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“MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1920, pues out discontinued patterns prices. Table illustrated made inches in diameter. o 0] @ o a O] oO 0] o S WHERE PIKE We have an unusually large stock of Dining Tables, and to reduce same to normal we will close real saving to purchaser during the period of high Extends to 6 feet when fully opened. Can be had in either Fumed or Golden finish. Special at $21.75. We can supply you with a fine assortment to choose from if you want a 54-inch-top table. Liberal Credit Extended FURROTORE CO.IN for $21.75 Well Worth at Least One-third More at a price that will be a of solid oak, has top 42 MEETS FIFTH fala 1} o & oO o o 0} 1} 0} oa a a 1} oa oa 1] O} a sae irge Recognition A of Irish Republic A resolution calling upon congress to extend recognition to the Irish republic and protesting against the enactment of the Irish coercion act 'U nual picnic at Wildwood park Sun- @ay. More than 6,000 attended the celebration. Edward J. Coen deliv the address of the day. i i 5 I if ATONIC Te ls oo tw ‘Ynstani ‘Gessy «Ey food : many caused by See Toetin he bestrenealy, ietabeee Yises | Feascapetpos ; Guaranteed te satisfy or money refunded own Esots cide. Vieak try hte ‘This Is Better Than Laxatives BR Tablet Boch Night Fer A Week WI Correct Your end nourished body and elimination means fermentation, putri- and the formation of poisonous which are absorbed by the blood carried through the body. is weakn headaches, coated tongue, inactive liver, attacks, loss of energy, nerv- ea Bppetite, impoverished w complexion, pimples, akin Sod often times serious Ordinary laxatives, ts, 3 ry relieve for I purges and ca- calomel and the @ few hours, but lasting benefit can only come through use of medicine that tones strengthens the digestive as the eliminative organs. 25¢ box of Natures Ri lets) and take one tablet eac! & week. Relief will follow first dose, but a few ag feel and realize lest benefit. When you get ned out and f just ht rou need not take medicine every, ,ay—an occasional NR ‘Tablet cep your system in good fondition and you will always feel Your best. Remi r, keeping well is @astier and cheaper than getting we! Nature’s Remedy (NR Tabiets) are guarant ded eed and Fecomm NR Tonight - Geta Tomorrow Feel Right|2. Box i n Fy Boe ih = E alunite Pind Out What Causes Your Suffer- ing and Go After It J a “What is Rheumatism? ts « ques that has not yet been answered ly satisfactorily. There are still tt opinions as to its exact use, but Little doubt that ifs pains real. @ medical profession is prac- ly agreed upon one point, how- , and that is that Rheumatism is than a series of local pains, that the real cause of the dis- is deep-seated, and can not pos- be reached by remedies applied je surface. forms of this disease have ' an 3 Sn es if j eH re SEARCH OUT THE GERMS OF RHEUMATISM New: York-to-Nome Fliers at Wrangell | WRANGELL, Alaska, Aug. 16-— The New York to Nome army flyers landed on Sergieff island, near here, Saturday afternoon, 2 hours and 27 minutes after deaving Hazelton, B. C. ‘They hopped off here this afternoon * ‘tehorse, Yukon territory, 300 miles distant. Captain St, Clair Street, one of the pilote, said that the trip is being made to test the possibilities in long distance fights by airplane, military mail exprese and general utility routes, Almost the entire populace of Wrangell met the flyers when they landed and saw them hop off today. |Girl Flier Turns 87 Loops in Air | .MINEOLA, Long Inland, Aug. 16. | Mise Louise Bromwell, 20-year-old aviatrix of Cincinnati, broke the | world's record for women in looping the loop in an airplane when she made $7 consecutive loope at the Curtiss airdrome yesterday after Qa & part of the dedication of ‘was formerly Hazelhurst field. aviatrix with 25 loops the best previous record last OF A GOOD AUTO, STATES BLAIR Portland Man Searched in “Vain for Relief From and Rheu- matism Until He Got Tanlac “When a man has suffered from the worst kind of stomach trouble and rheumatism for over twenty years, and then finds a medicine that gets rid of all bis troubles and makes him feel like a brand new man, I think it is up to bim to tell about his experience for the benefit of others,” said H. J. Blair, ma chinist at the Elite garage, 12th and Jefferson streets, Portiand, Oregon “Before. I began taking Taniac 1 couldn't touch a bit of mgat or fruit without being in misery for hours afterwards. I used to dread eating anything at all, and the little I did force myself té take would sour on my stomach and form gas that bloated me up until I was as tight as a drum and the pain was awful I became so dizzy at times I could) hardly see where I was going and/ also suffered with headaches that almost drove me distracted. My kidneys bothered me a@ fot and my back hurt-me so much it was agony to stoop over. I had awful attacks of rheumatiam that nearly laid me out altogether. I must have spent the price of a good automobile on treatment and medicines but never got any relief to speak of until I tried Tantac, “But six bottles of Tanlac have done wonders for me and for the first time in twenty years I am free of all pain and feeling just fine. I can eat anything I want apd never have a touch of indiges- tion. My kidneys are now work |ing properly, the pains in my back have gone, and all signs of the rheu- }matism have disappeared. 