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THE PEOPLE, BARNWELL, 8. C. « ' I QREEN PEA PIRATES £7 PETER B. KYNB — -~+-~—r-t—— . ~— T Copyright, by P«t«r B. Kya* oAuthor of* W WBBSTER“MAN*S MAN,” "THE VALLEY of the GIANTS," Etc. the rusty chain, singing through the imwsepipe. “Snub her gently, Mac, snub her gently, an’ give her the thir ty-fathom shackle to the water’s edge,”” he warned McGufTey. The bark swung uhtil her bows were straightened to the ebb tide and with a wild, triumphant yell Mr. Gibney clasped the honest McGuffey to his perspiring bosom. The deed was done! It wa^ dark, however, before they had nil the sails snugged up shipshape, although In the meantime the quaran tine launch had hove alongside, in- veatigated, and removed those of the crew who still lived. Shortly there after the coroner came and removed the dead, after which Gibney and Mc Guffey hosed down the deck, located some hard tack and toffee, supped and turned in In the officers' quarters. In the morning, Scab Johnny arrived in a launch with their other clothes (Mr. Gibney having thoughtfully sent him ten dollars on' account of their old board bill, together with a request for the clothes), and when the agents of the Chesapeake sent a watchman to relieve them they went ashore and had breakfast. After breakfast, they called at the office of the agents, where they were complimented on their daring seamanship and received a check for one thousand dollars each. “Well, now,” McGuffey declared, af ter they had cashed their checks, •‘See- In' as how I’ve become Independent ly wealthy by following your lead, Adalbert, all I got to say Is that I'm a-goln’ to stick to you like a limpet to a rock. What’ll we do with our money T” For the first time In his checkered career Mr. Gibney had a sane, sensi ble, sod serious'thought. “Has It ever occurred to you. Mac. bow much nicer It la to have a few dollars In the bank, I good clothes on your back, an’ a cred it with your friends? Me. all my life I I been a coiue-easy. go-easy, cOme- j Sunday.-God'll-send-Monday sort o' | feller, until In my forty-second year I'm little lietter'n a beachcomber. So now. a hen you ask me what I'm goln to do with my money, I'll tell you. I'm going to save It. after first paytn up about seventy five bucks I owe here I su* there along the Front. I'm through ; drlnkla' an' raisin' b—U. Me for a asvlugs bank, Bart.” CHAPTER VII. a When Captain Ecraggs, after aban doning all hope of salving the bark t'hesapeake, returned to the Maggie, the little cruft reminded him of noth ing so much as the ward for the tn- I'orrlglhle of an Insane asylum. Due a great, hairy demigod or aea-gobtin I Captain Hcragga' stupidity and the he lay out along the yard, and aprang general inefficiency of the Maggie, the from place to place with the old exul tant thrill of youth and joy In hi* work. A word, a gesture, from Mr. REAL MONEY. Synopsis. — Captain Phlne&s P. Scraggs has grown up around the docks of San Francisco, and from mess boy on a river steamer, risen to the ownership of the steamer Maggie. Since each annual In spection promised to be the last of the old weatherbeaten vessel. Scraggs naturally has some diffi culty In securing a crew. When the story opens, Adelbert P. Qib- ney, likable, but erratic, a man whom nobody but Scraggs would hire, ts the skipper, Nells Halvor- sen. a solemn Swede, constitutes the forecastle hands, and Bart Mc Guffey, a wastrel of the Qlbitey type, reigns in the engine room. With this motley crew and his an cient vessel. Captain Scraggs Is engaged in freighting garden truck from Halfmoon bay to San Francisco. The inevitable happens; the Maggie goes ashore InPa fog. A passing vessel hai .ug'the wreck,- Mr. Gibney gets word to a towing company in San Francisco that the ship ashore Is the Yankee Prince, With promise of a rich salvage. Two tugs succeed in pulling the Maggie Into deep water, and she slips her tow tinea and gets away in the fog. Furious at the decep tion practiced on them. Captains Hicks and Ftahsrty. commanding the two. tugboats, ascertain the identity, of the “Yankee Prince” and, fearing ridicule should the facta become known along the wa ter front, determine on personal vengeance. Their hoettle visit to the Maggie results In Captain Scraggs promising to get a new boiler and make needed repairs to the steamer. Scraggs refuses to fulfill his promises and Gibney and McGuffey "strike.” With marvel ous luck. Scraggs ships a fresh crew. At the end of a few days of wild conviviality Gibney and McGuffey are stranded and seek their old poeltlona on the Maggie. They are koatllely received, but re main. On their way to San Fran cisco they sight a derelict and Olb- ney and McGuffey swim to It The derelict proves to be the Chesa peake. richly laden. Its entire crew stricken with scurvy. Scraggs at tempts to tow her In, but tbe Mag gie Is unequal to the task and Ulb- ney and McGuffey, alone, under take to sail the ship to Saa Fran- dare CHAPTER VI.