The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 16, 1919, Page 10

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| time, In other words ~ PAGE 10 FIRST AID WILL BE TAUGHT HERE NEW FEED LAW More Americans Killed by Accident Than by War The Red Crosse First Aid to be held unde , of the Seattlo chapter, are now ready for enrottment 1 Cr ' quarters r Linna Fleming bh as enrollment cler pared to register of taking the cour Dr. H. LL. Mox tures, and on accot usual opportur first aid, it is will not only be the classes, but well, The cost to be the enrollment fe goat of book about Dalance of 75 cents for Will be absorbed by its fair share, Rained by cach first will be of great value munity at large This Detter understood when it that in the United States t three times as many from accident as w armies in Europe « mt of t ities he xpe com re killed the uring about 50,000 killed in war, we from accident 150,000. But besides j this vast number, of which m Than 70 per cent were eas re { Ventable, there were injured and Crippled in industry and otherwise Rearly 600,000 more. These figures have tmpressed th ed Croag with the mriousness situtaion ar fe one of the reasons why Frar Waterhouse, chairman of the S tle chapter, believes the chapt #hould share in the financial respor sibility AN desirous of taking the oa Should register at once. The first Glmas will be held at the I Cross peetquariers Monday “Weary” Wilkins il Tour State W. A. “Weary” Wilkins will open This fal! campaign for the sale of ‘thrift stamps in Chehalis Sunday Might, when he will address a mass Meeting arranged by the vartous September 1 churches. He will tour the state in the interests of the thrift stamp cam- | paign. and will return to Seattle late fm October to continue the campaign | here. Selection— “Madame Butterfly” .. “Love's Joy” SEATTLES B GUTERSON’S ORCHESTRA CONCERT NUMBERS a MILLERS BLOCK Restraining Order Is ed by Judge Gilliam Grant- THE TAHAN’S DA Tells About Indian At rary restraining order pre . the attorney general, the pr ing attorney and the state aes AbsO 4h agricultural amt ser from en y’ foroing the ns of the com + 1 food stuff act, which Mmits the an of fiber In cattle food t DY « was granted by Judge Mitchell Gilliam Friday Th The case may be appealed. Alice Would Cut Tow Line and Be Free From Rover o M Winans doesn't bel ory roamed the Sp the days when carried notched ready to unlucky villain ¢ d sideways main ati h spilt says she met a rover on Kansas some The rove ever since. she wants a divor Daniel C. was and was but was alwi inua and that o own. ture Seattle Fleet i. ‘ Augmented Again States ard state that the steam Advices from the United hipping t Orant has been assigned to k run, making 1 vessel on the new steams: DOUGHBOY EATS EVEN DOZEN BIG FLAPJACKS| 18.—a] KIRKSVILLE, Mo. Aug ee and migrating pan: | | gay rke the hat the ahe roe fa never aye Girls’ Clothes were EADY nen SEATTLE STAR—-SATURDAY, AUGUST 16, 1919. (Dorothy, aged 26, i Beach, having staked her job a of winning a ttable | are her letters home » Joan, Lively B again, Tuesda My darling Joan Well, L guens it's ver the shouting, The gods of Olympus, who amuse them with the antics of mere humar and women are doing the ut ling © © * | You nee by the date line that I'm back at the beact 1 motored here with Jim But not until something happened that turned m heart to lead, It was this wa | I went down to the litte camp| where Captain Wallis wrote his novel and where I, a# the humble but necessary stenographer, made ft possible for him to do it in time | 1 wanted to gather up ome papers | And small belongings 1 had left} | there. Besides, it was quiet, and 1 | wanted to be alone and think, 1 knew he would not be back from town till late. And what Jim Fons waid about Eric not caring “except as the novelist for his indispensable the | hip secretary” was tormenting me be yond words Not that I have permitted my self to dwell upon serious ponsibt) | ities. But, Joan, there is a time in the course of friendship between man and woman when, given the vital re xponse, the emotion can become love. | Love begets love. One loves, as! fone answers a call, all else being right. And in my deepmost soul | I suppose there had been a feeling that he cared. Yet I never was sure I could never tell whether his tender manner was for me alone or his way toward all women he liked | and respected. There were moments returned doughboy stepped into a lo BY