,s; r~- - - - " • . T • •/**?*+ ••- ^ . >».,-«,%• »V* .«*•*. nrfHumiT mi ^MeHCTRT,: ILL. Ill IIII •ill By A. CON AN DOYLf Author of "The Adventures of Sherlock Ho I m « t " ' ' "w •*'" 1 ! 4. . . _ # . . . „ • ' . » . > • • - J - - . . . . . Copyright by JL OMU Doito CHAPTER XII--Continued. --12-- I bac expected to find hnlf that regiment of horse lying on the ground; fcut whether .It'was that their breastplates hnd shielded them, or whether, being young and a little sunken at their coming, we hnd fired high, our volley hnd done no very great harm. Ahout thirty horses lay about, three of them together within ten yards of me. the middle one right on Its hack, with its four togs in the air. and it was one of these tliat I hnd seen flapping through the smoke. Then there were eight or ten dead men, and about as many wounded, sitting dazedly on the grass for 'the most part, though one was shouting "Vive I'Empereur!" •t the top of his voice. Another fellow who hnd been shot In the thigh-- a great, hlnck-mustnched chap lie was, too--leaned his hack against his dead horse, and, picking up his carbine, fired as coolly as if he had been scooting for a prize., and hit Angus My res, who was only two feet from me, right through the forehead. Then he out with his hand to get another carbine that lay near, but before he could renMi it big Hodgson, who was the pivot-man of the grenadier company, ran out and passed his bayonet throngh his throat, which was a pity, for he seemed to be a«wry fine man. At first I thought that the cuirassiers had run away In the smoke, but they were not men who did that very easily. Their horses hnd swerved at our •olley, and they hnd raced past our sqitare and taken the fire of the two other onesi beyond. Then they broke through a hedge, and coming on a regiment of Hanoverians who were in line, they treated them as they would have treated lis if we had_not been so quick, and cut them to pieces In an instant. It was dreadful to see the big Germans running and screaming, . while the cnlrassler* stood up in their stirrups to have a better sweep for their long, heavy swords, and cut and stabbed without mercy. I do not believe that • hundred men of that regiment were left alive, and the Frenchmen came back across our front, shouting at us and waving theft* weapons, which were crimson down to the hilt& This they did to draw onr (Ire. but the colonel was too old a soldier, for we could have done little harm at the distance, •nd they would have been among us before w* could reload. Tin-so horsemen got behind tbe ridge ea onr right agaiu, and we knew very wHl that If we opened up from the •qmrres they would he down upon us la • twinkle. On the other hand, It ww hard to bide as we were, for they had passed the word to a battery of twelve guns which formed up a fe\V fenndred yards away from m. but out •f Mir sight, sending their balls just •wi the hrow and down into the midst •f am. which is called a plunging fire. And one of tlielr gunners ran up to the top of the g]oi>c and stuck a band- »p!ke lute the wet eurlh, to give them a guide, nnder the very muzzles of the whole brigade, none of whom fired a shot at him. each leaving him to the •ther. Ensign Sniuson. who was the youngest subaltern in the regiment, ran out from the square and pulled down the handspike,- but quick as a Jack after a minnow a lancer came flylag over the ridge, and he made such a thrust from behind that not only his point but his pennon, too, came out between the second and third buttons of the lad's tunic. "Helen! Helen!" he Shonted. and fell dead on his face, while the lancer, blown half to pieces v with musket balls, toppled over beside him, still holding on to his weapon, so they lay together with that dreadful bond still connecting them. But when the battery opened there was no time for ns to think of anything else. A square Is a very good way of meeting a horseman, but there Is-no worse one of taking a cannonball, so we soon learned when they began to cut red seams through us, aatil our ears were weary of the slosh and splash when hard iron met living ftesh and blood. After ten minutes of It we moved our square a hundred paces to the right, but we left another square behind us, for a hundred and