The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 23, 1916, Page 4

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STAR-MONDAY, OCT. 23, 1916. PAGE 4 eisheteans Seaarrsretetseernts: seesesetsesit Next Week heennmesetd BY RANDALL PARRISH erry Seaaaneaeateisieteneaaeaanaaaaesasecaes | fTegttH Sorta rH eaten ware” lthe next twelve months, he! laugh, “so yer'd better git a bit o° y srinned ranite into yer system. Neow, ex CONTINUED {| Thin won rather disconcerting |(o a farmer—there’s Mike Finn, | | {\and the next morning I left college He lives "bout a quarter of a mile FROM PAGE 1 } sreves ; from your corner, He'll come 1 Ianded at Rentford statiog,| his son'll help out with the Mexico and Ireland isititiistisitriseeeae esi tee ttetet torte Piste totes meetiiit sa tar ge] |A Wea “eet “The Idyl of Twin Fires” “75 By Walter Pritchard Eaton sunsnmrereegmemgisrisenaity gtsneeemereg A Nove A Week sbleday, Page & Co work, such ez ploughin’, which you'd better begin termorrer, We'll walk down and see him neow, ef yer like 1 liked, end we set off down the road |bired a back, and drove at once to| a I< dealing with Mexico, President Wilson has held steadily in view the certain Milt Noble might sell, and] my "tar and my firet thought on | ideal that one country has no right to interfere in the internal affairs told me how to find him. | o4,)Allshting was this anes ie i 2 ~ “ ood Lo! or realized the| of another. He has believed that Mexico would no more tolerate our tute- Milt No When sie car atopped|, “Good Lord, I never realized frightful condition of this orchard! | More expense! | before the house, | instantly knew} it for mine lage in that matter than the North would have allowed England to inter- vene on behalf of the South in our civil war. I jumped from the motor and alts & dollar up here,” said the But another thing has guided the president in his policy towards Mex- Fee eee ee ee te bald Klas to i a ico. He has been seeking the greatest good for the greatest number Whoa!” cried the professor, |drove away, Milt Noble had & That unhappy country has 16,000,000 people, and the bulk of the land laughing, “yeu poor young Sie! Me Soe beet ony Then, in & lower tome, he caw| | heard my horse stamping in is held by 60,000 owners, some of them Americans, and almost all holders tioned: | “If our friend Milt sees) the stable, ond saw my two cows of titles procured by illegal grants from tryants like Diaz. br fh eagle orgy cneee's' Your Cars fom. pas Bert Tart le, my | The Mexican peon never will be peaceful, contented and happy until Yankee blood? we and erat Relahbor, had informed me j j 4 ob a 0 an ha oe was m ing them for he is restored to the land as owner. He has the same passion for earth as the fh 2 mopered vie ons een |—and. I gathered, for the milk. | tury-old lilac bush at the corner Well, if he didn't, goodness knew of the house, and sought the front| who would! I never felt so lonely, | of the dwelling unobserved #0 hopeless, in my life. | y, Irish peasant. The problem is to do away with absentee ownership and re- Store the soil to the 15,940,000, To attack this policy is to assume the same attitude as did and do The house was net with ite aide! I tossed my sult cane into the the Tory English who believe in absentee landlordism in Ireland. It is to ff/te the road. about one hundred goed (omy ay ee ae oe Say that the Mexican peon—as did the Irish peasant before the newer dis- behind, evidently containing the] There was tonic in that turn! | pensation—should continue to be a servant on the land, or a mere tenant on seeete. Wont ane AE lr | aati athe be the reed ourrebee sufferance, rather than a free, upstanding owner of the plot he tills facing the barn across the ing the house, ‘The other ten, be And just as there were Tories in England ready to shed the blood of or I a am olen ait Gh thd aoeie eg ces kane the common people of England who served in the British army, to hold a century ago. AD acre In extent to the brook on to their