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

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AVTHOR OF “NORTH OF FIFTY-THREE le low r “As a matter of Much to be said, much that was need-| Were candid enough about your att! ful to say. They could not go on| tude. But I told myself like a con With a cloud like that over them, a|©eited fool, that I could make your cloud that had to be dissipated in the | life so full that in a little while I'd crucible of words, Yet she could not | be the only possible figure on your Desin. Fyfe, after a prolonged si- | horizon. I've failed, I've known for Jence, seerned to grasp her difficulty, |S0Me time that I was going to fall Abruptly he began to speak, cutting | YQu're not the thin-blooded type of |I daresay that he has sworn his af | fection by all that’s good and gr | But if you were convinced that he |didn’t really scare, that his flowery protestations*had a double end in view, would you still love him?” Straight to the heart of his subject,|¥Oman that is satisfied with pleas- I don’t know,” she murmured after his fashion, Jant surroundings and any sort of|“But that's beside the point. 1 do “It's a pity things had to take his|™n. You're bound to run the|loye him, I know it’s unwise. It's a Particular turn,” said he. “But now | S@mut of all the emotions, sometime | feéling that has overwhelmed me in that you're face to face with some-|*4 somewhere, I lovgd you, and I/a way that I didn’t believe possible thing definite, what do you propose | thought, in my conceit, I could make | that I had hoped to avold, But do about it?” Pmyself the man, the one man, who|but I can’t pretend, Jack. I don't would mean everything to you want you to misunderstand, I don't “s “Nothing,” she answered slowly. T can’t help the feeling. It's there. I _cgn thrust ft into the back- want this to make us both miserable. I don’t want it to generate an atmos: “Just the same,"" he continued, you've been a fool, and TI don't see y : jealousy. round, go on as if it didn’t exist.| how you can avoid paying the pen phere of suspicion and fea’ ry ‘There's nothing else for me to do,|alty for folly.” Well only be fighting | about «8 that I can ok.” a ~ shadow. I never cheated at anything hag beet pothPaggae What do you mean?” she asked-|i1 my life. You can trust me still, “So am I,” he said grimly. “Still, it was a chance we took-—or I took, father. I seem to have made a mis- take or two, in my estimate of both “You haven't tried to. play the game," he answered tensely. “For months you've been withdrawing in |to your shell, You've been clanking you and myself. That is human| your chains and half-heartedly wish: enough, I suppose. You're making ajing for some mysterious power to Digger mistake than I did, tho, to/strike them off. It wasn't a thing Tet Monohan sweep you off your} you undertook lightly, It isn't a feet.’ thing—marriage, I mean—that you jhold lightly. That being the case,| you would have been wise to try j|making the best of it, instead of “He hasn't swept me off my feet, | making the worst of it. But you let “&& you put it,” she cried. “Good| yourself drift into a state of mind Heavens, do you think I'm that spine where you—well, you see the result. Jess sort of creature? I've never I saw it coming. I didn’t need to ieee 4 You Can’t Decide | Too Quickly .” Fyfe answered with- out hesitation. “Then that's all there is to it,” she lreplied, “unless—unless you're ready lto give me up as a hopeless case, Jalong the best T can.” He shook his head. “I haven't even considered that,” |he said. “Very likely it's unwise of me to say this—it will probably an. tagonize you—but I know Monohan | better than you do, I’d go pretty far }to keep you two apart—now—for | your sake.” “It would be the same if it were any other man,” she muttered. can understand that feeling in you. It's so—-s0 typically masculine.” “No, you're wrong there, wrong,” Fyfe frowned. ‘There was something that she read for contempt in his tone. It stung Still, knowing that you'll only live with me on sufferance, if you were honestly in love with a man that I felt was halfway decent, I'd put my feelings in my pocket and let you go. If you cared enough for him to break every tie, to face the embarrassment of divorce, why, I'd figure you were i entitled to your freedom and what u our ever happiness it might bring. But Monohan—hell, I don't want to talk ee eee about him. I trust you, Stella, I'm banking on your own good sense. And along with that good, natural common sense, you've got so many illusions. About life in general, and about men. They seem to have cen- tered about this one particular man. We Will Gladly|1 can’t open your eyes or sgh Be 3 he right track, That's a job for Sound Teeth ‘Are the rf bend yourself Ail T’can. do ta ¥0 eit back Outward Sign of Personal Se a Te ici “Do. y1 imuch as all that, Efficiency, Good Health eT Te if wha know?" Bear Contentavent rate tale ees dhrmeoeh : ‘ . “you've been the biggest thing in my : \ "t change ; 1 don't you must know by this time that ff patients From|want to change. But I'm getting “Snphamepeteate Py ce wet Se Out of Town | hopeless.” cedure Gini ce more so in the future. ose fi whose Time Is| | +) aan d with sound teeth, which means ff timitea, Given| ort Om” {0 tell You how sorry 1 better health, will take the place Special of those who are constantly away Attention. from their duties with toothache, y and all the kindred ailments tha poor teeth create, Come in tomor- ’ row and have the work of correc- tion commenced—do this much for iJ yourself when you know you Phone should have it done. Make the start Main 2555 and you will soon be fully equipped vit — vd Bang Phone for an Nothing Lite Fain Bitte: Phagphate jo Increase Strength, gor and Nerve Force When one stops to consider the host of thin people who are search- ing continually for some method b which they may increase their fles! to normal proportions by the filling out of ugly hollows, the rounding off of protruding angles with the atten- dant bloom of health and attractive- ness, it {s no wonder that many and varied suggestions along this line appear from time to time in public print. ectro Painless Dentists “Laboring People’s Dentists” J. BR. VAN AUKEN, Mgr. cated for years at 8. E. Corner First and Pike. While excessive thinness mi attributed to various and causes in different individual a well known fact that theglack of fficient phosphorous in the human system is very largely responsible for this condition. Experiments on humans and animals by many sci- lentists have demonstrated beyond | question of doubt that a body defi- cient in phosphorus becomes ner- yous, sickly, and thin. A noted au- thor’ and professor in his boo “Chemistry and Food Nutrition, published in 1918, says: "“* * |that the amount of phosphorous re- lquired for the normal nutrition of |man is seriously under-estimated in | many of our standard text books:" | It seems to be well established |that this deficiency in phosphorus may now be met by the use of an organic phosphate known thruout English speaking countries as Bitro- Phosphate. Thru the assimilation of this phosphate by the nerve tissue the phosphoric content when ab- |sorbed in the amount normally re- Jauired by Nature soon produces a welcome change tn our body and Nerve tension disappears, vigor and strength replace weak- ness and lack of energy, and the whole body soon loses its umly | hollows and abrupt angles, becoming: enveloped in a glow of perfect |health and beauty and the will and strength to be up and doing. JTION—While Bitro-Phosphate ed for the relief of ner- oe Cx CIN mind. | BY ly Lt = (auras = c jis unsurpa: | vousness, general debility, etc., those taking it who do not desire to put Jon flesh should use extra avoiding fat-producing f care in Rent an Individual Safe jn our newly constructed Safe Deposit Vault and be certain of Positive Safety for your Papers and other: valuables, There's a size for the requirements of each particular individual and the cost is but $4 PER YEAR and upwards—according to size. eS aes MEDICINE of merit, jae * Located as it is on the ground floor in the ‘A tonic alterative and center of the Up-town District, easy access is added | Soretie. , Peenared potee © to Absolute Security. Step in the next time you are : by the ment of Cheme % passing and inspect for yourself this splendid example Oiice Washlagton, DG but of scientific strengihi, Hours: 9.00 A, M. to 5:00 P.M, BRIACEA DRUG COMPAN! ee ‘ —— City, Missoart, a\ i Fe Puget Sound Savings Blumaver-Frank Drug Co. Be and Loan Association 4% Sete Dietributore ats WHERE ‘PIKE STREET CROSSES THIRD regen, Washington and Wiehe f 4 ~ ‘Avamen H a : Ask Your Druggist ! Boia rr ne re nMssAsMAAMASAsAMASSAAMASAAAMAAIABAL PTE OEP 5: tehes |fact, you love what you think he is. | jand let me go away and blunder} BY BERTRAND WW. SINCLAIR (Continued From Yesterday) | forgotten I'm your wife, I've got ajhappen in this afternoon to know/am. [ didn’t love you to begin » [little self-respect left yet, if I was|that there were undercurrents of | with—" aye gic Apel Akard bee enough to grasp at the straw | feeling swirling about, And so the| “And you've always resented that," side him, With one hand pushing |X" threw moe in tho beginning I] way you feel now is in itself a pen-|he broke in, “You've hugged that Pack mechanically the straight, red.