The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 26, 1919, Page 9

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te em en rT —— ane ee cen pean greens “ i ae Sinner Gt 7 PD DoeBeockle yas toy wht Dosreens 10/9 a Ne ee ee Interviews a Millionaire! BY THE STORY LADY Papa,” sald Peter one evening tell Me how to make some money need some awful bad. Ask me something easy, son That's one th You'll have aak Old Mr I neve KO up the atreet 45 West }woing with us than all by yourself Ramaey; he's the richest Dear Joan-gir! in the train |man I know around here What fiendish luck it is that a ae | Papa buried himself in his paper perfectly good and eligible man| I've made up my mind to go. jand when he looked up again Peter wants to marry me and I can’t being |I must get away from poor Jimmie myself to it, If Jimmie Ross had/and I'm nervous about Captain Ramaey was on his ve appeared a year ago in Mrs. Hu Wallis, too, 1 had to anawer hia let- | randa A thie six-foot hedge boarding house and asked me, I'd ter, so T merely said 1 wae leaving | screened him from. the that have loved him out of wheer grati-| Lively Beach and was like the lost| passed on the street. and an orn tude. But now, either I am be Mental fence and heavy gate kept witehed with the adventure I have | undertaken, and long to go on, or 1} am different from what I was a year ago. Tam enough the same girl, how ever, to enjoy the Bentasville Herald you sent me, dear, My, but it was | good to read about Dike's store alt dotied up with ¢ lights and plate glass windows and trading | stamps, And the Walker girls’ mit | linery shop. “La Belle Paris"—how | delightfully naughty for the old home town! (Tell them New York is | wearing its hat jammed down over its eyes; not sitting up on top of its head, as I fear “LA Belle Paris”. on Main st, is showing them.) And Randy Lewis, all set up in a wink: | ing new automobile business fine He'll make good, Does he sttif smite | with one side of his mouth? And | spend all his spare cash on his mother? | Well, speaking of the hore town, | whom do you suppose I ran into yesterday? Remember Tom Bene dict and that awful wife who made him so miserable? Remember when people used to say he ought to leave her he'd always answer: “No. A contract's a contract. You may hate it, but if you break it you hate yourself,” Zhe wasn't with him, for a won der. I didn't ask about her for fear of spoiling his day. We had tea at the new hotel, the Commodore and it sure was swell, Td like to marry a hotel, Joan, and be waited on by belihops”and maids, and rub up against satins and velvets and the rest of my life A Tom has quit his post in Chicago | !# dest, and come to New York for good He looked silkily prosperous—with one of those pongee-colored silk suits, sflk shirt, silk socks and a/| heirs to estates, Jabouts unknown.” touch of thé « dear? I realize wants to see me to find me. again, that’s all. fortydolar panama, if I'm any DOROTHY. Judge. | P. S—Tom Is better looking than | “So you haven't been home to *¥er. Why DO all the nice men | Bentsville since [ was there—well, | have to be married to viragoa? well. Like your work?-—you look | Uke a million dollars!” “Far be it,” I answered vaguely. | “But 1 haven't had a real vacaton | in years, and I'm doing it on vastly splendid scale this time! Had half of it at the seashore. Now for the other half somewhere else.” “Why don't you come to Silver sand Lake? Peach of a spot. Path iffg, fishing, boating, flirting— everything you could want. | “Sounds good.” I grinned. “I sup- pose you only go up for weekends?” 1 have small relish for Nina Bene. @iet’s company the rest of the sum mer, and hoped Tom would say she ‘Was spending it elsewhere ) “Haven't been up at all. said "but one of the chaps at the | yodels its praises so persiat- | ently that the only way of stop- ping him is to go. Better come.” “TM think it over.” day for a thief, by Mrs. Ht Ota, | tobacco. } ing an order, self, | Groceries. SPOKANE, Aug | here yesterday, Come along. | gallons of moonshine. “CREDIT GLADLY” Irresistible Smartness is. the most outstanding feature of the Eastern Styles for Fall. There is a dominant note of exclusive distinction about every garment which will surely appeal 1 to every woman who would be correctly dressed. And nothing is left to be desired in the way of de- pendable materials and perfection of finish. | Then why not dress here | on