The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 17, 1919, Page 13

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Seer eee ee Of classes,” | By CONDO! XL YEAR You CALLED MG - JA FOUR-FLUSHER ! STS 1 WANT You to TAKS (T Back tt ik Aowrr L OVERSTATED THO MATTGR ‘T—— You'Re Onry A O- FLUSHER It! i" Censure Governor; by Hungarians BERNE, April 17.—(United Press) )=The first seasion of the Budapest “seouncil was reported today to have elected Nikolai! Lenine and other Bolsheviki honorary members. DES MOINES, Ia, April 17 of impeachment , the Iowa house o! representatives, Thursday, failed tx Uae idk counall, anieiten’ toon discharge from office Gov. W. L. the international proletariat knows | Harding for his actions tn the Rath [Mo difference of race or creed, only | bun parton case. ‘The charges against Gov. Impeachment Fails| Adoptitig the judiciary committes's minority report for censure tn place Harding SDON, April 16. — (United }-A Budapest dispatch to the today reported that Premier Lenine had telegraphed be would vis ‘Ht Budapest after the Hungarian and preside at a meeting the communist congress. 10! | grew out of the case of Ernest Rath bun, 4 farmerte son, who was con. | ¥icted of criminal assault and sen |tenced to life imprisonment. was pardoned last November by Gov | Harding after an alleged bribe by lthe prisoner's father. Safe IMibk for ‘Tre Original Pood-Drink Por All Ages OTHERS are IMITATIONS He SHANER & WOLFF “The Store for Class in Clothes” A Distinctive Suit for Easter Get into that style parade with the best of them. We'll fit you out from our stock of DIFFERENT clothes for men and young men. The latest, snap Diet models. ‘There are the classy straight-up shoulders, the flare-skirt coat, gracefully curved wists, with all the details of distinctive talloring eared for by master clothes makers. Just received another shipment of the seal brown multe from Fashion Park. We also offer a fine selec: tion of Light Weight Overcoats | SHANER & WOLFF 916 Second Avenue WEDLOCKED— Back to the Soil for Nothing (ISN'T HOME YET: SPADE TH’ GARDEN | : r | THIS GUESS ILL SOME. (Ss TRE- WORK SQUIRREL FOOD ft | wey I'VE BEEN OUT HOUSE HUNTING ALL Wis House HAS 5 TU TT BREN SoLD An’ J |! | It » vd Wwe TO WE oe | Synops LeMoyne, “tall and very solemn leave the Pag: Sidney bas et" that whe te « |” Sidney gete the place, « fit he ever went tb x (Continued from Thur he wargclever with the ju Eyes of all But of the pursuing male | he turned at on him, line wardrobe room, where he would lexchange his white garments for street clothing, and spoke to her over lthe heads of a dozen nurses. | “That patient's address that I had forgotten, Miss Harri the r ot m. im the [ner of the Park and Ellington ave.” “Thank you.” She quite ness, j certainly him, The hurt to his pride nights before was healed. He whistling into the wardrobe room. As he turned he caught the interne’s leye, and there passed between them glance of complete comprehension. The The room was brother was there, comments of O'Hara, his friendly rt val cor the game well, was calm. He admired her cook Certainly she was pretty, and too, she was interested in a tow played interne grinned not empty. - His Listening to the said O'Hara hand on his was a | “Good work, boy!" and clapped a hairy shoulder, “That last |wonder. I’m proud of you, and your brother here is indecently ex alted. It was the Edwardes method, wasn't it? I saw it done at hia clinic in New York.” “Glad you liked it. was a pal of mine in F surgeon, too; poor old « “There ain't three men in the country with the nerve and the hand for it.” O'Hara went out, glowing with his lown magnanimity, Deep in his heart was a gnawing of envy-—not for himself, but for his work, These young fellows with no family ties who ¢ bring worth while, the older men nt that he would have changed things. God forbid! | Dr, Ed stood by and walted while his brother got into his street clothes, He wat rather silent There were many times when he wished that their mother could have lived to see how he had car his promise to “make &@ Max.” This was one of them, Not that he took any credit for Max's brilliant carees—but he would have liked her to know that things were going well. He had a picture of her over his office desk. Sometimes he wondered what she would think of case Yes, Pdwardes rin they had it all hia own untidy methods compared | with Max's extravagant the bag, for instance, with the dog's collar in it, and other things, these occasions he always“deter mined to clear out the bagy” “L guems Wil be retin said, “Will you be homé to dint “f think not ‘run out of town, an ool." | ‘The Street was ni summer, When Dr. home from Burope, eat where it's ‘oriously hot in jax was newly ind Dr, Ed wae A ' : ; went | | lyn “manufacturer sentenced to the penitentiary for selling throughout A great! order—of | On| re | vii goings | Lumbago, Colds, Grippe, Influenzal Colds, Joint Pains, of Preceding Installments _ id run over to Europe and | k anything new that was| over | ed out! | man of G by Mary Roberts Hisehart Wiis, [til paid the expenses of the house | jon the Street | Sorry, old man; I've made an-| ther engagement.” They left Everywhere t JAPANESE SEIZE TWO AMERICANS the hospital together younger man re | cived the homage of success. The| elevator man bowed and flung the | Joora open, with a renile; the phar doors open with senile, the ohr / Prisons Filled During Korean| convalescent patient who was pol Troubles ! ishing the great bras doorplate, ten: | 1 jdered their tribute. Dr. Ed looked) 4.1, “ | pelther to right nor left SEOUL, Korea, April 14, via/ | At the machine they separated, | Tokio—(Delayed.)