he jibbed and back he come again. Already half of the boys had given up the job, but that little chap with the red hair had been right up with the modrners Then one of the Pape | Watch some one run, do you? Why z rotten in Denmark and that a real federal investigation] “46 rageted a minute or so more.| ket early in June frogs wan beginning to squeal and| It seemed to Gamer down, tis IY! any one should want to run.” he bors sakes Cstee je ee ‘: is a , too! eo by th a) “Thi bad , he crickets to chirp. All at once,/to that book ae Nam We “when they ¢ eep still porsagiier m s An embargo on wheat exports is apparently not pace Be Vek ee by _ arm and Pins. gig: ol eye the ae pa as Tinggi Lopes and| Seems there was a kind of erase pase, Pag ay “7 _ | i . ¥ ter’s shiny black back. In a shake inted by such facts as have thus far been deduced Soh" be save. “net down 1} to feel her oats and lay down to! held-up his hand around New P f and the ¢ aot tack And he stretched oat | 2 wae: ne er ee pr : . 1 = > ask you something. B r we Heave! Van!" he say It | stirred up by that t to on the pine needles agnis peak, of a sc f monum of likely the trouble lies here at home and a little digging | want te ask 19m something By ee Acie Fay oe ars yeas arent says “4 pp be Bn dy pp Bread iam m th Dine need i “ Dk / |bore, ail fighting tbe dogs ovacal id unearth a healthy litle trust. . |right?" ‘They didn’t look like luna-) | “pl Pratt,” says 1 to myseit| times and so on, and get to Ving) 9 crowd at the fairground, five or Woodchuck Ps i i C " “Yes?” | said, giving him a It-| ties, but you can't always tell | “here's a lesson for you. You're) like poor folks. Living the “Nat-) 41. nundred folks, 1 should think, The increase in bread prices pinches most those whoj “Yes aid, giving (Continued in Our Next Issue) Berietol | Joseph oungster scooting in and out 9 * “~ Ase wart) od the f a’ knew and ca t Re Wear aioe oe A Week Butte Western wy CPE A WOR | ceeng te sans Snot nat sae OF SCRIPTS NORTHWEST LEAGUE OF NEWsrarnns BY FRANCIS LYNDE [HEHNARHnATaE SH TEEHNa ‘achsan?” “gaye & °@4ak ane legraph News Service of the Psu esrrnsr MILI none! aeteaeatatetesesaiasasaaatstessseat “set sagt x | candy? ne Gann, Postortion Wessna-Ghnee CHAPTER 1 _—_— — = manera sand | my fish lines and here was a feller] Sat hata toe ig nay po os He looked up at me as pert and TE nt smn Bie scat The Master coming down the wharf. yee C ae ~ ro ay r rn - pew 1 | sassy ae 8 blackbird on @ scare “‘Khlo,” saya t 4 | waid, too, that I'd think about! oo» shoulder Ber month up to ¢ mos MELINE ELDREDGE, cook at | inten coun dae the. cooking Maney mee ey i E ee St: Eee mosey. Teel “Mr, Edward ‘as ordered the boat | #eem to be no object—1 could have our mature says be. | summer, come down to the} for ‘alf past eleven,” he says my wages by the hod or barrelfu _ landing one morning afore break: | Merde to Wiber” sega L. citow’)| inet Be 2 it ays 1:2 Ge¥late he Tain weet ere = niget IVST A MoMeNnT—T]] he have it—fried?” For the next couple of weeks 1| knows yo y mel ore. Ol fe looked back toward ¢ hotel) chased around find a Hart ‘ How War! Wilson! Peace! | sloop, the Dora Bassett, untangting || MOVING You "THIS A ee jy rena Pagel! edgar gd Deter gl Ml nt oy fp Paha ; “Vy | fish lines, SPRING, 4ND oe “ pie ' 1 t * per But ' Y 4 " SO s aa) e "4 r nt s by ' ‘ 4 -f ’ notion he was going to #ing out lunatics eduld be ra su ¢ ¢ yme R. WILSON has thrown the Hughes party into fit | “My wakes! Mr, Pratt,” says she | [IT'S Somewnar os tie, Méwerd Ven Brant’s| whenever [4 thial atiaaied ai? doting to tha B intimating that a victory for them would mean war) "have you heard about Nate Scud: | LOVERDUS. | man,” says he promising outfit the Heavenlle ol-eloth counter. Th with Mexico and European powers. der? 1 mean about what him iad ~ CS And then I begun to understand uid turn