Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194?, November 05, 1920, Page Page 6, Image 6

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Pasre 6
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5. 1920
LWAUKIE & NORTHERN CLACKAMAS
MI
t t ,
.!
Oak Grove News
OAK GROVE, Nov. 4. Miss Char
lotte Merriot utetrained her Sunday
School class ot 12 girls at a dinner
party Thursday evening, October 2T,
t her home at Silver Springs.
Miss F. Kilgore was quite ill on
Tuesday and her place on election
board wasfi!led by Jos Fahey.
Mrs. C. A. Lewis passed away
Thursday of last w a1" ton" ul
ness. The funeral was held Saturday
and her many Iriends extend sym
pathy to the bereaved family.
Harvey !, Starkweather discussed
the measures Sunday evening at the
church before Epwortu League and
friends.
The Helpers Club enjoyed a hal
lowe'en party last Friday night at
the home ot the secretary Miss
Kathryu Olson. Twenty six were
persent. The guests attired in
ghostly or hallowe'en attire wer?
ushered into the darkened rooms
where black cats' eyes and pumpkin
faces glared at them. The hallowe'en
fortune teller was there and man
stcrit told by the ghosts to make
one's blood curdle in the veins. After
an hour the lights were turned on and
the apple paring contest and animal
hunt were enjoyed in which Edith j
Fernwick won a prie for downing
animals enough to succeed in giving
her the largest number of pounds j
found by any one perosn.
A prize was given for best gowned
rhost and was won bv Edith Xorberg
and Daisy Hubbard who appeared as
twins and Evelyn UUle won the prize
for keeping her identity concealed the
longest for not until they uamasked
was It known.
Dancing waa Indulged in and hal
lowe'en refreshments were served.
And all wero loth to return to their
homes.
Mrs. R. R. Davenport is quite ill at
her home.
Uttle Eugene Vernon was quite ill
last week bnt reported " ---
Several of the members of the
Social Service Club of Oak Grove
Milwaukie surprised Mrs. V. G. Pen
vie at her new home, Saturday takinR
good things to eat as a memento and
to assist her with her meals as having I She heard hlra In a stare. The worn
just moved and her house not in or- an In her could hardly be unaffected
der cooking was a difficult problem by the handsome gravity of that ei
The ladies acted the part of the Good Inordinary countenance, whose salient
Samaritan and with the good thinrs features gained so much through that
sent in by those who could not be
present mo-e than one gofd """"
meal was enjoyed by the hostess with-
out much labor for her and this act cf j
kindness was much appreciated by ;
her.
Prof. Stroud entertained the seventh
e"d eichth grade at his home Satur
day evening.
To obse-ve Hallowe'en. Misss Eliza.
bth K. Matthews, principle of "The
Out-of-door Development School at
Courtney station, entertained the pu
pils attending her school.
Friday morning the children in the
Kindergarten and Prima-y made ap
propriate articles and light refresh
ments were served. In the evening
from seven until ten the pupils in the
5th, 6th, 7th and 8th grades we-e en-
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
j
" j
Phone Milwaukle 64-W.
JOHNSON REALTY CO.
Heal Estate, Insurance and Rental
Office at Statioa Milwaukle. Ore j
1
Phones: Sellwood 697, Automatic 21363 John P. Miller, Mgr.
East Side Mill & Lumber Company
. Manufacturers an dDealers In
Lumber, Lath, Shingles and Mouldings
Mill Foot of Spokane Avenue PORTLAND, OREGON
J P. FINLEY & SON
Perfect Funeral Service
Telephone Main 9
A-1599
BBHE5
Drugs, Prescriptions, Druggist Sundries,
Vetinary Remedies
Fancy Stationery and Choice Candies.
At your home drug store.
THE PERRY PHARMACY
Milwaukle, Orsgoai W. B. Perry, Prop.
First State BankofMiwaukie
"YOUR
Conducts a General Banking Business
t
4 per cent, interest on Savings. Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent
YOUR PATRONAGE APPRECIATED
tertained, coming In appropriate cos-
turues. 1
iVtore the o(h?u fire place, corn was
popred, marshmallow toasted and
chtNnuis toastV HobblnR apples
caused much merriment, dancing and
games were eigoyed. Doughnuts and
elder as a repast were served during
the evening.
The "Log Bungalow" and veranda
were very uniquely decorated.
amummimHimmnimiiimimmmn
The .
