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The Seattle Star Kotered at Geattia Wash, Posteffice as second-elase matter By mail, out city, one year, $8.00; @ months @t By carrier, otty, STAR—SATURDAY, estsiiesritstiestiisg Next Puptianed Datty My The Publishing Phone Main 600 A Week Women and the Ballot To the West and the glorious womanhood of the tributes the re-election of President Wilson. With the bitterness of defeat that plagues the ‘professional politician, there are those who now proclaim woman suffrage a failure because the women, forsooth, failed to vote straight republican tickets. Forgive them, dear women of the West, for they are more to be pitied than They had counted on the pie counter and now they must go hungry four Their mouths had watered for the melon, but now their lips are dry and “1 censured years more. their throats are parched, If what they write appears so unreasonably absurd, pra: are feverish heads are just now in a whirl and their brains wounded and bleeding. i Woman suffrage needs no apology. n . : . . With a sigh that was almost of the head that bore the lamp) jioq 9 God bless them for that. It is the independent voter on whom rests the safety of sob, Miss Timpson turned away showed me Miles, ried the country. It is to the independent voter’s intelligence that the oratory found © poster to eek after ber Suddenly, not ten yards behind |,” Ah, but you nee T apswered, 1 and the literature and the logic and the advertisements of the candidates are directed ae oe ie bya en got an Fr th ame a tremen fous split | ovat pve aeons ; f ‘ ° of c | ting no! ike wood giving way The straight party voter need not be given any reason for his or her vote The Arriving at the mine, I found the| ynder eirain, and this was instant | Hau loved tae—betorehend’? Lat Straight party voter is the dupe of the politicians. wives of the trapped men bed) jy followed by a roaring sound a#|Me hear quickly, lest the end come Congratulations, women of the West. You have shown that you are not party alge . ar ‘nd the cen of tons of coal falling rat b me of it Be ri ’, r m3 . a iy . h where a thin Ine of policeme mPa . Hest voice & Ue not interesting enough for slaves. You have shown it just as clearly as the men of the West have held thom back, 1 Joined the crowd |, 1» a bo ee evo ee nin |you'to care about,” 1 warned bim | In the words of the morning paper in its extra edition Tuesday night when it of shawled figures, and, moving Ween enw ot now, but| Only, ever since | was a little girl] believed Hughes had been elected: quietly along the fringe, came 4PON | they'll have us out sooner or later,|! loved you. I used to keep your “To their credit, our enfranchised women voters refused to respond to shallow a a gag Lo Harb rd. fate your | @ can’t be far from the old shaft tetera or are ggg he rp pleas. You can fool the American woman no easier than you can fool the Amer- husband down there!” 1 stam-/miere,t came down. Trust your) cinost too wondertul to think of . :, palin vey eave you ye . ol ican man—at least, not all the time.” mered. st ‘ I'm dono, sir? Teawn't folght no|*eeing you in England. ‘Then, The false issue of woman suffrage attempted by the Hughes campaigners did not “It's ‘er vee the ead [longer the other voice answored,| When we did meet, it was the day | mislead you, women of the West. You knew very well that Hughes didn’t lift a Bee ee ae eee cag | breaking into a weary ecb you came to tell Lady Meldon of 4 i i tial candid my mester be'n't down. He wa You're not done unless you think | Your engagement. 1 prayed for you finger for woman suffrage in all his career until he became a presidential candidate up with the first gang, but {t's my]... 50 Bol cane Meee ‘Why,| to be happy—with Comtesse Helene and was looking for votes. You knew very well that the republicans, in control of lad. He's theer, I don't ne'er hope sia Gane ene eked the worst, Garde. After her death, I thought national affairs for 16 years prior to Wilson's election, didn’t even let woman suf . ee oe 1 en stronger than you broke|{t Would be good for you to go on frage come to a vote in congress. b Soy Sir Miles gone down tolqi.n Let's try and bring this t = ving = er slveys._ Besides i . « o . here a ron . And you knew that we are at peace—while Roosevelt clamored for war He h my leddy—went |°* . to uf ; ;one, with a human heart, save? And you knew of the child labor law and the other humanitarian measures, Guided with the f rty-—down the owd) 1 Sire or sinc ae