twenty men and seven officers showed where we had been standing. Then the piths found us again, and we tried to open out into line, but in an Instant the horsemen--lancers they were this time--were upon us from over the brae. 1 tell you we were glad to hear the thud of their hoofs, for we knew that that must stop the cannon for 'a minute, and give us a chance of bitting back. And we hit back pretty hard, too. that time, for we were •old and vicious and savage, and I. for one, felt that I cared no more for (he horsemen than if they had been ao many sheep on Corriemuir. One gets past being afraid or thinking of one's own skin after a while, and you Just feel that you want to make some one pay for all yoti have gone through We took our change out of the lancers that time, for they had no breastplates to shield them, and we cleared seventy of them out of tlieir saddles at a voiley. Maybe If we could have seen seventy mothers weeping for their lads we should not have felt so pleased •ver It, hot then men are Just brutes when they are fighting, and have as ainch thought as two bull-pups when tNey've got one another by the throttle. Then the colonel did a wise stroke. tor he reckoned thnt this would stnve Off the cavalry for five minutes, so he wheeled us Into, line and got us back Into.a deeper hollow, out of rench of the guns, before they could •pen ngnln. This pave us time to breathe, and we wanted it, too, for the regiment had been melting away ttke an Icicle in the sun. Hut bad mm |t was for US, It w®s a 'leal worstfpr some of the others- The whole if the Dutch-BMrlans were cijt off by ihis time Tielter skelter, fifteen thousand of thein, and there were great gnps left in our tane, through which the French cavalry rode ns pleased them best. Then the French guns had been too many and too good for ours, and our heavy horse had been cut to bits, so thnt things were none too merry with us. On the other hand, Hougoumont, a blood-soaked ruin, was still onrs, and every British regiment was firm, though, to fell the honest truth, as a man is bound to do, there were a sprinkling of red coats among the blue ones who made for the rfar. Hut these were lads and stragglers, the faint hearts that are found everywhere. and I say again that no regiment flinched. It was little we could see of the fiattle, but a man would be blind not to know that all the fields behind us were covered with flying men. But then, though we on the right wing knew nothing of it, the Prussians had begun to show, and Napoleon hnd set twenty thousand of his men to face them, which matle up for ours that had bolted, and left us much as we begnn. That was all dark to us, however, and there was a time when the French horsemen had flooded in between us and the,rest of the. army, thnt we thought we were the only brigade left standing, and had set our teeth with the Intention of selling our lives as dearly as we could. At that time It was between four and five in the afternoon, and we hnd had nothing to eat, the most of us, since the night before, and were soaked with rain into the bargain. It had drizzled off and on all day. hut for the last few hours we had ijot had a lbought to spnre either upon the weather or our hunger. Now we began to look around and tighten our waistbelts, and ask who was hit, and who was spared. I was glad to see Jim. with his face all blackened with powder, standing on my right rear, leaning on his flre-lock. He saw me looking at him. and shouted out to know If I were hurt "Ail right, Jim." I answered. "I fear I'm here on a wild-goose chase," said he gloomily, "but it's not over yet. By God. I'll have him or lie'll have me!" He had brooded so much on his wrong, hau poor Jim, that I really believe it had turned his head, for he had a glare In his eyes as he spoke thnt wns hardly human. He was always a man that took even a iittle thing to heart, and since Edie had left him I am sure that he was no longer his own master. It was at this time that we saw two single figh& which they tell ine were common enough In the battles of old. before men were trained in masses. As we lay In the hollow, two horsemen come spurring oioug the ridge in front of us, riding us liard as hoof Could rattle. The flr*t was an English