The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 12, 1919, Page 13

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THE SEATTLE STAR.-MONDAY, MAY 12, 1919, VERETT TRUE te Now- WHERE =f oscil | Abe You Gan’? Li Goin’ vownt ine AN’ SEE IF | CANT House BY BOILER FACTORY YES AN’ WE HA To MOVE — WHY NOT TAR TH’ Housé Down BY TH’ a ame WELL GO UP AN’ LIVE WITH MAMMA FP we C, By CONDO| NO, TLL READ IT AB TOR WELL ANMIE = ve) | | LooKkD ALL over FoR A House TO RENT ANO WIE CAN'T FIND AJ SINGLE ONE WHy- we’ NEVER GET ANY SLEEP THERE IT WOULD BE Too NOISY a AY, WIFS, HAVE You POOKED At THE i tril EVENING PAPER YET? ~ WEDLOCKED— The Choice of ebberss teeta axed Two Noises peor teen hn gdateay hag Bl enti Raise WAGES - SHB WAS JoINeD whe 'S Viton ~ She ThenaTeteD “TO QuiT AND | HAVE A LARGE WASHING ‘Tus wes MAT You fuaceT To pyr mt The wasn! By AHERN BUT YSEE, ITS TE FOR an ACETYLENE “TORCH “To BURN ME AN EXIT THROUGH A WIRE CAGE WELL. (A tt a HAV “To TURN Al’ GO BACK, $0 IT LOOKS LIKE IK “TRAPPED, EH? MUN I BY THORNTON W. RGESS (Copyright, 1919, by T. W. Burgess) Jenny Wren Arrives -LIPPERTY-LIP, scam-| and, thank goodness, we are here at Peter Rabbit behind the last.” replied Jenny Wren, fussing stone wall along one | about as only she can in a branch Just above Peter, “I never was more STUDENT 18 IN WRONG | Drysdale until the police arrived JM. Drysdale, 19, 6102 Fifth ave, | Reid alleges that he found Drysdale N. E., @ student, was arrested and/in a small closet in his home shortly the Douglas School of Dancing, will of take part in the performance, “L'Art <7 de la Danse,” at the Pantages thea- | tre, Saturday morning, May 24, at 10 7 jo'clock. Proceeds of the show will "7 0 to the Red Cross. thankful {n my life to see a piace what did you leave it for?” demanded oer whee tar et ee held on an open charge at 12:10 a. m,| after h & little sense; they don’t go off on _ long, foolish journeys, But the rest | of you" : | | Persuaded Him to Take Tan-| talk about something they know ) A. 9 prvi . the bank plunged a heavy, gorilia- . ‘ Peter chuckled. Ho dearly loves! like figure, jong arms pushing aside) +ghe tikes you, K. She depends than I am just this minute to see the Old Orchard once more. It seems iY" Ne a: EUGENE D. ABBOTT |never stay put; at least, a lot of Senter De fest ree, © 0 er t 3 plaint of Archie N. Reid, machinist, KIDDIES WILL DANCE you don't. Sammy Jay and Tommy More than 200 children, pupils of “Tut, tat, tut: tut, tut™ interrupt: 7 | ¢4 Jenny Wren. “You don't know | Iae and He's Now Rid of | All His ‘Troubles to tease Jonny Wren, and he meant | the frozen branches of trees. When! on you, too, especially since that| to tease her @ little now. he reached the car O'Hara found night when you took care of Pal | ages and ages since we left it.” “Well, if you are so fond of it, a ee afer wy ; of 4515 Seventh a E,, who held f patoc a nities Rg Woy Sad (Continued from Saturday) | mer were not in the house, You tke! "Before 1 started on Tanlac I was losing weight all the time,” ie Grace sitting unhurt on the ground. | mer's arm before we got Dr. Max. I) Next story: Jenny Wren’s Sharp|!" the wreck of the car the lamp#) often think, K., what a good doctor | said Bugene D, Abbott of 12184 Tacoma avenue, Tacoma, while in 1104 | denny Wren, I'm giad to see | would miss something, that n't have slept at all if he| have helped it. It was to see | ‘were any new arrivals since ‘Gay before that brought Peter fer to the Old Orchard so early this are funny creatures,” eata| he hopped over a low! fm the old stone wall and was) ‘in the O14 Orchard. Put, tut, tut; tut, tut!’ cried a| stolding voice. “Tut, tut, tut; % tut! You don't know what talking about, Peter Rabbit. had not been extinguished, and by you would have been. You knew so their light he made out Howe, sway: | wei! what to do for mother.” me Sy: st | She broke off, She stil! coutd not Anybody underneath trust her voice about her mother. “The chauffeur. He's dead, 1) wp ue i ona te Ea ee ean pace ot O'Hara's | quite straight. Dr. Ed Is so proud of te Max over it. It was a bad fracture.” party had crawied down the bank bY)" Fig ad been waiting for that that time, With the ald of a jack,|,,1¢ had been walling toe im they got the car up. Johnny Rosen. os at last, wh | feld lay doubled on his face under together, she brought Max into the pecan aie to and conversation, She was quite uncon: | opened his eyes, Gtace almost , *10Us of It | “You and Max are great friends. | shrieked her relief. | “Tm all right,” sald Johnny Ro-|! knew you would like him. He ts senfeld. And, when they offered him | interesting, don't you think?" whisky: “Away with the firewater, 1) “Very,” sald K. am no drinker, I~I—" A spasm| To save his life, he could not put of pain twisted his face, “T guess | *Y warmth into hia voice. He IN get up.” With his arms he lifted | Would be fair, It was not in human | himself to a sitting position, and fell | Mature to expect more of him. | bask again. |. “Those long talks you have, shut | "God!" he aid. “I can’t move my |UP in your room—what in the world legs” | do you tal Politics?" | | “Occasional! She wos a little jealous of those} Jevenings, when she sat alone, or! | when Harriet, sitting with her, made | |sketches under the lamp to the ac-| S ken lcompaniment of a steady hum of | Lo Magn ighh dr dole Bic &@ talk | masculine voices from across the with K. the night before she left. lhall. Not that she was ignored, of | PET MOUSE DEPARTS THIS VALE OF TEARS “Teddy” Drew is dead. No more will he gallop hither and yon about the property room at the police station begging for crumbe. “Teddy” expired Saturday morning. Deputy Coroner Frank Koepfli held a postmortem examination over the mortal remains of Teddy and pronounced death due to eating too many peanuts. And Lieut. Danny Drew, property clerk, is heartbroken. Teddy, his pet mouse, has depart: ed from this vale of tears. Sailor Is Knocked Down and Robbed C. Littlejohn, sailor on sub-chaser N298, reported to the police that he was taken to an alley near the water. front, knocked down and robbed at 445 a. m. Sunday by a negro, The CHAPTER XVII Ry Christmas day Sidn¢y was back in the hospital, a little wan, but val- |tfintly determined to keep her life to the French Drug Store, recently “but now I'm gaining all the time Why, I have already picked up twelve pounds and am just now on my fourth bottle” Mr. Abbott came te Tacoma jabout a year ago from Spokane, which had been his home for many years, He went to work in the shipyards, remaining there wnti! they were closed down, and is now employed at the Milwaukee Black~- amith Shops Mra Abbott says her husband just seemed to be wasting away right before her eyes § and t until ° Taniac, “For about two years,” continued Mr, Abbott, “I had been bothered nothing ever helped him persuaded him to try with my stomach and kidneys and kept getting worse until montha ago, When my condition | got to be so bad that I could hardly keep going. I had no appe tte, and what little I did eat just seemed to poison my system. I would Bloat with sour gas until I could hardly get my breath and, if 1| hurried a little in walking my eleht | 4 40) S. __\ unt , A GRAND PIANO For the Home Beautiful An attractively designed living-room is not complete without a Grand Piano —it is the final artistic touch—it “makes” the room. jonly description that he could give of his ossailant was that he was tall |and very black. Littlejohn was mi: BF ge aril yan giayee Sidney hed put | course Max came in always, before |heart Would palpitate so and 1 the dining room in order. K. sat bY | ne wont, and, leaning over the back |Would get #o short of wind that 1 [the table ‘and watched her as she) oe « chair, would inform her of the, Would have to stop and catch hold are not funny creatures at all. are the most sensible folks in | A Grand Piano has greater tonal beauty than an upright—to play on a wide world E beautiful grand piano is truly an inspiration. eut a long hop short right in m to sit up with shining “Oh, Jenny Wren, I'm so glad You! When did you arrive?” Mr. Wren and I have just arrived, nus $9, a Masonic ring and a silver ring made from a Panama coin. Actors are fragmentary individu- als, They are always appearing in parts and the parts are in pieces. i Sooner Cone The New York health authorities had a Brook- rer sentenced to the penitentiary for selling throughout United States millions of “Taleum powder” tablets as Aspirin Tablets, vare! Counterfeits! buy Aspirin in a pill box! Get Bayer package! Always say, “Give me a package of Insist you want only the Bayer |you.” ‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.’ ” package with the “Bayer Cross” on the package and on the tablets. paver tablets _of Aspirin The genuine American spirin’” have been proved readache, Neuralgia, Toothache, Earache, owned “Bayer Tablets of safe by millions for Pain, Rheumatism, | Lumbago, Colds, Grippe, Influenzal Colds, Joint Pains, Neuritis, Proper dosage on every “Bayer” package. seo of 12 tablete—Bottles of 2 4—Bottles of 100—Also Capsules. of Momoscaticacldenter of Galleyeneld absolute blankness moved about the room. of life in the hos i something to support myself. pital without her. The past fow weeks had been very | Oeen ak aan ended wonderful to hin: to help her up and | rue eniis Ge walcodie tol koe down the stairs, to read to her in the evenings as she lay on the couch in the sewing room; later, as she im- proved, to bring small dainties home for her tray, and, having stood over them in triumph to that upper room —he had not been so happy in years, And now it was over. He drew @ long breath “I hope you don't feel nm if you must stay on,” she said, anxiously, “Not that we don't want you--you know better than that.” “There is no place else in the whole world that I want to go to,” he said, simply. “Tt seem to be always relying on somebody's kindness ‘to—to keep things together. First, fo ra and years, it was Aunt Harriet; now it ix Don't you realize that, instead of your being grateful to me, it is I who am undeniably grateful to you? This is home now. I have lived around—in different places and in different ways. 1 would rather be here than anywhere else in world,” But he did not look at her. There was