The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 15, 1916, Page 4

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sj a STAR—WEDNESDAY, NOV. 15, 1916. PAGE 4 t ¥ | gaasnenenerenerenens nnenenenenetenseneeenenenenenteensernsee — seetererentaererneenererenenneeneererererer ete enanennsaygaesees tetas testgeeeTTTIT ae Ye, Next Week By i A Novel “Cap'n Eri” 66 9 9 Saravede Thompbon A Novel ¥ iw The Woman’s Law” Mtr" A Week By JOSEPH ©. LINCOLN by Prederick kee en =: Tn Kintered at Beattie, Wash, Postoffion as second-etase matter By math, out of ofty, one year, $2.00; @ montha, $1.96) S8o Per month up te # moe By carrier, city, eo @ month SEEEEESEESESSSESEEES TEDSTER at es sassasssea sees Bad bb bee. ‘ * me. > j i (Continued from Our Last Issue) | — — Jless Christmas present.” He bent{you to go right cw .y and sit for ; CHAPTER V over her. “What shall you call me,|your picture. Have an exact pro- my wife?” file, left face vie net size, Home Again | “Friend,” she answered, soberly |< ome . me ge re eiskta! ; “ce 9? M4 ANCE clapped his hands and ‘Friend? 1 don't need & constant | proofs; don't walt for the finishin aw an raer ommiuittee V inaghed ot stully. His “papa” reminder of our pact, Gall |process. Bay nothing to Mra. Ore had just tied a last glittering | She looked steadily into aged bos abo ‘ : the ne ss fata P regio In the opinion of The Star, the “law and order’? committee organized peoaiaees 56, the sayeiort apray of | ha sil casi vou Mak" |e WHS at the Seattle Press club Tuesday afternoon, is making a serious mistake that Now for. the etenbite,” cited |whe waid, wistfully. “More than = : ill } instead a he intere he ci boy, his childish treble shrill with husband or lover or anything else | CHAPTER VIL will harm instead of help the interests of the city. a ne othe “A ae intel lin the world, I need a friend.” | A Dangerous Gare The very name adopted by this body—a “law and order committee boos uiled, Aematine te “tka te There was no acting now. She| How dangerous a game Gail had {s broade 2 Sa ac . } . te } . of t 4 yw going eb ei wan pathetically in earnest, She|set herself to play she did not real- Spreads broadcast thru the nation the charge that this city is in a state o pranches, and I'm Kolng to cllmb up ‘sf coe perce A ee ett cate wae attr Che . ive > menace prope i ering lawles °- nen beres antes Good night, my wife,” be an-|mas eve, Then, when Orcutt had , anarchy, that human lives are menaced, that property is suffering lawless de ak iadak Hid: Lace, Whines Sea pean, Blah m7 | mas sve, Phew, when Orestt tle the ones on the lower branche But I like the climbing up-—"| jeried the boy | Would you like to fall and hurt | yourself?" said Gall | No; but he likes to feel he might | struction. No sane person believes such a state of affairs exists here Therefore, there is no rightful place in Seattle at this time for any so- called “law and order committee.” Why drag in the I. W. W. issue, by its very heels, to plaster Seattle ne lessly with it? acta ut the time came when she learn Guapo # led to fear herself even more Orcutt kept his pact of friendship On the Scent nobly. The two of them, sometimes It was two weeks later, Doctor| with Vance present and sometimes Underwood was visiting Oreutt in| without, continued to nd several a : ate fall and hurt himself, break an arm his room, a common occurrence.| hours a day each other's com yo One cannot help but feel that whatever motives may have inspired the or leg. and then not fall,” sald Or The doctor partly reclined on s}pany. Then one day Oreutt, acting : Milaw or ¢ ittee’’ vene ere are seve’ i y \0)S- eutt, with a laugh | wide leather couch. Both were on the advice of Dr. Underwood to y ‘law and order committee generally, there are several in that body, po The man and the boy looked at xmoking force his wife’s hand, again took her : Sibly the leaders who called the meeting, who have personal motives of re- each other, and both twinkled with So, that's why I didn't get the|in his arms and kissed her ve agai a 3 a mirthful understanding