to und dump in a cargo 4 off enough for a fair P s . his wife has just done - or thought I did, ‘T'was the|of objections, After five or #ix| sized tombstone and handed It out Ais Wilson ts ‘perfectly justified in drawing such con Aint ‘Seen atving his money to! | keeper, Well, in some ways he! funerals of this kind I got sort of! Hartle wwed It to boy. He | clusion, for these reasons: the poor, has he?” says f : | looked his job | tired and quit. It got to be July| pit off a bunk that m him lool Neither Mr. Hughes nor one of his backers tells how dine ong hdeh tol i. at “Ooh!” says, “All right. Yes,| and their month at e's was|iike he had the mumps all on on Would be preserved by any other policy than that main-|te's let his house to some city | [7 I heard you was coming, Mr.) ‘mort over | side, and commenced to munch . . nA be - s 4 | » a he © of the "The , y ER n : by Wilson, which has succeeded in preserving peace. ! folks, and im’ ‘Opper,” ee ies cae ee the evening of Ther i gays, That's proo! ; Indeed, Mr. Hughes’ chief aide, Roosevelt, rageth with the| Emeline kited off after the milk, | ‘Opper.” they wanted me and the sloc Hit > : Sagi . - only stopping long enough to yell Pi oC »| th ited me and th 0D Just r Philander Phin- | War spirit beck: "Folks say they're dreadful | Proud to know you, Mr yh ae the next da ey, the n of the Eastwich very erest in this country that would make! rich and stylish.” * | ay “ one ia a etd 1 Oper. ere wan to bea mr wrth of July | oy . tty nigh half as j y ) i « oppe 16 a pe celebration over to Eastwich, and is rod f n war is for Hughes it went ove to Tramet. ta the Bure! Opper’s wat I said,” #98, some of “f she Bre” Mig a af i to fom : Phi M ° ne wrey wn . ier-| Sloe na ry day pe ae he jud . 4 Thirdly, a victory for Hughes w ald be taken by (¢ et eieetak We there Water wicte wien 1 «Opper,’’| Md Hee the balloon and the race ered thet the groaned ple Gant Many as repudiation of Wilson for putting down the sub-| ger himself, setting on & mackerel Foe Ot re te ne face, ec bers | and the greased pig chase, and Such | togt was open to boys under fifteen, 4 Whe crusades against ships of peace, and such crusades|keg at the end of the wharf and| jhe ways altch—o-p-p- | like, If the Twins didn’t care I'd) an4 that the one that caught the 5 h looking worried. ‘Oh, Hopper!” 1 says. | take the job, 1 said, But they took! pig ana hung on to it would get ould be resumed with tenfold horrors, and, to stop them, fake ett alee “6 “Ot' course, ‘Opper,” he says.| x notion to go themsclves. So, on| BE aid BY would have to have war with Germany and, consequently, \ J “I'm Mr, Edward Van Brunt's vally the morning of the Fourth we) "*° °°! : rs Dora Bassett slid up to the wharf } tt In less than three shakes of a condition in this country frightful beyond the power of] «Hello, Bol!” he says, sort of Naa te ends « bie 4s Sariee, co aad veo Briss 806)» erring's bind leg there was bere Sneti, ouratul. . 4 . artiey and Lord James, in the| herrings lin amation, = ‘ ; Paes vou tik entsa haaieeea? 1 ——AND_1 HAVG A BILL AGAINST judged. If he was @ servant he) Dora Bassett enough on that field to start @ re- © And it is highly probable that war with Germany would meh oa ® ine You oF #/0,25 FOR ONG BROKEN couldn't be the keeper. The Heaveniies enjoyed the run, | form school Siead to immediats war with Mevico. Ones in war, the ad-| ee” cave. be MIRROR, ONG LAMP AND FOUR “! suppose you'll quite when the and they'd ought to. The Twins| “Hello!” says Hartley, “there's s : ne 3 eper come: r eh " a] Yortland cement yor ster. Hmistration would not hesitate to surrender to the dollar-| 1 made the Dora Rasnett fast and Pieces at ea Pay Mo keeper apg ig ie ! i back and caked in the seen one k p nd cemen Beh ens ink American element that demands intervention in Mexico) climbed onto the wharf ‘ e a ee Bie Sse heir jack afte ot bine" the protection of loot in Mexico EI Allan eRe alld “Why, the feller from the asy aoPy p latent Perk aboik 3 enough; there wie the bine ¥ ; A long?” 1 as t i Let no American mother, or father, or youth of soldier)“ sjeys way he. “Oh—-er yes.’ i How og has ee tt -~ noon and bad dinner, 1 coc had tackled the candy. I could f s victory vov er] ' | is mMessmate been crazy asks.