so much that was hopeless in his eyes that he did not. want her to nee, Bhe would be quite capable, he told himself savagely, of marry. ing him out of sheer pity if she ever guessed. And he was afraid—afraid, since he wanted her so much—that he would be fool and weakling enough to take her on those terms, 80 he looked away. Everything was ready for her re- turn to the hospital. She had been out that day to put flowers on the quiet grave where Anna lay with folded hands; she had made her round of little visits on the Street; and now her suitease, packed, was in the hall. “In one way, it will be a little bet- Christine and ter fot you than it the | | he would assure her, gayly; “but, I | tell you, the snap is gone out of it. | When there was a chance that every cap was YOUR cap, the mere prog: ress along a corridor becazne thrill | throwing out his hands, | shrug of the shoulders, “Cui bono?” jhe said—which, bei translated, | means: “What the devil's the use!” | And K. would stand in the door- | way, quietly smoking, or go back to | his room and lock away in his trunk |the great German books on surgery | with which he and Max had been | working out a case. So K, sat by the dining room table and listened to her talk of Max that last evening together. | "I told Mra. Rosenfeld today not |to be too much discouraged about Johnny, I had seen Dr, Max do such wonderful things. Now that | you are guch friends,"—she eyed him wistfully—“perhaps some day you | will come to one of his operations. |Even if you didn't understand ex tly, I know it would thrill you And—I'd like you to seo ne in my uniform, K, You never have.” She grew a little and as the eve: ning went on, She was going to |miss K. very much, While sho was ill she had watched the clock for the }time to listen for him, Sho knew |the way he slammed the front door. Palmer never slammed the door, She knew too, that, just after a bang that threatened the very glase in the transom, K. would come to the foot of the staire and call; “Ahoy, there!” “Ayo, aye!" she would answer— |which was, he assured her, the proper response, Whether he came up the stairs at once or took his way back to Katie had depended on whether his tribute for the day was fruit or sweetbreads. (Continued Tuesday) with a little hess of breath and would have t “T go every day because I must,” | these spells of weakness and short- | j | throw down my tools and lean up| f against something. 1 was badly constipated, my breath waa very loffensive, and 1 suffered a great! Katie while she cooked them, to bear ino jie had a foreign trick of deal with headaches and sometimes | |got so dizzy that I would almost |topple over, At times the pain in |my stomach was so bad that I | would almost double up, then that) | shortness of breath would come on, | § and my wife saya my face would |turn almost as blue as Indigo, My | | kidneys bothered me constantly land I suffered all the time with a pain dn the small of my back, |which was ao bad at times 1/f ‘couldn't bend over and straighton | f jup sgein | agony. | “1 also had rheumatic |shooting through my arms, which | would strike me suddenly at thr and with such force as to almost }take my breath, and then my Joints would get stiff and hurt so | |could hardly stand to bend them. | |My sleep was all broken up and { | was so nervous and miserable that without Just suffering | |1 could hardly keep atill. fallen off until I only weighed one} hundred and thirty-three pounds. At this time I was working in the \shipyards and one of the men I explained my troubles to, advised me to get Tanlac, saying that he/ was positively down and out and that Tanlac bullt him right up and jmade & new man of him. T couldn't make up my mind to try it, as T had tried so many things, but my wife insisted, in fact, she just made me take it and now I'm mighty glad she did, for all my troubles are gone and I am plck- ing up in weight and strength all the time.” Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell Drug Stores under the personal di- rection of a special Taniac represen- _ ative.-Advertisemans ‘ pains | 4 TI had |f What more appropriate gift to a daughter just graduating from High School or College, to a wife who has longed to some day possess a Grand Piano, to a blushing bride in whose affection the beautiful Grand will grow as the years pass by? We offer a wide range in Grand Pianos—in size, in wood finish, and in price— BRAMBACH $595 ALDRICH $785 KURTZMANN $875 DUO ART GRANDS The Marvelous Reproducing Piano which plays the world’s greatest music exactly as the masters play it; which can also be played as a Player Piano with your own interpretation; and which also cam be played in the usual man- ner by hand from the keyboard. STECK DUO ART $2,575 STECK $875 WEBER $1,025 STEINWAY From $1,125 According to the Model WEBER DUO ART $2,725 STEINWAY DUO ART From $3,025 According to the Model. /We wig Upright Pianos and other musical instruments in part payment, and, if desired, arrange convenient terms of payment. Sherman, ay & Co: Third Avenue at Pine SEATTLE Spokane ‘Tacoma Portland

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