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The Seattle Star (2: Entered at Seattle Wash, Postoffice as second-class matter By mail, out of city, one Fear, 13.60) @ montha 91.96; 8e per month up te # mos. By carrier, city, the @ month Peace Talk Seems Timely T is announced by Hamilton Holt, president of the American Neutral Confer ence committee, that a petition, signed by more than 150,000 persons in Eng Jand, will be presented to President Wilson asking him to take the initiative in calling ) @ neutral conference of nations with a view toward terminating the war, A dispatch P from New York yesterday said Wall st. is beginning to worry about its war loans, F and also wants peace ‘ Germany frankly ready to discuss terms time. A month ago, when Rumania came in, the tion that the war would be fought to a “knockout.” But the Rumanians have made a dismal failure of their campaign and seem about to be overwhelmed. On the East front the Russians are meeting with ‘successive reverses, and even on the West the Germans are resuming the offensive In Macedonia the allies are being held in check by the stubborn Bulgarians. It Hecomes more apparent cach day that Italy is waging a purely selfish war and does Phot propose to take any chances with its army : From the buoyant optimism of a month ago the English people have swung back to a state of sullen gloom. There are rumors of a separate peace between Rus © sia and Germany which are not entirely unsupported ] Of all the belligerents, only France is fighting with whole-souled unity of purpose jafid likely there has not been a day since the battle of the Marne when France would Mot have signed an honorable treaty of peace, had her allies agreed. The people of pe are heart-sick of war, They have had enough of bloodshed. The soldiers themselves, on all sides, want peace ‘ And the neutral nations, with food prices mounting higher and higher each day l|re beginning to see sure signs of internal discontent which alarm their wisest tesmen. Nor is the United States an exception to the rule been for some their asser has loud of allies peace and were is in e Heartily Thankful! » Im this country, about all you need when anything is : is to tell folk about it, and pretty soon they come With their hammers and make it right. . We used to have, for instance, some of the worst munic ernment you could find anywhere on this earth Fie other day there~ was a national convention of can city managers, and it appeared, from their proceed- that we are steadily building up some of the best city mt there is going. ond any kind of doubt the improvement has been pus. There is hardly a city in America that isn’t better] oi4 pigh Sheriff Rob ad d now than it was ten years ago. Better in every Went to the warehouse, BY; more honestly, more capably, more efficiently, with! Prepare, folks, to sob. bre regard to the people and far less regard to the bosses eee ieee noe exist, of course, but this is the general rule, | POR HoUsewives season has come for giving thanks. Then give Sweeping is a nanny nabber ike heartily, O American, that it is your lot to live in a)icat (1? One can't do it and still where, when all is said and done, the thing that)be joyful, can‘tst one? Therefore and controls is always a moral faith and a moral *)y not tack @ feather on the tip of the handle ro when you sweep a .. |it will tickle you under the chin neath all the hurry of business and all the dis-|and keep you tn an artificial happy is, there is always the solid understanding at bottom mood until the job t tt is right and the steady determination to have 1t.| nena $0, as sure as you live, and every man of us knows heart that it is so. THIS COUNTRY, A WRONG MADE KNOWN RONG MADE RIGHT, EVENTUALLY. | It is a bigger thing to have that than to win all the battles ‘all the wars. Don’t forget it when, on November 30, you) p thought to your blessings. At last! at last! A banquet without speechmaking. College club of Seattle, having performed thusly night, is to be congratulated. COLYuUmM MODERN NURSERY RHYME HUNCH is over? Z | May Come HS country is again confronted with the prospect of a} )Breat railroad strike. The four powerful brotherhoods| that, in case the eight-hour-day law is not generally! id on January Ist next, the strike will be called. This} either President Wilson nor congress, nor any one, nor} ing else will be permitted to interfere la A ge ey po your breath | . | does need exercise. In the event the brotherhoods carry out their threat |“ r gs 4 lich no sane man doubts, and a nation-wide strike is called, | DID You KNow— | will remain but one remedy. The United States govern-| The people who work on the| will be forced to take over and operate the roads. This|top floor of the Smith buflding are the