\a kettle of chowder—fetch ee bis red head blazing like a s to what a Hughes victory in November Hump!" I grunted, starting to his 1 mn raz 5 asks. a of cho 8 ni nea’ By tooled as My whet a by seen” vil an| walk oft “Well, be porghr of ‘Crazy? he says. “Crazy? Wat) clams along with me from home—| lightning bug. Next thing I knew ns. Instead of an America as anchor of civilization, an . ell, them Sunday. It is fine to arrange a dance for them dur- 1 know of such a place round here? He smiled, and the other chap—/ looked twice at any of the hotel) EA RO be they stole the money, and 1/ “Scudder said you had another|out of your head, like them two| self and the superiority of England) ...4 1) “Let's cruise round a litte Z ‘elcome str: Soldi don't know but they're crazy, run| man coming to his house,” says i,j poor young chaps. Dear! dear!” |to the United States—which was) 7.) » > Citizen ters away from an lum or something | He smiled. “Oh, I see. I don't culiien Latagmied po daaeyh rr aaaea boar So we went shoving along thru/| Preece rg “ i sf tl H zi . Has | 4 EATTLE’S welcome to the returning troopers of the}, ar eieten te pb dag peaks > ye ald call him a Was ee Tees Gatcehaaee tam" Shana the Gee es. neee, ote Oe, hone mers 4 sores, ulcers, cai bY =Second Washington infantry has its formal program, but|New York that 1 sell cranberries| “Pratt,” says I. “Solomon Pratt.”| 1 see ‘om pretty often during the La angie pelt yy pete er po and such Iike every other minute. |, For sale at alt druggists in ort i irit i i "Thanks. No, I wouldn't go 0 : the * saath” | 1a eT ce ten arte ce tani scinena| ht wanted to come ts 0" place: ta| for ta to call bite fonds G26 Jet] coe wcaeh Ce ns ciotwes—all. the strenuous ate} machine and. the inerrytormaed It is fine to meet them at the depot, as Seattle citizens] fi* country where ‘twas quiet. Did|he's not an enemy—not openly.”| As for the girls, they never|*nces. And she was engaged to! O0% tne “ossified man” inn tent ; Hartley once, but they had a row) Pretty soon we come to where the Albert Hansen D give up their lives for the country, if need be—shall be exactly as Seattle had promised. Welcome home, boys. We're for you now just as we for you when you left. 8 Nome. SERS © MAZUMA the dust for the seventh consecu- !tive time. “I don’t believe you could hit a furniture van.” i i | | i i Pr @ o'clock in the o. m., ge thre | “Oh, you needn't crow, ser: cg ey he retorted the recruit; “you followed ‘zergie of scalding | ™issed a train yesterday.” "dash tat the office te ag tes straight from the SAME NOW lag all pg all pmol Preacher—You ought to 2 o'clock Metarday Make your husband = think are scattered by about religion. If he should . die, you might worry about where he had gone. Mrs. Wayupp—Oh, no. i'm used to that. | don’t know where he is half the time now. —Judge. : A sy ili TOO FAMILIAR She laid her ‘hand lovingly on her husband’s shoulder. He some ammunition on the the other day, and the ser- in charge began to use strong | as the firing proceeded | the target remained untouch- it! Missed again?” he roar- id, a8 an unfortunate recruit cut up you object, dearie?” asked the wife. “Well,” replied the husban “eve car, every time you do it I think It is a traffic cop.”"