our “Credit Gladly” “present it He looked silkily prosperous. where I'm Yours for Silversand Lake. yet.” ne HEN FOUND SETTING went treatment . }fool to keep hoping, but if he ever | he will have | ‘The woman engaged Mra. Ota. and while the proprietrons was busy fill the soldier heiped him. The woman left without her ON MOONSHINE EGG. | raided Steve Dahlin elnaan ine they found a hen up Saturday, |setting over a still containing four | Dahlen's little lots nicer ' ruse set him back $160 in court }out the intruder, The rich old man | Was alone, as he had sent his man |servant for an evening paper, He had been very much tin the way that a branch ae had been wigeling He was just getting ready to when 1a servant to investigate a red head and bly over the appeared thru the boy hop and cam hedge ped nim running After that he across the | too surprised to speak Hello,” called the boy, cheerfully He perched himself on the rai by the man's sid You're Mr, Rameaey, the rich man aren't you I'm Peter Palmer I ive «de the street « ways, and my dad said to come to you to find out how to make lots of me Would you mind t ing me how you 1 it By w ad hard and minding my own business,” growled the mil Honaire Peter thought about it a minute then shook hin head It don't always work. My dad | works harder than most anybody and I'm sure he minds his own bust ness, andhe ain't rich. I'll tell you | maybe you ain't got any kids, Aren’t | You even mafried? Mr. Ramsey shook his head No,” he said, more gently, “I never had time to think about it till 1 was too old ‘Ob, w that makes a bl differ jence. I must hurry home and tell } papa. He'll feel lots better about jit. I'm sure inks mamma worth jall the m e world, to say Nothin’ of what “he thinks about us kids," } Before Mr mouth, P | ‘Come again could open mbing the fence. allied, much to his But Peter had disap Jown surprise | pearea ~HELEN CARPENTER MOORE 'Woman Aids Thief; TEACHERS FIND Police Begin Hunt | Seattle police were looking Tuee-| who aided by | woman and wearing a soldier's “ i form, entered a grocery store owned | “Back Easters” 529 11th ave. ar helped himself to a large quantity of | ROOMS T00 HIGH in Vain Search for Low Cost Rates of from $8 to $12 rooms In the seem high when they paid “back East ers coming to ttle for the time remarked Tuesday, ax th deavored to obtain housing faci in the vicinity of their future duties, The housing bureau of the school board has a pr placing teachers in rooms near the | schools in which they are to teach “Teachers cannot afford to pay all their wages for room and board,” a | member-of the school board said I hope Seattle people will have a a week for reaidential compared * nehool teach first district to what plem on ite them.” |PIONEER WOMAN IS DEAD ON HOMESTEAD) | Mrs. Elizabeth lot Washington. pioneer | |home near Redmond Busday sight Jafter a lingering illness, She ca to this country from Ireland in | ise and after spemiing 14 years in ilinols and New York, moved| { to the Nopthwest in 1875. With [ber husband, Jam Tesh, who sur- vives her, she took up the home- stead near Redmond, where sho} lived for the last 44 years. He- sides her husband, she is survived! by five daughters, Mrs. D. | M Dingwall and Mrs. John Sullivan. of Seattle: Mrs. George Davia and Misses Edith and Agnes Tosh, of Redmond, and one son, Robert Torh of Redmond. Funeral vices will! Wednesday at 2:20 p. INSURANCE HEAD K. Voehell, of t more, M4., president of the Nation al Association of Life Underwri who is scheduled to arrive tr Jonathan rs, oat association. All insurance men invited to attend the dinner If your gums are sore, sloughing and bleeding, you have Pyorrhea, so-called Riggs’ Div ease, which i# a menace to good health, We are the only Dentists in the Northwest whd specialize in this dreaded digease. Exam nation and estimate free, Special care taken of children’s teeth. Reasonable discount Union men and thelr families, to All work guaranteed 15 years, United Painless Dentists Cor, James St. 608 Third Ave, Phone Elliott 3633 Hours #20 a, m. to 6 p.m. @ndays, 9 to 12. ra r did find out. hands | heart when school teachers approach | i a An Undeserv Tunas A ed Bad Name | BY THORNTON W. BURGESS (Copyright, 1919, by T. W. Burgess) Fee fomewhere in the Old Or-|them, But Cuckoo likes them, There chard sounded a clear “Kow-| he cor now; Just watch him. kow kow-kow kow-kow.” It was quite A lor Lim, dovedlike