THE OREGON - SUNDAY- JOURNAL PORTLAND, - SUNDAY -MORNING, , MARCH- 23. - 1918." , 0 COMPANY B IS SOMETIMES REFERRED TO "AS "WEST POINT OF 6. N.G." .lite wi Xef to Hht--Sreent IL V canwngnt, ai. .ncfariaoa, d. .ttiuki,; m. u. uoxier, Jtxi cntuns, ., i. By-Jack Leal. ' RS. BUCK J AJIESON WM an ton-. eU bard-worklaar woman, a cook in a littkt, cboap hotsL , Hr hus band was a loafer, wfco bad. Ions- eoaied to be part of the household calculation, financially, ethically, .or physically. June was 4 years old. and was elng raiaed as. well "Cs could be. with her mother away all. day at work and her father away all the time , In a cala boose or the barrel-house. . r Buck lay asleep on a bench In the park- one morning, huddled up and shiv ft ring. .'X policeman saw him, hot-footed fclm smartly and aroused him. Buck had cone, to sleep on a quart of vicious whiskey., i His eyes did not-open, but he pulled In his whacked feet and, with the brute Instinct suddenly awakened. struck out blindly.' His fist bit the po liceman. In the eye. ' -s The. policeman, feeling that bis eye would be black, that be had been at tacked, that the scales of Justice had been spat upon, and that the majesty of the law 'had been dragged in the slime. his revolver and fired once.' Once enough." The shot went through the bum's heart. '-' . The policeman made report, stating at jameson naa attacked him and ex- uted a motion as though to draw a eapon. The coroner's jury acquited he policeman wltb pleasure and com- tumenc Ana tne sun printed a para graph about it. I I . - I ' Mr a. Jameson was shocked and deep ly grieved over, the tragie- end of the pan whom, she must once have loved, had who was the father of her daugh ter. She scraped up a few d611ara and Wave him burial. She and little June iUone followed the-body to its grave. (They came back on - the street cars, phey got back to. the tenement build ing, and a washerwoman, who bad al Ways displayed a dislike for Mrs. Jame- ojfc who worked, nights, and was. there ore, necessarily improper, slung at the frtdow: 'So,' you're a thief, eh V The tgent of the building. was waiting on ne upper landing. He made no prelim- nary remarks, but told her, tartly, that she would have to get out, and quickly H-and be served her wlUTna- five day notice, the shortest the law allowed. Pnly the across-the-hall neighbor, who saa always been sympathetic,-offered n explanation. - She pointed : to the paragraph la the Sun. - 1 ; under a one line headllnvlt said: . ' "Officer CHare was acquitted. by a Lcted in self -defense, when he shot a ramp anown-as Buck Jameson in the ity park. Jameson had a long record f convictions, for vagrancy and gen re! . misdemeanors. - . His - body was laimed by-hla widow, a hotel crook. The one little letter "r," .which, in he last line, had turned the woman rom a cook to a,, crook, backed b j th J (mi ; y Nw Strength tot Lame Backs and Worxnout ContioBS "Dear Mr1. .EdJtdr: I satf ef ed from ame back and a tired, worn-out teenng. .Vas anable to stand erect and scaroely ble to get around, ..It would usually ome on at first with crick.. la small if my back. X took ono box of rr. Pierce's Anurlo Tableta and my back ommenced -to ; ret better soon after ftartlng to take them. ; I did not have a -walk doubled over as I did . before tsing "Anuric.". It la-the best remedy I have ever taken : for 'what it w In ended "to -relieve.- ' I hopethose who ire in need of such a remedy will give ieee Tablets of Dr. fierce' s a trial. . I Tourg truly, . . : A. Q. DBAKJ . I NOTE When your kidneys get slug tsh- and clog, you suffer from back ?hc sick-beadacher dlriy spells or the vinge and pates of lumbago, rheuma lam and gout -- The urine is often oudy, full of aedlment; -chanoela of t- Woodten, T. Holla, Gij Schiewe. L,; unworthy character of changed her whole Ufa' her husband. . Word had flown through the tene ment and its environs , that the mys terious woman1 who -'-was away Lpights was the widow of a criminal. desperado, and was herself a . thief. There Is no enobbery-qnite so distinct or nearly as cruel as the ocial ostra cising of the slum-gutters. To be outre In a mansion means neglect and snubs; to be scratched on Hogaxfs Hill meant bricks through the window and dish water from the landings above upon the head below. , ' - . Mrs. Jameson was not a woman to fight against odds. , She was frail and timorous. Her years of ; silent suffer ing bad lef tier little stamina for re sistance. The day after the funeral she " was -dismissed at the hotel. 