The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 11, 1918, Page 6

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THE SEATTLE STAR—WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 11, 1918. * ‘ ' MR. AUTO MAN, DO YOU USE GAS ON SUNDAY? -} Back East, they have gasoline-less Sundays. The supply is low. The war needs are big. Here in the West we have not felt the discomforts of gasoline-le s Sundays. ' We are riding freely. Doesn't it seem as tho we ought to repay the government for this? Seattle autoists have a chance to do so by purchasing Thrift Stamps whenever 5 they buy gasoline. Ask the service man for stamps. Service men should keep themselves supplied. If you have already subscribed the limit, buy the stamps and donate them to the Red Cross. i 3. Wail, ont of city, bbc per month; 3 months, $1.50; 6 month $37 $5.00, in the State of Washington. Outside the state, Sc per Taontn, $4.80 for 6 months, oF $9.00 pe Ly er, city, 300 ino. Phone Main 00 Private to. Private Robert Lorimer, ax he leaves for France. It arises partly from the |e Gooupies in the pay roll, companion, resigning himself to a) he has failed in doing. Uniform To Be Honored foff the car. They did not even agree| If he had loved her more than 4 ,| With Sir Galahad that it was a nice| himself he would have readily recog- | ont, nee aes, swear Mien Ors It is rarely) day and they did not look back nized that the problem was his no | lateraeler Rate Rather Than Smiled On | “Come, on, you boob,” said the ad-| less than his wife's, and #0 long as | Pree. Saw m, The section hand uples a| necessary to come to your rescue. It| vance guard, “they'll wait for us on| she frank'y vowed her reluctance to | SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS mighty lowly niche tn the railroad! may not be now, but there may be| the corner.” go with the other man, there was | A coldness comes between Jane Lorimer, war bride, and hee hasband, | world if you reckon only the spot) othery like the young woman who| “Yeu, they will—NOT," replied his ork for him to do, which obviously attention Jane receives trot niltoe Certeis, m doctor educated in Vienna, | signed herself “In Love With @| car strap. Hat htt | A : ps ¥ whom Robert suspects of being ® spy: and partly from neglect to Jane eee Who walks the tracks day and) frafied Man,” who failed to grasp | aittercnee Plt ib Baan. bau Mr. “Anonymous,” you said tt wag 7 “ Vi ned by Bob's long talk with his father when he should have been say! night, week in and week out, year) tne f , to “Miss ms sao € ceime for & Wotan 0: We ee Met he ‘ | This talk conee planet he sense of your reply to “Mise) ehic PEAR decent—to aspire to mothers | ee * | Sixteen arding the advisability! If you would know, Miss Sixteen, | hood, and without respect for her wt Who tussles with heavy railroad| of dancing with any soldier because | where there is a bunch of lonely | seit was only fit for the underworld ties and rails in hot weather and|“if he is good enough to fight for| young fellows who would appreciate | Yes, you said just that, altho I had cold? us, he is good enough to dance with | your familiarity as to dancing, 100k | to read it a second time to convince upon the whole United States army; | myself that anyone who had intellb such as these, here is the opin: | but if you would win their esteem, | gence enough to read or write could ion of one who has soldiered in many | their reverence, their undying re|say such a thing. So we are t widest ~ t pry About a Hired Girl | Some years ago, when the German chemists cooked up gir monopoly in dyes, and other chemicals necessary to, Who bends over shovel and pick | “": thread of city life in America in out there where there's no shade rich family, lives it all intensely. je finds that ‘she is to mother the wu plot is strung oF Jane, @ country girl, married in After an unexplainable a nan happiness, and applied for foreign patents, they| first of anew generation pg Ria Gorm -pursiaer'a® bot eta RRd Hl eoas ana clitnes, in timan of peacd| fins sr thrncnimod: waitin soul ; mbted the honesty of America, after the German habit, ereagpemnees 2 a against, winter's biting! and times nf war: of one who