thousands of acres in Ireland, so there are Tories in this country ff! The front door, inced an aged) Tiat book ran south close perfectly willing to allow the blood of American soldiers to be spilled, if only they may hold on to their ill gotten ranches and estates. aris) ee orn ene, Ok the Oe peor | f wales Gown dita the orehard, The Tories in England fought Parnell and Redmond. The Tories in old orchard, and great limbs lay |and ax I followed the brook Into this country fight Woodrow Wilson. iP oee, eee before the bat-|den hushed quiet of my little stand | ltered’ doorway and looked down|of pines, I thought how all this thru the storm-racked orchard to| Was mine-to develop, to walk in }the brook, | had a sudden vision of |to dream in! 7 |boundary, along the entire extent | slope of perhaps balf an acre to | ee tere tan of the brook bed. |of the farm. ivii ink trees abloom above a lawn My apirite rose Ike the songs ‘Di Sarah een tor oe hn en tate de» [Ol the apatrown fom the ronseibe : j t atite, Nobl reen beyond s 3 ndert has come again This time she is tall r the deal. Milt Noble was | trees beyor ec raccuee: rence @ Yaokee, and so was |. But at! | continued to my western PM pictured with her two great-grandchildren. And, as usual, lek we Grae i brenin 1 be. |boundary, where my acres met th ; hardt brings inspiration with her, 9. \came poasesned of the house, barns orang ty ods of my neighbor. Bernhardt, than whom there ig no more remarkable wom- 30 ser of land, a horse and two | Her Be oc OM in history, has conquered the difficulties of an arduous ' eae stone wall, just inside my land, | f, not by great physical robustness, but by sheer WILL. CHAPTER 1 Then and there I saw my book | Bernhardt had followed the popular theory of bodily per- COL UM My Money Goes and My Farmer | ogy Mok alle ae ee tion as the only basis of success she would have been in) wirde OS eae t clechd thal | Phen 3 teflected how-t eea.eat home for aged women 20 years ago. | KNOCKING deal. took an {eventory of the farm | soil which must be made to pay » The most astonishing tribute which Sarah Bernhardt, the implements which went with the; me — s potatoes for the out: | it-grandmother, receives, is the homage of men. She gets place, made a few hasty arrange: |'@7--and dreamed of book plates , Somebody ought to get amuse ‘ ‘ f ent fo per ent coming « & amu keeps it for none of the reasons which make 9 out of Tod hestione beck to colldes ment out thie!” 1 sald aloud women famous as actresses. She keeps the admiration Ther 1 remained ont ow «1 set off for the barn, gathered ‘(of men because all men love gameness/a quality of the WILL enough to see that the faculty? had ny sult care, and climbed the road toward Bert Temple's a competent mo to fll 5 One often wonders, in any passing crowd, what horrors of i pired term, and to consult the co! If 1 live to be a hundred, ! can finess old age will hold for all the pretty, smiling, rouged, i tanical department. Pro.|never revay Bert Temple. Bert ooype ia whe ec bs ee a deee , nd his wife took in, treated |] J ort-skirt: easy-mannered girls who go by. ! fessor Grey of the department, as. | hin @ took me in, treated h ll dg i i A 5? he D What will life hold for them—after the age of 35? | | eae. signed his chief assistant at the|™me a8 a human, if helpless. fellow a a u e Sarah, the Indomitable, symbolizes what life might mean| L& |gardens to my case. He took me/ being, mot as a “city man” to be/ , « 5 many old women. Altho Sarah is a genius, her WILL| |. i to climb over the hard spots of life is not peculiar to her| outdoor epmett © TOT TOME Indoor.) Cries oe ny nrecious savings |hand. “First thing fer you to do's | is. WILL is not a quality which genius can copyright. | scat Sar orted,t?.8 frazsie in polita| “There!” he cried at & p. m./to git @ farmer and carpenter.” h WILL is common spiritual property. It is the one im-| part mene disease hes’ a. “tut WHY SINGLE OUT ROOT? Editor The Star: Why do you | mt J. Now you can make a beginning. | aid. “I kin git yer both, if yer | On ath waltichiee, “and ett told ‘em not to ship your amali| Want I should, an’ pot sting yer | hable human asset. If more women took their share of » m not affected with it Is as|fruite—raspberries, ete.