dragoon, his face right down r>n his horse's mane, with a French culr«nslcr, an old, gray-heiuled fellow, thundering behind hint on a big. black mare. Our chaps set up a hooting as they enme flying on. for It se<-nutl a shnme to see an Englishman run like that; but as they swept across uur from we saw where the trouhie !ay. Tlu» dragoon had dropped his sword and was un armed, while the other wns pressing him so close that he could not get a weapon. At last, stung maybe by our hooting, he made up his mind to chanee It. Tils e^'e fell on a lance beside a dead Frenchman, so he swerved his horse to let the other pass, and hopping off cleverly enough, lie gripped hold of It. But the other wns too tricky for him, and wns on him like a shot. The dragoon thrust up with the lance, but the other turned and sliced him through the shnulder-hlnde. It was all done In nn Instant, and the Frenchman cantered his horse up the brae, showing his teeth at us over his shoulder like a snarling dog. That was one to them, but we scored one for us presently. They had pushed forward a sklrmlslHine whose fire was toward the batteries on our right ajnd left rather than on us, but we sent out two companies of the Ninety-fifth to keep them In cheek. It wns stransre to hear the crackling kind of noise that they made, for both sides were using the rifle. An officer stood among the French skirmishers, a tall, lean man with a mantle over his shoulders, and as our fellows came forward he ran our midway between the two parties and stood as a fencer would, with h's sword up and his head back. I can see him now, with his lowered eyelids. and the kind of sneer that he hnd upon his Q|ce. On this the subaltern of the Rifles, who was a fine wellgrown lad, ran forward and drove full tilt at him with one of the queer, crooked swords that the riflemen carry. Tbey came together like two rams, for each ran at the other, and down they tumbled at the shock, but the Frenchman was below. Our man broke his sword short off. and took the other's blade through his left arm, but he was the stronger man. and he managed to t<*t the life out of his enemy with the jagged stump of his blnde. ' I thought that the French skirmishers would have shot hint down, but not a trigger was drawn, and he got hack to h's company with one sword through his arm and half another In his hand. CHAPTER kill. The End of the 8torm. Of all the things thnt seem strange In that great hitftie, now that I lo >k back upon It, there was nothing that was queerer than the way in which It acted on my comrades. For some took It as though it had been their daily meat, without question or change, nnd others pattered out prayers from the first gun-flre to the last, and others again cursed and swore In a way that was creepy^to listen to. There was my own left-bind mate. Mike Threadinghain, who kept telling about his maiden aunt, Sarah, and how she had left the money which had been promised to him to a home for the children of drowned sailors. Again and again he told me this story, and yet, when the battle was over, he took his oath that he had never opened his lips all day. As to me, I cannot say whether I spoke or not, but I know that my mind and my memory were clearer than I can ever remember them, and^I was thinking" all the time about the old folks nt home, and about cousin Edie with' her saucy, dancing eyes, and De Llssac with his cat'si whiskers, and all the doings nt West Inch which had ended <by bringing us here on the plains of Belgium as a cock phot for two hundred and fifty cannon. During all this time the roaring of those guns had been something dread-; ful to listen to. hut now they suddenly^ died away, though It was like the lull In a thunder-storm when one feels that n worse crash Is coming hard at the fringe of It. There was still a mighty noise on the distant wing, where the Prussians were pushing their way onward, but that was two., miles away. The other batteries, both * French and English, were silent, and the smoke cleared so thnt the armies could see a little of each other. It was a drenry sight along onr ridge, for there seemed to l>e Just a few scattered knots of red, nnd the lines of green where the German legion stood, while the masses of the French