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.- Coptyr CHAPTER X. -12 Ramsey kept very few things from 'red Mitchell, and usually his confl dences were immediate upon the occa sion of them; but allowed several weeks to elapse before sketching for his roommate the, outlines of this ad venture. "One thing that was kind o' funny about it, Fred," he said, "I didn't kn:ow what to call her." Mr. Mitchell, stretched upon the window seat in their "study," and look ing out over the town street below and the campus beyond the street, had already thought it tactful to ambush his profound amusement by turning upon his side, so that his face was toward the window and away from his compa-ilon. "What did you want to call hter?" he inquired in a serious voice. "Namnes?" "No. You know what I mean. I mean I had to keep calling her 'you'; and that gets kind of freaky when you're talkin' to anybody a good while < like that. When she'd be looklin' away from te, for instance, or down at the Sriver, or somewhere, and I'd want to start sayin' something to her, you now, why, I wouldn't know how to It started exactly, without callin' her t mething. A person doesn't want to ti always startin' off with 'See here,' o \iings like that." ',I 'lon't see why you let it trouble y0 ," said Fred. "From how you've alw tys talked about her, you had a peri. letly handy way to start off with 9 anyt ting you wanted to say to her." "1\ hat with?" "W ty didn't you just say, 'Oh, you Teach er's Pet l' That would-" "Cet out ! What I mean is, she called ate 'Itamn'"' "''4'iout any both er; it gems runny I got stumped every time I ;;tarted to say 'Dora.' Some way I couldn't land it, and it certainly would 'a' sounded crazy to call her 'ift'. Yocum' after sittin' in the same room with her every day from the baby class clear on up through the end of high school. That would 'a' made ue out an idiot!" "What did . you call hter?" Fred asked. "Just nothin' at all. I started to call her something or other a hundred times, I guess, and then I'd balk. I'd get all ready, andt kind of make a sort c C a sound1(, and thenl I'd have to quit." "Shte mtay have thought you had a cl 1(d," said Fred, still keeping Ils back ti. -ned. 'I expect maybe she did-though I din't kntow~; mtost tile titme site didn't s1 am to notice mte much, kind of." "Sihe didnh't?" "No. Site w~as too uipset, I guess, by wv 'at she wa's thlnkint' about." llut if it htadn't been for that," Frt I suggestedi, "you men she'd have cert. ltly paid( mnore attention to wh'lo was 'ittintg 0on thte bencht withi her?" "Ge t out l You kniow~ how it wias. Ever3 tody those few days thought we were oln' to have war, and~ site wtas just si r'e of it, and it upset hter. Of cour'se mtost people were a lot more upset bly what those Dutchmen did to the Lusitantia titan by thte idea of war; and site see'med to feel as br1okent upl as anybody coutld be ab~out thte Lutsitantia, bult what got her the worst was the nlotion of herl counttry wantin' to flghtt, sihe said. Site reamlly was upset, too, Fred ; there wa'sn't no ptuttlin' on about it. I guess that ole girl cer taInly mtust have a good dleal of feel ing, because, doggoned, after we'd been sittin' there a while if shte dlidn't have to get out hter handkerclhef ! Site kept her face turnted away from mte just the same as you're doin11' no4w to keep from laughtin'-btut hlonestly, sheo cried like somebody at a funteral.I felt like the darndtest fool !" "'I'm not laugintg," said Fredl, b~ut he did not prove it by3 turning so' that hIs face could be seen. "What dh14 she say?" * "Oh, site didn't say stuch an1 awful lot. She said one kind o' funny thing though: site saidI she was sorry shte couldn't quite control hterseilf, but if anybody had to see hter cry she inudedl it less because it was an old school mate. WVhat struck me so khutl 0' funny about that is-whty, it lookst as if site never knew- the way I nlways hated her so." . "Yes," said Fred. "It wasn't flat tering I" "WVell, sir, it