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"C -4 *: * r t ir»y. at ue to tray a a* a tat': tot ttvea 'to CaaMBora ibeatf It a a* ca2b"4 “Tbr l':e**-*-tt WarUT 3ad L 4 a «to»rful cor*-- on **■ -* a y ffstocrr «brr**-d ?ir i*r*-5 l:«V?4 t*ai*4» uiaai a fca*- no A* tfe* twa* ta wy -tori HT at«a? : - “Truss a taut to add too n-.4 t*« «a©rtSwr. jlisJ makr •Ja,’’ ’ 1 r* ten that if f.» atid tao ■da» A Eai- sti titr* to dtorotror tbr hfeto-'B oaofttHy i* tfcr oDftoP 'toast a tto- aortd. TUt a I norf-J «4 tiro* tf-*—d ft rafirrjy aas twaeso ti * sera- bur Iri tog to ■mam- that tao aad tao Btakr four Tbr 4*yroossMB t.v is my rosst to »br Usf td Wt tar at tbr jr<«.«**-t at o-totr iitot taa lid ugbt II aa* ib*.t t»* arbrk sVr luddy -ft a ’.«r a Bap to-tor* ditmrr. bar a* pat aw trio a gray silk dn-obt wr» to4 a pa*r of tliyrn I littrs-d to Ut t*»r«UBt twiitry apd as «» to »o aWi bnus aa-rs * to tbr trnakraoai Tv aat tor* dawM -ad I at rare to try to dtoroerr mv to tbr bi44» a room Tbr _* mm riibrr radr. as I barr '*14 tos<4 not bag tost jarrfaafK tbaw Irrf at trre-k mail Tbrr* a-as aa *aga at a* -totraan—ma Irrrr*. *c. toag*-» to grsr a hat Ertbrr tb> anatr! tm tb*- root. I d«. td*4 and aft «o a baK baur aa tbr araatrl. prodo* tiro at ttoriOHr as (Mali, i doridrd •© try ft* not •* Cbm or a Jtagbt. The few on whfefe 1 t*£ * ■ 41'Tiiwjl a bate «i»xyi left «, d;£ry •• tbe taws Tip- ‘.up mi moucm-nt it za » 1> *}." ri*\ Jt: 41fl »«:» * ij. And y»t — I S«s»a-. root ._ i * br-cnation. '_k< a west, life cf brar-ekta . with Ms. spear and bis ts me non there am* tbe _ of tbe rise the fr*w*f at fuar anrt. tbe dost of battle 1 gat quite a HUk ml tbe letter on Be as I ditcbxi fits tbe astSatabed battroasi oat t tfersasb a etndow ta tbe r<*uf of tbe mgtti a iv ml tbe batldisc. »t« b aas wty («• 4uTMf ta brlgbf. Or* oaf there. area to tbe tap ml -be -»».:■ baUding aas rendered easy -—ad feast It looked easy—by a small • ertlrai na ladder. ItRtxd ts tbe >iB ootatdi- ad tbe baltrwca. and per t .[. 12 feel tlgb.. Tbe 12 l-et kwki i ■tart (ram brio*, bat tbey were dlf trdt M rltmfe 1 gaife-red my suk cost aroand me. asd swewdl final •r ta e-t**! tbe top at tbe ladder I kaee tberr. bonerer. I aas > t|ilr> *y wwt of breath, f sat boa a. my feet * tbe lap rung, asd pat my fcatr-pin* a wore w-rarely, wbtfe tbe wind bet iota my dnsutc-pma oat like a sad I bad un a great strip «f tfe rrfk bow. and no* I ruthleady fin ota tbe deatrartion of my cone by ;wtn| h tree and tying It aroand my Lb* '‘‘■''■T. the roof was flat, and I was c ••! ■ to go over every ;nrb of it. But tb»* r- - 1 was disappointing; no trap r waled if, imi glass window; ••thing but a couple of pipes two •t* be, across, and standing perhaps 1V uutMW nigh and three feet a par.. ‘ with a cap to .-recent rain from en tering and raj.erd to permit the nas "***" *d a>r I picked up a pebble 'root the roof and dropped it down. ■ eg with tny nr at one of the pfp*-s ! could bear it strike on some ftiiiig with a fcbarr. metallic sound, but it was impossible lor me to tell bow far it bad gone I gate up tnafly and went down the ladder again. get; lag in through the ballroom window without being ob served. 1 went back at once to the ""tt*- • -usa. Hud. -itiicg down on a b»*s. gore my -;.itd. as consistently as \ " «wuld. to the probUm before me. If *-■' • 'i'* in ti.-t r*r>l »>.->- ventilator* ,n t*■. . < re- nand t-w-re was no tr.: *r above, the entrance was uros. t- v in «sc of the two room* h r} :< h it *ay— unle?-. indeed. ’*- f bad b-—n baitt. and tin-op n l~ 4 w.th a be;, arj aiortnr ■■ It Jt * . - . " '.iNd r:»*f-“;idl »: « . Ifa •» of wood =twi carved, the t.,e*re ! tooted ’ - j>- t wood- r*-d ti-.it I bad not 5 • J '>■ • r- *, ^1-5-jrUitT nf sv.ch gasping re- . ’rations, and my face was camp and clammy. ] must have been ih.T«- a long time, and the searchers were probably hunting outside the Louse, dredging the creek, or beating [ the woodland. ! knew that another i hour or two would find me uncon scious. and with my inability to cry out would go my only chance of res ! cue. It was the combination of bad air and heat, probably, for some inade quate vintilation was coming through tie pip. s. I tried to retain my con sciousness by walking the length of the room and back, over and over, but I had not the strength to keep it up. so I sat down on the table again, my back against the wall. The house was very still. Once my straining tars seemed to catch a foot fall beneath me. possibly in my own ; room | prop j for tjj„ c»jajr froni ' • tabl*. and pounded w ith it frantic ■ i> on tl • floor. Hut nothing hap 1 ued; I realized bitterly that if the o -' d was heard at r.U, no doubt it <1 with the other rappings •hat Lad so alarmed us recently. And then—! heard sounds from bo rne. : i thouse There was a | ' euliar 'h robbing. vibrating noise la: 1 l it n.'