Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
2 Aen ae Ay ARLE UTTAR RE yon ee Went Leacus of Newapapers A Novel A Week eattle Star) xr By mail, our ered at fe C clty, one y. CLIMBED the broad steps to the | lobby of the hotel, and # ely ] sé ” Ch “EF ° ” H h had my feet reached the top The “Answers” of Chas. “Evasion” Hughes Jy." ss: .'raitee nw cor ” i a 5 aving ¢ yoy o rushed to} ITH a great show of “frankness” the “hundred per cent candidate’ is tae Sg Pad 5 Ache ss Bho beginning to reply to questions as to what he would have done had he hand was in mine, her eyes upon been president. And his replies, instead of clearing things up tor the voters, PAC bak. ula’ ob Makan’ 0 | . | |send you,” she said | add to the obscurity of the situation. At Louisville, it will be remembered, he was asked what he would have WD ggg Mao Rae pr done if he had been president when the Germans torpedoed the Lusitania. His tan?” “Melted,” she laughed. “Have! reply was that had she been president the Germans would not have torpedoed ewtaly | the Lusitania. : At Sioux City, more recently, he was asked: “Will you urge the re- al of the Adamson eight-hour law for railway men, if you are elected pres- you business {n town? | |hot here, you poor man.” | “Yen,” said I, “I have business |here, very Important business, But firat some supper and a spree. I've ent?” | sot moat two bushels of peas to Ba H H “ . ange ” ayt'? spend! To which he made this reply: “You cannotvsepeal a surrender P | We bad a gay supper, and then The partisan republican newspapers are commending their candidate took « cab, left my grip at my col * ‘ sed é ee Fi oh gar lege club, where ad long main-| very highly for his “frankness with the people,” etc. tained a nonresident. mamberahtp, | land drove thence to Broadway Where shall we go?” There's a revival of ‘Patience’ jat the Casino,” she suggested. We found our places tn the Ca sino just as the curtain was going Taking the Hughes reply at Sioux City for a text, one paper winds up an enthusiastic half-column editorial with the comment: p “It is good for candidates to go on record on matters of vital . It certainly is; that’s exactly what the voters have a right to expect. |up, and 1 saw “Patience” for the ” te ‘ ; had i a’ rha at me. was glad it was for And now if the “hundred per cent candidate” will tell us what he Blut first time, because she was would have done about the Lusitania and whether he will urge the repeal of jwith me, to shere my delight After the performance she would | the eight-hour law, we shall be glad to publish the answers for the enlight- net tot. the cat & enh. enment of our readers. ; Srl ahr hrm plage Pye; Pr Certainly neither Candidate Hughes nor his newspaper a have [ildowatown to. her lodgings, thru 5 A A * A gs , Sas xpect that such sli the hot, dusty, —half-deserted so low an opinion of the intelligence of the voters as to expect that suc p- the Det. dusty, haltdesarted the city below 14th et. | At the steps of an ancient house! near Washington square, a pery evasious will be accepted as answers. paused “Here is where I live.” she said ferendum No. 8—Vote “No” I had a lovely evening. Shall I} | [) EFERENDUM Bill No. 8 is the measure which the last |soe na aaain betore you ko back? legislature aimed at the port commission. It was purely I» ge Pina tage ne aia “hts ve piece of political spitework against the port commissioners jped behind ber, to her evident a set of interests opposed to public ownership. Gov. Lister eg i sdanittae s. > large, silent the bill, but has since reversed his position, and is tai et eee baakebeen urging the defeat of all the referendum bills. l whispered. “You are going with | me. Stella, T cannot Nve without! Referendum Bill No. 8 would add to the present non- in commission also the mayor, the prosecuting attorney, auditor, and county engineer. There is also a pro-) n to limit the bonded indebetedness. you. Twin Fires ts crying for its | MODERN NURSERY RHYME I heard tn the stillness « strange | One misty, moisty morning, and|sob, and suddenly her head was down on the seat with excitement as the buggy rattled over bridge. Lamplight from Twin Fires porch stood Mrw. eee Mr. Roberta went to Kansas City with a car load of hogs. Several of the neighbors went in together to make up the car.