The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 19, 1916, Page 4

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grgrerseeerrereser te A Novel A Week 4 Claes Matter, ™ @ mos $1.90; year 93 ibe a month Pheae Mata 600, Private BY mall, out of city, B50 per month up to By carrier, city * Pubitehing © ©2: i st that the previous summer a famous band of smu Saving Serbia very noses of o ted in its sad en assigned to the sta tion and that a large reward been offered for the capture of the chief offender | “But law!" finished Mary Anne} no common man but mayhap one of these islanders wot war-tossed have been transported to southern Fr being fed, clothed and educated the report and their fine h m being cripple please, in the living room of suppressed excitement, | But more rema perish from There are the immediate need of the Serbians France is makir Do you think it's possible?” he Serbians 1 t that of its small) nett’s card on th git might exp said Gabrielle blunt them comfortable for the present. |!" 150,000 men fend is the Serbian army boys between 13 after Wilfrid and L will decide the fat Its present urgent necessity is an ambulance corps A commission, the members of item of service and expense, even that of office rent, is now! endeavoring to raise the $30,000 required to establish a hos-) tight that evening shoulders. improbable, now that jit was sumgested to us. Lord Wilfrid appeared in a new) which contribute every! pital unit for the Serbian forces borated Mary Anne's story Serbian ¢! destruction, this commission The address is “The Franco-Serbian Field Hospital Com to take ‘We have a boat-house, but no} boat,” remarked Gabrielle, “and wo} ‘s brother tnconsiderately Contents of the Hopper Perhaps one In other w was about 1) per cent activities of the lower according to the percentage table actually true rea requiring more deliberation and attention, than the 17,548) Most of the latter were never in- presented to propitiate the per cent of the house of congress were hardly see it 2 bills passed were more important,} which were not passed Nght illuminated the tended to pass, but were constituents “back But among the great mass of stuff tabled or pigeon- bly, many worthy measures They were lost in the were complet searchlight,” I great originality holed, there were, prot should have become law Sometime United States will be methods, and action wil 4f bills “introductd sional records and effective f bills, which overwhelms congress at eve in the far dista meaningless for the steps We went inside bap frid told A frien. ashington He Really Doesn 66TT may be very important t shall be a change Candidate Hughes’ ignor ’t Know Edith was tired toni for she was paler than at last they rose to go. wage-carne He knows looked at such high cost of living ngmens’ hor He sees fellows with some he ing here alone workingmen ea became aw ige-carner uncomfortal about admit studying on was only « everybody e es not know that aiff oo Fast? - nd disordered ‘Getting O CHAPTER ITI Our Neighbor ating the action "Every Pletare> wait for the and ¢ incomfortable waa lone ht to be oO we are love habit-forming in Read what A Seattle Case: I felt poorly and run dowr owing to backache it don't call it home, please ate anging ‘I can't get around like | used to” I'm from the STAR—TUESDAY, SEPT. 19, 1916. tueaeaenensssenenentestegstatasesttanst “Beyond the Frontier” By RANDALL PARRISH Te BTisrittiittiiiitiiisttiti titi ieti iy (Continued from Our Laat leave) | PAGE 4 it333 LiSSEIRTeti teeter teens eee SITIES StiittiseeetietTeititte test teeta tees eet tee ee sgateaaastagegeeresessaagtesstsaassserees | ieeeeeetegseasessstt By Middleton Tybout “THE SMUGGLER’™ A Novel A Week Pstttstissstrittiitiniiiiititiiitititiiiiiititi ttt ett LiSSesrei iia tissetisstisocd PrIstiititetissetiissisesisseseice iste) -_ -|mote corner of the world, and dofand she prompt! iNE | you mean to cut Sour old friends” aying she 4 lox ation | Edith, that uted the evidence! would gd down and Wa Me WuUson to ue | Outbursts of Everett True | 101. 