Dark
Mirror
Louis Joseph Vance g
Author f "The Pals Facts,"
-77.7 Lont Wolf," Etc
Kustrattd by
ESWIN MYERS
nllllltilkaktUalillUtllllllllllllUalklllllkUr
(Copyright, 1300, by th Author.)
(Continued Firm Page S)
But this vision was swiftly dlsslpat-
d hJ recrudescence of that fear which
Red Inspired. In honest conviction that
no earthly power could save her from
his vengeance.
"Tou don't know Red." She shook
her head solemnly In a spirit of fatal
prophecy. "He'd croak you, too; he'd
croak us both."
Mario smiled faintly. "I am not
afrnld"
"Tou're not afraid of dyingr
"What Is life without your lovef
He bad a thoughtful moment. "Who
knows but death may prove infinitely
more wonderful than this life of ours?
There is but one way of finding out
Retnbrnodtesque play of deep shadows
and dull light. Coder the spell of his
mentality she acknowledged now for
the first time that he was essential:
all else was nothing. And of a sudden
rare fastened crnel claws udod her
heart and wrung from It a cry of self
bet rfiyal,
"Maybe yoo're not afraid. Mario. I
dont believe you are. But I am
ufrald for you. I wish you'd go away."
You love me!" Her hands lifted In
protest ; he eanght and Inclosed them
both in his own. His shadowed face
and eyes grew luminous, his souorona
accents vibrated with emotion. "Ton
love me. Leonora at last."
He was drawing her steadily toward
him. all her strength seemed to have
ebbed from her limbs. There was
madness In the beating of ber heart.
madness mounting like mist Into her
brain. Now she was in his arms, and
glad. His lips closed on hers. For a
long breath she was a mere thing of
reeling senses.
"Tou love me?"
"1 don't know," she murmured
"maybe ..."
"Tomorrow you will marry me, and
we will go away "
Stung by realization of what had
b"Wned' fe
"I don t know perhaps yes, I w
will.
Montgomery and Fifth
Portland
HOME BANK"
But not tomorrow not right away."
"Why r
"Let me go I'll tell you." He re
leased her. She stepped hack, shaken
wltb love and fright, looking fearfully
up and dwn (lie street,
"1 i-HM't nuirry you just yet. I've got
to hrvnk with Rod so's he won't know
It wasn't tun) l luit broke with me. And
I've cm other HOntrs to do things I
can I tell you about. Marl things I've
t,t lo icihI to before I can marry you.
Km you inn trust me: I've promised,
iitiil I w ill, as soon as ever I ran , . ."
Ilt voice quavered, and she thrust
mil her hands, fending off his anus.
"I'le:ise don't kiss me again, please let
int go now. If anybody saw us and
tol.l Red . .
He made a sign of submission.
As
"You Lov Me, Leonora at Last"
rerlewlns! the company wtb quizzical
gmse.
Though both windows were open,
closed shu;ters prevented any draught
you win, so be It, Leonora. I will see
you again when?"
"Tomorrow. I'll give yon a ring
about noon and fix to meet you up
town somewheres, I guess. Now I've
got to run. Good-night . . . dear."
He uttered In resignation: "Good
night" With a flickering smile of
fondness she turned and left blm, her
slight young figure flitting swiftly
through the shadows. Beneath the
lamn at the far street corner, she
turned, looked back, saw him motion
less where she had left him, surmised
bis look of longing and, waving a
hand, ran on, wild Joy In her heart
contending with cold fear.
For now she had done It. and
there'd be the devil to" pay. But It
couldn't be helped. Though hell and
heaven were leagued against them.
she would go through. She always did,
once she got started. And with Mario,
she knew. It was as with her; he too
would go through, now he knew she
loved him, though Red and all the
world besides should try to stop him
At length, well out of her course,
she stopped. Imposed coherence upon
her thoughts, got her bearings, and
started on anew, in a cooling mood
constraining herself to forget Mario
and concentrate upon the business that
waited for her at her destination.
But the Self outside herself, of
whose constant company she was
wholly Ignorant, never ceased to yearn
bark toward that callant. lonely figure
they two hud left behind In the quiet
by-street.
