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» these plants for the benefit of state improvements; the s ' Cement manufacturing business or any other Provisions of this measure.” = By the time the highw Fi - x a One side of paper only. — Bign your name. | Baitor The Star if Mr. Minor. , Doesn't it sisike you, Mr BS Irish question settled once and he Nipponese, ’ of Sir Edward ‘ol Previous to the war under of John Redmond the ‘the rs sree E broad daylicht, ae was Alan Bell, | men. j breeding is the best se- deurity I Chesterfield. Bat present attempting to run the The Seattle Star By wall, ovt of city, He per month; & montha & $5.06, im the State of Washington, Outside 44.60 for ¢ montha oF #908 per year, Hy oni Her, ity, # montha, 92.76 f the atate, The per month, year. ide per week, Condemned by Its Advocates A Carlyon bill propaganda circular, distributed by the Auto Club of Western Washington, asserts that if the cement trust should try to hold up the state the way board would have power, under section 3 of that measure, “to take Over plants, machinery, sources of supply or anything needed, and to operate endeav y commis |sourees of 3 uw A man’s own good} bonds by raising their bids against other} ill manners.— _ 000 would be whittled dow stters to the tor— Write briefly. Use ink or typewriter. 000,000 or less Still further inroads could under the provision of section for the furnishing by the sta ANSWER TO supplies or materials needed MINOR name| chiner, on the Irish situation, the Being an appeal for U. tien on Ireland's behalf. @ays one can hardly pick up Or magazine without coming some echo of ¢ sh can wail, all duly fo its probable effect or @leetions, but it was no one knows where; to for ¢ your chipery, tools and supplies. & column and a half page to suc sh as flowed from ions and the interpretations Editor, | Spokesman-Review. tm this city there are at Many people of British descent English, Welsh, Canad there are Irish or Irish Ameri ir midst? Yet from the ni one element and the siler other, one would think the of all the “horrible atrocities” Miner piles up against them | “bloody King George (:)" B Of British birth myself Mesure both yourself and your that there ts not a Britisher | at home, in the colonies, or in @ountry but would be glad ‘the bottom of his heart to see There is much ado because for governor, lea: his farm to Jap And with what ehemence certain proJap, are “nosing it ar i to question | thousands of Jap yens for the But let out that for money THIS year ‘This i» merely to point have joined The Star's Judge Burke, ted right. You will e . te Wouldn't it be a treat, tho, to see turaih gay, “If that Is the case. vt truthful reply to that is,/ of the Irish themselves.” | (was there a nation that bet- the eaying, “A house Bgainst itself cannot stand.” the past 15 years the Irish ques- : been approaching a solu- Treland was never as pros @s in that period, and despite é if Mr. Brown, I wish you would handle work twice as hard and hold her & responsible cog in’ that business @uestion was never so near ts than when, on the out Bk of hostilities of the great war, | "1 n the house; support to the that British} be relieved for service abroad. the Casement fiasco, fol-| However, it often happens the business world, is timid and “What if I make a mistake? the past does not shirk responsibility He their sincerity, got out a special Jap edition a short time ago and collected many | mare. farm to Japs FIVE years ago is not as bad as advertising Jap virtues bygones be bygones. is the success of the future. and judges, not by mistakes, but by successes. He who goes steadily abead and later advances to the “bess’” ate can go into the or necessary to fulfill the} sion had bought the “plants, machinery, supply and anything else needed to ope the plants,” and the contractors had discounted the te to cover the heavy loss of selling the depreciated obligations of the state, as Carlyon plan advocates are proposing, the $30,000,- m by many millions—just | how much no one can know, not improbably to $20,-| for the actual work of paving. be made on the $30,000,000 4 of the Carlyon bill, which authorizes the highway board to supply tools, machinery, supplies and materials to contractors, as follows The state highway board shall have power to provide