peo pepe made mischief between you and by sentiment? Yes, the women felt grateful to Wilson for his humanity—and the eo t A = use ag pered,|to die. I had pot strength or cour:| 2m?” men did, too. And the West voted for Wilson—because the West is more human than please come away with me a min die alone, since for the ask-| “I know,” Miles said gently. “I the effete East ste—oh, plea I've something I 1 could the comfort of| know how 1 misunderstood you vig ca ~ ?7 were - kates nen e : eel pis Aine r - een ’ pre t hight when he was n ° KEEP IT UP, WOMEN OF THE WEST, THIS INDEPENDENCE OF | munt ou alone, ie recy ie legit toeeuuay things atta pow | PARTY LINES. MEN ARE GRADUALLY DROPPING OUT OF PARTY |} She let me draw her out of they le : 1 gone ORGANIZATIONS—AND LET US HOPE THAT WOMEN WHO HAVE Will you lend me a sult of your) “DAd some one call?” he asked.| | "Not—not what I've told you to NEVER JOINED A REPUBLICAN OR DEMOCRATIC OR ANY OTHER | boy's « want to £0 down| “It's I—Sandy,” 1 answered, and/ night?) 1 stammered. | 'Not that 1) PARTY CLUB, MAY NEVER DO SO. with th ne party. I must £0, |e OC | tell that.” < is = orl and they wouldn't |™e dimly | Cee 1 . ‘ . Am I dreaming—you?” he said.| “He kept his promise. So he let oman go ¢ i. * 90 to th °. oo |\Teally b But it was a dream “y. He guessed wher Some day we're going to drop around to the school- wimatee We tere there and soon 1{that brought me.” BE Lacy Rnd amaerte ag house and see how they teach European geography. had donned her son's Sunday| 1 eamo close to him and took off!” might have guessed, too, if 1] 4 th: my hat. |hadn’t been a blind fool. You've His H t Was T: oernatrt aw roight, m’ leddy!” ex | “You are dressed like a boy!” he told me something about yourself. peats f2eart Was i rue g |caimed tho woman, “They'll Tet nal f |,|Now it's my turn. While there's 4 HE revelation that O. Henry served a term in prison pass, no fear, Th none Yes; 1 borrowed Tom Harbord’s| time I'll tell you what I found out : . 5 a ‘ | too partic'lar, toimes like this.” | Clothes , | as I grew better and what I've gone during his carly life comes as a distinct shock to the} , ager asked me, an Tom Harbord! T've brought bim|on finding out every day since ulk of the American people. It is to be deplored that the 1 pushed forward—head bent and |here. | hoped to save pte At first I called the new feeling | = " . face sid y On unconscious from o-damp— | treache But wh " de | emory of the greatest American writer of short story classics co L UM Pra agprces at 1 lee tage and he hasn't watied up. John Deo-| tin lant confensing ince. that T'd ould be tainted by sensational methods of advertising a A. progressive railroad i» the| nodded, with a stifled sob. | nis was the only other one with life! had—the right instinct. all thru Mography sold for profit. Louisville & Nashville, which oper-|not trust my woman's voice to/@ough to move—and he's given in| Now do you guess what it is I have But to most admirers of O. Henry, the odium of a/ates a special car on its Gulf Coast) answer nom, Are you sure I'm not dream-|t9 tell you?” ° = eye : ; limited, for intoxicated persons} As our cage landed, with a alight |!98) é | “No,” I said, “I can’t think you on term will be lost sight of in their amazement that} a ee” cat errata gi Beggs Im su But last night 1]. Ne ma it all the writer retained the sweetness, the kindliness| see Iehaft, 1 he the men saying to|¢reamed something awful happened Papua tention in a tea ; | to you, in great darkness, and—I and the human understanding which characterized his writ- HIS SMILE h er that the “gas had got bes H+ * ns wipes o. Cress Atter.| before I knew that it was a false Mother — Sh! Freddy! You | here bet re thes But the Hghte | couldn I borrowed these clothes be,|aream. You thought—every one j i e tj still burned Ve could breathe, | ™are * ¢ “nee ought—that when Helene was . a“ Po - shouldn’t laugh so loudly in public! | #t pave 4 ots | though! _ The body of Sydney Porter might have once been in oun Stark seen ta abtiel j stil there was a weight on our|cause I knew they wouldn't let al :ikey ae, Veet itor love 3 the soul of O. Henry never was. prison Fashion constantly begins and ends in two things it abhors most—singularity and vulgarity. —Hazlitt. Not Even a “Lame Duck’ phrey needeth sympathy. The defeat of Charles —e is the last straw in Will's political demise. | mow— ’Tis a crool, crool world. Anyhow, Chairman Willcox deserves something for his literary efforts. For an author