IV. RiSTORIS.
She turned sb.-irply. hulf-wny down a
block In the shadow of the Elevated,
and with the culm assurance of her ap
parent kind entered what had once
been a dwelling of some pretentious
ness, but now was dedicated to the
decadent uses of according to Its
painted signboard "Ulstori's Table
d'Hote tMnner with Wine 75c
Luncheon 50c. "
In the i-orrldor at the head of the
first flit-hi she turned to the back of
the house ami laid a confident hand
j upon the knob of the furthest door. It
! turned, bill the door was stubborn,
i With a movement of Impatience she
j knuckled the panels with a triple
i knock of peculiar tlminu. A bum of
i voices in the closed room died away,
j a heavy tread became audible, a key
grated, ibe door awung open. She
went In. nodding lightly to the man
who had admitted her and. finding
herself under the concentrated regard
of eleven pairs of eyes, paused In the
middle of the floor and struck a spir
ited pose.
"Good evening, folks! Pipe my new
rags r
The silence that answered her was
broken after a little by fled Carnehan.
who said heavily: "Hello, kid. Sit
down."
Ignoring his Invitation to an empty
chair on bis right, she dropped her
pose but remained where she had
stopped, lifting ber brows a little 8ud
from vitiating the stuffiness of the
"private dining room" a bed-chamber
In the Intention of the architect. In
an atmosphere stifling with smells of
food, alcohol and a truculent perfume,
the smoke of imitation Turkish tobac
co hung In lazy, lilac reefs. Discol
ored paper of a morbid pattern was
parting In reluctant spirals from the
walls. Dust of decades weighed down
an elderly carpet and obscured Its
florid design. Scorbutic paint disfig
ured the fine old woodwork.
The man who had let Leonora in
having resumed his chair, twelve were
seated at a table littered with debris
of a meal, unclean earthenware plates,
H'1
f x ;
tip
and those high-shouldered bottles of
dark glass, guiltless of labels, which
seem to be the sole habitat of the vln
du pays so generally known as "red
Ink" that to name It by this alias ne
longer excites a smile.
Because of the heat all the men but
one Mr. Harry the Nut had put off
their coats and collars, while the wom
en had loosened tltclr blouses at the
throat. Sweat beaded faces of various
complexions, ranging from the san
guine countenance of Ked to the pasti
ness of Charlie the Coke, Leonora,
looking from one to another, found
each, with the exception of Red's, sal
len of cast If not openly hostile. She
sketched a lofty smile.
"What's the funeral r
Red Csrnehnn red of head and
hand an ltnlo-CVlttc product, as slen
der, supple and sinewy as a annke, and
as deadly replied sutlUMently,. "Nt
body's yet," and again waved a hand
toward the vacant chair. "Whyn't you
sit down?" He added: "You're pretty
late."
"What about It?" Tko girl flounced
to the table and t.,rew herself side
ways tnto the chair.
English Addle, Monde, blottsy and
full-bodied, sprawled half across' the
table and, without removing the clEa
rette from her mouth, spoke In accents
of cloying affection flatly denied by
her semi-sober Stan- of Jealousy:
"Maybe you won't mind tellln' us
w'at mlde you lite, dearie . .
Leonora experienced qualm of mis
givings. Had somebody spied on her
and Mario and hurried ahead to tat
tle? . . . Kven so, that was a matter
between Red and herself, nothing to
excite Ul-feellng in the other. But
Red was apparently unruffled, although
unusually subdued for Mm, and per
haps a shade suspiciously Impartial !
his attitude.
She lied readily, without a qulvet,
naming two plain-clothes men she had
noticed In the Street of Strange
Faces.
"Knnls and Corbln lamped me on
the way here If It's anything In your
young life. Addle dear and ! had to
chase all over to lose 'em."
"Tou did shake 'em, kid suref
Red demanded with keen Interest.
"Sure. If I hadn't I wouldn't le here
now."
"Maybe so," Charlie the Cok
drawled In s voice as colorless as the
flesh of his face "maybe not."
"Where do you get that stuff?
What's all this, anyway? I want to
know."
Her eyes ranged again the array ot
faces, challenging each In turn, and
getting no satisfaction; for each In
turn averted his gaze with an expres
sion more or less sheepish and discon
certed, all but Red. Harry the Nut, and
Inez, the third and only other woman
present.
"Well? What's It all about? Start
something, somebody why don't you?
If anything' gone wrong, let me In the
know. I guess I've got as much right
as anybody"
The Nut shrugged and with super
cilious nonchalance selected another
cigarette .from the flat gold case he
was fond of displaying ; circumstance
which, according to one's bias, might
or might not be tnken as Indicating
that the case had been honestly come
by. Inez seemed eager to speak, but
Red forestalled her.
"It's like this, kid: Eddie's been
pinched."
