The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 7, 1919, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ee oe 2 By CONDO|——___ er a NOT RIGWT Now > | THAT. ONE | THouG Torwatt A cites said ; | 1S A PIPPIN CUR wary Serore t~— WEDLOCKED— ANNIE are a Pal Thought She'd Send Two Back + a! I | AS | AM GOIKG To EXTERTAIM Some Soibiez BONS JUST BACK FROM “THE FRONT “Tus EVENING - KOTUMG TO GET EXCITED over~ 1 WAVE A SALVATION ARMY LASS WeRe TEACHING ME How To A STREAK OF LIGHTNING WOULD PUT OTTO AUTO'S : CART OUT OF COMMISSION” t “WIRTCHING 6 G-NUCAML? LL GET) | —_—“— SeT FOR | one! he Wael | rr ‘ese S0 \T.RE-CHARGES MY HIGH POWER STORAGE BATTERIES ~~ SOME SPEED JUICE eE-NIP—~ 100-Kow BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Copyright, 1919, by T. W. Burgess) licieeenaneamiee eee Wood | Gut of Whitetoot's nose and out of his mouth. Whitefoot began to gasp. Then Farmer Brown's Boy spread his coat close by the fire. rolled Whitefoot up in kis handkerchief and gently placed him on the coat For some time Whitefoot lay just Whitefoot the Mouse made the heedless jump landed him in a pail halt filled sap, Do one else was in the Hit Whitefoot was alone. You sce, Farmer Brown Farmer Brown's Boy were out sap from the trees, and the Hound was with them Brown's Boy was the first | engagement yet He had finished with his glass ry Read to Report on | return. He came in just after had given up all hope ‘went at once to the fire to put wood on. As he finivhed this he heard the faintest of little j It was a very pitiful little Farmer Brown's Boy stood ly still and listene: He it again. He knew right away it was the voice of Whitefoot. “Hello” exclaimed Farmer Brown's if Whitefoot | but presently his a | | . and after a while he | was breathing naturally. But he was) |teo weak and tired to move. so h | Just lay there while Farmer Brown’ | Boy gently stroked his bead and told him how sorry he was. Little by Mttle Whitefoot recovered | his strength. At last he could sit | up. and finally began to move about & little, altho he was still wabbly | on his legs. Farmer Brown's Boy) “\ foot could get them, and as he ate | Whitefoot’s beautiful, soft eyes were filled with gratitude. Next stery: Homeward Bound. U SENIOR IS DEAD ‘S nearly drowned that he didn't| Mildred Thornburg, 25, senior at strength enough to even kick. the University of Washington, died) Breat pity filled the eyes of Farm- Tuesday morning, at the family Brown's Boy as he held White-| home, N, 724 st. and 18th ave. N. E., head down, and gently shook |of pneumonia, following influenza. He was trying to shake some |The funeral will be held this week at the sap out of Whitefoot. It ran Everett, her birthplace. HOW MY HEAD BUZZ When the head feels Joreangvereene evens te coeve ce voce: (Continued from Tuesday.) “Beoteh and soda,” said Le Moyne. ‘And shall I buy a ticket for you to | punch?" But she only smiled faintly. He was sorry he had made the blunder. Evidently the Street and all that per |tained was a sore subject So this was Tillie’s new home! it was for thie thdt she had exchanged the virginal integrity of her life at Mrs. McKee's—for this windewept little house, tidily ugly, infinitely lonely. There were two crayon em largements over the mantel. One was Schwitter, evidently. The other was the paper doll wife. K. won dered what curious instinct of self abnegation had caused Tillie to leave the wife there undisturbed. Back of its position ef honor he saw (pe | put some bits of food where White | giri's realization of her owg situa | got n tion. On a wooden shelf, exactly be- tween the two pictures, was another vase of dried flowers. Tillie brought the Scotch, already mixed, in a tall glass. Kk. would have preferred to mix it himself, but the Scotch was good. He felt « new respect for Mr. Schwitter. “Vou gave me a turn at first,” said Tillie, “But I am right glad to see you, Mr. Le Moyne. Now that the roads are bad, nobody comes very much, It's lonely.” Until now K. and Tillie, when they met, had met conversationally on the common ground of food. They no longer had that, and between then beth lay like a barrier their Jast con versation Be ized that, after all, Tillie must work jout her own milvation. He could | offer her no comfort They talked far inte the growl twilight