The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 11, 1917, Page 4

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STAR—THURSDAY, JAN. 11, 1917. PAGE 4 » eooe B=) The Seattle Star fea] | ital“ S-—~ “OVERLAND RED” hi iva 2 ryyyrry) eee eece pose From Our Next 1 ited Dr, Marshall Yourjdriver did.” {wa goin’ to lope aga Wher was irrevocably NCE, and once only, had Over} man ty a good driver lio is usually pretty level th cond wind I © her a ———— land's name been ment Hplendid!” sald Louise, “Come| headed,” sald Walter Ston h and ot out and loped in the bunk house, Saund on, Anna, You alwaya «a ou He more than level hea an into ¢t ert ith kind of ‘good-b I discussing horses and riders in gen-| Wanted to ride behind some pal | anne Dr, Mare We nag t ma t he n you to mall this listened to Collie's account of | Western horses, Here they ar netic 1 could fee confidence ve. Paid the und for he v 1d Red. 1 told him from the deputy Dr. Marshall's offhand designa from m un ir ! sat | was coming It Is a Sad Story Tonlow, ‘Then he spoke alightlagiy | tion of the buckboard as “a. teat | froin a bri iter Stone glanced at D Ne are sorry you are lea of the font }in a hurry” was prophetic, even| “I think 1 Kile r rose, bidding | sald Louise Uncle Walter By R. F. Paine ‘ alte Witissap tried te phone | Hate the and ia ; }thing, om ‘ m 1 be sine 4d you had spoken to h r a ; : a . ERS ‘. ae : © subject, but Collie Named up hat Boyar could not accomplish |tackles be follow omewhat| (Continued In Our Next Issue It must strike intelligent Americans that the Mexican situation has instantly, “I got a little saved up," |{n the way of equine gymnastic s| in the obs of the m vin tone dinappeared fully reached the ridiculous point. he sald: “mebby eight hundred in harnes Apache, Collle’s pony levening they congregated ¢ } cigars, whi he~oopaanaaaanaae tte ty i als ‘ She's yours if you dast to walk a | cou! eranda and chatted about the pro he placed at A year ago, we mobilized all our available forces—some 100,000 [ilptns, “onmar’ Zot cent to Walk 81°C ity suvaiy.” aald the doctor.{pored plenie they were to enioy x triend D ' Editor’s Mail militia and 25,000 regulars—on the border and sent in a strong “column” Pe thee Red “took Ge the fom) Cone, Wiens Ris foot) cn ini tew Saye lates en “boots and | sha terner,” he wa Anns 3 % ‘ ; mite ie ad . Mis re you game?" {bra and both arma rigid, nodded. | saddl would be the order of the| Overland waved a comprehend to get the murderer of Americans and invader of Ameri Villa, dead or I'm not on the bet,” reptied| Moonstone Canon Trafl was not a|da Pa a it anbthiek einas HAMILTON STILL ON JOB? li 1 Saund , boul ' t k The St The Star has alive, anc day is i » sj jon: Saunders, “So Overland Red is a| boulevard, He was not to be lured| “Imagine! A of g | nettled ba Sow | can ta itor The Star he Star a ind today this is the situation: a3 4) [[|frtend of yours, eh?” into conversation, He was giving }about these mountains! How Billy | ho ft and talk ne always stood for clean politics and |p Villa is looting towns within 30 miles of our forces and our “column “Overland Red could ride where | his whole mind and all of his mag-| would have enjoyed it, doctor,” ex-| Wher t nt me to stop, honest policies. Now, I think you I dare not go after him because Carranza says that it shall move only home- you dassent to walk and drag ajnetiom to the team, elatmed Anne, | ae just say ‘G peu a Jott me eee } “4 - alte asserted Collle. one Marshall chatted by. y Yer su believe he is havin cleaning up th nilto: ward, and we have some dozens of soldier graves to prove that he means Williams, the tactturn, aaton-| With Louise, Young Dr. Marshall,|a prett where he is CHAPTER XIV the courthouse . what he says ished the bunk-house by jin the front reat with Colle, braced " beautiful ‘ Silent Saunders Speaks t ars that Hamilton, altho 7 px a - i i The kid is right. Red could out-|bis feet and amiled. He glanced | about and his min unfit for public office | Villa is acquiring large addition to his forces daily because