—till you| Most noo folks thet come here Kite | single out Judge Root for attack? 1 4 ; Movie actor with « hair) ’ | stung. 5 aah ttaaw af ene dieaiaten he bee 1 ir iT © “ ordered ‘em to, You won't be do not any ih Bernhardt, at almost 72, would not be unique. cut oF @ four-bit piecegin a Sunday eae tee ena alae” “fm clay te your henée.” sete 1 Pedi. Be aelboet Bry words tesa} | You're damn cheerful about it” | “Wall, yer don't exactly know; decisions which have been handed 1 erted. You talk as if | were a|™© intimately,” sald Bert with «| down by the entire membership of} , but Sounds West ip of © more reputation left| millionaire, with nothiog to do but! —— ———_—!- | (he present supreme court, an nehile and! oss r it HE poor old West is growing, sadly effete. It is fast then the meat'on a he spend toner! [at least a majority of the present That's about all you will do, for UB YOUR BACK! | membership of the superior court lose , baseball man: * OURht to be @ jof King county literature. . | boosted sc ae Ry DE being robbed of its birthright: its proper place in saffron-|jatne SMe | PSThat's about all you will do, for | : | 1 know of de¢isions made or ren- ‘The other day 12 masked) men eld up the autd of “Cran- a Mi S renen SYRUP OF FIGS | dered by Judge Frater, Judge Dyke: | err ing” Rider on a public Mattwey. Rider's daughter, | er ee SE ae | UM Aco man and Judge Ronald far worse | | | nt a well known ; | a ees is poasibi than anything Judge Root is charg-| | thers, who was driving, attempted to rush the gang) HOME RUN FOR SAM ed with, and I have heard of sim-| t full speed. The 12 men followed, firing volley after volley. | Samuel—Do you think your ta-| 5 5 | ilar charges against other members | | failed to catch thé car or garner the loot, yet when the ther would object to my marry! nt Don't drug kidneys! Rub the of the superior court. ce of battle lifted, Mrs. Smathers was found to be shot you? : ’ agi pain right out with old fae ee eee, ater ef times, the chauffeur beside her was dead, while in the], Sally—! couldn't say, Sammy. It] “St. Jacobs Oil.” worse opinion thi some of the de-| . : a" t | 1 au of the car, Rider was shot thru the jaws and his|pos,*77thne ike me, he would —| cisions which have been rendered | by the present supreme cour i H sf i bu holes 4s a sieve and . rags ‘i + H ere ents Savage Dalles Roles As 2 sb ” MODERN par i, |If Little Stomach Is Sour) M4°h burt you? Can't straighten | state vs, Peterson, Judge Parker AIRY” STORY |"" “Liver Torpid or oweld up without feeling den pains. | wrote an opinion, concurred in by affair would haye done credit to Texas in its wildest! “WII you marry me, my pretty Pp sharp aches and twinges? Now lie other judges. which, on two : a ar ; ” logged. sten! That pago, acta tic But it happened in New Burlington, New Jersey. East-| “wi maid | Clogged. Hsten! That's lumbago, actatica, OF! ioints, waa not only contrary to de ‘ s h i, * 7 hat's your salary, sir?” she | maybe from a strain, and you'll get) cisions in every state of the Union, ard the tw6-gun man wends his way said. Mothers can rest easy after giv. blessed relief the moment you rub Ci but was ulto contrary to leading | “$1 ” ing “California Syrup of Figs,” be- | your back : > bu ; Cc. in Politi | ante eae Mfoing, siti” she {cause in a few houra all the clox-|ing “St. Bcd; ot patna dee Washington cares! In the case of wup n ourt in itics said. y oir! ged-up waste, sour bile and fer-|takes out soreness, lameness and Soraya bet mans $f Pld i i ision i a s*| |menting food gently moves out of . ve ¢ 1 | ® Y¥ electing to defend his decision in the Danbury Hatter eee the bowels, and you have an well, {stittness so quickly. You simply rub| concurred in by Judges Morris, | j ® .