between Pryche I hinted for so diligently The two of them had spent an un venge against Mayor Gill. 2 ; ‘ them. The child turned to hie for Christmas? And why you have| usually pleasant day. Orcutt had Seattle is going along calmly, quietly, smoothly. There is not a ripple mother | closed your old rooma and occupy|ccompanied Gail to an afternoon Papa knows, because he was al boy once himself,” he continued, | “Women know how girls feel "bout | things, | guess, but they just never! know exac'ly how a boy feels.” | “Condemned by a fury of my | | these instead? You feel that those reception, where both had been things are not yours to disturb nor|made much of. Gall, used to long give away, Um-m!” years of worse than discourtesy on The allenist chuckled during this|the Part of her husband, glowed commentary, but his keen eyes be-| “th the success and happiness o hind the broad spectacles were it all. When they returned she went bright with anticipation, his nos- ‘0 her room to lay aside her wraps trils quivered like a beagle hound’s|#"4 Orcutt followed her up the stairs to bis own quarters on A scent , 8 errand toc only 7 The younger man’s face bebind| |, }!s errand took him only @ min the thick smoke of his cigar held| Ute, and as Ne agg ein door on his way back down stairs a rueful smile. + I've said the ‘other George’ so he ntered in. The psychological moment had arrive joften that I've grown possessed of Jan uncanny feeling that he’s ob. kissed her hair light Jective—a person outside this car-|Pefore the mirror patting it cass of nine. Underwood, | never|Diace, but some unbroken write my name to a check but that|*WePt Gail off her feet. |1 feel lke a forger. To save my|. She turned on him in what she buttons I can’t get the feel of own-| thought ‘was fury—only to return his kisses. But Orcutt’s joy over her apparent capitulation was short lived. As she pushed him from her &L His brows knit./amd Staggered back against the 4 They're mine. dressing table, her terror frighten. & {x good and 04 him. He succeeded in quieting © my wife,,her at last, and they had a long il, fighting desper- of disturbance. A “law and order committee,” by its innuendo and its very existence, not only slanders this peaceful community, but is possibly laying the foun- dation for needless friction and turmoil. In all earnestness and sincerity, The Star calls upon the “law and order am aaal to stop, look and listen. You are now on your way — but w ? WE ARE AT PEACE—PERFECT COMMUNITY PEACE—NOW. Think it over coolly. It is no time for “hot heads peers!" Gail's laugh was as gay a a bird's trill, “AN right, Vance There were packages of variour two big hampers full, all now e identity in their white tlasue ribbons, There w reach other, presents fc © that served them, In th house and outside of it, presents for the Lormes and other friends who| were to come next morning to help) them celebrate the first family Christmad tree of the George Oreutt Te ~ + hou iT Equal Wages for Women | JANE ADDAMS OF HULL|"*rhere had always been presental 3 HOUSE, SERIOUSLY ILL for the help. and there had always! " |been a tree for the child in the play “s But the wife's pride had not Jallowed her to have a family tree jwith the head of the family #0 prom inently absent. She could pot Dlind herself to Its irony More fronical yet was the present situation, But not.to Gail's present ership.” “Umm! And your wife and ‘ ENRY FORD'S announcement that hereafter women in \ his employ will receive a minimum wage of $5 a day, on p the same basis as men, should do much to relieve the burden} @nder which working women labor | Many states, like Washington, limit by law the hours that | Women may work to eight, taking this step in the interest of | “the race's welfare | n feeling of ownershi strong there. But G Vance's my child, thru and by my. | talk, in which self, not as an inheritance from the| ately, again won. |other George. I also feel that Gail's} But the next day Orcutt repaired F p pects. Ab enonenre, Maeyeney my wife and never has and neverst his friend =, But women always have lost the fight for equal wages wes upp her—that made ber co | could have belonged to that beast.”