appearing unlike any verse Peter had heard | bird alighted close to the enterpttl that spring, and he had exclaimed, | nest. Above he was brownish gra Who's that with just a Attle greenish tinge. De That's Cuckoo,” sald Kitty the | neath he was white, His wings were Catbird, “Do you mean to say you! reddish brown, His tal) was a littl don't know Cuck longer than that of Mourner the Of course I know him,” retorted | Dove. The outer feathers were bla Peter I had forg ound | tipped with white, while the middie of hiv volee, that's all, Tell me, ta i true that Mrs. Cuckoo in no better than Sally Sly the Cowbird, a ay her 4 in tie nests of other birds ard that said of her © isn't a word of truth in it eclared Kitty, emphatica bullds her nest whe after have looks Cuckoos English Sparrow ond wh f all reports are ally no better than Sally It's y ' The Cuckoo known ther ed neighbor to ther An a Matter of fa are might Cuckooo made no sound, but began neeful bird Brown Ought | to pick off the hajry caterpillars. to be tlokled to death that Mr, and Mra. Cuckoo have come back to | feathers w olor of his back Old Orchard this year. Do you see! The upper Half of his bill was black that cobwebby nest, with al) those} but the under half was yellow, and hairy catetpillars on it and around! from thiy he was called the Yellow t, up in that tree? billed Cuckoo, He has a cousin with Peter replied Uh and that!an all-black bill, who is called o had seen a gre jut like it, and had ne the caterpillars ate the leaves near them I'll venture to say*that you won't “ee many leavers around that nest.” replied K T are called tent caterpil and the an awful lot of damage, [ can't | them myself, beca y are xe bh few dx will touch the Jack billed Cuckoo Cuckoo made no sound, but bégan pick off the hairy caterpillars and wall t When he had eaten Jou t outside, he open the t and 5 out thone ie hen he flew off ax siler an he had m The next story: Peter Discovers ‘Something Startling BY AUNT GRACE Don't you want to wear one of those cocky caps like Brother Bin jhad when he came back from France’ Here's the way to make one Une a page of this newspaper to work wit Make @ 16inch equare and proceed to fold ‘ Follow diagrams carefully Fol th otted lines. ————~# |be held at. the Methodist chureh 11 | de | Redmond, m, | books TO BE GUEST HERE pa tle Tuesday night, will be of honor at & dinner to be given! at 6 p. m, Wednesday at the Ma-| sonic club, in the Arcade buiiding.! gra by the Puget Sound Underwriters'| the are first degree Woman of 70 Has Degrees and W «~~ oN MADISON, Wis Aug (United Presa.)—One ef the grad ates of the summer session at the University of Wisconsin was Mr Copp, und a grand fhe pursued studies in and eugenics, preparatory to receiving a degree of doctor of philosophy Mrs. Copp already had five college Rees author of | several of the tw first two "c at Pennsylvania college and wan one of th women to take a theological co’ Ato be ordained to the minist ng the several dd was one at Phin is her second summer sess at the Badger ity, She re ceived the degree bachelor of eds m pastorates Evansville univers of the guest! jaws at Wisconsin in 1910. Mrs. Copp received the m the time her daughter uted from Hillsdale college. O her eldest son received she recelved the degree f bachelor of divinity, When her Five College ants Another One | | hopes to cormplete her doctor's de in another year Belgians Honor Martyrs’ Memory} DINANT, Bel um. Aug. 25 (United F Cee id ound «religious jand civil ceremo were held here| today in commemoration of 600 in-| habitants of this town who were hot bt the Germans years ago! today in thelr march across Be gium Paul Deschanel, president of the French efamber of deputies, delivers ed a speech lauding the part played lgium In saving the‘ world Large crowds gathered to hear the consecration of the walls against which the martyrs gave theip lives Cardinal Mercier said brief prayer and thanked G the blessings | The inhabitants will per form thi ceremony every year dedic dead comrades re for of peace ation to the second son graduated from the en ‘There are many people who would | ineering course she received the proud to be arrested for speeding | legree of bachelor of laws. She | an automobile | Fully 50,000 outof-town visitor Week.” beginning Septembgr 8. Seattle hotels are pretty well f Name Address Street Car Line ... Rooms ...