isn't, kInd of," Itamt soy agreed, musingly. "It certainly isn't when~ y'ou look at it thtat way." "Whtat did( you say when site sid thatt?" Ft'ed asked. "Notihit'. I statrted to, but I sort of b~alked agatin. Well, we kept on sItting thtere, andl afterwhle site begant to talk again and got kInd of' excited abtloult how no0 war could~ do anything or anyb~ody any good, and all war wats wuIckedl, no matter whait It was abtout, and nothtint' conuld be good thtat wuas foundled on fear Itnd hate, and every wvar that ever wais~ fouitW'as- alwait, foundedi on fear' and' hate. She said" if the Germnat wn'nend to n..t usw thTa kcftgn ightby. Doubleday, Page &Company. ought to go to meet themn and tell them we wouldn't fight." "What dlid you say?" "Nothin'. I kind o' strted to-but what's the use? She's got that in her head. Besides, how are you goin' to argue about a thing with a person that's crying about it? I tell you, Fred, I guess we got to admit, after all, that ole girl certainly fuist have a lot of heart about her, anyway. There ay not be mnuchi fun to her-though of course I wouldn't know hardly any way to tell iout that-but there -couldn't be hardly any doubt she's got a lot of feeling. Well, and then she went on and said old nen made wars, but didn't fight; they left the fighting to the boys, and the suffertig to the boys' mothers." "Yes!" Fred exclaimed, and upon that he turned, free of mirth for the Coment. "That's the woan of It, I guess. Send the old men to do the fighting! For the matter of that, I guess my father'd about a thousand times rather go himself than see mie and my brothers go; but Father's so fat he can't stoop! You got to be able to stoop to dig a trench, I guess ! Well, suppose we sent our old men up gainst those Dutchmen: the Dutch men would just kill the Old mnu and then coe after the boys anyway and the boys wouldn't be ready, and they'd get killed, too; and then there wouldnt't be anybody but the Dutchmen left, and that'd be one fine world, wouldn't it !" "Yes," said Ramsey. "Course I thought of that." "Did you tell her?" "N o." "gWshat did you say?" "Nothin'. I couldn't get started any way, but, besides, what was the use? fut she n't st tYe old men to go; she didn't want anybody to go." "W at di she want the country to do?" Fred asked, impatiently. "Just what it has been don', I sup pose. Just let things simmer down, "o.' I 1 artedT, but ut itUl leftok ailonghad betI the dowhat "IYess sid Rsde. "uren, though of th andthy.lcme"e "Dd maku tely ner etngf" s becusethey. knould wn't tsad any wayngbut tlk.ies, wha guess tihe usay Dora sher isn't at in tol beC tony shwa d'r." tanio~ytog. "What(1( wsi pre t tie cthry tos thoug" rdaseyad, iitle thoghfu.y "JutO hatit hause shee (10s1then. Wel alle Jhuht set tos few days."~ LI "No. IShearaed To, bthut U pro'" wodn' oke ri')gh (1t twayibu (10 ~it twas lkest usur." coesmei h e ss o te'gam Sand all( thenal andtsrw mucheewhentilygo nd l ereein tioedO ther tat~l they'll thought that was makwey i repl e somweren foads ln. he theysh knw e rom~ dhe ay tihingfelt htrlfes ghu ti e utnia thalgtl fetlig dketa i~ htr wsuit nevr her ibsn'utl wip' ou e lng sshe wasived. t sre stlher wther "eelhn ofhourse horrilns hen War iltaoght s o k tho e f(last."en "o. bre aIgh ut, buit the po. break11' o right awy, ioult 1a0waysi ~he ready01 t.I all s ndver the ta ul n eime 501t1 wfel.~ ahoud sey iwlas gli'o doher har e ~artoght ither self, s irre lon im shI lvoul gst and h asktd She sai' he ne fom thle wnay te felp hter"i hn h uitnI thtiieillke that ii.iia fte a nloten Fed~'1 asdi "Well? Wha i. t i onsa "Notshein'. I -i sherted e but-" Agntini Fr.elld'e thouh iit thtfu to Aturnnn look" tthei~t windw whtfile' the agitation of his shoulders be. trayed hin. "Oo on and laugh I Well, so we stayed there (tlite a while, but before we left She got kind of more like every. lay, you know, the Way people do. It was half-past nin when twe walked back to town, ani I was colutmeei' to feel kintd of hungry, so