ate of any tools, machinery, for such work, and in the event the state highway board undertakes to furnish tools, machinery, supplies or materials, such tools, ma- supplies and materials shall be purchased by the state highway board in open competitive bidding. The public is asked by the advocates of the Carlyon plan to launch the state upon a dangerous voyage that will end a $30,000,000 bond issue upon a weakening bond market; to throw away $12,000,000 in “ interest; to plunge, at the discretion of the state highway board, into the expenditure of a large part of the $30,000,000 in cement plants, sources of cement making materials, ma ne Carlyon bill grows worse under study of its provis- of its advocates.—Spokane Bridges, Japs, Etc. Robert Hridges, farmerlabor candidate five years ago. Seattic papers, who until now were und,” even tho one of these papers Of course, the leasing of « how surely Seattle will be united on the Jap question, as the other papers apparently see the light and campaign against The only ones left to advocate Jap-love are Sam Hill, Dr. Murphy, Dr. Matthews and Bob Bridges. the further aggression of Hilt and Burke casting their votes Mt settied forthwith?” and for Bridges, Yet what else can they do and be consistent? Responsibility The successful executive divides responsibility. see, not to take care of every little detail. Give @ person responsibility and that person will gain confidence tn his own ability and find greater pleasure in his work, Black passes letters to his secretary with the words, “Miss Hila work ts to over these,” Mbe Brown ts guing to head just a little higher. She ts machine, and not a mere human automaton turning out just so many letters a day. that a woman, afraid of shouldering responsibility she asks, What of that? The error of who has newty entered The wise executive knows this, denk. seeks it. He shows that he is later by the Dublin insurrec. | Willing and eager to shoulder it for he knows that responsibility walks hand in hand with Probably the British govern- for “her harsh measures. They may been mistaken in that, but you are engaged in a deadly! in front, it is hardly the to expect one to gently slap of a benevolent gentleman 3 to stab you in the fa it? And so the merry game | on from bad to worse. But after all that, and in the midst war, Lioyd George called a of all the Irish factions Gave them carte blanche to Up a constitution of any kind of absolute separation, but again it was an Irishman, O'Donnell, who, after an it had been reached, upset Whole arrangement again. The is, Mr. Editor, that there was ly of men in and out of Ireland did not want to see the Irish settled, and that same body : Still a 10 light and heat are of the forces or other properties of He may observe, of Nature, he may formulate acquaintance with his environment The race has been placed in a | less docs it understand therm. covery, there are old ones Man still is lying on his and well as elect. itty by a system of terroriem would hardly be tolerated in country outside Russia—certain Mot by any Anglo-Saxons. In capacity and power, What wins for There is the playroom to explore, to be known back befare kicking up his heefs; he hasn't But at that, he is a promising child! “him” wins Baby When man grows cocky and boasts of his conqupst of Nature, he forgets that he doesn't know what matter, time, life, electricity, gravity, He is at a loss when it comes to defining any the universe. he may learn the laws governing the manifestations theories, but seemingly a more intimate has been denied him. nurvery, the confines of which it can never see; it has been given toya which it cannot play skilfully, tar there are new toys awaiting din- the fire, sucking his thumb learned to walk. Perhaps there would be more enthusiagm, if the people could select as A late fall protongeth the golf widow's loneliness. If you've got to use a hammer, build a house. part of the U. %. could it hap-|~ & street car and shot to death | ignating the next victim of his gun I may wrong, but he streets of doesn't seem to have been that kind . and no man have guts/of a “Father of this country,” and if either to help the man him-|I were an American-born, 1 think J OF to notify the police etation|should slightly resent the compart @round the corner, nor to as witnesses in the case| rd? Let the reaction to the ia murders answer that q be ex-officeholc in the yet von. | As for Mayor MacSwiney, tell me, |Mr. Minor, why is he any more of a| ue®| martyr, being a voluntary eulch than i# the policeman or soldier shot | from ambush while doing his duty| n being | tor HIS country? But perhaps you eee Trish streets. Piffie! Mr.