of the pres- ide most men. I was his pal once. |over the edge of the canon road | cla atest fad The re of Red's visit were ter class of citizens in the f nce of Ameri 9 yODs 1 avir There ain't a better two-gun artist | and bis «mile faded a little It he Hut 1 be | far re ng. Colle longed to Ko election, is etill crack- ence of American troops in Mexico. : A livin.” And the lean foreman|faded entirely as the front wheel ve the that—when they | back to the mine h his old pal, ing the whip around the commie § Our government cannot help Carranza, recognized as the de facto gov- looked pointedly at Saunders sheared off a generous shovelful|have his trouble, you know but Overland insisted that the bOY| stoners’ office, He has given im ernment, clean up Villa, because Carranza will not permit it and Carranza Spain eenecrtrrel cn Weenie |anbin’ st tua iliria the tocar ter line he w ter, I here he sepecially tructions to the board of commie at A : nexpected! bun nRle oO 1 00) yh as fair sh © miner hac jone hat his old pa a shows no ability to do the job himself. houne, found Saunders changing his|the turn at ® gallop ls ha aautee” “Hats Seve iteme alge ae cavieil aad Fg deryprgy The é ica fore yey border are simply hog-tied by shirt preparatory to a ride to town,| “The road neodx widentng there, | doors and at a good altitude, some You cut your trail e that” led up things that it seems al ‘ The American forces at and beyond the border are simy ly bog-tied by The rest of the boys were on their| Anyway,” commented Collie, ax tho| where on the desert. He's making Red admonished Collie a certain that he will make good hie diplomacy. A policy which indefinitely keeps an army under arms and way to the Oro Rancho, acroas the | apologizing money. He posts his letters at a| mar ed away after a | boasts owerle ; . . ome defeate ts purpose vbhe valley, Williams saw two puckered| “I have my—er—repair kit with |town called ‘ “in this «tate.”| them both in which he e1) All his road henchmen (forem 3 etless to move Io. march tow ard home defeated of its purpose, maybe h above the elbow, Besse * sald the genial doctor. “I'm, “Up above ia'¢ horseman | must stay, he $7 52) watchful waiting,” but it surely is close to senility. bared arms & surgeon.” Walter Stone. And htway! Meantime ‘ nders also right ot 2 ‘S : Coll — ‘ - : i a. naa ‘| ed. An His right n, Notice, the We moved into Mexico to take Villa. There’s Villa within half a day’ a returning from the visit) Collie nodded. Evidently this! drifted into reverie. p ; and nized Red. And | undertaker Georgetown, must a é . : : £ to the Oro Rancho that evening, {mmaculate, of the white collar Hello!” exclaimed Dr, Marsh n he wa ¢ ) ®lbe kept. This Is the man who fe ride of us and we can’t point a gun at him because we're afraid of Carranza, was met by Williams. The latter|and cuffs and the stylish gray}leaning forward. “Sounds Ifke the from the corrals, Overland did not| ceived from Hamilton the fat com tho is i > ° ; amar . »yt was on foot Weeds, had “sand exhaust of a pretty heavy {| misunderstand. But it came about | trate of cremating th a," impotent to crush Villa. It is not at all remarkable that Mexicans Drop into My shack after dark,”|. “They're « little fussy—but, 1| didn't imagine any one would érive|that this time the tramp did mot|tr Georecinten cag cam eae o laugh at us and join Villa as fast as he can feed them said the foreman, Then he stepped| know ‘em,” said Colle, as Boyar|that canyon road after dar need to borrow Louise's black pony |pu, corsetown, and who was jm RS LEO . ; ' i nay crer that he (Notes) back into the bushes as the other reared “Unusual,” said Stone, getting to | Th Gurzu behaved # ances on | could not keep count of the number |men rode t At the top of the next grade the | his fee Some one in a hurry. | mi nd flew as if on 5B: | he! antrecuan tin eae vc mae me ————————— nme | THO tana interview with|/athering, restive ponies finally set:| I'll turn on the porch Nght and | So for the nd time Sheriff Tet-|fist put ina este ts a ey! bs N. H. Lati - Collie that evening was brief. It|tled to a stubborn trot. “Mad clean | defy the mosquitoes ¢iow was tricked of the 000 re! nush perhead. Of coh = = os . ® atimer, president of the Dexter Horton bank, left a lot to the tmagination. “You! thru id Collie. | With a leonine roar an immense | Ward for a certain “pote” tramp. | ior Mon course, the con- succeeds J. E. Chilberg, president of the Scandinavian- |said too much about Overland Red 1 should say they were behay-|racing car stopped at the gate be-| But the sight of Red had left |'HT Oro meer American bank, as commodore of the Seattle Yacht club. Ld other night, when you was tng well ecough * said the doctor. |low. Before \ ne bad ~w ; ed she aid apr te tinge Barc . is t “to n ; rs aid en a bronc’ o actl ach " of the at he did want * . Evidently it's just as easy for bankers to float vessels as a Bes Ba oy *y ladslika Gaek se ke ties ta ane raat Betas gp he knew to be| 28 to keep him on d 9 somethin’. 1 don’t know what he's Out.” rald Colle, “Boyar and Apache| out the shade the radiance imp« Among other of his}, ried pb pple eee joe a af Pp Your eye peeled and 1ever been in harness before. | of the pore tood a wonder. | drea ha n to buy, a8 soon ow S0Sre make & on ee ; ; Pally , : F nd I believe the public is deept ‘6 on the bit That's all."| Seems kind of queer to ‘em H tired Frock coat, #8 he enough from his earn- p ply Even New York Has a Communal Spirit What! Never been—Why! Huh! | silk hat, patent leathers, striped | It ree of his own. This|i#terested in getting men of ability " IVE HUNDRED renters of fats in the Bronx borough of New CHAPTER XII For heaven's sake, don't let Mrs.| trousers, and white |dream came true, but not in the|®24@ int gerity to serve them tm York have taken a solemn pledge not to pay any rents until land | UM | Guests Marshall hear that.” vest, and a noth »| way Collie bad planned these public offices lords have in writing agreed to these demands |_,22utse, humming a song, rode| Walter Stone and his wife made |adorned the driver of the automo- Every year the surrounding A TAXPAYER. Adequate heat and hot water. lr wey ———“ i slowly along the Moonstone Can-|the Marshalls feel at home imme | bile. ranches held an all-day meet and No increase in rents this year. ee ee oes yon Trail diately, Walter Stone had known| He stood for a minute, blinking|horse race. The best and fastest| WANTS LAWSON TO y MEN IN UNIFORM | “PUT UP OR 8H / Houses to be kept clean and in good repair. OR DO THEY? | Why Louise thought of Collie) Dr. Marshall's father. Aunt Elea-|in the light Then he swept his| ponies were entered by thelr own- 4 oO} UT UP’ eee applause greets the valorous Brontites, altho they are vio { um thas heat anawer: to the ||Just then, tt would be difficult to | nor and Louise had visited with|bat from his head wit scular | ¢rs Also there a contest in} w hile Lawson's life has b DE primcipte twice tala dome te the ee ete ney ae Te ee, Tee Ne itece a pris ||ttmagine. " Lately she had caught| Anne when they were East, She|Qpace. “Excuso mo for intrudin’.”|fine riding, an unbroken colt belng|/more frensied than prosaic, . One hundred thousand In sd ato’ of one seat to any show at th her noting little details anso-| was Anne Winthrop then | I ween th m and | ino 4 for the first time. raised the pink that bears his n. ee ea ee, Show cold stor-}| of one se ino : at the ted with him and his work, De The host brought cigara and an it. Is Mr, Wa T year the colt to be ridden|He now attempts to bare the gi . b a th rod f Nath : * te hin lack of early training. he| extra steamerchair to the wid was famed thruout the range asthe |of Frenzied Finance, but calls os h shows on the ace - 2 6 as naturally pat His bits, | veranda It's moch le w and ugilest br in the es. He has stirred the lad the strike principle ha ead tr on HOUSEHOLD HINTS and trap shone. With) here. We'll amoke while the girl or 8 w © the most} those who went to the slaughter , Pi ke princi 5 ad from the r. tgs Pgh ae comment but faithful zeal, be| tell each other all about tt. Price, en 8 i, faste: i best-bred.