Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 09, 1912, EXTRA, Image 5

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the geouqiaws magazine page 1 “The Case of Oscar Slater” Bv Sir Arthur Conan Doyle |. I Shi’Hocic Holm’ in Real Life todays installment. ■g I>l-- !hllT l, " !h ,l ‘ eße ■g \ ie an.l Harro-vman, .-wore ■ 111'.' wore thrown I"S«therj BE . j, in.\- ...it 1" New York. and Bn .iiar*-<i ine same cab.n. they ; H of tee object ..f their] H ....aiwi-. .1 iu. e:* a.-- to 'be man' ■ . .. it Identify. For girl- i ■ tie, „.g 11 and "1 This ; ■ . .raisin- a unique of I M ... BS the three IdenUtiea- B .... i,. < nly who saw th.. K Ila.l 1 1 .’T.’itr.i'' breech < !e? ! ®.‘ and base i.!•’. .die: i:u"s | ■ the top of it. they would ill.- j M ~,,, .>l. ■ i.e ti .arungiy eorrobora- I ■ . |... t.evn ;be brooeii has been ■ , ... be a complete mistake. 1 really E| i,r,|. rstnnd how any .me .-mid K sack half-hearted recognitions as ■ . r.muli 1., establish lie identity and B uciii "1 He prison, r. B ' ~ |l . rf . remains the so-called ideiiun. a- E . j,y twelve witneses who had seen a ■ '.,i inhering in the street diming the E* , before the crime had ben com ■k | hnve said a ‘so-called idcntifi- | I caiimi. f"i' tin- proceedings wer farcical as B a real test of recognition. Hl witneses l ad seen pot traits ol the ■ ar •11.'C.1. They were ail aware ne E. a foreigner, and then tlmy were £ | m pick out bis swartbx .1.-wish .; isiegtiotny from among nine Glasgow , p.iiet. and two railway officials. Nal 'r di. they did it without .hesitation, since Il , matt was more like the dark indi- vidual whom they had seen and described than the others could be. | Head their own descriptions, bow 'ver. ' „f the man they had seen, with the d< tails ~f his . lot) ing. and they will be found in q many respects to differ from each other R,, n one hand, and in many from Slater i on the other. Here is a synopsis of their impressions: THEIR IMPRESSSIONS. | y rt . vHafTie: Dark mustache.!, light K ..verenat, not waterproof: check trousers, E seats, black bowler hat; nose normal." K ; Miss M. McHaffie: “Seen at same time K and same description. Was only pre- E i.ai-ed at firs; to say there was some re semblance, but 'had been thinking it I over, and concluded that he was the ■ ,nall -’" K>; Miss A. M McHaffie: "Same as before. I Had heard the man speak and noticed ft nothing in his accent." (Prisoner lias t a strong German accent.) ft Madge McHaffie .belongs to the same L family): "Dark, mustached. nose nor ft nial. Check trousers, fawn overcoat and fc <oats. Black bowler hat. 'The prisoner I. was fairly like the man.’ " S' In connection with the identification b; these four witnesses it is to be ob |’' served that neither check trousers nor K spats were found in the prisoner's lug gage. As the murderer was described as I. being dressed in dark trousers, there was no possible reason why these clothes, if Slater owned them, should have been de stroyed. Constable Brien: "Claimed to know the K prisoner by sight. Says he was the man I; he saw loitering. Light coat and a hat. E (• was a week before the crime, and he to was loitering SO yards from the scene of K it. He picked him out among five con- K stables as the man he had seen." E Constable Walker: "Had seen the loi | teter across the street, never nearer, E end after dark In December. Thought at r first he was some one else whom he E ’ new. Had heard that the man he had fe to identify was of foreign appearance. E Picked him ..nt from a number of jle- K tectives. The man seen had a mustache." E Euphemla Cunningham: "Very dark, K sallow, heavy featured. Clean shaven, ft Xose normal. Dark tweed coat. Green ■ . ap with peak." |: W. Campbell: "Had been with the pre- i Hous witness. Corroborated. ‘There was Ea general resemblance between the pris- E oner and the man, but he could not posi- E lively Identify him.’ ” E. Alex Gillies: "Sallow, dark haired and | "I In shaven. Fawn coat. Cap. 'The |- prisoner resembled him, but witness could i: not say he was the same man.’ ” I R. B. Bryson: "Black coat and vest. E Black bowler hat. No overcoat. Black f mustache, with droop. Sallow: foreign.” | (This witness had seen the man the night I before the murder. He appeared to be B looking up at Miss Gilchrist's windows.) E . a * rn: ‘‘Broad shoulders, long neck. Dark hair. Motor cap. Light overcoat r io knees. Never saw the man's face. '’h. 1 will not swear in fact, but 1 am f certain he is the man I saw—but I will ■ not swear.’ ” Mrs. Liddell: “Peculiar nose. Clear complexion, not sallow. Dark, clean shaven. Brown tweed cap. Brown tweed coat with hemmed edge. Delicate man, i rather drawn together.' She believed that prisoner was the man. Saw him in the Street immediatelj- before the mur oer." Those ac,. || le tvvelve witnesses as to ■ c identity of the mysterious stranger, m the fl rHt pi ace there is no evidence v latever that this lounger in the street >ad really anything to do with the mur- It is just as probable that he. had some vulgar amour, and was waiting °u-t S ghl t 0 " ln ou * to ,lim ,lU ' could a man who was planning a murder hope to gain by standing nights - orehand 80 and 100 yards away from he place in the darkness? ' ut supposing that we waive this point T £a "? ine ,he plain 'l'.'estion as to >r Slater was the same man as the loiterer, we find ourselves faced by a " lass difficulties and contradictions. "" "i the most precise witnesses wire u and Bryson, who saw the stranger • ■ he Sunday night preceding tie murder. I «g I'° n l,la * Slater had an un • I -in ' ? vouched for not onlj- by the | ntoine, with whom he lived, ami I Se r\ant. Schmalz. but by an ac- | ' amrance, Samuel Reid, who had been I h him f roni (• to | O . . () s Positive evidence, which was uulte ■ n in cross-examination. must ~ ' Iy destroy the surmises of the ■ witnesses as to the identity of the 1 "t and slater. Then the four a „ ii' Jf tlle M<, Haftle family, who ■ au Strong upon cheek trousers and ■ ■. .mi, les ot dress which were never t" the prisoner ab,n,'t u l>art front the discreiMincles of 1,,.,, i" b’Uktache, there is a mixture and in T latN ' Kfeen caps, brown caps Xd L T T'"’ wh,rh ,ea « nine ?■'' In<l,fi nite Impression In the -"ir ..al' " B,l< *" f thlß ni| Rht be of ■» ut if supplementary to some b t nd aK, ' < ‘ r ’ ainw ’ b " t nftempi upon such an Identification alone is to construct the whole ease upon shifting sand. The reader lias already a grasp of the facts, but. some fresu details came out at 1 tin- : rial which may be enumerated here. I Tie y have to be lightly touched upon 1 within lb- limits o'' sue 1 : an argument as tiTs. 'out L ose who desire a fuller sum-• mar) will find it in an account of the trial mibbsl.-d by Hodge, of T-Cdinburgh, and ably editeo by William Heugliead, HIS ACTIONS. on *.liis book and on the verbatim pre cogn tions an shoell-. nd account of the American proceeding-. I base my own e> amination of toe case. I irst. as to Sla ter s movements upon the day of the otir, . He began the day, aero.fling tu .: ' ; ' of aim: ell and the women, by the re t-i> ,t of the two letters already re- i feii ed io. w’r.ii'li caused him io hasten I his journej to Ann r tea. The whole day | sei to ..eve bean occupied by prepar;.-i Hons ii :- ka in.:ur<'. : ng departure. He 1 g.i-.d his . ;v. ".t -air. r ~t!ce as from r< -;t Saturday. Before five la- was; shown by the posimarl; upon the en- 1 velopei, he wrote to a postoffiee in Lon- i don. whi—<• he had seme money on de posit. At 6:1:1 a telegram was sent in i.is name and presumably by him from the Central station to Dent. London, for his j watch, which was being repaired. Ac cording to the evidence of two witnesses he was seen in a billia’d room at The murder, it will be remembered, was done at seven. He remained about ten minutes in the billiard room, and left some lime btlwuin C:3O and C:-!0. Rathnimi, ore of these witnesses, de posed that he had ar the time a mus tache about a quarter of an inch long, which was so noticeable that no on" could take him for a clean-shaven man Antoine, his mistress, and Sfihmulz, the servant, both deposed that Slater dined at heme at 7 o'clock. The evidence of tiie girl is no doubt questionable, but there was no possible reason why the dismissed servant Schmalz should perjure herself for the sake of her ex-employer. The distance between Slater’s flat and that of Miss Gilchrist is about a quarter of a mile. From the billiard room to Slater's Hat is about a mile. He had to go for the hammer and bring it back, unless be had it jutting out of his pocket all day. But unless the evidence of tiie 'wo women is entirely set aside, enough has been said to show that there was no time for the commission by him of such a crime and the hiding of the traces which it would leave behind it. At '.':45 t! at night, Slater was engaged in his usual occupation of trying to raise tiie wind at some small gambling club. The club master saxv no discomposure about his dress (which was the same as, according to the crown, he bad done this bloody crime in), and swore that he was then wearing a short mustache, "like stubble." thus corroborating Rathman. It will be remembered that Lambie and Bar rowman both swore that the murderer was clean shaven. On December 24. three days after the murder, Slater was down at Cook's office, bargaining tor a berth