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

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BY GoLLyY THESE EGGS BEAR CHARMED Lives S> &, 12,79 ann ec To CARRY. ©. 9% tt, (S- AND ONE To CARRY. WEDLOCKED— Pal Smashes All Wont Gk et AHA, 1 SEE You'Re DOING SOMGS FIGURING ON YouR Aecounres « THAT REMINDS MG oF A JOKS I — ~~ i | a¥i Gi: ray \ ! DOINGS OF THE DUFFS— The Union Don WwW onde rs ONLY ONE WHOLE EGG Pr Sneee prety seston a? a Pansi ~ -Bu ATT MAN No, Sue"s Dos FINE | ‘ SHE 1S TANG Holo of THE : | OW, PANSY, WILL You HOvSE CLEANING IN GREAT “This Tine bCome AND Give US A | srvue +BY THe WAY (WISH |] MUST DE | Lier Wir Twe PIANO! o\You'0 Move PuLeD WITH Shrwe PANO LEAD ¢ For me ERE 9 SAY, HELEN, NOW THAT PAWSY HAS Joined WE UNION, HOW 1S HER Work? HAS SHE DISPLAYED ANY INDIPPEREACE ? = | | | | Ni W Rt yi ony we ae NX “-TRY THIS PLAN ON OTTO AUTO- 1A SURE ITLL STOP Him * BY THORNTON W. BURGESS (Copyright, 1919, by T. W. Burgess) Jenny Wren’s Sharp Tongue RABBIT looked up at{T haven't, Wren aa she fussed |it! Any one who travels & thousand Over his bead, and there | milea twice a year har @ right to phief in his eyes as he sald;|expresx an opinion. Tt of yours ig just as place like home, and you r B av ever, But it is good to hear |to tease me by pre that e the same, We certainly would (there (xs. My dear, I know you; you but I've seen enough of | HAVE Nov cL powe! | Warr tT “TIGHT UP AGAM: “THAT be ga As DE RULES SANS~ It DE UNION DARE AM STRENGTH ty Lb PULL wwe Nav PUSH, PANSY You are so late I was be-jare Just as tickled to be back here to worry a little for fear /as I am.” Might have happened to| “Ile sings as if he were,” said that you wouldn't be back |Peter. For all the time Mr. Wren . You know me well) was singing with all his might. Jenny Wren, to know that; Jenny Wren looked over at Mr. | Biuirt me with your tongue,/Wren fondly. “Isn't he a dear to it f% so you may as well sing to mé Ike that?’ said she.) — to tél me a few “And ian’t it a perfectly beautiful {I want to know. Now, if you spring song? I do wish he would B fond of the Old Orchard as/be more careful. Sometimes I am etend to be, why did you ever afraid he will overdo. Just look at bY (him now! Hé is singing so hard ‘Wren's bright eyes snapped. that he is shaking all over, He a} do you eat?” she asked! | ways is that way. When we Wrens) Now that waa all over, They were | do things, we do thém with all our such good friends, He would mint Tm hungry.” replied | might When we work, we work would you eat {f there was | sings, he sings with all his aight” | her, too; but he would have Harriet "7 her, that weal daring meant for morning. other men were not emt, strength, cour Mary. Roberts ae | white. Sidney left the little house at six, with the street light #tili burn ing thru a mist of falling enow. | Sidney fed him his morning beef The hospital wards and corridors |tes, and, because her eyes filled werd null lig when abe went on/up with tears now and then at bis duty at eck, She had been | helpleanness, she was not so skill- assigned to the men's surgical ward, ;ful ax she might have been. When, and went there at onee. She had spoonful had gone down his not seen Carlotta Harrison since her he smiled up at her whimal- | mother ‘# death; but found her on duty in the surgical ward. For the second tin n four months, the two girla were working side by wide, Sidney's ion of her previ-| hospital rested on that Christmas ous service under Carlotta made her/day. The internes went about in nervous, But the older girt greeted trean white ucks with aprays of} her pleasantly mistletoe their buttonholes, doing “We all sorry few emings, Over the upper trouble,” she floors, where the kitchens were lo ton nicely cated, spread toward fioon the in Sidney surv xidious odor of roasting turkey overflowing. Every ward had {ts vase nony had been pt In the afternoon services were held “The ward is heavy, ten’t it?" in the chapel downstairs. Very. i b 1 t mad at Wheel chairs mac ing Fé até those Of progress dlong corridors 5 nd a probationer.” ators ts of the Christmas to we ming thra th ippers a put out tu Gradually tt a business like ny to Outelde the wide doors of the ridor the chalra were arranged semi-circle hind ther. the ion, were the f and Pig mbulane of le r the purses in in and fresh uniforms had been reserved a staff internes ninst