The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 201, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 7, 1917 Page: 2 of 4
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Gums
ROMANCE
Ti: aj\d Mrs. li\iperfcH\i?l\es
the norman daily transcript
Novelized from the Motion
Picture Play of the same
name by George Kleine.
Cw!■ !«. bf A4<+44 M H-,hr.
Piorporit Stufford. with his daughter
Dloria. 18 wintering at Palm Beach.
Gloria Is n vivaclou.H but willful youriR
lady who chafes under the restraining
ltarnl r t a RoverncHs from whom ah«> r« -
l«nterlly iscapia. Her childish ranrri
• au.se vnuiiK Doctor Royce ti) fall In
love wltti her. JiecominK lost In tin-
everiihiden «he fnlla Into tho han.la ,if
(lie Seminole Indians She i« rescued
anil returned to her father Gloria
Jails in love with her rescuer. Fr< neuu
l'lve years later she leaves school and
meets Freneau at the theater; he has
forgotten Gloria. Gloria feels that her
one dream Is shattered, loiter Freneau
persuades her to forgive him. Gloria s
aistcr-in-law, Lois, lieconifH Intensely
Jealous and Doctor Itoyce discovers 1 h
her an ally. Doctoi Royc > waniu Kre
Freneau goes slelghlnK" with
Gloria. It result* In pn.uinonin for
Olorla. whose family becomes Incensed
at I-reneau when they learn the truth.
Royce 18 summoned t( alleviate Qlorla'H
Hufferlhk Kreneau's flnaneen beln^ low
Jie approaches Plorpont Stafford fur a
loan. Doctor Royce a^ain warns Fre-
neau of his conduct. Hut l^ols, learning
or Freneau's betrothal to Gloria, threat-
ens him with dire punishment Her
hUMband. Gloria's brother David be-
comes suspicious. Freneau driven to
desperation by I.oIh' threats a ;r< « * to
spend a week with her In the Catskllls.
lie plans to have Mulry send Gloria a
bunch of telegrams. Lois husband
threatens to kill a man. After Fre-
neau takes leave of Gloria she sees
from her window an attack made upon
bun when lie goes to meet Lois. Doctor
Royce convinces her that what she has
seen is the result of delirium. Later a
telegram, followed by a letter, comes
from I- reneau. She replies hut her tele-
grams are returned. The llrst morning
she Is allowed from hor room, she are"
nently sees the supposed suicide of Fre-
neau reported in the paper Then Glo-
ria swears to find the murderer of her
IlIn^r„v,„^0!Ice. beoo|neK alarmed and
tells what he knoWB of Freneau to Mr
Stafford. Together they seek tn pre-
vent scandal from enveloping Olorla
Bhe accuses them In her mind of con-
spiracy against hor. Gloria sets about
lo run down Freneau's murderer
rJ,1ycer,Tarns Mulr>' te" Gloria notli-
>55? Vca".s on Wu'ry and there
s ,'olR Who alao is worried. Gloria's
suspicions are aroused. Royce endeav-
Irs to show her the difficulty she faces
ELEVENTH EPISODE
The Fugitive Witness.
Aroused from its winter sleep, Da-
yld's country house was ngiow with
good cheer. Gloria, her father. Doctor
Boyee, and David and Lois had come
up to piny for a Utile, to throw off the
family tragedy and the formal duties
of their city life, anil to forget them-
selves boisterously in the open.
For men and women resting In tlie
shadow of a crime they behaved
strangely like children turned out In
the yard to play after a rainy day's
Imprisonment. They ran through the
house shouting hilariously to
flirtation. Preparedness was Mulrv's
motto.
Gloria studied him a moment. This
was the partner of her murdered
lover. He was too amiable of mien
to he sccusahle of such a crime. She
acquitted him of wishing to do away
with FreneuU. In fuct, the papers
said that Freneau's death had nearly
wrecked the firm. Mulry -did not look
bankrupt. Gloria did not know that
her father had given a large sum of
money to Freneau a few days before
his death and that Murly was living
on that
I here was n shifty flippancy in
Mulry's eyes and manner that made
Gloria distrust him. She felt a little
added distrust of hor dead lover for
having such a mini us 11 partner. The
hateful proverb about "birds of
feathef" ran through her mind like a
tune In any case, here at last was
the man she sought, and she was im-
patient to question him. There were
too many people on tile crest of the
hill to permit of conversation there.
So she dared him to a toboggan ride.