—Cantlnuod. The ship lay In the wind, shivering Mr. Gibney was her*, there, every where. One minute he was dashing along the deck with a leading line, the next he was laying out aloft. He or dered himself to do a thing and then, with the pent-up energy of a thousand devils, be did It. Tbe years of degra dation as navigating officer of the Mag gle fell away from him, as he sprang agile and half-naked. Into the shrouds; != “If you can forgive him. I can, Gib." “Well, he’s certainly cleaned him self handsome, Bart. Telephone for a messenger boy,” and Mr. Gibney sat down and wrote: “Scraggsy, old fanciful, we’re square. Forget it and come to breakfast with us at seven tomorrow at the Marigold cafe. Til order deviled lam kidneys for three. It’s alright with Bart also,- “Yours, “Gib.” This note, delivered to Captain Scraggs by the messenger boy, lifted the gloom from the latter’s miserable soul and sent him home with a light heart to Mrs. Scraggs. At tbe Mari gold cafe next morning he was almost touched to observe that both Gibney and McGuffey showed up arrayed in dungaree*, wherefore Scraggs knew his late enemies purposed proceeding to the Maggie immediately after breakfast and working in the engine room all day Sunday. Such action, when he knew both gentlemen to be the pos sessors of wealjh far beyond the dreams of avarice, bordered so close ly on the miraculous that Scraggs made s mental resolve tu play fair in the future—at least as fair as the limits of his cross-grained nature would per mit. He was so cheerful and happy that McGuffey, taking advantage of the situation, argued him Into some minor repairs to the engine. About nine o'clock, as Mr. Gibney was on his way to the Marigold Cafe for bieakfast. he was mildly Inter ested, while passing the Embarradero waretuuse. to note the presence of fully a doaen aeedy-looklng gentlemen of undoubted Hebraic antecedents, congregated In a circle Just outalde the warehouse door. There was an air of suppressed excitement about this group of Jews that aroused Mr. Oih- ney’s curiosity; so h# decided to eross over and inveatlgata. being of tbe opin ion that poaaibly one of their number had fallen In a fit. Ha had once had an epileptic ahlpmate and waa pecu liarly export In the handling of such cases. Now, If the greater portion of Mr. Glhney'a eventful career had not been spent at sea. he would have known, by the red flag that floated over the door. Ann *r* rn^y worm ■ wnocp miior you get them?” “Twenty-five cents up," was the an-, swer. "You go It blind at an old horse saJe, as a rule. Perhaps you get some thing that's worthless, and then again you may get something that has heaps of value; and perhaps you only pay half a dollar for It. It all depends on the bidding. I once sold an old horse to a chap' and he took It home and opened It up. and what d’ye suppose he found inside?” _ "Bota," replied Mr. Gibney, who prided himself on being something of a veterinarian, having spent a few months of his youth around a Avery stable. , “A million dollars In Confederate greenbacks.” replied the auctioneer. “Of course they didn’t have any value, but just suppose they’d been U. S.?” “That’s right," agreed Mr. Gibney. “I suppose the swab that owned th« horse starved It until the poor animal flggered that all’s grass that’s green. As tha feller says, ‘Truth is sometimes stranger than fiction.’ If you throw in a saddle and bridle cheap, I might he induced to Invest In one of your old horses, shipmate.” The auctioneer glanced quickly at Mr. Gibney, but noticing that worthy’s face free from guile, he burst out laughing. "My ses-faring friend,” he said presently, “when we use the term ‘old horse,’ we use it figuratively. See all this freight stored here? Well, that’s never been called for by the consign ees, and after it’s In the warehouse a year and isn’t called for. we have an old horse sale and auction It off to the highest bidder. Ravey?" Mr. Gibney took refuge In a lie. “Of course. I do. I was Just klddin* you. my hearty." (Here Mr. Glbney’s glance rested on two long heavy sugar- pine boxes, or shipping eases. Their Jolnta at all four corners were cun ningly dove-tailed and wire-strapped.) “1 was a hit Interested In them two boxes, an* seeln’ as this Is a free coun try, I thought I’d Just step In an’ make s bid on them,” and with the words, Mr. Gibney walked over and bua'ed himself In an Inspection of the two crates la question. The fact of the matter waa that ao embarrassed was Mr. Gibney at the exposition of his Ignorance that he desired to hid# tbe coo fusion evident In hla sun tanned face. So be stooped over the crates and pretended to be exceedingly Interested In them, haul ing and pushing them about and read ing the address of the consignee who had failed ta mil for his goods. The 1 mente In that bend block of yours, crates were both consigned to the Ola Mac, you and Scraggsy caa divide my Seng company. T14 Dupont street. Son | share o’ these two hoses o* Francisco. There were several Chi- n*®* between you. Do you got K. Fair eraiy to get cm. New, dent it stand to reason that them fellers knows what’s in them boxes, or they wouldn’t give me fifty dollars to haul ship? Of course. It docs. However,- In order to earn 4hat fifty dollars, I got to back water. It wouldn’t bo playin’ fair If I didn’t. But that don’t prevent me from puttin’ two dear friends o’ mine (here Mr. Gibney en circled Scruggs and McGuffey with an arm each) next to the secret which I discovers, an’ if therq’s money In It for old Hbokyr that buys me off, It stands to reasoti that there’s money In It for us three. What’s to-prevent you sn’ McGuffey from goln’ up to this old horse sale an’ biddln’ in thetfi two boxes for the use and benefit of Gibney. Scraggs an’ McGuffey, ail share an’ share alike? You can bid as high as a hundred dollars. If neces sary, an’ still come out a thousand dollars to the good. Pro tellln’ you this because I know whaPs in them two boxes.” v McGuffey was staring fascinated at Mr. Gibney. Captain Scraggs clutched his mate’s arm In a frenzied dasp. “Whatr* they both Interrogated. “You tug hoys,” continued Mr. 01b- ney ’ with aggravating deliberation, “ain’t what nobody would call dum mies. You’fe smart men. But the trouble with both o’ you boys Is you ain’t got no Imagination. Without imagination nobody gets nowhere, un less It’s out th’ small end o’ th’ horn. Maybe you boys ain’t noticed It, but my imagination Is all that keeps me from goln’ to Jail. Now, If you two had read the addresa on them two boxes, it wouldn't 'a* meant nothin’ to you. Absolutely nothin’. But with me It'a different. I’m blejssed with Imagi nation enough to aee right through them Chinaman tricks. -''Them two boxes Is marked Oriental Goods’ an’ consigned (here Mr. Gibney raised a grimy forefinger, and Scraggs and Mc Guffey eyed It very much as If they expected It to go off at any moment)— them two boxes la consigned to tbe Gin Seng company. 714 Dupont street, San Francisco." "Well, that’s up In Chinatown, all right," admitted Captain Scraggs, “but how about whet's (aside the twe crates?" "lhieetal goods, of coarse," said Mc Guffey. “They art coaalgnetl to E Chinaman, an’ besides, that’s what It says on the casae. don’t It. Gib? Ori ental goods. Rcragga. la silks an’ aatlna, rice, chop stay, punk, an' fan taa layouts.” "If there ain't Rwlas H*« , Doss kvery day bring the SMI backache? Do yea drag atona your back a dull aacetmng seber nine find you “all played outP Don t be diocouraged! Realize it is merely a •iga you haven’t taken good care of yourself. Thia baa probably atnunad your kidneys. Taka things easier for awhile ana help year kidneys with Doan’$ Kidney Pill*. Then the back ache, dizziness, headaches, tired feeL inga and bladder troubles will ga. Doan’s have helped thousands sad should help yon. Atk your neighbort A North Carolina Cam J. C. Braxton, blacksmith, Main be. Scotland Neck, M, C.. says: “1 had dull pains in my bask and I was sore and stiff, end could hard ly bend to pick up anything. I had headaches and dlssy la set- spells, and colda tied on my kidney* making my condition worse. My kldr didn’t act propa I began taking Dona’s Kidney 1 They put my beck and kidneys In shape.” Gat Deart el Aar Slas* EEs a ■« DOAN *9 "V/i!