strapped as to material he certainly done noble in producing a yarn daily. Stung Again! the contract to light the county hospital, almshouse, etc. It is a matter of right that belongs to every American woman, just as every American has the right to vote. If it so happens that women are less susceptible to party Py RAY shed a tear, dear patriots, for verily Will E. Hum-} E. 3 John F. Miller replaces him in the house of representa-| fives. Sen. Poindexter knotked him out in the first round for} [Whe senatorial toga. So all that remained for Humphrey was} AFE HAMILTON’S keen hand was at work again and} the city lighting plant—and the taxpayers—got stung on ~ | (Continued From Our Last ta By MARAVENE THOMPSON , EUENENEESUUUSSUGEaT —TERTRRTTRTETTRATRARaRRTRR Tea terete NOV. 11, 1916. PAGE 4 Biiisiittiitsitiisisisssttieteecs tise tet et seeeeseeeLeeeest ‘THE BRIDE’S HERO” Week A Novel “The Woman's Law” ) | Inclined to think we had best take | montha, IT hope he didn’t mean to| !t, but it was a question whether |now?* “O go down the mine!” 1|the first rescue party might not sighed, more to myself|bave passed along the supposed ; than Miss Timpson, Then, aloud,|*hortcut, before the roof gave) 1 asked her if she knew exactly | WAY West the nation justly at what had been the result the} Something told me this had hap explosion pened; and because | dared not Just as I was starting off, the| speak lest my volee betray and coachman told me news had come| cause my disminval, | suddenly re-| that nobody could get down at} solved not to await the general first, But there was something | verdict, ‘ sald about an unused shaft they] No one noticed me as I edged thought of trying and « rescue| toward the gallery party'd volunteered. Sometimes I had to crawl on get a cab and drive to 8 the coal mine,” I said remember that their “Oh, Sandy, you'll do no such thing!” exclaimed my old nurse and their hearts are bres “Dear Miss Timpson, I must, and there's no good trying to keep me} “And I don't want back,” I said. you to come with me.” bunk and platitudes, smiling when all of a sudden the| chests, smile busted.— Puck. Jim Harbord took the lead. ais followed him, he and the LIKE ALL THE REST men calling out from time to t Miss Fortyodd had been aroused | but no answer came to them ex We other from her slumbers by rather |Cept a dull echo, And the air grew jawkward burglar. Thinking to/| heavier with every step we h quiet hor, the burglar said gently By and by we reached a part “1 don't want lady, onl of the wa which Jim bad prop | your money.” esied. On lery, he thought Whereupon Miss Fortyodd sniffed | was a short cut, but the explosion contemptuously and replied jat the other end of the mine had ye “Get out; like all the | caused much f the roof to fall tn ert of them! L ther gallery, a longer path to tlle atination, was clearer. ‘Th TRUE and Jim Harbord were ‘alr One—Where are women ie en giles? | {4 99 | Floorwalker—Anywhere between | neckwear and the hosiery,| | madam.—Froth | 73 8 | NO NATURE FAKE Humphreys’ Seventy-seven Three or four tawny spots ap-| For Grip, Influenza peared here and there on the lit |tle boy's bine knickerbockers. At |tracted by his cheery smile, two | kindly old ladies atopped to talk to him and “wondered why his moth er did not patch with a color to , - |match.” The little boy blushed| The Diagnosis of a Cold deeply and then burst out F Well, Lafe will be gone in another month or two. His!" “That ain't no patch; that’s me."|rataenee onan eet woe eapenion political end comes none too soon. |—Ladies’ Home Journal land sniffing, he hes taken Cold _ — | |though he cannot tell how : tet The girl who knows the newest! if a person liable to Bronchitis Many eat crow in early November, but it’s turkey | dances and is tho most stunningly |yan gcoreon, rata pak poerpret for all before the month's end. Igowned can't always best broil thelin the throat, be has taken Cold _ steak. ag ue : } F Ben | If a person ect to Qui The U-53 is reported all snug in a German port and | Ps Poe 1 tonsils swollen and p: oil it is hard to say who rejoices the most, the kaiser, John Hend—t Hebi A Pehi wun e ken Cold | Bull or Uncle Sam. practice is get larger. ta 2 pighat alight hould i. Young Doctor—That's true. MY|iut y 1 always be helped away. We can’t think of any reason for being sorry when a [Patient has gained nearly ten! qnis at firat is not alone easy, campaign ends. pounds in the last weeks but a very simple matter, because 4 ‘ aera ; ‘OUNG IKE WOU t early symptoms are all caused i Comfort is tedious when it lasts too long.