| Maybe the price of hay has ge 7 it on and out comes the pain. It is| 5, Holeomb and Mount, which case upon the platform, Mr. Hughes has drawn the su lup owing to the large quantitice or| Diavtul child again. Children atm: | perfectly harmless and doesnt burn ehorel Jone > dawg tig yrordalpisted a cs cere: ‘ a ply will not take the time from =. court squarely into politics, which is the inevitable and |it i ee the costumes for| play to empty their bowels, and ees ng om ers passed by anything Judge Root ever | distressing sequel to his acceptance of the republican nomina-|the hula hula dance craze amber up! Don't suffer! Get 8! wrote, | tion. T A ee. they become tightly packed, liver! snail trial bottle from any drug fait 4 Jud i ci vi ' ras mac t ‘ee! ec ity toward Judge : . he average American citizen has ever held the su-| FABLE gets sluggish and stomach disor-|'0). and after using it just ones Pi M aa past on & i. see 9 ie ‘ ? P ‘ | dered eme court in highest regard; a regard akin to feverence.| Once upon a time a young man| When crons, feverish, restleas, see /YOU'll forget that you ever had|:hon'] want to eee an attack made ese will be vaguely disturbed; their faith insidiously|betook himself into ye restaurant| if tongue is coated, then give this kache, lumbago or sciatica, be-| 6, every other judge equally guilty laken. By reverse reasoning they will argue that if past de-|"hoppe and ordered a dish of ye|deliciour “f axative.” Children | Couse your back will n In ase I tried before Judge ‘ 5 oyster stew, and iS geean it cannot cause injure Cause Bny more misery. It ne mA: ~ . | cisions of the august tribunal may properly be used as cam-| oysters In it and It had som ore me safe ae nf we Fog it disappdints and oy pfs Lio French of Kiteap oounhs ig? wee ; i cisions may 1 ed with g re |No difference what ails your little 9 . guilty of 9 grevter abuse of discre j im material, future decisions may be rendered with the . one—if fall of cold, or a sore| mended for 60 years. Stop drug.| SUllty of n armeter Bimbo of duane ‘Same object in view. | UNSOLVED MYSTERIES throat, diarrhoea, stomach-ache, sing kidn They don't cause The supreme court must necessarily be smutted by its], Since there were only two worms| #4 breath, remember, a gentie “tn- | foam "aot oaane % a oe in Noah's Ark, what did he feoq|*4¢ cleansing” should. always be nerves, therefore can not cause | contact with political pitch to a greater or lesser extent. Freiieder di eC) the first treatment given, Full di-| pain for bringiag Judge French over to And the aspirations and ambitions of no one man are of| When Rip Van Winkle slumberpa| rections for bables, children of all try King county cases "sufficient importance to warrant such an unhappy contre-|for 20 years, how was {t the soles | *e8 and grown-ups are printed on IF BACK HURTS CHARLOTTE F. JONES. tem, of his shoe: . . each bottle. “i he woke unt “Om Out when! “Reware of counterfeit fig syrups | oe ae | Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bot STILL UNFIT F | In some parts of Mexico, Carranza's paper dollar SOME INSIDI jtle of “California Syrup of Figs,” | Editor The Star: IT am well ac- “ d , & STUFF | caretuil oe Ms wee é ; is worth 2 cents in gold. Takes a pitchforkful of those | When writing a nove) Pagel 2 ge anal Soa pat quainted with Milo A, Root and te charged with, and yet the pres ent membership of the King coun ty superior court is not criticised | always be|is made “California Fig |know that he is as unfit for a dollars to buy a coat. ure to have a clumsy heroine,| Syrup Compony.” We make no | judge now as he ever was, a | Have her trip lightly into the room| *maller size. Hand back with con. “A READER.” and fall into her lover's arma tempt any other fig syrup Fiush the Kidneys at once when - | ge wa | Backachy or Bladder bothers— | OPPOSED CORPORATIONS A MISANTHROPE Meat forms uric acid | Waitor ‘The Star: It ts pathetic | “So you want to be a baseball ” to read the words of one who ab jumprie, eh?” asked the magnate No man or woman who eats meat) solutely knows nothing of what he | “Ahe you prepared to give up all regularly can make a mistake by|is writing, as does “A Voter” in your friends? | flushing the kidneys occasionally,| Monday's Star. If he would take| | I never had any,” replied the} says & well-known authority, Meat just a little time to secure the! applicant. “For yeats I've worker forms uric acid, which clogs the| facts, he would soon be put | in the weather bureau.”"