the ready to letween a cigaret or ¢ ease might t rything bro ver peace of Christma nurses sing, and hee frésh your * the reat. Ye came thru the and Johnny Rosenfeld lay back on the Hows and watched her fs “When I wan a kid,”’ “and ran slowg the Street, calling Dr Max a dude, I never thought I'd Nie here watching that door ree him come in. You have had trouble, too, Ain't it the hell of « world, anyhow? It a Christmas to you, either.” he natd, Copyriant, 1918, by Mary Moberta Rieehart poreeenrrerenf (Continued from Monday.) z; | with all our might. When Mr. Wren eat?” sputtered Jenny. “And when you scold, you scold! land Christine and—Max. Back in a & siNy question,” retorted | with all your might,” interrupted | “ircle to Max, of course. Peter mischievousty, She insisted, that last evening, on more sflly than asking me Jenny Wren opened her mouth for | ting up with him until midnight ‘the Old Orchard.” re-{a sharp reply, but laughed instead, | Ushered in Christmas day. Christine , “Do give us birds {1 suppose I do scOld a good deal," |}4nd Palmer were out: Harrtet, hav ‘@ little common sense, | said she, “but ff [ didn’t, goodness | Me Presented Sidney with a bloure gcd No more live without knows who wouldn't impose upon | that had been left over in the shop can, and in winter|us! I can't bear to be imposed on.”|from the autunn’s businews, had is t00d @t all here for most | yawned herself to bed. Swe go where there is food.| Next story: Jenny Wren's tdéas} When the bells announced mid s bout Dress. night, Sidney roused with a start | She realized that for somé time |netther of them had #poken, and that K.'s eyes were fixed on her CONFERENCE ON RENT The little clock on the shelf took up the burden of the churches and ALBANY, N. Y,, May 13.—(United| struck the hour in quick ato }Preas.}—Governor Smith today _re-| notes. j quested the state reconstruction! Sidney rose and went over to K |commission to call into confere her Black dress in soft folds abou’ | with him representative men and her women to carry out a plan proposed by the commission for housing relief} “He i born, dear.” in New York city, where rents aro| She stooped and kissed his cheek breaking records and evictions re- lightly ported numerous, Christmas day dawned one neck, cally, “Teun for Patret!’* he As much was four life. The dam's id, wible, the to hear of your sald. “I hope we shall |GOVERNOR CALLS FOR the ward, full to At the far end two cots anced. tac of their slow| and down | who were along in carpet} hour “ nvalesce “He ts born, K." flapped ab mornin dows. Carlott nd tiirned in probationer’s name said. “Perhaps her with way to mal kes it On ¢ ‘ fter § when Sidney found front Johnny Rosenfeld. i You here in the ward, Johnny!’ chapel filled up. w rr thick and whe is Ward ‘ou'd bet If a mistake at for ocean asta. élevator men, the ardetiles, John, who dr vide ¢ © 1 ne 7 ao ae ee, ean eat all kinds of food in winter, stay, They ty. That's what they are— And yet—” Jenny Wren yea looked at her fre what?” prompted Peter. dan yp carte pe wonder sometimes if you folks ‘ wut he smiled up at her « are at home all the time Know ee “Tw aa tn i private fo: a blessed place home fs." bs t 30. ptunks Jenny. “It is only six hy pay rent : since we went South, but I Sidney had not seen him #inee his Mf seems ages, and it does, The aceldent * had Wished to go, but of going away is coming | K. had urged was ‘That sounds rather mixed, | not strong, and ly suf. true, just the same. It fered much. And now work of $ down there ff the sunny | thé ward pressed hard. She had only ‘even if we do spend ag much | A moment. She stood beside him and | there as we do here. This is stroked his hand . nd there's no place like it.