The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, September 21, 1922, Image 6

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    RED CLOUD. NEBRASKA, CHIEF
ERSKINE
THE YOUNQ CHIEF
SYNOPSIS. To tho Kentucky
V'llderncfln outpost commanded ly
Jforomo Eiinilera, In tho tlnio Itiiino
dtatcly preceding thu llr-volutlon,
conies a whlto boy IIccIiik from ti
trlbo of Sliawnccn by whom ho hail
been captured nnd ndofitcd lis u eon
of tho chief Knhtoo. Ha Is kIvoii
nlicltcr nnd nttrnct.s tho fuvornblo
attention of nave Ynndcll, a lender
ntnotiK tho settler!) Tho boy wnrnn
IiIh new friends of the coming of a
Bliawnco war party. Tho fort Is
atlarUcd, nnd only saved by the
timely appearance of a party of
VlrulnlanM, The leader of theso In
fatally wounded, but In Ills dyliiB
momentn reciiBiilzes tho fugitive
youth an hid Hon. At lted Oaks,
plantation on tho Jatnea river, Vlr
Mlnln, Colonel Halo's home, the boy
appear with n message for the
colonel, who after rending It Intro
duces tho bearer to IiIm daiiKhter
llnrbara as hor cousin, Krnklno
Dale, ICrsklnc meetH two other
cousins, Harry Pnle and 'Hugh WIN
loughby. Dueling raplcrH on a wnll
at lted Oaks attract lCrsklnu's at
tention. He takes his first fencing
lesson from Hugh. Yandell visits
lted Oaks. At the county fair at
Williamsburg Krsklne mods a
youth, Diino Orcy, and there at
onro nrlscH a bitter antagonism be
tween them. Grey, In liquor, In
sults Krsklno, and the latter, for
tho moment nil Indian, draws his
knife. Yandell dlrnrms him.
Ahhamed of his conduct In tho af
fair with Orey, Krsklne leaves lted
Oaks that night, to return to the
wilderness.
CHAPTER VI Continued.
'Hurry." Mild Colonel Dale, "carry
your cousin r.iy apologies ami rIvo htm
Firefly on contllllon that lie ride him
Lack some day. Tell lilm this homo Is
his" thi speaker halted, hut went on
gravely and llinily "whenever lie
pleases."
"And kIvo lilm my love," said llar
liara, holding- hack her tears.
At Uio rlver-Kiite they turned to
wave a last goodhy nnd disappeared
In tho woods. At that hour the hoy
far over In the wilderness ahead of
them had cooked a squirrel that he
had shot for his breakfast and was
Knawlns It to the hones. Soon he roso
nnd at n trot sped on toward his homo
beyond tho Cumberland. And with
lilm. etched with neld on tho steel of
Ids brain, sped twp Images llnrlmrn's
face as he last saw It and. tho face of
younK Dnno Clrey.
The boy's tracks were easily to be
Been In the sandy road, and from them
Dnvo judged that ho must have left
long before daylight. And ho wns trav
eling rapidly. At sunset Ditvo knew
that they were not far behind him, but
when darkness hid tho lad's tracks
Dnvo stopped for the night. Again
Krsklno had got tho start by going on
before day, and It was the middle of
tho forenoon before Dave, missing tho
tracks for n hundred yards, halted nnd
turned back to where a little stream
crossed tho road, and dismounted, lend
ing his horse and scrutinizing the
ground.
"lie's seen us tracking him nnd bo's
doubled on us and Is tracking us. I
expect bo's looking at us .from some
where around here." And ho hallooed
nt the top of his voice, which rang
down tho forest aisles. A war-whoop
nnswered almost In their cars that
iimdo tho blood leap in both tho boys.
Kven Dave wheeled with cocked rllle,
nnd the lad stepped from behind a
bush scarcely ten feet behind them.
"Well, by gum," shouted Duve,
"fooled us, after nil."
A faint grin of triumph wna on the
lad's lips, but In his eyes was a wnlt
lng Inquiry directed nt Harry nnd
Hugh. They sprang forward, both of
them with their bands outstretched:
"We're sorry I"
A few minutes later Hugh was trans
ferring his saddle from Firefly to bis
own horse, which hnd gone n trllle
lnme. On Firefly, Harry buckled tho
boy's saddle nnd motioned for lilm to
climb up. The bewildered lad turned
to Dave, who laughed.
"It's all right."
"lie's your horse, cousin," said
Harry. "My father sent him to you
nnd says his home Is yours whenever
you please. And llarbara sent her
love."