*!** Wn mus, n t, I TRY GOWANS LAXATIVE COLD TABLETS jntam/ N v-) i j i m n ♦ * hUiuimaadt RHEUMATISM At AM Gibney. and McGuffey would pouurv on a ro|ie like a bull dog. With the fore-royal net. Mr. Gibney ran back to the wheel and put It hard over. There Im-Iiik no after null net the bark swung off readily on to her courae. etigplni: through the water at a nice eight-knot n|<e«-d. Ten UiHfJ! J>ff, the ^oa*t. Mr. the wind again.. Tirnrlil fii« Jnrdx* u ith -th** aid of ttr winch and McGufTey, came about ami Imuded nonh. At three o'clock st>« cleared the lightship' and wore around to come in over the bar, steering east by south. Imlf-aoyth, for Point Bonita. She drew the full advantage of the wind now and over the bar she came, ramping full through the Gate with her yards squared, on the last of the flood tide. As they passed Lime point, Mr. Gib ney prepared to shorten sail and like a clarion blast his voice rang through the ship, . “Clew up them royals.” He lashed the wheel and they brought the clew lines again to the winch head. The ship was falling off a little before the fore-royal was clewed up, so Mr. Gibney ran hack to the wheel and put her on her course again while McGuf fey brought the main-royal clewlines to the winch. Again Gibney made the wheel fast and helped McGuffey clew' up tile main-royal; again he set her -on her course while -McGuffey, follow ing instructions, made ready to clew- up the fore-to’-gaUa^s’l, ^They were abreast Black Point b^fet-e this latter sail was clewed up< and then they e** ' - . . .. \ smothered the lower top-s'ls ; the hark was slipping lazily through -the water and McGuffey took The .wheel. “Starboa?;;! a little L Steady-y-yi Keep her as she heatls,” Gibney warned and cast off the jib halyards. The Jibs slid down the stays, Tianging as * Melggs wharf now and It devolved up- ^*>n Mr. Gibney To bring his prize In oil v the quarantine ground and let go his port anchor. Fortunately, the anchor was already cock-billed. Mr. Gibney sprang to the fore-top-sail halyards and let Them go and the fore-top-sall came do\ri^ by the run. “Hanl'ii-shirhoiwd ! Make her fast. Bart, an’ roniK.np here, an’ help me with the anchor/'--Let. go f h»'urofn-top- Mji fisivnpl* M hv ■" > by the compressor orK the t ^ rj Jpe < Chesapeake rating the windlass, glnilg, bmedshle n*. G*e firm of the ebh aA»t* with the wind on Her port beam. Mr. Glbuey knocked out the Stopper.with his tra«) hammer and av*f won’ , new navigating officer waa of the opin ion that he had ttcen swindled out of hla share of the salvage, while the new engineer, furious at having Iteen en gaged to baby such a ruin as the Mag gie's holler turned out to he, blamed Scraggs' pandinony for the loss of his share of the salvage. Therefore, both men fired with the utmost frankness their opinion of their employer, tine word b-iranother until dipioiwnt- ie ruiaX.oux '*»,..i p language of the elavic, they “mixed •t.” They were fairly well matched, ami, to the credit of Captain Scraggs be it said, whenever be believed him self to have u fighting chance Scraggs would fight and tight well, under the Tom-cat rules of fisticuffs. Following u bloody battle in the pilot house, lie subdued the mute; following ills victory he was still war mud, so lie went to the engine-room hatch and abused the engineer. As a result of the day's events, both men quit when tlie Maggie was tied up at Jackson htreet wharf and once more Captain Scraggs was helpless. In his extrem ity, he w ished lie hadn't been so hard on Mr. Gibney and McGuffey, for tie realized he could never hope to get them back until their salvage money should he spent. Godless and wholly irreclaimable ns Mrv..Gibney and Mr. McGuffey might have been and doubtless were, each possessed in bounteous measure the sweetest of human attributes, to-wit: a soft, kind heart and a forgiving spir it. Creatures of impulse both, they found It absolutely impossible to nour ish a grudge against Captain Scruggs, when, upon returning to Scab Johnny’s •"hpardlbg" house, their host handed leitLxfl grubby note from their enemy. It wna^ahort apd sweet and sounded quite