appeared to be as thick as ever, though, of. course, we knew that they must have lost many thousands In these attacks. We heard a great cheering and shouting from among them, and then suddenly nil their batteries opened together with a roar which made the din of the earlier part seem nothing in comparison. It might well be twice as loud, for every battery was twice as near, being moved right up to pointblank range, with huge masses of horse between and behind them to guard them from attack. When that devil's roar burst upon our enrs there was not a man down to the drummer-boys who did not understand what it meant. It was Napoleon's lust great effort to crush us. There were but two more hours of light, nnd if we could hold our own for those, nil would be well. Stnrved and weary nnd spent, we prnyed that we might have'strength to load and stab and flrc while a man of us stooQ upon his feet. (TO BE CONTINUED.) m J * W ' fv'.:iChess Is a; compulsory subject In the schools In the. village yt Strobeek, *-»er{n»inj, jgHotQgrapIl show* sfthool chlldVen of Stmheck carrylng thelr chess boards and men to the school. c ;;.;s V; Desert Is Safe! Government Issues Guide to ^prinos and Wells in SaUon Sea Region. ANCIENT AND MODERN NAMES Writer Contends That Present-Day Appellations Lack tho Euphony of the Oldon Times. Speaking of New Englnnd names, the genealogical columns of the Transcript are Indeed a standing proof thnt the seventeenth nnd eighteenth century names possessed much more of snap, flavor nnd euphony than our twentieth century names possess. Pick up the genealogical department nt random--any day--and you will find such fine nnd resonant names as Betsey Keyes. Patty Holhrook. Susanna Gates. Polly Arnold, Darius Dewey, Prudence Rand, Thankful Sawyer. Thankful Newcomb, Hannah Pike, Deborah Clarh, and Jonathan Rich--all of which are from one recent column. It Is true that the same column contains names which are not exactly euphonious, and are Indeed rather hnrd nuts to crack; these, for example: Leafy Bullard--a woman; whence the name of Leafy--Hntsel Higglns. Sparrow Hlggins, Abigail Nash, Zerulah Jewel, nnd Alcy Lockwood. In the previous number of the same department are found the names Content Brown. Tabitha Holdredge, and Keturnh Bassett. The Nomad once encountered In an old book the name of Camilla Scudder. Wns there ever a swifter name than thnt? And whnt about the name of Hepzibah Hathaway of New Bedford. found In Emery's book on the Howlnnd Heirs?--Tbe Nomad In Boo* ton Transcript PROSPECTOR STARTS MOVE United 8tates Geological Survey In Cooperation With Engineering Do? (partment of California University Makes Survey of Desert Washington.--The repeliant» though Interesting phra.se "Ureal American Desert" was sprawled across u iar^e part of some of the eurlier maps of our western and southwestern territory, and though the urea of supposed desert land was. thus exaggerated, enough reft I desert remains to justify large studies of methods of jtiliziug It and special studies of Its watet resources and watering places iu order to make Journeys across It safe for travelers. Travelers In the desert region of the Southwest must depend for their existence on "wuter holes' (springs, welts or natural tanks), many of which are Separated froiu one auotlier by a hard day's Journey with team and wagon. The water holes In most of this region have never been accurately mapped or described, no systematic provision lias been made for maintaining them, and the -roods leading to them liHve not been marked with substantial and reliable signs, so that travel in the parts of the region that are remote from settlements has beeu precarious and even perilous. A Pionqpr for Safety in the Desert The movement for ilie protection of prospectors and travelers on the arid desert plains of his countr> was begun many years ago by George W. Parsons, a prospector and desert exj>ert of Los Angeles, Cal. tn 1001 Mr, Parsons made a trip across the desert region of California with Prof. W. L. Watts, state mineralogist, and. on hl« return, urged upon the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce the necessity of placing guide post3 and of developing water holes In the desert. , Mr. Parsons' work led to an