At nlmost the sumo hour In the
great house on the James tho old no
gross was carrying from tho boy's
room to Colonel Dale In the library n
kingly deed thnt the Ind had left be
hind lilm. It was a rude scrawl on a
heet of pnper, signed by the hoy's
Indian name and bis totem mnrk n
buffnlo pierced by an arrow.
"It make me Inugh. I have no use.
I give hole dam plnntashun llarbara."
Thus read tho scrawl I
CHAPTER VII
Led- by Dave, sometimes by tho boy,
the four followed tho course of rivers,
upward, always except when they de
scended some mountnln which they
bad to cross, and then It was soon up
ward again. The two Virginia lads
found themselves, much to their cha
grin, ns helpless us children, but they
were apt pupils and soon learned to
make n fire with (lint and even with
dry sticks of wood.
Three days' Journeying brought
them to tho brond, beautiful Ilolston
river, passing over the pine-crested,
white-rocked summit of Clinch moun
tain, and came to the last outlying fort
of the western frontier. Next day they
started on tho long, long wilderness
trail toward tho Cumberland range.
On the third day therefrom the gray
wall of tho Cumberland thnt ran with
frowning Inaccessibility on their right
gathered Its flanks Into steep gray
cliffs and dipped suddenly Into Cum
berland gap. Up thlH they climbed.
DALE
By John Fox, Jr.
st-
Copyright Vr Charlti Scrlbner'i Son'f
On the summit they went Into camp,
and next morning Dave swept a long
arm toward the wild expnnso to tho
west.
"Four moro days," ho cried, "and
we'll bo there 1"
The two boys looked with awe on
(be limitless stretch of wooded wilds.
It was still Virginia, to bo sure, but
they felt that once they started down
they would be leaving their own be
loved stato for a strange land of un
known beasts and red men who people
that "dark and bloody ground."
Ih'foro sunrise next morning they
were dropping down tho steep and
rocky trail. . That night they slept
amid the rocky foot-hills of tho range,
and next morning looked tipon a vast
wilderness stretch of woods that un
dulated to tho gentlo slopes of the
hills, nnd that night they were on tho
edge of the blue-grass land.
Toward sunset Dave, through a
sixth sense, had the unensy feeling
that he was not only being followed
but watched from the cliffs alongside,
and he observed that Krsklno too had
more than once turned In his saddle
or lifted his eyes searchlngly to the
shnggy flanks of the hills. Neither
spoko to the other, but that night
when the hoot of nn owl raised Dave
from bis blanket, Krsklno too wns up
right with his rlllc In his hand. For
half nn hour they waited, and lay
down again, only to be awakened
again by the snort of n horse, when
both sprang to their feet nnd crawled
out toward the sound. Hut the heavy
silence lay unbroken and they brought
the horses closer to the Are.
"Now I know It wns Indians," said
Dave; "that boss o' mine can smell
one furthcr'n a rattlesnake." The boy
nodded and they took turns on watch
while thu two hoys slept on till day
light. Tho trail was broad enough
next morning for them to ride two
abreast Dave and Krsklno In advanco.
They had scarcely gone u hundred
yards when nn Indian stepped Into the
They Had Scarcely Gone a Hundred
Yards When an Indian Stepped Into
the Path Twenty Yards Ahead.
path twenty yards abend. Instinctive
ly Dave threw his rifle up, but Krsklno
caught his arm. The Indian hnd lifted
bis hand pnlm upward.- -"Shnwneol"
said tho lad, ns two moro nppearcd
from the bushes. The eyes of tho two
tldewnter boys grew large, and both
clinched their guns convulsively. The
Indian spokesman paid no heed except
to Krsklno and only from the lad's
face, In which surprise was succeeded
by sorrow nnd then deep thought ful
ness, could they guess what tho gut
tural speech meant, until Krsklno
turned to them.
Thej were not on tho war path
against tho whites, ho explained. Ills
foster-father Kahtoo, the big chief,
the king was very ill, and his mes
sage, brought by them, was that Krs
klno should come back to tho tribe and
become chief, ns the chief's only
daughter was dead and his only son
had been killed by the palefaces. T.hey
knew that In the fight at the fort
Krsklno had killed a Shawnee, Ills tor
mentor, for they knew tho arrow,
which Krsklno hnd not had time to
withdraw. Tho dead Shawnee's
brother Crooked Lightning was with
them. Ho It wns who had recognized
I be boy the day before, and they had
kept him from killing Krsklno from
the hushes. At that moment a gigan
tic savage stepped from the brush.