1 sleep jlike a log every night and get up in the mornings feeling rested and refreshed. I can’t find words to express my gratitude for all that Tanlac has done for me and hope all who suffer as I did will profit by my experience.” Taniac is sold in Seattle by Bartell Drug Stores under the pergonal di- tection of a special Tanlac, represen: tative. been found to come from tiny germa in the blood, which set up their col- ony in the muscles, or joints and be gin to multiply by the million. You can easily understand, therefore, that the only intelligent method of treat- | ing such cases is through the blood. | 8.8.8. is su®h @ thorough blood purifier and cleanser that it can bes relied upon to search out all disease germs and impurities and eliminate them from the system, and this is} why it is such an excellent remedy for Rheumatiam. Go to your drugstore and get a bottle of 6.8.8. today, and if your cane needs special attention, you can | obtain medical advice free by writing PREFACE Which Explains Things Father calls me Mary, Mother calls me Marie, Everybody else calls me Mary Marie, The rest of my name is Anderson, I'm 18 years ld, and I'm @ cron. ourrent and a contradiction. That is, Sarah says I'm that. (Sarah is my old nurse), She says she read it onee—that the children of ynlikea were always @ crosscurrent and a contradiction. And my father and mother are unlikes, and I'm the children, That is, I'm the child, I'm all there is, And now I'm going to be a bigger crosscurrent and con- tradiction than ever, for I'm going to live balf the time with mother and the other half with father. Mother will go to Boston to live, and father will stay here—a divorce, you know. I'm terribly excited over It. None of the other gftls have got @ divorce in their families, and I always did like to be different. Besides, it it to be awfully interesting; more #o than just living along, com- mon, with your father and mother in the same house all the time-—espe- clally if it's been anything like my house with my father and mother in itt That's why I've decided to make a book of it—that ts, it realty will be a book, only I shall have to call it a diary, on account of father, you know. Won't it ‘be funny when I don't have to do things on sacount of father? And-I won't, of course, the six months I'm living with mother in Boston, But, oh,: my!— the six months I'm living here with him—whew! But then, I can stand it I may even like it-—eome. Any- how, it'll be different And that's something. Well, about making this tnto a book. As I started to say, he wouldn't let me. I know he wouldn't. He says novels are a silly waste of time, if not absolutely wicked. But a diary—oh, he loves digries! He keeps one himself, and he told me it would be an excellent and instructive discipline for me to do it, too~—net down the weather and what I did every day. id ‘The weather and wnat I did every day, indeed! Lovely reading that would make, wouldn't it? Like this: “The sun shines this morning. I got up, ate my breakfast. went to school, came home, ate my dinser, played one hour over to Carrie Hey- wood's, practiced on the piano one hour, studied another hour. Talked with mother upstairs in her room about the sunset and the snow on the trees. Ate my supper. Was talked to by father down in the ein “4 ated taking care not to be light: and frivolous. (He meant lke mother, only he didn't say it right out loud. You don't have to say some things right out in plain words, you know.) Then I went to bed.” Just as if I was going to write my novel like that! Not much I am. But I shall call it a diary. Oh, yes, I shall call it @ diary—till I take it to be printed. Then I shall give it its true name—a novel. And I'm going to tell the printer that I've left it for him to make the spelling right, and put fn all those tiresome little commas and periods and ques tion marks that everybody seems to make such @ fuss about. If I write the story part, I can’t be expected to be bothered with looking up how yords are spelt, every five minutes, nor fussing over putting In a whole lot of foolish little dots and dashes. ‘As if anybody who was reading the story cared for that part! The story's the thing. I