of the afteripon. Tillie w hungry for news of the Street: must know of Christine's wedding, of Har riet, of Sidney in the honpital. And | when he had told:her all, she sat st 1906, 7 Roverts Copyrt by Mowebert lent, rolling her handkerchief in her | | fingers. Then “Take the four of us,” she said, suddenly—“Christine Lorenz and Sidney Page and Miss Harriet and me—and which one would you have Picked to go wrong like this? guess, from the looks of things, most folks would have thought it would be the Lorenz girl. They'd have picked Harriet Kennedy for the hospital, and me for thé dressmaking, and it would have been Sidney Page that fried and had an automobile. Well, that’s life She looked up at K. shrewdly There were some people out here lately. They didn’t know me, and I heard them talking. They said Sid |ney Page was going to marry Dr Max Wilron “Possibly. I believe there !is no OUCH! CORNS! LIFT CORNS OFF | le rose to take it away As the stood before him she looked up into hin face. “If you like her ax well ax I think you do, Mr. Le Moyne, you won't let bien get ber 1 am afraid that’s not up to me, is it? What would 1 do with a wife, Tittet * “You'd be true to her. That's more than he would be. I gues, in the [tong run, that would count more | than money That was what K. took home with him after his encounter with Tillié. He pondered it on his way back to the street car, as he struggled against the wind, The weather had changed. Wagon tracks along the road were filled with water gnd had begun to freeze. The rain had turned | to & driving sleet thet cut his face Halfway to the trolley line the dog turned off into a by-road. K. did not miss him. The dog stared after him, one foot rained. Once again his eyes were like Tillie’s, as she had waved g00d by from the porch. His bead #unk on his breast, K covered miles of road with his long. *winging pace, and fought his bat | te. Was Tillie right, after all, and had he been wrong? Why should he efface himself, if it meant Sidney's unbappiners? Why not accept Wil son's offer and start over again? Then if things went well-—t mp tation was strong that stormy aft noon. He put it from him at last because of the conviction that what ever he did would make no change in Sidney's ultimate decision. If she cared enough for Wilson, she would marry him. “He felt that she cared enough (Continued Thursday.) Lose Contest for | Lower Steel Rate The supreme court of the United | States has decided against the Skin- ner & Eddy Corporation of Seattle in City’s Stockade At the request of Acting Mayor W. D. Lane, Dr. H, M. Read, gity health commission#r, will make Inspection of the sanitary conditions existing at the city stockade, Beacon hilt Members of the utilities commit tee of the council recently visited the building and pronounced it unfit for human habitation. They request 4” arrangement with the county for the transfer of the city's prisoners to the county gtocka@e. The health commissioner is asked to report on @ personal Ask for “Bayer Tablets } You must say “Bayer.” Never | asi ting the genuine “Bayer Tablets of | Agpirin." proven safe by lof people. RAINIER VALLEY CAR “tht ivy | SERO @ yy | Bill box, ICE “INEFFICIENT” er package with the safety “Bayer | Charging that service given has|CTs”. on both package and an/| been very poor and inefficient, Cor-|‘blets. No other way! poration Counsel Walter F Meier | Beware of counterfeits! Only re-| state /cenuly @ Brooklyn manufacturer | service commission inet |W8* sent to the penitentiary for) the propoged increase in fares on the |00ding the country with talcum| Seattle & Rainier Vatley street rail, | POWder tablets, which he claimed! of & new city detention hoxpital DON'T BUY ASPIRIN package—marked with ‘‘Bayer Cross,”’ k for merely Aspirin tablets. The | this plan, of the proposed building |"4™me “Bayer” means you are get-|directions and the dose for millions | gia, Rhtumatism, Lumbago, Sciath |ca, Colds, Grippe, Influenzal-Colds, Aspirin tablets in a) Insist on getting the Bay- | IN A “PILL” BO of ‘Aspirin’’ in a Bayer to be Aspirin. In the Bayer package ere ache, Toothache, Earache, Neural-— Neuritis and pain generally, “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin, American made and owned, are sold in vest pocket boxes of 12 tablets, which cost only a few cents, also in bottles of 24 and bot- Ues*of 100—also capsules. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manu- facture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. way lines. Hearing on the petition Py wet STAR WANT ADS will be in the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, May 14 |What Must I Do to Be that are so abundantly fires-| BRIN periénce of thousands of G RESULTS ~ HOW CAN I ESCAPE | PITFALLS OF DISEASE THIS SPRING? thick or aches, when v¢rsstion. ‘cutee salt %e ms . . very hi . one feel, all out-of agony” MT |Sceomerce' someteace acé''rar| Able to Resist the| “ree ‘veckmed’ run-dowa| spring tiles Senet oa Sh OR | NT crete. vee't. ork, mk toes roads over the raine in cates on cars! Many Ailments So feeling of lassitude that seems|S., the thoroughly reliable. ignal poisons are ac- Her reply set him watching her | | according to wurd reecived Prevalent in Sum- “ 54ve Possession of you is) blood purifier and __ toni * s face. More attractive it o@rtainly sometimes called “Spring| which cleanses the system a cumulating in the sys tem, and should be cleaned out at once. When the system is on what is often called “a low tone”’—when tox- was, but happy? There was a wist mer? fulness about Tillie’s mouth that set | him wondering “Ig he good to you?” “be's about the best man on earth. | He's never said a cross word to me even at first, when | was panicky | ed in 1916 its per 100 lide in the e fact that ships fever” and its symptoms are all impurities, promptly im- well known. Your appetite proves the appetite, and sends _ Nal si-/ has failed, your energy seems’a new supply of rich, red » commandeered by the govern-| ton is the change from Win-| gone, night finds you all tired| blood coursing through the t for ent use during the| ter into Spring—the passing out, and that rundown, good-| veins. S. S. S. in this way | war, the rates were raised in Septem-| away of one season and a re- | pounds, Panama Nature's greatest transi- for-nothing feeling seems to) puts your system in ‘ect i isons) cause and scared at every sound.” } | ber, 1916, to 94 conts, to eliminate| 9. A raat Si Pa genes haa whem, - ll +9 one! taste ine Moyne nodded understandingly the alleged discrimination which for. |4Wakening of new life every-| have full possession of you. | shape, and restores the lost F e, “I burned a lot of victuals when I |merly existed between the inter-| Where. The human body is just like| vigor and vitality which the first came, running off and biding | when I heard people around the| place. It used to seem to me that| what I'd done was written on my face. But he never said a word.” “That's over now?” “{ don't run. Tam still fright ened.” “Then it has been worth while?” Tillie glanced up at the two pic | tures over the mantel. ‘Sometimes it is—when he comes in tired, and I've a chicken ready or some frled ham and eggs for his sup- | per, and I seé him begin to look, rested. He lights his pipe, and many mediate cities, such ag Spokane, and| Trees, flowers, plants of ev- | Coast terminals. lery description, having con- !sumed all ‘the vitality which was stored up to carry them Line Is Demanded tbhroush the dreary winter, In an effort to secure the im-|DUd forth with new energy | mediate consruction of a car line on| ANd blossom into flower, pre- |. Marginal way, representatives of paring to grow and accum- all industries along the Duwamish ylate new strength and de- | waterway will appear before the| velopment. 1 the: O ittee © the council) utilities committee of the council! "Bit the human system has Thursday morning ; | ‘Tho petitioners are expected to de-| not passed through the winter |clare 2,000 employes of these plants | season in a dormant state like a piece of fine machinery, al- demands of winter have used though few people give it as|up. It is without question the much consideration. A loco-| best tonic and system builder motive is given a thorough) ever made. overhauling after each trip.. S. S. S. is nature’s own Your body has brought you! remedy, being made entirely safely through the winter! of medicinal roots and herbs eason and the voyage has) gathered from the forests. It taxed your strength. Very|is guaranteed purely vege~ naturally, there has been con-| table. siderable wear