The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 6, 1916, Page 4

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} ° STAR 1916. PAGE 4 sertaataaerernerrasy | seeeesgseagseess: Pei tisietttitiettiiititiiestiseeeesesiisieeeeeitisetesseeeieeeeteeteee eesti eRe EL ee pSUEETESSEUSEESUSSSSESSSESEEEESSSSSESS Next Week The Seattle Star (2: Entered at Beattia, Postoffics as encomd-elase matter By mail, out of elty, one yea ie per month up te # mos Dy carrier, elty, thee As a Fair-Minded Man, Mr. Voter, What Do You Think About This? NDER the caption, “America Needs Hughes,” there appears in the ad. ff vertising sections of the monthly magazines for November, and in all of the current weeklies, a page article by Theodore Roosevelt. This advertisement is signed by “The National Hughes which Roosevelt is one of the leading members. The following is reprinted from this Roosevelt article: “Under his (Wilson's) lead America could and should have put itself at head of all the neutral nations by its example, if not by direct diplomatic agree ments in demanding that the war should be conducted in accordance with the usage of civilized nations, that international law should be observed, that the | rights of neutrals and non-combatants should be respected | “If this spirit had animated our administration there would probably have | been no invasion of Belgium, no fears of a like fate to terrorize other smaller na- | tions, no torpedoing of merchant vessels, no bombarding of churches and hos- pitals, no massacreing of women and children, no murder of Miss Cavell, no at- tempted extermination of the Armenians and Syrian Christians.” Thus we have the flat, unqualified statement by Roosevelt that Presi- dent Wilson should have interfered to save Belgium. Roosevelt has repeat- edly made this same statement during his speaking campaign for Hughes. The European war began’on August 1, 1914, and the invasion of Belgium by Germany was an accomplished tact before September 1, 1914. In The Outlook for September 23, 1914, the same Theodore Roosevelt, who is now denouncing President Wilson for not having interfered to save Belgium, wrote an article from which the following is reproduced: | “Of course it would have been folly to jump into the gulf ourselves to no good purpose; and very probably nothing we could have done would have helped Belgium. We have not the smallest responsibility for what has befallen her and I am sure that the sympathy of this for the suffering of the men, women and children of Belgium is very real. Nevertheless, this sympathy is compatible with full acknowledgment of the unwisdom of our uttering a ¢ word of official protest unless we are prepared to make that protest effe and only the clearest and most urgent national duty wou d ever deviating from our rulg of neutrality and non-interference.” Now we do not claim that there is anything in the above that should influence any voter to vote for Wilson because the president did not hurl this country into war in behalf of Belgium. We simply want our readers to know how absolutely lacking in sincerity is the campaign of abuse which is being made against Wilson. One month after President Wilson had declared this country neutral, as every sane man and woman in the nation wanted him to do, Roosevelt wrote in unqualified approval of the policy. Two years later, the same Roosevelt digs the last words from the dregs of his vocabularly of vituperation and hurls them at the president in an attempt to defeat him for re-election BECAUSE HE SACRIFICED THE NATIONAL HONOR BY NOT SAVING BELGIUM, As a fair-minded man, Mr. Voter, what do you think about it Alliance,” of the country* Editor’s Mail WHY “BREAK UP” THINGS? Wall St. Dollars Elect a President? EORGE W. PERKINS of the United States Steel Co., the Harvester company and other well known multi- “ama : Editor The Star nee my ar ein n € concerns, hes written to the chairman of the DA-| tal in Seattle from Canada a few zi A al democratic committge saying the sole issue in thisywoeks ago, I have been an ardent dential campaign is: “Can Wilson get away with it?’ [admirer of The Star's enthusiastic Wrong as usual, George! and truly efficacious endeavors f 4 . * : . soctal form Thi alone, r, The big issue disclosed by the list of the campaign con-| coupled "with the fact that we in fibutions to the republican fund is this | Canada have profited very materi “Can Wall st. get away with it?” A perusal of the list of contributors who gave sums in poner hagpecty ene, nit five figures reads like a directory of Wal! st. Add to this list, crtticis Du Pont of the powder trust, J. Ogden Armour of the beef | partment’s trust, Rockefeller, jr., of the oil trust, I. N. Vail of the tele © vant ally from criticisms offered by makes me venture the pol thods of cop! vis suff ‘ a me de g with] 0 problem—enforcement of| ‘ ; 4 hero w him, and prob: | Phone trust and various and sundry little brothers of the gtd law A wy Bae be So nim, and prob: : ‘Ae js 4 s you sre probably aware, the| ably never shal | CHAPTER It ‘$maller trusts, and you have a fairly comprehensive idea Of| pominion of ( {a'a- prohibition-| But wouldn't it be wonderful if| 1 See My Hero the forces back of Charles Evasion Hughes. ary measures ar in every}! should meet him, in England May 7th, Night Not since the palmy days of Mark Hanna have the repub-|! wages ich we pone ts Leb wt; gop ane I have been to Lady Meldon‘s . bf : A u wil nN t ny arguerite a nere | The house « pack Q licans had so much money at their disposal in a campaign : alll tate I : aoe gpl The house is set back in @ garden. 4 ; iat : > . As far as I can see. now, I know, for | read in ® paper) ¢ seemed to me an ordinary Lon The big thing to be decided is: Will the farmers, the|of the United States of |the other day that he'd come home| gon house. till a young giant of a $mall business men, the laboring men, allow themselves to be |!ook forward also to that miller ea tog lant 5 h in| Liighlander in full kilts opened the fooled? am—the total obliteration of the| Usually there isn't very much in| door . . , : ’ . : . irink ¢ San Francisco papers about people He led me into a ware tail p We Maink not We think Wall st. is NOT going to get) Sunday evening I was attracted] and things In other countries, But) where a tall gfeat-great-grand way with it. We do not think the plain people are going|by a vast g of persons gaz-| somehow is still every one's| father clock ticked slumberously to vote to put Wall st. shackles upon themselves & inquisit into the windows | ero, as papaves (ohare and the gray walls were almost . £. A of the Washir , > € he e e@ 0 ere are ereste 4 de dc s fa 1 mace satisfied with the new freedom Wilson has given | (wt, fecoyr mayo agree chap | | aaioad oa kc Z daly eA Bh De 'y nought to flash thru my mind | e Ar ar m *| wainscoting, with portaits of Stu the small Business man, the farmer and the workingman. |was that some one was injured, | mother’s side | kings and queens and princes wah I. I was soon informed, however Last wee - (By = goot-bye| The drawing room is the loveliest Y & precocious little chap, that|!unech Mrs. P Tight gave for|/room I ever saw. None of the The Army asa School |“the cops were fishin’ for booze. | Marguerite and me, | met a woman| furniture could have been newer OU may not know that under the new army bill half a], The lan refreshment “4 * found, and much to astonish soldier’s time (96 hours a month, which is 12 8-hour| ment, a ruthiess bombardment was days) will be devoted to industrial education, fitting the prea upon the valuable fixtures ‘ pau ‘ + ‘ of that drug store. Some there This is provided in a senate) were in the concourse ws en lovea| the whole affair. But I was glad to find that others shared my soldier for a job in civil life. amendment introduced early in the session by Hoke Smith The army bill. however, does not direct how manual | con Fea, aie Jemnation upon such action training