in the Lusitania for his so-called wife and himself. He made no secret that he was going by that ship, but gave his real name and address and declared finally that he would take his berth in Liverpool, which he did. Among other confidants as to the ship was a barber, tiie last person one would think to whom secrets would be con fided. Certainly, if this were a flight, it is hard to say what an open departure would be. In Liverpool he took his passage un der the assumed name of Otto Sando. This he did, according to his own ac count. because lie had reason to fear pur suit from his real wife, and wished to cover his traces. This may or may not be tiie truth, but it Is undoubtedly tiie fact that Slater, who was a disreputa ble rolling stone of a man. had already assumed several aliases ’n the course of his career. It is tu be noted that there was nothing at all secret about his de parture from Glasgow, and that he car ried off all his luggage with him in x perfectly open manner. The reader is now in possession of the main facts, save which are either unessential or redundant. It will he ob served that save for the identifications, the value of which can be estimated, there is really no single point of connection be tween the crime and the alleged criminal. It may he argued that the existence of the hammer is such a point; but what household in the land is devoid of a hammer? It is to be remembered that if Slater committed the murder with this hammer, he must have taken it witli him in order to commit the crime, since it could be of no use to him in forcing an entrance. But what man in his senses, planning a deliberate murder, would take with him a weapon which was light, frail and so long that it must project from any pocket? The nearest lump of stone upon the road would serve his purpose better than that. Again, it must in its blood-soaked con dition. have been in his pocket when he came away from the crime. The crown never attempted to prove either blood stains in a pocket or the fact that any clothes had been burned. If Slater de stroyed the clothes, he would naturally have destroyed the hammer, too. Even one of the two medical witnesses of the prosecution was driven to say that be should not have expected such a weapon to cause such ■wounds FACTS ON ONE SIDE. It may well bo remembered in this summary of the evidence I may seem to have stated the case entirely from the point of view of the defense. In reply, I would only ask the reader to take the trouble to read the extended evidence If he will do so, lie will realize that without a conscious mental effort toward special I pleading, there is no other way in which I the story can be told. The facts are on one side. The conjectures, tiie unsatis factory Identifications, the damaging flaws and the very strong prejudices upon the other. Now for the trial Itself. The ease was opened for the crown by tin- lord advo cate. in a speech which faithfully repre sented tiie excited feeling of the time. It was vigorous to the point of being pas sionate, and its effect upon the Jury nas reflected in their ultimate verdict. Tim lord-advocate spoke, as 1 under stand. without notes, a procedure which mux wi d add io eloquence while sub tracting from accuracy. It is to tlds fact that one must attribute a most fatal misstatement whlcli could not fall, coming under such circumstances from so high an authority, to make a deep impression upon the hearers. For some reason, tills misstatement does not sppear t<> have been corrected at tiie moment by either tiie judge or the de fending counsel Continued In Nest Isiue. Personal Charm Born of Imagination, Says Irene Fenwick fRI ly z -'- \ ’ Irene Fenwick, tn "Hawthorne U. S. A.,” at the Astor theater. New York. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. "M TODERN life Is doing every thing possibb to crush ro mance out of things, but for tunately. so long as people have imag ination. they will be able to invest, tiie every-day events of life witli colorful possibilities and interest, and can live in a world of their own making.” Thus spoke Her Royal Highness Princess Irene Fenwick, stealing a few minutes from "Hawthorne of the U. S. A.” to tell why it is easy to be a really Zendaesque princess, holding an imag inary court at the old sundial every night, and a perfectly up-to-date and equally pretty young girl living in New York by daytime. It is just a question of imagination, and Princess Irene has quantities of it. When I saw her she was trying to close her practical outer ears to tiie steady sound of steel riveting, which came from a nearby building, and she ex plained that she could hear anything she wanted to. with the fine