The hoy's frame quivered, straight
ened, grew rigid, hut ho met the ma
levolent glare turned on him with
emotionless face and himself quietly
began to speak while Harry and Hugh
and even Dave watched lilm en
thralled; for tho Ind was Indian now
and the old chief's mnntle was about
his shoulders. Ho cut his horse like a
king nnd spoko as u king. He thanked
them for holding back Crooked Light
ning's evil hand, but contemptuously
he spat townrd the huge savage ho
was not to die by that hand. He was
a paleface and tho Indians had slain
his white mother. Ho had forgiven
that, for he loved tho old chief nnd
his foster mother and brother and sis
ter, and the trlbo had always "been
kind to him. Then they had killed his
white father and ho had gone to visit
his kindred by the big waters, and now
- PIONEER
lie loved them. Ho hnd fled from the
Sliawnees becnuso of tho cruelty of
Crooked Lightning's brother, whom he
bad slain. Hut If the Indians were
falling Into evil ways and following
evil counsels, his heart was sad.
"I will come when tho leaves fall,"
ho concluded, "but Crooked Lightning
must pilch Ids lodge In the wilderness
until bo can show that bis In art Is
good." And then with an Imperious
gesture ho waved his hand townrd the
west :
"Now go I"
It was hard even for Dnve to realize
that the lad, to nil purposes, wob actu
ally then the chief of n powerful tribe,
nnd oven ho was a little awed by the
Instant obedience of the savages, who,
without ft word, melted Into the bushes
and disappeared. Dave recovered him
self with n little chuckle only when
without a word Krsklno eluckciLFIre
fly forward, quite unonsclously taking
the lead. Nearlng sunset, from n
little hill Dave pointed to n thin blue
wisp of stnoko rising far ahead from
tho green cxpnn.se.
"There it is, boys!" bo cried. All
tho horses were tired except Firefly
and with a whoop Krsklno darted for
ward nnd disappeared. They followed
ns fast ns they could nnd they heard
the report of the boy's rlllo and tho
series of war-whoops with which ho
was heralding his nppronch. Nobody
In the fort wns fearful, for plainly It
was no unfriendly conllng. All wore
gathered at the big gate and there
were many yells nnd cries of welcome
nnd wonder when the boy swept into
the clearing on n run, brandishing bis
rifle above his head, and pulled bis
fiery black horse up In front of them.
"Whar'd you stonl that boss?" shout
ed Hud.
"Look nt them clothes I" cried Jack
Sanders) And tho women Mother
Sanders, Mother Noo and Lydia and
Honor nnd I'olly Conrad gathered
about him, laughing, welcoming, shak
ing hands nnd asking questions.
"Where's Dnvo?" That was tho
chief question nnd asked by several
voices at the same time. The boy
looked grave.
"Dave ain't comln" back," he snld,
and then seeing the look on Lydia's
face, Iiq smiled: "Dnvo" He had no
further to go, for Dnve's rlllo cracked
and his voice roso from tho woods,
and he nnd Harry nnd Hugh galloped
Into tho clearing. Then were there
more whooplngs nnd greetings, nnd
Lyilln's starting tears turned to smile.".
Dave had to tell about his trip and
Kr.sklnc's races for the Ind would sny
nothing and In turn followed stories
of killing buITnlo, deer, panther and
wildcat during his nbsence. Early the
women disappeared, soon the men be
gan to yawn and stretch, and the sen
tinels went to the watch-towers, for
there had been Indian signs that day.
This news thrilled the eastern lads,
and they too turned Into the same bed
built out from the wall of one of the
cabins nnd covered with bearskins.
And nnrry, Just before his eyes closed,
saw through tho open door Krsklno
seated nlone, tho connecting-link be
between the tidewater aristocrats and
theso rude pioneers, between these
backwoodsmen nnd tho savage ene
mies out In the black encircling wil
derness. And thnt boy's brain was In
n turmoil what was to be his fato,
there, here, or out there where he had
promised to go nt tho next falling of
the leaves?
The green of the wilderness dulled
and burst Into the yellow of the buck
eye, the scarlet of moplo nnd the rus
set of oak. This glory In turn dulled
and tho leaves, like petals of withered
flowers, began to drift to the earth.
Through the shower of them wont
Krsklno nnd Firefly, who hnd become
ns used to the wilds ns to the smiling
banks of the far-nwoy James. And
tho two now were one In mutual affec
tion nnd n mutual understnndlng that
was uncanny.