is to be introduced in the army One of the crowd, apparently 4 Here is where serious and thoughtful consideration of|very mucl embittered remarked ethods is needed, for hasty adoption of an imperfect system | | What 8 the use’ of destroying all © will lead to many evils that may hurt the army and the EF peel aed ‘bgired Ahad ypu Wiers more than they help it. |they confiscate and sell it Agee | Shall army posts or trade schools, or both, be used for|lic auction? Why, down in Idaho they put the guilty parties in jail this instruction? i a | without the option of p: " Shall only such trades be taught as are useful in military “iin It's But wnt Dora and Marguerite! about forty when she came to us,| both laughed. They thought I was! for she can’t be more thar wixty | thought, I bad only known him on| the others league and myself visited Olympe, dercribing myself, as I. imagined |now, she is so active and fresh. | paper. I saw his hair was dark,| Evidently Lady Meldon had | tuo consulted with Gov. Lister re myself to be. | London, May 7th, |wih © ripple im it. I saw deopect| talked of me to her brother, Mr.|SeTcise (be messare, oad advises You've heard that you look Hke| It’s & month today since I beg eyes under straikht black | Graeme, for he conscientiously laid sr ra we desired it kept out of your mother,” said Aunt Dorn,| this new volume yrows—true soldier eyes. But| himself out to be agreeable, be- | Pn It's as Gen do look a little Iike have been In France, for we » Was something else, too ginning a conversation by asking| , 20 ssreed with os es to the wit your mother, But she was very |!anded at Cherbourg, and stayed / haps if 1 hadn't loved him all! me if | “bad Scottish blood in my |0™ Of this course, and refrained youty and you never will be,” [10 Paris, seeing a few sights, and|my life, as & child and a young|veins.” He quite warmed when I polo Loge] 2 I do wish Aunt Dora wouldn't | Collecting quantities of hate. and|girl may love an ideal, | shouldn't |sald my mother’s mother had been | ‘D#t misht tend to make it a partl say that It dosen't matter whether |cresee®. There were crowds of} bave been able to read that look. | Scottish canteens, ne i a eat ich as I am ie goodioox.| places I wanted to see; but Aunt) As it was I saw in bis eyes that) At luncheon I sat on bis left). DOM uO” On Mas pe guess le Nee ae ant L trove very | Dore says she can't bear to behave| he had come to tell something dear|hand, On his right hand, Helene|4™1 he was active in @ persona’ and fascinating, like Margue-| Uke & tourist Jas his own soul, to Lady Meidon,|Garde sat, and on Lady Meldon’s|“%) ! Urging its adoption. His po- y od tool ther people cared |. Farts suited rguerite exactly,| his best friend |right, Sir’ Miles, which brought) Sit#on on it was entirely satisfac- about me for my own sake She has the most lovely clothes, As| Then, when he turned his face) him next to me; but it was a round |tory to those having charge of the . * |for me, I got very 6. but it} toward the opera singer, Helene! table, quite small, so we could ali | measure and the course followed It is a great pity Marguerite| doesn't matter a bit Garde, | saw that he loved her; |talk across easily, without raising |0Y bim was taken at our request. hasn't got as much as I have, and) Now we are at the Savoy Hotel,| and I knew that this was what our voices GEO. D. CONGER, she thinks #0, too, But If should! London had come to tell When we had come to the hot-| State Superintendent AntiSaloom love to give it to her, if father’s! Of course we have lots of letters| 1 couldn't bear to sit land let house strawberries and cream,| ¢#sve will hadn't stated exactly what he! of introduction. some to people! things happen o 1 got up quickly, | there began in the garden the most | e ? Dsus wanted to be done for his sister, | yareuert particularly anxfous| and he » m This was all extraordinary und | had ever| Unable to obtain men to aid in Aunt Dora, and her daughter Mar-|to know, because she says they aro| Was necessary for me to do, for) heard—a kind of wild wailing, like| harvesting, Fred Harris, a farmer ». Any % r left her| the ones who “really matter.” now he would say nothing which|the lament of @ lost soul. It was|near Pukwana, S. D., engaged four five thousand dollars a year They've all got titles,” she an-| he did not want a stranger to hear.|not music, and yet it was music,jof the neighborhood girls, who nd Marguerite one thousand for! nounced ] said to Lady Meidon that | must|Sir Miles and Mr. Graeme were | shocked all of his small grain crops | Revaett —_ ‘ a an —— = Lady Meldon, whom Mra. La Wheth she guessed why he!both looking at me las well as men cofld have done it, a hundred and fifty nd, and! wanted mo to meet, ie & Knight's | eee am forbidden to give tt 8 penDy.| widow. Marguerite found thar ¢ t! Luckily, | can make them pres in « Red Book, which is a kind of ents, tho it would be a littio plea® | qdetective list that betrays the no anter if Aunt Dora didn't behave! pitity'’s age. She looked to see aa if fo were twitting “her with) whether she wanted to meet Lady poverty. |Meldon, and thought, when she Aitho my father lived tll I was| Mew the worst, that, altho. Sir twelve, I don’t feel that I knew bim| George Meldon had been g general, S| at A Novel A Novel “The Woman's Law” msn A Week By Mrs. A. M. Williai “THE BRIDE’S HERO” A Week By MARAVENE THOMPSON od A ken ( CQUEYEVNEYaDYavaaeay | Feveveveyeyeresdevaseaensnaaeanvegeaeasd FEPsveyevavarsueseageatenseestavsdusneatonnscenavapenstaestinnnasveesaggngagstsestssescscstatsastagassgaesssersasce? ‘Feravaaanrgnesdnerieanaeaanaanaatasta) tHsgdHsg¢ec4st2saz05 CHAPTER I England,” she auld |membor that General Meldon com-|had brought Holene Garde to her I] “What do you think of that?” 1 Am Twenty-one Please, Marguerite, don’t!” 1| manded at Ladysackett Ull he—he| can't say, But she didn’t urge me| sir Miles asked, smiling ; San Franciseo, April 7th couldn't help imploring died; and then Sir Miles Culver|to stop, or even introduce me to 1 don’t think, I just feel,” wae AM twenty-one today, and I'm! “Oh, wo all had heroes at|had to take his place tll the end| Sir Miles and the others the only answer I could give ] beginning a new volume of my| school,” she went on, “Sandy was) Of the slege.” Nigel called me another taxi, 1| “Somehow, it's as if I'd heard the pif Book no worse than the rest of the girls My husband was killed by the| was whirled back to the hotel same sound in another, existence, This new book ts beautiful, 1/ Most of us took actors, but Sandy | explosion of a shell,” Lady Meldon May 15th, |and the thrill of it has got Into bought it for a birthday present,| chore an nglishman, Bir Miles | *4id, quietly Milew tried te ve The engagement was announced | my blood, to stay forever si j and I've put on a@ thick, er ny.| Culver. That was ten years ago, | bim—risked his own life in the at-\in the Morning Post, and Mar | od = lawele! Grand lassie ; expensive-looking — fly-leaf, To| And you know how, after the Boer tempt, and was wounded, Then he! guerite chanced on the notice while| That's the true spirit. It's the true Sandra Phayre, on her twenty-first | war, and Sir Miles Culver had been knelt’ down where George had| we were all three having breakfast | instinct in you waked by the birthday; from her affectionate| everybody's here in the siege of | fallen, supporting him in bis arms) together in our witting-room at the | pipes,” exclaimed Mr. Graeme self,” | Ladyaackett, they sent him to India| Ul! the end | Savoy Why, it’s my Hieland lads skirl 1 have always so wanted to be\to stop some mutiny or other I whould like you to meet Miles,” | Oh, Sandy, no hope for you!” |ing the bagpipes in the garden, ; called Sandra, instead of Sandy,| There was a big fuse about him,|she went on, In lighter tone, after! she chuckled, and read the an-|dinna ye ken?” Glancing at Helene . which fa a hateful nickname. Jeven in our American