has| ere introduced to them | cite n sroman even Ss Oe ci] ey filed fake specifications, with their applications : ieee cauae thin. wibering; is ROAely recov | and pitts yb hat sane aware wu k and over rs ark any roller you know about this | ships would give her a yight heattn ts, with Uncle Sam. JANE GETS BIG CHECK AND” °fed from his recent serious illness. \iate along the hundreds of thou H With & good woman for a:wits| andtuworr when yodiuae 16: tie dew [Pree ny eee enough, war came on, Uncle refused to recognize t : YE ‘ oo Magpie: gon A ba hin sands of miles of American rail-| 4nd a deep anxiety for the welfarg| sible, because if ¢ ores Chigke ty, Wen, when you tock tes woo Tin almost every case, it was found that some essen-| 0 '''Mamma’—be calls his wife, Mrs.| restaurant for’ hia woonday inach | uniform or s, volunteer (and) WhO |e ee ea mie While a {UP against a tack that will require l ingredient or indispensable step had been omitted from| Lorimer, “mamma,” ax he learned to call his own mogher in “66—|fut always, when he's working, has| MIEN, too—the young rascals it| man intonitorm snay be glad to play |* sTeat deal of unselfishness on your the recipes wouldn't work. Fine Teutonic cunning! | He pushed a slip of blue paper across the table to me, It was a check enough to want to play the game rn ; . Py +) an 1 or sretty hard grind, | an to be smiled upon). ‘oy is not a toy. Soldiers, y dear But our American chemists did not lie down and weep; for $1,000! More than my own mother has to live on for a whole year! Pam Magne gas AB BE Sad a SIG SEU PT GRANGE nay! | eet ce: ea neeeee my dear squarely and fairly to a finish. True, vork f ver why a ipes Daddy Lorimer is always giving away checks to show his love, and Ne tor PO be i bit thave ta MBYHING about a\. peerer ATKIN you are up against a task, but other fy went to work to discover why the blamed recipe: very comfortably in street cars t there i9 SOMETHING about | tional at heart. TOMMY ATKINS, | 700 “ie UP er ned more under going to provide cause 1am * "a aia ae a -i¢ | this is his way of saying that he's delighted te « duiform thatciemans Bitie'tn foreets | bi | d then they too! e Hun by the s' hair by ta |baby as belonging to the family #euccession a mesh | rest} a dangerous state of unprepared-|‘y.-o" ; men have won back wives who it domestic patents, the Hun having invalidated his pat- I don't really think I'll need all that,” I said, “You see, daddy, the ot ative a * coc coaches |? vA a parplenity. 3 me, Uf There Is Doubt stepped much farther from the path oy " ets his dves| things I want to buy are awfully amall ae our food and other neces#-{ sought the advice sap. sania ene Nise F ove |than it appears from your own tale such into this country he'll pay a nice royalty to Amer-| that, you're the first woman I ever saw of your kind, Try—and when| He does all this that guns, ammu-| the uniform—no, it isn't EXACTLY | cores much at Yet she says | Were Not humble over their wrong an brains. It’s a mighty fine instance of boomerang, and |you want some more—come and kiss me." nition, uniforms, food and material| that. daddy—yes, it-oh, T dont| che i willing to marry me. Tam |## your wife is, but arrogant. ther reminds us of a Story About a Hired Girl. k Now 1 aety anybody except “Mary Thomas—to keen from liking | for beige lope incite ad into battle | know, aaady——" svidering ifshe will learn to love| Lok up the word IMMOLATION ? i . ls li ¥ Daddy Lorimer, He is one of the most popular men in the city—always | agains country's foe. Lee sand at. token ie ae e ennthek at en and apply it to self, when Soule ny years ago, but it seems and feels like last week, put down as a 100 per cent man in any civic enterprise. At present only “| He does all this thatt roop train| call th pont pty a i th orate tb nae pose Later: lh the meaning clearly in your mind, was formed in a certain suburban community, back| few persons seem to doubt that he will be next congressman from that | after troop train may hurry safely | Pius anything you like wo lone AF ImOLO tO: ESE G_|not because of yourself entirely, but 6. Tommy Wilson and Bobbie Smith were two-thigds district cat et teally, Over those “ribbons py pe oti sone signage gta come) yo lar here ix no promise of happi. | because of the Uttle, innocent te rf * ly Feed < De Of 0 co 1] steel” to the waitin anspe 2 re got . , - Spi trust and we the remainder. There were no Th¥ft ae Tesi vention, ae re eka ah peepee nar bret por Sita. transports On| minimize the folly of tolerating fa-| ness under these circumstances, | YOu saab wit a responsible in those days and so the trust put its first accum-| re ne nt ans ime . a in| Milllarity because it happens to be id)’ i¢: wi far better to wait till | for. and because nana voc n of capital from mowing lawns, running errands and) — He made money as a young man, and, since the war, he seems to be cae? dani (erktua gman there is no doubt about the girl's | |. EXPERIENCED THEORIST, ling pigs into g large two-wheeled cart. making tons of it. It mostly comes, somehow, from those great pine Love With « Dratied Man,” that the . ae | Contemporaneously with the trust's pos TUALLY | Riahgas a er eed pearl drat drt Somaya Ragone oP Rrra first may gain know nd tha | Man Must Forgive mother possessed a hired girl, a buxom Swede named) out in them every summer. They left the train at Amesville, where | Janssen. Yow might forget your first wife, or) was born, Briefly, the Ames and Lorimer families were related long ago. mother, or pay day, but never Katura, having once |Our branch inherited the original farm site, now Ameaville, white the Lor. | i: ry , ers had the forests, Nobody thought them any good for 60 years her. Katura was the embodiment of emotion. She'd | Fnaty Daddy Lorimer fouunded “The Lorimer Chemical Co." Before the | th at anything, or cry at nothing, easily, and, as when} nited states went into the war he sold lots of stuff to neutral countries flood of tears she was a composite picture of the|1 have heard, but not from Bob, that Dr. Hamilton Certels managed some Shoe Falls and the emptying of a tub of wash suds, | of the transactions i mbk Deviecta Fossa ae"a Grape SN |For Baby's Sake | Editor's Mail We were coming from the circus al Dear Miss Grey: If one were to} few evenings k in a crowded car. | permit on If to be impatient with Thereon were two Miss Sixteens,| either this man who signs himself | APPEAL TO GIRLS pretty, fun-loving girls with clear,| “Anonymous” or the unfaithful wife | honest eyes, the eyes of young) he describes, it seems to me the| Editor The Star: Will you please American womanhood. There were! greater temptation would be to give print the following as an appeal to also two uniforms, physically clean | the man an all-around good lecture, | American girls? E. P. M., ry As I hurried to show my check to Mother Lorimer cut types they © and ney hac 'e au ex ery el ethe Bremert Wash, trust preferred Katura at flood tide. = in the hall. I have not seen him since the day of our ride and the too inti dalinneate Puincen’ tie i vg . bes : ; ot igi bog 8 bie te 4 ‘ eA cing! ha oo Well, in the gloaming, one day, the trust found Katura mate glance between us. After a formal sentence, I ru upstairs er car, hes pf Netibeen tha. iitae and thet interests evalh *, but what t, he is too selfish | body is: How to get nurses for they did not see at once was the to love r have loved his wife Uncle Sam. Every girl who has a ng, proud young womanhood | deeply, That, too, stands a bar be-| chance should become a Red Cross probabilities tween himself and his soul. His self. | nurse. COR. FIRST AVP. AND PIKE ST. One of the boys sidled up to the | righteous stand has weakened his| “It is just as important as it is for Whose Biala 065 | nearest girl and introduced himself | moral fiber so much that he feels he| the boys who enlist to give the! with an assurance regarding his re-|is her superior, thereby justified in| lives for Uncle Sam. \“IF LEHURT YOU, DON’T ception. ‘The other lad was one of | making statements to the effect that| ‘There are some nurses here whoy | PAY ME.” | the 999 kind who reverence their | “womanhood lost cannot be regained are trained and ready to become aj mothers and sisters and sweethearts, by love.” R. C. and do work in France. of feliverance | who gaze wistfully at a picture| We will grant that his wife has) “Why don’t they go? you may ask. Sperations © “9%! when no one of the boys is around, | wronged him almost as muchas she | But how can they when there are no 1 EXTRACT, FILL, CROWN and and who pasa the merry time of day | injured herself, but her error has not | other nurses to take their places? TREAT il cnoee bat wonky ateemout | with any “chicken” who desires to be | so.much tmportance in the way he| “Girls, become a Red Cross nurs@i But, glancing two-thirds way down the narrow hillside|,, THE COOL LOOKING MAN I ODAYS pain in all cases but acute abecessed | i own as such. He stood back and! looks upon it as in the way he fails|Give your service to Uncle Sam. 7 B. sends it: LAs os in your city for awaited the outcome of the advance to regard it. If he had loved her, as| “Do your bit.” wus iy, the trust perceived that father was returning): low Ps . * ry When the sun bigh-ch g da c rhis, I admit, wa » claime: ore n he dl | fis daily office toil. On one side father bore gro.|\ CARTQONET guard attack, This, I admit, was as he claimed, more than he did himself 4 Ss - Pac ” as shining its hottest | N well executed as circumstances he would have seen this and felt The price of War Savings Stamps meat and vegetables, worsted and hairpins for] Last Friday, 1 met an old friend STERLING DENTISTRY would permit | qualified to meet the problem with-| is 1 cent higher each month because , rolls of music for Sister Ella, ete., etc.; on the| Om the street. oyeaiee : Office Mours: Sa. m tod mm ‘The girls blushed, smiled and got out writing for the aid of theorists. | the stamps are earning interest. side one of these long-handled wooden garden rakes.| 4", "* !°° i That 1 said, “Heavens, mao, trust found four eggplants and two pounds of toma-| How do you do it?” er, stayed in my mind, He's #0 mysterious ig on the kitchen steps and coaxed her into taking a Certels, howe e in that cart. She laughed like a horse with oat straws! (To Be Continued) pits nostrils, called us boys her “deer leedle ponies” and ~ re 6 : ey joyed herself greatly until we—no, the trust-—reached | top of the hill and let go the cart handles. Then scooted. lf-way down you could fairly hear Katura’s tears il, and the trust danced on its six legs, swung its hats cheered her on from the top of the hill. | ' Gosh! but that was a live trust for the promotion of| Cm This te my messi to you from the =5 ECOMMENDED FOR. whe ate ate ofe ate ofe ate ate ate ate ote ate ole ate ole ate ate ale ate ofe eje ofe eje oje ope ape ojo ele x in the adjoining bushes, next day.) Darned if the fun) And he said, “Do what?” si 't ooze out of our third of that trust right then. on gibi eM i For a brief second father and Katura commingled,| it ne ant. “Why not? % liscellaneous and sudden, and for the rest of the way|tsn't it cool?” : e ; n the hill their best friends couldn’t tell which part was| And where we stood nen > » which hired girl, which cart or which rake. There | 1!® °ovblestones were melting ‘ %. to be sure, one brief flash of joy when father Gob faicti: Dene we A ee ; = his feet, with the aid of undiluted blasphemy, but) To kia me!” + = @ take handle swiped him at the ankles and he con-| 4nd vbr Mehsana e OF * ned You're kidding yourself.” ee s% “Boys will be boys,” said mother, later on; and s| aboee Tanta : 5 Ked both father and Katura, too. But “fathers will aes peeps SI + a thers,” replied father, and after his demonstration of it,|{ cou!d remember, 2, x the woodshed, where some blamed fool had just de-|AM4,n0 Suid. “September “ * ed a load of lath, we never saw any good in trusts. it bat hcig yg een TH eULER wo a We hope we will not grieve those smart Aleck Hun|! expect hot weather HAS TH NERVE T° A 4 a UT ee pi by adding this moral: | 3a eummer, But I don't Do THis. peege ogee A boomerang tastes a lot better when outward bound reo Tia at when coming back. | And argued about the heat ‘\ And got red in the face a hate al ae i__ a. 4 American Bar association convention ignores wom- | And hotter under the collar. ar | suffrage question, which is much like an ostrich Bot he ae! omteneneeinnt ‘would handle the problem. fear: Can Es corneas te | If you |That I'm hot. I'm cool. | your watch, let | I enjoy this weather. Haynes rep it. Next Liberty ha t’s to Come? | And all other weather. | theatre.