THE DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, SATURDAY, OCT. 7, 1916. I uopJTigbt, luo imnk A. Munr Company. LO N the day Blount realized the market would never turn right tor him In time It would turn, ,f courn, but not In time he spent his luncheon hour eating a frankfurter audwivh on a bench In Battery Park. jjfHe watched the boata go out to aea, the big fellows that, with smoke plumes trailing, seem Inevitably bound ;ifor a happier shore. The frankfurter had cost him five bent. He was paying 115 a week for hoard and room Jn Qramercy Park. 'A miserable hall room It was, whose I .window was Imprisoned by a lofty wall 'f a new offlce building. ' nd he hod taken $20,000 from the Merchandise National so cleverly In Hx months (hat overybody belloved lilrn the Innocent and energetlo Bd Vard mount he had always been. With five of the twenty thousand he liad never pluyed. The Ave he had liold snored for such an emergency as the present When he returned to the bank he nw a strange man working over the books In the loan department, The next morning his doctor sent a note ito the presided to fiy KJwr.ru Itlount whs thrcatned with grippe and inut renioln abed for a few days. The president wrote a cordliil wr Honnl letter, urging Blount not to leave his room without the doctor's permit) lon. At 13 that night Blount (lipped out of the boarding house and took a sub way train to Brooklyn. He had no fam ily In New York, no Intimate friends. 'J'hey would come to him, he had al ways snKI, when he had made lots of money. The mnn who was watching hlnv i stood hidden on the platform. mount thnnked his stars he had been horn In Brooklyn, and so could get out r.l the terminal and make his way roundabout to the B.'rle basin without making a question. lie had shaved his beard and dyed his light-brown hair Hack. At tk ba he had always been con- TO THE POLICYHOLDERS OF THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY OP AMERICA Notice is hereby given that n meet- iii of tue policyholders of The Pru dential Insurance ('onipnuy of America will be held nt the Homo Office of said tmupnny in tho City of Newark, New .lersey, on Monday,' the fourth day of lt''!cilir, 1 tM ft, nt twolvo o'clock noon, fur the purpose of selecting fifteen per sons to be voted fur by the policyhold ers" ' Trustee ns members of tho Honnl of Directors nt the nmimit election of itliectii! of the Cniupniiy to bp held on th eighth dny of .liinuiiry, 1P17. At such meeting every policyholder of tin c.iii,ii'ition who ti oi' the flue of Iwonty-onn years or upwards nnd whose policy has been in force for nt lonst one year Inst past shull bo en titled to cast one vote in pctsou or by proxy. F015RK.1T F. PltYDKV, President. A MEDICINE Conducive TO BETTER HEALTH HOSTETTER'S Stomach Bitters Try a bottlo for Poor Digestion or Liver Disorders, Healthful Sleep is necessary for the enjoyment and prolongation of life. During sleep Nature renews the vital forces of the body and restores the energy. Sleepbs irvKS s one of the evil results of indigestion. la avoid it, keen the stunndi well, tho liver active and tlu bowels regular. Tho health ot these organs Is Assured by H'Mi-lum's Pills. A harmless vegetable remedy, which u-U immxliatt.-ly on the stomach, liver, bowels and kid neys, toning and putting them in good working order. Millions of people? sleep well and keep well because, at the lirst unfavorable 6 initoni, they begin to take ff!) nam !-i7 ,?i Direction! of SpacUl Value to r.'i by cruiit throughout tha sldere'! an employe careful, If lavish, In the matier of dress. Now he looked like a cheap foreigner wlt'r. no notion of the value of color from a New York view. The man who was watching him trailed the various cars Blount took and the lonely streets he wa'.ked. For all that he lost track of him. Blount disappeared near the water front and slept In the alley of a ware- ' house. The veteran on night duty did not discover him because Blount was rouched under a pile of, refuse. As a boy Blount had played In this locality when It was open country. The man who was watching him knew Brooklyn as one knows a dictionary. One must always look In order to And anything. At 7 In the morning Blount, carry ing the small bag he had bought at a pawnshop on his way home