I asked h. If She wasn't, and she sort of laughed and s'eled to be ashunwei of it, it. If it was t llsgrace or soniethilg, but she said she guessed she was; so I left her by that hedge of Iilas near the observatory and went on over to the 'Teriln and the fruit store, ati got Some stufed eggs and olives and half. n-doneti enut butter saildwiches and a box o' stra wberries--kind of girl. food, you know-and went on bak there, naa we ate the stal up. So then she said she was afraid she'd taken mhe away fronm iny dinner and rnade ae i lot of troule, and so on, and she was sorry, and she told mue good-night-" "What did you say then?" "Noth-- Oh, shut up ! So then she skipped out to her Doria, and I cane o0n olne." "When did you see her nexs, Raan sey?" "I hatven't seen her nexts" said Rani sey. "I haven't seein her at nii-not to speak to. I saw her on Main street twice since then, but both tines she was with some other girls, and they were across the street, and I couldn't tell If she was lookin' at tue--Y kind of thought not- I thought it inight look sort o' nut ty to bow to her if she wasn't, so I didn't." "And you didn't tell Ater you wouldn't be one of tile ones to help her with her pacilisn and anti-war stuff and atill that?" "No. I started to, :ut- Shut up!" Fred sat up, giggling. "So she thinks you will 11011) her. You Mdn.'t say any thing at all, atn she niust think that means she converted you. Why didn't you speak up?" "Well, I wouldn't argue with h2er'." said Rtatusey. Then, after at silence, he seelned to he in need of synpat h etIc Coil)tprehetsion. "It was kind o' futi'iy thotugh, wasn't it?" he sold, lppeallttg. ly. "Whaltt was?" "The whole business." "What 'whole hus'-" "Oh, get out ! Iler stoppln' nie, and tne gini' pokin' along with her. and her--well, her- crying and everytilng, and me being around with her while she felt so upset, I aienn. It seets well, it does seem all kind o' funny to tie." "Why does it?" Fred inquired, pre serving his gravity. "Why should It scet funny to you?" "I don't nttn flny lIke something'" funny you laugh nt,'" Itaimsey explainetd laboriously. "I mean funny like sote thing that's out of the way, and y Wo wonder how it ever happened to hal pen. I menli It seets funny I'd eve! be sittin' there on at bench with that: ole girl I never spoke to in ny life or hand anything to do with, and talkin' about the United States goin' to war. What we were talkin' abhout, why, that scens just as funny Its the rest of It. Loolcin' back to our class plcnte, f'r Iistance, secontd year of high school, that (lay I jumpel~d in thle creek after Well, you know, it was wh'len I statrted tmakin' a fool of myl3self over' a girl. Th'lank goodntess, I got thait otut 0' my1 sy'stem ; it akes 211 just sick to look bac1k ott those5 day3s and1( thintk of I-lie fool thIngs 1 (did, and12 all I thoughit abhout thalt girl. Wh'ly, she- Wel, I've got 01ld entough to see now she was .lust abhout as or'dinary at girl as ther'e ever' was, and1( If I sawt her no0w I l'dl jprob'ly thin2k she was sort of 1022d lookin'. Well, wh'Iat's ptssed1 Is pn2st, andr it Isn't etthetr here nior thetre. What I statedi to say was t his: that the way23 It hegins to look to met. It looks ais if ntobody3 enn2 telil in this lifeo a dartIn th ing nhotut whtat's goin2' tOo ay Penl, and( 214 thtigs that do htappe are10 ' lhe v'ery 4ones you'd~ swtea r were lie last that coutld. I me'an-you lo'ok hack to that da2y of thte ple'nie-mty ! hut I wa'2s tlluhe ten-well, I tmenni yo'u lo0k back tol that dhiy. and0 what~t d1o you1 suptse (1 I'd hav te I toughit then If s 'me blody'd1114 tohlme the timae would4 ev'er 'tine whent 1'd 1)e 'way 3'fft here at enl il'ge sittlini' 0on a1 bench with D~orn Yo. conii-withi D)orn YoCIumt in the first inlce-and~ her' cry1ig' an b11 othi of uts lin g 21hou22t the Uniitedl Stiltes go ini' to wara with Giet'riany ! Don't it Seemh pr2etty fuinny to you41, F'red. too?" ''But as neart as5 1 can2 mtake out," Fred sabu h" 'that tisn't