| caraphrase the words of the Roman | Why, man alive, don’t you prdetor to Sp the gladiator, | Seat enty ‘a’ few moons ago| «tet the carrion there are no Fan machine guns thru the , : patriots but Irishmen.” Beside, why of your own Se and for} . the | didn’t you mention that real oo } r, John Redmond, whom his mistook this piace yr, Jo ti B : BiGuakt they could countrymen slew by breaking | heart when they wrecked hs i aba laarapade Ufework by accepting Sinn Fein? the ballot box? be | Hfework by 4 F Machine guns? And speaking of patriotiatn, Mr. | bave machine guns; what do|Pditor, It amuring to observe | expect them to use when you | these days Irish are play- | &n insurrection? Pea-shoot- |'n# we . for the nited |ment of U. 8, independence lever since. Amusing, because, when | one reflects on i, the bulk of those | colonists who fought for American Jindependence must have been Eng: lish or of Englieh descent—but they never brag about it as such, Also I venture the assertion that in any | U, 8. war since 1812 there have been | just as many English, Scotch and | Welsh in U. S. armies as there have |been Irishmen, the difference ng |that they do not go as tish- | Americans, but «imply as British or |} American and say nothing about it Mr. Minor says that Great Britain is always trying to undermine the United States. Well, he have our| . George uved cleaner meth-| differences and our rivalries; we'd| Aino I have never rend that} be a dead pair of nations if we | had himself declared the presi-| hadn't. But we will not forget, of the United Staten and|eithér, that string of well-known in htway left for France to raise | cidents from the time of Great Brit- until the scrapping was over:jain sponsoring the Monree doctrine Minor wails to the An that machine guns rican are if tacug rot; aia, | upset an |i" without It can't Of course ia how at th y have done both in the for “brutal King George,” 111 wery man of Iritish origin in ttle who ‘read’ that laughed out fit. Any man with an atom of ormation or intelligence knows George has no more to do fuling Ireland than does De himself. And speaking of gentleman, it sounds very crude B® whole lot of us to hear him MacSwiney lauded aa the peers Washington, Franklin, 5 do you get that way? Mugh Mt may annoy you, Ms Minor, je Washington was of English it and even in his day it bad been out of fashion to remove political opponents by asrasel that a man could be dragged | meanwhile from a rafe distance des-to the U. 8. naval officers’ declara- tien that “blood is thicker than ater”; to the Manila Bay incident, and lately to the fact that the two r worked side by ride for the suppression of the German subma- rine menace at a time when, I fear, rome of Mr. Minor'n Sinn Fein brothers were giving aid and com: fort to the enemy by allowing him to establich naval supply bases on thelr coasts. Like #0 many others of his kind of late, Mr. war between the U. 8. and Great Britain on Ireland's account. Mr. Minor must know that there is an arbitration treaty between Great Britain and this country, and that for these many years all differen between them have been settled by this peaceful method, and not by ny means always to the advantage of Great Britain, elther. And con sidering the state of. the world at the present time and the state the two nations themselves are in, if the Anglo-Saxon race has gone crazy achiev | enough to want to commit suicide| hands of the police?” axked "74/4 ould not choose any more ef-| fectual method than to «tart a war jover Ireland, and after the smoke} of it had died down we could turn the ruins of London and New York over to the cheerful bunch of mur. derers who at present would like us to think they rule Ireland, But that won't happen till het! freezes over. There are too many |people of sound Anglo-Saxon com-| sifal’ at 10:30 mon sense in both countries. Yours truly, WM. WYKES, Veteran Spanish-American War. Veteran World War 1916-1919, and wouldn't