'She bore for several days the invective and the elants of derision and profane jeers. But on the fifth day, having no money to , pay for r moving- her ; few - rickety properties,, and no place to-take them if she had, when a dead cat was flnng through ? hear' kitchen - door.by rowdy boy egged on by their , elders. Mra Jamesbn'sensitive soul and . aspen body ceased resistance. She seised lit tle June by the hand and fled with her, neither -knowing where they would go nor what would become-of them. . ' - V ' v: " 'For hours. It oeemed, they 'walked and walked. It - was ' growing . dark. The child, 'frightened by her mother's silence and -look -of despair, racked by the walking,' and chilled by the twi light winds, began to whimper. V The woman picked her up into her arms and wrapped her in- part of her shawl, and walked and walked.- It grew night black. She could walk no more. A doorstep protruded. She sank down on it and set the heavy little one. asleep, but,qulvering with the chill, in a pro tectlngr corner, wrapped In the shawl whkjh she stripped from her own back, : -The mother, ber arena aching,, arose to -stretch "and collect her thoughts. She saw a'tKjuare brass sign. -' On it wera.rtwo words, glistening by -, the light Of the moon --"The Sun." ' - ' ' - She -preeaed ber hand, wearily-- over en get soreVnd sleep is disturbed two or -three times a - niht. - This Is the time you should consult some physician of wide experience such as Dr. -Pierce of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical In stitute. Buffalo. N.-T. Send him 10 cents for large trial package of his new discovery -Aneuric" ? Write him your syaaptoms ana send a "ample of urine for test. Experience has taught Dr. Pierce that -Anurto" is the ipoat pow erful agent in dissolvlnr urlo acid, as hot water melts sugar. Belnr so many times mora active than llthia, it clears the heart valve ; of - any sandy . sub stances which tmay 5 clog them" and checks In, degeneration of the blood vessels, as well ' as regulating blood pressure. "Anuric" is a regular inatu-- ance and Tlf e-saver or all big- meat eaters and tnosa who deposit lime-salts in their joints. ' Ask the qmrggtet for "Anuric.'': put up by Dr. Pierce, in 63 cent package. - - v. B. Dillree, OJ Hi Henderson, A. Hm, E.' Dunn. C. A. Olsn Corporal strain, Armor; xice, Aum runo uorporal . I d. dljuiclet,- Bobert Q. Hester. H. : Wood. Ai, C. Aevcard. B infill- vw:' fpl IMS ' ffl8U: moon Th Sun. her eyes. Then she looked long and sadly at the child, crouched in the an gle of the wall, slumbering. Then she- looked at the brass sign - and 'She clenched her fist; then she sighed; then she breathed one sharp, hot breath, and then ' What do you suppose she did? - l: , Stop here and recapitulate the facts and emotions of the situation. What might she do? What could she do?. What did she do? , -"v - ' ' r "'! v "- -"' - . '' Conclusion No. 1 -S-he took from a pocket of her skirt a copy of the 8un containing the ' paragraph' which had brought so much woe upon her. . Sfce tore oQVthat portion.- irrom ine ground she picked up a bit of white pa per and scribbled something on It, - The note and the clipping- she pinned upon the shawl of the sleeping girL Then she leaned over and kissed June long and tenderly, but so lightly that she did not arouse her. Then she stepped down, looked each way, saw no one coming, looked once again at her little girl, and started swiiuy-np me and was lost. to sight. - . -:'" . A few minutes later a policeman aw the bundle la the corner. He examined it and saw it was a child. On ithe shawl be found the two paper pinned. On the outside of the upper one was written: . "To the Editor of the Sun." The policeman picked the child up in his anno and. carried her to the. edi torial room and marched to the city editor's desk. :-'r'A'-' '--..,'3..