11 ores ine eiaenee would eo sown may 1 ask?” moving about stan Sublan dhal 2 — Wilfrid and 1 are touring for bis up to with a S ecstonie ottienaia AND ANY BODY, k DON'T CARe WHO iT 13 ——| health. Is Mrs. Graham with you nging shelf Ii eae ta aureas THAT VOTSS POR HIM, How very charming! We all ero Khed a see tial aaa LBORN FOOL ! | - 5 ed from England together this Them rope oa ie ee co spring,” she explained for my bene-jnounced Mary A » added that a police boat had Ae Scare ren ml gt ell “i had ois comes fur the steam yachts Will you be agin tonight their clo'es. Anne and with | Mary | absently | | she} Mr. Gordon Ben-| table aa tho fear de do on ship ople very well, an p Ve board. Where is Mrs. Graham, and to raise snunl may I not go aud see her this given, I didn't morning?” no more, but go Mr, Graham hesitated percept make some chocolate bly, but I settled the question by like. holding out my hands for the letters and announcing that I meant to take a short cut to the cottage and them again soon tt was gladly fol lowed it CHAPT! CHAPTER IV Our Mysterious Ca It was Gabrielle who first opened | tok eonanai _ the door in our wall of reserve and "ich Breeted us | allowed Gordon Bennett to pene \00 Ronny ant trate beyond it Lad F dith « h no ir, and go ae) SS She had wanhod her bair, and BO) Pg ing out in the sun to dry it, had es tablished herself at the top of the flight of steps leading down to the boat house. morning costume Wilfred remarked servants’ gossip. é about it any more | And she also borrowed Eliza-) And as he means that we talked beth’s ivory comb with the silver ines ean ed and when Lord! ause its teeth are Yer? | ooked at us ty Kd came wi t, and therefore secept ivaiaid told th tat able whe omen to getting out ha Lord Wil 4 . h . 1 eenrtt Yr sode in one sald, with and a shrug really it} he was #o talk.) he a Oo cor about able and at any told ua out it because Mary knov she got to drear . ing out there in the sunshine, but bd Bakr ng ; thin is what she said Well. \ my error ‘I was sitting quietly reading » IES RIGH when I heard a little thump, and that miserable comb went thru a crack of the slip into the water It was low tide,” continued rielle, “and I could look thru « the crack and see ft K on the / sand beneath the water, #0 1 took Me tea gown, with and tried to poke ft out cours I inquired, as she paused was Iyl » with os color of a boiled tob- | 24! : ster, fishing away for ali I was “6 an valdable. “Robbed!” I lounly, worth, | heard a voice say A low me,’ and there he was in a wail boat. He got ft, then calmly landed and introduced himeelf, saying something about having been unfor- tunate fn hin vinite.” Then wan your opportunity to You could not expect Ien’t this a jolly little box?” he of the police.” of mine will fit ¢ to leave him in Virginia and be asked be dignified and squeiching,” 1 in-|°, th Wilfrid, producing | happy in ( id you? He gazed about the bare room terrupted, “You should have frozen) (Whom do they, sus; Let us try and Wh c Canada with os ch pleasure as tho It him with » glance.” do not know r rn luxuries of a palace I tried t returned, “but /MOment, then resumed, h the bint . ‘o's bet out of the winde 1 1b , 4 then ast night ‘ the t tb « how's that for a vi And " Zo you brought him home with | bound on t with no success his pleture. Do you wonder I am|the air we breathe night and day! you as a reward of merit,” laugh- | ‘ficult to fc nder the cottas rebellious at the separation? My! Already Mra. Graham is like a dif- ed Elizabett | “But,” objected and yet one can, mother writes that he ts quite well ferent creature Yes,” said Gabrielle; “and you|™ust have been I don't believe I like | and happy.” I glanced curiously at Mra. Gra-\two sat and stared ss tho we had|Knew she had them. | it fs so dark and| “He t# Ifke his father,” I said.|ham, but she refused to meet my escaped from the 200, Take your |"@ve been & stranger.” studying the laughing little face. | eye comb, Elizabeth; | never horrowed |, One can never tel however, a of) “Very lke,” she replied; “very,| “I have just been saying, Harry.” | one before, and I never will again.” | Bdith, thoughtfully k, #0) very Mke.* she remarked, “how different this 1 suppose,” remarked Elizabeth, |!t bas made me nervor brilliancy that we| There was a movement in the!atr is from South, and how in: renectively examining her blinded and stood ly hand for the picture. 1 smothered a surprised ejacuia-| have dropped into hin life: | id, with I will put {t away,” she sald hur-jtion and rose to go Surely, MY | your ty hen Elsie’s side-comb, |'° lose. and added by way’ riedly; “and let us talk of some |new friend was rather bewildering. ang now this of mine. It's fate—| "Old to do with nt It will be thing else. Mr, Graham thinks 1) “Oh, I nay,” exctaimed Mr. Gra |weve got to know him, but it|more than half inclined to dig a ty allow the boy to absorb me to the) ham, “I'll walk along with You.) wasn't so bad, after all, was it?” 1 don't exclusion of everything else, and/I'm going to the village for the) Indeed, we had all enjoyed the tionless in pe he is right mail.” afternoon. None of us referred to|*h® spoke, and t was most unpleasant, | stairs now the inte dark-| prised to we were plunged | not over oval of the no ord we made leading back to the and grew quite again, whi s about big cam But it » sual, When Lady Edith e band on mine other arm around Of will pardon 1 do net mean to eling and perhaps fll neighborly made herself opened the exclamation of EAE PONE RINE HAI OIE BO EI room above, and she b aham was coming down-| As the postoffice was my ult! our trip up on the steamer, He was evidently mate destination also, I resumed my | our visitor departed without once see me, a chair, and Mrs Graham and I cat|jentioning our property in hin |Peared to conta ¢ 4. alt ried on a desultory conversation | posseasion. rdialit until he returned, hat in hand, and A sudden storm came up that | Pulsively Stadium | y Anne herself, wet, draggled Suits are Union and breathless, stood before us. fn Her usually ruddy face was pale, and guaranteed all | , laranteed and her eyes rolled wildly as she 4 out her|vigorating I find ft.” announced himself ready clo 1 glanced furtively at Mr. Gra-|rose to go, the sky was very low ham as we walked along. He talked/ ering. so he left his boat tied to about the climate and the country.| our slip and went up tnto the vil showing a knowledge of the coast ince to do some errands and walt |*!!¥er, but it which surprised me until ft should be over. locks, and you Surely.” I exclaimed, “you have) instead of a short squall, how j*eep the keys not learned all this since you have/ over, it settled down into heavy Do you really been here?” rain, so he was obliged to spend |-#dy Edith d Oh, no.” he returned: "I spent the night in the village, as, of | “Yee—why not several summ: s here when I was a and I'm very keen about to his! course, he could not erc island in his smal! boat It was our first real storm in the| cottage, and as we listened to the young chap, and it, indeed You are fond of sailing? a Block of the safe Very fond. When I go out In my| wind sweep about our little home | and Pike catboat, T have no idea of the fi until {t sometimes trembled upon . | me of time its foundations, | must admit we 1 had a audden vision of his wife's were slightly nervous. So we gath he found ex figure waiting on the little dock. |ered around our stone fireplace We en contin Doubtiess she was destined to pas®!and lighted the driftwood Mary |OUr suest aitat many anxious, expectant hours be-| Anne had placed re than usual, Ther st three girls ly fore the end of the summer What's that? Elizabeth ration in hi and I've been think Mr. Graham our letters in his | sud and with accord we |exuberance of hat you told us te ocket with his o for safekeep-| snrang to our feet seen before; her ct papel ty and we turned our faces home-| For, above the noise of the storm, |PIDK. and her bgt ward we had heard a crash, and the fall |Chatted merrily of “ 9 On the outskirts of the village we! of a heavy body, apparently right /@*ter the fashion o| |met Lady Edith Campbell raid map Jover. In her sc r a8 young } “Why, Mr. Graham!” she exclaim, The ce whispered Eliza. {the grande dame ma © don't misunde ed, “What are you doing in this re! peth— "some one is down there.” |#h@ was quite i - - ——~ R found myself w is de Now, the cellar was a part of /20") ta por, r r abode we had not yet explor. |!" mage ge [PIANO CONTEST sx" fete 888,820 2e. 00 eaten rn pe h ee . | kitchen we experienced aj] (Continued ation of standing over a bomb PRIZE WINNERS retittctitisssisiteg in the DEBOTANTE and wh will the debutantes maiden wante for it's very comfortin One handsome innerds on a night | ceptable advice, The Robbery the mpbell s and simple has gone fishing, | as she removed her hat, | foolish mothers, why “and as he means to be away all! THE MAN WHO USUALLY STARTS OUT TO LOOK F TROUBLE USUALLY ENDS HAVING IT THRUST UPON HIM, WORTH LOOKING OVER work horses, § Call at this o& (Ore,) Times, . Mrs. Bundy, Sp ithe fat old lady who had the table yhext to ours, you know-——" “Who wore a diamond sunburst The Manful JUSTIFIED “Look here, Snip, on her forefinger and headlights {0 | indignantly ber ears,” interrupted Gabrielle put any pockets in these | “And came to breakfast in a vel emerald neck ber her. Did T judged robbed, "All you know where I can bay | poney ?” inquired | the man with a suitcase. “Are you looking for trouble?” But I'm against the tipping fl and at the same time I want formalities and Poor old woman!” exclaimed, “Yeu, robbed. It makes one very | ev uncomfortable, does it not? say it ts the work of an expert, and) avoid being made uncomfortable by |have put the matter into the hands | the waiters.” THERE ARE HIGHER THINGS ,IN LIFE FOR A WOMAN THANA GOOD COMPLEXION—A PRETTY BONNET, FOR INSTANCE. THE BOARD OF STRATEGY THE KIND YOU GET ATA who BOARDING HOUSE. It could not) ONE OF THOSE