Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, December 29, 1921, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    SiSr Wx "" '
SbZj
Nf'
DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD
!?
w
i
I
-uu3jM
A Man
By
o
THE GIRL.
SYNOPSIS.-Lotterlng on the San
Kranclaco water front, John Ttal
noy, newspaper reporter, Is accost
cl by a Rlnnt blind man, who askH
Ralney to lend him aboard the
-icallnt itchooner Karluk Tho blind
nmti telU Italney ho lu un old ship
inato of Captain Slmnis. In the
cabin they find Captain Slmma and
a man named Carlson. Simms rec
ognizes thi blind man, calling him
Jim mu. Lund accuses Simms of
abandoning him, blind, on an lco
tloe, and donounccu him. Slmmi
denies tile charge, but Lund ru
Cusuh to bn pacified. Ho doclares
his Intention of accompanying the
ICarluk on Its expedition north,
whore It Is i;olng In quest of a Bold
Held wlileh Lund has dlscovcrcU
Peggy. Simms' daughter, Is aboard,
and defends her fathor.
t;
y
CHAPTER I Continued,
Lv-i-i afood frozen, like n pointer on
weiri, nil Ills faculties milted In at
tention townrd tho girl. The doctor
croed and spoke to her In a low
voice.
Lund spoke, nnd his voice was sud
denly mild.
"I didn't know there wns n lndy
present, miss," he said. "Yore father's
right. Vou let us nettle this. We'll
come to nn agreement."
But, for nil his swift change to
placability, there was n sinister under
tone to his voice that the girl seemed
to recognize. Sho hesitated until her
father led her back Into tho cabin.
"You two'll sit down?" said the doc
tor, speaking aloud for the llrst time,
tils voice amiable, cnrcl'ully neutral.
"And we'JJ hava n drop of something.
Jtfr. LuniV, I can understand your at
titude. You've suffered a great deal.
Hut you have misunderstood Captain
Simms. I have Heard about this from
him, before. He lias no deslro to client
you. Ho Is rejoiced to see you nllvc,
though nllllctcd. Ho la still Honest
JMuuns, Mr. Lund. ,
"I haven't your mime, sir," he went
h pleasantly, to' Italney. "Tho cn'p-
tain said you were u newspaper
wan,?"
"John llalney, of the Times. I knew
iolhlng of this before I came nboant."
"And' you will understand, of
course, what Mr. Lund overlooked (hi
'.his natural ngltntlon, that this Is not
ia stofy for your paper. We should
have a licet trailing us. We must
issk your confidence, Mr. nnncy."
The?e was a strong porsonallty In
-tlio doctor, llalney realized. Ho did
mot like the man from first nppcnr
an ccs. Ho was too aloof, too sardonic
In his attitudes. Hut his manner was
friotirily enough, his volco compelling
in Its suggestion that ltnlney was a
man to be trusted, Captatu Simms
en mo back Into the cabin, closing the
door of his daughter's room.
"Wo are going to lmvo n little drink
together," said the doctor. "1 have
Rome Scotch lu my cabin.. If you'll
oxcust me for a moment? Captain,
will you got some glasses, and a ehiilr
for Mr. Lund?"
Th'3 doctor came back with n bottlo
of Bpotch whisky ntid n siphon. The
captain liml set out glasses and a
ttchcr of plain water from a rnclc
"I Imagine you'll bo the only puc
"who'll tnko seltzer, 'Mr. llalney," said
tho doctor pleasantly, passing tho hot
tie. ''Captain Simms, I know, uses
plalti water. T suppose Mr. Lund does
the finiiio. And I prefer a still drink,"
Italney took n long pull nt his gln-f.
The cnbln was hot, and he was thirsty.
The seltzer tasted a little tint or the
whisky was of nn unusual brand, hu
fancied, And then inertia suddenly
seized him. He lost tho use of his
limbs, of his tongue, when he tried to
roll out. He saw tho doctor's sardonic
feyes watching him us ho strovo to
hake off n lethargy that swiftly
merged Into dizziness.
Dimly lu hoard the scrape of the
mptuln'x elutlr being pushed back.
iKroiu fur off he heard Lund's big
voice booming, "Here, what's this?"
;nud the doctor's cutting In, low ami
eager; then he collapsed, his bead
fnlllng forward on his outbtretcheJ
ring,
If CHAPTER II.
f
A Divided Company.
Ht wttB not the flrHt time that
Italney had been nn u ship, a Milling
hlp, nnd nt son. Lucking experience
tu nctunl navigation, he was a pretty
Imndy sallormuu for an amateur.
