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EVERETT TRUE TELL You GoT ts | UGHT TMS | WEcC, THAT — SOME VEWSLRY STORE AND i DON'T KNOW ABouT WAIT TLEL CALL VP INCE THE PHONG COMPANY REFUSES To GWS TIME, WHY IMPOSE ON THE JEWELERS Z EX Have TING To SELL, NOT TO SiVS Away It ay Copyright. 1915 by Mary Roberts Rinehart fs 14, ambitious. undecided Aunt 4 been contributing ¢ m to remain at a nurse, Sidney the Page home to heip out while is to WEDLOCKED— Annie Lost Her Chance | WONDER How CAN GET PETER GIVE ME ‘TH’ MONEY FOR AN FASTER SurT Soe t ro | om GO Over HOUSE TONIGHT AN” PLAY POKER. WELL - Go AN’ TO HIS HWE A GooD POOR EESS. Ce AO | SAY, HELEN, | GUESS TOM | | Aun RiGwr. Twer’’s AMAN | oT To | wal We Ha OvT Were WITH A LOAD ‘Son EXTRA SPECIAL! WERE (T.15 ~ 1 GveSS There Is No | uITENOS “ Kee? A COW | QuesTiIoN ABOUT IT-1 WAS SA MANGER, PERO |] Aso Au BALT GOs WE GARAGE AND WE BRING S - AROUND RIGH IN -1S6EEM To BE MOVING Feewis ~— clon js hardly He smiled up « [ told him that I bad asked y Tom seems to ALA The NEIGHBORS wi BE] | DON'T KNOW WHAT OFF OF US FOR LIFE IF | HE'S THINKING OF - A cow WERE. 1} evess Lt CALL Wim UP - have a secret, | TOM.WAAT IN THE WORLD ARE You ThiMkING OF P ThE IDEA OF BRINGING A Cow ITO “TWS NEIGRBOR HOOD - WHAT WILL MEVT DOOR HAVE TS SAN? AMAN 1S HERE. WITh A LOAD OF HAN SHALL Any ons ay, Ml eg £. »/{* ae ne 2 1 Tinie | YouRE TH’ MOST | OSAGREEARLE MAN 'VE EVER MeT- Boo \ Hoo ~ oo re MR. ADWAS 1 SEND No-TeLe Him To, UNLOAD IT - WERE GOING To KEEP YEP. (T SURE LOOKS LIKE THE DEMON CTTO AUTO FINALLY HAS TO STOP, EN? ~-BUT WAIT- — SEE TOMORROW'S PAPE! wi Doctors Recommend tories Desert Fighting Harder Bon-Opto for the Eyes cdtime Than West Front Action n-Upto lor the EYES | Physicians and eye specialists pre |Seribe Bon-Opto as a safe home rem- dy in the treatment of eye troubles and authority before all the desert | ° and to strengthen eyesight. Sold — poe th ge pesca hg fsmong 9 under money refund guarantee by a fe nea |tO bring me here today. He was rious, Amd that wasn't all “He sald I wan Mirting desperately | with Dr. Wilson. You see, the day | we went through the hospital, It war | (Continued from Saturday.) Fighting for three years interrupted “him, deeply , the day was hot and his butter soft and the other “mealers” irritable Indeed, no. She wanted to| With the heat, he little or no She was young and strong, |!uncheon. Before he went out into surely a pair of willing hands—| the sun, he read the note again. To ‘was absurd about the uniform. | bis jealous eyes came a vision of had no silly ideas. There was | that excursion to the hospital Sid. to do in the world, and she | Pey, all vibrant eagerness, luminous to help. Some people could of eye. quick of bosom; and Wilson. money, but she couldn't, She | s#rdonically only offer service, earnestness and partly |drew a long And, partly | smiling, amused and interested in spite of himself. He breath, and thrust the ‘ excitement, she ended in a | note in bis pocket. Mt of nervous sob, and. going to the , stood with her back to him. | square in the sun followed her, and, because they old neighbors, she did not re It it when he put his hand on her ‘The little house across the way sat his windows had been against the heat. K. Le Moyne made impulsive movement toward it and checked himself. As he went down the Street Wil Gon't know—of course. if ¥OU)| son's car came around the corner. like that about it,” he said.5- 1. Moyne moved quietly Into gee what can be done. the shadow of the church and @ work, and a good many times | watched the car go by futile. They die, in spite of all we can do} are many things that are | | you} yoice trailed off. When he had | 145 9 «mat! pasteboard box, punched | out in his profession, he had | gome such ideal of service as girl beside him. For a moment stood there close to her, he saw | again with the eyes of his faith: } the crooked, to hurt that to relieve pain, to tht heal—not to show the other what he could do—that had spicy odors of field and woodland. his early creed. as he turned away. speak to the superintendent it you,” he said. ‘me to show you around a iit | “Perhaps you'd Today?” had’ meant in # month, or a) , It was quite a minute before | res, today, if you say. I'm oper at 4. How about 3 o'clock?” the held out both hartds, and he ik them, smiling. PYou are the kindest person I ever ” haps you'd better not F you are applying until we find if there is a vacancy. I tell one person?” b2 is very “much 0, No—We have a roomer now. interested. 