—lola (Kas.) Reg of its harbor development committee urging the defeat of Referendum Measure No. 8. — ~* This report in part reads as follows: “It should be remembered that the port district has been was streaming On the kitchen Pillig, dressed in ises of the district have been from time to time approved the voters of King county; that the proposal to enlarge membership of the commission was rejected by the voters | of rico descended upon us. a Den-| "82 jample arma closed about ber, Both women were half laughing, half cry-| Stella up the path, and Mra Bert’s| vent {t from sliding down over the ears has been perfected by ver hatter. King county and that thereupon the supporters of that! imbibe ‘Deen ing, when I got there with the grips i i | in that Je p the wT sa procured at Olympia the passing of the law now under) ieliMie ac dadhGr ‘wiki teste Bae, tb epiheot ne tie et aaa | ndum. * S , {than one stamp, it is advisable to “Your committee is unable to find any merit whatever in| piace the stamps side by each, tn proposed law and thinks it to be very objectionable on the |*tead of top of one another ing grounds so durn glad they gotter ery about et” “You shet up,” "For all you know said Mra. Bert I'm pityin’ “1—Because it prevents direct responsibility to the peo- |< ie a Bag * ‘ple in the’ management of their public port facilities thru the| SMART SMOCK ER | Phd ge aor hig Bet pn hei er z ce of adding four short-term officials elected to other of-| FOR COOL DAYS !\csiad fresh from the garden, and, for other purposes, already having ample work to do, un-| ° bd aa 8 crowning Slory, & magnificent d for the special service required, and unable to devote 4 We sat a long while looking at es to the single purpose of port development. — | leach other across the small table, “2.-Because it throws a strictly nonpartisan office and ) | |and then we wandered out into the ; dewy evening and our feet took us into the whirlpools of city and county politics, for I - linto the pir where in the dark patronage will thereupon enter the city and county poli- _ |ness we stopped by @ now sacred to the injury of efficient management and competent ray cg spot and held each other close in | |allence. Then we went back into cilities for foreign and coastwise commerce.” It should be further remembered that the interests which |the south room. ‘Oh, if the curtain «tuff would oaded the anti-port commission bill thru are the same only hurry up and come!” cried my “ h attempted to foist the notorious Ayers terminal scheme | wife upon Seattle, a transaction which would have given a few “You must learn patience—Mre. js : Upton,” said 1, while we both financial adventurers $5,000,000 of the people's money without any adequate return. The man who is right succeeds, whether he wins or _ Rot. rs. Axtell or Hadley? ONGRESSMAN L. H. HADI ways been a reactionary, opposed to the social and i © dustrial program which has animated the people of this state and which has characterized the administration of President Wilson Mrs the title, as before us, laughed alllily over others have done | doubt | She was beside me on the settle! The house was still choral song of night ins: jed drowstly, Buster came softly tn and plopped down on the rug. We were alone in Twin Fires, together, and she would not rise to go up the to Bert's. She would ne So we sat a long, long while he ~ ress of Bellinghar fo Jand the rest shall be silence: It was the strangest, sweetest sensation I had ever known to wake in the morning and hear soft sing Frances C. Axtell, also of Bellingham, has always given her best efforts toward a betterment of human condi-| ing In the room where a freab * 7 Sale et aitenet breeze was wandering. I saw Stella tions. As a member of the legislature, she was an inspiration eeulltaes at tase kor halt for beneficial results to the home, the mother, the child, and the worker. SY BETTY. BROWN labout her shoulders, looking out For these Indian summer days,| She turned when [ stirred, carne before we slip into our long winter|over to kiss me, while her hair fell like - _ in spots and some places were ~~. |GIPSY SMITH TO sainol Ointment STOPPED AT ONCE. Before I had used Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap three days the redness had r odist church | is known for its purity and high quality: | Pedro, star potato bug destroyer! on the farm of orge Allen. of} all gone, I could sle night no | Monticello, Y, and as fat and itching or burning 1 felt like industrious a toad 4 er lived, is}a new woman People who knew in Htigation He aten almost/me when I had this trouble N ar ridden potato fields Exemplary | samples, write to Dept. 6-8, Resinol, damages are asked Haltimore. Nat IM a BM | itehing STAR—SATURDAY, OCT. | exrsugnaasesassease guseeanestzassznsszazssazsaguanittiasiyt Next Week “Shea of the Irish Brigade” BY RANDALL PARRISH MUUNRRNYUTEGUCGGEN iavevasanaecenssescaapesemestasresntea (Continued From