—Judge jKidney pores so they sluggishly | straight filter or strain only part of the | **™ale one } , : Pe ; : waste and poisons from the ten | He would find that in the partic | pe ae RRECTION {Have Beautiful, Soft Hair of | then you get sick, Nearly all rheu,| War case in judgment, three judges Percy Paul—Selleve me, dear. an Even Dark Shad |matiom, headaches, liver trouble,| ¥ere for the corporation and four . I love you alone e. 4 Fr frouble,| ages were with the shipper, and fs nervousness, constipa 0 The Kiddie (trom behind the hess, sleeplessness, bledder divor.| JudRe Root wax NOT among the jscreen)—-Nothing to it, wis! 1 Not even a trace of gray shows! ders’ come from sluggish kidners, | three in favor of the railway cor. ahi love you alone till he gives in your h after a few applica The moment you feel a dull ache | poration me a quarter for candy.—Puck tions of Q-Ran Hair Color Restorer |!n the kidneys or your back harts,| If Judge Root had been a corpo or e urine Is ‘ tool, how easy would it not| to hair and scalp, @Ban is no dye, 0", if the urine tx cloudy, offensive, | ration | ¥Ban is no dye, ! oun of sediment, irreguiar of pas-| have been to throw his vote with is harmless, but makes scalp and | gage or attended by a sensation of|the three judges in favor of the [hair healthy, and restores the nat-| scalding, get about four ounces of| railway corporation and thereby se- | ee Bee tha 2 Editor’s Mail ural color glands. If your hair {_|J®d Salts from any rellable|cure a majority of the court in fa: | pharmacy and take a tablespoonful | vor of the corporation? SCORES “PAPA” GILL Bray, streaked with gray, faded,/in a glass of water before break-| it is said that Judge Root chang: Editor St. According to an in-|dry, bleached, thin or falling, ap. |fast for a few days and your kid-led his opinion after delivering It terview pubitirel some time ago! ply Q-Ban as directed on abel. |neY8 Will then act fine, This fa-| hut the fact Is that a few words in one of the Seattle newspapers,! goon all your gray hair and entire | MOUs, salts ix made from the acld| were changed to conform to the our honorable mayor, Mr, Gill,| ~ jof grapes and lemon juice, com-| phraseology of a federal decision seems to regard himself as the| Need of hair gradually turns to an| bined with Hthia and has boen used | and did not change the substance of | “father” of bis people. Some time, even, beautiful dark shade, leaving | for generations to flush clogged |, i} | WESTERN UNION Day Letters and Night Letters ming prosperity to the men who them as a selling impetus. The effectiveness of these live sales- men is shown in the dollars gained for cents expended. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO- the opinion. Jndge Root refused to sell out to | ako 1 addressed a letter to him in/all your ‘ir healthy, flufty, mutt, | ate case an nenteaiicorn ‘oan vhic a ” ‘excise! | tiv fj oO Z he eida | as rang: “4 pre: | ble blunder om the part of eaectog radiant, thick, full of lite, fascin- fn urine eo A no longer causes ier | {he Vice kangaters and “interest jofficials, whereby 1 lost my vote, 1/aUns: $0 evenly dark and hand. tation, thus ending bladder disor.