highest paid tn Seattle? . . ODD, ISN'T | ry, then, will be well upon the way to government own of all its railways. i Rod it will have been brought about by the arrogance © stubbornness and the utter disregard of public opinion by railroad chiefs. those whom the gods would destroy they first] it? HE STANDARD OIL CO. of California has adopted the ¢ight-hour work day for all of its employes, thus follow Suit of the'Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey | For what is the Standard Oil Co. run? For profit. Does it make profit? It does. Is the Standard distinguished above other big concerns for successful business policies? It While Jeresy City family mourn ed a son identified at the morgue, he walked supper. in and asked for his What have we got to be thankful for Thanksgiving day? Why, Eddie, is. ct \ i don't you know when the football What a pointer for big employers! season is over? 2. OUR DIPPY DICTIONARY KNOCKOUT—See election cigar. DOCTOR—A high-class machin int Initiative bill is filed to move the capital from 5 Olympia to Tacoma. It’s easier to move the capital than the mountain, eh? eee A Kansas scientist finds that the simplest way for a person to attain a ripe old age is to live, ee DID YOU KNOW 3y taking long strides ts another way to make shoes wear longer | now that they are #0 expensive? Contributed by a Scotchman rr) Frozen Out ROM one brigade, the Fourth United States Infantry, 145 men deserted last week. Sent from the burning places New Mexico into the higher altitudes about Fort Bayard, ness, ascribed to extreme cold, caused this epidemic of de- Ss. The record is a sorry one, lamentable to a degree, but it} tmphasizes the fact that an army cannot be built in a day. is a powerful argument for universal military training. ys “BI” would be a good name for) a baby born on the first of the month, providing it was that kind of a baby A SHY GIRL DOESN'T KICK WHEN IT COMES TO SITTING IN THE LAP OF LUXURY. | BEAUTIFUL SUMMER HOME DESTROYED In the great out of doors or at the evening reception Ba ker’ oa | KEECHELUS, Wash., Nov. 29. KEECHALUS, Wash., Nov. 29. | Covert Lodge, the beautiful sum mer home of Mr. R, W. Covert, at Lake Keechelus, was destroyed by fire Sunday night Mr. and Mrs. Covert are traveling in the South, and the Lodge was in charge of | Wm. Fitton, caretaker. The build ing Was built last summer and was one of the finest summer homes in the state. Fire caught from one of the large stone fireplaces. None of the rich furnishings were saved. There was no insurance on house or fur nituroe ‘Walter B ESTABLISHED 1780 & Co Ltd. OORCHESTER, MASS, |It is the only capital ing STAR—WEDNESDAY, NOV, 29, 1916. PAGE 4 sarearasaeeerereoeen tgengenagenagegenseriestreserereesersgte yee’ hada Next Weel A Novel = “Men in the Raw” A Week By WM. McLEOD RAINE HIE «a sbabdbabivasisseetibebocees (Continued From Our Last CHAPTER III Symptomatic \esue) T was not his first call on Amy I Marsingalo by many. On thin particular afternoon the talk had been more or less personal Brouillard had invited this, and Amy, with characteristic feariens ness, had met him half way, Minal ly he had dared her to give proof of her worldly wisdom in the read ing of men, by an analysts of his own character, There was cunning in this, for Broulllard had come to eare very much what Amy thought of him. But when she stopped he nodded gravely It ie all true enough Who has been telling you all these things about me? She clapped her hands in de Hehted self-applaune You don't deny them? I wouldn't be so tmpolite, Who has been gossiping about me; not Grisey?” No, not Murray Grisiow; it was yourself.” Good Heavens! am I really auch a transparent egolst as all that?” ‘All men are eKoists,” she an awered calmly Egolam is merely another name for the expression of a vital need,” he id You may you please What ta you He stated & lot of it How very singular! put it in that way if she returned gravely it concisely, “Money she laugh ed. “I need money, too—a lot of it Hut tell me, what would you do with your pot of rainbow gold if you should find it?” Broutilard rose and straightened himeelf, with his arma over his head like an athlete testing his | Muscles for the record-breaking event What would I do? I'd buy the privilege of telling some woman that | love , This time her laugh was frankly disparaging. As if you could! she said, “as if any woman worth while would care two pins for your wretched pot of gold!” “Oh, I didn’t meant it quite that way,” he hastened to explain, “I aatd Buy the privilege’ And there is no reason why I shouldn't tell you the simple fact. When my father died he left me a debt—a debt of honor; and it must be paid. Until it is paid—but I am sure you understand.” “Quite fully,” she responded quick!) Is {t much?