He accepted. She got aboard and
lie steered. They swooped like a de-
scending airship. But at the foot of
tile hill the toboggan careened and
slid them deep Into the drift before it
capsized.
Mulry, for all his bulk, was affile
and he was soon helping Gloria to her
feet.
"Thank you a million times. Mr.
Mulry, she said. "You saved me from
drowning in the snow."
He beamed and congratulated hlm-
| self on making such success with this
| pretty creature. He lmd not recog-
I nlzed her. lie hml seen photographs
"f her in Freneau's possession and he
bad seen her at the opera. But she
was disguised to him now by her
elose-iittlng cup, her rough sports suit
mid, most of all, by her coquettish
smiles. Suddenly he had tn leap for
bis life to escape another scooting to-
boggan. On it were David and Lois
anil u young man from the same house
party of which Mulry was a member.
"Hurt yourself, Olorla?" David
sang out.
"Did you get hurt, Miss Stafford?"
the other young man cried.
Gloria shook her head and called
after them, not noticing that Mulry's
e,\i's were popping and ills jaw droop-
ing. He had pieced the name to-
He hud
come up here to escape her and he
lover, who htifl escaped the dangerB of
the jungle, had been slain on lllver-
slde drive; her romance had ended In
vanity and despair.
She found the pleasure paradise al-
most the same.
A little more gorgeous, perhaps, but
all the gloomier for that. She had
come from the white winter of the
North Into the sudden July of Florida,
and her heart ached unew remembering
how love had bloomed In her life un-
der the tropical sun of Freneau's eyes.
It was like going over an old album of
souvenirs to revisit the scenes of that
far-off yesterday. The same throngs
seemed lo lie dancing the same dances,
bounding through the Biime waves, still
sipping their tea under the palms in
the royal gardens of ihe Polnciana.
She had almost forgotten her pur-
pose In coming here when she caught
sight of Frank Mulry's broad buck.
He was rolling along briskly. She
tlid not know that he had caught sight
of her llrst aat! made off In disgust
and amazement at her discovery of
his new retreat.
Shi- dared not run after him and
she could not keep puce with him. She
lost him in the imr.-.e of the bazaars.
Later she suw him riding in one of
the rolling chairs propelled by dar-
kies on wheels—the familiar "afromo-
biles" of I'alm Beach.
I'oor Mulry was winded by his speetl
and lie wanted to get to his host's cot-
tage. lint he caught a glimpse of
Gloria, also chartering an nfromobile.
To Ills horror her nfromobile made
after his. He dared not put back lo
ids hotel. He ordered his driver to
turn down a bowered path and to give
him all tlie steam the black could af-
ford.
1 he motorman was vigorous, but the
passenger was heavy. Gloria was light,
l>m hor African was weak. It was any-
body's race with every prospect of n
spill for one jockey or the other, since
'he paths were filled with dawdling
strollers and the bicycle had come
back into fashion. Everywhere worn-
n In exquisite dresses were roving
about on pedals. Dozens of other afro-
would last. He was tempted to go out
and surrender to this young girl who
was stalking him with such relentless
stealth.
But he thought of the money her fa-
ther had given to Freneau and he was
afraid he would have to give It up.
He thought of his share In Freneau's
trickery and the ugly look it would
have In court. He beat his fat head
for some clever lie that would explain
everything gracefully, but no inspira-
tion came and he went to lied like a
spanked and supperless child.
The next morning Mulry looked out
late upon the flood of sunlight gilding
the liquid emerald sea. The breakers
called to him. He could not resist the
summons. He stole down a corridor
and along an unfrequented walk to a
bathhouse. He unpeeled his clothes
and squeezed into a bathing suit and
so made Into the ocean. Friends of
liis lolling on the beach said that the
water rose when he went In and fell
when he came out. But Mulry was
hajipy. He wallowed and dived like a
porpoise till he was blissfully weary,
then he stretched himself on the sand
for an Oriental snooze.
He heard a voice that sounded fa-
miliar. He sat up. Gloria was com-
ing along the beach directly toward
him. In her sea clothes she was an
approval of nil eyes except Mulry's.
He did not make the mistake of the
ostrich. He buried his entire self in
the sand and tried to hold his breath
till Gloria got past. Luck was against
him and she casually stepped on him
as she crossed his equator.
When she had gone, he exhumed
himself hastily and made for the water
to clear off the sand that loaded him.
