The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 13, 1917, Page 4

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Member of the y carrier, elty, 286 @ month In the name of reason, why? As head of that committee during the p an utter failure in bringing forth ¢ the municipal railways profitable some such idea, that he was elected. The delusion is over. Thomson nothing of the superman about him. 1s sonable and profitable to do so. No, Seattle hi S its eyes open now. ties. Being pressed for food, Denmark climbs on the water but is honest enough to admit that it’s only for a _ short ride. We Forget? BY JOHN BATHURST (9272 5ist Ave. 8.) Pp EMEMBER THE MAINE Time was when this ery rang thru our country and forced the hands of a great and good pres! dent, so that, not counting the cost, we entered on a war in of the stranger at our gates, a war engendered by outrages and upon an inoffensive people almost within stone's throw four very shores. Today, thanks to the pacifist, the cry has changed Bs adopt as our slogan, “Forget! ! Forget the Sussex, the Arabic, Laconia! the American men, women an nildren now resting some fm the waters of the wide Atlantic, the victims of a ruthless Which, by its acts, has made of itself an outlaw among the na of the earth. ‘The sufferings of an tnoffensive Belgium fatled to rouse us from Apathetic sleep of self-sufficiency and a policy of expediencey D> Today, with the knowledge that under aegis of our national we have harbored the representative of a nation, who, while professing the sincerest friendship for us, was plotting us under the instructions of his foretgn office, we‘are stirred Our complacency, and are beginning to face things as they are, and ae the pacifist patriot wishes them to be. Too long, far too long, have we indulged in the proverbial feat| bird of the desert. Hiding our heads, we have tndulged in vain that we could not be seen. Nevertheless, the writer is con- and he would Forget the that our kick has not altogether departed, and that now, when shall face the in- j have withdrawn our heads from the sands, wi with a good face, and prove to the world t and most patient people, we are also a virile one, and which wantonly exhausts our patience by a long series of ges an@ the contravening of {ts solemn obligations and treaties, the plea of military necessity, has sown the dragon's teeth which Taise against her a mightier power that she has ever conceived of. Philadelphia editor says that “life in the West has just one perpetual hunt for the dollar.” Nope! the dollar, the potato! any’s Egomania BY L.R.N. THE utterances of some of Germany's noted writers and scholars are a true index to the mental state of its people, a strange and in- teresting problem in psychology is presented to the world “Even the ordinary man knows that there are paranoiacs, megalo egomaniacs and similar unfortunates, afflicted with various of dementia grandear; but it would seem that Germany gives the an example of national egomania—a nation possessed of the delu that it {s infinitely wiser, better and superior to all other people. In his book, Vomerhlichen Krieg (Leipzig, 1915), Herr Wilhelm Mey-| r himself thus: “The German nation will assume an elevated and decisive impor. Upon the earth. German thought and research, German songs and German piety and morality, German justice and unselfishness, i Mmagnanimity and heroism, German sincerity and rdiality, profundity and purity, German manliness and r, German shness and tenacity, German simplicity and straightforwardness, reliability and loyalty, German spi and organiz capacity, German industry and Ger siven German creation In its entire out of the travail of war, and sha ‘This is the vocation to which the hour tthe world. | Such a catalog of German virtues ts almost enough to make us feel pry for all the poor Yankees, Britfshers, French and Italians, and out sheer pity extend condolences to them in being so unfortunate as not be born Germans! In the Forum for Aprt!, 1915, Professor Von Leydon, noted educator us the following refreshing bit of information “Germany must and will stand alone. The Germans are the salt of earth; and they will fulfill their destiny, which is to rule the world to contro! other nations for the benefit of mankind.” ‘An unsought, magnanimous, humane and gratuitous guardianship! the benefit of mankind!” Shades of Belgium, Serbia, Armenia the Lusitania! Verily, the English language is bankrupt when it pts to portray the tenderly anxious and motherly humanity of thes: jan ‘super-men! nterpr thoroness born th fn in pure ad re us G urre our fate ca’ Ans Perhaps there was a postscript in the German note | suggesting a German-Mexican-Japanese alliance that also included the United States senate. ope Almost Abandoned When She Found Remedy , Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin] Relieves Chronic Case of | Long Standing. | After a long period of suffering . liver and bowel trouble that ought on piles, during which she tried many“ remedies without | ining relief, Mrs. Mary J. Jewell D of Berrien Springs, Mich., heard of | , Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and ined a bottle from her druggist simple, inexpensive 19 ei im Jewell bout her mpound brought almost mediate relief, and Mrs "wrote to Dr. Caldwell In her letter Mrs. Jewell says, “I had tried so many things for the , Without being helped at all bout given up hope of ever t mg any better. I knew ft was the ition of my bowels that caused and after I had taken a bottle ))ot your Syrup Pepsin I knew it was e, the medicine I needed. 1 0 © Very grateful to you for sending me or narcotic drugs, and is mild and gentle in its action, bringing rellef in an easy, natu without |griping or other pain or discomfort Druggists everywhere sell Dr a bottle ineffective To avold imi ubstitute: tations and get Dr. Caldwell'’s Syrup Pepstr D the little book—the advice and in-|See that a facsimile of Dr. Cald trnctions it gives would teach any-| well’s signature and his portrait ap how to get well and how tc keep | pear on the the bottle is packed fyrup Pepsin free of charge, can be obtained by bination of simple laxative|writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 455 with pepsin, free from opiate Washington st., Monticelio, lls, carton in which A trial bottle. The Seattle Star MORE THAN 61,000 COPIES SOLD DAILY. Why Thomson? There’s a persistent rumot that Reginald H. Thomson may be re-elected chairman of the city utilities committee of the council. ast y solitary ides and it was because somehow the people were deluded into the belief that he could give forth Thomson He is especially unfit to head the city utilities committee be- cause he opposes the right of a city to extend its service of the water and light departments to outside territories when it is rea- This right Seattle always enjoyed until 1915, when a rotten legislature, thru a joker law, deprived it of that right. i And Thomson is not the man who should head a committee as important as the city utili- |dead loss annually of $ jsecond class matter, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin for 50 cents| prompt Published Daty - Hy The Star . Publishing Ce v. Kotered at Reattis, Wash, Pestash mat cor | ma By mati, out of ctty, one 0; @ mont mth up te @ mee we year, he has been by which to make that’s all, ' Editor’s Mail | ee PARARAAAAAARLDDAL POSTAGE RATES Editor The Star ! xticed your editorial of pruary rogard ing Senator Smoot and the 1 at Tater postage bil I believe honor should go to whom ho is due, and Senator Smoot is certainly deserving of credit for his uphill battle against “EM ri I have before me the “Congre: sional RK. 1 covering the date that this bill was disc d. Tt alnc have a copy of the letter wr r by Postmaster General Burleson to the chairman of t venmitt o roads, in which Justice re nd-class postoffices and post Mr. Burleson says quires that the rate on mail be increased A few facts: “Big Busine: nishes 62 per cent of paid ton of the postoffice. The revenue from this tonnage is $11,000,000, and it covers about oneelghth of the Jof handling. Who pays the othe $77,000,0007 “Big Business"? Oh no; the common people, by a tax of 100 per cent on actual cost. The annual tonnage of postcards }is about 1 per cent of the total, yet! ived therefrom 1! twice the sum of the revenue de rived from the second-class (“Big Business”) Is that justice to the common people? Think of ft—» 000,000 on the revenue de And you think people are not en titled to l-cent postage? The rea son they don't rise up and demand it is be are ignorant of the above fa which prove that |common people are paying for the| so |distribution of two classes of mall |instead of one, In behalf of the common people 1 ask your support for l-cent letter postage. Yours truly H. M. ¢ 4212 Aurora A Without dealing in mere sta- tistics, the editor insists that the big cry for tcent postage comes from the mailorder houses, and not from the mass of people. If the t-cent rate is going to Increase the cost of second- class mail on books, magazines, newspapers, etc,—the average man's means of education and Information—then surély it's false economy to reduce the st of one clase of mail at the expense of another—EDITOR. COLYUM A CONTORTIONIST Mra. Will ( rge, what do you thin Baby can put his foot in his mouth Mr. Wi Fine! With an ac complishment Ike that, when hi grow he won't mind sleeping in an upper berth at all.