papers. His| we had both pat silent a moment. | nouncement A marria is ar-| Garde, 1 saw she was trying to, ‘The book locke up with a gold| pletures were in all the magazines “He comes to see me as often as be | ranged, and will take place late in| hide @ laugh key, Ike the bangle Jimmy McLean | and papers; Sandy cut one out. I'm |can when he ts in London, The! July, between Colonel Sir Miles Cul Mr. Graeme saw, too, and caught gave my cousin Marguerite, which| sure she’s got that picture to this powers that be have just offered|ver, Bart. V. C,, and Comtesse| her up abruptly, “I suppose to & q got on her nerves, and made her| day.” him something very important, on| Helene Garde, daughter of Comte | trained singer lke you, Comtesse have hysterica one night because Have ye asked Mra, Lane. the Mediterranean, but he has) Gard Austrian Ambassador to|the pipes haven't much sweetner she couldn't get it off. That was| “I wonder?” I murmured It ed leave to think It over before) America, and the late Lady Mary |in them?” be said the first year [ was sent to board-| must be faded by this time Jeciding. Probably it may be on| Garde.” | She smiled her enchantrees ingechool in New York with her,| Luckily no one began to talk of|/M!# brother's account. He has a] Aunt Dora and Marguerite were | smil and answered she supposed and she was fifteen and I was|Sir Miles Culver again juneh-| brother about n or twelve|staring at me, to see how I took| the love of the bagpipes was an ac twelve eon; but yesterday | had a letter tery Pecos co ar ge ad the blow, I laughed, and contrived | quired a) ee ae doubt she p| » nandcsomes voy in England, and o ® c ol a a Or acquire n Scribbling has been a great com-| from Mrs. Lane, enclosing am intro) | a eseliaa” t witch them off to the subject} c yore genie baa lady Meldon of Lady Meldon fort to me, It was my twel r ab Ah gp os Bll ag yer Li ypm ond re A oding yh — Your leddyship,” said one of the| In my heart, I hardly expected| whispered to me: “You have won this {* the third volume; but the] « 4 call ‘ 4 | Highlanders, “Colonel Sir Miles| that dear lady to have much time | my brother forever, As for poor Hee dee anh ‘very. fat. euae ‘She sabe what you'd poorer Culver is calling, and with him|for me. But that same afternoon, | Comtesse Helene, she has finished fe ight them bin: hecause youre) Of uptodate," Mrs, Lane wrote, there's his brother and a strange) while we were at Sandown with the herself with him.” : ’ but I feel sure you will like ber leddy.” Jewetts, Lady Meldon’s cards were| (Continued In Our Next lesue) seemed so long in those days. ‘The letter of introduction Is for How extraordinar exclaimed | left for all three of t 1 hy My firat volume I called “Letters ie al ema “he - 1 bf Gli tures of Us, and an fp tomy Dariteg Mother” 1 wonder me, tho it mentions Aunt Dora and the j + woman i Th what a! vitation for me to lunch with her DRY DEFENDS LISTER chance for me to introduce my old | today. With reference Editor The Star: what Aunt Dora would say if abe} 4 1 # I write, Ican hear Miss Timp-| friend to my little new ¢ ‘ ed te . Lie that tadrintiont S-naver hak rl D-| friend to my : me. Nigel,| 1 longed to go to that luncheon, | +5 your article on the candidates for son In my bedroom next door. Mar- bring them all three here to the| and yet | wished not to go. t time to know my mother, because 9 " governor, printed in your issue of guerite says I'm silly to keep such den It did not occur to me that Sir r she died before I was three, But 4 if wh j at & October 28, in fairness to Gov. Lis- ae cies Wh cnetae on HT Can Fe 1 eee on OS manid; that It Was) If she could have kuows how my! Miles and Comteme Helene miEht iter 1 destreito eng . mad enough to bave had so can “ beating be coming to luncheon, When I p member her, I distinctly see Sir Mil . At the time the campaign war ankerous a creature for a nurse Colonel Sir Miles Culver, and| arrived, however, there were Sir beautiful young face bending