|are shorn, but not shown the male- to the hous 1 It will not stop there. After we have join-; || ak pour the mmen \ * . e< t . . € 4 Brand Williams This, of |the storekeeper, brought you up,| mers roprietc of the But her o r considered her | facto (@d a strike against cold Mats ou, y " enoend nied into a large vat and throw : e a v propr r r ti ed . Doon poremptrced cay igh peed Bsa. oe ii ing Ol) | i. the bricks jcourse, flattered the tactturn cow-| didn't he Mine worthless, and she was to bim,| Now let him name the man or be Then there is something still bigger mae P Always use « strainer when ex-|#9, who unobtrusively arranged 1 don’t think #0, Miss Louise Why, {t's the man who bor-| for the best broncho busters on his|the goat that led them to the The rest of the country has always said it was utterly imposstbte| ‘acting the mush from mush ne work a. that it might | called him ‘ all I believe, He'd | rowed ay seas!” exclatieed. Louies ich bad tried to conquer her and akinter, ‘AL eagl brin younger man before the| make a splendid army surgeon, that} “Correct, 3 I—1 come to| failed ww , 2 ' apard New Yorkers to unite about anything or revolt against any tm-|"OUR 1. oo ae eaey by tetting |Zotice of Walter Stone, and tnci-| young man! He bas nerves Iike|thank you for lendin' me the| She was known as the Yuma colt, Men used to say you could walk on New York's neck and dentally Loutse. tempered steel wire, and 1 never! cayuse that time.” the outlaw. And her owner offered FEEL FINE! TAK get anything but thanks. Lrsitemasdcodier MPUR Brand Williame had his own saw such cool stren y 3 r sth. Walter Stone simply had to|ber as a gift to the man who could es 32 Peatite bear crushes; look at tte nightly eufforings | WHAT HAS BECOME {dean of romance, He badgered “Oh, that's nothing. Any one/laugh. “Come up and foes after | tay on her back two minutes. But foe Eas See bab the Gow eetrit of th iain ‘ Collie whenever he chanced to | could drive Price's horses P j Zour trip up the canyon... Of course,|the man who owned the Yuma 6 q lee ts Cucy creck. ‘sp! o new age ng ite way) han have seon him with the Rose Girl,| The doctor smile& “The young! you want to see Collie. He told|reckoned without Collie, That Get together—united effort; the tnju t ‘i | and amiling inwardly at the young|tman confided to me that their|me about your finding the claim. night, after a bit of horse breaking i of us. That's the new id ry of one of us ts the concern man's indignation, he would|names were ‘Boyar’ and ‘Apache.'|Sayn you have given him a quar.|that made the basis of many a a joa manifested elsewhere tn the United rtraightway arrange that Collie|I believe. They both lived to!ter Interest. I'm glad you're doing | Campfire story for years afterward, 7 jsbould ride to town, for, say, a|the last one’s name 1 Collie took the Yuma colt back to LI R Give thanks that {t is reaching everywhere. |few pounds of staples wanted in “Well, I'll be—Did that ye ng} Overland Red, despite his out-| the Moonstone, 5 Even New Yorkers can unite. ja hurry, when he knew that the pirate drive those saddle-animals—|ward regeneration, was Overland| The Moonstone riders were wild i“ I ae 0 kboard would be roing to town whew! He's a good horseman, but | Red still, only a little more so, | With glee over the boy’s success}, ‘. Why should Seattle businessmen pay $7.50 for tele- jon he morro ae t also that there ¥ Lt i talk to m. A Marshall was at once—as|—all but Silent Saunders. And Spend 10 cents! Don’t stay bil- f were plenty of staples in the stor Pardon me | you not to,! she told Loulse late » | Coll ant s i, ;, Phones while Tacoma and Spokane pay only $6? And Rebbe r store ae a ith ask os rp a a He iis x r desperately Coliies wae ha ang a 7 ious, sick, headachy, a ; Stone 0 ri Joyed it tm-| {ntereste Sven gentle Aunt nce he hai e onstipated. such rotten service, too! Somethin as the kind was afoot,|mensely. So did I. I believe the| Eleanor recetved the irrepressible | Sberiff of Red's presence at the = or rather asaddie, an Louise rode arora —|with unmistakable welcome Moonstone, became even mo ary low’s Your Rh tics? | down the Moonstone Trail, for be-| Don't You Want to Get Away| Young Dr. Marshall studied him,| Watchful." Collie’s vigilance was|C@"'t harm you! Best cathartic s ar eumatics? | yond the turn and the rippling ; as y racking memory for a name.