The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 18, 1913, Page 8

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Re : THE SEATTLE STAR STORY BY GOUVERNEUR MORRIS ree a 66 9 99 mes saa A LOVE SALE IN SURROUNDINGS 7 FAMOUS SHORT STORY WRIT 93335 SCe¢ MA iy addBEeee Gili Ulibesaal Robs set ed Lah Nove J J 1 0 wh n really matter, But,” a There wan ® bdued | she ke a little bitterly, “several . - : tor,” on wh hith ere t t far to ¢ n my life my actions and a Honse™ (Copyright by Chas. Seribner's/ ove Sons ‘ In most af which related t mat ll tw \ \ was a patient ma , and th " t mu himself had ralled a wife witht: t h Th r came to reat a first b i hoo lasted t six hird but three. i « « nt w orfect t ' fact that he ha dand to thre £ lame t 1 | good t ee saw tt howy lady acr wom: chicken wing. Each time he looke a, oe cated. Aes he muttered nf Flighty herself. Pir With his patient, He cation other tures. And templated t gon and heir was = mov $00 miles of inundated country a fast as a trai ew i : é gon had writte SO eee a ae ies ta Occasion Dearest Da I've found Dor Nb cy Beet — othy again They thougt but they a married Friday—at 9 a is going 4 You «: 80's to be . yiting you to the wedding. I'll hurt if you don't show up. Wh if Dorothy's mother is‘an actress and has been divore twice? You've been a marrytr yo self. Dad, Dorothy ts all darling from head to foot. But I love yc too, Daddy d if you can't se nt eee no be ed awa Saterlee ou must to walk- git?” asked the Great City] old man, there ain't the loft! told the hin’ better the kitchea et eaps & barrassed voice shining ) it,” he said. “It's | peared stream, Mra, Kimbal Shorn « inder the orate hair 1 Sate | ; | he + way, why bless and keep you pi spied Paand bag vlan nu can just the same, JM And He Swam to Shallow Water, Not Without Great Labor, Towing Mrs. Kimbal by the Hair, But Here He : tall g near as I can't that Marcus An Picked Her Up in His Arma, This Time With No Word Spoken, and Carried Her Ashore ther he to nee foal Can't you 1 by his was not tontus 8. Son's epistle. But moved out of re: pad hitherto eluded him will be easier, won't it,” s if you have my hair to hi air No won fl can help in any way,” sald ng trou somewhate grimly, “you 1 I could!” she said. “But ve been through as muci with a |dooty to pe himself, “is a patted, divorced t igey: slg s - - a : - : Ppp rat) nttonm « Ron boat and re-|b) es teins 1 can manage to ke I nd m I won't take eri ane, be thgnght with plees either When ¥ b entire sympathy with your views, | coat, on two had been but ¢ May I, Ma old man's whine interrupted, ure of the faith, pati and r or that en 4 for Carca-| Ma'am Now if oud | garment She laugh t you two married?” he titude of the th ee ntle com: * tow saat fon myseit,,*aid this man Sater! had DI aaa hie galt Maat ania A : * | said fons whom he had succosaivi ‘ proprietor’s witp, ‘directly @ A read T. felt VORCED threo wives : idan inte the keonlda’ of Nope,” said shortly. married and bur t ) stood B Rut ft seems you rlee and Mid not 100k | itary sorry The lady started. And in t y for bis hand Now leulous ?” ever any divorce in the t even a community of in-/at each other and laugh. They were q onsumptive?” {tra fuffored from a torrential rus loake teen Sater Bate could | Mediated old man; “I thought ce BO bes prided i, | terests pain? embarrassed Do I look like @ consumpts of blood to the face. Baterlee per ger keep his footing you was all along.” His eyes Man or woman, we stick by our|(erems. tk aaterten cee she asked pobre ch her spread 4 tare, Kina oe Muam.” he anid, “just let |rightened behind the spectacles, choice til! he or she turns up his Rateriee brought down the whip| “Bloss me—no But 1 Seakk umes Qcasent del Bose si — “It ain't for me to Interfere in aee.foes. .Not til then do w » sido, sharply upon the bony flank of the you're not stout, @ ring uid that this mar se te ee es hl edata, th ahadie ter, course,” he said, “but her aPuts think of anybody else. But, then side, |sharply upon the bony fact e min-|where you said you wes sols, YOU jhe wen ad tired’ of bis first snd was fastening the |not without great labor, towing |! & dusticn of the Peat ‘ jecat e | C ot Koo" ! olghty-| ute did the sensation caused by the air © for putting tw and had divorced her, or been | around tains hy tha ve + a Mrs. Kimbal by th “rs t hare Neither spoke erin Pag a il Mh ear to travel to the ancient onet and getting the) divorced by her. because hin desir laces Cee ee Ot picked hort his arms, this|, “I could rouse up the boys in the nia.” % oy pps rain. Not till reaching ; gay es i pega haben oat ‘I haven't anybody to do my dar: time