—so much that you can't—" He nodded. “Yes, it is big enough to go in a class by itself }in round numbers, a hundred thou sand dollars Horrors!” she gasped. “And you are carrying that millstone? Must you carry it? “If you knew the circumstances you would be the first to say that { must carry tt, and go on carrying it to the end of the chapter.” “But—but you'll never be free!” Not on & government salary he admitted. ary to pay the premiums on— pshaw! I'm boring you shameless. ly. You ought not to have encour. aged me. It's quite hopelesas—un- | lous some good angel should come | along with a miracle or two. drop it.” She was looking beyond him and Let's her volee was quick with womanly | sympathy when she sald could drop it-—but you can't. And it changes everything for you, dis-| torta everything, colors your entire life, It's heart-breaking!” This was dangerous ground for him and he knew ft. In the ardor of young manhood he had taken up the vicarious burden dutifully. But now love for a woman was threatening to make the renuncia- tion too grievous to borne. How did you know?" he queried curlously It does change things. We smile at the old fable of a man selling his soul for a ready-money consideration but there are times | when I'd sell anything I've got save . for a chance at the freedom that other men have—and don’t value.” What {# the one thing you wouldn't sell?” she questioned, “My love for the—for some women, I'm saving that, you know "I have when the big debt is paid. “Poot!” she said. #8 the one only and incomparable she worth the effort? Would you give a hundred thousand dollars for the privilege of being able to say to her: ‘Come, dear, let's go and get married’?” He was looking down, chiefly be cause he dared not look up, when he answered soberly “She is worth it many times over; her price is above rubies. Money, much or little, wouldn't be in it.” Brouillard got up and faced about as if he had suddenly remembered that he was wasting the govern ment’s time, “IT must be going down the hill,” he id. And then, without warn “What if I should tell you that the railroad is not coming to To his utter amazement the blue the Niquoia, Amy?" To Have Curly, Wavy Hair Like “Nature's Own” In three houra you can have just the prettiest curls and waves! And they remain « long time, when Hquid silmerine i® used before rolling the hair in curlers. When the hair in rbed out It will be nice and fluffy nerine {* of course a-clean tooth brush. It can be ob jtained at any drug store, directions accompanying each bottle. Sil ine Kerves also ws a splendid dress Ing. keeping the hair fine and glosny On QO Every Night For Constipation Headache Indigestion.cta_ RANDRETH BILL As a matter of fact, | it takes more than half of the sal-| “If you! perfectly | Mlens, and i easily applied with | leyes filled suddenly You shouldn't hit out ike that when one itxn't looking; It's wicked,” she protested Bewides, the railroad in coming; it’s got to come It ia still undecided,” he told |her mechanteally Mr ‘ord in coming over with the engineers to have a conference on the ground with-with the Cortwright 1 am expecting him any The Cortwright peo road, don't they?" she Yeu, indeed people. day want the asked And the government? © department is holding en tirely aloof, as it should ery Jone in the Reclamation Service knows that no good can possibly come of any effort to force the re gion ahead of its normal and nat ural ¢ lopment. And, besides none of us here in the valley want lto help blow the Cortwright bubble jany bigger than it has to be.” | T you will advise against the | building of th Instead of answering her ques tion, he asked one of his own. “What does it mean to you—to you personally, and apart from the money your father might make out of it, Amy?” Sho hesitated a moment and then met the shrewd scrutiny of bis «a Extension? with open candor 1 The money is only a means to an end—as yours will be. Three | times we have obliged to come back to the mountains to to try again. This time father has | promised me that when he can make his stake b will go back |to Kentucky and settle down; and} he will keep his promise, More Steve has promised me if he can have than that that he will go too a stock-farm and raise fi borres his one healthy ambition, Now you know it all.” He reached up from the step where he was standing and | | took her hand. | “Yes; and I know more than) that; I know that you are a mighty | brave little girl and that your load fs heavier than mine—-wo heavy. | fer, But you're going to win out; if not today, or tomorrow, why, | |then, the day after, It's written | in the boc | She returned his hand-erip of | encouragement impulsively and! smiled down upon him thru quick springing tea: o- | An hour later, Broulllard was closeted tn his log-bullt office quar. | ters with a big, fairfaced man, whose rough tweeds and unbrushed, soft hat proclaimed him fresh from the dustdry reaches of the Quesado | trail “It is your own opinion that I want, Victor,” the fairfaced man was sayiog, not the government engineer's, If you were the execu- tive committee of the Pacific South western, would you, or would you not, build the Extension? That's the point I'm trying to make.” Broulllard got up and went to the window, The gnomon shadow of Jack's Mountain had spread over the entire valley, and its southern limb was resting upon Massingale cabin, When he turned back to the }man at the desk he was frowning | thoughtfully | } | | “If you put it that way,” he said to the man who was waiting, “I'd/ | build the Extension.” CHAPTER IV. Mirapolis During the strenuous weeks when Camp Niquoia’s straggling street was getting iteelf transformed into GAS, INDIGESTION “Pape’s Diapepsin” is the only | real stomach regulator | known. | | | “Really does” put tad stomachs in order—“really does” overcome |indigestion, dyspepsia, gas, heart burn and sourness in five minutes —that—just that—makes Pape's | Diapepsin the targest selling stom }ach regulator in the world If what you eat ferments into stub born lumps, you belch gas and! eructate sour, undigested food and acid; head is dizzy and aches; | bi h foul; tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and indigest |fble waste, remember the moment | “Pape's Diapepsin” comes in con-| tact with the stomach all such dis tress vanishes. It's truly astonish ing—almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness A large fifty-cent case of Pape's| | | Diapepsin will give you a hundred |dollars’ worth of satisfaction or |your druggist hands you your money back | It's worth its weight in gold to/ men and women who can't get their It belongs in kept stomachs regulated | your home—should always be | handy In case of « sick, sour stomach during the day or at n It's the quickest, surest and most | harmless stomach regulator in the \* orld. Washing Won't Rid | Hair of Dandruff The only sure way dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely To ¢o this, get | about four ounces of ordinary liquid] to get rid of arvon; apply it at night when re |tiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the | finger tips | Do this tonight, and by morning |most if not atl, of your dandr will be gone, and three or for more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and tra of it, no mat ter how much dandruff you may | have. You will find, too, that all itehing and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and jook and feel a hundred times bet ter. You can get liquid arvon at |drug store, It is inexpensive Inever fails to do the work vertisement | soessepeesererernnprntrent NOSTOMACH PAIN The City of Numbered Days’ Copy Charles rvvssiryrvesveoseny THINK ie You CARRY ha DED _ VP LIKE TH! Wouree BE LESS Likely TO PUNCH SOMEONE'S EYE OUT $! — Chigringo Avenue, with a double row to supplant t Monsieur Pov late of the Sa: loin, opened counter-erill Finding mon sible in both halves of it rinned Poodie It was in one and dining-rooma shat | Cortwright wa ilard “Of course, I to have you « venture, Broul lowed, at lig banded cigars. of false-fronted “emporium he shack shelters, idrecaulx Bongras, n Francisco tender. the camp's first sieur’s name impos. the camp rechristened him ¢ of Rongras’ private Mr. J. Wesley % entertaining Brou- was quite prepared | tand off and throw | stones at our little cob house of a lard,” the host al- ‘hting of the gold- “But you can't bufld your dam in one day, or in two, and the interval is ours. I tell you, we're going to make Mirapolis a buzz- hummer ata, Mirap tis?” Is'that the new name?" Cortwright | It's Gene's ni Fits like the “It does, Bu while the daylig Don't you forget that.” queried Brouillard jaughed and nodded ame—'Miracle City.’ glove on a pretty | girl's arm, doesn't it?” t the miracle is that there should be any money daring enough in Niquoia.” The host chu ur workad fling, growing, ot ours. costliest leases. Our merely be a 1 factor of time.” vest itself in the nckled, heart, “Why, bless Brouillard, | nothing is permanent in this shuf- progressive world Some of the biggest and buildings IN FIVE MINUTES Chicago are buflt on ground in New York ground lease will ittle shorter in the “So much shorter that the par- allel won't hold,” argued Brouil- lard “The pareliel does hold. Let me a cement plan the imported our government orders are filled | we can afford to wreck the plant} for what it We'll be out nice little prof “That is jected the gue “Well,” laug power plant is lamation Servic it needs a n at we're going to make us