Tho boy wns the son of n king ngnln,
nnd ns such was on his way In nnswer
to tho wish of n king. For food he
carried only n llttlo sock of salt, for
his rlllo would bring him meat and
tho forest would give him nuts nnd
fruit. When tho sun was nearlng Its
highest, ho "barked" a squirrel from
tho trunk of n beech; toward sunset
a fat pheasant fluttered from the
ground to a low limb nnd he shot Its
head olT und camped for the night.
On the second day he readied tho
broad buffalo trail that led to tho salt
licks and on to tho river, nnd then
memories came. He remembered a
plnco where tho Indians had camped
after they had captured himself and
his mother. In his mind was n faint
picture of her sitting ngalnst u tree
und weeping nnd of nn Indian striking
her to make her stop and of himself
leaping nt tho savage like n llttlo wild
cat, whereat tho others laughed like
children, Further on, next day, was
the spot where -the Indians had sepa
rated them and ho saw his mother no
more. They told him thnt she had
been taken back to the whites, but he
was told later that they had killed
her because In their flight from the
whiles she was holding them back too
much. Fnrther on was a spot where
they had hurried from the trail and
thrust him Into n hollow log, barring
the exit with stones, nnd hnd left him
for a day and n night.
"Black Wolf, son of Crooked
Llghtnlnol"
(TO 1112 CONTINUED.)
Portugal contains only two cities,
Lltthnn nnd Onorto. with nonulntlom
1 tn excess of 50,000
.Ie$on
(Copy for This Department Supplied by
tbo Amerlcnn Ledon News Service.)
WAR RECORDS OF GRANDDADS
Mrs. Edward W. Burt of North Caro
lina Working on Hereditary
Society Plan.
"Grunddud, what did you do during
tho wnr?J' will bo the speclnl query of
tho young Amer
icans of the next
generation thnt
Mrs. Kdward W,
Hurt of Snllsbury,
N. C, has sot her
self out ta an
swer. Mrs. Burt
Is chairman of
tho Amerlcnn Le
gion Auxiliary
committee to per
petrate the organ
ization In n he
reditary society.
WW Ua
Tho Auxiliary, in Its present make
up, Is composed of mothers, wives,
daughters nnd sisters of tho members
of t life Amerlcnn Legion, nnd of tho
women of tl.o same status who lost
men In the World war. There Is no
Junior society to the Auxiliary or to
tho Legion, such ns there Is to other
patriotic societies for Instance, the
Sons of tho Involution hut when a
generation has passed undoubtedly
such n society will come Into existence.
It Is to prepare tl.e way for an heredi
tary society, composed of the daugh
ters nnd granddaughters of World war
veterans, that Mrs. Hurt Is working.
Her plnn will Include Incorporation
Into the Auxiliary records of the war
records of tho Legion men, so thnt
future genealogists will have no
trouble In locating tho wnr records of
their granddads.
THE VETERAN OF SEVEN WARS
Robert Bruce MacGrerjor of Seattle,
One of Eleven Survivors of
His Old Regiment.
A veteran of seven wars at forty
eight years of age, Robert Bruce Mae-
Gregor of Seattle,
Wnhh., says that
his days on tho
hattlcliclds n r o
forever over and
that ho expects to
d o v o t o tho re
maining years of
his life to peace
ful activities.
Mr. MucOregor
served In tho
World wnr with
the original Prin
cess Hat regi
ment, which numbered J,0'.)3 men In
101-1. Eleven of thnt 1,01)3 nro now
nllve nnd only two of tho eleven can
walk. Mr. MncGregor Is one of tho
two.
Ho fought In tho Philippines during
tho Spanish-American war, In China
during tho Boxer rebellion, In South
Africa during tho Natal rebellion, tho
Matabclo uprising and tho Jumleson
raid. Twelve medals, four decorations
und wounds which keep him constant
ly under tho doctor's caro constitute
his spoils.
Although Mr. MncGregor has left
the battlefield, bo believes that there
are peacetime battles to be fought. Ho
has been lighting unemployment In
Seattle In behalf of tho American Le
gion for a number of months. He re
cently landed Jobs for 230 former sol
diers. More than that, he has adopted
and Is educating n fifteen-year-old
boy.
DESIGNS THE LEGION POSTER
Drawing by Clarence rtceder, News
paper Artist, Advertises the Big
Meet at New Orleans.
Nineteen New Orlenns nrtlsts com
peted In a contest for a poster to ad-
vcrtlso tho Amer
lcnn Legion na
tional convention,
but n former "top
sergeant" won tho
prize of $100.
Clarence Heeder,
staff artist of a
Now Orleans
newspaper, who
drilled rookies at
Camp Hike during
tho World wnr,
rtrmv (lift wlmilut
..". " "
punter,
Tho successful design represents a
doughboy, n sailor ami n murine In
uniform, looking nt n guidebook,
labeled "New Orleans, tho Paris of
tho U. S. A.." with a view of tho
famous French quarter below. Abovo
tho three llgures nro tho Legion em
uli'in und tho words, "Oh, buddy, let's
go," and 4below, "American) Legion
National Convention nt Now Orleans,
October 10-20."
Forty thousand copies of tho poster
will be sent to nil Legion posts nnd
will bo on display In railroad stations
In ninny parts of tho country.
Boycott Them.
"Now, children," beamed the Sun
day school teacher, "who can suggest
the lesson we are taught by tho down
full of Samson? Very well, Georgle."
"Don't patronize women barbers,
tnu'am." American Legion Weekly,
v&& I
i , , , s
t..."v..i.'
if
v-i. v m.
MEDAL OF HONOR MEN GUESTS
Wearers of Congressional Decorations
Will Bo Prominent at Legion
National Convention.
-Fromhiont
among tho distinguished
guests at the American Legion nation
al convention in
New Orleans, Oc
tober 10-20, will
bo wenrers of tho
c (ingress lonal
modal of honor,
die highest award
for bravery made
by tho United
States. Lieut. Syd
ney O. Gumpcrtz
of New York was
tho first mednl of
honor man to ac
cept the conven
tion Invitation.
Tho citation of Lieutenant Gum
pcrtz came ns n result of "an net of
heroism while serving ns n sergeant
with the One Hundred Thirty-second
Infantry In the Hols do Forges, Sep
tember 20, 1018.
Advnncing under hostile ninchlno
gun fire, Gumpcrtz killed two German
gunners with pistol lire nnd the re
maining 11 members of thu crew sur
rendered. About thirty minutes lifter
this exploit the platoon was again held
up by German machine gun nests.
Volunteers were asked for to silence
tho guns. Gumpertz, a corporal and it
private volunteered and the trio ad
vanced In single file.
Encountering the enemy's bnrrage,
tho two companions of Gumpertz were
killed by n shell, but Gumpertz con
tinued to advanco alone on the nest by
the flank ami located It. Ho then
threw into It a Mills hand grenade and
killed nnd wounded several members
of the crow. The remaining 10 mem
bers surrendered themselves and the
two heavy-type machine guns. The
action of Sergeant Gumpertz enabled
his unit to continue the advance.
WHAT THE LEGION IS DOING
Reno (Nev.) Editor, on Bike Ride
Through Country, Spreads News
of the Poets.
Traveling 123 miles a day, and
camping nt night by thovrondsIde, Don
ald F. Chase, twenty-one years old, re
cently phssed through Middle Western
cftles on n bicycle from Heno, Nov., to
Syracuse, N. Y.
Young Chase's family lives at Syra
cuse and, as a vacation from his duties
ns city editor of tho Nevada State
Journal, tho energetic Ind decided he
would rldo through and sec his mother.
The Heno American Legion saw a
chance to do some worth-while adver
tising. So arrangements wore mnde
whereby Chase should speak before 110
Legion posts on his way across the
continent. At first ho spoke only of
what tho Heno posts of tho Legion nnd
tho Nevada state department nro do
ing, but later he found that bo could
be of greater service by telling each
post of all tho good things that other
posts along his route lire doing.
The. young galling gun which ho
carried with him saw service when nn
nutomohllo driver rnn Into bis bicycle
ncur Topekn, Kan., and then refused
to stop to see what damage had been
done. Chase put a bullet In a tiro and
then made the driver hnul htm and his
bike to town.
"One doesn't realize Just what tho
Amerlcnn Legion Is doing until ho vis
Its Legion posts and sees the efforts
of theso posts to Improve their com
munities," he said.
WILL DANCE FOR DOUGHBOYS
Miss Emily V. Sshupp, Duluth, Vol-
unteers Services at New
Orleans Convention.
Miss Kmlly V."Schupp of Duluth,
Minn,, has volunteered to dance for
her doughboy
.-- - . . . ... .1...
irii'ijr.rs ill. mu
American 'Legion
national conven
tion In New Or
leans next Octc
ber.