| 2S honest with you then, I'm try-]alty. 1f you let Monoban cut any} ghost of a loveless marriage to your @ish-tinged hair from his brow, he [198 to be honest with you ndw" |more figure in your thoughts, you'll| bosom and sighed for the real ro- looked up at her and said briefly, in| “I know, Stella,” he said gently.| Py bigger in the end.” mance you'd missed, Well, maybe & tone barren of all emotion |“I'm not throwing mud, It's a dam-| “I can't help my thoughts, or. 1) you did, But you haven't found it “Wen? nably unfortunate state of affairs,|should say, my feelings,” she said|yet. I'm very sure of that, altho She was suddenly dumb. Words| that’s all, I foresaw something of | wearily. I doubt if I could convir failed her utterly. Yet there was | the sort when we were married, You; “You think you love him,” Fyfe Let me finish,” she p u | | | | dead face nestled against her breast, “I'm not ajlay there fighting against that in-| |Tackled Him; self-sacrificing brute by any means. | terminable, knew I didn't love you that worn out and desperate, and clutch: | T was ing at the life line you threw. In spite of that-—well, if [ fight down| this love, or fascination, or infatua- | tion, or whatever it is—I'm not sure myself, except that it affects me| strongly—can't we be friends again? “Friends! Oh, hell!” Fyfe explod- | ed. | He came up out of his chair with a blaze in his eyes that startled her, caught her by the ‘arm, and thrust hi out the door. “Friends? You and 12” He sank | his voice to a harsh whisper. “My God—friends! Go to bed. Good night.” He pushed her into the hall, and the lock clicked between them. For one confused instant Stella ste poised, uncertain, ‘Then she went in to her bedroom and sat down, her keenest sensation one of sheer relief. Already in those brief hours emotion To be had well-nigh exhausted her alone, to lie still and rest, to thought—that was all she desired. She lay on her bed inert all but her mind, and that tra section by section in swift, tive progress all the amazing turns of her life since she first came to Roaring Lake. There was neither method nor inquiry in this back-cast | ing—merely a ceaseless, involuntary activity of the brain. | A little after midnight, when all! the house was hushed, she went into | the adjoining room, cuddled Jack Junior into her arms, and took him to her own bed. maddening buzzing in brain. She prayed for sleep, her yus fingers stroking the silky ner baby hair, CHAPTER TI. In. Which There Is a Further Clash | One can only suffer #0 much.| Poignant feeling brings its own an aesthetic. When 1a Fyfe fell a troubled sleep that night, the storm of her emotions had beaten hy re- | ly. Morning brought its physical re action, She could see things clearly | and calmly enough to perceive that her love for Monohan fraught With factors that must be taken into accoumt. All the world loves a lover, but her world did not love lovers who | kicked over the conventional traces. She had made a niche for herself. ‘There were tles she could not break lightly, and she was not thinking of herseif alone when she considered that, but of her husband and Jack Junior, of Linda Abbey and Charlie Renton, of each and every individual whose life touched more or less di rectly upon her own, She had always known what a woman should do in such case, what she had been taught a woman should do: grin, as Monohan had said, and take her medicine. For her there was no alternative. Fyfe had made that clear. But her heart cried out in rebellion against the necessity. To her, trying to think logically, the was $|self irritated §| past the camp, crossed the most grievous phase of the doing was the fact that nothing could ever be the same again, She could go on, Oh, yes. She could dam up the well- spring of her impulses, walk