inner ears of the imagination. Miss Fenwick is quite as charming as herself as she is in the part of the ro mantic princess, and she is equally ro mantic. Behind her luminous blue eyes lies a world of vivid imagination, and she Advice to the Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax. YES. YOU CAN. Dear,Miss Fairfax: I am seventeen yaars old, and dearly in love with a young man of twenty-one. I have known him one year, and we kept company eight months, 1 iiad a quarrel with him and we parted four months ago. I told a friend to ask him if ho wish ed my company, but have had no answer. I can not live without him L. B. You can live -without him. in a very short time that heartache will cease an 1 you will be happy again. In the meantime, while going through this pe riod of depression, so frequent in youth and love, carry yourself with dignity and don't exaggerate either the value of his love or the loss you sustain in losing It. Pleise don't send any more messages to him. You have made advances enough. THAT DEPENDS ON THE GIRL. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am working in tiie same office w ith a girl with whom I have been very friendly. Sue pays me mueli attention, but I am three years younger titan she. If 1 asked her to keep company with mt. would it be right to isk her to wait three tears before 1 married tier? ANXIOI S. It is not wrong to ask a girl to wait three years while her lover saves for a home for her. Why not let her decide? If tliejc is any selfishness in such a plan, a wom an’s love is usually such that she over looks It. PUT YOUR MIND ON YOUR WORK D. :tr Miss Fairfax: I am deeply in love with :t young mum All dux a work I do nothing but think of him. 1 send him pos tals quite often, ami lb :i«ks me if I send them and I say no. Do you think 1 ought to tell lilm? 1 never showed him that I cared anything for him. I am seventeen anil he is twenty-two. 1 love him wry much. LOVESICK. Are you not risking the substance in pursuit of the shadow? Try to keep your mind on your work, iny dear, and don't semi another card. You are young, too young to make the winning of a man who doesn’t care for x uu your life's ambition. frankly admits that It is peopled with ' non-existent shadows that to her are I as real as von and I “Having an imagination." said Mis a I Fenwick, ".seems to me one of the I greatest gifts in life. I think possibly ■ an imagination could be cultivated, though of course there are certain peo ple who disapprove of imagination ut terly, and who only see life as a series of hard, cold facts. They are the Grad grinds of life, and, oh, how much they miss! "Fortunately, no matter how prosaic our modern life may become, there is always a beautiful realm of dreams and l romance where each one of us has a | kingdom all her own. “Do I think the modern young girl romantic? Indeed I do, and fortunately for her, too. In Haw thornp,' when Mr. Fairbanks and I come to tiie charming love passages of the play, we often hear the gurgling little 'ohs' and ‘ahs’ and the gasps of the girls in the audi ence, and it’s sweet and encouraging to realize that all those young people are living the story through while we are acting it. Every girl is a princess with a Hawthorne for a lover. Just as every girl imagines herself in the role of the heroine of each book that she reads, providing, of course, the heroine is to her taste. “The romantic imagination is a great deal more than being able to see your self playing a particularly attractive role in life. The person with real im agination can invest every incident of life, no matter how trivial or how hum drum, with the glamour of their own fanciful thoughts. And probably the women who go through the daily rou tine of prosaic, uninteresting work cheerfully and with a gallant spirit.- have really the great romantic imagina tions. “These are the women who preserve their charm despite misfortune and drudgery, whose minds have a wonder ful flavor and fascination no matter how ordinary their lives may seem to the outward eye. - These women have real charms. Everything they do is colored with their personality, and your personality is the sum total of your thoughts and actions, isn’t it? And, of course, theie are more thoughts than actions." "The woman with imagination is sel dom if ever very lonesome. Generally she finds some outlet for her mental activity, or if not she retires Into that dream world of her own creation." “How much power does a romantic j imagination possess In counteracting l the jarring effects of everyday life?” 1 j inquired of tiie fanciful Princess. “A good deal more than people would suppose," she returned quickly. "Most of .he people who have succeeded after a life of hard and bitter struggle have had imagination. They may have only hi i n able to imagine aiuiig one line, but they have built up an Ideal, often a purely visionary one. and then they've FOR SALE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Atlanta Gas Light Co. g!!