the day before he was reported sluk at the bank, strode calmly up the gangplank of the obscure steamer bound for Spain. He had been r -filtered as James War burton by telephone, knowing enough not to use a nume nugrfestlvo ot his own Initials. The steamer was backing out Into the bay when ho noticed passengers and a few sailors run excitedly toward the prow of the boat. A belated voyager wns being brought to the ship on a tug. They took him aboard on a rope ladder. Warburton saw that he was a strong ly built, stoutlsh man, with a beavy Jnwed, pale face, and small, very black eyes. This much he observed as the tug drew alongside Then Warburton went down to his cabin and lay on the couch, dreaming awake of his whole lift?. An Inexplicable nervousness prompt ed him to get up and take a revolver ftnm his hnndliag. He put the revolver In the outer pocket of his sack coat. He brushed his hand across the cloth to assuro himself the weapon did not bulk noticeably. Some one knocked at the door. His breath stopped for an Instuut; his chin 4 10,000 Antelope Survive; Once There Were Hosts l.'nivi'i-Mty of Olefin, Kugene, Oct. 7. Ahout ten tlioii.suud nntclopc have survived the slaughter of .former years the wilil unimnls niiil the stress of rug ged environment, anil still remain on the low desert of southeast Lake and south cast Harney counties, according to ,lne Skelton, n university of Oregon sopho more who this summer wis one of nn official party in" three that made nn an telope estimate of (iiiuno valley. The party traveled by car from Kla math Falls to l.nkeview, then through the Warner vnlley to Ailel, then to Cole man, Nevada, nnd thence hack into southeast l.ako county. To the water holes of the nnlelope, the only places where u count was possible, it went by horse. The party was sent by C Stone, of Kltimutii Vails, fish ami game commissioner tor southern Oregon, mill one of the live fish nnd game commis sioners of the stale. He membership wits C. M. Kumshv, n Klumnth county game warden ; K A, Cress, Klumnth l'alls lawyer, nnd Mr. Skelton. l'hil Harry, a tliinno vnlley sheep mnn of 12 years' residence, told the party that antelope hud been increasing for Severn I yenrs under the closed law. Nevniln, however, has nn open season, nnd ninny Luke county residents com plain thnt Oregon flilscs nnd fnttens these niiinmls nnd Hint when they cross the Xevnda bonier, onlv n few miles away, they may be shot. A good ninny are so shot, nnd some also uio killed in Oregon in spite of the closed luw. Mr. Hurry an id Ins estimate of 10,000 was conservative, nnd other estimates inn to twieo that number. At one time nntelepo swarmed in the semi-mid re gion of south central Oregon, but when Womm with Every Bo, world. In boxes, 10c, 25c 'chard Duftb tv.-Itcbod. Then, Inhaling deeply and bracing his shoulders, he opened the door. . The purser appeared before him to Inquire whether Mr. Warburton would share his cabin with another man. In the companlonway Blount got a glimpse of the heavy jaw and sharp, black eyes of the man who had been taken aboard from the tug. "I'm sorry," said Warburton, "but my health Is run down, and that's why I took a cabin entire. I couldn't sleep with any one else In the room." "Very well, sir. Thank you," the pur ser said, and withdrew. Warburton went late to luncheon, and passed the heavy-Jawed man as he was entering the dining room. He heard another passenger address him us "Mr. O'Neill." "I don't suppose," Warburton thought more than onre during his meal, "that I would ever have noticed the fellow If he hndn't come on the tug. and If he hadn't wanted to share my cabin." Mr. O'Neill was friendly to every body, and had a cigar to offer any man who would accept. He professed to be curious as a child about the wireless telegraph room, and spent the greater part of nn afternoon with the operator. He P-nt a cipher message to a code address In New York. "I Just want the boys back at the office," he said, laughing, "to know I've got my eye on them even if I am cone." Outside Sandy Hook the Victoria ran Into a fog that grew thicker as she throbbed her way eastward. After din ner few passengers cared to remain on deck. O'Neill came upon Warburton leaning against the stern rail. "Rotten night." O'Neill Bnld, halting