During tho wnr
Miss S c h u p p,
who Is known
profosslonnlly as
"Ladn," onto r
tallied thousands
of soldiers In tho
enntonm cuts of
America. She hns appeared at Le
gion entertainments in u number of
Minnesota cities. Miss Schupp, who
Is also u soloist, Is scheduled to ap
pear at n recital to he given nt the
Now Orlenns convention by tho Duluth
American Legion band, which won
first prize over 75 competitors In the
band contest held nt the Legion con
vention In Kansas City Just fall.
Carrying On With the
American Legion
."- .......---.'
Hugo sign boards "telling tho
world" how to tlnd the American Le
gion cluhronnis have been erected on
nil roads leading Into ltlcevlllo, In.,
by the post there.
Auxiliaries fashioned on Identical
lines with the Amerlcnn Legion mix
Illury have been organized In Cnnada
and In Knglnad. In each the women
eligible must bo wives, mothers, sis
ters or daughters of members of tho
war veterans' association), whoso ills
chnrgo comprises their ell, 'lllty, The
women of Canada, and England visit
tho disabled veterans nnd caro for
their dependents und aid the voteraus
In obtaining legislation to mitigate
their after-war burdens.
rrj
iff
Mr
ORAMPS, PAINS
AND BACKACHE
St. Louis Woman Relieved by
Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg
etable Compound
St. Louio, Mo. "I was bothered
with cramps and pains every month and
had bnckacho and
had to jo to bod no I
could not work. My
mothor and my
whole family nlways
took Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable
Compound for such
troubles and thoy
induced mo to try ft
and it has helped mo
very much. I don't
havo cramps any
more, nnd I can do
my housework all through tho month.
I recommend your Vcgotablo Compound
to my friends for female troubles."
Mrs. Della Scholz, 1112 Salisbury
Stroot, St Louis, Mo.
Just think for a moment Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound haa
been in use for nearly fifty years. It is
prepared from medicinal plants, by tho
utmost pharmaceutical skill, nnd supe
rior methods. Tho ingredients thus
combined in the Compound correct tho
conditions which causo such annoying
uymptoms as had been troubling Mrs.
Scholz. Tho Vepetablo Compound exer
cises a restorative influcnco of the most
desirable chnracter, correcting the trou
ble in a gentlo but efficient manner.
This is noted, by the disappearance, one
after another, of tho disagreeable
oymptoms.
There's a Difference.
She I suppose you'd like to be freo
to ninrry again'!
He No. .Tust free. '
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it. Try It to
Lday. - B
A LUBRICANT-NOT A LAXATIVE
8USPENDER8
A full jcar't wr or more guaranteed (75e and tOc) ,
Men' Garten (SOc) ami Hot Supiwttrn (all ilres,
'."). ho rubber to rot (mm heat or awcut. I'hoa
lhor llronio Ituttleu Spring sire tho trctch.
AfK YOUR DEALER. If hscan't lupplyyoa.aend
illntt. elvlnii dealer's name. Acrept no substitute.
Get lha ucnulno Nu-Way, liok (or mierantea
ami name on Lucie, writ)
ito (or itory or Nu-way
spring btrcicii.
NU-WAY STRECH SUSPENDER COMPANY
t'.ruv Aftnttfattitrtri . Way and fjflla t.in4t
Dtpt. C Adrian, Mich.
w " mmmm a mm a MTaw
ra Hair
Uoutof fialilon;
li unnecctHary
for you can bare
uhuiiflritit hale
abude by u(n Q-Ilan Hair Color Restorer.-Bafa
a water try It. At all cood droRglats, 71 cent,
or direct from I1ESJIC-FXUS. CatnUU. KuipWU, Teaa.
lU'tiding iiuiketh a full man, confer,
enee n ready man and writing nn
exact man. Francis Ilacon.
Such as give ear to slanderer nro
worse I linn slnnderers themselves.
WDflUFMlihi and Morning.
WMlr'Z'HaVit Strong, Healthy
"TySS. Eye HtheyTire.Itch,
MW W Smart or Durn, if Sore,
YOUR EVE5 Granulated, use Murine
often. Soothes, Refreshes. Safe for
Infant or Adult. At allDniRgists. Write for
Free Eye Book. Mulct Eji Hauij Co., CMo$
JF 'Irr. a T-if 1 Arl Trifl !- wl sva
IIPIIII
wtP? A
life ml
ffv-fj
SOLD MEDAL
-t