whla)t Itappene1d4.'' "Youi say3 'andt both1 of us. talking' and1( so on2. As near12 as 1 enn2 maitke out, yotu( dn't saiy ainythItlug iat all."' mitted, iad returned to is poitnt wtith ailmost pathe4t ic persisten'ce2. ''Iaut doesn2't It seem2t kind o' funniy to you, "Wel!.1 I don2't know." "It doecs to m21," 1Iitmsey lisisted. "It cer'tainly13 doe4s 24) me.'' "Yes," said Fred cruel ly. "I've no0 Ice yo0( 34u satid so, but it dhon't loo1k aniy futnnier thian you4t do whten you saty It." Staddenly lie senti foth na start hng shout. "Wow !)1 Yo're' as5 red 12s a bl1uishinlg beet !"' '"1 2am nOt !'' "'Y'na le ' shout1 ed i-'reud. ''Wow ! Thle o1ll woman-i~thnter's get lhe ilushes. Oh, 1look att tile ipr'etty po5 I!" Safety First. .Johnnity, only three year1s olfl, was be. lng en1tertainied with some11 muusic on tihe phionograipht. lie was( tol by hIs aunttty thalit lie woulb 0 soon'ar a ben r gro wl . JTohnny Iloked very mauch frihtened, and( tihen whispered: "Oh, Autity, dlon't open1 dose5 door)2s on1 dI W\iektowla or " beat' milght 12um2 out." -Uienaro Herald and Ernmwinor. FRENCH MOTOR CA] AND BECOMIN4 A rather novel idea on the style of see'n In P'ar'IS and is be~otlning very II artistic style. Tilt' oecctaits etlin eljo ing of the vehicle Is conitrolled frolin th inianufact urers in 'aris ire qI te itel tined to change tie' design of ['tIs an SEIF-COMMENCER WON'TCOMMENCE One Human Characteristic of Engines Is That They Assume the Airs of Arrogance.. INSTRUCTION BOOK IS HELP Many Ills May Be the Lot of a Self. Starter and a Careful Examina tion Should Be Made to Locate Source of Trouble. This is the age of push buttons. You push a button when you want to eat or drink. You push a button no bigger than a dinte and a sixty horse power engine roars into action. But-have you ever noticed the look of blank astonishtinent that registers on 'hie face of a liotorist who closes his sedan '' 'or, lights his cigar and with an air of "let's go'" pushes the nagic button that doesn't Ingic? ills it ever happened to you? Fortunately, however, the mnotorist whose self-connuencer won't (o11 ui'iece nerely linds himself In the sa1nte position as it 11uan11 who lUs nalssed the lust train and then dhis covers lie eai reach his destination by "hooling it." One ht ninana characterIstie of iliotor cari enginies is thait Lhey assiuine! airs of aristocratic arrogance, writes 1I. W. C.oo'ke, pr'esident of the Co'yne Trade anud EngineerIng school, in an exchange. All this leads us to the initeresting observation thatt when'I a statier-the elect rie kind - at tends strictly to business, it is at thing of bea uty and a Joy forever. WVhen It balks It Is everythling frowned upon by the refo)rmers. Would Make Things Easy. Mbost au1tO11nati,L ve witer's arie o~f a decidedly altruistlec frane of' miind antd anxi'iouis to tatnke things e.asy for the nutotorIst. States' 0one: ( "T i stt n en AVOID MUCH TRAFFIC ON AUTOMOBILE TRIP Census Shows Tuesday or Wed nesday as Best Days. Survey Made by Bureau of Public Roads on One of Most Traveled Highways in United States Start Early In Morning. If you are going on an aiutoinobile trip and want to avoid all possibile tratillec you shiould go oni Tuiesday or' Wednesday. Such is the coenclusion recached fr'om a study of a trale cn~s takent recently by the biureau of ub lie roads, Uited States 1)0epartnnt ouf Agrictulture, on one of' the most tra~veled roads in the Uunited State-s. if you want to go at san hour whleni there will be the least tratil, start bet ween 2 and 3 o'clock In thle miiorninug. Traflc increases in alnounut steadily fromt Wedneuisday to Saturclay, thie (cinsus shows, and thlen junips int o bIg volume 0on Sunday. Thie volhnie on Sunday la about twic'e that onm Tuies dlay or Wednesday. (On Mond'ay there5 is a ildele dropl' roms the Sunduoay figures ande oni 'Tuesdlay the lowest ebb1 1s rea-lced. There is less trailtle on the road b)e tween 2 and :3 o'chik ini the iorinlg than at aniy otheir time of lbay. Finn 3~ o'cloc'k t' o t there is a siIlihtI inase ; then a steadl~y cliumbl until 11. 