-.; The busy - bos of t2ie local " room looked In. amasement at the visitor and his load. The policeman pointed to the note. -The editor motioned him to put the baby in the chair, and ha unpinned tfie two papers. "One of tham ha saw at a glance was a dipping of th story about Bosk Jameson. The other was written on with a pencil, a follows: ; "Editor of the Suo-rXou called me a crook; me, who is been a hard-working and suffering' woman all my lire. - l can't live no more now. By - the time you cee this I will be in the river. This here is my child. ; Her. name is June Jameson. Tou made her aorphan. .Ton raiae her. "; MRS. BUCK JAMESON." The editor ga"Pd. - He opened the shawl with trembling hand and saw a Drettv. tousled. vbaby-faced girl. He seised a telephone and called the police. He told 'them to. man every bridge in . town and try to prevent suicide giving them tho circumstances as far as be ! thought necessary and safe ' 4 " J-k-5 .sycC-sis. : Then- ha walked into .the publisher's office and cloeed the -door. H showed him the clipping and the note. f ;What shall we dor no asked. i' If was no light dilemma, - That a moral responsibility, at least, had been incurred," was beyond doubt. '-The baby could not be shunted off without basest indifference to justice and right. And just then the police called and stated that a woman bad jumped into the riv er a report had just come in. That mad it beyond conjecture. - The whole, uncanny tragedy, grow ing out of tho ghastly slip of a type setter hand, was equarely at the door of the sun; tne .cniia mvd Men placed m its ban da. It would be .challenging fate to dodge the. Issue. : ; 1 The pubUsber thought and , frowned Illfiil'i1 ? Company S, Third reg-lment, .Orejon National Guard. Is '- one ' of " tte best drilled commands in the state., Its of fleers and men take! keen. Interest in the work, and a snap and. Tim' In their drill and military duties that la appre ciated by the hlaher of fleers of the O. N. Q. From its. ranks have come more commissioned officers than from any other company in -the regiment. It is frequently "referred to' : as the" "West Point of the O. N. Q." : - and dropped an Impatient ejaculation or two, then raised his head and stated that it was plain It was a most dla tressing7 sltnatloiw but the certainty was plain the Sun would have to take the child. , The ' Sun would adopt It, ratee it,'support it; educate it the Sun would seek-to undo as far as possible, the result of its unhappy error. ' " ... -The Sun, in it next edition,' made known the facts, admitting: freely the regrettable slip.3 The corporation offl eHtfry adopted June Jameson, and i tfie society editor was appointed chapeVon. a T4ie girl was outfitted. " Later she was sent to 'school. Her story had gone the 'round of the world. She was known as : the Sun' Baby .to all . who could read or listen, ' -She .blossomed, and she developed. On half hoUdays she played about th of floe wbich was her mother. . Every one grew to love her. ' In time she became a young woman, and, of course, grew Into a reporter. She became a star reporter. - She loved the paper; the paper adored ber. i The paper fell into hard luck. It had a political enemy, who was grown pow erful. He started an opposition sheet, and was slowly pushing the Sun behind the clouds. The politician wae crooked and raw. ; But the Sun could never get proof -en which to base a serious and convincing ; attack. ' It was June the Sun ; Babr-who,- in "the darkest hour, when It seemed that the old paper could not last another months fell, across the evidence, wrote the story that startled the town and ruined the enemy and bin conscienceless paper, saved the Sun in triumph, married the-son of the pub lisher of the Sun. and lived happily ever after. - .-. . . - . e . - ; Conclusion No. . 2 She took .from a pocket of her skirt jl copy of the Sun containing the paragraph which bad brought so much woe to her. ' She read it . again and again. ' She clenched her hands . and ground her teeth. - ' .'TThey'v got to do it for me," she muttered."', , , . - Then : she -picked up ber - child and strode to the elevator. She got off at t&A- editor's floor and walked to -the gate. A stout boy barred ber way. r T want the editor,' said she .