and tear which Ask any druggist about must be repaired. S.S.S. He has sold it all his Your system needs, first of life, and will tell you that it the mouth, poor a) time to “clean house.” K Auto - intoxication can be best ascribed to our own neglect or carelessness. When the organs falter or fail in the discharge of their duties, the putrefae- tive germs set in and generate toxins — ac? tual poisons, which fill Doesn’t hurt a bit to lift sore, | Marginal Way Car touchy corns off with fingers one’s own body. It is ; ening he helps cne with the| pete emia dh 8 y rg hadageaadey rd ore DTS trees and plants. You/all, a thorough cleansing and|is a thoroughly reliable and then that the more Bee Pee ee ee pret lanue Inat Auuct far the eon| have been called upon to ex-| toning upto replace the nat-|honest old remedy, having henge SEFIOUS «=: CONSEQUENCES Hs your Le Moyne persiated. struction |pend energy and vitality con-/ural waste and wear. Im-)been on the market for more in “1 wouldn't go back to where I fa) ¢ ? |stantly. In fact, there has/purities have accumulated,/than fifty years, been a greater demand upon|and these aggravate your! Buy a bottle and begin tak- your strength to withstand) rheumatism, or make your ca-| ing it today and thus prepare | the rigorous winter than at) tarrh worse, or intensify any | your system for the changing any other season of the year.| skin disorder which you may | seasons, so that vou will be in , __ Sleepiness after meals, flushing of the face, extreme las- “Bitude, biliousness, dizziness, sick headache, acidity of the ‘Stomach, heartburn, offensive breath, anemia, loss of Weight and muscular power, decrease of vitality or lower- was, but I em not happy, Mr. Le Moyne. ‘here's no use pretending, | I want @ baby. All along I've wanted a baby. He wants one. This place | in his, and he'd like a boy to come | Connect Elevated | With Burien Line Work of connecting the west end r Yes! ic! 7 of the Spokane street bridge with f , "ie a | ae ing of resistance to infectious diseases, disturbance of the into it when he's kone. Hut, my |zone'on a bathersome corn inatantiy | the Lake Durien car tracks will be-| SO that as spring ap-|be afflicted with. condition not only ‘to enjoy eye, dyspepsia, indigestion, gastritis, many forms of catarrh, (od! if 1 did have one, what would) that corn stops hurting, then you lift | sin at Once, and a loop to the North| proaches—the most joyous) Very naturally, then, you|the beauties of sprin, asthma, ear affections and allied ailments result from auto" 8 wea here to th it right off. No pain! ‘Bry it | Pacific shipyards also will be “built.| season of the entire year—/are ready to ask:, “What am but also to withstand the Take cast, laxative, called h ees, Re ery Crug store. ra is : | ; so run down and your|tiptop shape for the coming in summer, Special medical ly astor oil, or a pleasant vegetable laxative, neath. sufficient to rid your feet of every |the proposed work by members of | ; | Shay if 5 B pr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, which are composed of May- “And she—there isn't any prospect | hard ‘corn, soft corn, or corn be-|the public utilities committee and | strength so depleted from the/of springtime, so that I will) advice will be gladly given aloes and jalap. : 8 Sep? tween the toes, also all calluses Acting Mayor W..D, Lane. Plans| strenuous demands of winter be in condition to withstand | without cost, if you will write _ ; Pah without the slightest soreness or irri-| were drawn in the city engineers de-| that your vitality is at a low) the common ailments so prev-| to Chief Medical Adviser, 7 One of the very best treatments which all doctors agree u is to tak il or t Pellets 0 take castor ol 'S There was no solution to Tillie’s P. P. P. (Pierce's | proviem. Le Moyne, standing on the hearth and looking down at ber, real- partment and presented to the com: mittee by A. H. Dimock, city en- It doesn’t hurt at all! Free i her discovery of tation. zone is the tha Cinrinws will ebb, and you are unable to en-| alent in summer?” Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, iov the beauties of springtime! Simply profit by the ex-iGa. X e A Mirth ese akon one piesa barnes Monn scnatih sian parle lta. ahatet thet ow

Other pages from this issue: