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The Seattle Star | STAR—TUESDAY, NOV, 21, 1916. PAGE 4 ——e pesstiittsiettitisisisstestieeeses ities ritesesees L222 Seggganegerrereeeres sgetsatereaeeetaeeeseeeereetsentsiesty seteeeeeetaesesrrerereresnerreeeneennsenteensreggtneteenenety state Next Week ms A Novel “The City of 66 9 99 A. Neal A Week ttiebeted ee . A P N KE R I sig Cc. Leesia A Week Boiered ee cond-eleas mation By maid out vf ony, © per month up te @ mos BY FRANCIS LYNDE ' srnes & ( : BIT nni@e niin nit ni nooo y ETTSWSTTSOSPTT SYST YSSONPNESPSTTTTLIITLTITLLIEEL Tinminstitaianitnseni §= PTS (Continued From Our Lant tesue)/ jdon't know of one in town,” “Yen, he come "bout an hour ago, The Captain was disturbed not “Nor me nelther said Captain | Now, if you wouldn't ind goin’ over the ¢ emnation of Web and ee. \end stayir’ with Gap'n Parter for i is business—but as to what effect te) b E T Just then the dining-room door {a few minutes while J finish gettin? 4 wits ate | Outbursts of EverettT rue | 0) nn: [Seeatcene his old friend. He got John Bax “There's Eri,” sald Captain] The Captain went upstairs in @ ter away from the meeting as early Jerry Then he added in an| dazed state An he passed thtw alt gins and harried him home| | ] YoU AR& alarmed whisper, “Who on airth| what eo ‘5 ® root he vaguely 4 j ae . obn Baxter was silent and ab has he got with him?’ noticed that the bure op whe “Attrition” is a word that is now used frequently in the war vocabu- — [/sentminded, and most of the Cap [THE PROPRIETOR, They heard their friend's voice|clean, and that most of the rubbiah ary tain's cheerful rks concerning Ti Betiovs. warning some one to be careful of |that had ornamented it had disap. a * . Orham affairs in general went un — ——- |the top step, and then the cham-| peared . 4 i J. W. T. Mason, the great military expert of the European war, de answered. Aw they turned in at the C ber decr epened and Captain Eri| ‘The sick map tay just as he Man The war has passed, in interest to us on the American side, from the ain't a religious man. ‘cor to Sing Ets eid asaantaet with | he must go down at once snd eat it " . ou y of thinkin’, bu€ I've gen et me make you acquainte | he m : first staggering shock of fearful loss of numbers, We read almost cold- | 2oMn "yo; Mymieln: but Ive gen Mra, Snow of Nantucket, Mrs,| while it was hot ventures, and other novel tactics of warfare, are now accepted as ordin- that billiard saloon. The s'lectmen “Pores,” continued the Captain, | oftfee They greeted him joy. , » he * ac, a a, 2 thin ¢ set tn . attend to them afore very long let me make you known to Mrs. | ously ary. We have even become calloused to the terrible conditions which the Why don't you go up to Boston for Snow, Mrs. Snow, this {s Capn| “Hey, Eri!” hailed Captain Peres women and children in the war countries are suffering. Only when the s couple of weeks? ‘Twill do you Perez Ryder.” ‘Ain't this gay? Look st them Shudder at the fearfulness of it. enormity is beyond imagination. It cannot be Studied. | Scandinavia and the War ‘ ESPITE recent indications that Sweden has overcome ‘ her historic fear of Russia—among said indications being i the bridging of the river that forms the Russo-Swedish ‘boundary, thus linking the two countries by rail—it seems Pthat Norway is kept from declaring war on Germany prin icipally by the belief that-such action w Swede P finto the war on the kaiser’s side! a Norway's annoyances at German hands have no rbt ‘een almost intolerable; her fjords, it is said, have been used submarine bases, so that Norway finally, at Great Britain's tion, has denied the use of her harbors to all sub- ines, whether men-o'-war or merchantmen And Sweden’s dread of Russia, the oppressor of Finland, M iwhich once was Swedish territory, no doubt is based on real danger, present or potential bring ' But fate is playing a grim jest norther Astrongholds of democracy, ruled for es by a com P tking. are tobe lined up war against ca and ¢ Fother's allies—over an issue that is none of heir a < at b Surely Norway and Sweden, sorely tried as t u be, can find a way of keeping out of the bloody shambles | (If these two peaceful nations take the sword we shall feel ‘empty head and no conception whatever of the value or joy of _ good, hard work. ‘ But don’t condemn him yet! The world DID owe him a proper sta Perhaps he did—but more likely he didn’t Did he get it? Seattle woman is given $20,000 for unrequited love What does the poet say? “It’s better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.” Dressed turkey jumped up 1 cent on Monday If it were undressed, we would be justified in declaring it a naked shame. ws The Literary Digest this week quotes many papers © on “Why Wilson Won.” In the language of our own | Harry Carroll, city comptroller, the reason is plainly * that Hughes did not get as many votes as Wilson. This Simple Laxative a “Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin Should Have a Place in Every Home Constipation, or inaction of th bowels, a condition that nearly ery one experiences with more 0} less frequency, is the direct cause When the bow {fof much disease ele become clog from the stomach, foul gases and T poisons are generated, and unless | the congestion is quickly relieved] the system becomes weakened and most susceptible to attack Various remedies to relieve con-| } stipation are prescribed, but of these contain ¢ rti tive agents that are ha Jent in thelr act and system The mo: etfec edy is the combination ' laxativ rbs pep ' sold in Bist crores under the name d with refuse| ister of|family laxative, mild enough for > has rep-|the tiniest babe, yet sufficiently * resented his district the State|powerful to act e ‘Legislature for si q writes | strongest constitution j that he uses Dr. Caldweil's Syrup To avoid imitations and inef | Pepsin and finds it a lendid lax-| fective substitutes, be sure to get ative, easy to take and mild, yet|Dr. Caldwell yrup Pepsin The Hon. Jobn D. } Brandywine, W. Va positive, in its action, and that it|that a faesimile of Dr. Caldwell should be in every household for| signature and his portrait appea use when needed jon the yellow carton in which the Dr. Caldwell up Pepsin is| bottle is packe A trial bottle sold by druggists in all parts of the| free of charge, can be obtained United States and costs only fifty | writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 45 cents a bottle. It contains no opi-| Washington St., Monticello, | Ili i ate or narcotic drug, does not! nois. cman nt P scribes this new phase of the world contlict in an article published in today’s Star. It is a rare contribution to the war literature and students law ought to be allowed to inter of the European situation will find in it much food for thought bloodedly of the millions who have died or are facing death in battle The war has passed from the stage of thrills. Air raids, submarine horror of it is brought right home to us, as it was by Mme. Schumann-Heink in her remarkable letter to a Star reporter yesterday, do we recoil with a The war, in a word, has been such a gigantic, monumental affair that its night It is this phase of the war which J. W. T. Mason now describes. He by before the three captains re studies the precise facts. His article is an analysis of the war moves and sotree Sey susoere trem ne se poe The SAeaaee s take Care of hiatt Wall, Mea Meow | coctincs aun" tock aed, a the war possibilities. He declares the war now has entered upon the phase 1 Al taltaon kithetban =1_ Good Day WO rege whe's a—a—sort of relation Of|we've got to have some kind of # yah | . i say . v 7 : re be a: b Be po ot “ Jerry's just a suspicion of &| gettiem: on this marryin’ quem of “attrition.” You will be interested in learning what “attrition” means, ee applicants were : smile accompanied this assertion—| tion Last night, when 1 was up “> al SPORE PRR “and she's done consid'rable nu%-/in the room there, it come acroat sin’ in her time. I've been talkin’! me al! of a sudden that, from what * is i i < " ! . lyour picture. Have you got one to| Mra. Snow's train was a He knew what [t was that he had | 4unnage out of here right off. I is indeed little hope for civilization Once upo aR tenist og FO" P ave You got on: t * late, an at it was that he _s that there F thie atnaer after’ gutting thru pian |eeed Bert” | Captain Krt escorted her directly to] stumbled over the moment that he] think likely you'll want to clean jer peer ewe : + ling bi iilinns 1) “Eve got that daguerreo j\the hotel. She was a pleasant | fell across tt, and his fingers trem-| Up some.” ame zabeth, ‘What the World Owes You Neake to Medatiee Te acoenc al Souk Wham eee reg | faced, middle-aged woman, neatly |bled so that he could scarcely| The lady from Nantucket glanced|** her mother's was,” said 4 dressed. There was a comfortable|®cratch the match that he took|at the bureau top and seemed|.8>4 her dad's name was Preston. 6 HE world owes me a living!” How often the maker 0f| piece. He sald he'd play it, and |afore.’ that remark is a lazy, good-for-nothing fellow with an) they did, and he did, and not one| Ho rummaged it out of his chest) vately considered bis comrade to|@t last, and as fts tiny blaze grew | checked herself. What she did say|‘0 Write to her every once in a w ; The man who has a proper start ically, mental Geodon’. Waa see le that might do,” said CHAPTER 1V riedly. The old “Come-Outer” lay cuse me, ma'am. Jerry, this| “Well, if he don’t,” said Captaia Pi morally—doesn’t often degenerate into the wortlless street-|doorknon. | This remarkabt inven. | , heaitatingly | The Schecthouse Bell Rings |!n the path with his arms out-/is Mrs. Snow. I don't know what's|Jerry, decidedly, “Mary Emma i y pei b jon puts an end to the problem of rs ‘ “ ' piche: e had . ’ bein’ | ‘tong “é i Peorner whiner who declaims, “The world owes me a living!"| soothing doorknob wrinkles,” Twill have to do, seain'| “All hands on deck! Turn out | Stretched, ap if he had fallen while | got into me, bein’ #0 careless |does. She reads everything, pos “ “ ie - rT 1 o ed of ? he's got,” said Captain Eri.|there! Turn out! coat-sleeve §= was! |tals and all Every child, girl or boy, rich or px black or red “ee - - badly scorched, and f cket | Aap 5 fresh air, sound Teotype, carefully; Captain Eri grunted and rolled) #@ly Scorched, and from a pocket | CHAPTER V Contin white, is entitled to pure food, clean clothes, fresh air, sound cosn ne thalled the next morn-|over in his bed. Thea, as ne|!a the coat protruded the neck|. sousshesper and Bock Agent. | — eee eet Sleep; to instruction that will equip him to collect his living) 7 oe nr [BE Mecompanted by a brief blo-|Rrew wider awake, he heard, oF ik. Rote. The bottle was! ‘There was a knock on the door ledge of the dif f h ife w mut and bought] ical sketch of the origin omewhere in the distanc |e y, but it c 7 - and a little joy besides; and to knowledge of the difference brobbeyaad ht | grapt mf Pie cctetnels | Oana the distance, a bell | ret, vial Ape a wlegggin bP Captain Perez's sleeping apart- $10,000 | " Pe < Conversation among the captains us 2 ment. bet ght and wron, They co er “Te or ! dence e. t . to VY een te ee hard on the man who believes the world'1 mean efi was, for the next two days, confin-| | ¢Turm out, all bande! Turn Nee ter wnat al ora teen one ‘Cap'n Hedge,” said Mrs. Snow, | Given ou be too ¢ on : : : ‘ > ed to speculation as to how soon|° pal pnts |"Cap'n Hed; r k ; t . ; é Livmtian(, Wdko: Meuita Weuias ; p WO Si : p'n Ke im sorry to wake Would not benefit you like a @wes him a living. It doesn’t, of course—but perhaps it owe | fote: Post's Noens 41144. | they might expect a reply from the; CaMain Eri sat up. That voice | the truth. A }you up, but it’s ‘most 10 o'clock course in our school. We be- shim other things i ‘ Nantucket female was no part of a dream. It be Captain Eri weighed the chances, | gnq——" { Fi the other fellow cs iene leceutieet et Cent When fealty” comes Cantal Coneues cone te ee oe eee ore ee eee eee Weert en One eames * get more money. No 2 * Jerry was in such a panic that Cap | CDUBued tO ring. : did what seemed to him right./ scissors! Of all the lazy—— I'll be ger time required, but it 1 wa The first thing Ruth sepeste seetioin vee thengoeet | eh ain Eri had "D open tt itis Aye, aye, Jerry! What's the| He threw the bottle as far away | out in a jiffy! Peres, turn out there Individual method. pleted her remarkable flight from Chicago to New York, _ Love makes the » go round deoohipnsdthls ater?” he shouted from the path as he could and! urn out. 1 tell you!” was powder for her nose. Mi Law broke men’s records, jand wo de . t bottle “looks . inaon . cute be oy _ ae = hn then stripped off the coat, and | Captain Eri sprang to his feet : ‘ ® village, Look out of the win-| folding it into a small bundle, hid|and tried to separate dreams from but she obeyed the Law of woman after al A lot of the things we wi or dow, and you can see, They're! jt in the bushes near by. Then! realities. He H s8eK nidly NORTHWEST! t ; A realiti dressed rapidly and —— are about as useful as an ur la , ringing the schoolhouse bell; don't » lift } : SHORTHAND arene Hage d dead yesterday. If she rer la : eens De 2 he lifted the limp body, and|went into the dining room. The Villa's wife was reported de iss dete he'll n urkish bath. — Ur eet es a three-captaina | {Umea It ko that the Kray head|table was set, really set, with a Arende ‘at all the characteristics of her husband, s Ale pike aioe martian out ot the aaa par spew was toward the billiard saloon/clean cloth and dishes that shone come to life again in a day or two PROFANITY Words ered ward the village. : “SSO | instead of from it The knives and forks were ar == Y—Words used . 1 Perez and Jerry were still busy|ranged by the plates, not piled in A Household Necessity sia wn andi eiome “0 toa, ienrahin’ Gul hin igh, and tthe od ber one" wy age sors. eee; ~~ WWorries Bring Aches tof Dr. Caldwell'« Syrup Pepsin. gripe, and is recommended as al sily on the somehow, Seems to me it's worth | than right, the way I look at tt. I shail and post-office were on the “main | lowed her into the sick room.|Seems to me that’s about the only age tient ay. Meet me atthe depot Yours| O84.” People in a hurry some | sree oe ae gazed | way out of it.” Oh, all right! ave it your OWN | trury HA Bh SNOW times avoided the corner by climb. | Wide-ey in at the door. hey Y way, ‘Of course, I ain't got nothin'| Nobody apoke for a momeat aft-|12€ the fence opposite the Baxter| When the Doctor came out bis Sd 7 Ha 2 iy ae to way, I'm only the divilish fool er the reading of this intensely | &8t¢, going through the Dawes’ pas-| face shone with gratification Captain Jerry reluctantly conseat hats got git married and keep practical note. At length, Captain | tre and over the little hill back of “She'll do,” he said emphatically.|ing phen Captain took up ae Jorn ts all Tam! Peres broke the spel the livery stable, and coming out in| They saw him to the door and| other subject P Worm) ties tetween them a wit he exclaimed. “she |! ar of the post-office and close | then came back upstairs, Mrs ee epectable “vigil diplomacy, they soothed don't lose ro time, does ahe » naloon Snow came to the door as they | John Bester had one relative: s earn $3 « da Island Cit sndidate mat But when it came to me th main Eri trotted through the | entered Captain Eri's chamber. oe Soakan / bee mal tet ere witness testifies. He worma(rimony wntil he agreed to sign bie tad Captain Jerry and Cap-| pasture and over the hill, Just as Mrs. Snow,” said the Captain, | 10i" iaaauahter — lt gate the elder man sald hite face Eri, do you appeared, and with him a womas; |jeft him, bis as color 4 stout woman dressed in black| jess ax the clean piliow ¢ alpaca” and wearing *pectacies: net which it rested, Prese Captain Jerry gasped audibly Snow entered and announ that breakfast wan read nd thal lieve that man's fere with God's law Now, John Baxter Snow, this i# Dr. Palmer He found his friends seated at ‘The Doctor and the lady from|the table and feasting on bot bie Nantucket shook hands. cults, eggs, and clear, appetizing things most as well as us folks could run ‘em, Don't you worry no more about Web Saunders and They shook hands; Captain|eggs; billed jest to a T. Ain't Perez managed to say that he wea|much ke Jerry's h’af raw kind.” glad to meet Mrs, Snow, Ca Humph! You needn't say noth Jerry said nothing, but he looked|jn’, Peres,” observed Captain like a criminal awaiting the {all| Jerry, his mouth full of biscuit, of the drop. When you was cook, you allers “Doctor,” continued the Captain,| bled ‘em so hard they'd dent the paying no attention to the signals) barn if you'd fired ‘em at it. Hows of distress displayed by hia friend, | John, Eri?” “{ heard you say a spell ago that) Captain Eri gave his and th John here needed somehody to! Doctor's opinion of bis frien good Do you think so, Eri? Well maybe ‘twould Sometimes 1 fe as if my head was kind of w out, Vi think about it WELL, JUST TASTE THose SGes — THEY'RE STAce ! AND THO Byrrer if CHAPTER II RANCID ANO THE Corres Something over a fortnight went is Scop! AND You CHARGE STiPr PRICES - Good-night, John,” ur gined. It must be that even Captain Eri was disponed »naider curiously marked Nantucket the thing over with her and she’s!1'd seen of this Nantucket woman, | willin’ to look out for John till he| she'd be jest the sort of nurse t gits better.” John needed. So | skipped The physician adjusted his eye-|while you fellers was busy with | glasses and louked the volunteer|the Doctor and got her to come nurse over keenly, The lady paid|/down. But I ain't made no° ar- |no attention to the scrutiny, but] rangement with her, and some It was post removed her bonnet and placed it] thing's got to be done.” on the bureau, turned calmly to} “Tell you what we might do,” | jthe Doctor and said said Perez, slowly; “we might exe col u I tke that in the Capt'n Baxter's in here. I/plain to her that Jerry don't feel 2 way she puts ft.” com *® Shall { walk right in that ‘twould be right to think of e man of medicine seemed 4) marryin’ with Cap'n Baxter so sek little surprised at the lady's com-|jin the house and that, if she's 1 don't bilieve myself you'd dc mand of the situation, but he said: | witiin', we'll put it off till he dies much better, Jerry,” said Captain - , ma'am; | Kuess® YOU! or gets better. Meantime, we'll pay Eri seriously, “1 like that letter ~| may And the physician fol-|her so much to stay here and nugs, Captain Peres I b'lleve st the kind we want on|“you'd better sleep if my room * y. I'll bunk in| [@4 of the old. man’s illness at once. The difficulty was that none of them knew the young lady's ad- ¢ to a letter to the Nantucket /tain Per polled. wo it fell to came to the bayberry bushe pee tee y. Then Captain Perez said Captain Ert's lot to do the honors of | th other side he stumbled and fell | here long’s you flat FABLE } “But, Ts Jerry; ashe wants the house with Perez downstairs. I'll git my t& tisherns ) lighted |about to say something, but| They called her je. John wi look about her and the captain pri-| from his pocket. But it w of them mentioned “Silver Threads |and displayed it rather proudly. It] ho in great luck. He sald aa much | Fighter, the Captain saw Join Bax- while. P'raps Sam would know Amongst Ye Gold” or “Ye Rosary.” |showed him ax a short, sandy-halt-| when he nad reached home again. |tef lying face downward in the ‘raps you'd better introduce | Where she lived.” them was the happy night.jed youth, whose sunburned face! fut Captain Jerry, now that bis|Path, his head pointed toward his|me to Cap'n Burgess. I don't think| “Jest ‘cause Sam's postmaster,” ’ jbeamed from the depths of an @n0r-| prospective bride was actually in| OMe and his fect toward the bil-| we've ever met, if we are rela-|observed Perez, “it don't foller that ars ¢ unsuccessful | mous hoker, and whose head Was) iow: was in too great distress to | /!4rd saloon. a tions.” | he reads the name on every letter has |crow with @ tall, flat-brimmed | iisten, and moodily went to bed Lighting another match, Captain! “Captain Eri actually blushed a| that goes out and remembers ‘em of a forgotten style | Eri examined the fallen man bur-/jine, “Why, of