—La dies’ Home Journal. Th scar First! “Nice lookin’ young fellers as in good faith. Their employment shall be restored tojever you see, they are. The biggest | one—they’re both half as tall that mast, seems so—he rays “Can you give us two sleeping rooms, two baths, a setting room, and & room for my man” “Two baths? says 1. ‘Can't you take a bath by yourself? If me and Huldy bunked in the hen- house and the chore boy im the maybe we could accommo- ‘ou, that is, all but the baths.’ “He laughed. He was so ever. lasting cool about things that it sort of riled me up. “'Perhaps you'd like to hire the whole shebang?” says I “Good idea!’ he says 1 would’ “Well, that was too many for me! 1 went into the house and fetched out Huldy Ang There ain't many women in this town can beat my wife when It comes to business, if I do say it. “How long would you want the house for? says Huldy, when I told her what was going on. “‘A month,’ ‘s him as calls himself Edward Van Brunt, turn- ing to the other city feller. ‘Hey, Martin? The other chap nodded “*ANl right,’ says Van Brunt. ‘How much? “Thinks I, fine feller.’ ‘I'll seare you, And so I says, month? Well, I don’t know. May be, to accommodate, I might let y' have it for two hundred.’ Two hundred it 1s,’ he rays. ‘And I don't know as you'll be lieve it, Sol,” says Nate, finishing up, “but that feller fished out the cash and paseed it over to me like ‘twas a postage stamp, What do you think of that?” “It beats me, Nate,” 1 “What do you think?” “BI ed if | know!” says Scud der. All I'm sure of is that they're up home, with the parlor blinds Open and the carpet fading, and says my| | 1 kind of jumped, I guess, when| and’ Hartley would just keep on| he said that. It began to look a* their course like they was carrying if they wan lunatics escaped from | the mail an asylum, and this feller that Wwas| ‘Twas these two females jcoming was the keeper. first named ‘em, “The Heavenly | | “Hum,” saya L “Do you belong | twins”: shortened later to/ to anybody?" I says to Hartley, © Hoaventies.” | },, 1 did.” says he, “but he’s doing! Every time I took the Heayn- ume.” lies on a cruise, the more certain I “Doing time? says I was that they were loons, Most “Yes,” says he. “Up the river.! generally they carried a book you know.” along with ‘em and read it out loud 1 cheaped over this for a minute,| to each othere and al! | could think of was that! you'd think that book was a the feller must be in a clock fac-/hyman almost, the way they went or @ watchmaker's or some that tory on about it. The name of {t was) thing ms “The Natural Life.” I borrowed | Watches?” I asks. it once to look at, but ‘twas all) fooliahn: to me; telling about! money being a cuss, and such rot.| One night, just as we were com-| ing into port, nm says to me | “Sol,” “We may want | Hartlgy seemed to be too tired | of life to want to answer, but his chum did {t for him “No,” says he. “i believe it was | pearl studs on the showdown.” Well, this was crazy talk enough you and the boat tomorrow. My for anybody. man'll let you know in the morn “Studs, hey?" says 1 ing | “Yes,” says he. “He was a Brit- ish beast, and Martin wag all balled up in the Street at the time— jaway from his apartments a good deal--and the B. B. annexed every-! thing in sight.” “Go "long!" saya I, for the sake I was a good deal shook up. I'd almost forgot that keeper. “Mant s I. “Oh, yes, yos! I see, Is he here now “No; coming tonight, I belleve.” So the next day, about half-past nine, when I'd just about decided) of saying something. to let some of the boarders have Beg pardon,” says he. |the Dora Bassett, I looked up from “Nothing.” ‘says 1; and wo stopped talking. We got ba to the wharf along about dusk, and I walked with ‘em & plece on their way t t We CHILD GETS SICK, ‘CROSS, FEVERISH IF CONSTIPATED “California Syrup of Figs” IF KIDNEYS ACT BAD TAKE SALTS | Says Backache Is a Sign You Have Been Eating Too Much Meat, Which Forms Uric Acid, When you wake up with backache | and dull misery in the kidney region it generally means you have been eating too much meat, says a well-| known authority, Meat forms urte jhe to home courting her?” “If she’s engaged to Van why ain't Well, the marriage, so James| said, was to be arranged later. Near as I could find out, Van and this Agnes Page had mighty little to do with the marrying. ‘Twas their folks that was fixing that up.