nnd looking Into the murk as if he hardly noticed Warburton. "Doesn't seem like April, It's so cold," Warburton replied. "I'm going Inside." A steward ran up as ho was leaving, and said: "A wireless, Mr. O'Neill." Warburton shuddered Inwardly. He the closed luw wns put into ef fect they ti n il nil but gone the way of the Ameri can bison. WHAT DID YOU DO? Did on nive him a lilt) lie's n brother of num. And bearing ubout nil the burden be rnn. Did you give him a smile? He was ilown eust nnd blue, And a smile would linve helped him to Imltlo it through. Did you give him your hand? Ho was slippiiii; down hill, Ami the world, so I fancied, was using him ill. Dili you givo him a wonlf Did you show him the. road, Or did you just let him go on with his load f Did you heli him along? He's a sinner like you, But the grasp of your hand might li n vo cnrricil him, through. Did you bid him good cheer J Just n word nnd a smile Were what ho most needed the lust weni V mile. Do you kuow what lio boro in that bur den of cares, That is every innn's load nnd that sympathy shares? Did you try to find out what lie needed from youf Or did you just leave liiiu to bnltie it through I Do you know whnt it menus to be los ing the fight, When a lift just in time might set everything right? Do you know what it" means just n clasp of n hiind. When a man's borne nbout nil n mnn ought to stand! Did you nsk whnt it wus why the quivering lip, And the glistening tears dowu the pule cheek thnt slip? Wero you brother of his when the time eauio to bof Did you offer to lielp him, or didn't you see? Don't you know it's the part of n brother of mini. To find what tho grief is nnd help when you cnu ? Did you stop when he asked you to give him u lift, Or, were you su busv you left him to shift? Oh, I know w,liat you meant what you say may bo true Put the test of your manhood is, what did you do? Did you reach out n hnnd? Did you find him the rond? Or did you just let him go by with his loud? J. W. Foley. NO TRUTH IK STORY. foiled Stntes - Army Headquarters, Nognles. Arix., Oct. ti. Private Charles Cull is now with his company. In these words Brigadier General rimntner, commander of United Slates forces stationed here today officially discredited n report rireuhted t Hut Charles Cull, a California trooper at- fh lot thought 'the small steamer 'v-"' ' mi equipped with the wireless. .d not fear, but an Instinctive dls- a ti n le and rather common. Day after day thenceforward be sus pected that O'Neill was determined to make friends with him. He was popu lar with all the other passengers, and Warburton judged that it piqued him to find a single person reluctant to smoke and talk with bim. To avoid being considered singular, and thus the subject of remark, War burton took on a more sociable air. He played cards in the smoke room and sat In a game with O'Neill. Yet He always evaded O'Neill when others were not present. The man, for some Indefinable reason, fretted his nerves. O'Neill could not be on his trait, he reasoned, since the bank officials could have had no reason to suspect Edward Blount; and before they could have learned that he had left Gramer cy Park the Victoria was out at sea. All his bills had been paid, and the doc tor had been advised not to return. The keeper ot the boarding house ex pected Edward Blount to come back from the country , within a fortnight. It would take a week, he told himself over and over, for the bank experts to unearth his defalcation. It was simply nervousness that made him dread O'Neill. The same evening, during a card game In the smoke room, the deck steward brought O'Neill another wire less message. O'Neill put onthls glasses, shifted his cigar by rolling It between his lips, glanced at the message, and then rolled It Into a ball and threw it toward the cuspidor. The Victoria would reach port early In the morning, so the game broke up early. O'Neill went off first. Warburton waited till everybody had gone. Looking about him cautiously, he stooped and picked up the ball of paper O'Neill had thrown away. Olanclng again at the door and at the porthole, he spread the message out and read: "Get James Warburton, really Ed ward Blount, for embezzlement. For eign police notified. PINCKNEY." Rolling the sleet of paper