Our Last Issue) | | kis the! From the’ first | Outelde the)) ts sound-|| | water blisters. The itching was inten 4 1 had no relief what with cracks and pained me very pies ; badly, My hands and arms were i th fy th ao ot oleed yet all scales, The burning was #0 rom e Trozen nor Wor eT aT ey te atha tree |bad it felt as tf Thad been turned : . | world, WIl Spend the months from)ig a blister and the blister rubbe to lazin tropics ohid Labise till pri tn Frafice doing| off, 1 tried everything I could hear pvangelistic work, under the au jabout, incivding mi eserip Baker's Cocoa piem ofthe Young Men's Chriatian| goa \ucing, any preer Jassociation, He comes as a repre-| 7.0" livia - alt Caan E hentia sentative of the Wesleyan Meth ieasort, 1 tried Resiaol Soap and were | \ every potato bug onthe Allen farm) surprised af the wonderful cure. |) Walter Baker & CoLid. when be suddenly disappeared.| (Signed) Mrs. J. 8. Walker, 97 ESTABUSHED 1700 DORCHESTER, MASS E Allen has’ filed sult against F | Bartlett St, Charleston | of erick Lawrence ¢ All druggists sell Resinol Oint E ing he lured Pedro to his own bug-|ment and Resinol Soap. For free| 28, 1916. PAGE 4 “Hurry! Hurry’ oe . 7 cloudy w th weather, | was bi n hb The entire subject matter affects only the people of King fa7kica by a tix. healthy, husky|flowing Me arma cased etent te into the gardent” y. No other part of the state is directly involved. The panhandler, and he was as tough Pree hana ie caritenie bgt Pads op ons at issue were passed upon by the people of Seattle leather, “Say, pardne ur lips Wife we in every case they voted against the proposed changes. °* ba 4 wi cilhaath the legislature, obeying the dictates of special interests, FABLE CHAPTER IX oy made a . me d the right of Seattle and King county to home rule.) Gace upon a time & man rat Preece dsr bdailbacmdeiggine Scuiak wb: Maw aad thok te Oeae d the votes of the people of this district, and passed)watching a moving picture, and/, por man walling with the) ury them measure. when the thrilling part came the) "UES m between us ae haat 1 wave” aan eae R icipal 1 ob Beattie ahonted. the people in front of htm didn’t get up ayer venga a als. "$e kant wee @ 8 se hemtlaghece mest ¢ ‘gaan g Fev jand Ko out. ota was bouncing up acd/r when you married me. These curtains be on your own bead! I'm the! doing the best I can.” There was suddenly the suspicion of moisture In her eyes, and I ran to comfort her and maintained primarily at the instance and ex-|ister. oot ee ee poe soon “1-1 so want to make Twin Fires i ; t the jicies and en- pee oe ‘ltovely,” she added, pricking her et:the people of King county; the: poe A derby with skid shaina to pre-| Bert raised his hand, and & shower) finger “Mh, tell me 1 can if f am lonly @ highbrow!” Of course the finger had to be! kissed pd da th she had 1 had te and pr and now, long, long afterward, I smile to think how like we all of us are on a honey 1000 Those who know the country only in summer, know {t searcely at ail November snow storm to the last drift melting be fore the winds of March on the| *¢t of a still, northern side of a pasture wall, the winter season is @ perpetoal revela tion of subtle color harmonies, of exquisite compositions, of dramas on the trodden snow, of sweet, close companied hours before wood fires that crackle, shut into “a tumult uous privacy of storm.” Our first winter began one bleak November day when the shrapnel of the snow descended upon us Wrapped against It, we ran about the farm, marvellng at the transfi¢ urations it wrought Keeping Yourself Well THE DAY OF WEAKNESS After you have had a ska ex- perience, or worn yourself out with an unusually hard day's work, your body is_not in shape to resist disease. Its vitality is lowered, and the forces that re- sist infection are lacking in power. Certain infections are always present. One of the worst of these is that of influenza. If your lowered, it is likely to ment, and no man can ever foretell what this will | to, For much per Of weakness Your heart no}! H You need a good tonic, | Bhould be strengthened, your cir- culation made more vigorous, your | ed up. The tonic that pds have found moat | has in Pe t rd off th often Songressman Hadley has been a corporation lawy * vereome them, Congr 3 : ov Yer, Alcoats, Dame Fashion has provided| about m ce 4 then. cried|| =a the tavice form you may carry brewery lawyer, a foe of prohibition. Mrs. Axtell has been|the smart little smock with more|-————— a |} at with you, using it’ whenever you pfree of any alliances that would prevent her from dealing|bands and beads on. it than the| |) Fealtze