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By mail, out of city, ome year, $3.60) 6 mon By carrier, elty, 18¢ @ mon’ MORE THAN 60,000 COPIES the United States been as cordial as now dinner in Berlin by United States Ambassador Gerard to each said, HE SHOULD BE RE the United States. our international affairs these days but, re formed as the president and his advisors, if According to unofficial forecasts, the allies’ terms will allow the kaiser to keep his watch and one or two suits of winter underwear—Brooklyn Eagle. More Work for Lawyers! HERES one thing to be said in favor of this constitutional conven At tion proposition recommended to the state legislature for passage: om It will give a good many lawyers a good many jobs. Some of them 2 it. A new constitution would mean that our honorable judges would | {have to start right at the beginning again to tell whether the consti tution means this or that, {n every case that comes up. And the more cases in the courts, the more Jobs for lawyers, Aside from this, it has been like hunting a needle tn a haystack ‘to find a definite reason why there should be a constitutional conven ‘tion called—except that {t was recommended {n the republican plat- form and by the governor. Representative Westfall, who introduced the Dill tn the house, and) ‘who {s chairman of the committee which saw {t safely recommended, | @ a Spokane attorney. { There are 27 law Most certainly, Washington should have a constitutional conven | Yon! The information that those deported Belgians are happy and contented would be more convincing if it came from them.—Nashville Southern Lumberman. A Good Selection | HE election of A. J. Rhodes as president of the Chamber} of Commerce presages his election, in March, of the combined Chamber of Commerce and Commercial Club. It| augurs well for the new organization that it should begin} its career with such a leader. | Mr. Rhodes has been a member of both bodies, tho active) only in the Commercial Club. He is a merchant of known ability. Rather progressive, tho conservatively so, the C of C. and C. C. will have to look a long time to find some tone who can fill the presidency with better community satis- faction. Major-General Wood very frankly uses only its initials when he speaks of the National Guard.—Cleveland Leader. | Ecuador Beats Us to It! } HATEVER the supreme court may decide about the Adamson 'W law, there is one American country that has a real, “water. tight” eight-hour law. | No, it isn’t Canada, or Mexico, or the Argentine republic. It is Eenador, that tiny triangular country, squeezed in between Peru and Colombia, that looks as if it were sliding off the steep sides | of the Andes straight into the Pacific. } Ecuador is the only nation in the world with an eight-hour law that } includes every employe in the country, pays time and a quarter or bet- ter for overtime, and has no loopholes for any favored industries. The whole meat of the law, which has just been put into effect, fa In three short, simple articles: | (1) Every laborer, workingman, clerk in store, office, or industrial | establishment, and in general, every employe of any kind shall not be forced to work more than eight hours daily, six days a week, and is . exempt from work on Sundays and legal holidays. (2.) No employer can evade the accomplishment of this decree by any stipulation with the employe or laborer (2.) If the laborer, workman, clerk, ete, be requested to work Jonger than eight hours he shall be paid 26 per cent overtime for th het extra work done during the day, 560 per cent overtime from six in the ete evening to midnight, and 100 per cent after that hour. | An expression from Villa as to just what he is fight- ing for would be appreciated by Washington.