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| ca Sc TOY | Tm i A Pleasant Visit BY THORNTON ie in} wh had led use told Whitetoc from the . adventures I visited the ing Pool r » to the moment ome to his res. foo ened without say ig@ a word until Danny's story was ended. Then he avely shook his head “It was a crazy thing to do, Coubin Danny. It certainly thing to de “What was demanded Ly was a crazy said he. crazy thing to do? ¥, looking pussled. “Going so from home when there plied White Were too wise to take such foolish risks. At your age you should know better, It might be exe pie in a youngster with no family to think of. but one of your age should have| known better.” | far away was no 0 “I ghess you are right Whitefoot,” replied Danny “L've learned a lesson I'll neve Ret. ad frights enough to ls me all rest of my life, and if I ever get home I'll never it again. I guess I ought to be start ing along right now.” ve “I guess you ought to do nothing |) retorted Whitefoot, he thing for you to do Payment | w y T BURGESS W. Burgess) t now is to condition rest and get your Danny sighed, “I don't know but what you are rig v4 foot,” said | as if I could face dange night. My nerve “What was a crazy thing to do?” "| demanded Danny, looking puzzled. comfortable It is one of on I've rm I think I have fF places quite as ng for you to do, to stay here the/| » night and make yourself To this Danny agreed, for he rally did not feel equal to going any farther that night. So he and White foot slept a little and talked a great deal. Danny learned many things about, the Green Forest, and in turn told Whitefoot many things about the Green Meadows sure that the mn Forest waa the finest place in all ireat World in which to ti anny was sure that with the Green| Whitefoot was | Confé$sions of a Bride lehted, 1919, by the News er Dnterpriae Association 1 PEEL VERY SMALL AND RE ALIZE ¥ GREAT JOB D to be an attractive | It had © usual character & Mexican town—-a plaza t one side, | inn, All| and the uw with extraor the place was ordinary in ite cleanliness, com the dirty Mexieun gown” 4 to see, The lation | ally, but moat polly inter in me, I couldn't fall to ob as my cab traversed the short between the station and the I ascribed it to the rumor of which was, I betieve, the | only rapidly moving thing to be dis covered in Mexico, It was a relief to turn patio of the inn and to get away |from the cariously attentive citizens jand it was equally a comfort to see | Morrison, the “coffee merchant.” get }down from an ancient vebicle in the | same patio. 1 had an Jose prov of ad garden, a chureh market and done in hig auty of the Moreover met dinary | distance hotel the hold-up. | into the recovered from the} vous Irritation which followed the up nor from the shock of seeing | ark edition of I not On Vancou | the Innkeeper prolonged the process | of obtaining a room and made it/ possible for Morrison to drift into the con ation, Racked up by his| | presence, I made inquiries concern: | ing another American girl—Mias! Miller—who ought to be somewhere | in San Jose “No such young lady had appeared at hip hotel. Don Pedro ghook his) head could not be in San Jone! or he would know, he asserted. At last I was installed in a vast apartment having a ceiling twice the | height of any I had ever alept under. I was housed, it appeared, in a por | ton of an ancient monastery or con vent. And I felt very amall and for |lorn and helpleas therein. Why should I not feel weak and! jinefficiont? A new duty had been! added to the load I was carrying She NO Ladysmith-Wellington and Comox Coals Agency, Ltd, and in the United States THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1919. Coal Shortage at Hand THERE WILL BE PROFITEERING | BY DEALERS HANDLING PRODUCED BY CANADIAN COLLIERIES (DUNSMUIR) LTD. ver Island, British Columbia. Seattle Distributed in Canada _ by , Wellington - Comox by Pacific Shipping & Fuel Co., 659 Colman Bldg., Because our mines are operated on the “open shop” plan, we do not anticipate any reduc- tion in our output after Nov. 1. Is-handled in Seattle exclusively by the BREENE & PEABODY....... . Elliott 3212 D. W. McNAUGHTON... INDEPENDENT FUEL CO.... Genuine Ladysmith-Wellington-Coal .