stead- fast along the accustoned ways. But those ways would not be the old ones, There would always be the skeleton at the feast. She would know it was there, and Jack Fyfe would know, and she dreaded the fruits of that knowledge, the bitterness and smothered resentment it would breed. But it had to be, As she saw it, there was no choice. She came down to breakfast calm ly enough. It was nothing that could be altered by heroics, by tears and wallings. Not that she was much given to either. She had not whined when her brother made things so hard for her that any refuge seemed alluring by compari- she did not neither did son, Curiously enough, blame her brother no she blame Jack Fyfe. She told herself that in first seek ing the line of least resistance she had manifested weakni that since her present problem indirectly wi the outgrowth of that original weak ness, she would be weak no more. So she tried to meet her husband as if nothing had happened, in which she succeeded outwardly very well indeed, since Fyfe himself chose to ignore any change in their mutual attitude. She busied herself about the house that forenoon, seeking deliberately a multitude of little tasks to occupy her hands and her mind. But when lunch was over at the end of her resources. J Junior settled in his crib for a nap. Fyfe went away to that area back of the camp where arose the crash of falling trees and the labored puffing of donkey engines. She could hear faint and far the voices of the falling gs that cried: ‘“Tim-ber-r-r-r. She could on the bank, a little beyond the bunkhouse and cook shack, the bly roader spooling up the cable that brought string after string of logs down to the lake, Rain or sun, happiness or sorrow, the work | she was k went on. She found it in her heart OTST co Camas forma bindion to envy the sturdy loggers. They contract of satisfaction could forget their troubles in the}? back, proof positive of strain of action. Keyed as she was |, of that to that high pitch, that sense of their unremitting activity, the ravaging of | nesia will instantly the forest which produced the re-|f rg np ge gd sources for which she had sold hi ‘4d thereby tine h She wis very — bitter when she thought that She longed for some secluded place to sit and think, or try to stop think ing. And, without fully realizing the direction she took, she walked down skid-road, stepping lightly over main line and haulback at the donkey engineer's warning, and went along the lake shore. A path wound thru the belt of brush and hardwood that fringed the lake, Not until she had followed this up on the neck gf a little promon tory south of the bay, did she remem ber with a shock that she was ap- proaching the place where Monohan had begged her to meet him. She looked at her watch, ‘Two-thirty.] THE SEATTLE STAR—WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1919. | Major Carroll Changes Res- | is adopted by the city council next Monday. The resolution was reported favorably by the dieiary mittee Tuesday. The original de era resolution, as introduced by alman John 5, Carroll, was prepared by repre sentatives of various Irish organt-| tions, according to Carroll, and was |introduced by him their request As drawn the original resolution} Pecognized the Irish republic as a eparate nation and invited de Valera to speak as its president “Inasmuch as the government of| the United States does not secog nize the Irish republic,” Carroll told the judiciary committee yesterdgy, “it would be highly Improper for | any legislative body under the gov ernment to do 80.” ¥| fied copy of this resolution.” \ | | She sought the shore line for sight WOULD INVITE | IRISH LEADER olution; May Be Adopted camonn Valera, “presi t” of the “irish Republic,” be Invited to address the citizens of Seattle as a citizen of Ireland but not in his eapac | ity head of the socalled re public, if a proposed resolution de Whereupon Carroll asked permis sion to introduce the following res olution, against which Couneilm A. F. Haas recorded the only vote of object “Whereas, Eamonn de Valera is now visiting the Onited States and deli « in numerous cities ad-/ dresses on conditions in Ireland; and| “Whereas, It is deemed that his message would be of Interest to res idents of the city of § » be it solved, By the city council of! ttle; there the city of Seattle, that an invita: tion be and hereby is extended to the sald Eamonn de Valera to visit] the city of Seattle and to deliver an| address upon the condition of af-| fairs in Ireland; and be it further | ‘Resolved, 'T the city comp tre be ler and he ts hereby author. 