—Wall Street Journal. Taxing the Idle Lap Dog ONSIDER the dog: There are watch dogs, and tunting dogs, and lap dogs, and| just dogs. | Now consider the dog tax: all pay the same, and the ownerless| Just dog is seized for his debt to the community and cast into the pound, which is the canine death cell Now consider France, which teaches this country many things: France has reduced the tax on watchdogs and workdogs to 40 cents @ year; hunting dogs pay the same old dollar, but most of them have Joined the army, where they pay no tax at all. f Lap dogs, tho, the fluffy pets from China and the haffless snips ; from Mexico, the silly, pampered, sugar-chewing, finger-biting prize winners that sleep in silken baskets, must pay at least $10 a year to live, and every additional lap dog, if the owner has more than one, must cough up $20. There seems to be here the germ of a big idea. A tax on uselessness! ANT ONCE! PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN STOPS INDIGESTION, GAS, SOUR STOMACH ,;Don’t Suffer! Here’s the | fear they know ft is needless to Quickest and Surest Stom- | “¥6 @ bad stomach < | Get a large fifty-cent case of ach Relief Known |Pape’s Diapepsin from any drug store and put your stomach right Time it! In a few minutes all|Stop being miserable—life is too stomach distress gone. No indiges-|short—you're not here long, so tion, heartburn, sourness or belch-}make your stay agreeable. Kat ing of gas, acid, or eructations of | what you like and digest it; enjoy undigested food, no dizziness, | it, without fear of rebellion In the bloating, foul breath or headache. | stomach Pape’s Diapepsin 1s noted for its| Pape's Diapepsin belongs tn your speed in regulating upset stomachs.|home. Should one of the family It 1s the surest, quickest stomach {eat something which doesn't agree | doctor in the whole world, and be-| with them, or in » of an attack sides, it is harmless. of indigestion, dyspep: gastritis Fl Millions of men d women nowjor stomach derangement, it is eat their favorite foods withouthandy to give instant relief. } i SOLD sing’s state of mind; it even may be President Wilson’s state ot mind not believe that it is the state of mind of the great majority of the God-fearing, self- respecting, justice-loving men and women of the United States. co e—_—- one . PROMINENT PROBES DAILY According to newspaper reports, this amazing statement was made at a But If Gerard Said It He Should Be Recalled “Never since the beginning of the war have the relations between Germany and At the same time, it is stated, Gerard also said that he returned from his trip to the United States bearing “an olive branch” from President Wilson to Germany. Whereupon, according to the newspaper accounts, everybody at the dinner so happy that tremendous cheers resounded thru the banquet hall, after which the president and the kaiser were toasted standing and a message of good will was sent If it develops that the remarks attributed to Gerard even approximate what he "“ALLED AT ONCE, unless it also develops that he was acting under instructions either from the president or the secretary of state. In the latter case it is clearly up to congress to take such action as 1s necessary to repudiate such a vicious misrepresentation of the public sentiment of the people of There is much that is not understandable by us ordinary folk in the conduct of lizing that we may not be as fully in- any, we are inclined to assume that they we 1 very | Into my didn’t know 9 | untit 1 fett bts hand on my shoulder and his gentle, “Hello, Bobbie!" 1} woke up with a giad start and | crowd } : 1) uhroat. Just for nd him sitting on the side of my |my door I nm L UM : . — . ale er! sald] him, so that } . down and kissed my| Woe orsing @| “Alec, Federal grand jury. Lioyd Madden's fists, Mutt’s oe nose, WAR ODDITIES They kept the Inmates of the asy |lum locked up at Stellacoom while a number of high society folk on/ horseback over the prair A Georgetown vented a new It ts played on Swiss cheeza WHAT HAS BECOME > THE PLOM AND Doe Al “Moun n, in Chi Agnes- flance had come out? chased a t Rainier.” . GOT THE BEST OF IT a fight # about the asylum. indoor golf course. BER Wwno BRovu6HT ALL HiSTous ON THE FIRST LRP, Geno Herald I bear that you and your How PAGE 4 *RIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1917, seesecsoccccssoesee® 9° seeeoese Newt A Novel! A Week! By HAROLD BINDLOSS eee | ontinued From Our Last Issue) | word I'm «tmply crazy to hear all CHAPTER VII about it.” -| The Last Straw | “Well—" he began, “Say, Bobb! On a certain night in April Twas) ins,” he broke off, “would you be fn the sitting room trying to keep | very much surprised to know that awake until Alec came home His train was not due unt!) midnight. 1 Was awfully anxious to walt up for) uy all right between Edith and ith?’ I gasped him, but at 10 o'clock I was so : : sleepy that I couldn't keep my eyes |, 10% went on Aleo gontly; open another minute. So 1 went to| “Edith Campbell. Of course you've _ Father's roll-top desk and scribbled | known I've cared for no one elxo public }for the last ten years. The bust this on a ple “Dear Alew of paper Be sure and stop [ers and our lar » family he | at my room when you come In, | WAYS mado it soem rather ho “ “goeBie.” | But when I was in New York I had }a common Mttle pieture post-card I fastened ft with a wire hairpin on the Nght that | left burning. Alec and I were on friendly terma again, and the whole world was smiling for me 1 might have known my chock book wouldn't have Med for me Alec didn't get around to look {nto was from Edith, who was at Pinehurst, and your disgraceful old brother down there, I was there for six | whole days, and she and her family Jand I all came home together to night. She's actually got a ring in |my bookkeeping until about the | 4 little velvet box which she's going first of January, and then he was|t0 Wear for me a little later, © delighted to discover that 1| Bobbie.” Ho tried to say tt Mghtly, | but his whole voice was exulting. “Why, Alec Vara!" I managed to easp, and then tho horror of his hadn't fatled tn my trust, after all ‘that he couldn't reinstate me quick: | ly enough It was #0 good to be friends |!°Ws Mashed over me, The man fagain, such a relief to have | 1 loved beat in the whole world had faith {n me restored and made | JU8t told mo that ho was engaged |to be marrted to a girl whom I ab- are acting wisely to risk urging’ te to explain what | borred! But even the dullest of us can understand the meaning of the words imputed to ff) )° DA) UIEINe me lo explain wies| Alec leaned forward and kinsed Ambassador Gerard. They mean that the United States not only has fully forgiven dollars for, “I know you'll explain | ™¢ hard. , 2 Germany for torpedoing the Lusitania and in cold blood murder more than a hun all about tt, sometime.” he sald, kay a ea in eee dred American men, women and children, BUT THAT WE FEEL MORE COR = Ny a way home eet I gulped down a disgusting sob DIAL TOWARD HER THAN BEFORE SHE COMMITTED THIS CRIME Body ol “| The hall clock struck ona I against humanity in general and against this nation in particular |. Ever since last Christmas Alec | Srasped the blessed sound Ike a Now that may be Ambassador Gerard’s state of mind; it may be Secretary Lan- [has been running down to New | king man York about every two weeks. | “Is that twelve-thirty, one, or one This time he had been away al-| thirty? most two weeks. I had had only | !doa.” I raid Ughtly do Then denper- one short note from him written | at the breaking point, I jthe day after he left home, Since | 64sr it cold ont? [then | had not heard from him un Alec patted my hand “Brave girl! I understand. But —|til his telerram had arrived ap a nouncing he would reach Hilton on|@9n't you worry. Everything will |the midnight from New York j Work out all right. Now I'll say | good-night tl good-nigt Alec must have soundly when room at twelve-thirty, I he was in the house, sleeping Btole Aleo must have seen I hold {n much longer. I was, In fact, using every atom of latrength t I possessed to fight I think couldn't hat pushing, shoving, tumbling of aps and sobs in my as Alec was closing ged to call after ght know that | ire and turn out the Hghts.” “All right, General-manager.” Then my door clos and I sank down on my pillow, opened the gates wide, and let the torrent of . “you've brought | I know it! J had a feeling that this trip to New York would be a lucky one.” in th wo Il me every life I had hated her. She had always treated Alec like the dirt under he wile coyote Solaire maamet | tee Se her to be his OLD-TIME COLD $}epecial guest, at his Class-Day, ) CURE—DRINK TEA! }| when } uted from college wizard has tn-}\ ~~! | But she i to go with some: Got a small package of Hamburg | body else, and pranced down there with a millionaire’s son. Poor Alec didn’t tnvite any other girl, I never understood why Alec ad- mired her. She's absolutely oppo- site from my brother In every possible way. She bas the most confident, cock-aurest manner | ever witnessed. Her clothes are dreadfully Mashy and her father ts a mere upstart who squeezes money out of everybody he knows, Hilton | used to criticise Edith Campbell | before !t commenced bowing and ping to her. When sho came me from boarding school, she let it | be known that ber intima 1 outside of Hilton, She merely tolerated Hilton and its people. | It was nine o'clock the morning lafter Alec told me his astonish- ing news, when I went downstairs for an attempt at breakfast. Ruth was devouring eggs when I went Breast Tea, or as the German folks call it, “Hamburger Brust Thee,” at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoon ful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sleve and drink a teacupful at any time. It he most effective y to break a cold and cure grip, iy opens the pores, relieving conges fon. Also loosens the bowels, thus hreaking a cold at once. It is inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore harmlesa, she would be at school, | forgotten that it | Alec had already gone to the fac- tor: “My, “Say, that will keep time but I had OG weet Fine 20-year gold-filled case, special Saturday at ead F 4 Ruth but you're late,” sald ut only isn't it corking about Alec? Just {magine—Edith Campbell!” | 1 became very busy fixing m cuffelink, for I was ashamed of my swollen eyes; but Ruth was sure to see them | “I might have known you'd take AND the higher up $12 50 jit Itke that,” she broke out, tho I ne jhadn't sald a word: “always acting AND Jack Hodge's booze? e like a thundercloud, and throwing =e « | . . | wet blankets at everything. I'm “They put a man fn Jail in Ta On our liberal credit Bj] simpiy wild about the whole thing coma, Wash., for calling Georg terms every man should The Campbells are going to do this} | Washington a drunkard, but it’s a | own a correct timekeeper. [Jj tumble-down old ark all over, for a |mercy you never hear what they . and Al says her fo to a guy that calls Mount Taco insist on Edith 1404-3 AVE s her horses with her. going to live he Mor | gasped | “Of course she is. Where else?}| And Alec says that you and I will EWELER leach have a perfectly lovely room, and divide time be did it “ eeu cpashing her solttatre) 1404 Third Ave. ies paiay page ae ike Hag Dolce that ram still inthe) Fine Watch Repairing ffl won't have » ike pigs any . D. K.: The following, copied! |more. EB ell is used to} from a sign in a window on Denny | a few weeks ‘ w a y, near », Is her lest sign ¢ Matermontall bureau North- magaziene Club gentilman ft | you want a millionaire wife ladies 1f you you want a husban com in and nee there | Tf you join club you | can get a millianatre Ladies ore | | lake, don't wh Ruth's | words mad eby entered in the fun.| me so terribly an competition | I shoved back my chair and % | " the table quietly, hurried up the | Wo guarantees our work for 15/stairs straight to my dishevel |yeara We will examine your teeth| room and locked the door tight, westrain come in millianalro fotos gents aney time. hicneeeatiemaeent ‘There was more of the same sort, but isn’t that enough? PI-ING THE WEDDING Miss Blanche Smith, the bride's) maid of horror—| Y., Gazette. sister, acte Pittston, N ANTICIPATED HER a . 5 T, Joy. Everybody, in fact, would de. Full Set of Teeth | Jo overybody, in fact, would de | old Plates nlite eat cate light in a ohange in adminiatra:| TM Co | fit ke new........000.-,. $8.50) ton—everybody but the poor old and tell you just what they require,|My mind was clear now all right; at. | and what it will ¢ I was no goose not to know per Our prices are the lowest in ge-|fectly well that Alec's engage attle for high-class work. ment meant that Miss Lucy Vary would be requested to hand in her] resignation as general manager,| and too, Partner-of-Alec | Now, suddenly, all was to end.