The fact that the person In question,
being under Indictment for burglary.
had for some time succeeded In re
maining at large solely by grace of his
loyal associates, might have been
thought enough to rob this announce
ment of some of Its staggering quality.
But to Leonora It came as a genuine
shock, and she showed it unmistak
ably. "No!" she exclaimed, and added a
most unladylike phrase of mixed in
credulity and regret "Somebody's
squealed."
"That's Just It." Inez affirmed sig
nificantly. "I wonder who I"
Leonora needed a little time before
she was able to couple the thinly
veiled animosity of the gathering, to
which she had been sensible ever since
entering, with the lone employed by
iuez. Hotnt-tlilug which this Inst would
ordinarily have lacked audacity to at
tempt. Then immediately her leaiper
grew incandescent.
"Meaning me?"
"Why, lion!" Inez drawled, rounding
her eyes "whatever made you think
that?"
But she committed the grievous
error of trying to exchange with Ked a
look of malicious understanding which
Leonora Intercepted Instantly.
"Never you mind what made me
think that," she said In cold ruge; "I
get you; I ain't blind and dumb. But
take it from me. Inez: yon chuck It
and chuck II quick. If I gei one more
word out of you. trying to make me
out o stool-pigeon If I ever see yoa
look that way lit Ited again your pe--ple'll
have no kick rotnlnu."
"Oh, Is that so?" Inez uuuiu:4l
"Ws Want to Know Whers You Got
Those Clothes."
with mist-Leu pertncha. "What rtc
you think you'll do?"
"Irish you," Leonora Informed bei
savagely "Irish ymi till ail you'll
need will be a wood kimono lined With
satin and trimmed with tin. And you
know I'll do It, too,"
Her small emphatic list struck the
table; Rod's band closed on It,
"Kasy, kid; don't run away with the
wrong Idea"
"1 won't. Don't worry." She
wrenched ber hand fro. "I'm no simp,
I've got more brains than Ibe rest u
this push lumped together that goes
for you. too, Ked. And I won't aland
for Insinuations from nobody not
from that rotten JIttle cat tbut's Hy
ing to make up to you aim's always
Jealous of me or anybody else. You
. . .1" Kor s moment words proved
Inadequate. She sat In a tense pos
ture, white with fury, breathing quick
ly ; and even lied avoided her eyes.
"Ah, you all make me sick I Kddle
gets pinched -God knows howl and
yu all fix on me as the squealer be
cause I happen to he a few minutes
late tonight I Why, you poor Mi 1"
She checked abruptly, noting another
questionable gap In the company.
"Why pick on me? Where's I.eo HUv
Husky? Why Isn't he here? If being
late's proof of squealing he's later
than me !"
"That ain't all, Nora." KnglUh Ad
dle tnterimsed. "We want to know
where you got those clothes."
"What's thnt to you? Can't I spend
my money, drvss myself decent. If I
want to?"
"Yes; but where'd you get the front
you was wearing when Harry seen
you up on Fifth avenue yestorday?"
"He never"
"Oh. yes. I did, Nora." the Nut In
terrupted with b's exasperating gen
tllity, mlnctny bis words In the fashion
he found useful In uptown barn, "But
ting on dog, ton. and ceding away
with It great traveling with a dame
that looked like she wouldn't take
nothing from the qncon of Knglnnd. 1
tell you. I saw vou."
"That's another He!" But the steadi
ness of Hurry's eyes wan disconcert
ing. I'nqiiestlonably be believed bis
assertions. Leonora's tongue tripped
over the denial : "I wasn't . . ."
"Well, then, tell tii where yon were
at four o'clock yesterday afternoon,"
Addle suggested blandly.
Al that hour Leonora had been In a
Second avenue motion picture theater
with Mario: an Indiscretion lo which
she could not possibly confess. Per
ceptibly she lost sxs'irnnre.
"None of your rl n business."
"Better tell 'em. kid." Bed counseled!
uneasily. "Yon got to come clean"
"I.Ike b I I have!" Once more the
flames of rage leapt high. "I don't
owe this gang anything, much less an
account of everything I do. Tbe'slioe's
on the other foot. You all know me.
you all know I'm on the level. Most
of you'd, lie up the river today If It
wasn't for me and ynu know that
too. How far do yotj think you'd get
If niv brains didn't work for you. top
yon what to do and bow to get awa
with It without the bulls tumbllmr'
Who planned the raid on KlnstelnV
bock shop? DM any of you g,o
pinched for that? Who flgunil otu
how 'o get those bo, id away from tin
Chemical Trust's messenger? Wa
biivI ikIv lagged for that? . . . And
hecnue take the I rouble not to leai'
a coupiii guns right up to you tonlgb'
and because the Nut saw sotnehmlv
that looked like me all dolled up u
Fifth avenue yesterday or thinks b.
did-" .