—(United Press )—/ Rut Dr. Ed stood for a moment with | CTOSABETHA ats | By THORNTON W. BURGESS. (Copyright, 1919, by T. W. Burgess Buster Bear Has a Good Drink __; his hand on the car “1 wan thinking, up there this aft ‘ yon,” he mald, slowly, “that I'm not sure I want Sidney Page to b& me a nurse.” Why" ‘There's a good de girl need not know until her husband tells her. Bidney's eon guarded, and it's bound to be a ook.” It's her own choice.” Pxactly. A child redbhes out for fire.” Th motor had started moment, at least, the younger Wil som had no interest in Sidney Page. | She'll manage, all right. Plenty! at o © girla have taken the train ne and come thra without «polling | their seet for life.” Already, as the car moved off, bix| mind was on his appointment for the | j evening and “quite eray over h re yet mot “The Ktreet,” and bee a roomer Joe Drummond, 21, le tn love with Harriet declares her intention to thru her sewim jockdiee to be ures, iidney | at the Page home to help out while 1 In life that 1 to Joe, ane ©: not, at least Ed's Brot Max jen to mee Bidney about a position acrifies t i Heowihoes wht she asks hin wired bond new offic brother er, by the White sup Thowe had lays for the « man names that he had read with and mispronounced, most of his roll off Max's tongue ow that ass of a Heyden hear the n Hient and sur the tinent; new hniq the smal! the clinics, student had brought into his drab touch of Put that waa Max had new frie 1 obligations; his time was taken And pride would not pw the ler brother to show how he missed the early days Forty-two he was, and, what with less nights and 20 years of bur ried food, he looked 50, Fifty, then, to Max's 30. here's & roast of beef pity to cook a roast for one.” Wasteful, too, this cooking of food for two and only one to eat it. A roast of beef meant a visit, in Dr Ed's modest paying clientele. Springs hotel wala der To hear Stein . Sidney, after her involuntary bath | n the river, had gone into tempo | rary eclipse at the White Springs | hotel. In the oven of the kitchen| stove mat her two small white shoes, stuffed with paper #0 that they | |might dry in shape, Back in a de-| tached laundry, a sympathetic maid | was froning various soft white gar | ments, and singing as she worked, | Sidney sat in a rocking chair in a hot bedroom, She was carefully swathed in a sheet from neck to toes, except for her arms, and she was being as philosophic as possible, After all, it was a good chance to think things over, She had very lit- tle time to think, generally, She meant to give up Joe Drum- nond, She didn't want to hurt him, Well, there was that to think over, nda, new It's a Counterfeiter Canght! The New York health authorities had a Brook- the United States millions of “Talcum powder” tablets as Aspirin Tablets, Beware! Counterfeits! | Don’t buy Aspirin in a pill box! Get Bayer packaget | ’ Always say, “Give me a package Aspirin.’ ” Insist you want only the Bayer package with the “Bayer Cross’ ‘on the package and on the tablets. Bayer-Tablets Aspirin The genuine American owned “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” have been proved safe by millions for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism, of ‘Bayer Tablets of Neuritis. Proper dosage on every “Bayer” package. Boxes of 12 tableta—Bottlea of 24—Bottles of 100-~Also Capsules, Aspirin is the trede mtark of Bayer Manufsctuse of Monoaceticacidemter of Salicyficacld | district For the |" | questioned in connection with the riots (of Korean nationalists), says |an official announcement from the today. at Chin Nampo prisons. Forty-seven have the statement says. verve three each in prison court have been held Ping Yang and been sentenced, six of them to years and six months ‘The prisons are full, but room can | be mm for xsary The statement says eight Amert can missionaries’ houses were searched, and that two American missionaries, named Mowrey and joffett, arrested Following an examination, Mowrey was detain ea at Ping Yang, but released. It is reported houses at Ti thousands more, if were that iku have been searched. and a matter of probation dresses to be talked over later with her Aunt Harriet. Also, there was a great deal of advice to K. Le Moyne, who was ridiculously extravagant, be fore trusting the house