| rewarded unexpectedly and rather for men, women and WD HEUMATISM has been explained by dampness and fog, as tn |ford she saw a lithe, blueshirted | from the Annoying Features Of Presently he turned to his wife | disagreeably children. England; by a rice and tea diet, as in Japan; by eating too much | flmure that she knew . | “What is Billy's partner's name? One day, as he stood stroking MA in the Hailed Staten: At inet we have an international Loulse would not have admitted | U've forgotten F s neck, he happened| Enjoy life! Your system is filled versal p » oon . { that she ee ; ge 4 corm oA Go univ rsal disc mfort. It is a pus sac somewhere in { that she urged Bo a arr ‘Jack Summers, Billy called him ross the yard. Saun-j with an accumulation of bile and body, which constantly leaks minute portions of potson into the i Wi | that Collie, | in his letters.” was saddling one of the horses|bowel poison which kee; ‘ou d m. addie at Just a mint 11) {o| bilious, headachy, dizzy, tong : ; Bee es ee f : at ist a minute,” said the ¢ ne ¢ astride] \. dac! izzy, tongue ers aoe and tonsils ause abo 5 per cent of all cases 0 . 4 “ but did E. Gauss Tells Y How turning to Overland ome de-| coated, breath bad and stomach |) “ he new theory is correct. A tiny * pocket may form ores, H 1 never - aus ou OW.! You said Mr. Jack purposely | Why don't you get a 10-cent the canal of the ad” nerve of a tooth without the individual's ~ Or — | | preeu her frank fi Hehip Neve? Do you b 2 fon. Some-| Dox of Cascarets at the drug si edge. Then the blood will carry ain chemical products of| THE TRAMP Who INSISTED |/10 KePt his place always, He was 1 of the old Collie had van-/ 8nd feel bully? Take Cascarets to» “the germs, and pile them up at some convenient dumping «pot, prefer! ON CUTTING YOUR Woop polite, a little reticent, and ver) ase In its stead was an inexplic-| Bight and enjoy the nicest, gentlest Sebly the heart or the joints. Sometimes these accumulations show as PLE FoR A SANDWICH jmuch in love with Louise. Say, is this t at positive quality of master-| !ver and bowel cleansing you ever ) the enlargements, deformities or stiffness of rheumatism. * | Collie lifted his broad-brimmed lot of ga , apparent in poise and man-| **PeTienced. You'll wake up with This explanation of the disease also explains why rheumatism see hat as Loulse rode up. His face ade, but 1 ain't feell a clear head, clean tongue, lively Medicines, of which mankind has absorbed oceans, so seldom cure. It! HAD SEEN OTHERS | ¥as flushed. His lips were smiling Winthrop?) Why And hi Lonise, because she knew him so| Ste? rosy skin and looking and Bevidently transfers the treatment of rheumatism from the physician to| Mrs. Golitely—The Rev. Palmoi!| >t his dark eyes wore steady and exclamation subsided as he asked | Well. was puzzled and curious, She sarees 2 eget — a the dentist. |eays he can see nothing immodest | ST¥e autiously. “Did you know him n him ole Cascaret to a sick, cross, jin wome gcowns! ‘ a By » Col , Toy is just 1 am his sister,” said cause of, his| hey are kerio een ae or r thert se Palmoi] | bound to lope ying all the way arst 0 th . i ; Port Orchard has two mayors, but then, you see, the,’ rby—Ob, well, Palmoi own? . Sco Marshall Instinctively | sicken, vs a y' y A : to town 1 fittle sy fs Pres A om 10 years’ mis ‘ Ove a zained a moral con 4 town across the bay hasn't any Billingsleys to com- ce in Africa, you know.