•lust as he set his toe in the first froth
Gloria sighted him. He could tell by
her start that she recognized him. He
ran into the waves, she followed. He
dived through the first breaker and a
second and a third. When he looked
back she was not to be seen. lie
laughed and began to float—which w
the easiest thing he did. Suddenly he
saw a red turban come through the
wall of a big billow. Under It appeared
■ \Va."
GEOftOfc
KgltlN!
ELPFLL
EALTH
INTS
Choose an agree*
able diet
Keep the digestion
normal
She Caught Sight of Frank Mulry
face.
He pretended to be suddenly 111. He
other as they found their skates and I " st"1T°rtl!"
wraps for a trip to the frozen svvim- ,C°fe, u>re to escuP'' •' -
tning pool. The dogs added greatly to !l" 'fUst c<msted <lmvl! Ihe hill with
the excitement by loud barkings of ' , shp km'w hls mum-! He re-
"('ome on out" and by a remarkable I"eml"T,>'1 Doctor Royce's warning of
gift for getting in the way. - ' ger of meeting (Jlorla face to
No one played harder than Olorla.
She was trying to convince the others . .
that she had put the mourning off her I. ('Ioriu u pardon and said that
mind as well as her body. She want-
ed to find out what her people were
concealing from her, and why.
Tlie Stafford family lark was soon
Invaded by neighbors. A toboganning
party from another country house ap-
peared. There were no invitations or
only mumbled words, for
eremony
lie must go home, lie was too big for
Gloria to hold mid she could not run
tiller him without, attracting atten-
i tlon. She stood bewildered while he
got away.
I Inter she telephoned to his host
| and asked to speak to him. She
I learned that lie had Just taken a mo-
tor to the train.
I Gloria forgot her suspicions of Lois
I ill her newer suspicions of this man
-Mulry. lie was evidently running
away from her. Therefore she must
pursue him. His flight was evidence
of some mysterious guilt.
Gloria cut short her visit to the
country and announced her Intention
of going back to town at once. Her
father and her brother were used to
her whims and did not oppose them
nowadays out of pity for her.
The next morning Gloria made an-
other Journey to .Mulry's office. Sin-
went early within business hours. Tlie
stenographer told her that Mr. Mulry
bad gone to Palm Beach the night be-
fore with a rich client who had In-
vited him to be his guest.
Gloria was furious at this new es-
cape. She pondered it all the way
home. When she saw her father siie
told him that he was not looking at
nil well; he needed some golf and surf
/
C
KteiHt
The life-saver thought she meant
that be was her husband. Hij thought
it a pity that so pretty a girl should
have so much husband. But he did as
he was told and hurried Mulry ashore.
Gloria felt lonely and afraid when
the bout wns gone. She wondered if
she could make tile land. She did not
really cure, her life was too sad. She
was beginning to droop ami fail when
Royce appeared at her side and set
her hands on his strong shoulders. She
liked him better than she thought she
did. He swam magniflcently. He saved
her and she was glad to be saved.
\\ hen at last she staggered ashore
ar.d her father embraced her, wet as
she was, she looked about for Mulry.
He was gone. The life-saver had re-
vived him and he had tottered away.
Gloria did not know whom he was
visiting. He was not in the hotel reg-
isters. She did not know that he had
gone to his friend's cottage, slammed
his clothes in his trunk and suitcase,
and returned North.
Told Her Father He Ought to Go to Palm Beach.
mobiles also cluttered the race course.
Now, Gloria gained and was about to
head off her man, when a messeng
boy ou a wheel cut In ahead and It was
necessary for Gloria's chauffeur to
back pedal wildly or endure collision.
Mulry would shoot ahead and rejoice
at his triumph, only to find himself in
tangle of pedestrians. His one-
darky power machine begun to feel the
effects of his bulky cargo. Mulry ap-
plied gasoline In the form of a dollar
bill brandished in front of popping,
white eyeballs, nnd that gave him the
advantage for a time. But even money
cannot furnish everlasting power, nnd
the heavy breathing back of him told
Mulry that his engine was about to die.
Ho looked back and saw that
Gloria's face. Mulry struck out to sen.
Gloria came crawling after. He was
astonished to see how well she swam.
Kut he swam well, too.
He wondered if he would have to
cross the Atlantic nnd he regretted the
necessity of landing in Europe with his
bathing suit and nothing else. He
was still at some distance from Europe
when he suddenly felt a twinge of
pain in his ankle—then In his knee—
in both knees. He was doubling up
with crump! He knew reni fear now.