1 like to tell him.” dropped her hands and looked in mock severity. interested! you?” Is he in love cy, nor’ ‘don't believe it. I'm jealous. s. know, I've always been more half in love with you myself!” | May for him—the same victorious that had made hin touch Harrison's fingers as she gave the how inatrument. it was And Sidney meant; she smiled his eyes and drew down her veil ly. m we'll say at 3,” she said, , and took an orderly and d departure. the little seed of tenderness taken root Sidney, passing in Jast week or two from girlhood | womanhood—outgrowing Joe, had only known it, as she had out the Street-—-had come that) into her first contact with a oft world, ‘True, there was Le Moyne. But K. was now of @ Street, of that small work! of dimension that she was leaving it him a note at noon, with to Tillie at Mrs, McKee's to it under his plate— ar Mr. Le Moyne—I am so ex ean hardly write. “the sui is goin, through the hospital fn ~ With: me luck. ir RCOK, Dr. Wil js after. SIDNEY PAGE. He sighed ah to take! CHAPTER V Sidney and K. Le Moyne sat under a tree and talked. In Sidney's lap with many holes, It was the day of releasing Reginald, but she had not| | yet been abie to bring herself to the point of separation. Now and then a furry nose protruded from one of the apertures and sniffed the wel come scent of pine and ‘buttonball, red and white clover, the thousand “And so,” said K. Le Moyne, “you | liked it all? It didn’t startle you?” “Well, in one way, of course—you see, I didn't know it was quite like that; all order and peace and quiet, and white beds and whispers, on top |—you know what I mean—and the misery there just the same. Have you ever gone through a hospital? K. Le Moyne was stretched out on the @rass, his arms under his head. | For this excursion to the end of the | street car line he had donned a pair of white flannel trousers and a belted Norfolk coat. Sidney had been di vided between pride in his appear. ance and fear that the Street would deem him overdressed. At her question he closed his eyes, shutting ovt the peaceful arch and the bit of blue heaven overhead. He id not reply at once. gracious, I we believe he's board box. But he opened his eyes and smiled at her. “l’'ve been around hospitals a lit: tle. I suppose now there is no ques tion about your going?” “The superintendent said I was young, but that any protege of Dr. Wilson's would certainly be given a chance.” “It is hard worlé, night and day.” | “Do you think I am afraid of | work?” “And—Joe?”" Sidney colored vigorously and sat erect. “He is very silly. He's taken all sorts of idiotic notions in his head.” “such as—"" | “Well, he hates the hospital, ot |course. As if, even if I meant to marry him, it wouldn't be years be fore he can be ready.” “Do you think you are quite fair to Joe?" “I haven't to marry | himn.”” “But he thinks you mean to. If you have quite made up your mind not to, better tell him, don’t you think? What—what are these idiotic notions?” | Sidney considered, poking a slim finger into the little holes in the box. “You can see how stupid he is, and--and young. Tor one thing, he's jealous of you.” “T see, Of course, that is silly, promised and, perhaps because jaitho your attitude toward his suspl- The shades of | lowered | ‘Good asleep!’ said Sidney to the paste hot, and we went to Henderson's for soda water. And, of course, Joo was there. It was really dramatic.” K. Le Moyne was daily gaining the lability to see things from the angle jof the Street. Jeouk! have seen no situation in two people, a man and a girl, drinking soda water together, even with @ boy lover on the next stool. Now he could view things through Joe's tragic eyes. than that. All day he had noticed how inevitably the conversation turned to the young surgeon. Did they start with Reginald, with the condition of the morning glory vines, with the proposition of taking up the quaint paving stones and macad jamizing the Street, they ended with ithe younger Wilson Sidney's active young brain, turned inward for the first time in her life, was still on herself. “Mother is plaintively resigned- and Aunt Harriet has been a trump. She's going to keep her room, It's really up to you.” “To me?” } “To your staying on. Mother itrusts you absolutely. I hope you | noticed that you got one of the apow up to you the other night. And she dian't object to this trip today. course, as she said herself, it inn't as if you were young, or at all wild.” (Continued Tuesday.) SPOKANE, April 14.—A lemon ex tract got Lhas Tootoo, an Indian, to the police station yesterday, while a | Vanilla extract drunk had the same |result for Richard Barry WOMEN ARE Mrs. Westmoreland Tells in the Following Letter. Harrison, N. ¥.