So, us lie ounie o(ut of the grip of
'tho drug that had been given lilm,
nlowljy with n brainpan that seemed
'overstuffed with cotton nnd which
throbbed with n dull persistent ache
with u thront that Bectned to be coated
with 'ashes, strangely contracted a
iinuscnted stomach eyes that saw
things through a huze limbs that
-ached as If hrulsod-the sounds that
brat their way through tils sluggish
consclousnesH were familiar enough to
place him almost Instantly,
""Ah "ho ly there In n narrow bunk,
watching the play nf light that enmo
'through n porthole boyoml his line of
vlfon, listening to tho low boom of
waves followed by tho swash along
ftlde that told him tho Knrluk was
lurking heavy hciia. a hIow rago mas
tered him. centered against the doc.
To His
J. ALLEN DUNN
COPYRIGHT BOBDS MERRILL. CO.
tor with tin; sardonic smile and Cap
tain Simms, who italney felt sure had
tacitly approved of the doctor's no
tions. He remembered Lund's exclamation
of, "Here, what's this?" the question
of u blind man who could not grusp
what was happening and acquitted
him.
They hail deliberately kidnaped him,
slinnghuled him, because they did not
chouse to trust him, because they
thought ho might print the story of
the Island treasure beach In his paper,
or babhlo of it and sturt a rush to the
now Mirlko of which ho had seen proof
In the gold dust streaming from the
poke.
What wore they going to do with
ldm?
lie mistrusted tho doctor. Tho man
had drugged him. He wus a man
wnoso profession, whore the mind was
warped, belittled life. Captain Simms
had been charged with leaving a blind
mnn on a broken Hoc. Lund was the
type whose passions left hlrn ruthless.
The crew' they would be bound by
shares In the enterprise, a rough lot,
dnrlng much nnd caring little for any
thing beyond their own narrow hori
zons. The girl wus the only redeem
ing feature of the situation.
He wondered whether anyone had
seen him go nboard the Karluk with
Lund anyone who would remember
It and mention the circumstance when
he was found to be missing. That
might take n dny or two. At tho of
fice they would wonder why he dldn t
sllow up to cover his detail, becuuso
he had been steady In his work. But
they would not suspect foul play at
first. He had no Immediate family.
And nil this time the Knrluk would be
thrashing north, well out to sea.
Italney would be a front-page won
der for a day, then,drop to paragraphs
for n dny or so more, nnd that would
be Hh; end of It.
lint they had made him comfortable.
He wus not In a smelly forecastle, but
In n bunk In a cabin that must open
off tho mnln room of tho schooner.
Why hud they treated him with such
consideration? Ho dozed off, for nil
his wretchedness, exhausted by his
effort f to untangle tho snurl. When
.lio nyroke again his mouth was glued
together with thirst. Ills bend ached
Intolerably. Each hair seemed sot In
n nerve center of pain. But he was
better.
Ho sat up In his bunk, fully clothed
as he had como aboard, the door of
his cabin opened and the doctor ap
peared, nodded coolly as ho saw
'Italney moving, disappeared for nn In
staut, and brought In n draft of some
sort In n long glass.
"Take this," said Carlson. "Pull
you together. Then we'll get some
food Into you."
Tho cnlm lnsolonco of tho doctor's
maimer, Ignoring . nil that had hap
pened, seemed to send nil tho blood In
Italney's body fuming to his brnln. He
took tho glass and hurled Us content's
at Carlson's face. The doctor dodged,
and tho stuff splashed ngtilnst the
cabin wall, only a few drops reaching
Carlsen's coat.
"Don't Ijq a d d fool," he fcalrt to
llalney, his volco Irritatlngly even.
"Aro you afraid It's drugged? I would
Whon He Woke Afjaln His Mouth Was
Glued Together With Thlrt.
not bo so clumsy. I could have given
you n hypodermic while you slept,
enough to keep you unconscious for
ns many hours us I choic or for
ever. "I'll mix you another doseone
more take It or1 leave It. Tnko It,
and you'll poon feel yourself again
after Tamada has fed-you. Then we'll
fhrofih out the situation. Leave It, and
I wash my hands of you. You can go
for'ard anil bunk with tho men ami do
tho ilrly work,"
Taluey felt that he had made u fool
BLIhF1iB1JIv7777
n
Mate
of himself, and he took tho second
draft, which nlmost Instantly relieved
him, cleansing his mouth nnd throat
and, as his headache died down, clear
ing his brnln.