have mentioned either except for this super-patriot of another country! Also an Amer jean citi™an of 23 years’ standing and not even “British” American at that, but one who says, with that real American, T. R. “Damn the hyphens!” Minor hints darkly at) THE SEATTLE STAR O.HENRY Story a Day ‘Tommy’s Burglar Copyright, 1920, by Doubleday « published by special ar rangement with the Wheeler Syn dicate, Ine, At 10 o'clock maid, left by the by ment doo J to get a ind the corner Page the with p.m, Felieta raspberry She policeman and objected nt, She ably, that ed to fall Hath but wand nan pointed out she might have been a auleep over one of St, George third floor Raspberr for nothing the because we bone’s novela on the she was overruled. cops w got into houne | ut much difficulty, must have action and not too much description in «, 2,000-word story | In the dining room he slide of hin dark lanter brace and centerbit he inte the lock of the ail Suddenly a click was hee n was Mooded with electric light The dark velvet portieres parted to admit a fair-haired boy of § in pink | pajamas, bearing & bottle of olive oll | in bin “Are you @ burglar?” he asked, in childish voice. to that,” exclaimed the! man, & hoarse voice. “Am I a purglar? Wot do you suppose I have }a three days’ growth of bristly beard Jon for, and @ cap with Naps? Give me the oll, quick, and et grease the bit, so I won't wake up your mamma, who is lying down with a headache, and left you in charge of Felicia, who has been | faithiens to her trust “Oh, dear,” mid T sigh, “I thought you would be more Uptodate. This ofl is for the salad | when I bring lunch from the pantry for you. And mamma and papa have gone to the Metropolitan to! hear De Resske. But that tent my! fault. It only shows how long the story hae been knocking around | among the editors, If the author had been wine he'd have changed It to Caruso in the proofs.” “Be quiet,” hissed the burglar, it der his breath. “If you raise an alarm I wring your neck like a rabbit's.” | “Like a chicken's,” met ened the! With a nr a sweet “Listen me | ‘ommy, with «| | ‘Tommy. “You had that wrong. You eat wring rabbita’ necks,” | “Aren't you afraid of me?" asked the burgtar | “You know I'm not,” answered | ‘Tommy. “Don't you suppose I know} fact from fiction. If this wasn't a) story I'd yell like an Indian when I aw you, and you'd probably tumble downstairs and get pinched on the sidewalk.” “I seo," maid the burgtar, “that you're on to your job, Go on with the performance” Tommy seated himaelf in an arm- chair and drew his toes up under him “Why do you go around robbing strangers, Mr. Burglar? Have you no friends?” “I see what you're driving at, the burglar, with a dark frown. the same old story. Your innocence | and childish insouciance ts going to) lead me back Into an honest life. | Every time I crack a crib where| there's « kid around, it happens” “Would you mind gazing with wolfish eyes at the plate of cold beef that the butler has left on the dining | table?" sald Tommy, “I'm afraid it's growing late.” ‘The burglar accommodated, “Poor man,” said Tommy. “You! must be hungry. If you will please stand in a listless attitude I will get | you something to eat.” ‘The boy brought a roast chicken, a jar of marmalade and a bottle of wine from the pantry. The burglar seized a knife and fork sulleniy. “It's only an hour,” he grumbied, “since I had a lobster and a pint of musty ale up bn Broadway. I wish these story writers would let a fellow | have a pepsin tablet, anyhow, be | tween foods.” “My papa writes books,” Fa Tommy. The burglar Jumped quickly. “You anid he had gone to the! opera,” he hissed, hoarsely and with immediate suspicion. | “I ought to have exptained,” said | Tommy. “He didn't buy tickets.” The | burglar sat again and toyed with the wishbone. “Why do you burgle houses?” ask ed the boy, wonderingly “Because,” replied the burgtar, with | & sudden flow of tears. “God bless my little brown-haired boy Bessie at home.” ‘Ah,” said Tommy, wrinkling his| ou got that answer in the wrong place. You want to tell your hard luck story before you pull out to his feet . yon,” wald the burglar, “I for. got. Well, once I lived in Milwau-| kee, and ——." “Take the asitver,” rising from his cheir, “Hold on,” said the burgiar. I moved away said Tommy, | “But I could