He looked back to shore nnd the far-
otT. misty crowd. He shouted for help.
Nobody heard hiin except Gloria, and
he placed no reliance In her.
She called to him, but lie was past
answering. Gloria had been raised
One of the picturesque features of
Palm lieach life is the presence now
and then of Seminole Indians, who
come up from the everglades to sell
baskets and other samples of their „uuu,
craft, rattlesnake skins, and trinkets I She seized Royce bv
of various sorts. Among those who 1 • ■ -
stood offering bargains of the sort were
the young chief who wanted to marry
Gloria and the old squaw whose horse
Gloria had tried to steal. They recog-
nized lier when they suw her wander-
ing slowly along looking for Mulry.
Gloria paused and stared at them.
She did not recognize them at first and
stopped to price a souvenir of her cap-
tivity. But she noted the wild glare
in the eye of the romantic peddler and
suddenly remembered her swarthy
suitor of five years ago. Her old fear
came back to her for the moment. She
started to escape. The chief clutched
her hand and compelled her to pause.
She was hardly reassured by his soft
words,
'Don't be 'fraid. Nice squaw, nice
squaw,"
She could think of nothing to say.
He did the talking.
"Many years since squaw run off.
and sighed. t n«d to h^ with"^
The cllief sighed, too—with relief. He \vh,, . ,,
spoke grandiosely "All riirht Ton . ' you tell me that it was
marry me now?" * T°U ! who 8UTOd "nd not Dick?"
The chief clutched It and iookeo
hard. The chief's lip curled with scorn.
He laughed—almost.
"Him? Humph! Illtn white liver!
Him# run! That man there band me
big wallop. Ugh!"
Gloria was indignant. The chief de-
scribed with vivid pantomime and gut-
tural words the true history of her
rescue, his own proposal of marriage.
Gloria's swooning with terror, Fre-
neau's arrival, his terrified retreat be-
fore the chief's advance. The struggle
for the chief's knife, and finally the
tremendous uppercut that had knocked
the chief. Meanwhile, during the
fight, he had caught glimpses of Fre-
neau's hasty gathering up of Gloria
and his escape with her, leaving Itoyce
to his fate.
Gloria was aghast at the story. As
the chief went on with it Royce saun-
tered up and paused. The chief turned
on him and was about to attack him.
Royce fell into an attitude of self-de-
fense, but smiled and spoke soothingly
and put out his hand. The chief took
it. He was a good sportsman and so
was Royce.
Gloria looked from Royce to the pic-
ture of Freneau In her locket. A ter-
rible doubt of Freneau assailed her.
. the arm and
dragged him to one side, demanding:
"It was you that saved me. Why
didn't you tell me?"
Itoyce looked sheepish and shrugged
his shoulders. He did not know Just
what to say. Gloria looked at the
locket with hideous new suspicion, \
then turned and hurried away with '
tears springing to her eyelids.
Royce stared after her adoringly.
Gloria wandered far down the beach
alone. She was In a hopeless frame of
mind. She dropped to the sand brood-
ing over the crumbling of her hero's
glory. From the sea the ghost of Fre-
neau seemed to come to her and, kneel-
ing by her, take her In his arms. She
thrust him away, crying:
"Coward ! Cad! Liar!"
The ghost retreated sadly into the
sea. Gloria wept over the picture In
her locket.
Royce, coming along the beach, found
her. He knelt down at her
See that the liver
Is active, and
The bowels always
regular
Should weakness develop, THY
HOSTETTER'S
Stomach Bitters
Stinging Retort.
There was a grim, determined look
In little Jones' eye as he walked iato
the optjclan's imposing premises.
"I want a pair of glasses immedi-
ately!" he demanded. "Good, stroag
ones!"
The assistant glanced significantly
the door labeled "Sight-Testing
Room," and switched on his best pro-
fessional smile; then switched It off
ngaln, constrained by little Jones' man-
ner.
"Good, strong ones!" he Inquired.
"Yes; strong ones!" affirmed Jones,
I wns out in the country yesterday
and made a painful blunder."
"Ah!" The assistant rubbed hli
hands together. "Mistook a stranger
for a friend, perhaps?"
"No," came the blunt reJoinder|
"mistook a bee for a violet."
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for Infants and children, and see that It
Bears the
Signature of (
In Use for Over 30'Y*e'ara7"
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castcria
Two of a Kind.