- . -The boy, seeing; that she was seedy and unimportant, told her that the ed itor was out ' But she pushed ; him aside. and,before the gasping, scared boy ' could stretch a. band, she . had marched to the desk of the busy chief. He looked up. wildly annoyed. ; " . u "My dear woman" he began. "Don't 'you 'dear woman me,, she shrieked. OhMHy. "Here's who am." and she laid the paper down and point ed with. hen finger. . - - - ? -, VWeU?- said he. ' ' - Tt' far from welt," she stormed. TOuse call me a crook. I am a cook. I never, wae arrested in ,my! life. ' I sever stole that much, and she point ed with her, thumb-nail an lnflnitesmal portion of her. index finger. "It was a misprint but. it was a crime, that" a what it was.-.. .-, . JJ; "I'll have it Investigated at once; anj if, a you say" rTrou don't need to investigate. If e so. Now listen to me.' Tm a. poor woman, but I'm no fdoL I can sue you for' a million dollars. And ! know m win. 'But If you want to do the square thing, I'll let it go at that." AWhat do you want?" 1 1 want $1000. yAnd I want a job at good wages, so I can live and bring up my aatherles baby. - Touse ruined my name and my chanoes, and drove me out of my Job and my bom. Now youse Is got to take-care of me of both of : Now, Til jglv you this chance if you act quick. -I got a law yer, and X want a. answer now; andr-rf it ain't the right answer. Til sue youse, and I'U show-youse up to the world. The editor pondered' for a moment He thought and frowned and dropped an Impatient ejaculation or two, then raised bis bead and. stated that ltwaa plain it was a most distressing situai tion, but the eertalnty was plain the Sun would have to take care-of Mra. kjameeon. The Sun would seek to undo as far .as posslbla the result of Its un happy wfeA'Slte:-'-He wrote a check f or S1040. signed it and handed it to the woman, - Then be scribbled 'on a piece of paper a re lease of liability and she signed that. Then be touched a button and the fat office boy came. "v . "Take this woman to Bilklrls,' said the editor. "Tell him to give bier A Jdb as- bead J an! trees at $109 a month; and tell him it's a life Job. , , V , ... , : 4 ; -s ".:- The womajj picked up ber child and her check and followed the hoy. wae given the position. ' With fcer $1000 as a nucleus and . ber - splendid salary, from which' she saved by fru gal housekeeping large portion, she was soon enabled-to buy a cottage in remote section of the town. .It turnedout a good investment. A railroad wanted that particular bit -of land, and ? paid - ber quadruple for ; it. She bought a flat building. - The rents paid 1 wellc - She soon -bought - another'. By th time, that June was ready: for finishing school, ber mother was well- to-do. When she returned from 7a- P. Gueriitu Merrill: It H. Knlcbt. ? Its commander.1 is , Captain Wj . F. Daurherty, a veteran of the Spanish American wan who has risen from- the ranks, Vand is mow-, senior ' captain of the regiment. The members pictured werl , those who attended volunteer drill Sunday last,' in order to the bet ter qualify themselves for the federal Inspection held on the following Tues day.. First Sergeant A., A. Scbwars. an experienced veteran and a "champion rifle expert of -the United States, is I shown in front of the Una of men. ; sar, was the only daughter and sole heir to a fortune. .: : : t. ; Tears passed. . The Sun fell into bard luck. -' It had a political enemy, who was grown powerful,- etc. It was June who. In the darkest hour, . when it seemed the paper could not last an other month,, married ' th .son of the editor of the Sun, gave "aim f 1,000,000 1 as. a wedding' present, saved the paper In triumph, and lived, happily ever j Conclusion No. S She took . from a pocket of her skirt a copy of the Sun containing the-' paragraph- which had brought so much.woe on her. -:-, - She turned to the claaelfied section ' and glanced hastily -down the "Help, Wanted Female" . column, j and saw that a cook was wanted la a lunchroom nearby. She - picked up the child, walked another .-.block - en bee - aching feet and got the Job.