PRINCESS NACOOMEE | terial, She helped her mother tan|Joan—Oh, well, what ts the use of | cal restaurant here and said Of the Kiowa Indian Tribe the skins of the deer so that they| my writing it all now! Fix me up 12 wheat cakes Inrap| 1 want to tell you girls some-| Were soft as cloth, One dress would} Suffice it to may that with my 1d succession and a cup of coffee.” | thing about the beautiful things | @%t for many years, When @ gir] papers I accidentally gathered up a} “You'll t, sure, {f you get on|the Indian girls were taught to| Stew too big for the dress, a sister| notebook which I thought at firnt | the outside of a dogen flapjacks,” the| make, Every girl learned to make|°° ® friend fell heir to it. Thenj mine. I opened it and my eye fell proprietor replied, but the soldier) ner own clothing he wan never | "¢ made another for herself on the pencilled memorandum | cleaned up his dozen cakes, paid his| troubled about fashions, for these|, BUt she never thought that she} “Types. Girl at F.'s office. Thin, | bill and went on his way never changed, neither did the ma | had to squeeze her body out of|dark, wiry. Foreign perhaps. De-| nl os hupe to make herself look beau-| voured with ambition to get on fi-| tiful. Her clothes were so made|nancialy. Shrewd, selfish. Tem. | that her limbs and body were left/ peramental rather than pretty. Use| | perfectly free for her outofdoor|in story for Walkei Magazine. | work. No doubt that is one of| "The Purple Flame.’ Get convers the reasons the girls and women/|tion next time at F's were #0 healthy. My own buck “Mrs. Warnock Good type of! skin drees is an exact pattern of| salamander. Heartless. Hongry for my aunt's. Jamunement and conquest. Intrigue. While they never changed the| Insert the talk with her in conserva shape of the dress, they always|tory at La’s ball, Intellectual and] made it look aa beautiful as pos | social sponge. Cares for nothing but sible. The girl had but few tools | affairs de coeur, Episode with L. to work with. A amall pointed| 4s basis of story bone for a needle, sinew from the! Mies Vatick. The unusnal, genu leg of a deer or buffalo for thread,|ine girl. Intelligence and beauty and a knife was that she need.| Charm for some. Honest. Type of ed. With the knife she cut out! itl who knows walue and determines the dress. With the bone needie|to play it up to advantage. Use and the sinew she sewed it, and| conversation on porch and in boat, | worked her bead pattern upon it,|L. HB. hotel. Episodes, ete.” | Jand the patterns always stood for| There were others—"“types” he} |something. For instance, if she|had noted for future use in his | worked a bead crons it was a prayer | novel writing—but I hadn't heart to/ | to Powers of the four ways—|read them. So that ts the whole| of the East, the Weet, the North| ~ eT “a Sat and the South The circle was usually a prayer to the sun, The colors of the beads, too, meant much to her, in fact everything whe did was @ prayer, But that was before | the old ways of the Indian were destroyed by the new ways of th white man. The girl herself, of course, al ways tried to look beautiful. Those of different tribes had their own way of dressing the hair. The girlx jot our own prairie tribe plaited BY THORNTON -—IN— and wins the hero! Puccini «++Kreisler CLE BEST PHOTO PL MAE MARSH The elusive “whim girl” of the screen, plays a boy’s part—part of the time THE BONDAGE OF BARBARA In which she climbs a porch to get into a road- house—Is ‘‘a little wildcat” in a struggle with two men—Beats the villains CHRISTIE COMEDY “A Rustic Romeo” Natural Color Scenic “OLD FAITHFUL” In Yellowstone Park MrER AY HOUSE: | ing. their’a in two braids, one on each side of the bead. They tried, too, to make their | faces look nice, and the way they put the paint on had a deep mean For instead of trying to conceal the paint they wore, they wanted everyone to see it When a girl became old enough to think about getting married, wore a circle of red in the center of her forehead. ‘This was to show that she was an nhe ing.” So, you see, instead of wear ing a ring on her finger after xhe was engaged, she wore it on her forehead before that important event PETER Plays Doctor BY THE STORY LADY unspoken-for bless. | (Copyright, 1919, ETER RABBIT sat in a thicket | | of young trees on the edge of | |the Green Forest. So far as he knew, he was all alone, It was very quiet there, and it wasn't long before he was dozing. Now, Peter is a light sleeper, as all little people who never | know when they may have to run for their lives must be, By and by he awoke with a start, and he was very wide awake, indeed. Something had wakened him, but just what it| was he couldn't say | For a few minutes he heard noth ing and saw nothing. Then, near the other edge of the thicket, he heard | a great rustling of dry leaves. For! just an instant Peter was startled, but only for an instant. His long ears told him at once that that noise was made by some one scratching among the leaves, and he knew that no one who did not wear feathers could scratch like that. sini g the husband her chum.) summer at Lively nd $500 savings on the during the summer chance The e story! Jimmie Rone | Tr was nothing more than casua inter of a writer in a girl wh would sometime do to use in a sto: I am merely a “type I went through my bad qua ter hour, Joan’ And then I got up, shook the kinks and wrinkle “I opened it and my eye fell on the penciled memorandum.” out of myself as beet I could, made a bluff at laughing, collected my be longings and went back to the Inn with a smile on my face—and hell in my heart. Yet truly I cannot reproach Cup. tain Wallis in the slightest way. He in a writer before everything else He is probably not the marrying kind. Not a woman's man. Cer tainly he paid small attention to the females at the “L. hotel.” I got the lion's nhare. Jimmie Ross is rather a dear lad in many ways. I can never feel in different or lacking in gratitude for the way he has helped me thru this trying episode. But I am still tired and “down” tn soul Devotedly, DOROTHY. P. &—A special delivery letter bas just come from Captain Wallis, containing the fat little check for my past week's work, and many other things —words, Joanie, that set me all at nea again. me Peter Saves a Friend W. BURGESS by T. W. Burgess) It was Chewink the Towhee, some times called the Ground Robin. wink, Reddy turned and trotted off trying to look as if he had never SECOND BIG WEEK NOW PLAYING FOR EVERYBODY OVER 16 YOUR LAST CHANCE —— 4 HE HAD NO RIGHT TO LOVE HER LEAVES NOTHING TO THE IMAGINATION THE YOUNG GIRL WHO FORGETS HER MOD. ESTY JUST ONCE IS LIKELY NEVER TO RE MEMBER IT AGAIN. * | ) x and CS PTI It’s Great to Be a Kid Once More It's grpat to be a kid once more, astride of ponies that are true and he This picture is sponsored by the United States Government, Public Health Serv- ice, and they request everybody over 16 in the United States to see it. It’s well worth your while. —_ and Hear Lions Growl and Roar ar the lions grow! and roar,|tried and throw a ball, but never “Peter,” said mamma one morn-| “Now, who can that be?" thought re . a oO 0 entertained such a thought as trying/and see the bears and feed the mon-| fall; it’s ghty ° ing, “Mrs. Rell called just a minute | Peter, and stole forward very softly.|to catch Chewink, hepa cok Ghitdie Uden an TOR mighty hard to watch it ago to say that Uncle Mack got too| Presently he saw the brown leaves trunks of the elephants all in arow| It's great to me the big circu hot yesterday and is sic’ ped | ny oarpeted: the lied ‘ * . mE . | k - ‘8 s circus pond as rod Porn a hor Sh 1 to: | which ye mehy ayer 4 haw Next story: Chewink Is Gratefal.| that keep a-swinging to and fro. | parade and swallow circus lemonade. | : over to her house, | way and that, and ne midst o | It's great to sit and watch the |and set shts or sights taking care of him, and he wants to|them was an exceedingly busy per: | ————— - mit | clowne pectorrn thety fupay. oe rnd fad othe = S apenaion Gai see you |son, just a little smaller than Wel-| | When you think of advertis. | nd ove them iawn sed hear [ail hanse oun: aes enor ths eae found Uncle Mack fldgeting around | dear life. Every now and then hi » : : z ; @ tent displays, OR, oleae in bed. Peter ne himself care-| picked up something, and watch those blokes play | year, its grand you know, to see th fully by the side of the bed - jokes upon some unsuspect- | circus show Wiis ge Nennt aunt caren His head, throat, back and breast g mokes, as fat and thin they am-| After unbosoming of the above thé true story, Unde iM Ng to iS | were black. Beneath he was white in, to make you squeal and smile | circus man intimated the Carl Ha wong cle | Hix sides were reddish brown. His : S fy rent :) ¥ 3! Mack nodde eter be | rin |genbeck and Great Wallace Shows tack nodded, #0 Peter began, | tail was black and white, oh for Horlick’s it's f and. wate Te | atari ; . Wall, this spacelike on ; i t and watch the|Combined would arrive in Seattle was eatin’ breakfast, Ida May Fian.| Oneer feathers of bis wings The ORIGINAL f so many, many | August 21 for two days aboard three nigan came over and wanted the| sf ncvive” nomotiines eal coal Milk | Safe tlre here Su6 horses japecial (reins. ‘Ewe | Saenenre Sent heaven iekase the Towhee, sometimes called the| ff 2 |there, and pretty girls with golden | will be given, at 2 and 8 p. m. The as ere | tr «Shei tn ‘ Peter kept perfectly still, for it whirls, and drivers bold in cars of|be opened an hour earlier, A two: she's three, a mH e ‘a “ ie was fun to watch some one who For Infants | jcoia t race as in the’ days of | mile long street parade will leave the nanny,’ and we didn't know what th, | hadn't the least idea he was being & Invalids | 010 1_monkeys that will” ride | show grounds at 10 o'clock. | nat the | : hanny’ was, #0 Patty had to “|| watched, Chewink’s feet were made | spain — ; lout what it was, an’ it was the hans | for scratching and he certainly knew | Ne Cooking |< | f tian, and Thad to 60 Go enn, | tow. to use them, For some timely of os et an Ages | SOLDIER CORRESPONDS St.Paul Stove Repair & Plumbing Co. ; A ng " eter sn « ate s ne! : shed for it, an’ pretty soon here | Peter sat there watching. Just as he | fice | WITH 150 U. S. GIRLS! Firebacks, linings come Archibal’, he's seven, and he| Mad about made up his mind to make | Quick Lunch at Home or Office) and repairs for all wanted the grass hook, an‘ 7: » A ia his pre known and have a bit ‘ © | PEORIA, iL, Aug, 16.—Private kinds of to £0 Kit that, ‘catine T couldn enna |of morning gossip, he happened to Avoid Imitations and Substitutes) ; ..., Lewis was a past master | ps gd it, an’ then Mike, he's twelve he | look out beyond the edge of the little | — lin the ntle art of letter writing ang coils put com he said that the pie wan| thicket. There he saw something nen ' | ane connected, pen, an papa maid, ‘Ank ‘om if they | Tet: It was something alive, for tt SAVINGS | OEE 80: Gy ER: SEM ee think this is a hardware store,’ rs a| was EpVing’ NOE ‘slowly 8nd. ont | bei neh sca bt rahe siipg ts to Patty tun out aga ware store,’ and) ously toward the place where C Refore we entered this Iast great || her hushand had 150 women on } dah n ; war, | it made him m an’ mamma Id. | wink py as ny “ hing Pb ace ot We were a nation of xpe: letter-writing list while at Camp led ty an’ Patty cried everything but his breakfast, It was || na | atty cried an’ said if * Pike. He wrote them constant 1 y-eatnehod teddy Fo! nd quite plainly Reddy || - urself up oth rag ly didn’t Itke her she was| § ai i to oth cueeinn “6 Have made us all the lender: yh he said. A for } persist To build yor wi |soin’ to bo all dead. And papa gave | VAs NOPiIng to cake hewin lenders | re sal’ is 1 y |her some gum, an'--an'"— | Suddenty er thumped the ||Cemmercial fatlurea are oncy, Mims Tew! ie you feel run down—to bags eva alien. yg und with foot, “It was his ||, Since the government impose tnx, |! ; ‘| bring back health, appetite Jeovered that Uncle Mack waa sound | @&neer signal which all his friends tem now brings results| dainties a little finanelal Jcgvered thet'Uncle tack wan sound Saneer wignal which it in tient |" ata ceheg honk oes fase | gun vin. when and strength—take | “I guess I'm a pretty bum story |Pered, —pperty-ipperty-lip, to a ¢ wold, | * at mana: a |teller,” sald Peter to himaeit, | bramble-t not far behind him sold | found time so many letters | He stole out of the room }At that thump Chewink instantly hows ‘moch| she tostifi ed: “Whenever “Tired alreddy? asked Mrs, nen,|(e¥ UP into a little tree, ‘Then he ea lay vhich was of a 1 I, se nal Reter woberly, “T was | w Hendy Fes mG bee zy ‘ , scold 1! ar t entire 24 b wri elling him @ story and he went to or Reddy, he looked over towarc | sleep.” ade |the bramble-tangle and snarled “Good! The doctor wanted him to} Til get you o of these days. GIVE A WOMAN A BAD NAME 0 to sleop, but he was too | Peter Rabbit,” sald he. “I'll get you TAIRS|| Mrs, James Peruna was arrested nervou: You're a pretty good doctor, Peter,” |M® of these days and pay you up fon Pourth st. last Tuesday by the gy " HELEN CARPE cheating me out of a breakfast.” | police — fe bootlegging. Kirksville | -"s ARPENTER MOORE. ' without 90 much as a glance at Che: | (Mo,) Journal |

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