| Dr. Underwood looked at his vis- with men. livious «to all but the ors of the |displayed his erudition to her social! pect three months’ decency tol ‘The doctor twinkled itor critically. The puzzled frown Fort f, our. She had been thus for three/friends He conversed at length drown out of my memory seven B 7 TT on Oreutt's face was deeper th ew r c yea 7 t a Y a - *, DI a jeant—eh That's the way you a per than 7 Yo k teachers for years have sough a salary stand months, since the day of Oreutt’s/ only with her and Dr. Underwood, | years of humiliation, of the most] speak of yourself?” ordinary, They were in the doctor's ard for women as high as that for men, feeling that in teach home-coming a matter that delighted her person. brutal neglect! Myne! With quick wrath,| study ang, of all professions, man’s boasted muscular superiority | |, free from the suspicions of the jally, even outside the question of The man walked the floor for a| “That Iibertine never inhabited—| “The sun hasn't been out like th i Should not make him any more valuable. They have met| ; heer ~d eec ar ypeseeke ree | betraying himself, few moments, stopped abruptly be-|Oh, the devil! Can't I stop the ae I was at your house,” remark- ' ~ - ; |from Dr. Underwood's suspicion ‘ at Scie ab lanedte was a ‘Ol od the dostor, “You were gntui aan : Wepeated rebuffs. And they have not been able to establish aaa oe new Orcutt ac- |. 20%@ things were in her mi ide her lunacy of disowning my own past their claim <i hua tacd th “4 fateal glen ‘el jas she believed: the new Orcutt ® |she helped to dress the Christmas Stop shivering, Gail. 1 will not| The alienist raised himself from|*!t for your picture. Did you bring ' claim despite the fact that physical strength plays little) jcepted _ compincentiy af /tree—a treat that Vance had inaist-;touch you.” He spoke roughly,| his pillow and sat upright jthe proofs? ‘ in their occupation | en by friends and — Jed that only himself and his papalthen his voice softened. “Forgive| “It's all a rotten muddle!" Or.| “Yes.” returned Orcatt, and Iald i 4 Henry Ford, the first great employer to realize and pro-| jances: Vance happy beyond words; |ang mama should have. me! I forgot that you yet have|cutt continued. “f'll close the door| 4? envelope on the desk beside him, jand the man playing his rol The presents are all on,” the|¥our memories, that you cannot #o/on George Orcutt’s past some day| The doctor reached for it ea, F elaim the justice of $3 pay and an eight-hour day, now stands friend to the letter!—all this pro easily dissociate me from my that 5 “How is life gol . - | “ disnoc 1¢ from past.”|as I have on that room and cut for) going now _ before the nation likewise as the champion of equal pay for] vided an anesthesia that quieted ‘The man swung the! He took another turn about the| the open.” |questioned. “Satisfied ?—Happy | | women. j fer rare. ever known a man like {ttle figure inthe air, then set him |foom. again stopped beside her, | "And Mra, Oreutt?—shall you) “Underwood,” said the other. pee And with this accession to their fighting ranks, the army] mint gaat ake led tan oven known | bis feet, and pressed the call-bell| | “I've broken out of my traces, and/ leave or take her?” i) oe Panay wien tee . ah a for his governess to come and take You're afraid | won't go back into ‘ou old quizzer! Thy does it afraid . ania foundew) of wo “wy workers draws a long step nearer to its goal—in | thet s rod zisted ‘cia ecieiiititen (MICO BOR: harness again. But I will—for ajalways seem to interest. you s0/0n something that’s beyond my dustrial justice lby his conversation, convereation| Gall waited to arrange Vance’s|Sbile. I’ can't promise how long.