- ; , : She turned to . the column headed "For. Rent Furnished Rooms," and saw that room was available a block from the, restaurant, -beatly fitted, for a dollar a week. 6he picked1 up her child and walked' another block on her weary limbs and rented the room. It had a bed in it. She undressed June 'and herself, and they both retired to a needed and well earned rest. ; ; t -. Tears ' went by. June grew to be strong, healthy girl, and is now work big in a laundry. ; Mrs. Jameson- lived to mix batter for the buckwheat cakes which gave chronio indigestion to the linotype operator on the Sun who bad set the misprint in the paragraph that had brought so much woe 00 her.? - Young Hero, Saved TMrteen of Fellows Boyal Humane Society Gives OecU Kethertngtoa Oold Medal for OeOaa . try.Wb.es Treigbte Xs Bank by seine. ludndon.' March 11- (By Mail, byU. P.) When the Royal Humane society handed over a ' gold - medal to- Cecil Hetherington, an 18-year-old Northum berland land today, it disclosed a hith erto unpublished story of bravery. Hetherington saved 13 lives besides bis own -. , . .- . . - About noon,. August II, the steam freighter Jacond, from Mlddlesborough. for Montreal, struck a mine and sank in two minutes All bands. Including Hetherington, a member of. the crew, went down with the ship.- Fourteen men, including the captain, came to the surface and were kept afloat in the chilling water by means of pieces of wreckage.- . .' -' ' When the survivors were-almost ex hausted, some one observed a boat floating -nearly-100 yards away. No pone appeared strong enough to swim to tne boss untu - uewerington voran teered. : He succeeded, and, returning, picked up bis fellow, survivors. .After five hours the boat was picked up and landed." v . '.-.? ' :J ;. The Northumberland - lad was con gratulated for. bis bravery today. ' Ha expressed regret that here ..were not more to save. 1 Twenty-five members of the crew were drowned. ' Lives Insiired for University Benefit sirery Member of Frtacetom lsld CTTsssi ifttii to irake Jfollcy Payabls to 7 Alma Mater. rMgtz&S Princeton, N. .1 March 25. (I.-N. S.) For the first time la tho history of - the world, so far: is known, . the member v of - college claas have agreed to insure their lives on gradu ation in favor of their alma mater. -Every member of - Princeton ; 1I1S class has promised to pay premiums for 25 years, if , be lives' that long. The face of the policy gees to tbejisl vertlty en ta graduate's death or at the v end of Is years. ? -The amount each man pays Is. small,: but the class will ' turn ilO over te the-univer-sity in 194L .l'"--' - s- -' KOSTRILS! EKD ; :: : A COLD OR CATARRH : i How to Gst ReUef WKsit Head v and Nose Axe. Stuffed Up v Count fif tyl Tour cold in head or ghtcatarrh disappear. . Tour clogged nos- vi 1M, wi viva, ut, m-ii y v. y&ur head will clear and you can breathe freely.. No more jtmuf fling,: hawking, mucous discharge, dryness or headache, no struggling for breath at night. -. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist and apply a little of this fragrant antiseptic cream in your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage of the head, soothing and healing the swollee or inflamed mucous membrane, giving you instant relief. . Head colds and catarrh yield like magic. Don't stay-stuff ed-up and miserable. Relief is sure, - -. E- Leonard, fihrdr. Otto S u7cox,,i. U, Sunt, . V, ,K. . Mcvpuongn, a Aaaeraon, "jorporal n -r-x v v - -v :- I'll LV , ! ' t n im V&i In:: - r..,.. ., k 1 :,;; (! n .ill ; i? ':it -Mm immmm& immmi c: '-lis .' r.;, t - .w r , v III Production Pvmnalio&nd L Galatea to Be Followed, - Wy, vl'V ts' jtylce and Men;' ; ' ;'lf ;;v trA . Th aucoeasfnl ? ttresentatloa ' of J s 1 1 " r Ill I ' 2 The successful : presentation ' of "Pygmalion and Galatea" by the Pa clflo university extension class in practical dramatics, under the direc tion of Professor--W.