| | Ruth was delighted; Alec was supremely happy; the twins, who| worship anything that means more cash, would be transported with| oh, Gold and Porcelain Crowns $5.00 dethroned ruler, who was locked in her desolate room trying to find consolation In vigorously making her bed | ‘National Painless. Dentists N. W. Corner Fourth and Pike Open Sundays, 9:30 to 1 P. M. CHAPTER VIII “For Plucky San Franciso” Specialists in Pyorrhea | For three days and nights T wan-| She—I'm awfully sorry. course, T will be a bes AINLESS » disease of the||dered over the ruins of my life, | MeoNe, Hou Won! MAlue tie mouth. ‘This dis- |] bi and forth, helpless, almos' provided me with all the sisters I ©) rious conplic driven mad by the horror of it; want. et tons tf }and then at last Dr. Maynard came. ? ae “J High |T had not realized that he had been Lost Go out of town. I had been so stan. motte, ned by Alec's annonaceiment that Where have you been ali th AUSTIN icc nc I} had not missed him evening?” demanded his wife, as | Nurses in attendance | 1 don't believe | quite appre the last dance ended. "T couldn't PAINLESS AUSTIN |clated how much [ wanted him Peter = rig }until 1 found myself bund up hat is easily explained,” he re in Father's old ulster, again be. plied "You looked 1 was lost in admiration.” ie ein o beautiful that 1 side him in his automobile, flash ing thru the cool night air, a great T haven't the ghost of an | age V've been farther than New! gobs rush thra. York, Bobbie Ivo bi to Pine | Can any one realize the torture hurst, North Carolina,” Alec an-|of my mind during the long dark | nounced | hours of that night? | “To Pinehurst! Mercy! What! 1 hated Edith Campbell. All my friends | | {nto the dining-room. T had thought | was Saturday. | “Twine rome “Bobbie, General Manager” | Wave of relief ran over me. | “Now, go ahead,” he natd, |heartily; “the whole story, please,” and I knew that Aleo had broken his news to him, Well,” | started in, “since you been gone, there's been a dreadful earthquake around here | (Dr. Maynard and I adore to talk in slinile,) “My house has been mashed up, and I'm a pitiful refu- gee. I am cold and hungry, and without a home.” “I've come with supplies,” laugh ed Dr, Maynard, taking it up de Nghtfully I can’t live with her, Dr. May jnard, I can’t!” I broke out, too | here dropped everything and went|heartsick to play with similes any! more. “Tell me all about ft,” said Dr. | Maynard, and I related every single wore of my whole pitiful story, | growing sorrier and sorrier for my: self as I went along, and finally, at the end, breaking down completely, |repeating my old timeworn phrase, \"I can't live with her. I can't, Jean't!” I covered my face with jboth bande There were tears trickling down my cheeks | Without a word of advice or com fort, Dr. Maynard shut off the |power and brought the car to a | standstill by the sido of the bleak country road. He took hold of my hands and gently drew them away from my face down into my lap, | Then, in a low voice, with the play and ne out of it, he sald, you lve with me, Lucy ; “Oh, yes,” I replied quickly enough, “fifty times easier!” I listened calmly as Dr. Maynard went on talking in his quiet, unex- Jctted manner. 1 don't remember that I felt # single sensation during | planation except at the! jend a kind of shock as I thought | the entir to myself, “So ufter all t's going to be just Dr. Maynard!” | For when be had finally finished, {1 said evenly, with the moon stand- ing there like a clergyman before us, and all the watching stars like | witnesses behind, “I will come, Dr, aynard,” and added, “and I think you are the very kindest man I now." For you see he had offered his home, his protection, and his love, he said, for all my life There was vomething awfully silent and ominous about the gentle still way he turned the machine around and started for home. It | was entirely different from what 1 had dreamed might take place, | There was nothing thrilling about it. I sat like a stone image beside Dr. Maynard. I couldn't speak while to grow up,” he sald at last, half laughing. “I've actually grown gray wa for you, Alec said to me the first time, ‘Wait till she's nineteen,’ and then, ‘Good heavens, Will, she’s nothing but a child yet. Wait till she's twenty,’ and so on, and so on. Awful hindrance, be cause for the last two years I've been wanting to do some important research work in Germany. But I couldn't leave you to the wolves, How did I know but that some good- | looking young chap would come along and snatch you up? But now, we'll go to Germany | Lacy,” he said | I stole into the house that night and closed sound, I the wanted door without a to be alone. 