|areatly how I get along with myjAbility to overcome, She's sick.” —_——_— hg ® ce jo ony 01 You're my wife—I'm mad with love| wife? Well, for once I shall an-| “You—— : - - | not meant to instruct her, but to|/ Presents, the man drawing them |, | i . “H 4 h for you~it’s inevitable that some-|*Wer you. My wife is hysterically ‘en knows I want her happi- In spite ot pant _songe ge db spose ee pn be | JANE ADDAMS | pase the timesbetween them that he | forth frome thelr biging Fecal Shel time—. But well be friends as be-| afraid of me. I kissed her Christ. [ness 1 want to get the sick terror able to reca a ie di jow something ut a dogs Adldien, Retndes at Huns | malatod they should spend together, | fore, dear. Come, shake hands, as|mas eve and she threatened to|out of her eyes. It wrings my heart . |so many hours each day over, then held out her hand to|.°" : | | recall plan. house, in Chicago, the greatest so| | ' h cited delight | Orcutt you intended |leave the house forever if I Thad a talk with Mrs. Lorme before . cA e eam | elal eottioment in the United States,ltn tne. jor excited delight | The face she turned to him was| much as laid a finger on her again,,Coming here. I shall take Vance to : | in thene novel excursions of thought Good night. I have atill a few) prantty . the Lormes’ Florida h e 2 and one of the foremost women iniina: blinded her to the d . 7 ™ | Raw |sentimentally, that is he Lor lorida home after his What Is the Steel Trust Up to? Jamascre of the foremost women Inithat blinded her to the dangers of|things in my room to get ready.”|" "It's the end. T must go away. 1| "You mean Christmas eve wasthe|operation, Mra, Oreutt intends to |the intimacy they brought. Philos-| She assumed the air of mystery that t " ” | N % 7 [AN spapers hav overlool I deep si Bright | eave it to your fairness—about— | firet time you kissed her remain in New York. Underwood, MERICAN newspapers have € ked the deep sig 9 ophy and science seemed such safe, had been Vance's for the past Week| Vance He's my baby—you-you| "And the last, probably. Unfor-'I want you to treat her. I have con, nificance that apparently lies behind the visit to Japan} All her life Miss Addams has|!™Personal subjects. She basked in| and whispered, “For—you will let me have him balf the @unately, my wife hasn't lost her|sented to this arrangeme::t almost disease - the warmth of this friendship, with What I wast nt } pa 4 shells: ao iat “er A amp f : ; Inited States Stee} |!¢4 movements to heip the poor.‘ Logue lina av Phi | at I want is right here,” sald | time memory lly so that she may have time pot “Judge” E. H. Gary, chairman of the United States Steel iy hog her. greatest monu-|°tt *opping to ask wher @*/he, and took her in his arms and, His eyes were bewildered. “Why,| “Then make her lose it," com-/to get over her fright and be under corporation. . ment center of ed . leading them ay. | kissed her Gail, dear He pushed a chair to-;manded the physician. “If she's|your care without my disturbing From long extracts of Gary's speeches in Tokio, pub-' charity, religion and hope for Chi poetic pi ypaladhand hn ’ Singies tt fo unexpected that for al Ward her. “Sit down,” he command.|Your wife, then let her be your) Presence around.” lished in newspapers owned by his personal friends or sup-/ ose Fant to the family And ake hej {moment she lay unresisting agninat |¢d. Kently. “Now, Gail, try and tell | Wife.” | (Continued In Our Next Issue) 4 - er pa M sma w orn at Ce bel - ae eek ? he had! nis breast me what this terror means For Easier sald than done with a er ig y ed by steel trust money, we learn that th soft-soaping both Americans and Japanese into believing |ter of John H paraded him before her world with A pathetic pride in his possession.| Even when free of hin clasp she 1860 three months we have been daily | wife that shudders at the approach} companions, good comrades, joyous |of My caresses as a gazelle might for 1 a ; A nusb 0 honor or, and could only stare at him in a sort of that establishment of steel mills Japan will cement the|a power in the [llinois senate. She ps sage eke _ che b Sse OF tare, and teeret rather then wraih| a sit-yearolds, Nor was it friend. | at & gorilla’s! * © Gorilla?