.tl.er than heard, much ik - pul- tig b at of fire engines in fte city. For one awiui moment I c . ;t ilie bos- was on fire, end No Trap-Dior Kevealed Itself. **r maalel-iioor. at «veryihing 1 did oat t ar suffocation: before ihe thought :.ad com' to me 1 had already seen a c lea in of tight from the two -tijdi teanlaftng pipe* in the root They supplied a;r. but nothin? else. Tbe room itself was shrouded in blackness t Blast hare dozed 08 ! am sure I did not faint 1 was never more rcnrposed in By life. I remember! ..aging if i w»re not discovered. I ttiw would have try things I knew I I.ei-'T »■ . 1 wart my bettotrope pop in :-t:d wbe's a fright in lavender, tier, or twice I heard mice in the par titions und o i sat on the table, with at ■ et on the chair ! imagined 1 cmiid bear the search going on ti-rough the boas*-, and once some ••a- ciar into ti*e trunkroom; 1 could distinctly hear footsteps. in the cfciiwey* In the chimney!") I called rsth all my might. and was r< warded by a piercing shriek from t-cidy and tfce slam of the trunkroom door. I felt c-asier after that, although the room was opprrtave'.y hot and enervating. I had no doubt the search for me would now come in the right dire.-lion, and after a little. I dropped into a doze. How long I slept I do; oat know 1* must have been several hours, for I had been tired from a busy day. aad I waked sti® from my awkward posit ma. I could cot remetnb?" where 1 was for a few minutes, and my head felt heavy and congested. Gradually I roused to my surround ing* and to the fact that in spite of ventilators, the air was bad and grow BC worse. I was breathing long. dovhi in my noay gatn *nd a round my heart: then I knew. It w.is 'he engine of the automobile, and Halsey had come back. Hope sprang up afresh. Halsey's clear head and <’.• -rtrtub s intuition might do what I.idi.y s hysteria and three detectives bad failed in. \f'« r a tin:.- I thought I had been : There wi certainly something go- u or. down below; doors were ! slan ming. people were hurrying ! through the hr 11s. and certain high] note of ex-it-J voices penetra.ed to' n. • .-hrilly. 1 hoped they were coming ■ closer, but after a time the sounds j d < d away below, and I was left to the ! silence and heat, to the weight of the' darkness. to the oppression of walls that seemed to close in on me and' stifle n:e. The first warning I had was a I stealthy fumbling at the lock of the I mante l-door. With my mouth oiieti to scream. I stopped. Perhaps the sit uation had rendered me acute, per bjjjis it was instinctive. Whatever it was. I sat without moving, and some one outside, in absolute stillness, ran his fingers over the carving of the! r ante? and—found the panel. Now the sounds below redoubled: i from toe clatter and jarring I knew. that several people were running up the stairs, and as the sounds ap proached. I could even hear what they said. "Watch the end staircases!” Jamie son shouted. “Damnation—there's no light here!" And then a second later. “All together now. One — two — three—" The door into the trunkroom had been locked from the inside. At the second that it gave, opening against the wall with a crash and evidently tumbl'ng somebody into the room, the stealthy fingers beyond the mantel door gave the knob the proper im petus, and—the door swung open, and closed again. Only—and Liddy al ways screams and puts her fingers in her ears at this point—only now I ! was not alone in the chimney room. | Thi re v as some one else in the dark- ' ness, some one who breathed hard. | anti v ho v.u> so close 1 could have j touched him with my brad. I was in a paralysis of terror. Out side there wt re evcited voices and in credulous o.nhs. The trunks were being jerked around in a frantic i search, the windows were thrown I open. only to show a sheer drep of 40 , fccL And the rnr.n in the room with mr- l*aiu d against the mantel-door i and lisL d. His pursuers were plain ly hauled: * heard him draw a long ^ breut’::. anil ti.ru to grope his way through the blackness. Then—he touch, u