you are not up to full phys: justly with public welfare questions French peasants who invented| |] than to be Ill, and for auch ce Whi ° smocks ever dreamed of. tions Perunma is heartily recom- , , amed | Which would you favor, then? happen gh hich the Fashion| | mended by thousanda, | r ‘ A | lock ow ech he ‘as js the ideal laxative, Forget party politics. On the merits of the case, Mrs.!Art League of America gives sanc ITCHING | 6 waste from the system, Axtell is entitled to the vote of independent voters. There |tion is this model in marine blue} fones up the women in the country more able in legislative ma velour, collared, cuffed cketed | “ " s are cid me ‘er oy pepe df gislative matters.| ang ali bound round in red pontine.| Tele of “Wonderful Cure” by Voters of the Second district, which includes King county |Red pontine faces the brim of the| 7 outside of Scattle and the northwestern counties, should have| wide, flat ha NOSTON, Mass., Aug. 26.-—"I had no hesitancy as between two candidates so widely apart as|_ The smock enient littlejeczema in the worst way for six Pe et on if ve d {toma e garment to slip over the one-piece| months. A small pimple on my | fret Mrs. Axtell, progressive democrat, and Lynn Hadley, reac-|BAmen) 10. lright wrist kept spreading until it| sacks tebe tionary republican was up to my elbows. It came out| lo Our Dentistry Is Right in Method. Moderate in Prices. Modern Gold Crowns .. Natural Crowns . Bridgework, per Tooth $5 Plates that fit... .$8,00 to $10.00 All work guaranteed 15 years. National Painless Dentists Fourth and Pike Open Sundays, 9:30 to 1 P.M. “The Id PTSTistttseetsitiitiiistssetitistdsectieetsss testi sete Let sees yl of Twin Fi —| That snow melted, but others fol fowed it, and by Christmas we were, an Mike it. snowed tn for the winter. In ° war the rm «mel! of motors d disappeare r roads aud we went the na DK. meeting other pungs on the way It was as if we had slipped back a whole generation in time, Curious |!y enough, too, Mfe became more leisurely, more familiar. in summer had known but few of|and should be given the same priv- out townsfolk, now became ac-|jlege of reform as any one else. quainted with them all | We who We, too, Jeft our pung in the horse sheds every Sabbath morning and joined| good man for in the social quarter-hour which fol:| should be given the opportunity to lowed the service. tt was an altogether different world we lived in from the summer world, and we liked it even better What walks we had! Either with stout boots aloffg the roads or with overshoes into the deep woods took our exercise almost daily we by tramping, and to us the countryside Was @ perpetual revelation Almost the first thing which tm pressed of the wir was the colorful quality landscape. aceful day we could At sun. | look forth from our south windows lacross the white lawn to the dark green pines and beyoud them the | exquisite iron-rust tamaracks, soft and feathery Then, as the sun sank lower, a il of amethyst we i steal mys terlously over the gray hills, all the upper alr would blush to rose, and for a brief nature ecstatic would sound ten minutes a color chord like a Mogartian andante And then the long winter even by the twin supposed by ings were the theatre, and fires our friends town to be pining for t were when we in opera or in reality } bifeafully unaware of either! We had the best pooks In the | world, the best music in the world. | to choose from. We write, also, a tash evening. h alw d letters to left till Any writing of my own T brought forth in the evening for Stella to read, and to criticise as mercilessly as she chose over together agreed with her! and we thrashed it Sometimes, even | Oh, John, I never want to go batk to the city,” Stella answere: me one night when I asked her if she still liked the country. “I want to live here forever of being rooted to the ing a home to know that, but It's a little soon that,” said I, but T knew meant I want to know what I've never known the sense land, of hay Our grandfathers used in our cities we have forgotten in the house I've always lived modern I want to to plan for what she CHAPTER X Spring In the Garden The excitement of our first spring at Twin will probably never be equaled in our lives, tho no epring can recur out its excitements. in a garden with fittititisitestsiiseettes tesa teteete teed eistetssesssctics res” rigt surplus milk and cream to a farmer who ran a milk route, This brought me in $73 a year As I further saved at least $100 by not having to buy milk, and $60 by Peter's ef forts at the churn, and could reckon ja further profit from manure