again Into a ball, he dropped It on the floor. Cold sweat oozed from his forehead and the palms of his hands. He started with palsied steps toward the door. Suddenly It was pushed open from without. O'Neill popped Into the room and slammed the door Bhut behind him. All his affability hail vanished. War burton could see only two fierce, black eyes and the bulldog Jaw. "I've got you covered," he snapped, showing an automatic revolver.. "I want that gun out of your right-hand pocket." . . "What's the matter with you?" War burton demanded angrily. "What do you mean by " "Gimme the gun!" O'Neill growled, nnd slipped up on Warburton, aiming his own weapon. ' ONLY A DAD Only a dud, with a tired face, Coming home from the daily nice, Bringing the little of gold or funic, To show how well he hns played the gnine, But glud in his hear thnt his own re joice ; To Sec him come and to hear his voice. Only n tlad with n brood of four, One of ten million men or more, I'lodtling along in the daily strife, Hearing the whips mid scorns of life With never n w himper of pnin or hnte For the suke of tljose who nt home await. Only a dad, neither rieli nor proud, Merely one of the surging crowd, Toiling, striving from dny to day,. Kncing whatever may come his way, Silent, whenever the harsh condemn, And hearing; it nil 'for the love of them. Only n dud but he gave his nil, To smooth tho way for his children small. Doing, with courage stern and grim, The deeds thnt his father did for him, This is the line thnt for him I pen, Only a dm!, but the best of men. Author I'nkiiown. s(c )jc jjc )( d)c jfc jJc )Jt sjt sf( sjc sjt sjc jjt )f! ' ALL SAME HEAP FIREWATER Pierre, S. 1)., Oct. II. The elimination of the enlivening Mexican I'eynta benn from the diet of the South Dakota reser vation Indians is the mission of Karl 11. Putt, a chemist, who left l'or Washington today to obtnin anti-beau legislation. The bean is supposedly n sub stitute for booze, which, as booze is burred from the In ,dinns. A brew from the bean causes the In. linns to grow utterly in different to bulldogs nnd to see pink elephnnts with wings. Putt doesn't know whether to tackle the job under the Harrison drug luw or the Indian anti fiiowater regulations. j:!):: ' ' BLACKMAILERS INDICTED tuched to the ambulance eompnnv had I been hanged and his bodv riddled withe w York, Oct. (I. Five men and one bullets bv Mexicans after t all hud wau-lwman were indicted by the federal ilered ac'rossh houmJnry here in inii-' Brand jury today on charges of imper t'urmt ' Isonnting federal officials nnd atteinpt- " So such occurrence ns stated hns!" liiuckmail in connection with the been heard of here as implied to unv I mcnihcr of this command, concluded Uenernl PI u miner. NEW HOUSTON HOTEL Sixth nud Kverett streets, Port land, Ore., 4 blocks from Union Station, Under new manage ment. All rooms newly deco rated. SPECIAL SATES BY WEEK .OR MONTH. Rates: 5iV, 7,"e, $1, (1.50 per day In a second he snatched Warburton's revolver from his pocket "Now, act decent," O'Neill went on, "and I'll save you Rll the trouble I can. Nobody on the boat knows about this except you and me." "The wireless man " Warburton began. "He never saw that message. I get all my Instructions In cypher. I wrote the message myself to see whether you'd any Ideas about me. Then I wanted to have one last clincher that I had my man right. You bit hard." "Supposing you're wrong. You know what that would mean," said War burton. "Wrong when I saw you buy that bag of yours at a pawnshop? Wrong When If It wasn't for the bag wouldn't have recognized you the' way you're made up now? Wrong when I fol lowed over half Brooklyn to the Erie basin, and lost you overnight? "I took the chance coming aboard, but I made sure you were on the boat before we dropped the pilot You're a Blick artist, though, for you had things so fixed up at the bank they couldn't give me more hold on you than suspicion till today. "They're been keeping an eye on four of you fellows, and It was looking bad for the other three until you skipped." Warburton smiled. He was aware of bis dexterity with accounts. I "Now the thing for you to do Is to shut up and obey my orders without trouble, or with trouble. If you like. But you can't get away" "What's that?" Warburton