1 ken wonder, for there had been actual tears In Dr. May- nard's eyes when he took my hand at the door (I hadn't known how to say good night to him), a tremble his voice that awed and fright- ened me I never shall forget that night. I don’t believe I slept at all. I don't know what time it when 1 got up and, lighting my candle, and held {t close to the cold, glass- covered picture of my mother that hung over my bed. Why did she have to die so long ago? What would she say—she who would | have been iny best friend?’ I didn’t | know, I hadn't been old enough to |remember even her emile. Shouldn't girl be glad ¢ night of ber betrothal? Shouldn't there be ardent loo passionate ds, tender caresses for her to jiive thru again in thought? Shouldn't she long for the sigh the together, | very quietly, crept up to my room| By Prea the man whom she bad promined to marry? “What shall 1 do, Wathor?” I said out loud. “What shall I do? But only my clock answered me with lis steady unin- telligible tick. | me——no one in the wide world | So that is why, near morning, 1 |xot up again, went to my det | opened a little secret drawer, and took out @ picture, The picture was the one | had bought in Ne York after | had seen Robert Dwin nell at the theatre in the afternoon | Of course it ts e@illy and very absurd for a girl of my years to treasure a picture of an actor in a secret drawer in her desk. J can't |help tt. That picture had been my ideal for almost five years now. It wasn't Robert Dwinnell bim- self I admired. It was simply the Jolly look In his eyes and the way he had—I remembered {t so well of striding across the stage, sitting carelessly on the edge of @ table and swinging one foot. It had just about torn the heart out of me to watch that man make love. I gazed for a whole half-minute at Robert Dwinnell’s picture. I forgot all my problems for a little | | while. Call it absurd if you want to, but when I raised my eyes at | last and rose, clear an the day that was breaking, bright @ new-born vision, I knew—-I knew I couldn't marry Dr. Maynard. It was just as |if Robert Dwinnell had gotten up |from out of that picture, lover to me, taken my hand and sald, “You must walt for some one | ke me.” Of course, of course I couldn't marry Dr, Maynard, and I finally wrote him this note: Dr. Maynard: The refugee has thought It all over very carefully and has decided to gather the pleces of her house together and rebulid on the same spot, like San Fran- cisco,” Then I added, cropping all play and with something I knew to be pain “1 can’t do it, Dr, Maynard, I've tried and | can't. But you'll always be the very kind- est man | know. “LUCY CHENERY VARS.” So that is bow it happened that Dr. Maynard went away to Ger- many alone and 1 remained at home to fight my battle. It was a dull “Dear |eray morning that he sailed, some three weeks ‘ter that wakeful night of mine I was wondering if the nicest, |cheerfullest steamer letter I could | write had reached him when sud- | “It took you an awfully long) deniy Mary, the general-housework | plane control which, according Fs pushed open my door and shoved in a Jong white box that had me by express. I opened it won ngly and gasped at the big mass of fresh red roses that met my gaze. There was a little limp card that Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin Relieved Her Baby When Nothing Else Would | Little Mox Pendergrast is now four years old, and a fine healthy boy. When but a tiny baby, in fact almost from birth, he euffered a great deal from constipation. Hii | mother, Mrs. Carl W. Pendergrast, Red Key, Ind., heard of Dr. Cald- well's Syrup Pepsin, obtatned a bot- |tle of it from the drug store, and with {t was able to quickly correct this condition Mrs. Pendergrast says Dr. Cald- well's Syrup Pepsin has saved them from calling the doctor many times, and that