my hand, cold, clammv, death like. A hand in an empty room! He drew in his breath, the sharp intaking of horror that Sills lurgs suddenly col lar,-' d Beyond jerking his hand cway Instantly, he made no movement. I think absolute terror had him by the throat. Th n he stepped back, with- | out turning, retreating foot by foot ; from The Dread in the corner, and I do not think he breathed. Then, with the relief of space be tween us. 1 screamed, ear-spiittingly. madly, and they heard me outside. “In the chimney!” I shrieked. ‘Be hind the mantel! The mantel!" With an oath the figure hurled itself j across the room at mo, and I screamed again. In his blind fury he ; had missed me: 1 heard him strike the wall. That one time 1 eluded him: 1 was across the room, and I had got the chair. He stood for a second, list' ring, th.cn—he made another rush and 1 struck out with my weapon. I think it stunned him. for 1 had a sec ond s respite when 1 could hear him breathing, and some one shouted out side: "We—can't—get—in. Iior.-—does—it open?” But the man in the room had changed his tactics. I knew he was creeping on me, inch by inch, and I could not tell from where. And then —he caught me. He held his hand over my mouth, and I bit him. I was helpless, strangling—and some one • was trying to break in the mantel from outside. It began to yield some- ! where, for a thin wedge of yellowish light was reflected on the opposite wall. When he saw that, my assailant dropped me with a curse; then—the opposite wall swung open noiselessly, closed again without a sound, and I was alone. The intruder was gone. "In the next room!” I called wiidiy. “The next room!” But the sound of ! blows on the mantel drowned my voice. By the time I had made them understand, a couple of minutes had elapsed. The pursuit was taken up then, by all except Alex, who was de termined to liberate me. When I stepped out into the trunkroom a free woman again I could hear the chase far below. 1 must say, for all Alex's anxiety to set me free, he paid little enough at- ; teniion to my plight He jumped through the opening into the secret room and picked up the portable safe. "1 am going to put this in Mr. Hal sey s room. Miss lnnes.” he said, “aEd I shall send one of the detectives to guard it.” I hardly heard him. I wanted to laugh and cry in the same breath— to crawl into bed and have a cup of tea. and scold Biddy, and do any of the thousand natural things that I had never expected to do again. And the air! The touch of the cool night air on my face! r in the large ; ":es The old theory that men are1 the criminals and must be policed by men i.; gning way before the fact that 1 there do appear from time to time j women criminals, and especially be fore the fact that women can be saved before crime fixes them permanently in its possession. In Portland there is a woman on the police force who has done efficient ! work in connection with the Young Women's C’hr:. tian association — an other vital factor in large towns in the ordering of the city. She had also accomplished much as a probation offi cer. Having served her term in these, the woman was ready when Portland decided that it required a police wom an. She is a regular member of the d' partment. with the same recount- i tion shown to men. In Seattle there is also a police woman, although her appointment is temporary—during the Alaska-Yukon exposition. In ail prob ■ ability, however, Seattle will fled this j1 cne j olice woman of such value that she will be retained. __ i ! Worried Over His Trousers. The humors and tragedies of New ! York East side life are delineated bv 1 Frank Marshall White in an article in Harper s Weekly. Master Jacob Hos- 1 enberg. eleven or twelve years of ! age. was suffering from a broken leg. 1 His supreme agony came, however, j ' when Dr. M. ripped up one side of the juvenile trousers with a pair of scissors to make room for bandages. ‘My new pants! My new pants! He’s cutting my new pants!’ Jacob ! shrieked, and almost wriggled himself 1 out of the grasp of the policeman and \ the driver in his efforts to prevent the mutilation of his raiment. All the way to his home in the ambulance the \ boy bewailed his mangled trousers ! more than he did his broken leg. We think that preachers ought to I say more about hell fire and brim- I stone; people are feeling altogether « too easy about themselves I :s good, ^xctpl lie be ttiude by loving? -Ol. .AUSUCUlie, Laughter is the sun that drives winter from the human face. —Victor Hugo. Palatable Liver. Lamb's or cait s liver is not a dish to be despised. The common method of serving it fried with bacon is very appetizing if well cooked; but one likes variety even in serving liver. Try this way and see how choice a dish it is: Fry three slices of salt pork until brown, lay in the liver and sear well on both sides, then put into a covered baking dish with a few po tatoes parboiled, a few carrots and aa omea that has been tried brown in the pork tat. If you have a liuie broth or stock pour it over the meat and vegetables, if not use boiling wat.r, cover and cook for several hours until the vegetables are tender. Serve in the easserok. Season when the dtsh is about bait cooked. Another nice way to serve liver ; - to wrap a piece of bacon around ach piece of liver alter seasoning well arid rolling in hour thou bake in a hot oven until the bacon is crisp. Turn race during the cooking. Liver with curry sauce is another way to add \ ariety to its serving. Cook the liver as usual, adding a bit of oak i. to the fat fer flavor. Remove the live r and ad 1 two tablespoonfuls of flour, a half teaspoonful of curry powder and a cup of stock. Strain over the liver and serve with rice. Things Worth Knowing. When a stitch is dropped in a fine silk stocking which will cause "rail roading" wet the place to arrest any further damage and then it will go no further and the place may be lamed when the stocking is removed. Stockings that have been dipped in water and dried before wearing w ill not be so apt to drop stitches. Try using varnished paper as cover ing for shelves; it is easily wiped and kept clean. To clarify fat. add a raw rotate cut in small pieces to the fat and allow it to her.t gradually. When the potatoes are well browned remove them and s'rain the fat through a cheese cloth. The potato absorbs any odors and collects som<» of the sediment, the re mainder sinks to the bottom of tht kettle. LOVE the sm- U of apples when they’re getting streaky red. Ana l love the smell that crinkles from an old time posy bed; The earthy spice of new plowed fields is e’er.most sublime. But there ain’t no smell that ekals the smell of picklin’ time.” There are so many good things to prepare for the winter that it is hard to choose when one can have but a few on account of the expense. Those fortunate enough to possess a good garden may be independent of the markets. Pickling Tims. There are so many good things to he prepared in the fall that the house wife who has not a well-stored fruit closet may well feel that she. like the butterfly, has idled the summer hours away, and the winter will find her with bare shohes. Most house wives have old and tried recipes that have been banded down from mother to daughter, so that those need not be repeated. French Pickles. —Reject the seeds from six green peppers, cut the stem end from one pec’.; of small green to matoes and pare four medium-sized anions: chop separately. Chop two tablespoonfuls each of mint and nas turtium seed: sprinkle with one cup ful of salt and let stand 24 hours. Mix one cupful of grated horse radish with two tablespoonfuls of white mus tard seed, one tablespoonful each of pepper corns, ground cinnamon and sugar, one-half tenspoonful each of ground cloves, allspice, mace and gin ger. Add to the vegetables, cover with vinegar, cook slowly for four j hours, seal hot in pint fruit jars. Plum Catsup.—Boil the plums with ; is little water as possible until soft, j rub through a colander, and to every 1 Rve pounds of pulp add two and a , half pounds of sugar, a cupful of vine- I ;ar. and a tablespoonful each of cin- j lamon and cloves. Boil half an hour, stirring steadily, and seal boiling hot. Chow Chow—fake two quarts of :mafl green tomatoes, 12 small eu •nmbers. three red peppers, one cauli lower, two bunches of celery, one ;int of small onions, two quarts of string beans, one-fourth of a pound of nustard seed, two ounces of tumeric, j ;ne-half ounce each of cloves, allspice j ind pepper, and one gallon of vinegar. Prepare the vegetables, cut them in mail pieces, cover with salt and let i stand 24 hours and drain. Heat the j rinegar to the boiling point with the | spices, add the vegetables and ccok I hem until tender. Peach Mangoes.