— : ie. . . : wadwated from it ae ifhes om she wan not asham: S res . {| ship I‘ t Gorilla?” RS - > @ friendliest of relations between Japan and the United States sem age et roar re i col)” Joy in this revelation had mingled|*as in her low votce ae — caused our happiness 1 ne he repeated slowly. “Go- What the steel trust really wants in Japan is a chance| cr) “Stodical college at. Philadet.| Wit even her first fear of discov You have broken our agreement| "x01" The words were carefully; He trembled violently, sprang to to exploit the cheap labor of the Orient just as it already is|phia, be ng she could aid thelery: Which fear oo srounéiess, whet Wie ee ao wite and 1/choten. “It was not love—I loathe | bis feet, clutching the ‘alr. exploiting immigrant and negro labor in this country poor be: Medical knowledge. |fn® "oon. eco ov betes Pe eee =| hoa | “Underwood, help me to remem- a os 4, 1889 dan ‘ os nd cutt o a | t b Der,” . The capitalists and the government officials of Japan| 17 1889 Miss Adame and Miss! iain, and a posttion which his wife| “But I do not look on you as a|_ 't was the man’s face now that/bder,” he entreated piteously, turn me y psa ,| Ellen Gates Starr opened Hull ‘ bustand ala tt ; was gray. A moment, then a grim. |ing dazed eyes on his friend. “Ab Gre wise to this, take it from us; and while they may let| house bore for him. The folden-brown | husband, and I do not love you ly sardonic smile curled his lips. half falling to his chair. “It's gone Gary enslave the poor coolies they will have no false ideas The tneditation: fen erewa | \encren oc ee mee Puncee him gat ieee Being te the we a gor| “Let me congratulate you on your|—the door closed before—I—could about his steel mills linking the two sides of the Pacific in| trom one floor of an old resi. Bactorily in society's eyea—the one |theee © MAYS! perfect acting,” he said curtly, but |—look—in dence to a colony of 13 build MACINCHIVOS CRIB /t USS ever remark with a note of jagged pain. “I real What door? The alienist's a@ closer bond of brotherly love Whatever the Japanese about him. Three montha'” she cried, fore Ings. It became the center of ly believed that you wanted to be in quiet voice hid a palpitating ex t may be, they are not fools on wen and fiarature ane had aoene oy #4 t society Ing scorn Into her vetce. ° You ¢X-|my arms as much as I wanted to|citement The real point seems to be that Gary hopes to cheapen| ameng Chicago's poor ve wget: ~ acer heibea one jhave you thera Forgive me.” He Memory’s door. It seemed for Jabor in this country by depressing the demand—which he sah hon af oan cnr whe as | bowed gravely And good-bye, 1) an instant that something—great— ot Ge Matheney tie th, Tecan to Hil euaelvatdans | rae Melo ter held jshall leave the house after the| Was going to happen plans to do by using new mill Japa t $} mp : eet bs yhrdring partomality-v-) 5 | Christmas festivities in the morn-| “Something great has happened; "from the Far East sy : ithe ground of his now being sober ing.” |memory has stirred,” muttered the And about all America will get out of it v divi et ta hak tea ee ee PAIN “And you would go—where?” We under his breath Dai arnet stockholders heteisits sete acs eee whispered By the way,” aloud, “have you dends to ste % | [Knowledge would arouse suspicions ’ “I think I shall go first to Colo-/found me a picture of yourself be rado and see father's relative ved. He had not I {fore your fllness? 9 was quickly Altho the cold snap is on, there are certain folks | ane Pape Don't Suffer! Relief Comes should like to find out more about| | Orcutt opened a drawer of the! who want to make it hot for Mayor Gill. | IN FIVE MINUTES the Moment You Apply |™¥ family than you seem able toldesk by which he sat and handed| tell me. Jackson says that Aunt|out a pasteboard box St. Jacobs Oil. Maria was with us during most of A boxful. I ren across them in ‘ m | *The Most Popular Book | COL UM Do stay crippled! Rub this|™¥ boyhood. Surely she could | the storeroom Wednesday, while i HE one best seller is the Bible. It has been translated NOSICK STOMACH aocothing, penetrating ofl right to [tone tee light on the very mys-|looking for a mechanical toy Vance j ’ ee tptt Gees te | wanted and thought was there. The | TRAMMELL | Cheer up The campaign cigars terious change In myse’ into more than 100 languages and it h She gripped the chairs back other George liked to pose before | s an annual cif-|are nearly all smoked | ‘ “ | jcomes pain, soreness, stiffness and| «vance,” she mumbled. “It would|the camera. 