find no other employment, For a while I managed to support my wife and child by passing confederate money, but, alas’ | I was forced to givé that up because : it did not belong to the union. I be came desperate and @ burglar.” | “Have you ever fallen into the Tommy, “E said burglar, not | answered the cracksman “After you finish your lunch,” said Tommy, “and experience the usual ‘change of heart, how shall we wind up the ste “Suppose,” said the burglar, thoughtfully, “that Tony Pastor turns out earlier than usual tonight, and your father gets iu from ‘Par I am thoroly repent | ant because you have made me think of my little boy Hessle, and——" “Say,” said Tommy, “haven't you got that wrong?” “Not on your colored ctayon draw- ings by B. Cory Kilvert said the burglar. “It's always a Bessie that I have at home, artlessly prattling to the pale-cheeked burglar’s bride, As I was saying, your father opens the front door just as 1 am depart- ing with admonitions and sandwiches that you have wrapped up for me. y HUMOR PATHOS | “Rah | make it j hand over | Kot was a kiss from a litt j shall pray for you as soon as I get }am abstracting the U | out | Saul will never forget you. And | words must be nearly up.” |is the greatest inspiration a man can ROMANCE Upon recognising me as an old Har vard classmate he starts back in “Not Tommy, “Tle #tarts back in the doorway,” continued the burglar, And then he to his feet and began to shout rah, rah! rah, rah, rab! rahi in surprise?” tnterrupted with wide-open eyes rab, | rab “Well,” said Tommy, wonderingly, “that’s the firwt time I ever k burglar to give a college yell wh was burglarizing @ house, even in a story.” “That's one on you,” anid burglar, with a laugh, “I was prac tieing the dramatization, If thin is put on the stage that college touch about the only thing that will £0.” my looked his admiration, “You're on, all right,” he maid “And there's another mistake you've made,” maid the burglar, “You should have gone some time ago and brought me the $9 gold piece ir mother gave you on your birthday to take to Bensie. But she didn't give it to me to} take to Bonnie,” said Tommy pout ing "Come, come! said the burglar, sternly. “It's not nice of you to take| advantage because the story contains 4n ambiguous sentence. You know | what I mean, It's mighty little I get | 7T | out of these fictional jobs, anyhow, I lone all the loot, and I have to re form every time, and all the swag I'm allowed i# the blamed little fol de-rols and luck pieces that you kids Why, in one story, all I «irl who opening And it tasted of m too. I've a good m ver over your hy the ailver came in on me when I was a wate, candy thin table keep on int lonet.” “Oh, no, You haven't.” sald Tommy, wrapping bis arms around his knees Recause if you did po editor would buy the story, You know you've got to preserve the unities.” “Bo've you,” suid rather giumly, “Instead of sitting here talking impude and taking the bread out of a poor man’s mouth what you'd like to be doing & hiding under the bed and screeching at the} top of your voice.” | “You're right, olf man." maid Tommy heartily. “I wonder what they make us do it for? I think the 8. PC. C. ought to interfere. I'm sure it's neither agreeable nor usual for « kid of my age to butt in when & fullgrown burgiar i at work and him a red sled and @ pair of not te awaken his sick mother, And look how they make the burgiars act! You'd think edi-| tors would know—but what's the user" ‘The burglar wiped bis hands on the tablecloth and arose with a yawn. “Well, let's get thro with ft," he maid. “God blexs you, my little boy! you have saved a man from com- mitting a crime this night. Bennie the burglar home and give her her orders. shall never burglarise another houne —«t least not until the June maga- zines are out. It'll be your sister's turn then to run in on me while I 8. 