course,” he said, | besides.” After eapolia invent pected his machine They turned | at a dog trot crowd of oddly running in The was in Web billiard saloon, and the tion of the building was when they r to the “main roac rt of ne, a rusty brain to fill blank parts of a conversation FALL GUY—See common peo with the water buckets when their|a heap for each man to help him. friend came panting up the Knoll| self. The Captain gasped INLEs: }to the pump. He sent them hunt Well, I swan to man!” he said. pA S * ra’ | 1 for Dr. Palmer, who was sure Has Jerry had a fit or what's » to be In the crowd somewhere, and | struck him? IT ain't seen him do */ in a few moments all four were | anything like this for I don't know reach DID YOU KNOW THAT— A herring doesn't follow the Hopes Women Will Adopt This Habit hed it. Ladders D&ckK over the way Captain Eri | when.” er ot ane a bath on Saturda were placed against the eaves, and | 4d Just come | “Oh, Cap'n Burgess didn’t fix the A _ Full Bet of Teeth own shower bei’ sath 2 As Well As M a line of men with buckets were, John ter was lying just as|table, if that's what you mean, USTI ‘$10.00 (o 815.00 jown hn? Neither did we en pouring water on the roof the Captain had left him, and the | Said the new nurse. “Cap'n Baxter Eatimates Free Captain Eri worked with the rest| others watched anxiously as the | seemed to be sleepin’ or in a stupor Protective Georantes With All | 265 ane he saw that the worst was | doctor listened at the parted lps,|like, and the Doctor, when he my of hot water each morn- | | 0 Then he began the search| and thrust his hand inside the |Come, said I might leave him long PAINLESS AUSTIN ing helpe ue look and feel an b + b hs his mind since he | faded blue Waistcoat enough to run downstairs for a few : Thira a ke Bt saw the blaze, “He's alive,” he said, after «| minutes, so— Ope clean, sweet, fresh. There was the most likely place,| moment, “but unconscious. We| “The Doctor? Has the Doctor t and John Baxter was not there. |been here this mornin ‘ at once,” ell and was|~ Cortaialy eves eitinan Go Gen must get him home ‘ertainly every citizen in Orham. s ° - Happy, bright, alert—vigorous who was able to crawl, would be He heard the t out in his shirtsleeves, and was took when he got as fur as here.” life today brings many worries;was a task for me to stoop over freedom from Illnes re assured ent (o exult over the downfall of he = feminist movement wa only by clean, healthy blood. If| the wicked, it wo ne b | “pulled” by Helen Wade @ en-|only every woman and likewise ev ne iN os Rie bron ™ rie a "T warned him against over-/and worrying is apt to bring on|or straighten up, owing to pain and ered the barber shop of Charles lery r 1d realize the wonders | tain didn't like to think ‘di tak other exertion or excitem: months |kidney troubles, so the medical |lameness across my kidneys, Doan’s Collins, and, seating herself in ajof the morning {inside bath, what a| reason, |ago,” said the Doctor. “We must| men say Kidney Pills soon relieved me of barber chair, demanded a ave. | gratifying chan would take place As the Captain, running silently, | {nd some one to take care of him) It's easy, of course, to say, “Don't |all these ailments She refused to leave, and Colli Instead of the thousands of sick-\turned into the “shore road,” he|&t once. I don't believe the old| Worry,” but ft can't be helped called a policeman » anaemiclooking men, women| saw a light in the Baxter home| ™an has a relation within a hun-| when things go wrong constantly, = ela nd girls with pasty or muddy d dred miles However, make it a rule never to |}! The mind-wrecking oblem of complexions; instead of the multt ie Baxter house was on the} “Why don't we take him to our worry over trifles, and, when the: | jhow long a piece of string ha wrecks. run- | “shore road,” and the billiard room | house?” suggested Captain Jerry, is reason to suspect kidney weak- |=!! been solved by a age” and pessl |"'Twouldn’t seem so plaguey lone-| ness, help the kidneys before any ee a virile, op thing worse can happen