+++ Single ds Single B (Male or female) Price, if any Remarks « All Right, Neighbors, Let’s Hang Our Latchstrings Out ing houses, But the vixitors must be housed, and Jim Lansbury, chair man of the fleet housing committee, has undertaken the task ; We're asking everybody to do their bit,” said Lansfury Tues day. “By opening our homes, and in no other way, will be able to accommodate the crowd.” If you have a room, or more, fill out the following and mail it to the Fleet Housing Committee, Commercial building . Parties Preferred #4 will be in Seattle during “Fleet iiled. So are apartment and room NO, Of CAF vssevcesetseces Double Rooms Double Beds (Male or female) FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE Manly Suits For Young Men About to Enter University, High ; School and Business Careers FREDERICK & NELSON have been particularly careful to incorporate into the design of these Suits the dis- tinctive details that will appeal to young men about to enter upon a high school or university career, while as care- fully avoiding the slightest suggestion of the “freakish.” Tailored in Single- and Double-breasted Models r —from select weaves of Tweeds, Cassimeres and Cheviots, A ie in the favored shades of blue, tan, green and brown. Coat designs range front the fitted waist-seam effects to the looser, semi-fitted styles. One and two-button fastenings are 1 | featured in the new lines. a | Sizes From 35 to 39 Chest Meatire prices, $35.00, $40.00 and $45.00. ie ‘hird Floor rrowing Eskimo Girl Passes {| Away After “Romance” in States || ~~ ~t | Let's go eat at Boldt’s—u 1414 3d Ave.; downtown, 913 24 Mont NK Alone | ts pinlly attributed to her grief, due| fi ind unmourned, far from her home| to the fact that Kost was deported. n the Arctic wastes of Northern |-—————— Alaska, Marie Smith Ketchte a half-breed Eskimo young woma lied in the county hospital here, and th was brought to an end the ro mance of the untutored aboriginal it Gi girl who sought warmth and happi- | ives : ness in th ates. Uniform E ouseho Marie related her story to the fed _ adthorities here before she died Baking Action should have ajaro the result of her story, Peter : Kost was arrested on a statutory | charge, to jail and later de Does Contain ported, Kost is a G 3 According to Mari ee: was born within the 4 ee. Eskimo mother father, While still a lo 1e was only 24 when she was wedded to one of the best hunt: | ers and fishermen in her tribe, As luxuries go among Eskimos, her hus of an > heal skin skin tro it ie of rash or redness—so ema velop imo serions, stubborn affe that every home-maker should hayg yand was a “good provider,” she Resinol Ointmenton hand tocheck tl sald nd she was content with beforeth. etthe “4 > the long winters spent in her igloo. Giohend Rectal fonts hand, We Then along came Kost, with his stories of warmth, bright lights and| n happiness in the States—in contrast dients and its success in healing ect to the cold, darkness and hardships bs land similar serious skin diseases, — of the- North listened. She == Is Resinal Olatment a . was tempted __ Rectan And then, upon Kost's agreement She to help her secure a divorce and | then marry her, she said, she desert Eskimo husband, went to and then came to Butte sald, Kost refused to ng her into a life’ of In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the jand strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the n you can bite corn off the cob; teed 15 years, EXAMINATION FREE $15.00 Set of Teeth. Kost | and illtreated’ by | n her earnings were insufficient she told the officials, Her death Price & Co, $140,000 | The bonds provide| —_All_ work guaranteed for 15 yea: Dou. |morning and get teeth same day. sold to John E worth of bonds, for the completion of the } gall and Donahue road project, are for five years, and bear interest early at 5% Pp nt x Have impression taken tn Vxamination and advice free, d See Samples of Our Plate and Bridge Werk. We Stand Most of our present patron: is recommended by whose work is still giving Md satisfaction, Ask tients who have tested our work, nm coming to our office, be Fou are in the right place. Bring this ad with you. =m | Open Sundays From 9 te 12 fer Working People’ When you think of advertis- | | Wen you think of OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS _———————-}) (88T ~ UNIVERSITY sT, Oppesite Vraser-Patersen Ca,

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