feel h ell it? To | put it In a nutshell; we're building t, and we shall sell | You the output—at a good, round | price, I promise you, but still at a | lower figure than you're paying for article now. When i ot it bring whole, as junk with a only one instance,” ob- | st hed the host, “our anothe The Rec re gets all the power nominal price, and sell enough more to appy.” whom? Mr. Cortwright leaned back in his ch and the ‘sandy-gray eyes seemed to be searching the inner recesses of the That's insid don't mind tak he said We few contracts gale—he's goin drills, electric ¢ ern equipment the developme Susan’; one w syndicate whic tions at once ot pects on Jack's querying soul e information but I king you in on it,” ve just concluded a one with Massin ng to put in ore cars, and a mod generally, and shove ent of the ‘Little ith a new “mining h will begin oper nm half a dozen pros Mountain; and one with a lumber combination that has just taken over the saw mills and will install others, with a planing mill and sash factory.” Brouillard nodded were slowly hy But that the promoter reincorporate the Niquoia Eh 1 Tracti fortnight volis, and the railroad ating trolley-ca {the effect upo | noting was app since he went assurance of 01 clearly “That bring ness, Brouillar mitting that I ling. It's this pany the gove The gray eyes ypnotizing him isn't all,” continued “We are about to the power plant as ntric Power, Light ion Company, With we'll be lighting within a month aft- ars.” n the subject. parently satisfactory, on with the steady ne who sees his way 8 us down to busi- d, I don't mind ad had an obfect in ask- any) ing you to dine with me this even. We feel that in the Ad=| reorganization of the power com- ‘rament, whieh will | | The enthusiast paused to let the | information sink in, also to note} The} | You see I knew always be the largest consumer, should be represented in some ef- fective way; that its interests should be carefully safeguarded. We discussed it in the directors’ meeting this morning.” continued the hypnotist smoothly, “and | made & suggestion which, a: dent of the company, | was im- mediately authorized to carry out. What we need, and what the gov- ernment needs, is a man right here on the ground who will be abso- lutely loyal to the government's interests and who can be, at the same time, broad enough and hon- orable enough to be fair to us.” Brouillard roused himself by a palpable effort “You have found your man, Mr. Cortwright?" A genial smile twinkled In the little gray eves. “I didn't have very far to go. your father and I'm not afraid to trust his son. We are going to make you the govern. ment director with full power to investigate and to act. The capital stock of the company is ten mil- lions, with shares of a par value of one hundred dollars each, full paid and non-assessable. Don't gasp; we'll cut a nice little melon on that capitalization every thirty days or my name isn’t Cortwright.” “But I have no money to invest,” was the only form the younger man’s protest took. “We don't need your money,” cut in the financier with curt good nature, “What we do need is a consulting engineer, a man who, while he is one of us and identified with us, will see to it that we're not tempted to gouge our good Uncle Samuel. It wili be no sine- cure, I warn you. We're all pretty keen after the dollar, and you'll have to hold us down good and hard, Of course, a director and a consulting officer must be a stock- holder, but we'll take care of that.” Brouillard smoked in silence for a full minute before he said: “You know as well as I do, Mr. Cort- wright, that it fs an unwritten law of the Service that a civilian em- ploye of the government sha engage in any other business.” “No, I don't,” was the blunt re- ply. Supposing your father had left you a hundred thousand dollars to invest instead of a debt of that amount—you see | know what a load your keen sense of honor is making you carry—suppose you had this money to invest, would your position in the Reclamation Service compel you to lock it up in a safety vault?” ertainly not. But—" “Very good. Your objection to taking part in our project would be that & man can't be strictly im- partial when he has a stake in the game; some men couldn't, Mr. | Brouillard, but you can; you know power | you can, and I know it. Otherwise orde: hard to remed: Beecham’s Pill Give ( Qui Sold by druggists By Francis Lynde right, 1914, by Horibner’s Hons ot | digestive system, which, if negl » remedy, Remove the disturbing element an your digestive organs in good BEESHAM'S nts in we'll be oper: | They gently stimulate the liver, They act promptly and safely. you feel low-spirited and out of sorts, take is. Their sure, mild, thorough action will || the stomach—purify the