—Advertisement 3 “a |So long.” In the Southern Pacific railroad shops, at Sacramento,| And he walked away. ins are making for the permanent retention of hundreds| 44 1 #4, “A nut F. 0. B, SEATTLE F. 0. B. SEATTLE ally able to fill, permanently. Grant that woman has the ee lity and will to do a thing, and all else de We don’t believe Lenine and Trot | Bead i _ all else depends upon) ..y witt come to the United States. BTSs Ral DT ORE ~L IA eee) e demand for her performance. War is taking the fittest|-rrey wont take any chances of cee > iS fairs our men. How many of them are going to return and ing under the work or fight order. the “permanent” jobs held by women? | ere just received, make it possible to secure imme- diate delivery for a few days, or while they last. ¥ women machinists and helpers. Superintendent Williams| Maybe he WAB cool.” A 4 } ; ‘Many bt dh h h ; | And I began to cool off e ie women have proven themselves peculiarly | "rom the argument. : ‘ * ied for the finer type of mechanics. They Peake a Pe, on ea Soup Tamily se ‘ lent core-makers, brass finishers and machinists.” ee Aid awenty, and vedelable __._<.- ‘6 z __ What a change may be coming! If women perma-|!t¢ said, “Whew! It’s hot.” Home-made 4 ‘ ently in railroad shops, why not in all shops and factories ?|AP4 1 said,,"Oh, I don't know— pausace ‘ ¢ the sh d factories, ordinari "*| Not #o hot.” * a p Shops and factories, ordinarily, there are thousands| Ana upon my word, BD aSNCO DOMOCS | j d thousands of jobs that women are physically and men-|1t wasn't. 7... te) 2 at BoldisEconomy ht Lunchimm *s : % % % wje ope ojo ojo ofe ofe ojo oje ofe ojo oe wpe ojo ofe ojo “omg to be a reversion? Great scholars assure us rae ph iitlandhibeaent cof “a FALL ST Y ere was a long period in human history, when the} insolent as ever, but we notice that and materials for Suits, ad Coats and One-piece Dresses, e of the species did the hard work, while the Je|the several million privates have a ited and fished. Mother in overalls; father with rod|et"!ns Lanlgeaeniom gun? Indeed, we may yet thank heaven for that labelled ry lal mantine trait in woman that sets her strong against JEWELED things she doesn’t want to do. ARIST WATCHES DIAMOND RINGS AND ‘WATCHES ALBERT HANSEN }0_Secomd Ave. on Don’t fail to take advantage of this oppor- tunity at once, for it may never come again. RABY TAILORING CO., Inc. 425 UNION ST. The Hun takes his daily dose of defeat on the run. Chance for Wealthy Citizens The Star is calling upon lodges, fraternities and other] she ote ofa ote afe afe ote ofe ate ote ate ate ate ate ote izations to invest in‘ War Savings Stamps to the| + Wouldn’t it be fine if every G. A. R. post and Ladies| g * the G. A. R. circle would invest to the $1,000 limit?| : . We recognize that some of the posts have no surplus “The most tragic moment tn a woman's life is when she discovers the Re ney an the freneatry. It would be a splendid thing for ok pray hair use it is Nature's warning that youth is passing,” an - sa 3. me of our wealthy Seattle citizens to contribute elderly Memphis matron said recently at a Newport hotel. v e s 2 enough “Then you are very fortunate,” a Chicago lady remarked, “ : ney Be that ithe man and the woman who battled for|apparently you never have experienced that moment of fee) pen ae H.D. AUSTIN, Manager > eedom in the ’60s can, in this later struggle for freedom “Indeed I have," the Memphis lady confessed, with a laugh. “Only % EAST PIKE TWELFTH EAS » e a keepsake worth while. ’|my tragedy was intensified because several gray hairs appeared at the at T 614 + a 4 nalts te I felt heartsick, but I could not bear the thought of using . x _ - WAR SAVINGS § s ARE 7 —a “Fortunately, about that time a chemist in Memphis developed a INGS STAMPS ARE THE SAME AS | aration which ix called Ban Color Restorer. "You can imagine my delight | [eed : - GOO ASH, when I tried it and found it restored the uniform color and luster of my | f ‘ Ne ai f Ne oh > all Pane, wae eye ojo ope ole oje eje o vo ale ojo oje eje oe ole ™

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