with no wo and car ier n for witnesses,” he inginui once more t the Ob erled t blame ms t . . our ntipathy » ty now wald My girls a ) ried her ashore. moments ted. . with me d verte natu abe sald ok An 0 * ‘ t fe e . “are: mbal, bt » 1 _ oe a . = op Dek , Bonn to bid } er hrough die, cover-|"my deugt oo Carcasonne difference. Because God | fy”, eri, ters 7 pirate pte Ps ted eee anthicte Regehr vine = arent | humole. ages. bow! Tia tinsihstns to merkiteg Eighty,” repeated Saterlee. ing Saterlee a dy with mud,| House. She had a very heavy cold | Almighty Himself saya in one of wiiy in his right — “On,” said he. terribly confused,| “Ma'am?” be suggested. advantage a number of handsome|, “Eighty dollars,” said the son-tn-/ and, having re e other side, —and other troubles—and TWO |His books that man was not meant! 4+ ries: the old mare would not|“I forgot. 1 was just casting an eye sThe End) rings. law, “for a horse and buggy that a fell once more into a halting walk. |qoctors agree that her lungs were |to live alone. Maybe the more ® »..4z6 Gateriee brought down the|around for that horse. She's gone. aah EEC STI “My boy's 3 ‘ man's never seen ts too good to be) Once more the road ran under a tened. Well haps they |man loved his dead wite, the quick: |(udze. Sateriee brought down the are er mind—we'll walk ed actres . true shallow of water. And once more I nent her to Carcasonne|er is he driven to find @ living iat of a mall cannon. She sighed| “It'll be heavy going, wet as you ING leaked. “3 haae a They are yours, air,” sald the the old mare remembered that she House on the doctor's recommenda-| woman he can love. Hut for peo-\inq walked gingerly into the river ” gaid he. } Ron he muttered: “You'd jook |f@ther-in-law, and he turned to his|had boon whipped, and made a rush tion. And it seoms that she's just /ple who can't cling together until! “rng water rose slowly, and they 1 , she| oe Hike an actress if you was painted.” |daughter’s husband, “Is that horse |for it. Fresh mud was added to that ay sound as | am ,|death—and death alone part ‘em—| wore half-way across before it had | Wednesday evening the initial Though the words cannot have |!® your cellar or in min he asked.| which had already dried upon them What a relfef to you, Ma‘'am,’|for such people, Ma'am, I don't give! aaned the hubs of the wheels, But Saterlee managed to pull his boots | Orsan symphony concert will be een distinguished, the sounds|"! ain't set eyes on her since Feb-|by the dry miracle of the alr sald Saterioe, hastily ja ding the mare appeared to be in deeper, (0 over his wet socks, and Mrs, Kim-|Siven by Dr. Bruce Gordon Kings- were andible | ruary.” ‘She'd ought to have been a “Yeo,” she said, but without en} And you are wrong,” sald the |... refused to advance, and out bal, having given him his wet coat|/¢y at the First Presbyterian . “gir?” sald the lady, stiffly, but} Saterlee turned quietly to the|motor boat,” said Sateriee, the mud thusiasm, “a great rellef, But” lady, who was nettled by the appll| ore turned and stared from her neck, stooped and wrung|Church, assisted by Fraulein Hed- courteously. angry and tearful vision whom he|which had entered his mouth grit: she itated—"you see—she has /cability of bis remarks to her own | wistful rudeness. Th ‘as much water as she could from|Wis Fritsch, formerly dramatic so- Nothing, Ma‘am muttered | had so callously outbid. ting unpleasantly between his teeth. made up her mind to marry a young Case ot us pay & KoOd WOMAN | the whip, before It foll her clothes. prano of Berlin, Germany. Mark Anthony, much abashed. “I'm| “Ma'am,” he said, “If we come to| The mare rushed through another man whom I scarcely know. But) marries @ man. and that he diet—|iorato piunge, and floundered for-| It was now nearly dark, but they| | Dr. Kingsley comes from England, surprised to see so much water in| MY stop first or thereabouts, the | puddio. p about him and his antecedents I|/not THE DEATH—but dies to ber. vara into deep water—but without found the road and went on where he held with success the po- this arid corner of the world, where | DUSKY is yours to go on with. If The Indy laughed Please don’t know this: that his father has bur Tires of her, carries his love to line buggy What time is it?” she asked |sition of concert organist at thi T have often suffered for want of | ¥@ reach yours first, {t's mine. Now bother to hold her,” she said; “! ted THREE wives anotaer, and all that. Isn't he as| One rotten shaft had broken clean My watch was in my vest,” said | Alexandra palace, London. she | ed into Sateriee’s dead, even ft I must have been talking to ou re going further than