to him. She folded her white arms and prepared to think over all these things, As & matter of fact, she went mentally, like an arrow to its mark younger Wiifon—to his straight fig- ure in ite white coat, to his dark eyes and heavy hair, to the cleft in his chin when he smiled. “You know, L have always been more than half in love with you my self ¥ Some one door tapped lightly at the She was back about her. “Its Le Moyne. right?” “Perfectly. Are you How stupid it must be | for yout” “T'm ddfng very well. The maid will soon be ready. What shall I order for supper?” “Anything. I'm starving.” (Continued Friday.) CHAMBER COMMITTEES TO SEE PORT DOCKS Members of the executive commit- tees of the foreign and industrial trades bureaus of the Seattle Cham: ber of Commerce, at invitation of the Seattle port commission, will in spected the port properties ‘Thursday The party left the chamber at 10:30 in autos, and visited the Spokane and Hanford st, docks, the terminals fish and fruit storage plants, and grain elevator, and then went to the Bell st, dock, where luncheon was ed, The Smith Cove terminals were visited during the afternoon. ASKS $500 FOR NECK AND $5 FOR BOTTLES Suit for $605 damages was filed in superior court Wednesday by Himen Horowitz, teamster, against Harry L. Renaud, truckster, the complaint alleging that Renaud bumped into the Horowitz horse and wagon with his truck at Sixth ave, S. and Jack- son st, August 12, Horowits al leges his collarbone was twisted and mixed up with his neck tendons, and a barrel of bottles, empty, jolted out of the wagon, He wants $500 for the injured neck and $5 for the bottles all! Moffett was | missionaries’ | reached that p On | didn’t move. It was as still as if it/ and saw that it was to the| again in the |. stuffy room, clutching the sheet | je g, friends and Sammy Jay had driven Buster Bear to his bedroom under the pile of fallen trees, deep in the Green Forest, he remained the red Mr. Sun had gone to his bed be. hind the Purple Hills. He knew that his tormentors had also gone to bed. and that he cowld go where he One thousand Koreans have been | AFTER Blacky the Crow and his|drops of water were fallifg, for it |was warm, and the sap had not stopped running. It puzzled him | ti, standing on his hind legs, ie looked into that strange, shiny tl Of these 799/on his bed of leaves until jolly, round, | pleased without fear of being both-| ered by that likes the night nolay crew. Buster He likes to roam around in the dark, for he ean see! where you and I could not see at all. | Buster was hungrier than ever Also he was thirsty. He went down to the Laughing Brook, and along this until he found a place where there was no After a good drink he felt better, Then he started to roam about to see what he could find In the course of his wanderings he rt of the Green For. est where the sugar maples grow. | the very first sugar maple he came to he saw something bright and shiny where the moonlight touched it. Right away Buster stopped and sat up to stare at it suspiciously. It were a part of the tree. Buster tried a deep growl. Still it didn't move. Buster took a few ps and tried again. The nearer he got to that bright, shiny thing the more curious he be- came. He walked all around the tree at a safe distance. Presently his keen nose caught the smell of farmer Brown's Boy, Instantly the hair on the back of his neck stood on end, and he growled a more deep: ly, rumbly, grumbly growl than be fore. He was more suspicious than 5 He {s always suspicious when gets a whiff of that hated man smell. Buster suspected a trap, Yet that bright, shiny thing made him so curious that he couldn't tear himself away, By and by he was near enough to reach out and touch it very gen- tly with one paw, He pulled that paw back like a flash, half suspect- ing that something would happen. But nothing did happen, Buster touched it again and decided it was harmless. He was so near now that the sound hear a faint drip, drip, drip, as if | haere Very cautiously Buster stretched — | out bis head and sniffed. pale full of what looked like water,!and that little drops were falling into it from the thing on which it hug. Very cau> | tiously Buster stretched out his head jand sniffed, There was a pleasant odor, It didn't smell like any water Buster had ever had. Buster put a paw into the sap pail, for that is | What the queer, shiny thing was, |then licked his paw. One minute |later he had emptied that sap pail. It was one of the best drinks Buster }had ever had. | Next story: Farmer Brown's Boy | Suspects a Thief. WILL TELL SEATTLE PLANS — Gordon C. Corbaley, executive seo retary of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, left’ for San Fram ~ cisco late Wednesday, to present the” Seattle chamber’s plays for the @e velopment of Alaskan tran i! and coast naval defenses, to the sociated Chambers of Commerce of Ithe Pacific Coast, in session Satie, day. i

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