and calves, my cows were worth be tween $200 and $400 a year to me hens and chick Now that we ens, we could om another $100 saved In eax c To thin total I was able to a {the end of the summer more tha | $600 received from the sale of fruit By Walter Pritchard Eaton ceitssiecssstistece A Novel A Week itititsesstestessssstts ise & bo + 1996 fay, Powe ‘uraueneannateanacaracciiacantaaiacaaies | ‘ERSTECORTaRIDORREED Fires, of cour showed us many, me to contemplate what a beantt \ things yet to be done ful, comfortable home we were Tho preceding summer 1 had! able to afford on an income whieh, made about $200 out of my prod-| tr York, would coop us tn an ice, which in my first naive en-| Upper st Side apartment thusiasm pleased me great! Hut We had 30 acren of beautiful {t Was surely a poor return on my land, we had a brook, a 4 Investment recko! mer in’ an orchard, & nottoo loliars and cents, and the second) den, « lovely in eonacn ed a different result. were slowly assembling mahogany Having two cows and a small) furniture whieh fitted it family, | managed to dispose of i We had summer society as sophiaticated as we cared to mix with, and winter society to whieh we could give gladly of our owe stores of knowledge or enth and find joy In the gtving. had health as never before, air and sunshine and @ world of beauty all about us to the far Dine bills I MARK ONLY SUNNY HOURS” i the ancient motto on our lal-plate, and, as 1 look back om the care of Twin Fires’ or forward into the hours that are not sunny are te and vegetables, not only to the} 4 jess but to the hotels. I also eae not beer get Spe Pm |wupplies the inns with peas, cauli-| am writing & i ttt flowers and tomatoes. Pom - on ae June again eo wo is @ thick, rieh ‘Thus the farm was actually pay pean ‘The path still wanders into jing me in cash or saving at least $1,000 @ year—indeed, much more since we had no fruit or ¥ bille the year thru, Mre. F ing as 1 preserving would 1 in the cellar wo will $106 To offret this I pald Mike $600 a year, and employed hin son Joe at | $1.75 a day for 20 weeks, This left me a profit of about $200 on my} first semson at Twin Fires, which | paid my taxes and bought my coal.| Out of my salary, then, came no! rent, no bills for butter, eges, milk, | poultry, nor vegetables. I had to pay Mrs. Pillig her $20 a month | | therefrom, | had to pay the upkeep Jof the piace, and grocery and meat bills (the latter being comparative. table be what But rtist tn hee the pines—pines larger now énd murmurous of the sea. Somewhere down that path, my wandering, and she is not A little form sleeps beside she sits, perhaps, with is n her busy fingers, or more Ikely still with hands that stray toward the sleeping child and ears that listen to the sea- «bell murmur of the pines, whis- pering secrets of the future. I see the white dial post focus- sing the sunlight once again the green lawn, and the thought comes over me, not that I possess these 30 acres of Twin Fires, bet that they possess me, that they are mine only in trast to do their bid- ding, to hand them on still fairer than | found them to the new gea- jly small in summer.) |" put with the great item of rent|eration of my etock. They are the eliminated, and my farm help pay-| Upton bome—forever. ing for itself, it was astonishing to! THE END ~. eel ee eee JUDGE 1S HUMAN, TOO Editor The Star Referring to | restion Should a judge} rong be given another! Wr 4 iges are hu nh. a e Cannot a judge gro reform «ns we as any oO else? Do they not) have the same rights that any one else has, and are they not subject | to mistakes the same as any other human being? They certainly are, I have known Judge Root for years, and think he is a the position, and | | many | make good T think that he was made the cat's paw to pull the chestnuts out of the fire for the “higher-ups” be- fore, but he has bad his lesson, and he will not be caught again. By all means, give Judge Root another chance A SUBSCRIBER. | WHY ROOT? | Editor The Star: Shall a judge who has gone wrong be given an-| other chance? In answer to the} above question, T would like to say | that, if the judge who had gone | wrong was the only available tim-! ber to from, 1 would give him another chance, but I fail to see how any one could turn down another candidate who has had no| chance to make good, and whose other qualifications are on a par with the judge, ro far as we know. | 1 would use the same judgment! in h& case as I am using with the two old political parties that have had many chances to make good their promises to the majority of | their supporters, and have failed to redeem their