1 don't, The usual| Florida culation of about 5,000,000 books, testaments and portions 1a tak: Seas Faget es al ND tons else etrates, heala|PPenk his heart for you to leave—|consistent difference, you see.” | — How many thousands of books about the Bible have been |. wtcher no eats «must pay oa 5 Pee Tasanathins Pom Ardrenee) ig now. The doctor thinks that he| The alienist gave him a quick} written no man knows, and the average reader does not re ee | ee reretnene ane injured mus. | wil have to be operated on for his| fiance, then attacked the proto: TRIO HELD AS THEY quire the information, because the Bible, whether it is read RIGHT Pape’s Diapepsin” Is the %.?romptly. It doesn't burn or dis oe) Soum many you ere { | ; | | here | “Does Mrs, Orcutt know that | CHARGE ROBBERY color the skin and can not cause! fi» folded his arms and stood in|You have these photographs?” BBE! as literature or as a religious guide, carries its mea ing di-| The teacher had been reading t« is : | ckest and Sures' jon't suffer! Ge Tectly to us untrained fellows as well as to the student andthe ¢ about the great forests of bristle Relief. ; ‘ela die A nai ? ae . eee No,” he returned, drily | America of ee ee oo 5 orec ‘ ‘ she could a | Police v 0 . preacher. Pa fggy oe ee ee a |now—limber up! Rub the ‘misery | og NOr,,Be Utter nd, at length I then at ® couldn't have known) Police officers Wednesday were Because it fits into the experience of all, because it applies|“which one of you ean tell me the! If What you just ate is souring on| fight out. A moment after “St. Ja poppe Pec hithar sourwanla diec |< oN: bt earns Seen ered | MVestigating a series of counter f 4 ‘our sto ‘) e € cob ‘ pplied ou ean j bugne aPh day ; bp pol ped : bic i bys arges ¢ ir Ps. to the conditions of every age and every land, the Bible is|pine that has the longest and sharp. ey per Caee tke a lump of pan i 9 applied vos an notlip Vance for half the time rather |them destrayed, and Jackson—I am|C2&rees of alleged robberies, and recognized as the world’s leading classic. No man can claim |@#t needles taxa And BRIGG cone uh te and you can go about your secnn.|than endure it, I should be a mon-|sure it was Jackson—has saved | holding Harry White, James Sharf : to be educated unless he has studied the Bible Up went a hand in the trentrow.|foo4 or have @ feeling of dietinam | dutite wr regular | ster to stay on here and keep you|them, He has been in the family|and James Boyd on open charges. fo pti om : Ineartburn, fullness, weet OBE. Jasobe OL" 6 in daily dread of another outbreak." | long while and has the old re-| Boyd, who the police say gam. ce a ar - The porcupine Tit-Bits ln as + nausea, bad} “St. Jacobs Ol” conquers pain.) ghe swayed unsteadily. He muat|tainer’s devotion to even a black| bles extensively, accused Sharp of Our honor is vindicated,” said Teddy, and went to ae te | ried cooked pod Stomach head-|It has been used effectively for! not go to Colorado. Aunt Maria| sheep.” | stealing from $800 to $1,000. Sharp | ache you can surely p| sp , . . 6 € S be bed. What he thought when he got up and found that AN EDITORIAL five minutes palpate la Ge sesteesie nat redial | WOuld discover the truth, She knew| | Underwood reached for a small) alleged that White had strong. q the later returns favored Wilson we shall not publish until | By Sig Emtige kak your aihartiedtat to aiow aa lowers ® medal |avery feature, every distinctive leather bag he had with him, {armed him at Sixth ave. S. and the board of censors has passed on it. | In any city the population aver-|the formula, plainly printed on these | ———————-———— mark, every blemish and beauty of} “toshall take these with me,"|Jackson st. early Tuesday morn- ages about 200 citizens to one auto|fifty-cent cases of Pape's Diapepsin, | body of the real George Orcutt, said he, depositing them. “I wantling, and taken $150 from him fowner. Therefore, why should we|then you will understan | No, he must not go. Yet—conld| ear is she deceive him again, play with| jhis affections? | Yes. For already she heard her| Jump out of the road on an auto peptic troubles of all kinds must go, driver because he blows a horn?