The high cost of pleasure appear#
to be keeping pace with the high cost
of living.—St. Paul Pioneer Press.
AVOID A DOCTOR'S BILL
on the first of the month by taking
now a bottle of Mansfield Cough Bal-
sam for that hacking, hollow cough.
Price 25c and 50c.—Adv.
Mean Thing.
' Mr. Dauber said my face was
classic. What is classic?"
"Oh, most anything old."
RED CROSS BALL BLUE
Makes clothes whiter than snow. De-
lights the housewife. Large package
6 cents at all good grocers.—Adv.
Every dentist does a wide-open busi-
ness.
American gloves are la demand In
Cuba.
side,
ques-
Royce gazed into her sad eyes pity-
gly. He was unable to deal the
Polnciana gardens as she had been "by h"r ,rUSt la hpr dend
Gloria was almost as much embar- m S ,m" ner 8aa ^ P".v-
ssed by this second proposal in the 1dea! !>«"h
the first in the
proposal in the
she 1
erglades.
not imagine what to say. The chief saved^7" Fr-eUeaU that foUnd you
Gloria's car had taken a wrong turn I tin athlete and her brotjier David had
and shot down another avenue. He taught her how to rescue drowning
gave three silent cheers for himself. : people. But her first practical demon-
Thus ended one of the most blood-1 stl'utlon alarmed her. She had not
curdling rolling-chariot races since ",lin'«l on so huge a barge to take In
Ben-Hur's dny. Mulry paid his ex- t0"''
hausted man well ami took the nearest S,1° set UP a cry t0 shore. No one
wa.v to the cottage where lie was gu
He did not leave it that night, and it
was well, for- Gloria hunted for him
everywhere.
She would not dance, though many
asked her. The music hurt her cruel-
ly. She remembered how she had
bathing. He ought to go to Palm I "tinted to dance that moonlit night so
Beach. He accepted the suggestion I ,,:mK nt-'o, but had been put to bed by
This Was the Partner of Her Murdered
Lover.
had no place among fiylag snowballs,
and dignity could not be kept up after
a buii'P on the Ice.
Gloria found herself the victim of
the attentions of a large, jovial man
heartily. He wns more than willing
to undertake the golf and he was
eager to get Gloria out of the region
of her sorrow. He was so worried
over her swift alternation of gloom
and gayety that he invited Doctor
Royce to came along as a member of
the family party. He did not have to
ask Royce twice.
Gloria had not been to Florida dur-
ing the last five years. To her It was
not so much a flight from her romance
whose playfulness was a little too I as a return to its birthplace. It was at
heavy for her liking. She was ubout ! Palm Beach that she hail met her fate
to snub him when someone casually It was there that she had made her
ulluded to him as Frank Mulry. girlish escapade in David's racing car,
Gloria staggered In the snow at
meeting thus by chance the man she
had tried In vain to overtake In town.
Mulry, never Imagining who she was,
thought that she had slipped on the
ley kuow; he put out his hand to catch
and wrecked it in the everglades. It
was there that she had wandered Into
the heart of the wilderness and into
the heart of the young Seminole chief
who would have forced her to be his
squaw, If her brave Freneau had not
er. Mulrv was always ready for j rescued her from him. And now her
her heartless governess. She remem-
bered how she had suffered till sne
could bear it no longer, and had risen
to dress in the dark and steal out,
leaving her governess a-snore.
She had envied I)avid his liberty and
had stolen the car that David brought
round so that he might take Judge
Freeman's daughter Lois for a moon-
light spin—and spoon. Gloria had not
prevented David from marrying Lois,
and she had run herself into a series
of adventures that had promised every-
thing wonderful only to stop short in
black disaster. Her poor, brave, pa-
tient lover would dance no more, smile
at her no more. Love was gone from
her life already and she was only
twenty.
Frank Mulry did not dance that
night, either. He sat at his window,
listening to the music and wondering
how long this game of hide and seek
heard her. No one missed her except
one man. Doctor Royce was looking
for her. That was not strange. He
was almost always looking for her or
at her. Pierpont did not know where
she was. David and Lois had no idea
of her whereabouts. She was not
among the crowds on the beach.
Hoyce stared out Into the farther
waters. Se saw her turban—or at
least he was afraid that It was hers.
