The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 23, 1919, Page 11

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ERETT YS | SVSRESTT, T WANT You TO U4 STAY HOMGS TODAY AN HELP MG CLEAN UP THS SPARS GREAT Scott! COMPANY AGAIN $ WHO [N THUNDER pes i UT By THORNTO N W. BURGESS. (Copyright, 1919, by T. W. Burgess) Buster Beaf Gets His Stomach Warmed Are Farmer Brown's Boy hadjthen the other over his nose. Then ter Bear, he chuckled all the way/|*hake !t off. He put his big paws Back to the little sugar house. “I/in his mouth as if he thought there Wish,” said he. “I could be around when Buster Bear drinks that pail of | gap I have left for him.” “Perhaps he won't drink it.” re- Farmer Brown. “Buster Bear & clever chap, and not easily | He may just barely taste find something wrong with it, and then leave {t alone.” “Perhaps,” said Farmer Brown's Boy, “but I have an idea he will take goed, long drink before he discov. anything wrong. Buster ,{s but also he is greedy. Then, he has had @ lot of sap, so he be suspicious.” Farmer Brown's Boy was right. As as it was dark enough to sult Buster started out for his third) to those fascinating sap pails. | § Right before they had been . #© Buster was more eager | D than ever fora drink of that delicious, | and plunged his nose into that sweet water. The vefy first pail he | . IR ng to was nearly full. You see. | was something in there he could pull i Brown's Boy had hung that |out ‘Then, with a squeal, he clapped on the tree farthest away from |poth paws to his stomach. Some Uttle sugar house, because be felt | thing was wrong, very wrong, inside lage it would be the first tree| him. Buster had been stung by bees would visit. more than once, but never inside. It éver there was a greedy look in| Now he to p 3 ‘ee © Qny one’s eyes, it was in the ilttle eves It aa if a whole hive of bees were stinging him from his mouth, of Buster Bear as he peeped| down his throat, all the way to his | {nto that pail. There was no #u% | stoma Of course, you know what Picion there, only greed. You see. ! + was, It was the red pepper Farm f - Buster bad found those sap pails per-| er Brown's Boy had put in teat sap. fectly harmless. He grasped that} had pall in both “paws and plunged his | ‘ . ‘Trie Mose into the sweet water.* Then te Laid pet Dee he gulped more than half of it down | " before he really tasted it. That w Because he was so greety. NAMES LOAN CHAIRMAN Suddenly Buster pulled his nose| Tom H. Brown, 754 Harvard ave. out of that pail as if something had| N., has been appointed state chair. Bitten him, and on his face was the| man of the Royal Arcanum Victory expression of surprise and| Liberty Loan committee by A. &. it and dismay. He dropped the | Robinson, supreme treasurer of the ind rubbed first one paw and organization. DON'T WANT THAT, NOW IANTED (T Any’ Annie Change 3 Her Mind DON’T WHAT se = — BUT You TOLO | OD YESTERDAY iI You women BUT I'VE DECIDED I'D PATHER HAVE A Went, |'D LIKE TO HAVE DuNER DowH AT SOME KoTEL, THEN Go To A GooD MUSICAL COMEDY AND AFTERWARDS DROP Tom.) Peer Like 1 Like To Go Some PLACE This ALL RIGHT, Where Do You Twink Nou'D Like ToGo! "RUN OTTO AUTO OVER A CLIPF 5000 FT HIGH SE8 WF THAT WONT prepared his surprises for Bus jbo shook his head as if he would) an effort, but she looked at him ‘and people who jebildren, bute are not all rather hurts. (Continued from Tuesday.) K. never smoked in the parlor, but by sheer force of pabit he held the He grabbed the pal! in both paws | PIP? in hin teeth. IM SOME PLACE AND SEE A CABARET e L -}~ [Guess You FEEL LIKE GOING SOME PLACE ALL RIGHT His tone was carefully casual Almost every day. He stops at © door of the ward and speaks to m It makes me quite distin guished, for a probationer. Usually you know, the staff never even » no pre “An ationers.”