| Agnes herself had gone to Europe with her ma, When she was to! home she was great on charity.| Her one idea in life was to feed! fee cream to children that hank-| ered for fishballs and brown bread. | In another half hour or so the! Heavenly Twins showed up along-| side. And then ‘twould have done you good to see that valet’s back | get limber. He bowed and scraped | and “Sirred” till you couldn't rest They spoke to him like he was a dog and he skipped around with his tail between his legs like he) was one—a yellow one, at that. | When we'd passed the point out} comes that everlasting book and the Twins got at it “Van,” says Martin, “the Natural) Life for mine. 1 envy the lucky devils who've had it all their) lives. | ‘Twa'nt none of my affairs, but | I shoved my oar in here—couldn't | |help it “Yow fellers ain't getting the real article—not yet,” says I. “There's! a hotel over back of the village! where the boarders get the genuine aimple life--no frills included,” 1/ says. They was interested right off. “Where's that, skipper?” says “Well,” says I, “folks round here call it the poorhouse.” CHAPTER Il | I was getting real chummy with! the Heavenlies by this time, so one afternoon I walked up to the Scudder place to ‘em. They! were sprawled ont the plazza/ chairs with their feet on the railing and they hailed me as friendly Van Brunt. “What's its name?” } | on the week. Well, course | wrote back that| Whose name I found out was Hart-|ones. Two skittish females oe | fore pee tong ap gth gist br $24 | felier was selling the E Pluribus But more important is that these boys—“our boys,” we|'t¥## Bice and quiet right at our/ley—Martin Hartley—smiled too. | to get in thelr way and beg pardon | pont en Unum candy—red, white and blue, | ue? Pa Bike .j house. And then, yesterday morn He's the man Van here belong® and giggle, hoisting flirtation sig- B h "y led. and a slab as big as a brick for deweler and Silveremita i led them when they enlisted and le§ for Calexico, ready| ing they come-—-both of ‘et to,” explained the Hartley one. | nals, so to speak, but Van Brunt at, seo here, » purzled. | dime, | rtley stops and r heaven's sake Third Ave. and Pike St, SEATTLE Danger! Beware! The human mouth is the ger- minating hot-bed where disease begins. Don’t health is gone, but come today and let me ex- amine your teeth and gums, | may save you bill, ar from a serious surgical SEE ME Let me check and stop the dis- ease of your gums with your finge operation, you have Rigg Have your k by my famous and successful ‘010 Second Ave, Near Madison, Phone Main 5769 wait until your ‘ as so many do, a large Doctor Press them t—if they bleed, s’ disease. st teeth restored Service | looked sort of sick, to me. He had a white face, and that kind of tired, don't-care look in his eye; and the atleast | | THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. bigger one sort of ‘tended to things for him. “Good morning,” says the big one—the Van Brunt one, 1 judged. T'other chap said, “Good morning,” too. “Mornifig,” ways 1 | sary night. Either consult a good, reliable physician at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine, This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kid. neys, also to neutralize acids in the! urine #0 it no longer irritates, thus! ending bladder weakness, Jad Salts is a life saver for reg ular meat eaters. It is inexpensive, Figs,” then don’t worry, because it {a perfectly harmless, and in a few hours all this constipation polson, sour bile and fermenting waste will gently move out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again, A thorough “inside cleans- ing’ is oftimes all that is neces. It should be the first treat. ment given in any sickness Keware of counterfeit fig syrups, Ask your druggist for a 60-cent bo! tle of “California Syrup of Figs, which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown ups plainly printed on the bottle. Look carefully and see that it is you take us ont sailing?”