Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
a ee Oe! 2. 2 2 ore: Fan Vveece aot | SVERETT TRUE _ ‘Bully Seqgrer aQrnsrertrnene er Jee 89 YS Oe” een KADIES AND GENT S GVENING MR. EVERETT TRLG, wito wien LUSMGN: WE HAVS WiTH US INGR A LECTURE ON "ANERICA AND THE WARY en) ; WeH (Copyright, A Feat the English Sparrow Rabbit Jenny Wren would do danger could from there. was a little afraid that, able to have their old my and Mr. Wren wouk! leave the Old Orchard altoy as he hopped over ¢ Wall, he heard Mr. Wre With all his might. where Bully and Mre. up housekeeping. Over. He found Mr. away, but at first saw nothing ly. He was just about her when he caught si in a little hole in out again was free, ly. Mr. Wren taken into that hole. “Well! exclaimed Peter. take you long to find " snapped Don’t buy Aspirin in BY THORNTON W. BURGESS ruth to teil, it was with a great deal’ of relief he song was coming from quite Other side of the Old Orchard. Peter hur with a tiny stick in her bill. snapped her sharp little eyes ‘but for once her tongue was for another. You see, she couldn't talk and that stick at the same time, watched her and saw her dis- of one of the old apple trees. ly ‘had she popped in than she While She W This time her| and so was her oud Detter stop singing “ASPIRIN” WAS TALCUM POWDER Heavy Sentence Imposed on q Manufacturer of Tablets. H (ASBOCIAT! NEW YORK, cused of having manufactured and sold to iffluenza sufferers thousands {lot boxes of aspirin tablets, princi- pally composed of talcum powder, Brooklyn. was found guilty yester- Gay of violation of the santtery code was the most severe Rigi J imposed the coudtry for st uine WS HAVE SCEN THE UTTER FAILURS OF AVE. NOTED (TS REACTION IN THE WORLD. THIS CONNECTION mdimuvty (11 LID 1918, by T. W. Burgess) hered Busybody morning after the fight be- [We can't afford to sit around wast tween Jenny and Mr. Wren and | !ng Ume, like some Peter grinned and looked a little in the Old Orchard | foolish, but he didn't resent It He was so curious to know | se, he was quite used to that sort of “Aren't you afraid that Bully that nothing but some very | will try to drive you out of that we kept him | house?” | folks I know fouhd | for a| thing. he ventured. Jeany Wren's sharp snapped more than ever. to see him try,” said she. not be house. | decide | doorway's too small for him to get And if he tries putting his head in while I'm She Peter wether. more than his head in he old | inside, I'll peck his eyes out” naing-|*ald thie so’ fiercely that jlavghed right out Bull | «now, to ask {that stick is too big” nt of |SRatched it out of Mr. of as a feathered buaybody a big NIPPON BANKER HERE | Sei Okazaki. recently | agencies in America and E “1t} Promote foreign trade. a new! Jenny. times practical fools. Pai ”ATCH) Decembet 31—Ac- of I ch an offense. Hereafter say, “Give me gene | strect. a pill box! eg oor Aspirin The genuine American owned “Bayer Tablets of feck on an envelope on her way | ‘Aspirin” have Been proved safe by millions for Pain, | Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism, Joint Pains, |r fia, Proper yrs on every “on every “Bayer” package. | tc sae Neuralgia, ids, Grippe, ri e. Influenzal Cords Influenzal Colds, Eumbago, = riti Boxes of 12 tablete—Bott! len of 24—Bottles of 100—~Also Capsules. io the trade mark of Bayer Manulecture of Monvaceticacidester of Salicylicacid MANY PROBLEMS IN CONFRONT US. IN THE FIROT PLACE --— You little eyes “I really believe you would,” said "I certainly would,” she retorted I can't stop to talk to you, Wren | Peter Rabbit, because I'm too busy. Mr, Wren, you ought to know that | Jenny | time, angry and reckless Wren's | mouth and dropped it on the ground, |while Mr. Wren meekly went to hunt | Jenny joined him, and jas Peter watched them he under stood why Jenny ix so often spoken | Next story: Jenny Wren Talks | orks. | But Sidn Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.’ ” | A BAYER Insist you want only the package with the “Bayer on the package and on the tablets. Bayer | even April found the r Cross” with ice. But N) “TOM, Yow ALWAYS Like. TO DOESSED AS Nice AS OTHER Women WEDLOCKED— An Evening At Home HOVE ANOTHER SPEED CAR PASS OTTO AUTO. MAYBE THAT LL HUMILIATE. HWA INTO ewe Ci AB a a (Continued from Saturday.) Sidney was thoroly angry by this She had come thru so much that every nerve an crying in passionate protest. “If it will make you understand things any petter’’ she cried, “I am going back for both reasons!’ She was sorry the next cnoment But her words seemed, surprisingly enough, to steady him. Fog the first time, he sat down. “Then, as far as I am concerned. it's all over, is it?" “Fea, Joe. I told you that tong appointed | ago.” and | representative of the Bank of For me,” she said to Mr. Wren|mosa in London, arrived in Seattle e henaiy| Saturday on his way to England, |i, nocent had ranged far ahead singing and began to hunt| The bank of Formona is the leading | tiny little twig, such as Jenny | bank on the island of Formosa with) janas full with Palmer, don't you? neland (| weil, if you take Max Wilson, you're He reemed hardly to be latening. Suddenly “You think Christine has her going to have more trouble than ‘Theoretical "paenaglore | are some. | Christine ever dreamed of. I can tell | You some things about him now that you think twice! y had reached her limit and flung open the | will make She went ov | door “Every word that you say shows me how right | am in not marrying you, Joel’ she said, Teal men do not sa those things about each lother under any circumstances. You're behaving like a bad boy. I don’t want you to come back until you have grown up!" | He was very white, but he picked up his hat and went to the door | “1 guess I am crazy,” he said |“I've been wanting to go away, but | mother raises such a tuss—I'll not }annoy you any more!" | He reached in his pocket and, pull jing out @ small box, held it toward her. The lid was punched full of holes | “Reginald,” he sald, solemnly. | “I've had him all winter, Some boys caught him in the park, and I brought him home.” | He left her standing there speech. | }less with surprise, with the box in her hand, and ran down the stairs |and out into the Street. At the foot | of the steps he collided with Dr. Bd. Back to see Sidney?” sald Dr, Kd, genially. “That's fine, Joe. I'm glag | you've made it up.” The boy went blindly down the CHAPTER XX relaxed {ts cluteh slowly March was bitterly cold Winter that year and the hedgerows clu mid-day there was | spring in the In the courtyard of the hospital, convalescents sat on the benches and watched for robins ‘The fountain, which had frozen out, was being repaired. Here and there frozen Get Bayer package! Jon ward window sills tulips opened | their gaudy petals to the sun Harriet had gone abroad for a fly ing trip in March, and came back | laden with new ideas, model gowns. and fresh enthusiasm, She carried |out and planted flowers on her sis |ter’s grave, and went back to her |work with a feeling of duty done. A combination of crocuses and snow on the ground had given her an in | spiration for a gown. She drew it in ck in the street car. Grace Irving, having made good |during the white sales, had been | |went to the spring cottons. She be-| gan to walk with her head higher she sold Sidney matertal a simple white gown, she was very happy Once a customer brought her a bunch of primroses, All day she kept them under the counter in a glass of water, and at thought of was trying to get @ little co PAGE 11 —By A LLMAN i Jusr Kwewl Nou’D SAY ThaT- “The CUT STreL BucKeLS come EXTRA 30 | BOUGHT A PAIR. i STAR—MONDAY, MAY 19, 1919. Helen is very tactful with bad news! ous Me. WELL, Tee me | OW, THEY LOOK ALL RIGHT~ | Wow You Live | TWEN Look LIKE suppERs. (OD Luke Them BETTER | NEEDED Some NEw PumPs |————-—__ AND AFTER ShoponiG MTree! FIFTEEN! OR FOUR PLACES, DEQDED ON DOLLARS, These As ABOUT “He BeEsy 1 | You oMtY Boverr|| | , IP THEY HAD Some RSET ark: toa COVLO Do - "THEY weRe one PAIR | BUCKLES ON “Them - wer zn ord! FIFTEEH DOLLARS ~ ‘4 _ . " YY a Wei, Let's Have Waar diD You 1) suppose you| fi Twe aor Jeu yorxoo lf — < ia T OH YES Sant LY EVERY NICKEL | ME THAT You WELL OION'T | Bur | HAD IT OF (7 LEFT | [wen SHOPPIN ® —_ { { CHARGED _— MONEY | GAVE You SATTDay | AT. WAS HE ‘TRYIN’ pe SPEED? (happiness out of life. And,"—he e pi | | If you value your watch, let stroked her arm—"as far as t am Heir to Big Farm |Hold Funeral for | Haynes repair it. Near Liberty tie concerned, it's been worth while. tre.—Adverti: te sonar, tee, been wert wm’ Sought by Lawyer| Victim of Smashup| “4° If a young man by the name of 40, I've always looked forward to Funeral services for Howard Car oming back here to you in the eve Puckett, son of Samuel D. Puckett, | roll, 18-year-old victim of the street Maybe I don’t say enough, but /@ rancher of Malheur county, Ore-| car collision between a Capitol Hill 1 guess you know I feel ft all rieht.” gon, who died recently, shows up and | car and a one-man street car on Pine Without looking up, she placed her proves hix identity he will inherit a ®t last Tuesday, were held Sunday hand over his lranch of 820 acres, valued at $3,000. afternoon at the First Presbyterian ntin jued Tuesday) arch {x being made for young |church, Rey, Mark A. Matthews off —<=—-wwnwwvwenmenen | Puckett by Attorney Robert D. Lyle | clating. of Vale, Ore. A number of Broadway high school | Optometrist and Mfg. Byes Examined andG Prices madi ler Bik. 237 Epi 813 Second Ave. Phone Main 2551 q | Puckett was sent to a friend in| students