love stories. I've written lots of them for the giris, too—little short ones, I mean; not a long one like this is going to be, of course. And it'll be so exciting to be living @ story in- stead of reading it-—only when you're living a story you can’t peek ofer to the back to see how it's all coming out. I shan't like that part. Still it may be all the more exciting, after all, not to know what's coming. I like love stories the best. Father's got—oh, lots of books in the library, and I've read stacks of them, even some of the stupid old histories and biographies. I had to read them when there wasn't anything else to read. But there weren't many love stories.. Mother's got a few, tho— lovely ones—and some books of poetry, on the little shelf in her room. But I read all those ages ago. That's why I'm so thrilled over this new one—the one I'm living, I mean. For, of course, this will be a love story, There'll be my love story in two or three years, when I grow up, and while I'm waiting there's father’s and mother’s. Nurse Sarah says thay when you're divorced you're free, just like you were before you were married, and that sometimes they marry again. That, made me think right away What If father or mother, or both of them, married again? And I should be there to see it, and the courting and all! Wouldn't that be some love story? Well, I just guess! And only think how all the girle would envy me—and they just living along their humdrum everyday ex- istence with fathers and mothers al ready married and living together, and nothing exciting to look forward to, For really, you know, when you come right down to it, many girls that have got the chance I've got. And so‘that's why I've decided to write It Into a book, Oh, yes, I know I'm young—only 13. But I feel really awfully old; and you know a woman is as old as she feels, Besides, Nurse Sarah says I am old for my age, and that it’s no wonder, the kind of a life I’ve lived. And maybe that is #0, For, of course, it has been different, living with a father and mother that are getting ready to be divorced, from what it would have been living with the loving, happy-ever-after kind Nurse Sarah says it’s a shame and a pity, and that it’s the children that always suffer. But I'm not suffering —not a mite. I'm just enjoying it It's so exciting. fully to Chief Medical Adviser. 603 1 Swift Laboratory. Atlanta Ge ; Of course, if I was going to lone there aren't | | THE 8 EATTLE STAR Mary Marie Py EleanorHPorter COPYRIGHT 1 either one, it would be different. But I'm not, for I am to live with mother six months, then with father. Bo 1 still have them both. And, really, when you come right down to {t, I'd rather take them separate that way. Why, separate they're just perfectly all right, like that-that— whatdo-you-call-it powder? — sedlit- ser, or something like that. Any- how, it's that white powder tbat you mix in two glasses, and that looks just like water till you put them to gether, And then, oh, my! such « fuss and fiz and splutter! Weil, it's that way with father and mother. Itlh be lots easier to take them separate, I know. For now I can be Mary «ix months, then Marie six months, and not try to be them both all at once, with maybe only five minutes between them. And I think I shall love both father and mother better separate, too. Of course, I love mother, and I know I'd just adore father if he'd let me —he's #0 tall and fine and splendid, when he's out among folks. All the girls are simply crazy over him. And I am, too, Only, at home—well, it’s so hard to be Mary always. And you see, he named me Mary— But I mustn't tell that here. That's part of the story, and this ts only the preface. I'm going to begin it tomorrow—the real story—chapter one. But, there—I mustn't call it « “chapter” out Joud. Diaries don't have chapters, and this is a diary. I mustn't forget that it's @ diary, But I can write it do chapter, for it's going to be @ novel, after it's got done being « diary. CHAPTER 1 1 Am Born ‘The sun was slowly setting In the west, cating golden beams of light into the gomber old room. ‘That's the way it ought to begin, I know, and I'd like to do it, but I can't. I'm beginning with my being born, of course, and Nurse Sarah mays the sun wasn't shining at all. It was night and the stars were out She remembers particularly about the stars, for father was in the ob servatory, and couldn't be disturbed (We never disturb father when he's there, you know.) And so he didn't even know he had a daughter until the next morning mm he came out to breakfast. And be was late to that, for he stopped to write down something he had found out about one of the consternations in the night, He's always finding out something about those old stars just when we want him to pay attention to some thing’ else. And, oh, I forgot to