* d down at her. 1 Christine Lorenz, while not large, | seemed to fill the little room. Her voice, which was frequent and pen- etrating, her amile, which was wide and showed yery white teeth that) were a trifle large for beauty, her | json allembracing good nature, dominat: | #4 the entire lower floor. K., who “All knowledge that ts worth while hurts in the getting.” nd how have things been go asked Sidney practically. “Your steward has little to report Aunt Harriet, who left you her love. has had the complete order for the Lorent trousseau. picked out a stunning design for the I thought I'd ask We're rather in Do you like this new fashion of draping the vell from be: hind the coiffure tn the back——" been sitting on around the room, touching Its little familiar objects with tender hands watched her. curious element in his that when he was with b jon the gulse of friendship and de colved even hime She and I have | K |mer gives you wedding dress you about the veil. It was only in hopeless yearning h of her hand or a glance from her clear eyes. Sidney, having picked up the min replaced it absently, eo that Eve stood revealed in all her |preapple innocence. “There is something else,” she said “I cannot talk There is a girl in the This house ts fatal! They're making | !*ter's pleture an old woman of you already.” tone was tragic. “Mins Lorens likes the new meth od, but my personal preference Is face covered.” He sucked caknly at his dead pipe new preseription— “A patient?” ” | She t* quite pretty. §& has had typhoid, but she f# a ltt bread and fewer air-holes. & 00d person.’ Sidney sprang to her feet. “It's perfectly terrible!* cause you rent a room in this #0 is no reason why you should pergonality and your I shivered when I had to but I've got to talk this out with some one. I worrled a lot it Katie has masculine as-| ike her.’ sistance for a good many years if Christine can't decide about her own veil she'd better not get mar. good for you disapproval in his DR. JEFF HALFORD You May Pay More But You Can’t Get Better Dentistry It is an absolute fact that nature is hard to improve on and it is a fact that the handiwork of nature can be almost exactly reproduced. This ia one part of the dental science that I have made a most careful and thorough study—Nature Expres: sion Teeth—acknowledged by dental authorities to be among the greatest achievernents of modern dentistry. I Follow Nature’s Own Method Instead of the old mathematical plan. That is why my ture Teeth” are distinguished by the desirable quadty of naturalness. I carefully study each mouth, the bite, the manner in which your natural teeth fit together, the conformation of the gums and jaws, the shape of the face and mouth and the shape and tint of the natural teeth. Free Painless extractions with all Plate and Bridgework. Examinations and Consultations Are Free DR. JEFF HALFORD Rooms 205-6-7-8 Pioneer Bldg. First Ave. and James St. Phone Main 6237 Mother says you flowers every evening, and lock up ‘the house before you go to bed. I never meant you to adopt the fam “Well, this is the question. getting better. She's | going t She'll be able to go thing ought to be done to keep her trom—going back?” There was a shadow in K.’s eyes! was #0 young to face all | course, unless father gives me one since face it she must, how much better to have her do it removed his pipe and gazed earnestly into the bow! “PAN Taft has had kittens under the porch,” he said. eryman has | weight “And the groc We've bought scales now and weigh everything.” “You are evading the question.” “Doea she want mode of life?” things because’T like to do them for some time I've been float ing, and now I've got a home. ery time I lock up the windows at are some things.one doesn't discus. | ple to take two rooms and go to thi The other day I propped her up in bed and gave her a newapaper and after a while I found the and she was cr: |The other patients avoid her, and it |was some time bi next day she going to marry some magazine as a suggestion Aunt Harriet, ‘ore I noticed it Sidney gazed helplessly at his im He seemed older | man w the hair | else than she had recal over his ears was almost white. yet, he waw just thirty. Palmer Howe's seemed like a boy self more erect than he had In the first days of his occupancy of second floor front. That was | told me Le Moyne did his best, that after noon in the Httle parlor But he held him |her thru her training responsibilities could not reform “what about yourself? | a lot of illusions, of course, but per haps you've gained ideals and healing were her felp them all you can,” he fin “Lite,” observed Sidney, with wisdom of two “Vite is a terrible We think we've got It withee amile; the rest to the Almighty exigned, but not con-| send you on approval our stomach Newly facing the evil of the | preparation, Jo-to, fc rampant reformer | Which time you are t arrival of Chris ed his philos “Undoubtedly.” think of how used toAbink