4 per cent} from the tea urn and buy me off/ with her coral necklace and a fal wetto kine.” “You haven't got all the kicks| coming to you,” «ighed Tommy, crawling out of his chair, “Think of the sleep I'm losing. But it’s tough on both of us, old man. I wish you could get out of the story and really b nomebody. Maybe you'll have the chance if they dramatize us.” “Never! said the burglar, gloom: Dy. “Between the box office and my better impulses that your leading juveniles are suppored to awaken and the magazines that pay on pub Yeation, I guess I'll always be broke.” (T'm sorry.” said Tommy, sym- pathetically. “But I can't help my- self any more than you can, It's one of the canons of household fic tion that no burglar shall be succens- | ful, The burglar must be foiled by | @ kid like me, or by a young lady | heroine, or at the last moment by hia! old pal, Red Mike, who recognizes the house as one in which he used to be the coachman. You have got the worst end of it, any kind of a story. “Well, T pose I must be clear. ing out now,” said the burglar, tak- ing up his lantern and bracebit. “You have to take the reat of this| chicken and the bottle of wine with you for Bessie and her mother,” said | Tommy, calmly. “But confound it," exclaimed the burglar, in an annoyed tone, “they | don’t want It. I've got five cases of Chateau de Beychselle at home that was bottled in 1853, That claret of yours is corked. And you couldn't eet either of them to look at a chicken unless it was stewed in champagne. You know, after I get of the story I don’t have so many Mmitations, I make a turn now and then.” “Yes, but you must take them,”| said Tommy, loading his arms with | the bundies | tless you, young master! recited the burglar, obedient. “Seoond-Story | now | 2,000 | | hurry and let me out, kid. Our Tommy led the way thru the hall! toward the front door, Suddenly the burglar stopped and called to him softly: “Ain't there a cop out there in front somewhere sparking the gir” “Yes,” sald Tommy, “but what “I'm afraid he'll catch me,” said the burglar. “You mustn't forget that this is fiction,” “Great head! waid Tommy, turn- ing. “Come out by the back door.’ A HEALTHY, HAPPY WIFE have and the life of the family, yet how many homes in this fair ‘land | are blighted by the ill health of wife and mother! It may be backaches, head the tortures of a displaceny some ailment peculiar to her sex which makes life a burden. Every woman in this condition should rely upon Lydia EB. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from: roots and | herbs, to restore her to health and happiness.—Advertisement, \ ches, nt, or |for By CONDO DID YOU NOTIEY THe |B6@s & BOGGS Com. PANY AS I TOLD You To YesTerpay ? BY. S Do YOU KNOW WHAT Ht? (Coprright 1930) Higher Education. Booming Now. How to Finance? A National Question. Mr. Julius MH. Barnes, chairman of the Institute for Publ ervice, of fers some interesting statistics In re gard to the colleges and universities of the United States. It moms that we are in the midat of an enormoun boom in higher edu cation, and if the present trend is continued it will not be long before | the existing institutions will be en- tirely unable to house the multitude | of young men and women knocking at their doors, | During the last atx years the num- | her of wtudents increased from 187,-| 000 to 294,000, There ts no indication that any in- Quences are at work which will make | higher education lens desirable in the future than ft is at present. On the contrary, reporta from all over the country Indicate that this yelir will witness a bumper crop of students as well as of corn. Mr. Barnes says “The six-year increase since 1914 is equal to 18 institutions the size of Columbia in 1914, or 100 colleges the size of Vasnar. Taking the low er estimate for 1960, it means finding | facilities over three times the total for 1920, at wx or seven times the salary cout; it means adding 644,000 students or 200 colleges the nize of | Yale last year, 60 universities the size of California, 400 colleges the size of Oberlin, over 1,000 colleges the nize | of Williams, 1,400 colleges the size | of Bryn Mawr. Even if these 210 colleges arrange to advance to 1,138,- 000 they will have reached only a/ small fraction of high school gradua. | tions.” | This presents the most interesting | problem of all problems. For the | mont important crop we raise is men | and women, and the most important thing In relation to them is their training, Must ' the Increase In schools de- | | Pend upon private benevolence? Will | the state and nation feel the oblign: | tion to make suitable appropriations | educational facilities? Or will | this throng of youth have to be de |nied and sent back home? One solution may commend itself to the