| nd wants someghings atater { If | plicate the job. | fron re Is his ; x | | rey wah “I'm going to the station, We ex oe * cave, Gare Carefully § . M Ie — | MAKING PROGRESS pect a telegram from some friends ee : asad 8 | alaae amar igs” Maybe It’s Charles | wrest Nutt say, of man, how|Maybe they'll be there themselv 1 tell you he's gettin’ s forward BONDS HE suspicion is justifiable that much of the peace excitement has!are you geiting on with that girl|! BOPe Rot, tho. We would have to frisky he's got me scared {| to be drinking his f been stirred up by the new emperor of Austria. For a youns|you were'so keen about? ‘Iget Price's team and buckboard left him settin’ on a rock eat Hi smile | yielding fully a man just beginning to enjoy his “divine rights,” the outlook for} Secoad Nutt—Tip-top, old chap.|*24 14 be ashamed to ride behind san'wich with one hand and ke humorou : ‘ '— Charles is gloomy. ‘ The dog has stopped biting mo|>!® horses, expecially with my—my holes in all the tin cana {of tho outlaw colt | oY. Oo; His people are miserable, as excerpts from the Austro-Hungarian | when I call Jon Sketch. friend from the Kast with “othe zi lea , that cay-| 2°0 Mewspapers undeniably prove, and their case becomes more desperate a ag | “Boyar and this here buckskin mus ve chang for two minut han I ev Mths war proce a ne @icolt would make a pretty fair tgned De hares ? th 3 Denominations $100 and $600 oF Any peace terms that the kaiser would accept would undoubtedly ; , ventured Collle, smiling to al ei + at time : f dude the grant of Austrian territory to Italy and Serbia, and the longer CRIPPLED—OR BROKE? a eg dq? § e on al G d n the war the larger the territory to be thus granted. Even complete According to EB. C. Wher wh no drive? Heavens, Collie, no! | mi a I first turne H b 5 added had smiled uardia B Yietory for the kaiser would mean that Charles would become largely, UF Olympia correspond hk Wee eee Navas T says to myself | 1—"About horses.”* | Trust and Savings > @ vassal to Wilhelm, and every day of war increases Charles’ weakness, ‘0 ®t senate is consider har . ny. must be late. |; a fella with one foot And ks I oke quietly | to avoid this fate. | | ably crippled. He cites the he train for the north just|wh ave ADA Tie athar ceo tand gauntieted band: | Bank Now seems surely to be the time for Charles to got the best terms| | “st example, old Dick Huteh- s the station. 1 expected to| el, 1 war mistook, Anq{touching it lightly witb his lps.| ~ he can. inson, who failed to show up ||D® there in case the Marshalls did|® S cruia tail te tke cree »: ihukpested had beent First Ave. at Columbia St. the first day because he just | |come today. But they sald they'd |; aie con acer ee a that ah aka t ref A got married and was o |telegraph.” ' itil pa SOE iconmebeaes Farm hand sues King county farmer for $500 dam- honeymoon ; Bae | “I can see three folks on the plat-| ! pron e chemtl Sep rcn ms ages because he was kicked by a vicious cow. One | Wheeler evidently figures | |form.” said Collie, “One is the} Sor eg as ta c ir blaee RAbleice would almost be justified in saying it was a bully case. | | that because a lot of folks get | /asent. Then there's a man and a in the works than a mosqu! u r Hutchinson must at least be At the station Louise found her tn good _ for sy he ks pane gat yeu ithe om e Fro ucer nf As to Meat crippled. guests, young Dr, Marshall and his Bee eo Tl Believe me-and I'm ist ah \ CAWIFT & CO., Chicago packers, have got out their annual report for| | wite; also the telegram announcing yf Mie ek ee top i ie High Cost of Livin “sa 1916, and {t is a corker. The net profits were $20,465,000, indi. | , cd eta land Pubs eg A His » better, then? °. ° | te. ry bf 7 € Y « bette be i et . . . . aating that the high cost of meat is due to the scarcity of cattle ous tie Maereeea ceed greets $08 Main st.. Marshall, e “Lungs? Ho ain't got none.