—Rub the down 1 rom firm, large peaches, cover with ! strong brine, and let stand for two lays: drain, cover with cold water snd stand 30 minutes; wipe and with The Pipe in Germany. Among the European smokers the neerschaum and the porcelain bowl ind favor with the German, and the ivalry between their respective iner ts affords a constant topic of contro versy among the burghers or youths if the universities. The possession ind becoming use of the pipe mark he transition from youth to manhood, .nd the rauchen rank being assumed, he pipe, which is its recognized em ilem and representative, is seldom out if the hand of its owner. RHEUMATISM | a sharp kniie remove a small piece | from the side, take out the stone ana rub the cavity with a little celery i seed. Make a filing with one cupful ! of chopped sour appla. one table ■ spoonful each of white mustard seed ! and grated horse radish, one tea ; spoonful of mace and half a teaspoon ! ful of ground cloves. Fill the peaches, i replace the piece cut out, tie secure | ly, and stand in jars cut side upward. ; For every quart of vinegar add one j cupful of brown sugar, and one-fourth teaspoonful of cayenne; bring slow ; !y to the boiling point, skim carefully, pour over the peaches, seal and in ten i days they will be ready to use. — beauty that doth oft make ! woman proud. wkl- ir at ao;n r.i;u;c mem mosi aa- i mired; Tis government that makes them seem di\ ine. —Shakespeare. Pickles Like Mother Used to Make. The following are old and tried re- , cipes which are never quite out- ' classed by the now and up-to-date pickles: Green Tomato Pickles—Slice one ' peck of gro ".i tomatoes into a jar. put a layer of tomatoes, then a few slices of onion, using half a dozen onions, sprinkle w:'h a capful of salt and let stand 3-i hours, drain and add one quart of vinegar and choice of spices: cook until the vegetables are tender j When cold add a tab’espoonful of ground mustard mixed with a little vinegar. Ripe Cucumber Pickles—Cut ripe eu cumbers in halves, cover with water. : allowing two teasponfuis of pondered ! alum to each quart of water. Heat gradually to the boiling point, then let j 1 simmer for two hours on the back part : of the range. Drain and chill in ice water. Make a sirup of two pounds of sugar and a pint of vinegar, with i two tablespoonfuls each of whole : cloves and cinnamon tied in a cloth Remove the cucumbers and put in r s'one iar; pour over them the boiling | sirup. Scald the sirup three successive . mornings and pour over the cucurn hers. Sweet pickles of different kind may be prepared from, the following recipe: Take 3!2 pounds of brown sugar, a pint of vinegar and sever pounds of fruit. Spicing is varied tc suit the taste. Alwars put the spice in a small muslin bag. then it may be removed if the piekies are too strong with spice. Most people like one part cloves to two pa-ts cinnamon for : spicing. Crab apples are delicious pickled in this proportion; also pears and peaches Pickled Onions—For those who like pickled onions here is a good recipe: ! Select small silver-skinned onions put them in a brine, after peeling j carefully, i.et stand three days in a brine that will float an egg Drain and put in a jar. making a layer three inches deep; sprinkle with horse rad ish. cayenne pepper or chopped red I pepper, cinnamon and cloves; repeat until the jar is full. Take vinegar to cover, add a cupful of brown sugai to a quart and pour boiling hot over tfco onions. K.\ \vi say Wf have not time for anything, we usually mean that we have not inv'lination for it. It is significant that most persons find time for what they are bound to do.” Helpful Hints. Closely woven goods require less starch to stiffen. All fats except mutton can be used in cookery; that may be used for salves and soaps. Put the roast in a very hot oven at first, then after ten or fifteen minutes lower the heat so that it will cook slowly and retain the juices. When coloring, use a little vaseline on the hands to keep the dye from sinking in and then wash them, using lemon juice to remove the stains. Bits of dampened paper thrown over the carpet before sweeping will aid in keeping down the dust. Tea leaves are also good and tend to brighten the carpet. For a long-sleeved corset cover, cut the top off of your worn winter union suits. Such a corset cover costs noth ing and is as good looking as one made for the purpose. When having a roof shingled, save some of the shingles and leave them exposed to the air and sun until well weathered; then when a few shingles are wanted for patching the roof it will not