—Life +S <0 They're watching our cashier, I hear Dear me, | am 80 WORRIED. They've got him In the hole soul, His friends are FLURRIED, A rumor is afloat Fear on that face OF HIS'N An expert's on his books. Like he might go TO PRISON ney got suspicious poor awf'l We note It look when some men Gave our trustees a HUNCH, They'd seen this cashier guy, buy A potato with his LUNCH ee > Things even up in this world pretty well, after all. When you buy a nickel cigar, instead of a 10 cent one, it takes a nickel’s w of matches to keep it going. . GRATITUDE A bereaved widow thus than! in insurance company for the yment of her claim April 29th my husband took out be sure you|an accident policy and in less thar a month he was accidentally drowned. I consider it a good 41 vestment oe Mr. Cuttittall, a York bar iy ha: just married XN 4 Sham yui. Very tongorial and quite con sistent, STAR—TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1917, PAGE 4 sed | ‘ ARREST TWO IN GERMAN PLOTS; FIND BOMBS IN PLOTTER’S ROOM % ° United States secret service men have arrested two more German reservists in connection with the latest discovery of plots against the president, for revolution in In against munitions fac t They are Hans Schwarts, hown at the left, belleved to have conspired with Frite Kolb in plot dore Wolf, right, held as witness Above, explosives and bombs found North German Lioyd docks, in Ho-} jin Kolb's room, overlooking the, boken, N J “The Mystery of the Boule Cabinet” BY BURTON E. STEVENSON 1911, by Burton E. Stevenson Copyright, pay | most! (Continued From Our Last tesue) | | “She does not need to te went | th lon Godfrey inexorably fool | e¢ could guess. She came for the let That night,’ t She had resolved herself to| decided that at biackmall you, madame I would hasten house; » ould explain the matter to } te ehrieked the girl) O°" B A al hoping to cave her} Vantine, I would persuade him to eres Jrestore to me the letters, with : ee hbing choxea|*MCh 1 would fy to madame, 1 i etorm of angry bbing choked | ynow, also, that I could rely upon her. Then I sav eyes widen. | her ‘gratitude,” added the 1 4, aw that) «After all, one must provide for | Rogers himself to a ' : one sitting posture, and wee staring at s ‘It was not until evening that 1 He Hstened with much interest; but when | proposed that hould restore to me the letter ho declined beginning Grey <—, GLetters ToC Return to your mistross,’ he ss ae sald, ‘and inform her that I shall, LIMIT NINE MONTHS? more than | arm e calls me the be to return the letters worst names, What breaks my moat hapr Q—Will water glass preserve heart Is he ought to be more rea to her, But it must be in her own jefinitely? casa hat place thont, The ay |e FARMER JOHN, | 89nable and careful, as | am to bee tors are hors whenever ft pleases! Ait in wald that eggs cannot |come a iiggleid re dune. Don't you so I left the house, he himself g4, WHAT? Dit iat xin eee ie a opening the Seer for me. And that) others is « young woman In] ne will walk all ever ma... 777 pus rae bight cope | pac our neighborhood who continually Lizzie, then I heard Godfrey draw a deop| rune after my husband. What can) |. v2) ively ne doesn't real- breath. 1 could see that, lke my-|! 9 to stop og ER wire, |!z how unreasonable he is, More- self, he was convinced that the girl m ty fe wering over you may not realize how un- was telling the truth An roe ey even, it|feasonable you are at times, Bet- Tho velled lady rose herwelf 10 Your aun oa a cad will| ter have a talk with bim and see Have you any further questions |%0U Nenore it, your husband Sl) voether you can agree, Leaving to ask her?” she sald eee ed fiat oniy contaman for te] iit, now, maakt tmene flat oem No, madame nad Godfrey, | 't¥- and feel only contempt for the) Joi be aione and unprovided for, The story is complete.” oe = jwith a little baby to look after The vetled lady turned to me and} a later on. Unfortunately, in this held cut her hand | CAN'T PREVENT IT state it is a very easy thing for a “1 thank you, Mr. Lester, for; Q--My mother objects to MY! run to desert bis family, and it your kindne she d. “Come,|being converted, because hel), . very hard thing, apparently, Julie,” and she moved toward the|thinks | am too young. |! am 13)¢, force him to support thor door, which Rogers hastened to|and very unhappy about it. What) whom he should look after and open. can | do? Don't you think MY| care for mother is very much In the wrong? Please give me some of your good Mr. Hornblower nodded and assed out after them, and Godfrey Q.—Would you please tell me why nd I were left alone together. | advice. MARY M. | we have a holiday on Washington’s - A.Your mother cannot pre | and not on Linsolaet! t CHAPTER XII jyent your being converted, #ince| think Lincoln did just as many Enter M. Armand | {hat Is something which must tA¥e| deeds as Washington, and should I got back to the office to find! does not want you to join the|°® honored al at M. Felix Armand, of Armand church, that will not + et Fils, had called, and, finding me|from being g | A—Lincoln’s birthday {s a legal out, had left his card with the pen-/until she is willing. | holiday in this state, altho it is ciled memorandum that he would |not as generally observed as that all again Monday morning. MUST HAVE “BELLS” of Washington. Personally, I ~~ And at the earliest permissible) @—There je a young lady whom|#ider them equally great. One hour on Monday morning, M. Felix|; sim geausinted with. 1 see her| founded our country, and the other Armand wa own in to me. saved it. quite often. | would like to see her! oftener, but she says the man that goes with her steady must have 1 have only call again befe ality, for to clone my eyes to me that strikin Felix Armand Two million children between the ero! Was gold medals, gold bells and a doc-/ages of 10 and 15 are employed for one the most extraordinary MEN torts certificate, signed and sealed. waxes in the United States ever had the pleasure of meet- Can you tell me thru your columns ing. 1 was both impressed and what she means by that, and also haar friendly fe yor what | have to do to qualify? | apologized for the mis ANXIOUS | Then Mr. Vantine's cabinet is} 41 think she has the right idea! 4 etill in Paris?’ : P altho Tam not sure I could interp: discovere ome days ago and th r lel — model young man corre cabinet bel to My, Vantinejoc, snc Gunes: ¢ wax shipped ¢ It shoulditan’ ceuet have brains enou ihc pa ineaday 1!) make good, a bank ount and a Provence myself receive cian bill of health To qualify, fl and di to Mr, Vantine.” |ieee throe witeiadink eae Mr. Vantine is dead,” I said,|""°** ' greece see ” i ou did not know?" “SHALL 1?" They're Fine! Liven Your oe a ober aed Cot) said) “Q—i have two proposals, one| Liver and Bowels and oo age =_— he BLAIR trom a young man with a good, Clear Your Head. I told him briefly as much as 1/8te@dy positon and good family. | naar ak tromeds do not think | could ever learn to| No Headache, Sour Stomach, “It ta Pesce ols Bees love hime but ' do tike han very} Bad Cold or Constipa- seed reer we © other Is from an elderly js eae na pare” added. “They | nan of about 45, and his habits are tion by Morning. “Il have b visiting friends at 9000 He has plenty of money, but! he explaine: It was |* Of foreign birth, | do not know that the message from our Whether ! love him or not, or vind me, commanding me whether | am merely infatuated. 1 aten here. But this death of 2 19 years old, and have a good, steady position. | can buy many things that other girls have. Do you think it would be wise for me to marry the middle-aged man? He has been married four times. LOLA. A.—I do not think you are suf. I fleiently sure of yourself to accept elther person, If you were really Vantine found dead house I told him of Godfrey's and my theory, and he acknowledged the eabii to have b need to De Montespan, “Perhaps you can assist us,” you say in a room that he was at his Get a 10-cent box. Colds—whether in the head or any part of the body—are quickly overcome by urging the liver to action and keeping the bowels free of polson. Take Cascarets tonight x and you will wake up with a clear =| head and your cold will be gone. Cascarets work while you sleep; they cleanse and regulate the stomach, remove the sour, undi- gested food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter and poison from the bowels. Remember the quickest way to | get rid of colds is one or two Cas- |carets at night to cleanse the sys- jtem. Get a 10-cent box at any drug store. Don't forget the children. f | They relish this Candy Cathartice peg ingore “ suggested, “for that theory of mine : TY go hi gh aN seemed to mad-|f0Und an opportunity to leave| has been completely disproved.” |!2 love with one of these two men la ; ' madame,” Julle went on. “I has-| “Disproved? In what way?” he | Would have no occasion to ask wan you!” she ahrieked, ana | ‘hed here; but I confess I should | demanded, j® third person what to do. It does “ you!” she shrieked, and/ not have secured an entrance, if] “The secret drawer has been |" seem to me that It would be a nook her clenched fist at him. “It! it had not been that it was my hus-|found © © © good plan to take a chance on mar- was you who told! Coward! Cow-) hang who opened the door to me. “Comment?” he cried, his voice TY!2s @ man who has already been ard!” . : An wo were debating together, M.