it all up and got marrie haps had ehildren wot very old, one died been seeing that life really consists | progress from of exceptions—children grow up, and grown-ups who die be: | fore they are old, ’ | tine and her fiance w from complete time for @ question between the ring nd when one Kitchen to the don't | front door. And’—this took | Wilson? i i mn ann La ci eieasiadindbiies nce nt ev aero eee had met her before, retired into st-| lence and a corner. Young Howe amoked a cigarette in the hall, “You poor thing! said Christine. Why, you're positively thin! & month to tire of it but T sald I take that back,’ Palmer ke indolently from the corridor. “There is the look of willing martyrdom in her Yace. Where in Reginald? I've brought some nuts for him.” “Reginald is back in the woods again. ‘ Now, look here,” he said solemn. ly. “When we arranged about these roomgp there were certain properties that went with them—the Ihdy next door who plays Paderewski's ‘Min- net’ six hours a day, and K. here and Reginald. If you must take something to the woods, why not the minuet person?” Howe was ® good-looking man, thin, emoothshaven, aggressively | well dressed. This Sunday afternoo In a cutaway coat and high hat, with an English malacea stick, he was just a little out of the picture. The Street said that he was “wild,” and that to get into the Country Club set Christine was losing more than she was gaining Christine had stepped out on the ‘ony, and was speaking to K Inside. t's rather a queer way to live ba ju lof course,” she said. “But Palmer a pauper, practically. We are : home for a wh tain things that we want we can't have if we take a house—a car, for instance We'll need one for gunning out to the Country Club to dinner. Of} see, for a wedding present, it will bo a cheap one. And we're getting the | Rosenfeld boy to drive ft. He's |grazy about machinery, “and he'll |Come for practically nothing.” K. had never known a married cou- bride's mother's for meals in order to keep a car, He looked faintly |dazed. Also, certain sophistries of [his former world about a ch Pp autfe' being pstly in the end in his mind and were carefully | suppressed. (Continued Thursday.) Sour Stomach (heartburn), Belching, Swelling and Full Feeling, so fre quently complained of after meals relieved in ‘Two Minutes. Almost In | stant relief from Paing in the Stom. ach caused by undigested food. Send 6c postage, name and ad dress, plainly written, and we will 30 days, at send us $1.00 or return’ the unused portion 1f not perfectly satisfied. Address; Bellingham Chemical Co., Bellingham, Wash. pavers EASES. KAR-, BOX. Write Seane mame i Tacoma, Wor sale by all Jeading and testimo: \ THEY CHANGE THEM OFTEN WOMENS’ mip THAN MENS‘ JEN MEN ADMIT SPRING SUIT INSTEAD) | YOUR BRAINS ARt By ALLMAN VERN WELt THEN, ANYTHING To SAVE A FAMILY ARCUMBAT “S” AND JvST MAKE Ir “U*— THAT Woupa’r COST US AWFULLN MUCH AT THAT if WELL DROP The Cost vs? Where “Do You GET “War “v3 |AMBASSADOR WALLACE | Opera Singer Will WELCOMED IN FRANCE —In reply to the of welcome of PEMA 2 There are three kinds of radishes | poincaire, Hugh In most | United States ambassador to France, the first are grown. | #aluted the people of France on be- American people. |snid that since France was victor, the task imposed upon allied nations | dow 10 a. m., Thursday. rT the firat garden {%%* to secure peace and humanity | crop I harvested from my garden, | @tho spinach was a close second. Usually the gardener can pull rad- from three weeks to a on the soil and Appear in Recit Mabel Garrison, New York Me politan Opera company soprano, ai pears in recital at the : | theatre, Wednesday, April 30, seat sale opens at the box PARIS, April the glamour persists? He|--spring, summer and fall. lgardens only think be ts very wonderful,” |qnig ts the little round red or white }maid Sidney valiantly radish, easily grown and quick to| get to tho table, Radishes were rison makes but one appearance. ee MILLIONS OF CATARRH GERMS AFLOAT IN THE A month, depending Summer radishes are gray, white jor almost black, and are of the tur ‘}long and have a rather woody taste. and put her cheek against Sidney's. | prowever Pal-| radishes at all, if one likes radishes, | = jand usually winter radishes are Atmosphere Is Laden With grown in ground from which sum mer crops were gathered, thus mak ing double use of the soil, be stored