Carca- | don't mind—now The blood ved him, as if veal waned $$$ ine myself to that effect.” sonne Junction, I'll get off there 1 guess your dress ain't really face and nearly strangled But | he had really died? He tw dead to = —= The lady looked out of the win-| And efther I'll walk to the hotel or hurt,” commented Sateriee, “I re-|the jady, who was leaning forward, | her—burted—men don't come back. | I dow—not her's, but Saterlee’s. hire another trap. membor my old woman—Anna—|elbowa on knees and face between, Well, maybe t more she loved |f] Tt does look,” she said, “as if Why!" exclaimed the lady, “are|had a brown silk that got a mud hands, did not percelve this con )that man the quicker she ts Ket the waters had divorced them-, YOu bound for Carcasonne House?|bath, and came through all right.” vulston of nature the vervice read over him-—that's selves from the bed of the ocean, So am 1.” | “This is an old rag, anyway, If blood co for anything,” |dlvorce—and another whom she I suppose,” she continued, “we may “In that case,” said Saterlee,|said the showy lady, who was still anid she, “the son has perhaps the | can trust and love. Sup e that Attribute those constant and ted!- elegantly, “we'll go the whole hog | showy in spite of a wartlike knot brutish instincts. An rom |hapgens to her twice. The cases ous delays to which we have been together.” of dried mud on the end of her! pect for my girl—to euffer—to die| Would seem identical, sir, I think. | subjected all day to the premature, “Quite so,” sald the lady primly.| nose. And she glanced at her spat-|—and to be superseded. The man‘s| Except that I could understand di | melting of snow in the fastness of You'd ought to make Carcason- tered but graceful 1 expens secon} wife was in her grave but | Vorcing a man who had become tn the Sierras? ne House by midnight,” sald the linen and hand-ombrold: kn w taken a tolerable to me; but 1 could never, This phrase did not shock Sater. | proprietot dre he {sa great,|never fancy myself marrying again Jee. He was amazed by the power Heavens!” exclaimed the Iady 1, can see one thing,” sald | cc bull The von is a|-—if my hus had died still lov of memory ‘rhich it proved. For|“And if we don't make it by mid-| Saterice that you've ade at low, too. Oh! | ing me, s hful to me three hours earlier he bed read a pight?” your iwnind to go through this ex.) od * pver t she ex 1 inke your point,” said Sateriee Close paraphrase of it in a copy of Wo will by 1 or 2 o'clock. lence like a good sport. I wish - Saterk he cat-|"I have never thought of it along the Tomb Clty Picayune which he| The lady becam y grave I didn't have to take up #0 much| an—< a kt him those ines. But I may as well tell | fi] had bought at that city ‘Of cou sald it can't | room | p! ma " with| you, Ma’am, that I myself have The train ran slower and slower, be helped. But it would be ever so ‘Never mind,” she sald, “I like ort that would have moved) buried more than one wife.” “Do you think we shall ever get| much nicer ff we could get in be- to think that I could go to aleep|a | If we are to be on an honest anywhere?” queried the ledv fore 1 without danger of falling am going to appeal to her,’| footing,” said the lady, “I must tell “Not when we exp to, Ma‘am, “T tak int, Ma‘am,” said That's so—that's so, said the Indy 1 have been a good! you that I have divorced more than an promise nothing. |lee. “Maybe It's just as well we're p to the horae |something of a tight fit the Indy, “It Wo said Saterlee Saterlee. I The train gave a jolt. And then,| It’s all very quietly, the dining-car rolled) “Of course SULZER STATEMENT GAINS NO SYMPATHY NEW YORK, Oct. 18.—Although| testimony against h was false. sympathy was expressed for ex-Gov., and that he was nehed” by a} Tammany controlled legislature other to her. I have suffered for one Dusband, and yet when I sizo And she must—she sha yaeif up, I do not seem to myself : air this is,” exclaimed the listen to me a lost woman. It's true that I act — for my liv 1 know,” he Interrupted, “you are Mrs. Kimbal. But I thought I knew) ff) f/ Saterlee And my business at Car-| jasonno House is the same as yours.” | [| | And then | “Well,” sho said, “bere we are. | fi |} And that's luck in a way. We both | = x |weem to want the same thing—that Sulzer today, the consensus of opin-| ‘ty wae hard to find politician | |is, to keep our children from mar | fon in political circtes was that the! who did not agree that Tammany in rying each other. We can talk the explanation he issued last night ex-|spired the prosecution, or who was |mattor over and decide how to do H h d pestis ofan ra gel Nie neg aly cane re | ave