—* When my first child was born I did not know about meme Lydia E. Pink- i" HII ‘| Compound and had a very hard | eg I read in | ‘the newspaper about the Vege: table Compound and when my second child came T took it and was well during the whole time, and childbirth was a ham’s Vegetable | | \ I Hy ili | and would not be without it for the | world, I do all my work and am | strong and healthy. I am nursing Fa baby, and I still take the Vege- table Compound ag it keeps a woman in good health. You may publish my testimonial for the pF wy of other ‘women, if you choose to do #0,”—Mrs. C. Westone Lanp, Harrison, N. Y. Women who suffer from displace- ments, irregularities, inflammation, ulceration, nervousness should lose no time in giving this famous root and herb rem- edy, Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, @ trial, and for speci advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham | Medicine Ce Mass, o., Lynn, And there was more | tle spoons with the custard she sent | ot} NMOE STRONG ckache, headaches and | BY | Bowser the Hougd at his heels, | Was tramping thru the Green Forest | on his way to the little sugar house among the maple trees. Farmer Brown's Boy was happy. It always makes him happy to be In the a Forest, and it makes him especially Kappy to be sugaring. That was what he was on his way to the little sugar house for now, Hoe had a busy day before him. He had to tap all the sugar maples and hang all the sap pails, The sap was running in the trees, and there was no time to lone It meant bard work, but Farmer Brown's boy likes hard work, espe | clally this kind of hard work | As he approached typ little sugar house, he saw right away that the door was open, “Must be I was care lens and didn't latch that door,” said he. “I guess the wind must have blown it open.” But when Farmer Brown's Boy looked inside the little sugar house he gave a low whistle of surprine “My goodness!” he exclaimed, looks as if there had been a tornado has been here again.” | It certainly did look as if a tornado [had been in there. Sap pailehad | been knocked down; they were scat }tered all over the floor. Things | were upset generally. Farmer Brown's Boy's first thought was that Buster Bear might | still be in there, But he soon decided |that he wasn't. Then Farmer | Brown's Boy went in and began to |pick up things. Presently he hap | pened to think of his old sweater, which he had left there, He would | take his coat off and put that old |sweater on. In this he could work more comfortably But the old sweater waa not lying on the bench wheré he had left tt | It had disappeared, He couldn't #eo it anywhere, “That's mighty funny,” muttered Farmer Brown's Boy aa he went around picking up sap pails. “It ia mighty funny what has become of that old xweater. I wonder if a | two-legged bear, instead of a four: legged bear, has been in here and has done all this mischief just to | make trouble for me.” By and by, as he stooped to pick | up & sap pail in the darkest corner of the little sugar house, he apled a A CLEAR COMPLEXION ne ree” Well-Knowa cone Bera Dr.F. M. Edwards for 17yearstreated ‘cores of women for liver and bowel ail- ments. During these years he his patients few by their olive color, These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a off the pormal action, carryi <% a time and note the pleasing results. Th of women as well as men take Dr. Edward's Olive Tablets—the ‘thea just tokeepin thepink otcondl 30c and 25c per box, All druggistas ha THORNTO N W. BURGESS (Copyright, 1919, by T. Farmer Brown’s Boy Finds His Old Sweater A month ago h* wyanweR RROWN'S BOY, with|dark mags, and instantly cuessed W. Burgess) that it was his «weater, He reached | out and grasped it, then dropped it with a yell, “Jiminy crickets!" he exclaimed, and held up his hand to f ‘ ti |, “Must be I was careless and didn't Latch that door,” said he. in here, It must be that Buster Bear) the light, Hanging from one finger | ing troops. |were two of Prickly Porky's sharp |little spears. He pulled them out | and clapped his finger in his mouth, for it was bleeding. Next story: Farmer Brown's Boy Works Without His Sweater, Take Two Back to Frisco for Trials Theodore Somsky, arrested here | April 1, at the request of San Fran leiseo authorities on a charge of |forgery, left Sunday morning for the Golden Gate city in the custody lof a San Francisco detective. Som- sky will face charges of defrauding a San Francisco bank. | C. A. Guinn, arrested in Seattle lon April 4, on a charge of robbing a | California storehouse of $38,000 worth of Mquor, was also taken to San Francisco, |Aviators Describe The Transportation club held its weekly luncheon Monday noon in the club rooms in the Railway Ex. | change building. American aviators | just back from France were sched uled to tell of their experiences while fighting the Huns, Lieut, Sid Peters was the principal speaker W. E. Boeing explained the manu facturini WAT FORIT * Huy a Victory Bond and help | | bring back our heroes to us, Wartime Experience! yy { the Mount of Olives he built a hos- “It is constructed with gray gran- ite, and in its aspect. it is as power- fully foreboding as the entrance into | the city. Inside the main entrance | his picture bangs beside that of the | | | thru five major actions on the west | {front as an ambulance driver and | was decorated by the French gov- lernment for bravery. He was at | the battles of Maison, Chemin Des Dames, Kheima, Cantigny, Cam- peigne, Noyon, Montdidier and at | the second Marne. Later he served |as gas instructor. Difficulties Great “Allenby’s army kept them