| [hey determined tnd are now a have not recelved from Mayor (iti #ome NO one Will suspect you used | Ars. Th en charged him with ac even an acknowledgment of the re|Q-Ban. Also stops dandruff and| PO le Seve bs seeing eo Pe 8" | copting $30,000 which the Great | celpt of my letter. It seems to me/ falling hair. Sold on a money-back | fervescent lithlawater drink whieh | Northern railway attorney had mis-| oes roe tver’ of the citisens of guarantee. Only 0c for w big bot-| all regular moat eaters should take | appropriated from his company, eattle ought to take a little more tie at Bartell Drug Stores, 8 now and then to keep the kidneya| His resignation showed bis high r t in the welfare of his “chil Seattle,| ciean and tho blood pure, thereby | spect for the court as an instituttc CHAS, T, HOOPER Wash. Outoftown people supplied | avoiding serious kidney complica: |and his desire to keep it above su 1221 Yesler, |by parcel post.-Advertisement, tions j vicion and reproach, | | | fetter, 1 confessed Gone Wrong to Rowton and, armed with, my |e over tert took me in| BE Given Another Chance? Judge Root has a large heart for manity, and I know the voters will never regret having given him their support “JUSTICE.” SHOULD NOT BE TRUSTED Editor The Star: 1, for one, was considerably surprised that Mr. Milo Root should offer himself as @ candidate for the judgeship, and much more surprised that voters who bad been in the state in 1909 should for a moment consider his name 1 cannot agree with The Star that “a judge gone wrong” should be trusted with “any other office, unless it should be a constable of & country precinct. Evidently they had the goods on the gentleman, or he would not have resigned under fire. And 1, for one, appreciate the patriotic spirit of The Star in bringing the skeleton from the closet of our for- getfulness, and thousands of voters thruout the state will keep it in view on November 7. In the mean- tme, keep The Star's 42-centimeter guns going. “Lest we forget.” CHAS. A, THOMPSON, Irondale, Wash. Of Elastic and Such Misery-Causing Makeshifts Are the Ruptured Man's Worst Enemies Depending on tle or spring tru like shown above ie little less than slow suicide, Such con- traptions are alno sure to shorten your life It's hard to make them hold, eve when drawn #0 tight they scarcely give a minute's peace. They are simply a And because they nearly alwave tet their victims get worse all the time, they are yearly forcing thousands of people into risking their lives by undergoing operation. ‘These unselentific makeshifts cause #0 much misery and such a shameful waste of money that the law should put a atop to their sale, Don't Buy Anything For Rupture Without Giving It a Thorough Test re'a only one why you or any o ied up with go ahitte I's simply because yo sf afterward pro The only way yo nt exactly what y xty days trial—a y kind good enough to #1 such a nd thoroygh test That's ou ranteed rupture holder Only Thing Good Enough To Stand A 60-Day Test We'll make you @ guaranteed rupture holder--make It to your measure—and let you give It a thorough 60-day teat without asking you to risk @ cent If it doesn't keep your rupture trom ming out or bothering you in any way no matter how hard you work or strain if It doesn’t prove every claim we make then you can send it back and {t won't cost you @ single penny See What It Do Thie guaranteed Law Should Stop Sale ‘Faraaaaaaaatamaaeeetsaaeeaaeasaaaoats © FESRALEIATEITTITTED } “Wal, then, 2 to carpenters | Bert continued, “thar's Hard Cider Howard. Hard Cider's forgotten more about carpent’rin’ then moat y’ the rest ever knoo, But he looks upon the apple juice when It's yalier, | kin keep Hard Cifer sober while he's on your job. He'll treat yer fair, an’ see thet the plumbers do” We came to a small settlement of white cottages, At one of these, Bert knocked. We were admitted by « pretty girl Into a tiny parlor where a middieaged Irishman sat smoking a pipe Hello, Mike,” said Bert, “this. Mr. John Upton, who's bought M Noble's place, an’ wants a farmer, 1 told him you waz the man. “Sit down, sor, sit down,” said Mike, offering a chair, “Sure, let's talk it over.” “Well, now,” Mike was say “sure I ean run a farm, but whet jdo I be gettin’ for it?” | We wettied on what seemed to ime a sonable wage, and thes Mike asked: “But what be yer runnin’ the place