^* 4945 worked and worked and materialize.l that ideal. "Tiie romantic imagination helps tide over the hard places of life by showing the infinite possibility which the future holds in store for one, and in ordinary, everyday life, imagination covers up a multitude of those daily disagreeable happenings upon which tile matte; of fact person dwells with apparent relish, white tiie imaginative person escapes from them, to hide in her fanciful ro mantic world of dreams. MMfc BvylM Emßb ' | 3 i I I''- H ■X H' ■ ■> sO - r B imagination has been stunted or whose romantic fancies have been so laughed to scorn by older peonle that the door of that fanciful world is closed to her for ever. She has lost a refuge from lone liness. a home of inspiration, and some of that intangible thing called personal charm, whifh is horn of imagination.” Household Sug gestions Bamboo furniture should be scrubbed with water and salt. Don’t make wet ter than is absolutely necessary, and dry in the open air as soon as possible. Before you use a new gas mantel, soak it in vinegar and hang it up to dry. In this way a brilliant light is obtained, and the burners wil last twice as long as usual, even in a drafty room. When tired of sweet jellies and jams, try lemon honey for sandwiches and tarts. Beat well together one cupful of sugar, one egg, and butter size of a walnut. Add Juiee and grated rind of one lemon. Stir well, put into a double boiler, cook slowly till thick, avoid stir ring after it begins to cook. Add tiny pinch of salt. Often when children suffer from headache it is an indication that their sight is weak. If they are constantly . frowning, you may be fairly sure that such is the vase. In such eases an oculist should be at once consulted. If defective sight is attended to in time, It van often lie cured in a few years, while if it is neglected it mux mean that glasses have to be worn for a life time. DO YOU ITCH? If «o dsp! Tfttterlne. It cures ecz£»ma, ground itch, ringworm Itching piles, in fant sore head and ah other skin trou bles. ilead what C. I’. Kaus, Indianapolis, 1 says: Enclosed find sl. Send me that value In Tetterine. One box of Tet terine has done more for eczema in my family than SSO worth of other remedies I have tried. Uss Tetterine It relieves skin trouble that Ims baf fled the best medical skill. It will cure you Get it today Tetterine. 50c at druggists or by mail. 1 SHUPTRINE CO., SAVANNAH. GA. ‘ (Advt.) Roofing Pitch, Coal Tar, Creosote, Road Binder, Metal Preservative Paints, Roofing Paint and Shingle Stain. Playing With Love By Beatrice Fairfax ({T OVE." said Napoleon, “is the I occupation of the idle man, the amusement of a busy one. and the shipwreck of a sovereign." And he might have added that it was the play thing of the thoughtless. A young man, who was thoughtless so long that he has had to begin to think most seriously, writes me that last January he became much interest ed in a young lady, and secured her acquaintance. As time progressed they became very intimate, and she became much at tached to him. He says lie lias no se rious intentions, as he is ba v ely able to support his widowed mother, but en ■ tertained such a strong' friendly feel | ing for the girl that he couldn’t keep I-a wax. His visits became so frequent that other young men. thinking he had a prior right, stopped going to see her, and it became understood among their friends that they were engaged. He had played with love al! this time, and when the girl's affections became seriously Involved, lie decided that lie must make his visits less Hequeltt. He told her why; that he didn’t love iter, and couldn’t marry tier. To this rather cold-blooded decision afte: so many months of pleasant intercourse, she re plied that it would break her heart if he ceased coming, and lie continued his calls “four nights a week out of sym pathy and duty." After calling four limes a week, ’’out of sympathy and duty.” for several months, lie decided to end it. and didn’t go again. Then she wrote to him that if he didn't < ome back, sh ' would do herself bodily harm. Because of this foolish deekyation on her part he has resumed bls visits. “What.” he asks. “ is to be the end?” No one asks himself that question in tiie beginning. Tliose who have had the years that should stand for wisdom are just as foolish as this young man They deliberately pi:tx with