and many friends of tha! \Weatern Washington or Oregon Carroll family attended the services. | some time ago, but no record of the Interment took place at Washelli Jovening she took them to Johnny Re senfeld, stl lying prone in the how 6" . aes |friend’s name or address can be| Cemetery. m Sidney, on K., and on i nico npc found. | _— tine the winter had left ite mark | MENTHOL COUGH DROPS gf Paes pf Eo ope gen « the foreign | heavily. Christine, readjusting her! rade bureau of the department of life to new conditions, was graver, MI QUICK RELIEF | . tiation ‘way 0 the lansrset| commerce, was eqhedulek' te almaess | more thoughtful, She was alone kind of fh ry, but more men ac the Kiwanis club in the Masonic most of the time now. Under K.’s quire ) by doing as they club rooms, Arcade building Monday ‘others do not do ‘ noon. guidance she had given up the "Duchess and was reading real books. She was thinking real thoughts, too, for the first time in her life Sidney, an tender as ever, had lost a little of the radiance from her eyes; her voice had deepened. Where the had been a pretty girl, she was now lovely, She was back In the hoepital again, this time in the chil dren's ward. K., going in one day | to take Johnny Rosenfeld a basket ef fruit, saw her there with a child n her arma, and a light in her eyes that he had never seen before. It hurt him, rather—things being as they were with him. When he came out he looked straight ahead With the opening of spring, the little house at Hillfoot took on fresh activities. Tillie was house cleaning with great thoroness, She scrubbed carpets, took down the clean cur. tains, and put them up again} freshly starched. It was as if she | found in sheer activity and fatigue a| remedy for her uneasiness, | Business had not been very good. The impeccable character of the lt-| tle house had been against it. True, Mr. Schwitter had a little bar and served the best liquors he could buy; but he discouraged rowdiness—had heen known to refuse to sell to boys and to men who had al-| ready over-indulged, The word went} about that Schwitter’s was no place for a good time. Even Tillie’s chicken und waffles failed against this han-| dleap. By the middle of April the house | cleaning was done, One or two mo |tor parties had come out, dined se. dately and wined moderately, and had gone back to the city again, The next two weeks saw the weather ‘The roads dried up, robins the trees with their noisy and still business con E were so busy on Sunday showing visitors the manifold beauties, of Carleton Park (and—incidentally—selling them choice lots) that we were unable to give every one that full measure of time and atten- tion that was their due and our desire. If you were one of those we were forced to neglect, may we ask that you give us the opportunity to make good the omission? If you will phone this office, stating time most convenient to you we will’ be glad to make a special trip with you to show you this most beautiful residence section of Seattle. under 21 ae ee te clear filled spring songs, tinued doll By the first day of May uneasiness had become certainty that morning Mr. Schwitter coming in from the early milking, found her sitting in the kitchen, her face bur- jed in her apron, He put down the milk pails a going over to her, To Get to Carleton Park—By Auto: Follow Kinnear Park line to West Howe street, turn to the left one block to Gilman avenue and thence over the West Wheeler street bridge to Magnolia boulevard to and through Carleton Park. By) Street Car: Take Fort Lawton or Salmon Bay cars on Western avenue and get off at 15th avenue and West Wheeler street, where autos will meet all cars. This is only a temporary arrangement pending the improvement in transportation facilities soon to be announced. Tillie’s On a hand on her head. 1 guess there's no mistake, | . “There's no mistake,” said poor | Respectfully, Tillie into her apron. He bent down and kissed the back | of her neck. Then, when she failed to brighten, he tiptoed atound the kitchen, poured the milk into pans, | and rinsed the buckets, working me: | thodically in his heavy way. The tea | | kettle had boiled dry. He filled that, too, Then: | “Do you want tdfiee a doctor?” | “V'd better see somebody,” she said, without looking up, “And—| don't think I'm blaming you. I guess I don’t really blame anybody. As far ax that goes, I've wanted a |child right along, It isn’t the trou | |ble [am thinking of, either.” | He nodded, Words were unneces: sary between them, He made some | tea clumsily and browned her @! plece of toast, When he had put them on one end of the kitchen table | |he went over to her again. “1 guess I'd ought to have thought of thle before, but all I JONES & PHINNEY, INC. SALES AGENTS FOR “ “An Addition With Protection”