say ‘that I ksow it f “constellation,” and not “consternation.” But I used to call them that when I was @ little girl, and mother said it was a good name for them, anyway, for they were a consternation to her ail right. Ob, said right off afterward that she didn’t mean that, and that I must forget she said it. Mother's ai- ways saying that about things she aaye. Well, as If was miying, father didn't know until after breakfast that he had @ little daughter, (We never tell him disturbing, exciting things just before meals.) And then nurse told him. 1 asked what he eald. and nurse laughed and gave her funny little shrug to he: shoulders. “Yea, what did he say, indeed?” she retorted. “He frowned, looked kind of dazed, then muttered: “Well, we'l, upon my soul! Yos, to be sure!" ‘Then he came in to see me. .1 don't know, of course, what he thought of me, but I guess he didn't | think much of me, from what nurse said. Of course, I was very, very small, and I never yet saw a@ little bit of baby that was pretty, o: looked as if it was much account So maybe you couldn't really blame him. Nurse said he looked at me, mut- tered, “Weill, well, upon my soul!” again, and seemed really quite inter ested till they started to put me in his arms. Then he threw up both hands, backed off, and cried, “Oh, no, not’ He turned to mother and hoped she wan feeling pretty well, then he got out of the room just as quick as he could. And nurse said that was the end of it, so far as pay- ing any more attention to me was concerned for quite a while, He was much more interested in his new star than he was in his new daughter. We were both born the same night, you see, and that star was lots more consequence than I was, But, then, that's father all over, And that’s one of the things, I think, that bothers mother. I heard her say once to father that she didn't see why, when there were #0 many, many stars, a paltry one or two more need to be made such a fuss about. And I don’t, either. But father just groaned, and shook his head, and threw up his hands, and looked so tired. And that’s all ho said, That's all he says lots of times. But it's enough. It's enough to make you feel so small and mean and insignificant as if you were just a little green worm crawling on the wround, Did you ever feel like a green worm crawling on the ground? It’s not a pleasant feeling at all. Well, now, about the name. Of course, they had to begin to talk about naming me pretty soon; and nurse said they did talk a lot, But they couldn't settle it. Nurse said that that was about the first thing that showed how teetotally utterly they were going to disagree about things. Mother wanted to call me Viola, after her mother, and father wanted to call me Abigail Jane after his mother; and they, wouldn't elther one give in to the other. Mother was sick and nervous, and cried a lot those days, and she used to sob out, that if they thought they were going to name her darling Httle baby that awful Abigail Jane, they were very much mistaken; that she would never give her consent to it—never. Then father would say in his cold, stern way: “Very well, then, you needn't. But neither shall I give my consent to my daughter's being named that 4 absurd Viola, The child is a human) being-—-not a fiddle in an orchestra And that’s the way It went, nurge said, until everybody was just about crazy, Then somebody suggested “Mary.” And father said, very well, they might call me Mary; and mother said certainly, she would | conrent to Mary, only she should) Pronounce it Marie. And #o it wan nettied, Father called me Mary, and | mother called me Marie, And right | away everybody else began to call | me Mary Marie, And that’s the way | it's been ever since, Of course, when you stop ‘to think of it, it's sort of queer and funny, tho naturally I didn't think of it, growing up with it as 3 did, and always having it, until suddenly one day it occurred to me that none of the other girls had two names, one for their father, and one for their mother to call them by. I began to notice other things then, too, Their fathers and mothers didn’t live in rooms at opponite ends of the house. Their fathers and mothers seemed to Uke each other, and to talk together, and to have little jokes and laugh: together, and twinkle with their eyes, That ts, most of them did. And if one wanted to go to walk, or to @ party, or to play some gam: the other didn't always look tired and bored, and say, “Oh, very well, if you like.” And then both not do it. whatever it was, That is, I never saw the other-giris’ fathers and mothers do that way; and I've seen & lot of them, too, fof I've been at the ether girls’ houses a lot for a jong time. You see, I don't stay at home much, ouly when I have to. We don't have a round table with @ red cloth and a lamp on it, and children ‘round it playing games and doing things, and fathers and moth- ers reading and mending. And it's lots jollier where they do have them. Nurse says my father and mother ought never to have been married. That's what I heard her tell our Bridget one day. So the first chance I got I asked her why, and what she meant. “Oh, la! Did you hear that? she | demanded, with the quick look over jher shoulder that she ya gives when she's talking about father and SILKS Upper Main Fleer HIS assortment of silks regular, stock compri Lei of broken, lines mace inch printed Pussy Willow Pussy Willow satin; 40-in $2.45. 