The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 12, 1917, Page 6

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He plumped thie out In the midst of a pause In the con. versation so that everybody got the full wallop of It, Our Eng- Neh gu naturally looked unhappy and made no com ment, but the rest of the table applauded, We had been talking about the "d Evil Gentus of Russia, which was lthe present Mra. N. Romanoft, late jezarina and Head Troutde Maker \Czarina Helped Lot lto End Nick’s Rule | CHAS. EDWARD RUSSELL. | (Copyright, 1917.) | 1 should like to « a sturdy American one at dinner in the Wintec “ig an International law ly forbidding any Ge prince or princi to anybody outside of Ge ny, henceforth and forever. E SEATTLE STAR Ave. Near Untom St. OF ‘SCRIPTS NORTHWEST = Entered at Soattic, Wash, Peatotfice Be. € Matter, | , out of city, 350 per m up to & mom; & mom $1.90; year 98.50 city, 30c a month. Star Poblie| Mate 600, Premte 1 ~~ PEOPLE’S COUNCIL some respects it is a pity the assorted pro-Prussians the “People’s lis phed, the as variegated vaporers calling themselves were not permitted to meet at Minn Accurately reported and properly photogr ly might have provided valuable information as to those the kaiser’s work in this country . phs of the “conscientious objectors” England 9 corral in work camps, served to dispel amy sympathy rm. The relentless camera showed their degeneracy, in thejr faces and spindling bodies. : The pictures suggested that surgeons amd pathologints © needed, rather than jailers or drill sergeants. 4 peace crowd has many of the same sort. Aside from there are, of course, the paid German agents, Tien is a large /class of so-called “radivals,” mostly partor and unsexed wenren unbalanced temperamentally. largest element is composed of persons affected with nia, or with paranoia, men who believe they are to their fellows and that the judgment of the people United States aad their cleeted representatives is an on of ignorance and inferiority. inent earmark of this type is imordinate inteliert- Mauty and delusions of persecution, It is a weil krown pe to students of discased mentality. is not strange that this type thirst for motoriety and attach themselves to progressive movements. Mis shows every progressive or revolutionary movement at ‘abnormal creatures who constitute a serioug handicap By Contrast some of these lightweight pacifist characters such sturdy expenents of the sane, peaceful tendemey in moc: and socialism as Bryan, Henry Ford, Upton Sin- ir, Clarence Darrow, Heary L. Slobodin, Lucien Samial, one f cers of socialism im America and today its oldest leader, John Spargo, and the tried beaders of the labor who support the government. AH these men are ing the war, heart and sowi, as the. omly means of re- the ideals of democracy and husmam progress to whack given their lives. are men whe hove achieved results, amd wmuny of have suffered real martyrdome All have made personal i E “PEOPLE'S COUNCIL” MUSTERS ONLY TRE ILKERS, THE FROTH AND DREGS OF THE BADI- iL CURRENT. OSITE OF THE PEACE YELL pro-German whe sees that Germany is boing excess war profits grabiver wihro fears a bag tax, mine operator and railroad operator wiro sees that ent is going to take control, | Every food shark and storage gambler who believen that iS cinch is to be broken, icy may beceme permonent, low, altogether—“Peace! Peace with the pow Garman cy!” TAR BEAMS ... By E. D. K. G THE CURSE FROM|®——— -.—___@ THE: MOUNTAPN TWE FARMER'S WIFE « || wo a farm wite received Moun” Patan | | Mages ate would got about $817 || year, secording to recemt orem ras | studies of the average value of missed with 2 || the household Ieber on a farm. of the hand ana| | Th™ Saure ts based om taventt. | ‘ “ mitions on 950 ferme in 14 | ‘of court. It Sy easeereaton | states, and represents am av- | - erage of the farm wives’ esti that the plea for the original | ceding thal mabey ilar | is gaining a wide-hearing all toa in eeciiien sete of 2 the country. In nation-wide Dp rates of do eatic Waetes, te mt thoir on there is hope for event-| | ™e* 7 fustice. As the case is studted| | housewerk dene for thom. The Bd the true facts made clear, the| | SY°?ar amnual value of the : p clear, the) | food thie the farmor amd bis u of Mount Tacoma advo-| | Mi ioctoase family got frem the