entist He find h it is from |! eh ns f some, anyhow.” | one end to the other do throng of rosy-cheeked NO UININE IN “By mighty!" ejaculated Cap-| Kidney weakness usually shows Sine Waite ts. iad fiy caatad tain Ert in astonishment. | “Woll,|{taelt in backache, pains when A new writing ink has been pat I'll be switched if you ain't| stooping or lifting, morning lame | ing, each mornt before re! . Jented that {8 much superior to the {ret a glans of reat hot cinloaghar rel right down brilliant once in a} ness, headache, dizzy spells, and old kind. It stops shorter and goes! a’ teaspoonful of limestone phos while, He can have the spare|urinary disorders around corners more accurate }room, Why didn’t I think of that,| To strengthen weak kidneys, use phate in It to wash from the ston ; pes Doan's Kidney Pills, This is a re. | jand, instead of foll the pen lach, liver, kidneys and te I wonde | point, it goes ahead of of bowels the previous day's indl- | « tet And John Baxter, who had, liable, safe remedy that acts on the | to, sour fermentations | Pape’s Cold Compound”Ends| not paid a visit in his native vil kidneys only. It can't hurt sound | | There are no sign n the roe thus cleansing Colds and Grippe in lage since his wife died, came at kidneys, and it does help sick kid- | of Gibraltar prohtt isitors | ening ning the entir a Few Hours last to his friend's home to pay neys Seattle peop BAY 80.16 from taking it home fo: ouvenir.|mentary canal before putting more ccna what seemed likely to be a final, Here's another interesting case | “- food into the stomach Take “Pape's Cold Compouna”|one. They carried him up the The only to tell the ditfer-|. Those subject to sick headache,|every two hours until you havelataire to the spare room, un-| SeAt kak EVIDENCE: Jence between a right-handed and|biliousness, nasty breath, rheuma-|taken three doses, then all grippe| dressed him as tenderly their Mrs. John Craig, 4511 Fortieth [left-handed walking stick t® by | tism colds and particularly those | misery goes and your cold will be} rough hands would allow, and laid|/ Ave. 8. says: “The too frequent boda a He Bor eat moon who have a pal id sallow com. broken It_ promptly opens your] him in the big corded bedstead action of my kidneys caused me a|/ / eam Ko that it divides ix plexion and who onatipated cloxged.up nostrils and the air pas. | The Doctor's examination of the |kTeat deal of annoyance There |} OUR DIPPY DICTIONARY quarter pound of ne phos-|charge oF nose ‘fianiig: ralleVed| Se tects inane ere nee tee | Sanend th Pc oe ger ne Gc FO EY PICTON ARY aaa trai che doug stare coninie atic aeteaie ence of water, teaspoons, and the like, {passed the Kidney, jecretions, and é liso Geay, bk els ‘wing {cost but a trifle, but is sufficient |ness, sore throat, sneezing, sore.| “Pt Peres and Jerry busy, It was}! a i. vy & Gull, ‘heavy etave it 8 \to demonstrate the quick and re-/ness and stiffness some time before they noticed that |#ebe In the small of my back. It BURE WINNER—Beo d |markable change in both health and| Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blow.| C&btain Eri had disappeare , earance awaiting those who]ing and snuffiing, Ease your throb.|, D'you think he'll die, Doctor? | PARLE ractice Internal sanitation, We|bing head—nothing else in the| avired Jerry in a hushed voice, Once upon a time a woma ent | at t remember that inside clean-| world gt such prompt relief ag/@% they came out of the sick room Into a butcher shoppe and ueked yo uuees, i more Important than out-|“Pape's Cold Compound,” which | Into the connecting chamber butcher for 100 ‘worth of round tome tmoimitan G kin does not ab-|costs only 25 cents at any drug Can't say He has had a steak and ye buteher cut off 100 | blo worth, not 13¢ worth, as per usual. * fe b Impurities to contaminate the| store. It acts without assistance, | stroke of paralysis, 1 don’t think . while the pe in the thirty |tastes nice, and causes no incon-| he'll die tonight, but if he lives b nt of bowels do. veni Accept no substitute, will need @ good nurse, and I