matches and when a blaze result", turn to their friends and ask. "What is to be the end There are many endings to an affair ot this kind, and the right end depends on tin” rationality of those concerned. If this girl is foolish and hysteiical, as her declaration to him implies, ills pun ishment is all the greater. He will merit all lie receives. It is witli the gir’ I am meet concerned. It is to her that 1 make the plea to be sensible and act like a rational being. He doesn’t love her. < an she prove that she lias lost much? By forcing his attentions she lowers herself in.her own estimation, and feeds the flame of his vanity. She can't live uithout him. H. may be frightened by such a statement, but he is of tiie nature that is also flat tered. She can live without him! She must! She will! If Instead of looking at the long evenings without him (an appall- Southern California affords more opportunities than an^ F other area in the world. WHY? Because it has proven its possibilities in a thousand ways. The pioneer work is dorx. The chances to follow proven Hnes are unlimited. The e*- j sentials are; Climate, land, water, power, traneport&tkm ! and markets. Southern California hue them all. You Will Want To I Know All About This I Marvelous Country | THE NINTH ANNIVERSARY NUMBER OF THE LOS ANGELES “EXAMINER” will be ianued WED NESDAY. DECEMBER 25, 1912, and will be the greatest | edition of its kind ever published, giving you every possi- |h ble information about this famous land. It will tell you about its farming possibilities, its poul try. its fruits, its walnuts, its oil production, its beet sugar u industries, its live stock, its cotton, and. in fact, anything il and everything you may wish to know about Los Angeles |H||| and the marvelous country of which sh£ is the metropolis. ! The information will be accurately and entertainingly I I set forth, and aporopriately illustrated. The proposed opening of the Panama Canal tanui all the eyeg *f the 11||| world on thie region. This special edition will be moiled to any address in the United State! I or Mexico for Fifteen Cent* per copy. Ab the edition Is limited, and bo as not to disappoint anyone, an early I I. request with remittance Is desirable. Remember that some of your frtendte I may not see this announcement. • Use the coupon below and Me that they II! ret a copy. —— ■ Los Angeles "Examiner, I I I Los Angeles, Cal. Enclosed please find cents, for which you will 5 I ) please send the Ninth Anniversary number of your paper to ( [ ( the following names. > I || Ji < Name.,.... Street ( ’ ( I Hl < City State f ||H i Name. Street I II L ctty '-‘--_ * Btate j | i Los Angeles Examiner LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA ing prospect to one In love), she will 1 regard them as so many greater oppdr- ) tunities for study and good reading, i she will find such profit and pleasure in i them that her only concern for the past 1 will be that it was such a deplorable i waste of time. She must forget him. She must not feed iiis vanity by picturing a desola tion of her life without him. She must learn for her own good that there are better men in the world; men more i worthy of such outpouring of affection. She must learn that if she spends the time in waiting for such a man in im proving her head, instead of a hysteri cal waste of emotion, it will mean her greater happiness. As for him: One of the great mys teries of life is that a man so little worth love as he should awaken so much of it. Up-to-Date Jokes Employer—So you want me to raise your salary? Can you give me but twe good reasons, even, why I should do so ? Meek Employee (sadly)—-Yes, sir Twins. "Pa. what does it mean when it s«yx a m.m has arrived at years of discre tion ?" "It means, sonny, that he’s too to die and too old to have any fun." 1 He—They say that the face is an in dex of tiie mind. She- I doubt that. It doesn’t follow because u woman’s face Is made up that her mind is. Mother (whose daughter is engseged to a young farmer) —Don't you find Boh rather rough? Daughter (blushingly)—Yes. ma. And yet he says he shaves every day! At a very convivial dinner a man with a preternaturally solemn face arose, wineglass in hand, to propose a toast. "May we never." he said, in deep, measured tones, “drink any more of this stuff” He paused, and there was a horrified silence for several sec onds. "Than is good for us!" Old Gent —Well, Tommy, did you take your dog to the “vet.” next door to your house, as I suggested? Boy—Yes, sir. < tld Gent —And what did he say? Boy—He said Towser was sufferin’ from nerves, so Sis had better give up playin’ the planner. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of