1 and requested to forward to the| Running From Wife ry G. Nicholas, gunner’a mate, | attached to the local navy recruiting | office, thought he was a purse| snatcher when he came galloping down the aynue. So he “tackled ‘im low,” and brought down his “bird Sut the tackled one was only Gilbert C. Hawkins, age , and the woman following him at top speed was his | | | wife. Gilbert was trying to from marital tangles, Exp Then Gilbert and his wife, re-united, | went home of a boat, wondering if he would] come in spite of her refusal. But to her-gregt relief she saw no sign of him. Probably he had thought better of it; had seen now as she had seen then, that no good and an earnest e of evil might come of such a clandestine meeting; had taken her stand as final. She was glad, because she did not want to go back to the house. She did not want to make the effort of wandering away in the other direc- tion to find that restful peace of woods and water. She moved up a Uttle on the point until she found a mosey boulder and sat down on that, resting her chin in her palms, looking out over the placid surface of the lake with somber eyes, And so Monohan surprised her. The knoll lay thick-carpeted with moss. He was within a few steps of her when a twig cracking under- foot apprised her of some one’s ap- proach, She rose, with an Impulse to fly, to escape a meeting she had not desired. And as she rose, the breath stopped in her throat. Twenty feet behind Monohan came Jack Fyfe with his hunter's stride, soundlessly over the moss, a rifle drooping in the crook of his arm. A sunbeam striking obliquely between two firs showed her his face plainly, the faint curl of his upper lip. Something in her look arrested Monohan. He glanced around, twist ed about, froze in his tracks, his back to her. Fyfe came up. Of the three he was the coolest, the most rigorously self-possersed. He glanced from Monohan to his wife, back to Monohan, After that his blue eyes never left the other man’s face. (Continued in Tomorrow's Star) 1946, by Little, Brown & Co All"rights reserved. Bi-nesia Stops Stomach Trouble Or Money Back INSTANT RE Copyright KF GUARANTEED YOU CAN’T AFFORD TO PUT OFF BUYING YOUR COAL SUPPLY —\ f CC Z >A iy) ¢ igs a When Uncle Sam tells you that coal produc- tion is DANGEROUSLY BELOW the SAFETY, line it’s time to sit up and take notice. It’s time to GET IN YOUR COAL—FILL UP. YOUR BINS and BE PREPARED. The plain facts are that coal is not being mined fast enough to meet the needs of next winter. Thousands of miners are leaving America— returning to Europe. Immigration restrictions have stopped the influx of miners. The United States Geological Survey, whose business it is to keep track of the coal situation, has issued an early warning. If you study the situation, and understand the danger of a shortage, you'll order your winter coal supply before it’s too late. It’s up to the man who has neglected to get in his coal to heed the advice of the United States government—for the Pies of community welfare—health, convenience and com- ort. : Below appears the coal production chart of the United States Geological Survey. It shews you the coal situation. Study these lines: Estimated average total production of bituminous coal per working day, om TL TI | RSE FT NE rRAUTGLUTTIPA Teer TUTTE THEE 1\ 5 ( CTT SEPEENA ATT pe Below The Safety Lire, SHORTAGE and FAMINE | | | | 1, +4 11.1825 1 8 1522.1 8 15 22.295 121926 3 1017 24 91 7 142128 $1219.26 2 9 1623 90 613 20 27 4 11 1825 1 8 152228 ow Jen, Ped, Ma. pn May June July Au Sop Oct, Mon, = Bo ° The black line running straight across the above chart indicates the average daily coal production necessary to meet the country’s essen- tial coal requirements this year. It is the SAFETY line. When pro- duction is BELOW the safety line it means that coal is not being mined fast enough to supply YOUR needs. AND RIGHT NOW PRODUCTION IS BELOW THE DANGER LINE because miners are leaving America ~ by thousands and no foreign-born miners are being permitted to come to this country. : : Isn’t it just plain, common sense to help out by filling your coal bins now? Then Uncle Sam won’t have to worry about you. Neither will the fuel dealer, who is going to be up against a tough problem when everybody wants coal at the same time, and the supply is short of the demand. Relief rests with YOU. Conditions urge you to ACT. ; Heed the advice of Uncle Sam—save your- self and your neighbors from the dangers of a coal famine. GET YOUR COAL IN NOW BEFORE IT’S T00 LATE ‘ Ne ded eq” al Neer TT | 12 Recently a writer on the treatment troubles, who has ctically all stomach acidity, decided y to the test. Every sufferer from stomach trouble was told to take a teaspoonful of pur Bi-nesia or two or three of the fi lets in a little water imme. claimed t trouble i to put hia r HARTFORD, Barth Hoffman made drink of ammonia, peppermint, lini- ment, sugar and some odds and ends. He’ ing at his wife and threatening a cop. LOBSTERS BY AIR PARIS, July A regular air transport .service established be- tween this city and Brussels recent- ly delivered at the Belgian city a 440-pound load of live lobsters. SOME DRINK! ionn.,, July 23.— an anti-dry Let's go eat at Boldt's—up' 1414 3rd Ave.; downtown, 913 2nd Ay —____—_______ 's in jail now, charged with shoot i It. The vindicated his theory relief was indicated {n nearly ev one of the first hundred reports re ved, showing -conclusively that the trouble had been due to stomach acid, which, as is well known, js in- stantly neutralized Bi-he sia. Sin making this test, the well known manufacturing chemists who have specialized in preparing pure xclusively ni package r y of genuine Li-nesia either of fer ple How Much MoreTobacco A Vital: Question for Every Man Who The heart of ey bears a double burden, allotted task heart wins he lives; he dies, but before the final victory | directed, stages of decline and decay and suf- | man beings—some are others, stand more tobacco tha there is a limit to what ai can stand, additional chan ond that he may not lose them. indulging in @ costly habit at the ex- doctor anywhere you that using tobacco is injurious and that it is far better to quit the | to throw off the tobacco habit, and that | habit than to¢ much tobacco your heart will stand without seri Byt the thought of quitting is un- Will My Heart Stand? If your gums are sloughing and bleeding, you havel| Pyorrhea, so-called Riggs’ Diss) ease, which is a menace to health, We are the only Deni in the Northwest who specialize’ in this dreaded Bisease, Hxami nation and estimate free. cial, care taken .of children’s teeth. Reasonable discount to Union men and their families. Smokes or Chews to Answer who know that tobacco injures them nd to really quit takes more will power than they have and causes) more suffering than they can volun ton|tarily endure. To quit the habit, ee ad Sa ces make it easy for yourself by getting When it loses | Nicotol tablets and taking them as The habit reauy quits you many | and its departure ia a pleasure equal to its indulge If you want to know how much jeasier it is to quit the habit with Nicotol than without it, go 24 hours others, but| Without tobacco and note what an| y heart | effort it costs you, then begin using | The tan who puts this|it as usual and take Nicotol tablets. | strain on his heart agAt the end of a week discontinue Hommes a day by smoking cig-| smoking or chewing for a day and it| apipe or cigats—or chewing |!* probable you will have no desire | ceo—is taking a madman’s | to resume, May Cont a Life to Find Out by Experiment ] ry user of tobageo does its for suprema pass thru nicotine you Hearts are like hu- ronger than therefore some hearts will many pangs. All work guaranteed 15 years, United Painless Dentists INC. Z 608 Third Ave. Cor. James St. Phone Elliott 3633 Hours; 8:30 a, m, to 6 p. m, Sundays, 9 to 12. At least your desire will | with health and life to lose|be greatly dimimiahed, and another | Sothing to win but the chance | Week or two should make it not ‘ed He is possible, but a pleasure, to quit. Manufacturers’ Note—Nicotol is sold itive guarantee that it is that it containg no habit that {t will help any man | health and Ask any will tell | under the p not injurious: forming drugs he periment to find how | any drugglst will refund the entire pur- | chase price if it fail, It is dispensed in Seattle under this guarantee by the | Bartell Drug Company and G. O. Guy and! ant to most men—even Lo those ‘other good druggists, result

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