—Elizabeth YOl NG Dl KE WOl LD by congestion and inflammation Stoddard. FIGHT FOR FRANCE] To get the best results and help The healthy person enjoys cold weather. It is only when the circulation is poor, when the blood is thin and the system under its proper condition, that cold weather has any terror. Invigorate the body by restoring the circulation, throwing out the waste, and over- coming the stagnation of catarrh, and you will enjoy crisp weather. Peruna Is Invigoration It relieves the system of the eal of inefficient digestion and hampered breathing by restoring the mucous surfaces that are used in these functions. It gives tone to the digestion, and it clears away all catarrhal inflammation. It builds up the strength by enabling the organs concerned to do their work properly. Its use in convalescence and in all weakened conditions is wonderfully ‘helpful. ( : Liquid or tablet form—which ever is the more con- ient. we Monalin Tablets for the liver and bowels are a great help to good health. Pleasant, mild and effective. The lazy liver is aroused and you feel bet- ter at once. 10 and 25c, Your druggist has these two prepa- rations in tablet or liquid form. The Peruna Company, Columbus, Ohio ‘Winter’s Terrors Overcome |the Cold away take “Seventy-seven” at the first sign of a Cold | Price, 26c at all Drug Stores. TONIC TABLETS (HUMPHREYS') For the convalescent, for the weak and the ary—Price, $1,00, at all Drug or sent, collect on delivery | Medicir 166 H UPSET? Get at the Real Cause—Take Dr Edwards’ Olive Tablets That's what thousands of stomach sufferers are doing now. Instead of | taking tonics, or trying to patch up a poor digestion, they are attacking the real cause of the ailment—clogged liver and disordered bowel Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets arouse the liver in a soothing, healing way. When the 1 nd bowels are per- forming their natural functions, away is ir ” 1 t vach trou- be you have a bad taste ° DUKE DE CHAULNES. |moutin dongue costen ant our Young Duke de Chaulnes, grand-| or Cnergy, troubled ith arto son of Theodore F ION: foods, you should take Olive Tablets, aire te of the if The IDWAY | the substitute for calomel F y m n here n the unt r « ds’ Olive able « form of a French piou plou, Altho ea sibs able es thy mixed he has expressed eagerness to go with olive oil, You will know them to the front in France, he is kept by their ol color, They do the with his mother, who was Miss| work without griping, cramps or pain Theodora Shont New York o ak ' or two at bed me { or et leader at W hite Sulphur quick relief oO you can eat what you jlike. 10e and 25¢ | Sorings, Va All druggists. |woman come down. }with you hands and knees, But at last my straining eyes caught a faint, flit ting m of lgbt far ahead, As 1 drew nearer, | saw a tall man | carrying the limp form of a boy in his fig leading a shad asped his coat, and arms, and ire that | stumbled after him. | Anoth er moment, and a Hfting I passed with| the others, But the men with me| have gone another way, toward the! explosion was—t!| think, Mfle&, they'll never find us Say you don't mind my being here with you.” Mi he echoed word to use’ You here, There's nothing I can do to save you.” Tam saved “A strange | may have to die| I naid, “because Vm) That's all I came | just to find you, and be near you | whatever the end might be. Now It] siren woman—such infatuation as doesn't matter your knowing. We're | Se? ¢ should be ashamed t s0 close to eternity, both of us, I'm|™&n li Por seed Pee aenemes to not afraid. I'd give my life ten| ‘ee! wntempered by purer and times over to save yours, but that's | *eper feeling eligi not saying much, because life in|!0¥® You. It’s true, I despised you| thin world hasn't given me the| fof marrying me for an unworthy things I wished for most 1 life| Feason—as I supposed. What a : cere prig—what a prig I was! As if my in the ne: It's almost | too good for n to go thru the val- by your side, and that's why I asked if you would mind.” My Nttle woman—my brave lit-| tle woman,” he said Thank you—thank you!" I mur-| mured, “You can’t know how happy | Iam to hear you say that.” “Don't!" he exclaimed. “You make me feel a monster of cruelty.” ‘Oh—why?” | “Because a word of two of mere ent appreciation makes you hay f So Ittle as that! It wa ou've lived thru, these last CLEAN LIVER AND BOWELS TONIGHT Don't Stay Headachy, Sick, or Have Bad Breath and Sour Stomach, Wake Up Feeling Fine! Best} Laxative for Men, Women and Children. 