QUEER FELLOWS The window front blew in and cut I did not | the day clerk on the forehead recov. |>ring many jewels, fortunately, but | one of the Sisseton ball players : 1 have my mother's pearis and a| red pro ° be sald te ’ the name of Kelly was severely ¢ ered property, owe may YS rtd few other trinkets I would not care| from his foo! : 4 “But I confess t to his elbow on by / 1 do not know what in the} jet, arm —The Oak (3. D.) Times. NEUTRAL QUESTION Fred Scads over He made a million in the” street last y jhole and bury them deep and safe.” | She gave a vexed little laugh as|, High—There's and |*Tapped in white paper which she |held on her lap, and which had ap | High—I don't know, but be ; “Tl tell you,” said Elizabeth, im-| “Laave them here. There afternoon, and when Mr. Bennett |'* ® little tron safe under the china} A M U S E M E NT tin the dining room f limagine why {ft was put there, for it is not big enough to hold much possesses could incredulously VAUDEVILLE THEATRE Fifth and Pine EVERYTHING NEW | OPENING SUNDAY MATINEE | SEPTEMBER 24 ALL RESERVED SEATS GET YOURS TODAY KES PLAYERS @veke ALA won't be pursued for our valuables if you will take all responsibil ity for leaving them, you are more | than welcome to the exclusive use isn't she. we agreed willingly, and were quite repaid by the look of f in her big brown eyes had a delightful morning, for was even more charming was a subdued spirit eeks were softly “ALONG CAME RUTH” §120—100 to SOc Bi eres girls the world er laid aside neither in Our iNT DOCTOR" Fine Vaudeville 1 Feature Photoplay Eve and Sun, ie Change Thurs, lolinted'to te OFFICER GETS $10 Shaw have each TACK SAM CO, of bis shooting two high . » AND GREEN Dancing Wisards. es which ht at any time explode ance be ef Plane Contest| Gabrielle valiantly es of mere ac FOR AU woe Wi ee Ween teen r leading down into it, and aud we were grat! Grates te Read This ened it the fraction of an inch.| Attorney Crawfor urorived, for with Who is there?” she said | Dr. Harry nner she had a Of course there was no reply, | uted $5 to start a f one to acpagae: Gabrielle shut and lock the door, | plan to present to paboga we ASR es s Shall we go down?” Her voice | lice Officer M.S. eters onaeet was rather tremulous, and she | ognitic at the dies berged |looked relieved when we shook our] Wayme Septemb se ‘ heads decided physician for the If we only had a dog,” 1 hazard. | sociation ed, “we could put it down ahead | sires Regular $20 Values f us and find out if any one was| there; but we haven't | later I paid a visit to No,” agreed Elizabeth thought » could see her . |fully; “but we have Mary Anne. ery time I ed the outer hitehen door opened, and wool looked from one to the other, while piano and plane | her shawl slipped unnoticed to the Alterations Free famous makes as the Kin floor remarked 1 seated xb & V Jel), Chickering, Docke You've been out neighbor SSSSSRSESSSSSEESS re o. eg ree mower, MES It was Elizabeth who spoke. and ou settled yet, and ” “ ‘a whieh ked in ple her voice brought Mary Anne's new home? We ” . gure r regu tall price of| wandering eye to a focus and held with ou “ * 3 SHALES it a moment sald, with a » BB ltrice, tor exam t| “Yes, miss 1 » 2B the amount et, She picked up her shawl and ny Pe ” ro ance In a it carefully bi e 8 + It's a wild night, Miss Eliza. home?” pe pd re ue per cent | beth.” she sald, with a shudder. | it why not look orm does not! couldn’ leep fur th K “a ° 98, why not * Beit line sat dollee® Mls ‘couldn't sleep fur thinking of them ; e . mr nev that|! knows who are maybe oon the} ocean hi kerrupted » Shirts in Seattle. « or preliminary | sea, so 1 got me shawl and started lwa rolling o “ bills fur me brother's ‘ouse to see if ‘eo no dec \iful, with | SSSFSSSSSSHSSKS RSS fee ee mene ana a ee ad got ‘ome safe and sound; bit! ! laughing water, and YOf that expenae, ; I couldn't git down the bluff, Miss | do not see he um 9 PP) a ME ae la EA bd Bo the wind being that vi'lent this sum er have invextiqated Biler prices, | ft clean druv me back. ‘Ow, but it's silent astonishment plunos and terms at Bilere “Music| a night! | ham paused with a Houge, at Third ave, and University!” Mary Anne paused for breath | : rae ical everal pianos were selected yea. {and looked curiously at us. | me,” she #a di you day at Bilore by content prize Rut what are ye all in_ the + ae and in each case the (pur 7 {he Sound’ ere 1406 FOURTH AVE. iva hinhie' pleased Witnete| Kitchen fur?” she inquired tn a a additional benefit” they — recetvea| more natural way trees. My child is [from Eilers on their award letter We told her about fright,

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