"It wns yon. all right." Harry af
finned coolly.
Their glances met ami cln-bed. tie
girl's hot with cbnl'eiige and reseti'
ment. the man's cold with malice. Fo:
the first time she recognized In thU
creature an enemy. Then ber super
excited Intelligence, grappling with tin
problem of how to confute bis Implicit
accusation, experienced a Hash of
memory followed by a llgbfnlngllke
stroke of Intuition.
"If you want to know who squealed,"
she suggested deliberately, "why don't
you give Harry the office? Ask him
what be 'iocs with nil tils tl'ne, where
he gets the coin for all bis swell
clothes, who be talks to when he's
bulging up to the bars of the big ho
tels. Ask him why the cops always
look the other way when they see blm
coming, why he ain't never pinched"
With an oath Hurry thrust back bis
chair which overturned with a crash,
and Jumped up. pillf stamped upon
bis countenance of sudden pr.llor,
glinting fearfully In his furtive little
eyes. Hut In the smiiic ntnnt the door
left negligently unlocked nrter the
entrance of Leonora was hastily
Shingles
For your garage, chicken house, ham and outbuildings,
here is a cheap but serviceable shingle:
STANDARD "A" $1.50 per M
For Homes use the famous UNIVERSilY EXTRA A Shingle.
' EXTRA A $3.50 per M
Prices are for cash at our Milwaukie mill.
L. B. MENEFEE LUMBER COMPANY
S Main 7537
opened and slammed. The Ural
Identify the man who bad slipped In
and now stood fumbling with lb" key,
English Ail. He cried out In shrill dis
may: "Leo!" The company turned
simultaneously and with confuod
cries and questions got lo Its feet,
Slight and under normal height,
punting, sweating, haggard, bis face
livid, eyes terrified, bullosa, and with
clothing disheveled, Loo lllcllnsky,
alias I.eo the Blood, sank back against
the door, one hand pressed to his
side Just below bis laboring heart. The
other, holding an aniomatli' plftot. de
scribed a goKiure of supplication. Bed
snapped over shoulder a profane de
mand for silence. -Leo's broken
phrases brenme audible.
". , . Croaked a bull down the
street , . . coming out of Bonnie's
place, Corbln and Funis tried to Jump
im . , . Corbln got t." He gos
ttculated meaningly with the pistol.
"Funis took after me . . . Looks i
like a frame-up . . . cop every
where I turned . . .
lied demanded furiously: "What III
bl'tl you come bore for?"
"No place else to go , . . for
nered, I tell you . . , Listen '."The
Russian held up a band and. bending
an ear lo the door, beard sounds below
Inaudible to the others. "There they
come now I For God's sake, got me
out of Ibis !"
"Fire escape," Red Indicated with s
lerk of bis bead, Somebody thrust
open the shutters of one window, The
murderer pulled himself together,
reeled aotvxs the room, and lurched
out upon nn Iron platform grating.
Immediately he disappeared,
Now the rumor was loud In the hall
below, the shrill protestations of the
waiters rising shove yet dominated by
the deeper voices of the police. After
brief but violent altercation, heavy
feet came pounding up the stairs.
Then panic fastened upon the wits of
nil those In the private dining room
and stampeded them toward Ibe fire
scape. 1'rliultlvely In their fright
men fought with women for first place
at the window. Stilled screams of
pain and anger mingled with muttered
blasphemies, but the noise of milling
feel alone would have been enough lo
betray them. Not more than two had
managed to light out to the Iron plat
form before the police were clamoring
ami hammering at the door. Leonora,
thrust brutally to one side, saw the
futility of trying to escape before the
maddened men. and, resigned, stood
clear of the crush, watching the panels
of the diwir tremble under a storm of
kicks and blows.
Fear was absent from ber temper,
but she was shaken by Impotent ex
asperation and sad with regrets. This
meant nn end to everything, not
alone to these associations which
barely an hour since slip herself had
planned to forsake, but In all her hope
of happiness wlib Mario. For she
bad not the remotest doubt but that
she. with at least a majority of the
others, would be arrested, Julled and.
on the evidence of complicity In past
exploits which the police spy, Harry
the Nut. would be able to lay before
Ibe district attorney, sentenced to s
tertn of years In one or another of the
stale penitentiaries.