appropriation h^ congress, as a result of which the United* States geological survey. Departme.ft of the Interior, In co-operation with the department of engineering of the state of California, surveyed the southern California desert and ta«s recently Issued a report. entitled "Routes to Desert Watering Places in the Sniton Sea Region. California." by .lohu S. Brown. Region covered by th* Report The region covered by tuts guide Is In the southwest corner of California and Is about one hutiw.re<i miles In length and breadth, covering ahout ten thousand square miles. Us northern limit Is the-thirty-fourth parallel and its southern Is the boundary between the United States and Mexico; Its eastern bonier is marked by Colorado river, which Balanites California and Arizona, and its western by the meridian of 116 degrees 40 minutes. It therefore Includes Imperial ccunt.v and the-most arid pnrts of Riyerside and Son Diego counties. In addition to maps showing the roads and the watering places, the guide contains road logs iftid brief descriptions of the watering places. For the convenience of travelers coming and going, the logs of nearly all the roads are given In two directions. Information and sketch maps are Included for certain roads that extend somewhat beyond the northern boundary of the region as defined above, in order to connect the routes In this region with watering places beyond Its limits. On the other hand/ a considerable aren In the western »»nrt of the region Is high and well-watered and the routes in It are given only for certain Irregular westward extensions of the desert. ~ The report Just published, which Is listed as water supply paper 4JKWA, may he obtained free of charge hy applying to the United Stntes Geological Survey, Washington. D. C. The longest tunnel In the world, 15 miles in length, is planned by a Russian railroad to save an 815-mile .detour. ti'ifwii Use Film in Surgery Preparatlfef For Out of Operation Shown. Is Especially Useful for Students aa Instructor Can Explain Evsry^,?! Move Mado. New York,--Many prominent physicians lend the student body of the New York Homeopathic Medical College attended tht unique celebration of National Homeopathic day at the New York Homeopathic Medical College end Flower Hospital. Avenue A, between Sixty-third And SIxty-tourth htreets. Interest centered around the exhibitions of herniotomy under ioctil anesthesia by Dr. Kred A. Kelly of Detroit, surgeon of the Grace hospital of that city and President of the Michigan State Homeopathic society. The application of local anesthesia, which ntenns the deadening ol the nerve centers In the region of the operation without causing tlie patient to lose consciousness, to herniotomy, uhich included operations for hernia and rupture, is something entirely new in medical science. The first demonstration was four-reel moving picture showing every detail of preparation and actual carrying out of 'he operation as performed by Doctor Kelly nnd his assistants In the Orace hospital in Detroit This moving picture reel Is especially useful In that one who understands the operation can stand und explain every move made to students and surgeons Interested and also In that It hns the advantage over the actnal operation Itself in that the entire operation or any part, of it can be reviewed as many times as la dosired by the Instructor or student The picture was followed hy a demonstration by Dr. George F. Laidlcw nnd Dr. Milton J. Raisbeck of the electro- cardiagraph, an electrical Instrument used for the purpose o{ detecting and diagramming Irregularities in the heart. The advantage of rhU apparatus is that the part attached to the patient may be attached In his bed at home, and by means of connecting wires, the results of the test may he recorded on the machine In the hospital miles aw&y.' This does away with the necessity of carrying about the entire apparatus. It being necessary to have on hnnd only the part attached to the patient's artns and legs. The final demonstration was the performance In the operating room of the Flower hospital of an actual operation hy Doctor Kelly after the manner described In the motion picture shown earlier in the afternoon. The operation wns successfully performed