Over! aino, that it's “simply ridiculous to Mr. Culver, Comtesse el ‘ad “L c Sir| started to secure the adoption of the ‘ 3 jene| Miles and “Laurie” Culver, and @lpronipition law, those in charge of mo when I'm tn bed. call the woman Miss Timpson.” Marguerite perhaps doesn't know I should die of terror if 1 tried to ad dress my respected monitor as Timpeon,” or of laughing if I at tempted “Hepalbah,” Miss Timpson must strange-looking elderly man whom |{y teit th | 1 guessed to be th rother of Lady naye jt become a partisan issue. | Meldon. Aw I ente Lady Meldon | stany active progressives desired to that foorsed Helene came in thru @ 1on€ make jt an important part of th came into the den, the two| window from the garden ~ following Helene Garde—the| The dear woman introduced us, |Prcerenn*? nee eee famous, the beautiful Helene Garde.|1 was thrown a fascinating smile | °°) a Sir Miles was better than I had| a The president of the Anti-Saloon » could be it would be injurious to Once I was silly enough to re mark before Aunt Dora that | could remember my mother; and when she said I couldn't possibly do so, I went on to describe the face that | comes before my eyes only one Helene ast as there could be only Miles Culver 1 knew have been I by the singer, then introduced to father was very making more and 1 was a bit afraid of him; so that was the reason I wrote that ume of letters from school to my darling mother. It was the next volume I began to call Hoo! but now when I co ead over bits of it, I find more about other peop! than about myself, especially th intimately. My busy always, more money his widow wouldn't be wérth both ering about But somehow or other I conldn't give up Lady Meldon, and I sent a note, with Mra. Lane's letter, ask ing if whe will call, or {f she will let me Ko to seo her The most char the h ng note has back, saying is not very and will | have tea with her quite by herself, this afternoon? ne t an who actua knows Sir Miles Cul ver, She is an English authoress. and per name Is Mrs. Lane Highland youth, but there So you're going to England?"| one to receive the glad tidings ne asked. 1 was wond6ring if Lady Meldon I replied that I was. | bad forgotten having Invited me I wonder which o than Stuart 4 Miss Ph announ f our dukes t rT when a woman's figure appeared in marquises or earls will fall a vic-}one of the long windows that tim to you next season?” she mur-| opened on the garder mured | She was dressed with extreme Unfortunately, Marguerite, who| simplicity. On her waw hair she at opposite, had heard, She never! wore t enough of a widow's cap has any mercy on me. not to obtrude commemoration of fi méy bas a hero already in| grief.upon others D C1 ’ aE I elicious, long- EVEN CROSS SICK almost exactly like the first, in e |formed us tea was in her “leddy 1 t . | fore, asting. e : 1 more effective | He made this utterance . * Shall the products of the men under training be used only | re! rig logic. The guilty parties) laugh. “My ‘Out’ fs at the bottom 0. e | fn the army, and shall the army use the labor of soldiers ex Pane ott a iat ne aN aw) of the garden,” she said. “Only a ° ° he arn |should no ith such a ma | very few know of its existence.” W it tri f Chusively? y licious vengeance as was exercised A Se tah ps aggro ci rigie 0 0) f | Sow shall the soldier-workmen be remunerated? at Sunday night's raid. It f# at once} ia iart ber wg we went down A i 4 A t ae © Ri pant gethe: db: { it is likely that any attempt to use labor or products of | fMDNOINE and depressing to find jl wep paged beggri 4 ghey refreshing con- : ¢ Mmerican jurisprudenc 16 to a kind o! } soldiers outside of purely army activities will meet with Otro ties auctor “ 5 temple almost hidden behind Milac Opposition from we rkingmen and others in civil life ition. It ¢ § sto piece of legisla-| If Feverish, Bilious, Consti-| and syringa bust fi $ vO ing 1 jon. an bu en 7 FY ms rag h 1 open tenmecinen mites joi “e fed pated, Give Fruit