| I'm sorry, Johnny at, Mr. Wren? If haven't| He pretended to thi ‘all pe. Great World? Perhaps pS “pps pee ie ward, “Oh, I'm all right ‘SHOES FOR TUE Poem the other p she the Suffering had features. Hin dark, refined heavily trin na pale face rtully m; but vo T mov an ings ambulance aE: | a run 8 atl oe for on an the % 1 the after. fternoon it A Week a yan he voice yw wine stained on her} nooth ker. awry with them risin shone nad fice, Her # tlways Just a little Dr. Max, lounging Inst the wall the found his eyes straying toward her constantly, For Piles A Free Trial of Pyramid Pile Treat. ment Will Be Just Like Meet- ing a Good Old Friend, , the lovely id ; across chape that nf to the re “94 be r OR, JEFF HALFORD What Would You Do? If you found a small fire hesitate a second Miss Sidney,” is paying $6 a erence between wa around he said. “Mr. Hov for me, The di me and the other here is that I A napkin on ny tray and they don't.” Before his determined chee Sidney chéked. ‘Six dollars a week for going some. I 1 tell Mr Howe to give ma the $6. She'll be needing it I'm no bloated Fipto- orat I don’t have to have a apki “Have they told you what trauilé in? ack's worry gto the tan py's oy | Max could week home rfulness smouldering in your in putting ft out, or decayed or missing teeth, should cause consternation. They will slowly sap your health, just a as the day i# long. you would not would you? A cavity, a napkin ts you ¢ y “Neolin Soles have solved the | forme. Other soles wore | ly on the rocky roads here, 4 had no end of trouble with | ” he writes. other. soles fail, Nestin Soles | the test of hard wear and This fact points the way Buy Nedlin-soled shoes | e family, and so save shoe | ind have Nedlin Soles put on is one tooth or the BE TAKEN better than It doesn't make all your teeth that are CARE OF. There The only thing I can do fact that I do MODERN | DENTISTRY. any difference whether it bad, THEY SHOULD one knows this Sut don’t tet} Dr, Max Wilson on me iit be} » yet.” # shone, Of course,| why don't you? The trial ts What a thing it | fat mail ‘coupon below—and [seas to ie adie to Cake thn tie-ins] Healaina Byram, ile te death of Johnny Kosenfeld’s and jeliverer~ make ft life again! | All sorts of men made up Sid ney's world: the derelicts who wan dered thru the wa in flapping slippers, listlessly carrying trays the unshaven men in the , beds, looking forward to another of boredom, if not of pain; Palmer | Howe with his broken arm; K,, ten |der and strong, but filling no espe- }clal place in the world, ‘Towering over them all was the younger Wil- broke. you. porate is you your mind the PAINLESS no that if to impress on ABSOLUTELY en te aa | Math 1 use nothing but the very beat materials— ny © box from all work that leaves this office is guaran- teed——I stand back of jt at all times, If you are not able to pay all at one time, I will arrange payments for the balance, DR. JEFF HALFORD Rooms 205-6-7-8 Pioncer Bldg. First Ave, and James St. Phone Main 6237 upon mew. 0 any druggist }wubatitute. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, (66 Pyramid Bidg., Marehall, Mich, send mo a Free sample of Filo Treatmont, in plain wrapper. r anywhere, Ef ge AE nag hl Ohio Wt ae shake Wick | guaranteed Kind): Pyramii Name. Street. city... ain't much of| On} it} Iney sang} | Have you tried Pyramid? If not. | \her head and glanced toward him. Swift color flooded her face. The nurses sang: Rethlehem! How #hé stood out from the others? What 4 #éat for ieing and for hap. piness he had’ Eplecopal clergyman fead the |} Belgium Protests Hun Color Scheme lupins coal a ow . z PARIS, May 12, — (Univea therefore. God.| The Wheel chairs and convales { penne fl pi on ee anointed thee | cents quayered the familiar words. |) acainst the plan. of the Ger |Dr. Ed's heavy throat shook with |} 2f°onH tS & ‘Belgium nation: fellows.” earnestness. }} al colors for its new flag. ‘That was Sidney. She was good,| The Head, sitting a little apart |! px Germans wished to replace and she had been anointed with the wits her hands folded in hér lap| the present flag of red, white ond ol of gladness, And he nd weary with the suffering of thé |) biack with the old federation flag His brother was singing. His deep | Wort, closed her eyes and Mstened. |) o¢ rea, gold and black. Gold | base voice, not always true, boomed | (Continued Wednesday.) not practical for a flag; so | Jout. above the sound of the small | ioe | low was substituted, making {t ‘Papert Mill Unions organ. Ed had been a good brother coincide with Belgium's colors— to him; be had been a good son. . red, yellow and black Go Out on Strike GLENNS FALLS, N.¥., May,13. Max's vagrant mind wandered away from the service to the picture | lof his mother over his brother's Nit-|—cnlted . Press.