11'-: weien 11 'cluock cind I there is ai sliht driop, ande thlen an ineia se aiait unil the~ peakih is reached'i bet-weeni 2 iitul 3. AC -ti' 3 o'cl o-k trali lie dropll s sI lghly until 7 when I ie del ~eens bei:ornieis more pronounce('(d. 1By muidnlilit trallec has almost r('ehed Its lowest point. Ninety per' cent of the day's traffle, the census shows, rolls over the rond Ibetween 7 fl. m1, andit 9 p. tI., and 52 n~er cent bntween 1 n. mn. 'anid 8 n.m 5X - /72 3 IS ARTISTIC POPULAR IN PARIS the 0141 Londo lu as,tu cah has been >1pubir owing to Its very handsome and y' ailsolute freellon of view. The steer I' top of the chatlffeur 's sent. Motor car e'ste1 in this first inodel, which lia des to vehicles. gine when the self-starter (p ils, jack up the rear wheel, set the gear lever in high u il shin the rear wheel." Just like that . . .1 don t know this writer chap, andi I wish himu no htarmi, but I'd like to see himt do4) the trick. To turn 1n engine over against Its own colpression is not easily per formedl. outside of the lovies. Fel lows like C harlie Chaplin a1n4 Jnck Deim'psey get away with it-in' the uovie--hut you and I have got to try sotme other expeilent more likely to IriiIg us ill sIelling Elistltlune of som1ething to eat. In dealing with a uulish starting 1ueelnIIaillsiit 4one s4'cheinle, to Ily 111inn1, has never protlueed serious results. Arnli that is to examn111e things in in t attempt to discover what is wrong. A h:ttieiry terminal luny he loose and1 lissing netua tl contt, or a battery tortinal an1 wire iay have become <llv"oret(. Carb'n (ust worn off the brushes of the starting 1ntor may have caused a ground or short circuit between the bu' ishi holders; (lIrt, oil, grease may be where Ihey will do the worst harml; the silent-4rive chaIn may he broken, or the ge:ar enganging the flywheel rin has falleil to slIp Into Its allotted place; the Starter switch inay be out of orler; the starter's Wife an1lntister, the.' battery, mIny have goeie wrong; insulation nuty he cut or ruhhel off souewlhe'e so tliat anl excessive niount of current is diverted Instead of reaching the starting Motor. Ignorant of Electricity. Mainy titnes I have been asked to Iook over it car to find t hat the trouble was onte of the simlplst. The nver'age driver' knows no4thilng abou)It bIle, and4 so 1s unletIl to tell when1I the4 Ignit Ion and1( stin21lg system a'i1 re fuinc't loning properly. \\hen s011ne thinlg does happen he Is "out of luck." '1h1 lnstriduio boo1l))lk As a ga-eat help, and14 It shotild be conls'1lentioushy stlled'4 by (lie ('ar owner'. W\e lily thle plper' for havv~ing daniced t hrdough Ih 11'sealson~ wih1 a 1trting syste toll1 whiehI we havye gIven the 53111e itaiolIIt of Utareful 2411t14111il jnwe uisuaInlly give theii gals met er, wle h 54ee'i15 non11e iat ail, e'xcepIt to ki14k abou)It It whlen we,* com)11' tol Iay the4 bIlls. BRACE HOLDS FENDERS RIGID Device Illustrated Will Help MaterIal ly to Reduce Objectionable Patthing, A great don1 It'of the n1ois4' set upj by llih niutoenieles is the re-sult of' rat I ing t''inlers, wvhichi e'veni at modera4iltet Splleld, mtazke a1 h1orn so1 1meh1 ''xcess we4lih. Thi'eldrawuing' showi~s ai l'4nder' brace tat notnly/h1hs teL 4et00r Braces for Front and Rear Fenders of Light Automobiles Help to ReduIce the Objectionable Noise of Rattling -Sheet Iron. for 114'heIleinse plate. A piece of threi4e-O' ihths-Inchl s1eel r'odlI ll thread (edI, foir se'veral IInche14s, 01n each'l end anid a1tn'hied, tihrough hiles cut In thle fenders, bly means111 of 21u1., wash (ers, andil pill14 w('dges, whicho are s('rewed up4 111tight IIg.a1inst bothI slebs of' t he f4'nderis, n1u shown in thle 4dra1wIng. Simlia bra'c's mai~y h'eII ld to. (lie rearl I foinders. S 113on il el 1 l(1lps, Joinetii'i from11 oneighth'll or ) threoe-slx gethlei' with stor.~e bolts. are ujstri for cliimiping th1e Il'o'nse 1)late4 to the bra'ic.