"Why did you drug me?" he de
manded. "Pretty high-handed. I can
mnke you pay for this."
"Yes7 How? When? We're well
off Cnpo Mendocino, bending nor'woht
or thereabouts. Nothing between us
and Unalnskn but fog nnd deep water.
Before we get back you'll see the pay
ment In a different light, We're not
pirates. This was pluln business: A
million or more in sight. J
"Lund nearly spilled things (as It
was, raving the way he did. It?s a
wonder some one didn't overlicnrhlni
with scn.se enough to tumble.
"lint we didn't take nny risks nftcr
his blowing off. IIo might have done
it ashore before you brought lilm
aboard. I don't think so. But he
might. And so might you, Inter."
"I'd have given you my word."
"And meant to keep it. But you'd
have been nn uncertain factor, n wenk
link. You knew too much. Suppose
the Karluk fought up to Kotzebuo ba.
nnd found a dozen power-vessels hang-
log about, waiting for us to lend them
to tho beach? And we'd have worried
nil the way up, with you loose.
"I don't suppose your salary Is much
over thirty n week, Is it? Now, then,
here you nro In for a touch of real ad
venture, better .than gleaning dock
gossip, to a red-blooded man. If we
win nnd you saw the gold you
win. We expect to give you a share.
More than you'd earn in ten years,
likely, more than you'd be apt to Save
In a lifetime. We kidnaped you fo
your own good. You're a prisoner do
luxe, with the run of tho ship."
"I can work my passage," said
Italney. IIo didn't trust the doctor,
though he thought he'd play fair about
thcjjold. But It was funny, his as
suming control.
"Ah I" The doctor appeared to dis
miss tho subject with some relief.
"Well," he went on, "arc you open to
reason and food? I'm sorry about
your friends and folks ashore, but
you're not tho first prodigal who has
como back with the fatted calf in
stead of hungry for It"
"That part of It Is all right," said
Italney. Thcro was no help 'for the
situation, save to mnke the most ot
It and tho best. "But I'd like to ask
you 'a question."
"do nhend. Huvo n cigarette?"
Italney would rather have taken It
from anyone else, but the- whiff of
burning tobacco, as Carlson lit up,
gave him nn Irreslstlblo craving for a
smoke. Besides, It wouldn't do for
tho doctor to know ho mistrusted him.
If ho was to bo n part of the ship's
life, thcro was small sense In ncting
pettishly, IIo took the cigarette, ac
cepted the light, and Inhaled grate
fully. "What's the question?" asked Carl
sen. "You weren't on tho" last trip. You
weren't In on the original deal. But I
find you doing nil the talking, making
mo offers. You drugged me on your
pwn impulse. Where's the skipper?
How does he stand "in this matter?"
"You'ro asking a good deal for an
outsider, It seoins to me, llalney. I
camo to you partly as your doqtor.
But I speak for the captain and the
crow. Don't worry about that." ,f
"And Lund?" llalney had gathered
that the doctor resented Lund.
Cnrlsen's eyes narrowed.
"Lund will be taken care of," -he
said, and, Tor the life of lilm, llalney
coitld not Judge the statement for
threat or friendly promise. "As for
my status, I expect to be Captain
Simms' son-ln-lnw as soon as the trip
Is over."
"All right," said ltulncy. Carlson's
announcement surprised lilm. Some
how ho could not plnco the girl as tho
doctor's fiancee.
Ho rose nndkbsthed face nnd hands.
Carlson left tho cabin. Tho main
room was empty when Italney en
tered, but thcro wns n plnco set ut tho
table.
The mnln cnbln was well appoint?'!
In hardwood, with rod cushions on tho
transoms find a creeping plant or so
hnnglng hero and there. A canary
chirped up and broke Into rolling song.
It was all homy, Innocuous. Yet bo
had been drugged at tho same tublo
not so long before. And now be wna
pledged n share of ungatherod gold. It
was a far cry back to his desk in tho
Times office.
A Japanese entered, sturdy, of
white-clad figure, deft, polite, Incuri
ous. Ho had brought In some hnm
nnd eggs, strong coffee, sliced canned
poaches, bread nnd butter. Ho served
ns Italney ato heartily, feeling his
old self coming back with the food,
especially with tho coffee,
"Thanks, Tamada," ho said ns he
pushed aside his plato at last.
"Everything nrrlght, sir?" purred
tho Japnnose.