upon an Ininate of -the hospital, who hr.d recently been brought into iho hospital suffering from ruptuce. Archers Hold Chamoionshio Tournament Tooth fuller's Bad Reputation. "To lie like a tooth puller" Is In Le Roux de Llncy's "Book of French Proverbs" (Paris 1850). quoted from the "Dictionary of the French Academy" (1835).. The tooth puller In those days was often a wandering mountebank who drew a crowd by tell-^ Ing Rabelaisian stories and indulging, in horseplay. He sold quack medicines. and. of course, lied prodigiously. Lannelongue's explanation of the origin Is more amusing, though It Is so circumstantial that It breeds suspicion. Furthermore--and this Is conclusive-- Mto lie like a tooth drawer" is in Phlllbert Joseph l<e Roux's "Dietlonnalre Comlque" (Amsterdam 1718) with this comment "No one lies more outrageously than a tooth drawer, who promises not to hurt, which la not possible." And Le Roux quotes f'olssons' one act play, "The Basque Poet" (NWS). "But all of you lie like .Ike tooth pullers." i jTlie attliuul cliamplonslilp lourtiuineui <>i itir Kasirin Archery att^oviai IOU wu* held •ft the eastern states comitetlng. The photograph, shows hve of the women contestants. Boston, archer* trow Honesty. Is not the beot polity, "'ft "Isn't any kind of policy. It's a virtus practiced for its own sake without regard for profits. Those who refrain from stealing because thieves end in lall are not honest. They are merely discreet.--Robert Qulllen in Saturday Evening Post • Mother Stops Locomotive Saves Children in Auto Danville. Pa --Running up the tracks, wildly waving her arms, Mrs. Ralph Shannon succeeded In bringing a fast Pennsylvania freight to a stop just as It was ahout to crash Into the automobile in which her children were stalled on the tracks. Mr. Shannon did not have time to carry the little ones to safety before the train would have been upon her. Members of the train crew pushed the machine from the tracks. "Great Expectations." Should people. It Is asked, sleep at the theater? No. They should hardly expect to get bored and lodging as well.--Brooklyn Ragle. It's better to smile nnd he a villain than never to have smlltd at a|L Whmrm Aee the Cutter* of VeeterdayT OreenslMirg. Ind.--Although eorn cuiters can average hetwew *» and $10 a day. farmers nay they are unable to get la>Mir and the oldtlme "<-ut ten*" can't ho tempted out of rstlre- HE'S FOOTBALL FOR A "JINX" California Man Thrice Robbed, Thrown --y-fldt of Hotel and Finally Jailed. ,. Los Angeles.--At, Just noon jjfefcpockets relieved L. P. Schuster, a salesman of 811 East Fifth street,-of his purse and $25. One hour later thieves stole his grip while he was riding on a Hollywood street car. Half an hour after the loss of his grip he discovered that Ms room on East Fifth street had been entered by burglars and most of his remaining property stolen. Five minutes Inter he was thrown out of the hotel after accusing the elevator operator of being the burglar. At central police station ten minutes af*er having been thrown out of his hotel and Just after he hnd drawn a loaded revolver from his pocket to explain to Detective Sergeant Lyons thnt he was ready to defend the remaining portion of his property, he landed hoh'nd the bars on a charge *f carrying a concealed weapon. 30 Indian Sells Land for Plane; Heap Big Chief Hiawatha. Kan.--Chief Harrison Connell. an Indian, bought nn airplane-In Kansas City several months ago to give exhibition flights. He brought tlie plane to his home here, where scores of redskins assembled to see their chief fly. Chief Conn£ l| had sold his last eighty acres of Indian land and was preparing to\fly high when the plane enme down with a sickening thud. Chief Connell had $2,700 Invested In the machine, but sold it for $100 to an oil man from Texas. Twins Marry at Corydon Corydon. Intl.--A oonhle wedding In which sisters became brides of twins t»iok place here. Rimer O Scltwem hart nnd Josephine Hall and Kniery L. Schwelnhart and Elizalieth C. Hall ware married. lEEBMEOr _ MeUntil l Took Lydia & PhikhamV , V e g e t a b l e C o m p o u n d , ' - i Wyandotte^ Bich. -- "For the IsiK four ye^urs 1 have doctored off and so w i t h o u t h e i p . 