-Popul 31 arI MchaiesIC Malgaie. Swat 'Em. I"Jny w-alkers"' oin hilghiwaiys atre theI Iw wor01st cenemieis of auitoiinobiling, TANLAC KEEPS HIM FIT, SAYS McO1AW Has Used It for Years With Bplenldid Results-Fine for Run Down Condition. "For four years Tanlac has kept me in the pink of condition as I take a few doses of it every time I feel a little run down and it always builds e up agtifin," said Win. A. McGraw, 207 Beach Place, Tampa, Fla. "I began taking Tanz4ac first about four years ago when I was In a very bad state of health and had been run down for several years. I was always taking laxatives, too, but 1; believo they did me mnore harm than good. "Taniac made me feel like a brand new man in a Yery short tine and I have never had a return of any of my old troubles. The reason of this I am firmly convinced lb that I always have Tailac handy and take a few doses every time I feel a bit under the weather." Tanlac is sold by all good druggists. Conscience Bothers Them. The rain falls upon the unjust as Well as the just but the unjust do not enjoy it because of their irritating cohselence. A just man has peace with his conseience. WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND SWAMP-ROOT For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kiliner's Swanip-Ioot, the great kidney, liver and bladder medi cine. It is a physician's prescription. Swainp-loot is a strengthening medi cine. It helps the kidneys, liver and blad. der do the work nature intended they should do. .. Swamp-Root has stood the test of years. It is sold by all druggi'tts on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney Inedicine has so many friends. Be sure to get Swainpltoot and start treatment at once. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation setnl ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Ilinghnmton, N. Y., for a sanple bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.- Ad vertisement. That's the Difference. Browne-"A womtan is forever talk lug about w'hnt she wouilhi( d) if she were a main." Towne-"\\'hile a man contents himiself wivt talking about what he wouidn't ot he were a wvomli."-Lift.. SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES And sprinkle in the foot-bath ALL10N'S FOOT=nAste. the antiseptic, healing pow der for Painful. Swollen, Smarting Feet. It prevents binaiet and sora spots and takes the sting nut of . ns and iunions. Always use Alien's Foot=.ose to break in new shoes and enjoy the bliss of feet without an acho.-Advertleement. Misused. A teache' in the fourth grade of one of the Indianapolis schools asked the pupils to use the word "totemil" in a sentence. Th'iomasi, who was usually ai little slow on answeriing questions, quickly arlose and1( saId, "I've got 'lve books, aind I tote 'em home every evening." Cuticura Soothes Baby Rashes That itch and1( burn, by hot baths of Cuticur'a Soap followved by gentle anioinitings of Cuticuira Ointment. Nothing netter, purer, sweeter, espe chally If a little of the fragrant Cuti eunra Ta'lcumn Is dutsted on at thme fin.. bali, 25c each.--Ad vertisemient. Averting Suspicion. "Sonie of' your constituents are crit leising your' English." "Enc'ourage 'emi," relhiedI Senator Sorighlum. "It'll help to convInce folks tatlihough I occasinally mingle In siueleiy I still speak as one of tihe plaIn. "flend Shtot." Dlr. P'eery'n Vermifugn, fe not IL'i "loeg." or a "nyrup" but a real, old-ftashionedi dose ot meil icine, which, clennst out wo"rms or Tapeoworm withi a sinagile'dos. Money back if not satisaed. Advert isemen t. It is bet ter to lend t han to iborr'ow. Leiti I hIelpIi ng handt but don't borrowv O r LMothers!! Write for 32 Page Booklet, "Mothers of the World" LOy The Loom Products r &zaby Carriagos &Fumitum waalf.AfiJ~ tJoe This Coupon Plea..e'.".nd ey The Lloyd MIg. Wkied."Mohro h Company QEI ~~ .Wake. Name.. Uenominee h'Uhstreet...,, -... CIm et.................Stt KINiGiPIN PLUG TOBACCO Kwwn asM "that good kind" 'Try it -and you, will know why