48¢c Main Floor MR @ special sale on Tuesda: inches wide. range. Formerly Thc. Special a yard, 48¢, $6.95 Upper Main Fler and 38-inch silk Duvetyn, substantial lain shades of tan, beaye mother. “Well, little pitchers do have big eara, sure enough” “Little pitchers,” indeed! As if I didn't know what that meant! I'm no child to be kept im the dark con- cerning things I ought to know. And I told her so, sweetly and pleas- antly, but with firmness and dignity, I made her tell me what she meant, and I made her tell me a lot of other things about them, too. You see, I'd just decided tb write the book, #0 T wanted to kntw ing she could tell me. I didn't tell hér about the book, of course. I know too much to tell secrets to Nurse Sarah! But I showed my excitement and interest plainly; and when she saw how giad I was to hear everything she could tell, she talked a lot, and really seemed to enjoy It, too. You see, she was here when mother first came as a bride, #0 she knows everything. She was father’s nurse when he was a little boy; then she stayed to take care of father’s mother, Grandma Anderson, who was an invalid for a great many years and who' didn't die till just after I was born, Thén she took care of me. 80 she's always been in the family, ever since she was a young girl. She's awfully old now— “most sixty First I found out how they hap pened to marry—father and mother, I'm talking about now—only nurse says she can't see yet how they did happen to marry, just the same, | they're so teetotally differént But this is the story: Father went to Boston to attend a big meeting of astronomers from all over the world, and they had banquets and receptions where eau ful ladies went in their pretty evening dreaser, and my mother was one af them. (Her father was one of the astronomers, nurse said) The meetings lasted four days, and nurse wid she guessed my father saw a lot of mother during that time. Anyhow, he was invited to their home, and he stayed another four days after the meetings were over The next thing they knew here at the house, Grandma Anderson had & telegram that he was going to be married to Mins Madge Desmond, and would they please send him Baldness Conquered INDIAN’S SECRET FREE A vastness almost ebun pletely Balke who Nad tried mess: erous ies. Settee, ob. « prosf > o 10 conta, silver or stamps,.to 3B. Retuein, BE-84, See. F, New York, N.Y some things be wanted, and he was|her right then, without going on @ wedding trip and would| minute He'd never hap; But be’é found 1t wae fust as sudden as that /4nd nurse said And surprising'—nurse says « thuo | 40 but to make the best of it, get ready for her. Irate Husband Fires month, derclap out of a clear blue sky couldn't have astonished them more. Father was almost 30 years old at that time, and he'd never cared a thing for girls, nor paid them the least Uttle bit of attention. So they supposed, of course, that he was a hopeless old bachelor and wouldsrt ever marry. He was bound up in his stars, even then, and was al- ready beginning to be famous, be- cause of a comet he'd discovered. He was a professor in our college here, where his father had been president, * His father had just died a few months before, and nurse said maybe that was one reason why father got caught in the matrimo nial ngt ike that (Those are her words, not mine, The idea of call ing my mother a net! But nurse never did half appreciate mother.) But father just worshipped bis father, and they were always to-| gether— grandma being sick 80} much; and so when he died my father was nearly beside himself, | and that’s one reason they were so anxious he should go to that meet-| — ing in Bostoh, They, thought it| might take his mind off himself, | nurse said. But they never thought of its putting his mind on a wife! So far ag his doing it right up| quick like that was concerned, nurse | said that wasn't so surprising. For all the way up, if father wanted any-| thing he insisted on having it, and | having it right away then. He never wanted to wait a minute, So when | he found a girl he wanted, he wanted Boldt's fat ed in “Gee, but good!"