| ‘ ~ plan of the housewives. Likewise stop the n “ op 1 They're belluses. dy i i re of y * Ds However, these enormous profits were made from a gain of one-|N°, Pearls in ocean shadows lost,|hearty “Oh, pshaws!” and “No mat iaranete setts SEL BAe the anita dying. Buy yout caskets ‘disuet stra | Shalt cent on each pound of output, indicating the highest efficiency in Formed by the oyster day by day,|ters'” with an incidental hug from (ieras tilly wba Bile lc Meant e manufacturer. Cut out the middleman. ) | handling a tremendous business —we do think hig Og prt rae ne en iat vy oo we h , He must be, judging from Catal | Why pay $ 50 for a casket we sell for $25? ——— Nia wis is onms 1 our old he: th la hy, you have | , : ai om wh 4 ‘ ? tised.to he so terribly formal, and seh ees ig a taht Le Bad his tannin’ they Why pay $ 70 for a casket we sell for $35? Weak Lungs ow you're actually hugging me in PAIN iGtissun. tae ond of nat Mttie Why pay $ 80 for a casket we sell for $40? i chicke rreastec chaffe the i f - PRUDENTIAL SAVINGS ON ae tes an _ ai Why pay § 90 for a canket we sell for $487 Chest Trouble atic Rubles Just departed ear aR 10 JAngeles, 1 hired him becanse the Why pay $100 for a casket we sell for $50? & LOAN ASSOCIATION : bellave,; Ho riden wall- the tall Combined with #kill, gentleness aaa Td: better: take him: slong un Why pay $ 35 for cremation we do for $20? ant more quickly to the dark chap that came with you genuine satisfaction, at lowest pos ju was sone: b tter nequainted And on the better rrades of goods wo save you an even ‘ 1 rai : a “Oh, Collte dott ! ° ith @ machine. he Guzzuh ‘ or percentage. Why deprive yourself nn - | 5 | ' gone for the " rae “ of the necessities Announces Its Semi-Annual Dividend as of jood-enriching oil-food in leatthard (Ae seis eee Hoee sad Metimatee Free/ ain't no ordinary brone’ i f life in order to pay an outragecis funeral bill, and get no January 1st, 1917, at | 9 |why he took Boyar with him to the Scr ceeenaa Guetied: Dr. Mar better service and no better goods than we furnish for one | $ C Istore, tho a . | half the money? | rs 5 uh hhat what [chris Per } The Marshalls and Louise paced TARA Nee ahen ihe cee We give a complete funoral, inctiding casket ii 8 O A slowly up and down the station jtened her. She's sixty hoss-powor calling for body, cremation, and oo eee, ae nnum platform chatting. Presently they ae a ! reckon T could urn for ashes, for $47 50 In addition to the above dividend, 5% of our | were interrupted by ld ec «| handle sixty he ; ney 4 h 5% of profits have i a wild clatter lehean “T oould che - We maintain our own casket : Been placed ‘n the Contingent Fund,” as required by law | than to any other one medicine. a sada and the grind and screech I lalabg put ie tdaoes | complete. paMGr and leqhlomeit ee ieee aoak: anne perate under stringent state laws, are subject to rigid [/|SCOTT’S is a rich «of a hastily applied brake, The bor Karat Crowns r e De ‘i os ; ' 8 ich, nourishing | : miles an hour by the leetle on't allow anyone to dictate to you what Undertak state supervision, and regula amination by expert accor Ph ton rowed buckboard h ‘ Crowns 1 : t yo hat Undertaker BPE bessioved ty the oe r examination by expert account food to strengthen’ the throat iis pais Pap Hi ar ee : on the dashboard, when all of a ou shall employ when death comes to your home, but call Payments received up to January 15th will participate in the and bronchial tubes. It is of reins wrapped around his wrists hag he Jay * back her ears and tar Pes Pee! tog sive you the best services and best goods earnings from the Ist of the month | peculiar help to the respiratory!» the harness stood, or rather EU ie se Ain aL a Call or write for further information tract and is used in tubercu- "ted. Boyar and Collie's own that au et ts van h ou antl BLEITZ-RAFFERTY UNDERTAKIN “LE — is cal at pony Apache. | Fe: nat § its. 1 climbs out and] Me furrry erRerr. Seaetntiy jlosi camps for that purpose. Price's team 1s out—-I knew you| 4%" 9:89 @ nie toll et r choi and eed & CREMATION CO. No Alcohol in Scott's. anted a (eam tn a hurry aid Nati was pretty much het up, When she] ‘ poet cas 8 Gcott & Bowne, Vioomield,N.J. 16-48 “St 100% 1 iS liesclgs tht weaiteme har enue ort Rhone Nac te 6817-19-21 Kilbourne 6t, jowne, Bivoulield, N. J. ‘It looks like a te , ’ d her ea 8 De i a team in a hurr NR. OW. Coreen Weurth and Pita of grazin’ along opretendin’ we ORE RYN ANS WY ETRY TOE wR

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