Italney nodded. Tho "sir" was re
assuring. Ho was uceopted as t some
body nboard tho Karluk. Tamada
cleared awuy swiftly, nnd Italney felt
for Ids own cigarettes, borne ono wns.
pV"t " ...-.," " iiiu iuuiii
and lie fancied by Its volume It was
Lund.
It wns n divided nhlp's company,
after all. For bo knew that LunO,
handicapped with his blindness, would
live perpetually suspicious of Simms.
And the doctor wns against Lund.
Italney's own position was n paradov.
He started for the coinpanlonwny,
nnd a slight sound made him turn, tu
face the girl. Sho looked nt him cas
ually as Italney, to his nnnoyunce,
flushed.
"Good afternoon," snld llalney. "Are
you going on deck?"
It wns not r clever opening, but
she seemed to rob lilm of wit, to an
extent. He had yet to know how she
stood concerning his presence aboard.
Did she countojanco the forcible kid
naping of him us u possible tattler?
Or?
"My father tells me you have de
cided to go with us," she said, pleas
antly enough, but none too cordially,
Italney thought. l
"You hnvo not been well. I hope
you nre better. Have you oaten?"
Italney began to think that s?he was
Ignorant of the facts. And ho made
up hLs mind to Ignore them.
"Thank you, I hac," he said. "1
was going to look up Mr. Lund."
Tho sentence qovcred n sudden
change of mirid. He rio longer want
ed to go on deck-with the girl. Tbev
were notto bo Intimates. ' She was
"Good Afternoon' sajd Ralney.
You Going on Deck?"
"Ara
to marry Cnrlsen. He was an out
sldoi'. Carlson had told him that. So
she seemed to regard him, lmperson
ully, without Interest. It piqued htm.
"Mr. Lund Is In the first, mnte's
cabin," snld the girl, Indicating a door.
"Mr. Bcrgstrom, who was mate, died
nt sea last voyage. Doctor Carlsen
nets as navigator with my father, but
he hns another room."
She passed lilm nnd went on defk.
Cnrlsen wns acting first mate as well
ns surgeon. That meant he had sen
mnnshlp. Also that they had taken
In no replacements, no other men to,
swell tho little corporation of fortune
hunters who knew the secret, or a
part of It. It wus unusual, but Italney
shrugged his shoulders nnd rapped
on tho door of the pnbln.
It took loud knocking to waken
Lund. At Inst he roared a "Come In."
Ilntney found him seated , on the
edge of his bunk, dressed In his under
clothes, his glasses In place. Italney
wondered whether he slept In them.
Lund's uncanny Intuition seemed to
rend the thoughts. He tapped the
lenses.
"Hate to take them off," he snld.
"Light hurts my eyes, though the op
tic nerve Is dead. Seems to strike
through. How're ye mnkln out?"
"You know they drugged me."
Ralney ended his recital of the Inter
view he had had with the doctor.
"Knockout drops? I guessed It.
That doctor's slick. Well, you've not
much fault to find, have ye? Cnrlsen
talked sense. Here you nro on the
road to a fortune. I'll seo yore
share's a fair one. There's plenty. It
ain't a bad billet you've fallen Into,
my Ind. But I'll look out for ye. And
I'll need ye."
Ho lowered his voice mysteriously.
"Yo're n writer. Mister Bnlnoy.
You've got brains. You can see whlcn
way n thing's heading. You've heard
enough. I'm blind. I've bin done dirt
once nboard the Knrluk, and I don't
aim to standjfor It ng'ln.
"I ain't got eyes. Yon hnvo. Us
em for both of us. I ain't asklug y
to tnko sides, exnctly. But 1'vo got
cause for boln' suspicious. I don't call
the skipper 'Honest' Simms no more.
And I ain't stuck on that doctor. He's
too bossy. He's got the skipper un
der his thumb. And there's some
thin' funny about the skipper. He
uln't the sniiie man. Mebbo It's hla
conscience. But that doctor'a runnlrt
lilm."
"He's going to marry tho captaln'a
daughter," said Italney.
"Slinius' dnughter? Curlsen coin'
to marry hor? Umpl That muy ac
count for the milk In the coconut-"
nis fuco became crafty, und lu
reached out for Italney's knee, found
It ns readily as If he had sight, and
tapped It for emphasis,
"Simms li Crlen dog. Tho
doc'a got lomethin' on him,
mark mc.'
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
THAT SIMLL BOY
Just a Word or Two Said Hero
in His Defense.
Pennsylvania Educator Issues Warning
to Mothers of Danger of Errors
In Training Methods.