He saw her put up her hand, though
he could not hear her cry.
lie howled to the life-saver In the
bo.it nnd pointed to where Gloria swam
with one hand, the other clutching at
Mulry s collar. The life-saver bent to
oars; the shallop slipped across
the waves and Royce plunged In and
swam with all his might, diving
through the white caps, cresting the
big rollers. The life-saver checked
his boat alongside Mulry, took him
from Gloria, hauled him over the stern
-'"I'l left him fact* down, lift-Is in
air, while he offered his hand to
ria. Gloria shook her head. She
felt better for having saved a life. She
underestimated the distance to shore.
She ordered the life-saver to make
haste with Mulry.
"Take good care of him," she shout-
ed. "He belongs to me."
Spoke Soothingly and Put Out His
Hand.
crowded closer to her. Suddenly his
face hardened as he looked past her.
He clenched his fists and reached for
a knife. Gloria followed his eyes and
saw Doctor Royce in the distance. She
wondered why the chief should hate
him. The chief explained with a dog's
snarl.
"That man nearly kill me once. He
take you from me."
Gloria pointed to Royce questioning-
ly. 1 he chief nodded. Gloria protested.
She would not permit the glory of her
rescue to be taken from her dead love.
No, no; It wasn't that man. It was
this one," she cried, nnd caught from
her gown a little portrait of Freneau
in a locket
and
I arrived a little too late
I and I simply held off the Indian clilef
while Freneau made sure of your
' safety."
Gloria studied him with a longing to
believe in Freneau. He did not flinch.
She thanked him and he rose sadly and
walked away. He had lied to her be-
cause he loved her. Hut his heart was
almost bursting with protest against !
the sacrifice.
When he had gone, Gloria put out !
her arms to the sea, crying:
"Dick, Dick, forgive my suspicions
and come back to me!"
F rom the waves F"reneau seemed to j
come forth again and, sitting down be-
sill<' hpr, take her in his arms. She 1
wept, then rose and accompanied by j
ids ghost, moved slowly and sadly
along the beach.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Dire Possibility.
'Maybe It's lucky they didn't have ,
moving pictures when Shakespeare
wrote." |
"Why?"
"He'd probably have put Hamlet in- !
to the form of a 's'nario' and left the I
poetry out."
Strong Drinks Irritate
Strong drinks like beer, whiskey,
tea and coffee, Irritate the kidneys
and habitual use tends to weaken
them. Daily backache, with head-
ache, nervousness, dizzy spells and
a rheumatic condition should be
taken as a warning of kidney trou-
ble. Cut out, or at least moderate,
the stimulant, and use Doau's Kid-
ney Pills. They are fine for weak
kidneys. Thousands recommend
them.
An Oklahoma Case
"'wrr to. Jjgss, James Driscol, 816
•/>. ,Avenue. I-^wton.
Oklu.. says: "I had
soreness across my
kidneys and It stead-
ily eot worse until It
was hard for me to
stoop or lift. I tried
plasters, but the
trouble always came
back. Finally. I
heard of Doan's
Kidney IMlln and af-
ter I had used a few
boxes, I was cured."
Get Doaa's ml Any Store. BOe • Bos
DOAN'S
~ ' 111 PILLS
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
Quite So.
"What Is the difference between a
horse track enthusiast and a strawber-
ry grower?"
"I suppose the principal difference
is that while one Is trying to pick the
winners the other Is trying to win the
pickers."
Preparedness.
Bill—He always carries a parachute
about with him.
Jill—What for?
"Oh, he makes so many rash state-
ments he wants to be prepared to let
himself down easy''
Boschee's
German Syrup
We all take cold some time and every-
body should have Uoschec's (lerman
Syrup liandy at all time! for the treat-
ment of tnroat and lung troubles,
broncrhial coughs, etc. It lias been on
the market 5l years. No better rec-
ommendation Is possible. It gently
soothes inflammation, eases a cough.
Insures a eood night's sleep, with free
expectoration In the morning. Drug-
gists' and dealers' everywhere, 25c
and 75c bottles. Don't take substitutes.
Boschee's
German Syrup
GALL
«°IPOH
><No Oil) No moro ,.an.
l™"ti.n&\ Muiv,8"1.?or
tlltonaneM, HeiuHobe,Con.uiJK?piif?l!w', ' t
£&• £FREE
felrtMi l«Mr <*.. Nk W S.il,, IhHm k. cu^
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Burke, J. J. The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 201, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 7, 1917, newspaper, March 7, 1917; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc113419/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.