1 pounc Pi bave had r every month so that I would nearly double up. So motimes 1 could ml sweep a room without stopping to resU and everything I ats upset my stomach. Three years am 1 lost a ch iTi and suffered so -- badly that I was oat of my head at times. My bowels did not move for days and I could not eat without suffering. The doctor could not help me and ouc day 1 told my huabandT that I could not stand the pain any longer and sent him to the drug store to get me-a bottle of Lydia £. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and threw the doctor's medicine away After taking three bottles of Vegetable Com- J<J and using two boltles oi" Lydia ft inkham's Sanative Wash I could da my own housework. If it had not been for your medicine I don't know where I would be today and I am never without a bottle of it fn the house. You may publish this if you tike that it may help some other woman."-Mrs MAftf STENDER, 120 Orange St., Wyandotte Mich. Clogged-Up r Liver Causes Headache i It's foolish to suffer from consttpatk% side headache, biliousness, dizziness indigestion, and kindred ailments when Carter's Little Liver Pills will end all misery in, a few hours. Purely vegetable Act gently on liver and bowels. Small Pill--Small Dose--Snail Mh HOXSIE'S CROUP REMEDY Strikes the root end cure* Croup, eoiicfea and colda easily, »!><><• ililv. thoroughly. SAYS PILES ALL GONE AND NO MORE ECZEMA **I had eczema for many years on my Read and could not get anything to stop the agony. I saw your ad and got one box of Peterson's Ointment and I owe jroo many thanks for the good it has done nse. There Isn't a blotch on my head now aa4 I couldn't help but thank Peterson, tor the cure is great." Miss Mary HU1, OS Third avenue. Pittsburgh. Pa. "I have had Itching piles for IS 7MUTS and Peterson's is the only ointment that relieves me, besides the piles seem to have gone." A. B. Ruger, 1127 Washing ton avenue. Racine, Wis. . Use Petei«on'8 Ointment for old eore^ salt rheum, chafing and all skin diseases 35 cents. Druggists recommend it. frit orders filled by Peterson Ointment OOm Buffalo. N. Y. y **A few minutes mote, PeggT dear, and Daddy wi'.l be bsgk wi'Ji tlie Kemp's Balsam. Then you can go to sleep and forget that horrid old cough. * KEMP'S BALSAM Win Stop That Coaak J'" DODD'-E,' •'!»1 SIDNEY PILLS v vv; •DODD'S KIDNET PAIS auicMy freed me from torturing rkeamstle pains in my joints. After paying five large doctor bills I was still totally crippM. My wife persurded me to try DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS, and within ten days the pains bad •on* and I was bn'-k t-> '-"rk." CHESTER L. FANCHER. 625 Meigs St., Rochester, N ¥« Ask your drugEist or order direct from Dodd's Medicine Co., Bnffsio. X. Y. Only SOo and Guaranteed, Diamond Dinner Pills £ < > r ( u n v .1 !]) it u r n - N o * t T (? i t p' E-Z Dustleas-Ebenjr Stove Polish E-Z IRON ENAMEL UH THE PIPB E-Z METAL POLISH FOE THE NICUL E-Z SHOK POLISH SATIS SHOBS All Dealers--If oney Back Qnarant-- TOBACCO stron*. medium or'mlld OROWKRS' UNION. W. U. P»H« T*„r ?n« R W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 47-1920. "'A -/ u TBT E-Z Help VVumeti, Male-- Young man wanted U represent large New Tork corporation in tSfts el,jr. HIOGINS. S80 Broadwa>. New Yorifc I.BAF TOBACCU. uuiiwopun, ased la balk, 1911 crop, gone through sweat, tbe cream N the finest crops, all tobacco, no dope Direst from farmers, making room for new croa. Pr)ce» by parcel post, prepaid 3 lbs.: Sl.Mi 8 lb* J5 00: IX Iba 17 00: 15 Iba S8 00 Special prices on larger quantities Tnbace* IMPROVES with age. Order a year's n«»- ply. State whether chewlnz or smokla% Address TOBAOOO Adams. AireM, Preamble of the Constitution.* Here is tbe preamble of tbe Constl* tut ion of the United State*: "We, tlM people of the United States. In order to form a more perfect union, establish justice. Insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defense promote the general welfare and a»> cure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordata and establish this Constitution for ffcn United States of America." Correct. Teecher--Who lived in tfce GaiQm of Kden? " • KUl--The Adnmses Keep mz ** Morning CeepYbur Eytes l«an - Clear Healthy arc L:. hw Cs»* a--li Mmfs Ci.qini>l p: /