Laxa- | “Even my brother, whose house ections, ; . lism The wrecking of} } ° that drug store last Sunday 4] tive at Once. is, isn't allowed in my Out The Coroner’s Office | would be far more i atieline T - i= ie as & spec {al favor,” Lady R. DANIEL BUCKLEY, democrat, and Chas jable to Attila and his Huns, than Don't acold your fretful, peevtah pence a. 1 think you would _C. Tiffin, 00 fo Ada ‘and is Huns,'than oni” elf tongue’ couteas th | ka hon iat you mould have to od for tee republican, are the candidates for coroner. Ti erty ir asure eign f little stomach, | fumble about among the branches > ' hake liver and bowels are clo; f your famil oe, an rar he best man in the republican primaries, and the voters did], U"! @% one of the crowd lacon-| gov ER aight a With | Dornan ae ee Vag Bg + : “Te a oe othe erovt oe tal cee fat, ee appe well to nominate him. Dr. Buckley has had more experience|eq and he doesn't pr e bet When listless, pale, feverish, full| You could break it to bim you were 9 e" i@e : ie , : fe by - jed « he de care wot helof cold, breath bad, th Ame Hf $, 4s a physician and surgeon than Dr. Tiffin. This should be,/does.” 1 suppose, Mr. Kditor, that nit hroat sore,|an American d di J ; i h iditor, that |doean't eat, sleep or Y y ne le te » u 4s much as any other office, a nonpartisan one. Vote for]! the nucleus of it all han stomachache, indi Ct Ae Ta Fp “ aia wet uheleane ake an gestion. ; ; | f ion, dia es of silver-framed photographs, the man you think will best serve as coroner—and forget party], At an zat on Editor, I be rhoea teaspoonful of Gal (tnoatly. of soldier; and” pothg ited 7 7 a oicing 1e® Op ) D ‘orn up of Figs n ‘ y . ¢ solitics 1 eer ate te opinion of for p of Figs,” and in a few | which had a table ail to themselves, | & American of the|hours all the foul waste, the sour|one was a portrait of Sir Mil (Paid Advertisqment) end of Washington, when I say|bile and fermenting food passes! Culver, DORtTAL’ OF Shr es < | that f ipgp legislation is a stain|Out of the bowels and you have al ‘The ott eases soa |upon the white page of American| Wl! and playful child again. Cht 1 Gcner WAS OF & much OMe T All V t | Justice Mlfren love this harmless fruit lez pass ipnesig abe prensa Don’t fo et Wishing you godspeed in your|Ative.” and mothers can rest easy | 2° husband's picture, i oO oters noble work, I am, sir, Url after giving It, because it never| AS 1 Was hesitating whether or Three of a kind A CANUCK, HAPPY IDEA The railway board had met to} [consider the case of old Tom Jones, who, in a train accident, had | become deat, : Well,” eaid a director, “old Tom has been with us a Jong time, and we want to find him & new Job. What do you suggest?” ’ : a know,” paid the chairman "Let's put him in charge of the complaint department.’—Tit-Bits, | | 1 will appreciate your support in | the election tomorrow. | Joseph P Tracy Democratic Candidate for COUNTY ASSESSOR Keep them in mind, falls to make their little “insides” | PO jt Would be best to mention him clean and sweet Meldon said “That is my _—_____ A little and's picturg on that little | Keep it handy, Mother! 1 given today saves And the*only other man| WRIGLEYS after every meal a sick child to- morrow, but get the ger Ask | Worthy to my mind of a place near | your druggist for a 60-cent bottle of | him is Miles Culver. 1 wonder if] California Syrup of Figs,” which | You know that my husband died tn has directiona for babies, children | Miles Culver's arms at Lady of all ages and for grown-ups plain. | 8ackett?” ly on the bottle. Remember, there| “Oh,” I exclaimed, “I hardly re are counterfeits sold here, so sure-| alized he was that Sir George Mel- ly look and see that yours 1s made|don! 1 was only a little girl then by the “California Fig Syrup Com-| But I used to sit breathless when pany.” Hand back with contempt] one of the teachers in our school any other fig syrup, read to us about the war, I re ¢

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