- G. Harrington, at the ILincoln High school auditorium March : 18, demonstrated the possibili ties in the way of dramatic interpre tation 'by local amateurs.: The ' play was presented for the -benefit of the Franklin High school scholarship fund and probably will be presented at the Eleventh, 8treet theatre in the near future." v-: V'--' -'--''-'-v ; "The., work . of the .cast was ; of un usual . Interest, is - that the typical mannerisms and faults of amateurs were conspicuous . by their absence. The action was smooth and snappy and the strong climactic - situations . were well developed.' The character work throughout . was good and the Stage business and tableau effects of a-finished nature.: The costumes of the Greek- period Were artistic and pleas ing. - : . : . --: -f " The work of Miss Kate, Sbbaef er In the part of "Galatea' deserves. special mention. Miss . iuclie Wolcott , also gave a strong 'interpretation of the jealous wife who knew no half moods and was either love or bate. 8 worth Newman Craig was ev' pleasing "Pyg malion" and : Florence . Brotnberger, Gernell Kane, Emilia Michael and . Dor othy Peering brought out the comedy situations that surround- the jove ax falrs of "Daphne and her husband "Chrysos"" and ?Myrine" and. her-betrothed "Jveuelppe". with true per ception. - " ' ; - , - . The class In practical; dramatics has been maintained - by the Pacific ' uni versity at the Portland public library during; the past winter , in order to aX- oman Rudely. Interru sndleAu of 'tfreat Mas la i Balssos ' and ' Tower Was, Surais', Somebody Tursed la Tire Alarm. '''Xm Angeles,' lisjeb ifiWhile the fate of Babylon,- fiercely besieged by more' than 2000 - doughty x warriors, trembled in the balance, and' a huge wooden tower used In the attack bad been successfully fifed by the Baby lonians aa a prelude to. the routing of the enemy, some unidentified - person turned In- a firs alarm and the-filming of - the most ' spectacular event is ' the greatest production f of filmdom : was rudely interrupted by the charge of a Los'Angeles fire truck into the pictur esque scenes of battle at Griffith stu dio on i Sunset boulevard. - 4 ; S k For five minutes the firemen occu pied the foreground of the picture while D,tW Griffith, 28 directors and more . than 4000 other frantic Individ uals commanded, beaeeched and ,1m plored thm get out se that th burning tower could be recorded; on film in its otherwise historically cor rect environment; As a result of th Incident, eeveral 'hundred -feet of film will have, to be cut out -and it is pos sible that the costly scene must be re enacted. c ; - . , . Boy,' Kills Himself ' ' Becauseof Spanking nsleCIOTge Touad wtb voJvr, v Velseaed Xlsesit, Xesos ssdViagram '- of body With Cross Marked en Heart, Johnstown- Pa, . March " 25. Lonnle George, 11 years old, shot himself to death, at bis home in Cherry Tree be cause bis father whipped him 'for chewing tobacco..- He was found by his parents. -? , Beside him lay a revolver, a biscuit covered with rat -poison; -a.' razor and two notes, one to his father' and an other to bis mother, and a diagram of a body with a cross marked on -the heart,..?. . , , - "Pygmalion aad-Galatea- bythe Pa- If J? II 1 1 I L :A ciiio university extension CLass in If . ill I ' practical dramatics, under the dlrec- l - 4 ' f -i tion of ProfessorrW.' Q. Harrington, 1 . - V Ai III J ' f . at the Jlncoln High school auditorium . 1 - March 18, demonstrated the possiblli- i l III , I 1 ties In the wav of dramatic interore- . l lr ' I i tatlon ' iby loos4:'strarsv: Tn ' play I 1 ' f: V- J 1 WeUz. - Dan Ncwfard JrM Pint SenteAht A A'Schwarz, Sewant C. K. v . V-i L JtSl ford adequate instruction in" amateur dramatics; The aim in - this course has been to study classics that rare worthy' of 4 production, which atffthe same 'time afford the students an opportunity to develop-- their latent possibilities.-4 The Pacific "university extension, course is the only course in the. northwest devoted, to these needs and open to the public. - - , At the present arrangements are be- Great Farin College Founded in Ohio v.- '. Ohio a Barber Millionaire Xaksr ef TsTstohes, Coaverts Tameus taoOAWO LTrm mXolAlpha&ttttal School. . ' Barberton.: Ohio, March 25 (U. .P. Ohio C. Barber, millionaire maker of matches, now 74. plans to make "the best farmers ; in, the world'!