| Y—er—1 guess #0," 1 says “1 don't know why I can’t, if you! el Mke going, Course" =I hadn't finished what 1 was folng to say before they was in the boat ‘Twos © nice day; one of them Disses rete tenet made by the “California Fig Syrup n ul cannot injure and makes a delight. Company, ful, effervescent lithia-water drink, month, as I understand it, and That didn’t make no difference. I could fetch the Dora Bassett along too, Van said. Hartley ox plained that they intended to stay thru the summer, anyhow, perhaps! later. “And while we're giving you the story of our lives, skipper,” Hart ley went on, “I want to say right here that our present surroundings aren't all that fancy painted ‘em The populace are too friendly and interested.” There was more of this, but 1} managed to find out that what they | wanted was a quieter place than Scudder’s, A place off by itself, where they could be as natural as : * r P| " _ p as) re 7 . . AWESTERN UNION [fini7iisizs ise tise st | “alarm Tenaer tome [ii ih ror ty dren gh a ale sm fly System cf Bridgework. without he's doing the cookin’ for ' » 2 y > ates Tile Wikslrol tueled Selon. cheat ach or Bowels blood and they become sort of pet ein lg th ri ape Bad sak Plates. . ; , and ‘sack caglds Gat esther then oe ae : paralyzed and logy, When your : 3 ttl . ‘ gets instant late tiie, ok eae, Shae Huns rare ig Ao cine kidneys get sluggish and clog Ee yea Pha pings end | 22-karat Gold Crowns. . ..$5.00 attention and brin S| And Huldy can’t netther. 1 never | will not take the tlme from play to| must Telieve them, like you relieve! Tit you"come ang help ae cot 22-karat Bridgework, per tooth | was so worried in my life.” empty their bowels, which become |Your, bowels; removing all the) wee doe like Mme Sundaat 5 the first reply: I left Nate sure of one thing: |clogeed up with waste, liver gets |vOCy § urinous waste, else you Bave! (ose sa Jamen toa fe : ipierienis 2: them two New Yorkers must be! sluggish; stomach sour. backache, sick headache, dizzy| Cookin : Papel Gold Filling $2.00 and | iat y oh : Well, now; hold qn,” says I x01¢ ings ....$2.00 and up queer birds and 1 wanted to see| Look at the tongue, mother! 1¢|8Pells; your stomach sours, tongue) ,,. : airs + a coated, or your. child in Hatlega, {i# coated, and when the weather is| “Some ways I'd like to, and, if you| Silver fillings oo e $1.00 ERN And the very next afternoon 1| cross,’ feverish, breath bad, reat.|D&d You have -theumatic twinges,| Want plain cooking, why, I guess| Sytvactiag J , i" pon eriah, ad, rest-/ rie urine is cloudy, full likely T can give it to you. But Extracting) si... Liisiecn's Se did see ‘em. They come down the|less, doesn't eat heartily, full of | Th urin re eo cul a ata i tpt eho & Old Home pler together. One of| cold or has sore throat or any oth. | Ment, channels often get sore, water) busines nagar ti eh Treatments special ‘em, the smallest one—-ho wa'nt|er children's ailment, give a ten. {Seals and you are obliged to seek}™MY boat and my living for the ao UE Te epee more'n six foot one and a halt--|spoonful of “Calffornia Syrup of |Téllet two or three times during the) s¥mmer. You're here only a} Largest Dental Office in the Pacific Northw ators skilled experts. Nurses in att Protective gu work. PAINLESS AUSTIN Third and Open Sunday 9:30 to t p.m. for your conve rest. All Oper- endance. larantee with all e hience.