for winter use. the symptoms of the Germs of the Di ease, and overlooks its Every person afflicted with The first radishes may be sown|Catarrh releases millions of the tiny disease germs with every cough or sneeze, so that whenever on the street \ded from the midsummer sun by |cars or street or other public place you see a person af- j}douches, washes, ¢ jand jellies by the gallon |the best you can expect from such is merely temporary rel {But what you want is sq fot the a |between rows of other, later matur- | Late sowings should be | jmade In the cooler soil of the gar-| when partly | | muslin covers. Radishes may be sown as early as the ground can be spaded. |Farmers Will See Tractors at Work WALLA WALLA, permanent ridding yoursel: and this you jhope for until treatment that to the cause of the dis ‘hawking and coughing and sneezing, every one in their \vicinity is exposed to the dis- | You, along with every one |parea to take care of 20,000 visitors/else, will find yourself ex when it opened its big tractor show | nosed | this morning. | tor and truck demonstra: | Catarrh is more than @ jlocal irritation that your nose and irritates throat and chokes up breathing apparatus. clearing these up te strong , solutions |sprays and other local {ment, does not in the affect the real cause Your blood with Catarrh germs, jth i i ei within its relentless clutches, tain oes thet When every one is equally jexposed, it is merely a mat- ter of keeping the system|m, in such a robust and thor- Catarrh several times every ng staged at the 600-acre day. The germs multiply by two |the millions, and the air you hundred and fifty Walla Walla citl|breathe is thick with these zens donated their automobiles for | transporting the visitors to the scene |of the demonstrations. Many department heads of the/and suffering. Agricultural college, | ington State college and the Univer- | near this city little disease demons \that cause so much distress Some people will mptly succumb | soon find themselves tural agents from all parts of the/others will pr Northwest, are among the visitors. | Hart, of Washington, | Walla tomorrow | will arrive in Wall to attend the sho |fhey remain in the blood. The only sensible ent, therefore, is which wiH rout the germs from the blood. This is why the most ; isfactory remedy for Catarrh is 8S. S, reliable blood purifier. S. has been used s ly for Catarrh for more fifty years, and it is the that attacks source of the ing the blood th and eliminating from it trace of disease germs. — If you want a goes direct to the seat disease, begin to take § S. today, and throw aws your atomizers and other lo treatment that n¢ possibly reach your Catarr You will be delighted giving this remedy a and will soon find 8n the road to a S. S. S. is s druggists everywhere. Begin its use today, al |write for free medical advieg own individual Address Chief Medic: 109 Swift tory, Atlanta, Ga.—(Adv.). Grants ‘Hearing to Suspended Car Men that the germs of the dis- |strike several months ago and were ease cannot find lodgment. d by the loss of two weeks'| You | vacation and a i6-day suspension by throw off the attacks of the ms and escape their ef- then be able to ltheir grievances to Mayor Hanson | $e?" Jon his return from the East, after | forts. Catarrh is one of the*most stubborn diseases, and is al- in cold, damp and disagreeable weather. It should not, however, be con- ise was obtained by representatives Jof the street car men's union Tues- Rainier Valley to Get Big Roadway The Board of Public works pleased there are thousands afflicted it who are doubtless lready to believe that a cure impossible, their experience. But, like all other afflic- jtions, the main trouble is that Catarrh is entirely mis- understood, treated in the wrong way. Because these demons attack the delicate membranes of the nose and throat, choking up the passages and irritating the tender lining of the nostrils and bronchial average sufferer makes the mnistake of treating merely when ft approved plans for a doubl roadway from Cornell ave. to 75th |jg ‘The improvement | this summer. 4. OF DOUGHNUTS Ensign N. H. Lorenzen, Salvation will lecture on “Dough- ughbpys,” at the Knights hias hall, First « st, Wednesday night, ” ¥ ou think of advertising, little germ about your 0 TREATMENT. $2.00 KAR-RU COMPANY, 2

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