yelled as, with a terrific jar, both he and O'Neill were thrown Into a corner like nine pins. They caught each other by the arms, and stared at each other, awestruck. The lights went out. Then they heard a cracking of steel and woodwork and the frenzied shrieking of human voices. "Lord 'mighty!" O'Neill roared in panic rage. "We are run Into, and I can't swim!" "Quick! We must get out of here," Warburton said, feeling his way to the door. "Na;, ye don't," O'Neill said, grab bing ir.is arm. "Ye don't get away like that." "Fool!" Warburton retorted. "Do you want to stay in here and drown like a rat? Give me your hand. We've got to find a boat or a raft." For all the terror of the thing, War burton could not repress a sense of ex hilaration at O'Neill's Incompetency to meet it He could not swim, and, from the hysteric questions he kept asking, Warburton realized that O'Neill was one of those landsmen who have an In born superstitious fear of the water. Thtre was, too, Ironic joy for War burton In dragging his captor along to 'safety or to death. "C'-ee, the poor kids and me wife!" O'Neill began to babble tearfully. In the dense fog that covered the sea the Victoria had been struck amid bhlp, where she lay open like a cake with a piece cut out A Little Sidelight From Austrian Front An interesting sidelight on the great war in Europe that brings it closer to home develops out of a money order sent from this city to a prisoner of war in Russia. The order was made out on March S of this year to Anton Krepeln, brother of I.ouis Krepeln, a tailor in the establishment of D. It. Mosher, on Stnte street, and sent to Mishni, Novgorod Province, Russia, in the cure of the Am erican Red Cross. It is needless to sny thnt I.ouis Krepeln was the sender of the order. But the money sent with such kind in tent never reached the person for whom it wns intended nnd now it is held wait ing orders from the sender, who is re quired to write a new address in his owu handwriting. Anton KreM'lu, the prisoner of war, shortly after the war broko out, wrote letters to his brother io this city tell ing of the avtunl conditions then ob turning in Austria, their native country. One of these letters the government confiscated and as a result young Kro peln wns sentenced to two years in pris on for expressing his opinions. Then, after doing three mouths time, he was called to join the Austrian colors. Aft er the war, if he returns to Austria, he will be required to serve out the : rest of his unexpired time j On October 24, 1015, he wns captured nml Inter took sick and was cured for ;ia a hospital nt Kiev, Russia. When he got well, he wns sent to Siberia. Later, as near as his brother can find cut, he was taken to another deten- tion camp. He wns fighting in Russian Poland when enptured. and one of the secrets of the marvelous Rnssinn nd- vance is found in the fact thnt among Hie Austrian nro many Slavs ns well as the Russians and such Aiistriims will rot fight ngniust men of their ow.n i blood. They prefer to surrender and be- ; come prisoners. With this condition of things, the (Ioniums mixed the Aus- trinns with the Germans. . Letters reeentlv sent to Anton Kre- peln have been returned, nnd as it takes jn month to go nnd month to return, I.ouis is uneertniu whether his .brother denil or alive. alleged luring of r.dwarrt K. west, in eago merchant, to this citv The indictments charge that Miss Buila (loilninn, posing as a convent bred girl, got West to a hotel room here and afterward 1he other defendants came in, threatening to arrest him as n violator of the Mann luw, whereupon the girl became hysterical. Those indicted today were William Butler, Homer T- French, .lames Chris- Itian, iliss Oodman and two men whose names are withheld. Wedding Invitations, Announcement and Cnl'mg Cnrds Printed at the Jour nal Job Department. The colliding v?ssel was standing by, and both ships bobbled up and down on the floor of lae sea like balls. And over all the tragic wonder of the scene rose human voices In terror or in command, and the hoarse, cloomy note of signal whistles. Passengers wero darting here and there, cursing and screaming to God and man to help them. Warburton, still grasping O'Neill's trembling hand, listened and watched for some word