1D Remove the liver and bowel poison, which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coat ed, breath offensive, and stomach our. Don't stay bilious, sick, headachy, constipated and full of cold, Why don't you get a box of Cascarets from the drug store and eat one or two tonight and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced? You will wake up feeling fit and fine, Casearets nev gripe or icken like salts, pills and catomel They act so gently that you hard ly realize have taken a ¢ thartic should give cross, sick, feverish children a whole any time thorou barn you Mother bilious or Cascaret aly and are U'RE BILIOUS! | face Will you forgive me There's nothing, nothing to for give, How should you think there was~from me to you? I've spoilt your life, and all in vain, because Laurie couldn't be saved, and you needn't sacrificed yourself if ou'd known,” “If death were an enemy companionship would give m age and at h face Milew said you are true and loyal, ax well as brave, But the horrible part is that you must die too—you, *o young, with so much to make life happy if you were rid of me.” “Rid of you!" 1 echoed, in a voice of protest. “Why, life wouldn't be life without you, Don’t you under stand?” How can I understand,” he asked, “when I've done everything to make you hate me since we mar your cour of her and the loss of her. I never expected to tell any one this side of the grave that that wasn't true. But yo have a right to my truth. And I give it to you. I nearly lost my reason because for her. It couldn't as I ought to have cared. I loathed and despised myself for not caring more. I had to face my soul, and realize that what I'd be Meved an overwhelming love had been mere passion for a beautiful, I did not care give were worthier.” “Oh, they were,” I broke in eagerly. “It was for your broth ers sake “Don't defend me deserve nothing good. But I soon began to see that good That good-—was help beginning {fa at you were oncile real nature formed of it cause of yo me. ad come to me. 1 couldn't uy to realize And I couldn't glimpses I got of your with the estimate I'd in my denseness—be r willingness to marry amed ever so dimly told me now, of what what light would have ve on darkness it I didn’t guess I tried to fix my thought upon the image of Helene, to love her dead as I had thought I loved her living. ied to justify myself in my own eye And when 1 felt myself wavering, wanting your companion ship, finding it sweet, I forced my- self to » you as I'd once seen you an ambitious, heartless girl, wanting to buy some sort of post- tion with your money. I used to say, ‘There's no other explanation of her marrying me, @ man she hardly knew But when at last I began to understand your forbearance, your sweetness and devotion, to the brute who had done nothing but heap injubties upon you, I couldn't shut the door of my heart in your It was then | first loved you.” Miles!” I cried. “Now it 1 who dream. “No, this is no dream,” swered It's reality, and going to die soon You've made me the creature on earth, soon to be the happiest in heaven!” I answered. If would kiss me, | should die happier than I ever lived,” “Kiss you!” he echoed; “I'll kiss you till 1 | vway, and mine with it We leaned toward each other in the dim light of the miner's lamp He caught me in his and kissed me with a kiss che it seemed had no beginning and need have no end After that, did not speak fitfully “How many hours T asked steadily, t arms | had no fear That depends on bave to breathe the Are rowsy? Yes No Ob must be he an- we're for but a long time, later we talked we ause in the air we Do you feel you growing a little. et My Are you heart beats to ~| fast with its new happiness. him,”| jeurred at in shame and remorse | my heart wouldn't break | T hated, | at | reasons for taking what you had to| been thrown | happiest | i | val we last?" | his ht, 1912, Btokiaw Co Go to, Miles and Miss Timpson, and Dr. m hold | Henderson, all bending over me. sleep in n op te my afte, Caring. T) | ‘Then, the first question I asked you. And at last, when I Mer “Listen!” I exclaimed. “Do you| was, “Is it @ dream Ana Mite ‘ hear something-—very far away? Al knowing what I meant, answered without a pause, “No, my dearest, voles calling Miles did not answer me, shouted a reply to that distant call | which, perhaps, we only fancied but | it's not @ dream." The second question was about ‘Tom Harbord. I was very happy when Miles sald