—Adv. apple pie Summer-Spoiled Skin Removed by Absorption As undue summer expomure usually | aves an undesirable surface of tan, red: | ness of roughness, often freckles, too, the | nenaible thing to to. remove such | surface. There's nothing better for tht than ordinary mercollzed wax, wh actually absorbs an unwholesome com- plexion, The thin layer of surface skin ig iteelt absorbed, gently, gradually, there's no Inconventence, no detention in- doors. Spread the wax lightly over the entire face at bedtime and take it off in the morning with warm wn you will get | | 0 | | expect marked tmprove- hen the underlying skin on will be 1 of spotless purity and beautiful whiteness, Don't let those summer wrinkles worry you; worry breeds more wrinkles. Raniah them by bathing the face in @ solution aif pint witch-haxel,” Use for @ while this will be found won Hy effect Adler-i-ka | Helps 1221 “COR UNINERSET hird Ave : ( Mr. Hoeft! “I had stomach trouble for seven years and one bottle Adler--ka com- pletely CURED me. I still use it as a family laxative with good results.” (Signed) B, Hoeft. Adler4-ka flushes BOTH upper and} lower bowel so completely it relieves ANY CASE gas on the stomach or| sour stomach. Removes foul matter which poisoned stomach for months. | Often CURES constipation. Prevents | appendicitis, Adier-i-ka is a mixture | of buckthorn, caseara, glycerine and nine other simple ingredients. Swift Drug Co., Bartell Drug Co. and all leading druggists SPECIAL, A YARD $2.45 Meteor and 40-inch Crepe de Chine in medium navy, white, pink, yellow, sand, fawn, old blue, rose and taupe, but not each color of every quality. Special for a quick clean-up, a yard, 75¢c RIBBONS TUESDAY, A YARD bon section has taken from the reg ular stock and reduced for @ quick clean- up 300 yards of hair bow ribbona, 5% The assortment consists of piain colored Taffetas, fancy edged Taf- fetas and fancy stripes in a wide color SILK DUVETYN SPECIAL, A YARD HE splendid reductions in this ,i stock readjustment sale of 36 excellent opportunity to secure at savings, a high grade fabric to develop your new suit or dress. The variety is composed of ue, navy, gray, squirrel and black. ary, of the custom house, yesterday daughter and shot away the lower Portion of his wife's chased them thru a friend's apart- ment and down four flights of stairs into the street, Street police station, said he intend- wife, her husband was jealous, It Worked Until urday night he told.his roommate he treaa, Anderson is minus $110 Mon- day. from our ise? 300 up of 40- 3 40-inch ch Crepe SY ih f uct wD. ¢, ae Beautiful Silk SKIRTS to” $15.00 to Seornd fear, Frry high-grade Silk Skirts from our.regular stock offer an exceptional value in this sale, as they are not only adapted for sum- mer wear but are appropri in style, color and patterns for y fall occasions. The asso composes the smartest ima; _ models, designed of Silk Georgettes Fan-ta-st Crepe de Chine Baronette Satin Silk Faille and Taffeta y, the rib Tuesday, offers an in plain colors, brocaded weaves and stripes. Sizes 25- to 31-inch waist measures. Reduced to $15.00 for a quick cleanup. r, French at Wife and Girl NEW YORK, Aug. 16.—Emile Cap- Make Your Own Complex Treat If you would have a” tomplexion, one which you exceedingly attractive, this recipe Go to any store and get ten cents ordinary oatmeal and from any store a bottle of derwillo. oatmeal as directed in age of derwillo, then lo! the marvelous change. One § cation will astonish you. Be to read the announcement appear in this paper, entitled to Make Your Own © Treatment at Home.” It gives” details for using this recipe. Rochester $8.50 All-Copper Wash Boilers, Special $5.98 Here Is a Remarkable Bargain’ All-copper Heavy Rochester — Wash Boilers, made with sta tionary handles and fit-in cover. A Big Special for Tuesday Screen Doo $2.19 and $3.49 LOT 1—SPECIAL AT $2.19 These are Stained Screen Doors with a strong frame; covered with black screen wire; sizes 32x80, 34x82, and 36x84. Special at.............$2.19 LOT 2—SPECIAL AT $3.49 These Doors are made of 11%-inch select Southern pine; they are strongly constructed, being mortised at all joints; frames are finished in natural varnish and are covered with black screen wire. Sizes 32x80, 84x82, 36x84. Special at ceeee ences Pde 4D 4-Gallon Stone Jar and Cover Special at $1.19 A 4-gallon Stone Jar and cover—just what you need for pickles or preserving eggs. Special at $1.19 2-Burner Folding Gasoline Camp Stove—Special at $6.49 This is the ideal stove for camp cooking; it folds up like a suit case when not in use, Special at $6.49 —————— EE EES tally wounded his 21-year-old right ear as he Coudry, locked in the Charles to kill himself after shooting his Mrs, Coudry, who is 42, said He Told Secret ‘When 0. Anderson went to bed the Main hotel, 208 Main st., Sat- ways hid his wealth under the miat- THE STORE FOR USEFUL ARTICLES