or sign from the officers. After all, this was a good way out. They had caught him. To live meant disgrace, imprisonment slow death. Better a quick one. The sight of the sea reaching up all about them with greedy arms, quite lnconsequently, made him think of the waters at home. He had seen Long Island Sound in a fury and had sailed his little boat laughingly. What a fun ny thing the Sound was! What a tem pest in a teapot the whole struggle of life! "Gee, the poor kids and me wife!" O'Neill continued to moan. "Listen!" Warburton cried, wrench ing O'Neill's arm. An officer was sl.outlng orders to the passengers. At point of pistol he had herded them on the forward deck near the spot where Warburton and O'Neill were standing. They would be let down In boats and on rafts the women first, the crew last All must move In an orderly fash Ion and obey or be shot. The colliding steamer Would continue to stand by and pick them up. Members of the crew manned each boat O'Neill stuck close to Warbur ton with helpless dependence. Now and then he would ask absurd questions in a moaning voice. "Can you swim?" was one of them. "Will this boat hold all these peoprfc?" Or, staring about at the fog that enshroud ed the sea, he would say: "The one th'lng In the 'fhole world I'm scared of Is the water, and here It Is at my throat! And that fog It's choking me!" Some of the men cursed, some pray ed." Warburton remained calm nnd si lent. With stolo lmpasslvenss he was trying to fathom why this trick of fate that meant dire tragedy for all the rest should mean for him possibly lasting happiness. He saw the way O'Neill was going. The detective's terror of the sea by this time had driven him into sheer de lirium. He moaned or babbled by turns of his wife and children; and he kept hold oi Warburton's hand as If he Mm self were a child. All Idea of pursuit and capture of Warburton seemed to have been blotted out. The master of the-crew, who was at the tiller, did his best to assure the f.assengers fiat they would be saved If they only strove to be brave and quiet. He explained that they wero pulling far off frem the wrecked Victoria In order to avoid swamping when she slipped to the bottom. In an hour at most they would find the other steam er and be picked up. Surely they could A BUFFALO Known All Over Dr. Richard C. Cabot, who is head of the Massachusetts General Hospi tal, has been writing for the American Magazine, April and May, on the sub ject of "Better Doctoring for Less Money. He sas's that "A new era has come in the practice of medicine, but most people do not know it yet. We have begun to emerge from that stage of medical work in which the doctor was a peddler selling goods from house to house, into the more advanced and sensible era in which the doctor stays at his place of business, like anyone else who has poods to sell, and the people who want these poods come to him. 1 he shop where he has his poods to sell is generally called a hospital and he has associated with him there a body of men and women similar to work people, foremen and managers of any industrial plant or dry goods store. He has there some beginnings of a satisfactory division of labor and specialization of function. Therefore, he can give the public a much better article for less money. "The 'article' I refer to is sound medical advice and treatment." This is just what Dr. Pierce has been doing at the Invalids' Hotel in Buffalo, New York. Dr. V. M. Pierce has asso ciated with him Dr. Lee H. Smith, who is vice president and head surgical director and operator, and there are a dozen other physicians and special ists, as well as four chemists, and the poor and the very rich pet the best medical attention. As Dr. Caliot has properly said, "When you po to a doctor's office you may complain of nothing more abstruse " than a head ache or a stomache-ache, yet for the solution of the problem represented bv vour suffering there may be needed an X-ray examination, chemical tests such as very few experts are capable of mak inc, the consultation of experts in diseases of the eye, the ear and the Capital Journal Want Ads Will keep their heads for that time. All the nlsht they prowl :d about In th fog, and when, with the dawn and sun rise, came a wind that brushed tho