that he was alive, After that I remember no more, until the knocking began—knock-|and would get well. John Deanis ing that meant men's axes and|too, would recover. shovels breaking down our prison For two days they kept me in wall | ped—that stern old nurse of mine, ‘They tell me that {t was twelve| and the doctor, and Miles. But it hours before they broke thru the| was interesting and amusing to see maws of coal and timber, a hole big | the change in Miss Timpson, a enough to craw! thru, and find us,| Miles won her over. , By that time Miles and I had| Isn't it strange, my Book? fallen into that strange, drugged} Ob, but I rhall have many things sleep which coal gas brings. lto write, when next I have time He and I Jay a little apart from| to open this dear Book—my friend Tom Harbord and Jim Dennis, they | thru everything—my “Bride's Brey say; but I kne nothing till 1 lary 4 on my own bed, and saw THE END, wak FIRED BECAUSE HE WAS WILSON MAN Editor The Star ‘The demo-|tee before whom I laid the facts cratic triumph in the great strug-| As a college and university grad- gle just closed is essentially a vic- | uate, a lawyer and ex-federal attor tory of the working classes over|ney, as well as a man not too the tyranny of wealth, But in this| proud to turn my hands to honest triumph labor must be mindful | tofl, I shall say that it fs my opin- that the insidious agencies of the|{on, and I am corroborated by the nemy are yet present and active. |opinion of some of Seattle's apie Perhaps no better example could | attorneys, that when the managers be offered of the persistent tend-|of the Canal Lumber company ency of these diabolical forces to| “fired” me they committeed a das- crush and destroy the rights of|tardly crime against society, for free and unfettered labor than to| which they should be indicted. A state briefly an incident which oc-| high crime, in that by discharging, the plant of the Canaljan employe under the circum- Lumber company within the last| stances related, they sought delib- week erately to intimidate the remainder At of their employes and to influence their votes by putting them in fear of acting independently, at that Satur: | ap} the noon hour of last 4 democratic speaker a peared at the plant of the company for the purpose of addressing the |¢titical moment on the eve of the employes on the prineiples for | election. which the party stands. The au-| Fortunately, I am in such post- tion that I have no regrets, so far #8 any money consideration is con- and drove the speaker doggedly |cerned, by reason of being dis away. Thereupon a number of the|charged. My employment there employes followed the speaker| Was only temporary and for ex- from the premises, I among them, |traordinary reasons. aod listened to his talk, It should| But from the standpoint of prin- not be overlooked that at the self| ciples, my own inherent respect for same hour a publican speaker | justice and the rights of mankind, “ppeared, was welcomed by the|and above all, my profound regard managers and permitted to speak |for the patient sons of toll, I feel on the identical spot from which|that I cannot honorably refrain the democrat had been driven. |from publishing the above facts, so This malicious insult to the em-| pregnant with the venom of pollu- ployes, and high-handed attempt to| tion and injustice. rive them of their most sacred! The publication of these facts is heritage, was not all that trans-| not attended with any spirit of ill- pired in connection with that inci-| will, no selfish or vindictive mo- dent. On the following Monday,/tive. But if this article shall the eve of the national election, I| arouse a single working man to a was discharged by the company for | knowledge of the necessity of inde- no other reason, as they claimed, | pendent thought and to a conscious. than that my political views/ness of the powers that would y clashed with theirs, 1 being a dem-|adorn labor with a crown ocrat. This much they, in thetr|thorns, I shall deem it timely and vindictive and foolhardy reply, ad-|of some avail. mitted to a member of the commit- JESSE L. SUMRALL. thorities of the mill appeared upon the scene, prevented the speech In the great out of doors 4 or at the evening reception | Baker's oa i abl licious. Walter Baker & Co Ltd. CSTABUSHED 1760 DORCHESTER, MASS Alhambra a "THEATER OINAVAT: A\ Mamzelle Gap x Ce James Alan | Lot Grant “Kf ~ Mullen & Coogan McConnell & Simpson ‘4 " New ne”? 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