politician. If we maintain our | splendid isolation and refuse to com- jbine with other countries in a pact to prevent war, we are liable at any time to be plunged into a conflict | like the one we have recently passed | thru. Thus we can solve our diffi “T'd rather be right than presi- dent,” said Henry Clay. We don’t know who'll be president but— We do know that a watch re- paired by us will be right. What a deep feeling of satisfaction you have when you know you are right. If your time-piece is losing or gaining or bas been relegated to the shelf because it right don't. be discouraged; can fix it, Don’t Put It Off Do It Now! — Thomas J. Cassutt JEWELER Pantages Building is not we culty by slaughtering our youth On the other hand, if we keep out of war and quit preparing for war, we can easily gave money enough to provide for ouPebildren. Mr. Barnes says: ions only 14 had than six years ago, losing all told 668 students, of which Hunter col- lege, New York City, lost 108; Ohlo university, Athens, 126, and Yale 81. In numbers the largest increase in mix years was by the College of the City of New York, 6400; University of California, 6,200; Boston universi- ty, 4,700. ‘The smallest increase in any of the largest public universities was 855 by Mississippi, and 750 by Cornell. In percentage growth 28 Institu- tions more than doubled. Sweet Brier led with 334 per cent; Boston university came next with 333 per cent; Union, 324 per cent; College of the City of New York, 293 per cent; surplus “Of 210 institu. fewer students University of Arizona, 243 per cent; | Delaware State, 188 per cent; Uni- versity of Oklahoma, 160 per cent; Akron’s Municipal university, 157 per cent; Stevens Institute, 141 per cent; West Virginia, 139 per cent; William and Mary, and George Washington, 136 per cent; Minnesota, 123 per cent. —_—_— THE POPULAR WAY “ Iwish IT could think of some good argument to“ase to convince people that they ought to vote for me.” “That's easy. Why not talk about the money the other side is spend- ing?’—Detroit Free Press. TUBEDAY, OCTORER 26, 1920 | THE LAST SAD RITE bY KOMUND VANCK flowed enn day us old-faah played at ¢ fretful, na boy at night went to bed! Ah, well! ‘tin good we may not ohgm The day's stern duty to be done Mayhap we have our‘pledge to keep, efore death brings us restful sleep—~ Ko 1 might floetize and prate st do 1? Mo! I'm here to # Just what I've always said say it was @ gongone shame rend my soul, to rack my frame, wear me with that torturing fame, Betore | went to bed! (Copyright, 1920, N, B. A.! ‘BEAUTY SPECIALIST | TELLS SECRET A Beauty Specialist Gives Home- Made Recipe to Darken Gray Hair Mre. M. D, Gillespie, » well-knowm beauty specialist of Kansas City, re- cently gave out the following state ment regarding gray hair: “Anyone can prepare a simple mixture at home that will darkem gray hair and make it soft an glossy. To a nalf-pint of water add 1 ounce of bay rum, a small box of Barbo Compound and % ounce of glycerine “These ingredients can be pure chased at any drug store at very lit- tle cost. Apply to the hair twice = week until the desired shade is ob- tained. This will make @ gray- haired person look twenty years | younger. It does not color the scalp, ix not sticky or greasy and does not rub off.”—Advertisement. LESS THAN HALF PRICE All High Grade — Standard Makes — Strictly First Class There is only one do, Mr. Motorist, if thing left for you to you want to cut the high cost of Tire Expense, and that is to refuse to pay the high prices. Note the list of prices below — less than before the war. LIST PRICE SIZE Casings 30x38 N.S. $23.35 80x82 N.S. 29.35 32x82 N.S. 29.70 31x4 N.S. 438.75 82x4 N.S. 44.60 38x4 N.S. 45.80 34x4 N.S. 46.70 83x42 N.S. 59.65 84x42 N.S. 61.80 85x42 N.S. 65.50 36x42 N.S. 71.10 35x5 =N.S. 76.30 387x5 N.S. 81.75 War Tax Included REMEMBER—When You SALE PRICE Tubes Casings Tubes $3.15 $10.00 $2.00 8.75 12.50 2.50 4.25 13.75 2.75 5.05 17.00 3.00 5.25 17.50 3.25 5.45 18.50 3.50 5.70 19.50 3.55 6.85 25.00 4.00 7.00 26.00 4.25 7.95 27.00 4.60 7.40 28.00 4.75 8.55, 29.00 4.90 8.90 30.00 5.00 in the Above Prices Buy a Tire From Us We Do All the Changing You will look a long time before you find another bargain like this. « Pike Street Tire Shop W. O. STANDRING, Prop. Phone Elliott 446, 1026 Pike, cor. Boren