blood ila. a) panels are eaten A marked such times when na i |] their vitality. ce promptiy eed on |] The next time of Value to Women are with Every Box PerrrccrrrscTreerSiicceTEeTTEoM a alf of your insurance tyou wouldn't be puttin salary and more into Ii premiums to secure debt that ien’'t even construct oure We'll leave the money considera tion entirely out of it if you like. You'll get a stock certificate, which | you may keep or tear up and throw into the waste-basket, just as you please, If you keep it and want to realize on it at any time before you begin to put the finishing forms on the dam, do this: I'll | agree to market it for you at par CHAPTER V. | It was in the days after he had }found on his desk a long envelop lenclosing a certificate for a thow | sand shares of stock in the Niquola | Electric Power, Lighting and Trac | tion Company that Broulllard began to lose his nickname of “He Fire” among his workmen, with the promise of attaining, in due time |to the more affectionate title of “the Little Big Boss.” The construction of the new city | Went on apace. Many of the working-men were | securing homes on the installment | play. A good few of the villas |couid boast parquetry floors and | tiled bath-rooms, In harmony with the "i same spirit | Was the energy with which Mr. |Cortwright and his municipal col- leagues laid water-mains, strung electric wires and pushed the trol- ley-line to the stage at which it | lacked only the rails and the cars |awaiting shipment by the railroad, | Under other conditions it is con- ceivable that an impatient commit- tee of construction would have had the rails freighted in across the desert. But with the railroad grade already in sight on the bare shoul- ders of the Hophra Hills the com~ mittee could afford to wait This was the situation when Gar- ner, real estate man, sharp-eared listener at the keyhole of Oppor- tunity, missing the dynamite rumb- lings, sent a cipher wire of inquiry to the East, got a “rush” reply, and began warily to unload his Mira- politan holdings. Being a man of business, he ducked to cover first and talked afterward; but by the Ume his hint had grown to rumor size Mr. Cortwright had sent for Broviliard. “Pull up a chair and have a cigar,’ said the great “There is a rumor that the railroad grading has been stopped.” Broutliard, busy with the work of setting the third series of forms on his great wall. had heard nothing. “I've noticed that they haven't been blasting for two or three days. But that may mean nothing more than delayed shipment of dyna- mite,” was his rejoinder.” “Well, we are up against it, that's a Read that,” and the promoter handed a telegram across the desk. The wire was from Chicago. It read: “Work on P. S.-W.’s Buckskin tension has been suspended for th present. Reason assigned, shrink} age in securities and uncertainty of business outlook in Niquota.” It was the consulting engineer of the power company rather than the Reclamation Service chief who rose and went to the window to look | down upon the morning briskness oft Chigringo Avenue. And it was the man who saw one hundred thousand dollars, the price of free- dom, slipping away from him. The stocky gentleman in the pivot-chair thrust out his jaw and tilted his freshly lighted cigar to the aggressive angle. | “Say, Brouillard, we've got to |throw something that will make the railroad crowd sit up and take notice. By George, if those gold hunters up on Jack's Mountain would only stumble across some thing big enough to advertise Brouillard started as if the wish- ful musing had been a blow. Like a hot wave from a furnace mouth it swept over him—the sudden re- alization that the means, the one all-powerful, earth-moving lever the promoter was so anxiously seeking, lay in his hands. (Continued in Our Next Issue) ‘SAYS WAR LOANS ! ARE STILL SAFE | NEW YORK, Nov, 29.—New | York bankers today said they did jnot believe the federal reserve |board desired interfere with |granting of loans to the various varring nations, and that the board warning was directed only at cer- |tain classes of loans. | As for shutting off loans to the belligerents, one banker said such laction was not in sight. “When American investors and bankers come to the conclusion |that war loans are not good risks, | War loans will cease,” he said, “but {there is nothing to indicate the ap- | proach of such belief.” loans made by American bank- to \ers to the warring nations are now ee a two-billion-dollar ‘tote Don’t Suffer Longer and allow yourself to become grouch and depressed. These conditions usuall , upset, nervous ly indicate a dis- be b put working order by taking lected, ma act on the bowels, tone and regulate the system. by women at demands upon ck Relief the world. In boxes, 10c, 25¢.