pledges lam not going to give the judge another chance | Neither am I going to give the! old parties another chance J. 1. GILMORE | ox 27, Birmingham, Wn. | select ONE MORE REASON | Editor The Star: Shall a judge! gone wrong have another chance? In answer, I would say “No.” In addition to what has been said sbout Judge Root’s fitness for the position of judge, I would like to state that | had a lawsuit with Henry J. Gorin. Gorin claimed that T owed him $822.01 for attor ney’s fees, and I offered him $50. H» was dissatisfied, so L brought suit in court to have the amount determined. He called Judge Root as one of his witnesses, and the judge testified that the legal serv- ices Gorin rendered for me were worth from $900 to $1,000. Judge | Gordon IN THE EDITOR’S MAIL Frater allowed Gorin the eum of $50, which I had offered. Gorin then took an appeal, and the supreme court, in passing on ft, said that my offer, and what Jnéige Frater lowed was “very liberal sation for what Mr. Gorts hed done Under these circumstances, aay one can see that Jndge Roots views of the value of legal servic: are absurd, for he was perfectly willing that I should pay Gore from $900 to $1,000 for servicgs that Judge Frater and the su court sald were only worth @ liberal estimate. If Judge Root's ideas of Matters are on the same line with that of lawyers’ fees, he surely would be a poor excuse for a judge of the superior court. I, for ome, considering what bas otherwise been said about Judge Root, shoald very much dislike to see him elegh ed to the bench E. O. GABRTELSEN, 2213 Howard Ave ADMITTED “IMPRUDENCE” Editor The Star: What are the facts in the Root case? It is true, as some of your com — respondents say, that Judge Rest — voted against the railroad, bet after that decision was handed down the road asked for a rehear ing and got it. Gordon did so, and they talkel Great Northern, wrote to Root com plaining. Root wrote back asking him to come and see bim. Gordon di dso, and they talked about the case. A railroad lawyer and a judge writing and talking about the road's cases pri and out of court! All this apy in the committee's report original letters. Thea the opinion in which law which would govern fu’ cases against the railroad was made much more favorable to it than the original opinion did. The stenographers of the su- preme court testified that Root did not dictate the opinion to them. Judge Gordon's stenographer testi- fied that rdon did dictate it to him, and produced his original notes The letter from Gordon to the general counsel, sending him the opinion and asking him to “O. K.” it before he sent it to Root, was produted. This letter said the changes that Gordon had secured were valuable. Root, in his testi- mony, said he was guilty of an “im- prudence.” He did not deny that wrote the opiaton. When the legislature threatened an investigation, Root resigned, rather than face it, A VOTER. < [ ef RADIAX RADIAX Is a combination 2 polish. It te the only polish suit- able for bi wood ai met Tt was Stella's initiation into rural April, and the feet of the south wind walking wip the land Hronght hourly mirapion to. her Satisfaction in AUTO Oh, 1 don't know which is the BODY POL ISH real sign of spring,") said Stella, ; one. ¢ veolng coe minaret i Insist on “The Shine it's the frogs on the first) warm a RADIAX Come Onrr | evening; sometimes I think it's | Z& RADIAX outtita can register it as - ee : Zs atrademark the soft coot-coot of our new hens | 2% Gatawa Weitere in the sun, Sometimes it seems | &M mot in the dlc- io be the figure of Mike driving old | 3* manner pleasing to onary Dobbin and the plough, against the 2 your car with RADIAX 2—A purely de he lone pine, lik e 4 varnish and preserves the paint. Spend scriptive word sei Oi lone ping, like a Millet fF $1 for '« RADIAX outfit and save re cannot be pro- Y 4 tes painting your car tected asa trade- Lump them,” 1 suggested. “It's || 3 mark. Try to all of them combined. In New || £# $50 f N submit a word York is when the soda fountains | ¥ , or a New suggest the nas have to be extended over the tooth- 5 N f RADIAX ture o brugh counter,” #8 ame lor Babia pag vores Gaited. Stelta.)| £e Fell us an expressive “coin name | oF "cotne ; Hy . But this story ig, after all, an 4a uqweste ite nature and une. | fdyl, and the idyl Is drawing to all Sy H selves ta you. It sour denier close, My little tale can only end) Ze |] supply you race N ty with “and they lived happy ever|] 844 {] TUTE), then send order dl eit ‘ after.” Into (he sweet monotony || £5 Seen of such happy years what reader is wants to follow? $i That second summer at Twin