sincere; Mr. Gibney read it aloud: „< . ”(.hr Board lifte Maggie, Saturday night “Dear Friends: * your kidden when you twok the Chesa peake away from me. To er is human t-at to forgive is devine. After what ( done I don’t expert you two to come •jack to work eve* but for God's sake don't give me the dead face when we meat agin. Remember we-been ship mates once. \ “P. I’ .Srragga^, “Why, the pore ol* ton of a hor»e thief.” Mr. Gibney murmured, much “Of course we forgive him. It ain’t meaty *m h«4d a grouch after the cut prtt has paid hia fair price for hie •‘0» By an large. get a hooch Hart, that old Scraggsy ■ had hla k» for ooca." - . “Hard-a-Starboardl Maka Bart." Her Fast, that a public auction was about to take place, and that the group of He brew gentlemen constituted an organi zation known as the Forty Thieves, whose business it was to dominate the bidding at all auctions, frighten off, or buy off, or outbid ail competitors, and eventually gather unto themselves, at their own figures, aJl goods offered for sale. In the center of the group Mr. Gib ney noticed a tall, lanky Individual, evidently the leader, who yvas Issuing instructions in a low voice to his henchmen. ' This Individual, though Mr. Gibney did not know 1t, “Was the King of the Forty Thieves. As Mr. Gibney luffed into view the kihg eyed him with suspicion'. Observing this, Mr. Gibney .threw out his magni-fieent chest, scowled at the king, an’d stepped into the warehouse for all the >vorld as If he owned it. An oldish man with glasses—tbe auctioneer—was seated on a box mak- J REhftogSfrtr&ou hngfiuiim awfuFwUk - ftguraa in -a notebook. Him Mr. Gibney addressed. "What’s aJl -thta here?" he inquired. Jerking his thumb over his shoulder at the group. “it’s -qn old horse sale,” replied the auctioneer, without looking qp. Mr. Gibney brightened. He glanced around for the stock In trade, but oh- j Captain Scraggs. “Relatives serving none c«airlnded that the old j lucky, an’ expensive. Take. neae characters scrawled on the top of epeb crate, together with the words, la Engl (ah: “Oriental Goods." As he ceased from hla fake Inapee- tkm of the two boxea. the King of the Forty Thleveo approached and our veyel the aallnr with aa even greater amount of distrust and suaplcloa than ever. Mr. Gibney waa annoyed. He disliked being stared at. M>*he aald: "Hello, Hlumenthal, my bully boy. | What's aggravatin' you?” Blumenthal (alnce Mr. Gibney. j the at.eer riot of hla imagination elected to christen him Blumenthal, 1 tbe name will probably suit him aa well aa any other) came cioae to Mr. Gibney and drew him ashto. In a hoarse whisper he desired to know If I Mr. Gibney attended the auction with the ex|*ectatlon of bidding on any of the packages offered for aalo. Seek- log to Justify hla presence. Mr. Gibney advised that it waa Ids Intention to bid on everything In sight; whereu|Vip j Blumenthal proceeded to explain to ! Mr. Gibney how UnpohMbie It would [ for Mffi, afflfVhd srrilfiW The'F*niffy - 1 ftgvflrTo'rdiy iny umnriri if*. sellable price. Further: Hlumenthnl desired to Inform Mr. Gibney that hi* (Mr. Glhney'a) efforts to buy In the “old horses” would merely result In his running the prices up, for no benef icent purpose, since- It was ever the practice of the Forty Thieves to per mit no man to outbid them. Perhaps Mr. Gibney would be satisfied with a fair day’s profit without troubling him self to hamper the Forty Thieves and interfere with their «omblnation. and with the words, the king surreptitlbus : Jy slipped Mr. Gibney a tlfty-dollar greenback. * Mr. Gibney’s great fist closed over the treasure,‘he having first, by a coy glance, satisfied himself that It was really fifty dollars. He shook hands with the king. He said: “Blumenthal, you’re a smart man. I am qidte content with this fifty to keep off your course and give you a wide berth to starboard. I’m sensi ble enough to know when I’m licked, an’ a fight without profit ain’t In my line. I didn’t make my money that wgy, Blumenthal. I’ll cast off my lines and" haul away from the dock,” and suiting the action to the figure. Mr. Gibngy departed. He went first to the Seaboard drug store, where he quizzed the druggist for five minutes, after which he con tinued his cruise. Upon reaching the Maggie, he proceeded* to relate In de tail, and with additional details sup plied by hia owq, imagination, the story of his morning adventure. “Gib,” sain McGuffey enviously, “you’re a fool for luck.’’ “Luck,” said Mr. Gibney, beginning to expand, “is what the feller calls a relative proposition—” .‘‘You’re wrong, Gib," Interposed is un- fr tn- rhurklebesded son of a Irish potato? Gin Seng. 714 Dupmit street Ginseng —s root or a Kerb that medicine la made out of. The dictionary aaya It’a a Ghlneae panacea for exhaustion, aa* 1 happen to know that It'a worth Eva dollars a pound aa’ that them twe crates weighs a hundred and fifty pounds each If they weighs sn ounce." His a editors stared at Mr. Gibney mech as might a pair of baaaboll fans at the hero of a home run with twe la | strikes and th# bases full. "Gawd I" muttered McGuffey, "Greet grief. Gib! Caa this be pos sible?” gasped Captain Hcragga. • For slower Mr. Gibney took out hla j fifty-dollar ^Dl and handed It to—to I McGuffey. He never trusted Captain Scraggs with anything more valuable than a pipeful of tobacco. “Ern.ggsy," he si id solemnly, "I’m willin' to back my Imagination with my cash. You an' McGuffey hurry I right over to the warehouse an’ butt hi ou the sale when they come to them two boxes. The' salg la .Just about ^.'irrTi' !,<.\\ <;.> ;i« high us j l( u HniHHW III IIRIfiP Ifl 5fit fW JffTlWlJlT SLOAN’S REUEtES NEURALGIC ACHES Atnl sio Liniment horjes would be led In, one at a time, f stance, Mrs. Hcragga’ mother—" through a small door In tbe rear of t *T mean, you lunkhead." said Mr. i-ilrtj -luck, la found- brains grow. No brain, no luck. No ♦nek. no brain* l.emme musrrnte. A tillerin' land fhark makes me a present o* fifty dollars not to butt la on them •era boxes I’m tellln’ you about. Him an’ hla gang earns them lew Uua* Gibney had a pusslon for hi.r*ebark riding and In a spirit of adfbnture he resolved to acquaint hlm*etf with the Ins and ours of an old Iwwae snip. . "How much might a man have t«< give fat one of (he erlttura?'* ha asked a prnfitatde Agger, an’ pay the auc tioneer fifty dollars down.to hold the sale; that will give you hoya time to rush around to dig up the balance o’ the money. Tack right along now, lads, while I go down the street an’ get me some breakfast. I don’t want Blumenthal to aee me around that sale.’ He might get suspicious. After I eat* I’ll meet you here aboard th’ Maggie, an’ we’ll divide the loot.” With a fervent handshake all around, the three shipmates parted. After disposing of a hearty break fast of devilled lamb’s kidneys and coffee. My. Gibney Invested In a ten- cent Sailor’s Delight and strolled down to the Maggie. Nells Halvorsen, the lone deckhand, was aboard, and the moment Mr. Gibney trod the Maggie’s deck once more as mate, he exercised his prerogative ttF~ order Neils ashore for the remainder of the day. Since Haivprsen wag not in on the ginseng deal, Mr. Gibney concluded that it would be Just aa well to have him out •*< tbe way. should Scraggs and McGuffey appear unex pectedly with the two cases of gin seng. Hobsoris £zemA< 4be -Ossssm “We’ll open her up and in spect the •WSg.” (TO BE CONTINUED.) On# Ordsr Stswsd Bsans. 7~" Stuart Detfiw puqip manufacturer, is a member nf the Indianapolis Country club. Recently Mr. Dean tele phoned the club to arrange for a dinner. One of the Filipino servants answered the call. "This la Mr. Dean—Stuart Dean," (he dub man said to the servant. *T not understand good,” the ser vant said. , “I am Mr. Dean—Stuart Dean.". aUfeb y«V jp* hit*' I uinlsmand yes. yes.” The Fa 11 pi no hung up the receiver, hurtled to the kitchen and. said to the chef: •vine order stew ad beans I”—Indian spoUfl New* “Waiter, if this la rprtng cblckt where *ts the wishbone?” "It was too young to wish, sir." BOSCHEE’S SYRUP Allaya Irritation, Sooths# and Hsalo Throat and Lung Inflammation. ’ The almost constant Irritation of h cough keep* the delicate mucous mem brane of the throat and lungs In i con gested condition, which Boschee’s Syrup gently and quickly soothes and heel* For this reason It has been s favorite household remedy for cold* cough* bronchitis .and especially for lung troubles In millions of homes all over the worid for the last fifty-five year* enabling the patient t* obtain * good fight’s rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration In tha morning. 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