farm ts ; | $229.84. The averaam sum that litical prestige and the power & neighboring c#y will not al be able to prevent justice being done the mountain. being done the mountain. fa the way Tacoma folks refer efforts to change the name df ‘Tacoma, the funtly spemds for feed tm | * Fall | ettitien is 9198.16- | Home Jourmad. | « 2 ° Siew hard em a very shave ohiet and the vied wes blowing. Aa she started to cross Second mwve., roted a Iittte group af neu at the corner. “The horrid creatmoamt” star arin ee IMPOSSIBLE was nearly noon when the traveling man found the niget| “I'll #eow thew!” of fhe littic hotel in a Nertk| Awd san std! ina town. Poi aie told you to cal me & tm 7| Gxi® nm quick oom & a train. Yow | hee tw low | semaptim—S M6 hours’ time. Whe émin't yas outd so Perks fitxger Pheegegm Crt cuygp be aupiriay tm hroomse pra idemt of ti forthocmiey Gxormao repubdio, : “I couldn’t very veedl,” couptatumd “the clerk, cheerfully; “1 jme got “Up myselt.”——Everybody’s. TE Improve Your Get your blood pure, keep the liver active and the bowels regular, and disfigurin z pimples and unsightly blotches will disappear from the face. For improving the complexion and putting the blood in good order BEECHAM'S PILLS are safer, bettér and surer than cosmetics. They eliminate poisonous matters from the system, strength« en the organs and purify the blood—bring the health- glow to the cheeks, brighten the eyes, improve and Beautify the Skin Directions of Special Value to Women are with Every B Sold by druggists throughout the world. In boxes, 10ey 25e. American millionaire wito hicks on imereane of his | Every franchise-holder, cinch holder who fears that war! RASPUTIN BOASTED O hru Her This Monster Ruled Russia and Hastened the End of the Romanoff family out of business Also to enable about 30 representa }tives of demepractos then assem: | bled to sit at ease about her late! taple What was about a million times more important, she had had a hand, without knowing !t or mean- ling it, tn bringing on the Russian revolution, the best thing that has d since the Fall of the) happe | Baatile |. The reason our English friends looked sad at the mention of the about all of England is BY CAROLYN WELLS | (Continued From Our Laat teswe) { | Then after a audden tap at my . STAR—WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 12, 1917. PAGE 6 lant 60 yoars have been with Ger) man princes or princesses, The curse of monarchy is real persistent and terrible, Monarchy is an utterly lunatic an@ poisonous institution that should have been abolished from the face of the earth 140 years ago, The price that durope han since paid for clinging to the wornout old bunk ts ap palling. Witnoss tis war. Also, the fact that the war wan | She had helped a lot to put the! and many of tte marriages in the| horrible conflict all the worm, — “It's belted an wott Mrs tentative pen. mm locked Dees F CONQUEST OF CZAR Romanoffs, subject is because the royal family| not ended months ago; alwe a heme) orman| array of details that bmw mando n| we er nko may we, tee thes of Gar | Turkey out and enabled the war to “THE MOSS MYSTERY* Mom usu | sewhyxtated her.” One of the countless bad things) about fooling with royalty is that the offspripx of royalty ean marry only with the offspring of other | royalty. , | Germany had alwaye had an | amazing overcrop of prince | and prine: In the world there were not enough to go around. Conse. quently every royad family in Europe became German and is | German today. Generally kine, 0 Cowmem te abwaye « Gorman, Ne matew where, Tenny continan te bind, ln thowmtts | Copyright, Paget Newspaper Hervice | | turned om full, and the fumen, own door, Fraak Wesley burst inte | Ally belt ber deer, Vidwt™ | “Are yeu sure sho—aho te—" | }my room, exclaiming, “Get up| “Yes, sir,” stammered the math| “you Miss Field, there in mo Prall; fitng on some clothes amd | “that is, not always, emotions, hope, But wo have seat fer the come downstatrs, Theo's seam: | Whee the has valuahles about, Bho | doctor.” | | thing the matter.” He diwappeared, aut I anade a record tollet Not stepping te) shave, but otherwise prempotatte, I) hurried downstairs, to Mod a grewp | of poople at tte deer of the bed: | room just below the om 1 hud | slopt im. | it's Mavybolte’s room,” ent | Woatuy, in amawer to my tequuirtves | look, “amd she won't amawee te knocking er catty, We're afratd | she'e—ehe's mm." | I looted ot the smatous trees, | Heten Weatey, in turers amd cop, huddied sgminet the doer of ker | Owe ;room, whiek wae meat bneclt, | amd mommerd in frigate, | “Heep stitt, Meten.” mtd kw buns bord; “she's alt régtt. Only ovor stept. Mayle sho took a steoptms powder er semetiing, after tim co chtement ef the evemtag, amd for et | foots haven't worked of.” “tee never takes thoa Onimaps, oir.” Fhiy from a tein menid, wiro, lwith a fewe as white as lew prom, | stood treantiing by “Ler’ ne, sic,” aed & mom wees in the beekground put ker arm room the girl, “os Vita says, sir, Mis’ Misses, sie ain't mewor bed bo drugses, She aus Wels herset lenge aforg atro’s called Imm the | coot, mtr, Fhdn, ake bem yumm im’ |to ime, whew sine comihd a't smeador [Mth Mows let ew fm Cn, wisn Se to pay?” “Ts a trteR 1 mtd, mapiemety, “Stra, Moss te @otmy thin (o make a tng she's aebenp, AM the (hme mia fe sitting om the edqo of hae bod, chuckling et oer scare.” “Oh, de you think sot” ard Met cu Wester looked greatly setieve “Then beg ber to stop fooling « }open th» @eor, Hinze comes Ming |FPrid. Yeu eall Marybelle, wom't you, Jomntt” “Why? Wher'e the mntter® Th fit lectort im summeroers as ten strane Keoe “She wen't smmaaw wn” tert on | Heten “She's jektag, you lonow- “Jolene!” = and Me Piete’s | Brot If stro's meade tp ber xokod not [Me wpenk, see w "tame see | Yeu muwhorn- mee, ste males wp hee mind” “You, 1 dw. Bot this ta too bad | Mt stre's trtciring us, aif rit. Pot wtre ray tm fti—er tntnterd—I don't ithe 1.” Thea Helen wrat «toun te the oe7, aad whtnpored consinety, Heme we wore distressed at har niboneo, and please wouldn't she speak to “a? Bet thaem wos ne ripen, | Chmy Carreran amd Lord Hervine |@enm bed rococo om the sneomd | fiver, and ainfest ximuttanoousty they appearet from their door. | | Cinag, having heard a comimatten, | but not knowing the orowmet wen in fetching meeligee, but the Forl woe fully amd conventionally attired “What te it alt about?” he acted, | | politely. | fo told knten, amd hin free wemt | jason gray. “Marybatle!” claimed “She most be | would sever chaff me # haart leaely!” whe would!” crud Chany. “I! wher! The rowwe! Ske wants! us to break in the door, and er, sitting up im bed, fe a negligee and Tosebuddy eap \see h | chifte |with her pearl meckiace oe, jing at us!” | “Pearl necklace! exclaimed | Miss Field; “she hasn't any.” “Oh, hi she’ lawghe Clmy “You know better, ¢ Lord Herrimadess Theo Earl amiled. |umow?” he sald | “How should yee k jeé Cissy, “But I woe cret. Hello, Rock, coree and make Marybelle let ws 1e. She's plan ning a surprise for ts, she told me so, and this {s the beginning of It Co help the work along.” Rock Bellamy, drawm by the nol we made, came downstairs |He, too, had slept on the third) |floor, but back, and only waked as| | the commotion increased. | “What's the matter with you peo-| ple?" he growled; “can't you let a |feluw mtrep? What are you trying| to do?” | “Get into Marybdle’s re "a" Cissy.” auge- “How should | joaw 7” work tell the se od “BS nice occupatte, I must aay. If skp desir: your company in | there she'd doubtless invite you.” | | “Say something funny, Rock. | Make her lawh.”, | “Yes, do,” sald Westley. “I'm getting worried. She's got us all here now—tell, her to spring her| surprise, whatever {t 19.” | Bellamy leant down, his lips at! | the keyhole | Quickly he stood upright. “tT jsmell gag” he sald, in a low, curt | tone. | The merriment faded from the |faces. It had been forced, anyhow, | and every one felt that tragedy not | comedy impended “Break down that door! exclaimed. "Shall I do it?” | “Oh, I don’t know,” said the fat, | | starting forward, “isn’t that rather | “No matter if it is rather—it must | be done. What say, Frank?" Bellamy’s burly form was already Rock | against the door, but he paused for | Wesley's word | | “Why, yes, I suppose #0 Can} lyou do it?” “Not alone,” said Rock, after al oom, |" always locks tt, sir “Well, it's belted mow, amd 9 ot woime te take chameos om thin | tet mg Pradl, 1 heomed te the heyhoto, which wan covercd by a brome guard This being a joke. Sametl the gan, 1 hapationtly punted anide, sud | atetimetly mumethed maw. “There's methine wreme By ail monmn break down the door, or chly on pew got In nome way, an @ sttie Is there amy othe “Ne” said Janet Pheld, wearer smd lnoaing down to the key bode, ings! Get fa romehow, de!” “Shall I call Bimor?” meid Mire. Beam , nto may meee “Yes, », call Bimer, whoever be i" eotd 1 “Amd call bem @wick Rimer, who was the chauffeur, come, amd be amd Bythoamy together, womehow burst the door opom An overpowering volume of ann beiehed forth, amd the Women screngond amd ram from the door way Awd everybody fll back, by rem rom of (ee muttorn ting fumes I bed my hamderchin’ to my fare amd daunted imto the room. T mw, at ome that the mae came from am open burner om the great center, Crerndetive acting 0 Keop eat for 9 mimats,” | eniled to thone im the ball. Then I opened a whmdow war mecurety tant com tra pthom I turned i off imetamtly that mo efber burmer war tt coed, with a patent sensation, aad te fool wa into thIMK- whick took men a fit necenda tol menmi punts, bet I met M rained ond avo another, amd atowly the alr be gan to purify I wuwittizgly lecked at the bed Theme ny Maryhelle, honutifal an a Vietom, ome lovely flung abov her ead, nad « re | her fnce, Mee cyen were clemvd, and I meer, fm thet fire slanoe, thet thew would mover epem acoaim im world. 1 went te sy, rtert bewe, for th wake of my own self rempeet my enly cmetions of that mom were the deepen sorrew and grief for the youme lite mo saddemly and sodty ended Trot an peegte becmm te ease them. idly ever the threshold, T awoke te the oxigemcion of the situation 0 im, Wesley,” Lnald, quietty, “aerd Lerd Koereinedeam Nededy else, fer & moment.” The twe men entered, aod new, on I hed meem, the awfad treth ‘The Harl wot clesor, amd pemly 1) het | bor Inid bie band om the Ino night @rom, Them ho touched bor cheek “Bho in @nad.” he anid, aed the bor showed we cmetion, | kuew that wae bis Eng@lich way, amd met be! Pele be fett ver t may » Prall!| Sead for a “Yor, send,” I sald, and Wesley hurried away to telephe Miss Field entered softly, without | in-} waiting for permission. And, An mv awful accident. The gas burner was ident,” I returned —THR BANK OF CALIFORNIA NATIONAL, ASSOCIATION OF SAN FRANCISCO A WATIONAL BANK Veutiee of Feders! Reserve Buk Onpttal and Surptes 916,900,000.00 SBATTLE BRANCH +l Secoms Ave. Gwe. T. 4 WHITE.... FREE DOCTOR Ge to the Right Brug ce 1 Washiogion RHE the Doctor will give you @ careful examination and prescribe ter you FREE. If you are sick you canget do bet- ter than take advantage of thie of- fer, We save you money and give the best possible treatment. ° | We Render an Exceptional | Service In | COLLECTIONS TRUSTS GENERAL BANKING GUARDIAN TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK Cor, Firat Ave. at Columbia “Ob, Urere In gue camwap the eook “Het @ terrible | deed, who was I, that I should sive) id it? | “What does it mean?” she said ja an awestruck voice “an| “Tut caa't we @o semething our | selves? Artificial respiration—" | “Net a chance, The flesh ts cold, jevem stiffened. 1 knew semething |ef these matters, and I should |judgo sho bas beon dead an hour | er nore.” | This que i torripte,” and Janet t her haud te her brew. “Can wet got it ent?” ] t will » eo, now, But I will open another window.” | The reom had four large win dows, twe north and two east. | There were cach securely fastened! with the patent tehes, until I opened thom, I took most careful mete of thin, calling Minn Picld’s| ettention to M for future corrobo- ratic In it mot miramen?” To nald. “that Mra. Mone should sheep with no yoatilation “She is subject te asthma,” re turned tho girl, “and on very cold nights ‘she always closes all her room windows, She ventilates thru the bathroom Fer the first time I noticed a door leading te a bathroom It war ajar and | stepped thru. The room windew, there was but| ene, was open fer the space of about six inches and fastened in that porition by a side catch | 1 could tead!ly see that tho thin ba might be med fftc by some people fer ventilation, it was really a very @mall aperture, and it had proved, was utterly tn vate t Now t as to o* I went back to the bedroom. Bellamy and Ct wers stand ing together leeking down at poor | Marybelle | I made a gestare to Wesley,| which he understood | “Prall,” he said, se that all could! hear, “l wih you'd take command! jhere It's a serious matter, and we must move carefully. I've call: the 4 ‘or, he'll be he: shortly thie | Meanwhile, we will all do ma you | a very well.” 1 returned. “T've ority, but you, Wealey rest of kin here, or rather, your wife ie, ee I'll do as jyou ask. And I will request that | the room be cleared, and no one jcome in again until after the doo ter’s arrival.” Lerd Horringdean went away at once, without a word. Cissy went reluctantly, fairly dragged off by Bellamy, M Field had already | fone, called away by a servant, and Holen hadn't been In the room at 1 could hear her sobbing "| ewn room, next doer. | Wesley stayed, and he a | wemt right to the eructal qu | “Accidemt er suicién?” I brietty “Ob, never mictde! | Marybelle | kill herself? Never!” | “But how could it be acciden | tal?” I asked. “Look, Frank, the gar burner {s too high for her to| have reached. See, It is fully eight | |feat from the floor. I can’t reach it by nearly a foot.” How did| “By George, that's so! they ever light the thing?” “It hasn't been used for years, | not since they put In the electrics Ww they used to burn gas they had long lighters, with wax tap on them, and a slotted end to turn on the gas.” “Then how did {t get turned on here? Where's the lighter?” | Werley and I looked about, but saw no implement of the sort | “Of course, there isn’t one about | now,” I said, musingly. “If Mary-| belle turned on the gas pur wely She never did!” “If she did, she climbed on a chair or something. If it was turned on accidentally, it was hit by something—but what? What could possibly hit that high fix ture, and Marybelle not notice it?” “She would notice the escaping ras at once.” “Of course why she would, That's! T say {t wasn’t an aceident.”| (Continupd In Oyr Next lesue) | | Editor’s Mail | AGAINST VACCINATION Editor The Star: I am a physt clan, graduated 1910, use vaccines in my practice when indicated, and T want to go to France, but will not unless exempted from vao- ination until called for. I have a “typical scar” of vartol vaccination; also hadovariola later. If Tam not now an {mmune I nev. er will be. Thru two epidemics 1 know {t to be a flasco—a superstl- tiog in the class of “sheep tea,” ete, ° Vaccination against typhoid can be proven or disproven by tle | Widal reaction, Bavif& no room| for doubt, bellef, or argument. If boys vaccinated 6, 9 or 12 months! axo ar@ yet Widal positive, I'll quit my croaking, and go to HB Egance, but ft 1s money to mar es the vaccine immunity clatms get an awful crimp put in their time tables and will be fortunate jif not proven worthless except for short periods, and useful only in the face of an epidemic on a 60 to 80 per cent basis of effective vac ination ALHERT A, DAVIS, M g | 4 | THE doggoned contrary baker ps right on neglecting to de u our 14-ounce loaf of bread for 5 conts, Mr. Hoover! | persons |ous fake monk, Rasp and ambitions continue to be Ger man All the trouble in Greece, for in stance, was made princess married to the king that | the Greek people, for some reason or other, still allowed to mess and mishandle their affairs, German Princess’ Betrays Russia If Greece had been a republic sho would have kept her agree ment, landed troops at the Darda nelles, taken Constantinople, put ead je the autumn of 1915 But abeut this czarina of Russ! and she was a man princess, altho the country upon who throne she sat was at war wit! Germany she betrayed the countr she helped to misrule for the sak of the country of her birth. She was proud, arrogant, aring, neurotic, unpopular over NN by a German) traitors were to sell themaelves ina scoffed at the suggestion he | foretold the prince's sickness and Meantime a scandal had went away. | arisen and swept over all Rus- The prince immediately fell fil . concerning the relations and continued to be {ll in spite of) Rasputin and the may have been the bent efforts of the court phy- sictans | with superstition and gave orders to | to |the real directing power of Russ! thru the onarina ever he told her to do, and he wan KRuesia she was per no basis for any such reports, but it cannot be denied that the camrina helped them along by behaving withowt restraint or discretion, and as for Ras- putin, he epenly boamed when drum that he had made a conquemt of the cmarina. Betere lesg 95 per cent of the opie keew the story and The crarina then fell ashaking | have the holy man brought back | the palace. Whereupon the prince got well, Soon after that Rasputin became | Bhe did what- id had long been in the pay ef bepeved it The oké respect for jermany. gyn lad bong bees éying out | THIS STORY FINISHED IT | Pretty pearly everythime im this | werld seems to have @ une, soon He led the ezarina along the way | er la! Reeputin wae a beast and ly willing to go to|@ greamy imposter, but he helped » with Germany. He om t evolution, And #0, strange. neparate pen was the go-between and agent in ly enough, did the German princess She |the negotiations; he is supposed to| who planned to betray Russia and had her way absolutely with her|have fixed the prices at which the! unwittingly saved It |husband, who was cowed by her |< furious self-will and was a weak man anyway to sending revolutionists to the gallows or Siberia The carina likewise had weak spote in her domineering charac ter, She wae in deadly fear of as pansination and she was almost In sanely superstitious. ‘There is abundant evidence that | from the beginning of the war sh had the purpose to bring about a separate peace between Germany and Russia, Feared Only What People Would Do She seems to have been held back by one fear and that was what the Russian people might do to her if they found out her treachery, According to the story current in Russia among the best informed it was the” czarina who elevated Sturmer, the German, to the place of foreign minister, and it was she who urged on the min isters who have arranged Russia's surrender just b the revolu dion broke. But for the revolution the thing would have gone thru and the 150 German and Austrian divisions now on the Russian front would have been released to be hurled aga France Before this the czarim® had come wholly under the power of that astounding atmormality and villain a. He never was a monk, as a mat ter of fact, but early in his vicious career he discovered that a pre tense of ploty was an pay way to win the confidence of the women he pre upon, For this purpose he proclaimed himself the apontle of a new kind of holiness and put on vestments to which he had no right. Wearing that garb he led a Ufe of shocking tmmorallty Had Czarina’s Only Son Made Quite Ill The czar and czarina had one son and several daugiiters. For the of the successio nd his wife were worried about the health of their son. Rasputin used this feeling to get the czarina in his power it is supposed that among nuke the ther women he had hypnotized : who attended upon be prince, and that she wage in duced to dope the food of her cba # Anyway, Rasputin an- noune and o the prince J that bis constant presence were necessary to keep well and when the crear extept when it came | = SECOND AVENUE AND PIKE STREET TO MEN And to men Nightshirts place our Special $1. 35 Nightshirts Underwear, now, we who need or Pajamas } garm | Cut extra long and full from finest outing flannel, inst any lower or higher priced nts anywhere as the Best Possible Buy trimmed with silk frogs and large pearl buttons. Sizes 15 to 20. Men’s Pajamas ~~ Special $1.65 Men's heavy Outing Flannel Pajamas with military collar, silk frog fasteners. Men’s Union Suits = Special $1.65 40 per cent wool Union Suits, medium weight, per- fect fitting. Special $1.65. Men’s Union Suits tes Special $3.00 Men’s mixed wool and cotton Union Suits of fine, soft yarn, steam shrunk; sizes 34 to 48. Heavy Cotton Auto Robes In mixed colors; size 54x72 inches; $3.95. “Garbage pails are a source of infection and should be disin- fected regularly.” -—Dr. Woods Hutchinson, You always need a powerful, econom- ical and safe disinfectant to keep diseaae away from your home. All first class grocers and druggists have or can get for you War Department, U. S. Government, has ordered a large quantity of Chlorin- ated Lime from us to protect the health of our boys in camps and trenches. The Board of Health of New York, Boston and many other cities recommend Chlorinated Lime as an effective and economical disinfectant. Large can 15c, Refuse substi- tutes which may be stale and worthless, Write for booklet. Q A. MENDLESON’S SONS 120 Broe¢way, New York City Established 1670 = Factory: Albany, N.Y. INA | Says Russell - enrredae=4+ eseaneuneeu ‘oh ak da cece agnd come mod'~-s=8 oaceew eereen erecn

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