you heard about the extra- Sulzer's version was, in brief, because Sulzer refused to take or: | “We can talk ft over, anyway, that Boss Murphy of Tammany be-|ders from Murph Jas you aay, paid Saterle But _ ed gan war on him when he refused to! B was equally hard to find and he fished in his pocket and|§} d P bli S ] f L t call off the investigation graft |one did not believe the prose Drought out bis son's letter and gave ff or Inar u Cc a e oO oO RY in it to ber, She read in it the waning light Suu ve reraied cone oot | Lawrence’s Second Addition to |, which had cost the state millions; cution m out its case that he never speculated in stocks that he never appropriated cam paign contributions; that he was $70,000 in debt when he nated for governor, but had mor assets than he has now; that Dun-|he was golng on the le can W. Peck and Allan A. Ryan's! form TARGET PRACTICE PAPERS QUARREL od Sulzer can ever ven a respectable a candidate for gov like a brute of a son would write to a uti totaaece to ae | ~—6 Beautiful West Seattle, Large opened her purse and took out a/ fj carefully and minutely folded sheet is “That's my Dolly's letter to me, | View Lots Only she sold, “and it doesn't sound like her voice broke. He took the as né ernor. The deposed executive announced ture plat | letter from her and read it | WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—Secr?-| tog aNGELDS 18—The Jo, it doesn't,” he said. And he | tary of the Navy Josephus Daniels ening Herald file 800 dan said it roughly, because nothing = cae brought rough speech out of the several of his fellow members of sult against KE. T. Karl, pro 4 : ot | the cabinet, and a number of mem etor of Express, another a pl mre oe — Rees they 1g | bers of the senate and house naval | newspaper, and J. Clem Arnold, one wiWoll,” said Mrs. Kimbal with aj] ay ‘ committee's, left the Washington |of Earl's employes. The Herald aist é eeaeyit ire mbal with a} No Taxes, No Assessments, No Mortgages. ] 4 ry yard Friday on the claims the rival paper spread re ON hata Tet" | ‘ ‘ “a Ria ones, ports that the Herald was giver Gy ER picereceed. eA SAK) Terms to Suit Everybody | ie bs for drinks in saloons eee | et practice . | -, : robe oe the souther They could hear from far ahead | ff] Every Dollar Buys Twice Its Worth, q outside the Virginia capes arene STREET SPEAKERS Ja sound as of roaring waters. | | President Wilson was to have ac 7 AND, Oc ‘Bix wom | hat,” sald Saterlee dryly, “will) f] Special advantages to first purchasers. A good crowd went out y | companied the party, but was de /¢® and one man are under arrest] |be Gila River, Mebbe we'll have M Sh MM ‘ 7 ys | tained in Washington on account ay, charged gf Se attempting to] to think about getting across that ore going today, More going Sunday. Arrange to see this property Sunday. it was believed, of the Mertcan ait an ¢ ‘orbid street | first. It's a river now, by the sound | f Take Fauntleroy Park car on First Ave. get off at West Brandon S a, ation speaking In the business section of | of it, if it never was before,” Regandids ; : er Vest Brandon St., (a short That the sale of the Midas cop. ‘he cit The speakers were led by| tunately it's not dark yet,'|I distance beyond the West Seattle junction) and walk four blocks west. See Mrs, Feu sIph Schwab, an Industral: | said Mrs, Kimt “Th per mine, on Solomon gulch, Alaska, , . : to the Granby Consolidated Mining, | l#t org ‘ 7 Smelting and Po Co. will atimu-|ed the 5 Bee ‘ bl ut ate wining in the Valdez district ts , my (irst wife died, That was the the belief of W..G. Tanzer, a local! , WILL HELP—NOT HURT Pianos film ; American River in flood. | had to| A LAW mining operator LO NGELE: Oct. 18.—Chatr pres eon | cross it to get a doctor, We'd gone e .] wner man Julius Kruttacbnitt of the : - prospectin’—Just the old woman and | wt modern outside roams in| Southern Pacific board of directors,| Chief Engineer Dewar of the Voiturno, Who Stuck to His Post Regard-|me—more for a lark than profit.” | 308 American B ¥ 1 my representatives on the ground For information, cal last time I had trouble with} oh et i. hee sald Saterlee, “was when | zer. No disorders attend reste nk Block, Phene Main 80% be to 50c. Stewart House, |declated the Panama canal will less of the Awful Death by Fire Staring Him in the Face. By Keep-| He broke off short. “And the: Stewart (near Pike Public) hap the lroads, instead of injur ing the Pumps Going, and Steam on, He Saved Hundreds of Livee,|Gila Miver,” he said Advertisement, ing them as popularly ®edieved, and Lost His*Ownk “I hoped you were going to tell |

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