Sbmo Interesting facts con'ccrnlns
proper treatment of children were
Drought out In nn address ut the Moth
ers' club recently by J. George Becht
(list deputy stnte superintendent ol
public instruction, tho Philadelphia
Itecord state. In n talk on "Youth
Its Characteristics and Training," he
Jcfonded the "small boy," who, Ik
vild, was blamed for much of whicl)
lu was not guilty. Children betweer
the uge of Iho mid sevon nnd twelv
mil fourteen especially, ns n rule, he
said, were going 'through n process ol
levelopment which wns abnormal unci
n which th mind did-not keep apace
with the bodj. This lack of co-ordina-:lon
In tho child's system resulted
til awkwardness, forgotfuluoss, etc.
iiid ns u result, b'oys- uapeiinlly
;oing through tho "nvkmrd ngo,"
erc not treated with too much con
sideration, The speaker criticized tho mother
who nre nlwuys nagging their boys
ind charging them with indolence, for
jotfulnoss, etc., whon in reality the
voungstors should be kindly trented
and ghon sympathy. He said s
uothcr, through lack of knowledge
,vus often cruel to children, while she
'elt,that she wns over Indulgent. In
his connection he specially referred tc
Iho blame given boys because thpi
forget to come In In time, or some
Jther such trllle. What wns verj nmcli
.vorse, he snld, and very common, wai
i desire to catch the boy In his error
md to corner him to explain it, which
was responsible for the development
3f sneaks and liars. A boy should
aot bo treated like a law-breaker, fie
said, because he was slightly dero
let, neither should a mother use the
Same method ns n policeman.
Tho speaker said that now more
tlinn ever the parents should labor tc
aiake the hcarthslde attractive. Jv
this age of restlessness nnd shift,
ivhen there was eery where an effort
wide to gain money, soclnl position
;tc, the home spirit that our ancestors
jnjoyed was gradually dying nway and
the family clrqlo had no place what
ever. The mother should multiplj
her efforts to mnke home attractive
o establish a spirit of fraternity lr
the family, nnd to make sympathy and
:onslderatlon qualities which encircled
the hearthstone nnd made It the most
sacred spot for both parents and chil
dren. .
Mechanical Ticket Seller.
A machine for the rapid Issue ol
railway tickets has been demonstrate!.
In London, according to the Munches
ter Gunrdlan. Outside the "buttery'
ire silts in the walls, and below each
Df these a saucer-shaped receptacle
The traveler puts his coins In the pen
ay. two-penny or three-penny slot, and
the ticket shoots out Into the recopta
cle. If he puts n six-pence Into the
two-penny slot three tickets emerge
If he puts a sixpence Into the five
nenny slot he will get his ticket nnd
i penny change. He need not have
two pennies for tho two-penny ticket
Four half-pennies will do. But bad
3i foreign coins will be returned.
All the work Is done by the oper
tor In- the box, who stands at the
levers and shoots out the tickets ns
the coins tumble Into a receptacle
Those who watched tho machine nl
work said that undoubtedly the Inven
Hon would prove Its value, especlallj
iurlng the rush hours.
One "Man's Reason.
Hero Is one man's reason for not
supporting his wife nnd family, ac
cording to u report filed with Mrs,
Lulu Kunkle, bend of the adult pro
batlon department of the juvenile
court.
"I'm just not satisfied," he snld. 'Tie
not contented. I don't like to rttny
In ono place very long. I just won't
llvo with her nny longer. No 1
haven't any other renson."
The man suggested that his wife, a
cripple and partly denf, with a three-(1ir-old
boy and a five-months-old
baby to care for, should go to work.
He didn't like tho Idea of providing
for .them.
With a jail sentence facing him, the
man decided he would support them.
Indianapolis News.'
If You Must Speculate.
"An oracle for some; a game foi
others" Is tho legend on nmnll paste
board box nogr selling downtown. With
Ip Is a squaro piece of stiff paper, dl.
vldod into lu ports, witu me names oi
four stocks In each, making 04 names
in nil. many of which nre speculative
favorites. On a pivot In the center
is nn arrow, waiting to be spun. With
this now method of picking 'em, fullj
ns relluble ns some now In use, conic?
tho iinnounceinent: 'JAU the fun ot
Wall Street with none of Its dangers."
New York Evening Post.
Domino Fans in Long Game.