seal clear, they saw no sign of tho Vic toria or the ship that had run her down. One man stood up and, with a cry ot frightful blasphemy, threw himself into the water. "That's the man I'm after! Let ma get him!" O'Neill yelled, and would have sprung over the side If Warbur ton had not restrained him. O'Neill fought like the manlao h4 was. "Let the fool go over!" some one shouted. "It's one less mouth to feed." "Let him go," the tlllerman roared, "or you'll go with him. Can't you se he's too strong for you?" "I can't do It! I can't do It!" Varbur ton cried out "I want to, but I can't do It." One of the oarsmen tapped O'Nclll'B skull with his oar, and the detective fell In a heap with Warburton on top of him. "He's got a wife and kids at home," Warburton said, picking himself up. and shook as with ague. He had lied, he knew. Then he disposed O'Neill, who wa quite unconscious, as comfortably as ha could, and sat watching him as a fath er watches a sick child. a Toward noon they were taken up by one of the large" transatlantics, which had learned of the collision by wire less, and was on the lookout for el ray ed lifeboats. O'Neill, still unconscious, was placed in the ship's hospital with a slight fracture of the skull. Three days later he. recognized War burton. "Say," 0'NfU began, "tho doctcr iold me this morning that you're ths fellow who saved my life. Ho cot U from the Victoria men. And I ncvor knew you. What's your name oh. holy heaven, I know you now! Elount Warburton. Why didn't you stay away?" "I've got to go back nnd pay my bill." said Warburton. "I'm a thief, all right, but I couldn't be a murderer, even if It didn't look like nrcrdtr t- those on the outside. I thought IM begin my life over again when I ran away, but I found out that night In tho boat that I have to begin right. "I couldn't even die that nlfiht. though at first I wanted to, with thl strain. Good Lord! To think what I've been through to find eut these things." "Not a word about It while we're on the boat," O'Neill cautioned. "May I stay a little while?" Warbur ton asked. "Sure! Smoke a cigar!" O'Neill as sured him hospitably, at ths came tlm offering him one. "You see," Warburton c::pl.-.lncd. "you are the only person v;itli vrhom I stand right. With the other pcnrila or th boat I'm almply living a 11c. "I've had to live that way so long, too." INSTITUTION m the United States. A- throat, and the study of the improve ment or aggravation of svmptoms at different times of day and under dif ferent diets and temperatures. This study demands the conditions found in just such a hospital, and nowhere else in bp tld lMtlin,,f .Tva-ifr - f. .w w ...... ..iiviil (ivill 11 is also true that the "family doctor does me uesi mat ne Knows how, and con sidering the difficulties under which he works, makes a wonderfully good esti mate of the nature of the patient's dis ease and the treatment to be adminis tered." "But as an accurate diagnosis simply cannot be made in a considerable num ber of cases without the co-operation of a number of men, each expert in hist own field, vi-lmr w acL- ,i,a (n:t doctor to be is an 'all-around' specialist. This he attempts, but -one cannot truth fully say that he succeeds, for the at tempt is obviously an impossible one. .nicumiic is icuay iar too large and complicated a field for any one man, no matter how wise and exnerienred to cover." e have not the space to speak in dividually of the professional men com posing the faculty of this old, world famed institution, but will say that among them are many whose long con nection with the Invalids' Hotel and Surpical Institute has rendered them experts in their several specialties. Advantage of Specialties. Bv thornnrdi d. . . . " r- "i,uu dllU MID lviding the practice of medicine and sureerv in thi in.t;i,:AH : . , i-vrry in valid is treated by a specialist-one ijou ucwics nis unuiviued attention ir the Particular rl.ice .tlc.o... ... .. i.- i. - - v. . ,...ut U IWUl ll the case belongs. The advantage of this arrangement "is obvious. Medical science cover a fitd eA .., .1. ... , . . - si uiai no; physician can, within the limits of a iiiciunc, acnieve tne highest degree ot Sucre in Um & -e ' . j ... , ..i.jwncui or every malady incidental to humanity. m Get You WbatJou Want