have that patched look. When the stilletto is lost, try usins the orange wood stick, the kind used for the nails. Many workers prefei them to a bone or ivory one. and il lost can be easily replaced. The eye lets made are as smooth and perfect as if made by the stilletto. Spiced Cucumber Pickles. Soak medium sized cucumbers fot 12 hours in strong salt water. Then scald them In vinegar and pack in jars. Prepare the vinegar with spices and pour boiling hot over them. Use whole spices. Novel Clock. A clock that plays soft music not only to awaken a sleeper, but to put j a person to sleep, thus reversing the ' usual function, and one that turns on the iights In a bedroom are recent ideas in timepieces. AJI She Wanted Was the Man. "My wife didn't ask me to sign ovei my fortune whin I married her." said the man in the corner seat. “She was too glad to get me to bother about trifles.''—Clevelrnd Plain Dealer. r 1 want every chronic rheumatic to throw array all medicines, all lialntcnts. all piasters, end cire Ml’KYOXS RHEUMA U'itSM REMKPY a trirh ^o matter what your doctor cay say, no matter what your friends may soy, no matter how irejud: ed yrtj a ay be rtrtirrt a!) adver tised remedies, c-'- rt cr e to yonr drny glst sr.d ret a Dctt'e of the av3El M_\ TIsM r.E>'"PY. 1? it fails to give satis faction.! will rferd your merer.— Muayoa Rem-tuber this remedy cousins no sr! Irrlie aci 1. no cr'rt cv tine, morphine or ether harmful dries. It Is pat up cVr the guarantee «* the Pure food a.;i l>ru* A-t. Par sale by all drcyyktr. Price, koc. NEED HOMEY PCS S03D WORK Flans cf tbs National Association fcr tbs Study rod Prevention cf Tubereuxsis. Whnt "a Million Mr Tuberculosis from lied Cross Sea's” >v ill .V in pro viding : cate of the £73 l 0.- need ed at once in the Cultcd States for roesu.relives. is explai'.od in a recent bulletin of the Nttkml Association for the Study and Proven;ion of Tu bercalo is. Then- is jus: about one bed for • very ten ird’g nt con sump tires, ami ii ail tuberculosis r~ r.-cn in the corr try are coat tod, N it rich and poor, hardly one for every £3 or 30. If sufficient hospital . r. mo 'a tions ar»> provided only fcr those who are too poor to pay the full price for their treatment, fully 273.000 more !- -ds in special institutions for tuberculosis would l-e e-edc-d at once. The immense outlay necessary to pre ride and maintain so many bods in hospitals, make it indurative, the National Assoc lation for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis de clares. that such Institutions be erect ed fro:r. public money, either muni cipal. county or state. In order to set appropriations for public hospitals for tuberculosis, rotation is neces sary, and in order to create a cam paisrn of agitation, orgnnlratioa is de manded. Rnt in order tbs: an o-gnnl zation may carry on an effective cam paign. funds are needed. These funds it i. proposed to secure in as many communities as possible from the sale of Red Cross seals. THE RIVAL CAPTIANS. Cbimmie—GVaa. you're no hall player. Yer couldn't Ketch a foul if it was moultin'! Patsy—Gittout. you couldn't Ketch a fly if it was stuck on sticky fly-pa per till it was dead as nu Masses* Deadlock. “Who is that man who has boon sit ting behind the bar Jay after day?" inquired the stranger in Crimson Gulch. “That's Stage Coach Charley. He's in a peculiar predicament. He went to town last week and got his teeth fixed. Then he came here. and. bein' broke, ran up a bill on the strength oi his seven dollars' worth of gold fillin'. Charley won t submit to havin' the nuggets pried out an' the proprietor won't let him git away with the col lateral, and there you are!" She Probably Could. Senator I«\ Follette, apropos of cer tain scandals, said at a dinner ir Mad ison: "These things recall the legisla tor who remarked to his wife, with a look of disgust: 'One of those land lobbyists approached me today with another insalting proposition.' "The wife, a young and pretty wom an, clapped her hands. 'Oh. good!* she cried. 'Then l can have that sable stole, after all, can't I. dear*' * A business firm advertises a shirt without buttons. That’s no novelty. Many a bachelor has worn them for years. When It’s “What lor Breakfast?” Try Post Toasties Serve with cream or milk and every’ member of the family will say “rip ping" good. And don't be surprised if they want I a second helping. “The Memory Lingers** Fossnia Cereal Coiapaay,: Iri BatUe Creek, Mick.