And long before she had served out
her term Mario would forget ber; or.
even If be did not, would never, never
by any chance, make a woman with a
criminal record his wife.
And this was what came of Indulg
ing her keen delight In excitement and
attveutu'.
If only she had listened lo Mario In
time . . .
Seconds dragged like minutes, and
the door still held. She began to catch
at straws of hope: only three now re
mained In the roio, Charlie the Coke
already with one foot across the
sill, whimpering and inoutbliig curses
because of Inability to crowd Into the
8 "THEY SAID I HAD T. B.
VCULD
Mr. Harold W. Rchmidt, Box 08,
Breese, Clinton Co., JR., believes
he has reason to praise lr. llart
tnan's Remedy for Catarrhal con
ditions. l nwt p-rn-ns ulKttt month fr t'lirnnio
tlrnni-hUI CtlArrh. I da imt C-l tlrtl. fl llkit
lllnl,tM III ounluvrr normal wrlKhl Bud
alii If, wurk i-vnr? (lay. In Mn-li, IWli. 1 Core
trfti:u-d irvrrnroifi with iimnir suit took to
mf lw-d. 'ltM-r I T II. and would not
llfH law moullii. Afirr Uknil ft rounln )-
1 It
1 1 V' I
ii A
A
, TABLETS OR LIQUID
Shingles
MILWAUKIE, OREGON.
Phones
..,,
Htr Ears Wr Dtarontd With fttd's
Profans Instructions,
press upon the fire escape Red, and
herself.
The hammering on the door stopped.
She wondered why. Charlie contrived
to Jam bis terror-racked body out
through the window. Ked caught
j Uonorn by a shoulder, roughly enough
If In s rare Impulse of chivalry, snd
tried to thrust ber out after Charlie.
But the crush on the platform was
still too ditise. She hrnrd a dull rrsafe
and. swinging round, saw the door. Its
lock shattered by the Impact of s
brawny shoulder, slnm bark against
the wall, The policeman who brnt
broken It In stumbled and spiawlnt
full length upon Ibe Hour, The plain
clothes man. Funis, leaped In ner Ids
prostrate body, Her ears were deaf
ened with Red's profane Instructions
to gel hcrm-lf out through the window
without more delay. She made a vain
attempt to obey, ami had half suc
ceeded when a rattle of shots oimb-(1
and looking back, she saw the man
Funis pitch forward on his knees,
then full prone. The policeman,
scrambling up pltol In band, received
Ibe balance of the el'p In Red's auto
matic, mid sank slowly down upon his
side,
Screaming with horror, the girl fell
back from the window. Red shoul
dered past lii-r, Vllmbed out, tunirtl
snd caught her by the arm and
dragged ber after him. still scrcHndng
like a, mnd-w.oman. . She tripped, ber
head struck heavily against the bot
tom of Ibe window sash, and Ibe lights
dimmed weirdly ami burned out. lesv
log only darkness Impenetrable, and a
strange bush pierced by thin echoes
of eldritch shrieks . , ,
(Concluded Next Week-)
RMS IFGACY OF
I'K.VI l I'TO.N, Or.. Nov. 4. MIs
Ji'shIo DeWltt, aged -, a wnveT at
the I'enilli-ton Woolen nillln, who ha
been an orphan for several yeain. un-
eXM'ilcdly received word IttKt $17.
mill h:d been wl!loi her u-m'i ,
deiith of her unci,' In CUiiiluinit City.
?!hi" will leave for tb- K.i 'O setl
the e-itat on lit" fir t nl I'io your.
AND . !
HOT LIVE THREE MONTHS" J
S17JO0O FROM UNCLE
"FEEL S
LIKE
8
GIANT !
SINCE I)
USING j
PERU NA" j
MSSSSSSMftsJ it
U"t of I'r-m-nft ftnl ft hoi of HUu ft-Un 'lahlnU,
could walk around ftnd In vf n month! went hftrk to wnrk. Mr
Imiibtn waa ilus to Chronic atarrti of Uia now, and Utruat, whli-s
I had u-n yuan, itrn'titift- dowu Into Uia bronchial tub,
"i't-rn-uft waa mf iita aavtir."
HALF CENTURY IN USt
SOLD EVERYWHERE ,
Shingles
Milw. 91
M
:
Hi