[sharp with surprise, “Found? ™arried four times. Neither would | anq jt is often all that is needed to iatrtt Godtrey, bis face very grim,| Vantine himself came into the ball,|The secret drawer has been |!t be a good plan to marry a man|arive a cold from thelr little Sn beay®, pand upon her arm. [and I ran to him and begged that| found?” for whom you do not care systems | note elt he cried. “He told us!he hear mo. It was then that he| “Yos, and there was no polsoned meee thing le tried to shield yo invited mo to enter this room mechanism guarding it.” TALK WITH HIM | jtho why he should wish to do)“; sat down,” continued Julie. “I| He breathed deeply for an in-| @—What do you think of a man/ 3 vy. | told him the story from the very|stant; then he pulled himself to-|Who treats his wife this way: He Rogers broke in with a hollow sean Si gether with a little laugh. “Was | '8 28, ! am 25, We have been mar- and ghastly laugh ried six months. From that time | @ald hoarsely She's my wife! 3 he had a bad temper, was unset- | It Was a sordid story that Rogers | MY GRAY HAIR f Love letters, of a tied and changeable. || wanted to | shall pass over it as briefly as may| Lady Gives Simple Home Recipe | £Tout, Louls to the Montespan, per kore ine pal pe a tkb ola 4 | rs | That She Used to Darken Her | ®Al* , ..'s oh 1 ieigne pe \ | Gray Hair No, unfortunately they were of him. | thought, for my sake, he BULL BROS. Re = Shh a . 7 ws gongs | a much more recent date. They | would peer vers vere after we had come to New Yo For years I tried to restore my|have been restored to their owner.” | were married. | have always help: i the employ of s tasnfiy. Ros gray hair to its natural color with] He sat for a moment staring ¢d him, and saved. Now he want Just erinteny 1043 i re had been Shecins 4 prepared dyes gnd stains, but/thoughtfully out of the window, |t0 start a little business. He i tots T ner oe e be _ De vs on of them gave satisfaction and| “It is a nice problem,” he said.|Very conceited and says that he is od Poergg ag reg Het ey nealow were all expensive, I finally|"I will think {it over, Mr. Lester. | ——————————— aT NAST ACABNTANE lied an eveotful existence as the| mien ur h which 1/ Perhaps 1 may be able to make a Sal ig gh at he| mixed at home that gives wonder-| sugg n in any event, 1 | leona hab ind Mp beet aoutha \erlanda kad iiawcase ait “ of my|it is agreeable to you, we can meet entrusted his savings to her and| with it To 7 oss, of water a matin ake the savings were goue, also. Julie,| small box of Barbo Compound, 1 02.) "at what time?” R 4t rum and it seems, had been overcome with | of bay % oz. of glycerine longing for Paris, and sho had Hienta can be bought at| flown back to France, Rogers had t very little cost. | |thought of following; but, appalled very other day until the hair| jat the difficulty of finding her in omes the required shade. It wil | Paris, had settled gloomily down to nly darken the gray hair, but ive upon his memories ome kort p it soft and gloss It 1s not f affection for her had t alive or greasy, does not rub off. thin him, and wher openes Advertisement he door of Vantine | found her standing was as wax in her hand. And ald madame, irony you wi with be so good visit now,” 1 us of your as here” Very well, madame,” and Julte ettled Into a more comfortable pos ture. “It was one day on the boat as I was looking down at the pas with sound | usl- songers of the third class that I j |perceived Georges. 1 was upset | with amazement, and then he Palé en Savings Accounts looked up and our eyes met, and a he came beneath me and command m\Gordially Invited ed that I meet him that evening }1t was then that I learned his plan ‘It was to secure those letters for | h ! Peoples Savings Bank Re es be hi Pe BY secoxp ave. AND Pie si, LUYHEIR FRIENDS ABOUT THE BEST TORACCO, TWATS EXACTLY THE KIMD OF TOBACCO VM WANTING woe ie RicH “EM. ALITTLE CHEW TOBACCO. OF WB CUT SATISFIES Wyou vaKe AND LASTS, WITH LESS. A LARGE CHEW | GRINDING AND LESS enn ON Survie vou mare Thine it RON \T00 V/V HEN you gentlemen get together at your lodge meetings, somebody is pretty sure to start the little pouch of W-B cut up the line for his brothers. It’s conducive to brotherly feeling. There is gratitude for the rich tobacco that makes a little nibble go so far and for the touch of salt that brings out the tobacco satisfaction without so mych jaw work. Made by WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY, 50 Union Square, New York City I do not know with exactness. ne be ek : There may be some delay in get- Dad” Lindsley Still Young ting une ‘ ab net from the ship. and Sprightly Despite ‘erhaps ould be etter f i . 4 ye | His 62 Years y " 1 assented | | CHAPTER XIII ] ‘ | S hurr, f | Part With the Boule Cabinet | ye Sule a precisa | The coroner's inquest was held From Retirement Two next day, and my surmise proved Years Ago. to be correct. The police had dis- covered practica no new evi ee dence; none, certainly, which shed ‘ re eh , any lght on the way tn which f Peatcod chs can cas. Cae rouet and Philip Vantine bad met ing with @ frightful Doctors told me an op- was the only hope of relief r Godfrey Joined me at the door had lost all sense of taste and as I was leaving, and we went 1 and my stomach and bowels down the steps together, e in such a disordered condi Mainne iy theory. about:: the tion that I could eat barely enougt keep Goormal et ‘This aliv weight dropping from my Boule cabinet exploded,” T said, to have given up hope. By the way, I'm going to turn the cabinet over 165 pounds was w my n to its owner tomorrow.” are Oe ge ly avons “To its owner?” he repeated, his| ager of the §& u eyes narrow Who does it happen} wh ffices and la yeated on my route, in Mari- to be, Lester?” ime building. He gave me a bot- I told him In detafl the story © of Sulphurro ang a be@nk of in which Felix Armand had told me.| structions setting et es its various ‘He was quite upset over it,” 1| uses, A care reading convinced , an “ me that the Sulphurro method of added. “His apologies were almost | Wa. L. (“Dad”) Lindsley treatment was: based on common abject.” | sense, and I. deck to give it a Godfrey listened Intently to all COVERING more than £0,000 miles phi dh aon ms nae this, and he nodded with satisfac-| in his nearly 24 years in the| curative value of sulphur, tion when I had finished. service Uncle Sam and walking “ : on . ee ¢ ‘ “My © Was certainly a stub Tt is all most interesting,” he'] an average of four miles an hour! por but I was persistent tn commented What time do you | for eight hours a day, every day| my efforts to regain health and expect him tomorrow in the week, “Dad” Lindsley ts] strength. and pe ergs open ‘Some time {fn the afternoon, Doi] «tit young and sprightly despite the nasal passages brought the you think I ought to hold on tol} nis 62 years first relief in my many long ye the c a while longer? 1 oie cinebe eer Rig tiny Pet one, vb a Pig Ny s Dad" ts one of the oldest car ent continued, headaches disap- could tnvent somo pretext for de-|] 7, point of service, in the| Pearing first, and gradually lay, easily enough. surely hand stoffice and wears the two ating relate “Why, no; let him have his cab: ven sense of red stars on bh Said Godfrey, with an alac-|| jo cots Few carriers on the Se-| turned. T was soon able to eat that surprised me, 3 ‘4 i ‘ with genuine relish and keen en- There did not seem to be any!) sttle fores walk, with © mules Joyment anything and everything Prag tic step, and Mr. Lindsley that was set before me. -T reason, so the next day when I ac proudly ware to the donn umphed in the battle for health companted M. Armand to the Van-\| ? ts, marking a quarter | ®84 happiness, and T challenge any tine house I permitted the ex-|| the sliver stars, markine & man ‘of my “ake, and xome of the entury of faithful performance. | younger ones, to do a harder or hange of cabinets to be made. ionger @ay’s walking 5 onger day's rs Continued in Our Next Issue) ‘They came, near shelving (26h we in Or Me leous two years ago,” said “Dad phurro did the work, alone day, in recounting his many and unaided by any other medicine or treatment hold standby ely after atment fatled It Is now my house- for {t cured me com- lt other forms of sin the long ye ente b 1 Walked Thru Snow 42 Miles to Enlist twer wit u Mr, Lindsley has qualif bad as an D. March 18 pont expert rifleman, and only recently diahinatone: mi 7 out of 10 bull’s-eyes at ame obj ions of T out of 12 at 1,000 r to his being un 1 48 out of 60 points at ler when he said had all with a pickup sean walked 42 thro. tre Seattle gun club. members walked 42 miles thru tremendous | is @ remarkat tely clos rie score snowdrifts to eulist,

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