for, Mr. Upton? Is it a real farmer ye'd be? real farmer,’ I answered. “Well, | didn’t know. Onct 1 Worked fer a Mterary feller that marr rich, and he was alw: fer makin’ me try newfangled things. Begorra, he nigh drove the J life out o' me with his talk. I've | heard say yer wuz a literary fel- ler, too, Mr. Upton, and I have |me doubts “Well, | am a sort of a literary “but I never | married a rich wife. | Sure, ye're not £0 old to be past hopin,” Mike replied. I shook my head. “It's you want to write a poem in potatoes.” Mike put back his head and roared. “It's a pome yer want, is it?” he cried. “Sure, it’s an ora- tion I'll give ye. I'll grow ye the | real home rule pertaters.” |. “Well,” said I, rising, “do you begin tomorrow morning, and will your son help for a few weeks?” “The mornin’ it is,” said Mike, “and Joe along.” “I'm going to like Mike,” salé f to Bert, as we walked back up the road. | knew yer would soon ez I seen yer.” Bert replied. “Well,” said 1 “now 1 suppose I've got to find a housekeeper, soon as the house is ready to live jin. Do you know of anyone?” | “Reckon I dew. You leave it to my old lady ‘al, neow, yer might do a heap sight worse!” said Bert. The following morning was a balmy first of May, but realism again compels me to confess that, | having read manuscripts the night before till 2 a. m, I did not k lightly from my couch at breakfast call. | Bert hustled me off immediately after the meal to meet Hard Cider | Howard, whom, by some rural wireless, \he bad already sum- moned, | As we walked down the road, I saw my horse and Mike's hitched to the plough, with Joe driving and | Mike holding the handles. Across | the green pasture already four rieb | brown furrows were shining up to | the sun. . | “Well, Mike didn’t wait long!" IT |exclaimed. “I wonder why he | started in there?” “1 told him to,” said Bert. “That's goin’ ter be yer pertater crop this ear.” | “Is it?” said I. “Why?” felt ‘a little peeved. After all, this was my farm. “Cuz it’s pasture land thet’s good |fer pertaters, an’ yer don’t need it fer the cows, an’ it kin be worked ter give yer a crop right off, even tho "twant ploughed under tn the fall,” Bert answered. “You trust |yer Uncle Hiram fer a bit, sonny.” (Continued in Our Next Issue)y Spring Trusses only way ever discovered for overcoming the weakness which is the real enuse of rupture. Just how it does that—entirely matically—is explained in the free book which the coupon below will bring you. Will Save You From Operation The Cluthe hae such @ remarkably strengthening and benefictal effect that it has completely cured hundreds a hundreds of people whose cases seemed almost hopeless. It has so thoroughly proved its merits that many physictane in all parts of the niry now recommend {t instead of dvieing operation No Belt—No Leg-Straps—No Springs Does away entirely with the cur of belts, leg-straps, and aprings. Peop! itt ow hold im the Also perspiration-proof and easily ki clean. Get World's Greatest Rupture Boo! There are so m rupture that we sum up In a book during forty years of expe: This remarkable book—cloth pages—is full of facts never bs in_print Tt shows why depending on elastic or spring trosses ts about the worst thing Tt exposes the humbug “appltances,”’ “methods.” “plasters.” ete, Tt explaing the dangers of operation And shows you why, 1€ you manage te live through ft, you may have to keep on dearned jound, 96 efore put 1 about the famous le tt fe—how it ends how you can test it without having to rink Uttle it coats if you ® penny, Keep It. Also gives voluntary endorsements from over 6,000 benefited and cured peo- ple The minute it takes to write for this book may make a bie difference in the rest of your life. Don't fail to get it— Just use the coupon or simply say in @ letter or postal “Send me your book.” THIS BRINGS UT qemu Hox §8t—CLUTHE COMPANY 123 BK 2rd St, NEW YORK Crry © your Free Book and Trial Nend Offer. Name Address ;

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