|and why It relleves sour, out-of-order Where does he get the privilege to|stomachs or indigestion in five min. OPEN NOSTRILS! END A COLD OR CATARRH ; All Women Need I th t t fd |make us get out of his way?) Why utes. Pape's Diapepasin” is harm me Meee cee hgladiropssced don't we all carry a horn on our | les tastes like candy, though eac eegeta! | tiv Ci i « y i i nthe great out ofdoors |i fakin is 2: 2iient aashes $ Mamet wmntind $ S50 oa etn | AgBEtG candy, 1 eta doer mach, or at the even recepti lof our way? Why not? Ain't it?--(similation into the blood all the : have been happy these three! | Which is the cause of so much sick headache, nervous. Pp’ OM Fi tem's our sentiments, Ble food you eat; besides, it makes you| |months—it is only that I can’t yet ness and sleepless nights. Quick relief from stomach i — go to the table with a henithy ap.| Count fifty! Your cold in head |forget and am afraid. For—my troubles is assured by promptly taking a d op aKkers Oa OUR DIPPY DICTIONARY |Petite: but what will please you|OF catarrh disappears, Your clog: |sake-—won't you stay and be friends | . ao most, {8 that you will feel that| 4 nostrils will open, the air pas-|a while lon | your stomach and Intestines ‘cnt 8 of your head will clear and| “Gail! His votce was| clean and fresh, and you will nor |You can breathe freely. No more|rapturous, “We will be only friends, | jneed to resort to laxatives or liver | Suiting, hawking, mucous dis-/dear, till you do believe in me. | |pills for biliousness or constipation, | h’'8% dryness or headache; no|There is no other George Orcutt This elty will have many 4 " ri Ha Oy eae ae night beloved. I am your husband, the Balm from your druguiat and apply | mage You hold was an interloper. | |a little of this fragrant ant ved Paar) tan fi we a loream in your nostrils. It pene Bg Ne aad | trates through eVery air passage of Georg Why Simp—A fellow who voted the other way Harber—See phonograph aa is equal abl ieviBoreting and 5 licious. Walter Baker & Co Ltd. Beecham’s Pills They act gently on the stomach, liv i ach, liver, kidneys and i aot Segulating Nee organs, and keeping nee ina ecient sation ve famous pills are vegetable in composition th armless, leave no disagreeable after-effects and are not habitfonmiege _ A box of Beecham’s Pills in the house is a Protection i many annoying troubles caused by stomach ill wy ier HOW TO MAKE A LOT OF 8 eee MONEY , Diapepsin” cranks, as some people | nvent @ sewer pipe that clogs up ywill call them, but you will be en.| jmuch quicker than the old kind and|thusiastic about this splendid stom, jsell It to the city. The city is look-lach preparation, too, ff you ever jing for such a pipe as this to put|take it for indigestion, ta 8, heart-|the hes 4 ize I called him that,” she| a ESTABLISHED 1720 DORCHESTER, MASS. down Just before a street ix paved.|burn, sourness, dyspepsia or any Seoitan or nner ate mae cried, impulatvely. st | Sand lays the foundation ane stomach misery nm 7 L brane, giving you instant reli He laughed, with boyish happ!- For B tt vita aiaite bet iia haa ‘on light Hane cuait ic Lent pai and| Head colds and catarch yield ike ant Dir. e er ea t beac yo of stomach misery and! magic. Don't stay st * “TL must have a name, dear, A ‘ections of Special Value y stuffed-up and ea Sell by Brunson Tatts ta, Women are on a rock-bound coast.” ‘indigestion in five minutes. ‘ith miserable, Relief ts sure name from you will make @ price: orld, “in bencat Toes ite,

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