she will never be without a bottle of it In the house to use when needed. She found it »qually effective as a laxative for herself |and other members of the family Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a jcombination of simple laxative | herbs with pepsin, pleasant to the taste, mild fn action and positive in effect. It does not gripe or strain, and contains no oplate or narcotic drug. It is the {deal fam- j {ly laxative, mild and pleasant for baby, yet acting quickly on the Olive Higgins Prouty Copyright, » one could help | walked | Will Never Be Without — This Simple Laxati By— A Novel! A Week! Wit Jcame with them, and tts 91a erick AL Stokes jof three little words brought bury jing tears to my eyen |, the card sald: “For plucky figq Francisco.” CHAPTER Ix, Exit General Manager Many months have pai Dr. Maynard went "oa bes There have been two crops chestnuts for me to gather alone ty October since he sailed away, Kdith has been in command of my father's house for so long now that all the difficult adjustments have been made, the machin running without an audible jand the house {tself has developed into a plant as imposing and prog. perous a8 a@ modern factory, jg elaborate new bedroom, built on over the new porte-coche olé room was cut up into tee baths and a shower—and am our rounded with rose cretonne ings, lacy curtains, and delicately | shaded electric Ughts. | There's a new stable a | of a mile back of the houses ta are lawns where the vegetable gar. den used to be; the old apple jorchard is now @ sunken gardes | with a pool tn the center, The name Edith bas chosen give to all this grandeur ts “The | Homestead.” It is engraved at the jhead of every sheet of notepaper in the establishment. You must think from this | tion that Edith Campbell in some |thing of an here Now that | word to me has a kind of aristip | cratic sound, and so I prefer to say |in regard to the Campbells, that | they have simply oodles and oodles lof money 1 hate the word | “oodles,” but it just fits SBéiee | Campbell. It describes her wi possessions toa T. Her fat! Dave Campbell, is rolling fortune that is attracting att Alec tells me that if it wasn't | Mr. Campbell, Father's | business would not have another twelve months. Mr, bell has gone into the heart and soul, and I don't whether to be glad or sorry. Father never had any use at He used to | | | for Mr. Campbell. ‘him “scurvy.” I remember word because as a child I it a funny adjective to apply te man who had a perfectly flat mplexion. (Conciuded in Our Next Issue) ‘MAKES FLYING SI | A model of an automatic ‘J. Bert Ellinger, the in makes the heavier-than-alr chine absolutely safe against freak air currents, fs on display | the rooms of Attorney C, D, 1710 New York block. | strongest constitution. 4 ‘To avold imitations and ineffect ive substitutes be sure to ask for Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. See that a facsimile of Dr, Caldwell” Signature and his portralt appeat on the yellow carton in which the bottle is packed. A ‘rial bottle, free” of charge, can be obtained by writ ing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, Ww |January Clea SUITS AND OVERCOATS For men and young men, wool fabrics in pinch-back models, conservative English cuts and box backs, all Sui duced for this final sale. 1 $12.50 and $15.00. $25.00 Suits and Coats ....... | Men’s Rubber ‘, RAINCOATS REDUCED rance made up from good heavy ts and Coats are greatly re- he prices range upward from $1 8.50 | lues values values values now .$12,00 now.$ 9.00 now.$ 7.00 now.$ 6.00 ’ Women’s Su $19.50 values, n Coats and Dresses that going at $15.00. Plush Co sale at S27. carries our guarantee, fur trimmed, that were formerly $39.50, now on >. Alterations are free and every garment sold during this sale its and Coats ow only $7.50 were sold for $24.50, now $2 Open a charge accoun | F Open Saturdays Until 10 P. M. f 1113 Third Avenue Between Seneca and Spring Sts. paid—$1.00 a week or $5.00 a month. Dress Well—Never Miss the Money t and pay us as you get eS | Our New } | Store i | I write today I am sitting fn my ington St., Monticello, I!Mnois Poe | Se lees: TEC wm Sams F212 8lie = | BxHreak wm