-at ths greatest agricultural school in Amer lo." Barber is drawing plans today IrowIsC.Greatit of All : Strength u v- Builders, Says Doctor A Secret of the Great Endurance and Power of Athletes ' - Ordinary Suxatsd Xros wm Make Deli cate, sTervous, maadewa "People BOO 1 . Far Oeat - Stionr 1 we . - weeks' Time ia may Cam. '. New York, N. T-Most people fool ishly seem to think they are going to get renewed health and strength from some stimulating medicine, secret nostrum- or narcotic drug, said Qr. Bauer, a specialist of this city, when, as a matter ef fact, real and true strength can only come from the food you eat. But people -often fall ? to get the Strength out of their food because they haven't enough Iron in their blood to enable It to change food into . living matter. From their weakened, nervous condition they know something Is wrong. -but they can't-tell what, so they generally commence doctoring for stomach, liver, or kidney trouble or symptoms - of some - other' ailment cauaed by the lack of iron in the blood. Thi thing may go -on for years, while the patient suffers untold agony. If you are not strong or .well, you owe it to -yourself to. make the following test: "See how lone veti can work er bow far you can walk, without becom ing urea, ruext xase two' xive gram tableta of ordinary auxated iron three times per v day after meals for two L weeks. Then test your strength again ,na W99 lor yoHmuABW muca u have gained. I . have seen dosens of nervous. . run-down ueoole who were ailing all the while, .double'" their strength and endurance and entirely get rid of all symptom of dyspepsia, irrer ana otner- troubles w xrom ten Pbeto by Parrtln. "wan ton F. Bona, W Mel ver. Cas that presented , "Pyfttmsiion sjid Galatea'. Above left to rigbf-Garncll Kane, CThrysos; '.Dorothy Deerlng, Leuclppei Emilie Blichael, ' Myrine; Plor-1 - once - Bromberger, Daphne; Kate , . Bchaefer, Galatea; 8 worth New. s man Craig, Pygmalion; Lucille v Wolcott, Cynisca; . Rath , Starr, - 1 Bllmos; Ida Coleman, Ageslmoa. ? Below,1 left to righb--Kato Schao- fer as Galatea; Emilie JUchacI .as Myrlne. ' Ing made- to present Op O , My , Thumb, In which Maude Adams made' her debut, and "Sunset," by 'Jerome K. 1 Jerome, which was Daniel Frohman's ' favorite as a means of trying out his' discoveries in v the dramatic field. . "Mice and Men" is to be presented as the final production of -: the class. - The class has been largely attended . and enthusiastically supported by those Interested in amateur! dramatics. . to convert his famous f8;000,000, 200 acre farm, Anna Dean, - into an - agri cultural school adjunct of. the ; West ern 'Reserve - university, - Cleveland. According u to -Barber his institution will rival M. A. C, lUlnots, Wisconsin or Cornell in agricultural teaching and experimental work..- ; . - ; - - ' Escape Altnost Ufaciiloa; - MoUne, J1L. March 28-A Bock Is land train -crashed into a touring ear in East. MoUa and then dragged and pushed the wrecked, mass, with its three human' occupants an entire block, All thi victims win recover. to fourteen days' time simply by-tak. ing iron in. the proper form. And this after - they had in some ease been doctoring for month without obtaining any. benefit. But don't take the-old forms of. reduced iron, iron acetate or tincture ef iron simply to save s few cent. -Teu' must -take iron in a form that ean be easily absorbed and aseim- ilated like nuxated iron if you want It to do you any good, otherwise it may prove worse than - useless. -Many an athlete or prise fighter has - won the day simply because he knew the se cret of great strength and endurance and filled bis blood with iron before he went into the affray, while many an- ?ther has gone down to inglorious de eat simply, for the lack ofixoa, ,, r fc'OTs Ktasted Ire meatsended sbeve by vt. seoer is bm a pause meaiooe nor seeret remeer. bet en wbicb is writ sixnra te erne f; gtota and wboa ira eoaatltoeou ts wtda rreribed tr aiatneBt ehystetase trrmtt esara, L'ullka tbe older iaorf tnlc lroo product,, it le 'iily ssdmllatad, does set injure the tettb. make tsaa black, scr opaat the atamirb; an tka eoatrarr. it is a nauat potaot fmtdfj in Kaarly U lonas ef ' tedltrentioe, . aa w,ll aa - to? narwwa.- rn-"ra eondtrhma. Tka ala---; factum kava aoeb great aeUiase 4o tint' ted iron tbt tbey otter - to forfait 100.00 ta any cbaritable. inatitBtMe If tber cannot : take r mi woman twArr 80 who lacks -' troa. aad iaereaae thlr atr,atk 200 aar -eaat o- ettr In tour .mfkfj ttm pwlfrd -tby -save "a aerioaa Wcanlc trouhl. They slaa offer to refead Tour more if it dnes iot t ' least -6oubla your atrcor'B' sad rpdaraeea la -ta days' time. It ta diacwaaad la this city .. tr The Owl Uni Ce.,- and all ether drag, glSt. . . - ' i -