}—-Pa mill 3 tered desk, to the Street, to K,, to| ployes affiliated Rides gp rH ol | the girl who had refused to marry tonal Brotherhood of Pulp, Sulphite| Fire starting from a leak fn am jbim because ghe did not trust hin, and Paper Mill Workers, in the fac-| Ol heater at the home of Major. L jt Carlotta last of all. He turned tories of the International Paper | D. Léewis, at the Highlands, Moptay it) }a little and ran his eyes along the Co, were on, strike today. The strike | was quenched with only a slight loss, 9 followed differences of opinion be-|The chemical engine from the fire ” . there she was. As if she were | tween id employers and employes | station at Third ave. and Pine st. put ©” % Thou hast loved and hated iniquity; even thy God, hath with the oll of gladness above thy es. OTL LEAK CAUSES FIRE line of nurses, consc ous of his scrutiny, she lifted as to out the PADEREWSKI—Premer oF PoLAND The Man Who Astonished the World” \First as a Musical Genius—Now as Nation Maker Takes Nuxated Iron for Stréngth Energy and rance Dr. Kenneth K. MacAlpine, for 16 years Adjunct Professor New York Post Graduate Medical School and Hospital, Says That in His Opinion Nux- | ated Iron is, The Most Valuable Tonic, Strength and Blood Builder Any Physician Can Prescribe When Ignace Jan Paderéwski, mas- | ze ter Pianist and Nation Maker, turned | , his back to the plaudits of the admir- ing thousinds and deserted music to give his whole energy that Poland might be- come a free nation, he little real- ized the tre- mendous strain which would be imposed upon his health londetrength. After two years of such streniious work and | Intense mental effort as would have worn down the constitu. tion of many men, Paderewskt had recourse to the sustain- | ing tonic benefita of Nux- | ated Iron to help rebuild his | wasted. forces and restore | his old-time health — and | strength, That one of the foremost and most foree ful figures of today's in+ ternational life should come out frankly publicly indorse uct which he has person- ally found valuable for building up the health and strength must arouse the t of overy thinking per- uxated Iron, which is today being used by over | 8,090,000 people annually to |help create red blood, power and en- | durance. Yommenting upon the use of Nw Iron by Padorowakt and othe Known ps neth ‘a prominent New York ‘adjunct profess= ork Post-Graduate ool and Hospital, says 1é years aa lecturer and adjunet profeasor of iy roctology). in the lical School er bad recourse to 80 VA uable, a remedy for building up jhealth and strength of gonvalescent | patent Iron, 2 {pats re with ? Ifon. have convine that itis a preparation of most extraordinary merit, Nux~ | muscular tisaue and brain. aor by enriching. the blood iron there fe no strength, vitality | new. blood cells, |And endurance to combat, Obstactos entirely satiefartor strength ves, rebuilds the jor withatand severe strains, ‘To help | chaser or they will re Weakened issuer and helps, to, In: |make. strong, siurdy, men. of blood | It ix dispensed. in this city aul renewe ax .And onaurence [apd tron there is nothing better than |Co, Bartell Drug Co. switts {nto the Whole system, whether the [organic iron—Nuxated Iron.’ land. alt other druggists we | Paderewski Nuxated Ire consider ft Geor n and Thy Monmouth Jersey, ated Tron 000,000», . Baker, surgeon, f patient be young or |; old. In my opinion Nuxated Tron is the most val- |p ‘annually as a tonic, strength: F Juable tor Altength. and. blood |Rnabload batder ie in itsete-an ets [builder any physician can pre-|dence of tremendous public contls ® : |denes, and Iam. convinced that. 1@ .. fot- | others hould take Nuxated [ren spital| when they feel v kk and run dowp, (Outdoor Dept.), New. York, and the |it would help make @ nation Westchester county hospital, says: stronger, healthier men and women, “Lack of ire in the blood pt only ) If you are not stron makes a man a physical and mental | owe it to t weakling, nervous, irritable, easily }fatigued, but it utterly robs him of that virile force, that stamina and strength of will which are so ni ry to suecese and power walk of life. Thousands of men and women are impairing their conatitu- 8, laying themselves open to Ill , and Iiterally loging their gr on health, simply because their, bloo thinning out and possibly starvin h lack of iron, Iron bel gree; at into scribe. Dr, Jamesk merly physi rancis Sullivan, jan of Bellevue bh lowing test: work or how far then black 1: manufacturers, & successful and every Dur

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