up pretty well but the numerous guns with terrible effect,” Lieut. Bickel writes, “For the life of me I cannot see how @ barrage could protect advanc The crucial moment |when intensity was most required | occurred simultaneously with that moment when ‘t became necessary to jeut it off or kill the attacking | troops. “History will give Allenby credit |as being one of the greatest tacti- | clans the war has produced for the | difficulties he surmounted in cross: ing these arid Palestine hills were enormous, French Front Soft “From my experience in France I think I can truthfully say we had a soft job. “This may sound peculiar, but when one stops to realize that these boys fought three years in the des- ert and semidesert with only a can- jteen of water a day and from this supply they » obliged to wash their bodies and theirs clothes. they wished to keep only their faces clean it meant nothing to drink. On top of that they were asked to advance under direct observation and capture seemingly impregnable positions. “But they did it. Could any one | ask more? “The Germans had quite a num- ber of troops operating here. They | mixed them in with the Turks to | preserve the morale, but in this re ispect. they made another blunder, | Turk and boche refused to mix, and various incidents are recorded where they turned machine guns on each other. | | | Turks Usually Won “In arguments of this kind the Turk was usually successful, and when the boches were finished the Turks immediately surrendered to the English to save their own skins. They seemed to have had a distaste for warfard, rather than a lack of sympathy for the cause, “I think there is nothing which more clearly shows the kaiser's dream of world empire than his visit to Jerusalem in 1914. Me came in regal style with a great procession of dignitaries from the Turkish and German empixes, The procession was resplendent with banners and ) standards in gorgeous colors. “Whon he arrived, it was discov: ~lered that the Jaffa gate was not wide enough to admit his carriage Orders were immediately issued to tear down the wall and he drove thru the breach thus formed. “After the demonstration of power ¢ |chureh on Mount Zion, just inside |the walls. As the hospice house, it| |is built from gray stone, and gives | the visitor the same impression of | powerfulness and authority, ¢ | “The last thing he did before he | left, was to place a diamond crown | [on the statue of the Virgin Mary, which stands in the church of the Holy Sephulcre. Of course, it had to be more magnificent than the one | given by Queen Victoria, of Eng- land. “His departure was just as im pressive as his entrance, and the East was properly awed, “I have this story straight from | one of his guides, Hamah Ashib, who | |happened to be acting in that ca- pacity for me, and I have seen the | various testimonies myself. | Jewish Boy Wonder | ‘I have an extraordinary little Jewish lad, born in Odessa, Russia, for my striker—or batman, as the English call them. He's only. 14 years old, and came to Jerusalem seven years ago with his mother. The lad is absolutely precocious. He speaks five languages fluently, Rus- |sian, Turkish, English, French and | Arab. This afternoon I tried him on | American slang, and it didn’t faze | him. “He's an absolute marvel of in- telligence. Rates of exchange be- tween piastres and shillings he can work in his head that would take me five minutes with paper and pen- | cil. I almost feel as if he was pos- sessed by the spirit of Solomon. “The sanitary conditions in Jeru- salem have been pretty well taken care of, and the board of commis- sioners—Colonel John Finley of New York, Major Stanley Stoner of St. Louis, and Major A, C. Lowenstein of New York, asked me to take charge of the situation in Aleppo. Syria, 400 miles north of here. “Aleppo lies in the Euphrates | basin, on the Berlin-Bagdad railroad, jand the conditions there are deplor- jable. The commission is putting in |a hospital and some Armenian | refugee camps. My duties will be to | build sewerage systems and water | supplies, besides delousing plants }and various other corollaries.” j Big Crowd Attends Opening of Market Between 25,000 and 30,000 pros- Pective customers attended the open- ing of the Liberty pubic market Saturday, ' Thousands of the new govern: ment issue of Victory threecent stamps, recently made to commem- orate the signing of the armistice, were given away as souvenirs to the visitors. ‘To stimulate interest in the opening day, a guessing contest, fs to what the souvenir would be, was inaugurated. Those winning prizes in the contest were: John M. Richards, 3025 Estella st., $10; Mrs. J. Moss, 412 New York block, $ Miss Ruth Sobloser, 606 28rd ave. | » $1; Miss F, Ballaine, 4708 15th $1; Mrs. . ‘Trazinni, R 1, $1; Mrs, George Gar jLvon, 926 Second ave. W., $1) andj Norma Smith, 1726 Bellevue ave., $1. Cc. = druggists. [ i Ey i i " 5 } i ; k t L it E & é Optometrist Kramined and