A domino game has been In progress
for the last quarter of a century In
itlvorhead, N. Y. Tho exact date of
Its Inception Is vol known, but It
was begun by four men some time In
1S93. Sluco then the same tour, the
oldest now ninety-four, have g'lthorod
for several hcjurs dully to match up
,tho little black blocks. The first ten
years were the hardest, tho quartette
sssens.
Sure Relief
FOR INDEGESTBON
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
ELL-ANS
25t and 754 Packages, Everywhere
WATCH
THEBI
Stomach-Kidneys-Heart -Livst
Keep the vital organs healthy by
regularly taking the world's stand
ard remedy for kidney, liver,
bladder and uric acid troubles
GOLBMEEM.
The National Remedy of Holland for
centuries and endorsed by Queen Wllhel
tnina. At all drugglst3, threo sizes.
Look for the name Gold Medal on every bos
and accept no imltntion
Keep Fit
Bowel regularity is the
secret of good'health.
Without forcing or irri
tating, Nujol softens the
food waste. The many
tiny muscles in the
intestines can then re
move it regularly. Abso
lutely harmless try it.
The Modem Method
of Treating an OtJ
Complaint
Fit Your Auto
WITH A
Radiator Qhutter
SI. COMPLETE
Operates prom the dash
Hill Mpo. Co.. 1810 Broadway. New Yom
Alwatis Plenttj
of Stretch
no rubber to rot
in
'JyG
H
ExcellQ
uspenderS
Guaranteed One war-m75
Askvour dealer for
NtiWiw -or ExcelloJ
waramewausMnoeriwraraaMrtteauDMrars
Accept no substitutes Look for name on budUe&J
Nu-Way 5trech Suspender Ca.Hfri.Mnan.Mieh.
Fresh Frozen Fish
New Winter Caugh I
ALL VARIETIES
Also aajokod and salt fish. Send
fur illustrated catalog today.
SPBOIAC Qenulno Norwegian LODHF13K
60 lb. K.00. Serentb joar of faithful Eorrico.
A. G. DUNN CO.. 625 MinklUn Bid., Dulath, Hiia.
CALIFORNIA FARMS
You have only on llfft to live.
Why not Hettlf down In the
LAND OF SUNSHINE
KnUc (rrupes, grain, citrus, cotton, nlf.ilfiu
Plenty wntPr. Land cheap. Small cash nay
ment. Easy lerpi For particulars write to
I.KO c. nou'NK
210 Hopklnx HI.!., llAKFltsrUM.!). CALIF.
OKT (I'll AKCY AMI MAK1! 25 'IO SWu
A WKKH as our other agents do. Particu
lars free.
VKKNCll KKAL'TirVINO CO.. INT.. t'lilciiRn
Idle Houra With Statisticians.
It Is tvstiinuled Hint u ninn who
renclies the nt,'e of eighty yours .spentln
two yenrs of Ills life drcslni;. No
body 1ms the courciKO U Chtlnmto liow
innny of lur yours n woman duvotes to
bul, ns we wcru snyiug, it's u luird
winter tlint 1ms no 5.0ft spots.
Watch Cutlcura Improve Your Skin.
On rising and retiring gently smear
the face with Cuttcurn Ointment.
Wash off Ointment In five minutes
with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. It
Is wonderful what Cutlcura will do
for poor complexions, tlundruff, Itching
and red rough hands. Advertisement.
-- ", is "----
Speed of Glaciers.
Studying Alnblsan rIucUth, Prof. V.
K. CoOpcr finds tlint Miilr glucler has
receded CO miles 1n the Inst 127 yenrs.
A healthy soul stands united with
the- just und the true as the magnet
arranges Itself with the pole.
Cash registers can't wear out too
fast for n buolncss maift
Living by one's wits hns been roc
oiiimciiiloil nf 1111 untlfnt remed.u I
UJiay Have Strong, Healthy
byeg. It tney Tire.Itcli,
K or GQx&lJp martor Hum, if Sore,
Vhtin CirC Irrtated, Inflamed or
YUURtYtj Granulated.useMurine
often. Soothes, Refreshes. Safe for
Infant or Adult. At all Dmu-o-isf l Writ. fnr
I Free Eye Book. HorUc Et Xtt4r Co.,CUo.
G 4
1KI
gSH
ftjcrAy
AJWIUI
mm wm
B'SAftTn'sy
Mimumm
amumii EXK
Jr"ytul rmsrf
r7i Jr f i I Tf'f'ri T
m JKT,WS 1CJ
w
..
it
A
i
1
Y !i
f I
i-
"miiBitft,. - jr -- -w--.
JKV.T"'' m '&--' W.