- following dealers: .Main 700 . Elliott 295 FREMONT .....North 17 WAINWRI McLEOD...Main 1218 KEATING FUEL CO..........Elliott 654 WESTERN COAL CO........North 1591 PER TON OF 2,000 LBS. AT THE BUNKERS — NO MORE. DRAYAGE AND PACKING EXTRA. There will be no increase in price on account of the anticipated shortage. Order from your nearest dealer. The only GENUINE LADYSMITH-WELLINGTON COAL is pro- duced by the Canadian Collieries (Dunsmuir) Ltd., and shipped. from Ladysmith, B. C. Don’t let anyone sell you a substitute for Ladysmith coal. COMOX COAL: Owing to the unprecedented demand for lump coal for domestic use, we have arranged to market in Seattle 3,000 tons per week of Comox lump from Union Bay, B. C., mined by the Canadian Collieries (Dunsmuir) Ltd. Lump $10.50 per Ton at Dealers’ Bunkers Nut $9.95 per Ton at Dealers’ Bunkers Order from your own dealer. We are endeavoring to supply all dealers who apply. When you purchase, ask your dealer for folder containing instructions for using Comox coal to the best advantage. Don’t pay more than $10.50 per ton for lump, plus drayage and pack- ing. We are placing this coal in the hands of dealers at a low price © istomers are re- quested to report to us any attempt to charge more. CO. PACIFIC SHIPPING & FUEL Ha,” ae reued the mat-| First I must find Baby Babs, And rgument | then I her mother! ximply | didn’t it ois used |p loves best | showed tha to are the things one To Danny the Gr filled with terrible dangers. Whitefoot the Green Meadows | sponsible. seemed a place where there could be] Morrison wired daddy at once, | no such thing as real aafety. So they | using a code which was supposed to argued and argued and had a per-|cover the coffee business, Until we} fectly splendid time mecetved daddy's instructions we de | cided to confine our activities to the Next story: Danny's Home Com rescue of Fh ing. “The Curtis hacienda Don Pedro, the innkeeper }to my Inquiry, “Why, ot the very jedee of the town. The towers are visible from the chureh.” It was @ great estate. and Don Pedro gave me its history, Ten thousand peons had been attached to it In the old days, In that day the monastery had been built—and the church—and afterward, house by | house, and street by street, San Jone [had come Into existence. But the hacienda was there first—an original srant at the time of the conquest |The dukes of Riminex had always owned it until lately—very lately, in ured to what might | shocking fate *by daddy's! The Loriners were re THE PRICE IS $10.90 Absolute Privacy SOCIETY FOR. repeated replying com "mI HEATRE) wi Ui At amin liar But whether Mexican or an Amer. lican or a Spaniard, Don Pedro would not way. He had a vehicle to take me to the hacienda at my conven lence { It suited my convenience to go at once. | The administrator received me; the haciendado was away from home. I had come from the States, I sald gravely, to take charge of the little | ward whom the haciendado had re cently adopted. | It was a long chance—and I was | amazed to see it win. | ‘There was such a child, the admin | istrator admitted, and they had been expecting a governess for a week! | But it had been reported that the |wenora had been seized by bandits | only a few days previous to my ap- | pearance, But reports——? The ad- | ministrator shrugged his shoulders and regarded me gravely. I might! remain—if I would condescend to ac: | cept hospitality, The doctor himself would return in three days. He would decide whether I was the right governess! | From which wisdom T knew: that within three days I must have Baby Babs in my arms, somewhere up| toward the border. | And not even Morrison could help | in a wonder Concert on the Warlitzer | 659 COLMAN BLDG.—MAIN 1079 CHARLES E. PEABODY, President. | good reason for tik our fathers. | Sat eaid be Ukea bie Deonuse he was| Hold Funeral for Mother and Son the best man on earth. Corny made} & verse out of his, It was like this:! 4 gousie guneral service will be jheld Sunday afternoon for a mother and son who died only a day apart. | William Allen McDougall, 31, died |the Swedish hospital Thursday af 1 ee Ae ete a Jernoon at 3:35 o'clock. Friday night lmounced Peter one hight: when: he| oP peor pile game came home from school | “I said I liked you for lots RR gt lle yn naka esa must have been a very happy | thing of all ‘cause you a= ere € at the Bonney-Watson establish- gol ooh shades ant ment. Funeral seryices will be held ps an’ helped him a Utth porary peek oy cody tie as ut I don’t think anybody else} Te said he liked bis father ‘cause Mrs. McDougall ‘te survived by at he gave him something that no other |." 4. lunters “Mra, DV. Douglas “Does he do pretty well in school?” | kid's father in the room had given hee |nim, ‘Teacher let us guess what it) “D4 Mrs. E. F. Stover of Seattle, and Got me beat|Was an’ we guessed everything but Hill of Port Angeles, and Ja city block. “He says he's just got | none of ‘em was right an’ we give | empha wa gsr |to take home a good ‘port card, He|UP. Then he told us it was a new made us all laugh today, Teacher | back.” | | told us to write down on paper one'—HELEN CARPENTER MOORE. ARBORISTS TO MEET WASHINGTON, Oct, 25.—4United me. I must manage it alone! Press)—The American Forestry a» (To Be Continued) \noclation today announced the Amer: — lican Acadeniy of Arbgrists will be) The trouble with the man who/held here January 10, 1920, Plans doesn't know anything is that he is|for memorial tree planting will be/ always telling it to others discussed, it was said. THINGS YOU CAN MAKE ALL BY YOURSELVES |": BY. AUNT GRACE BRIDE ASKS POLivE © TO LOCATE HUSBA' Mrs. Laura Melvin, a bride three months, is worried. J. Howard Melvin, 33, groom ithree months, is gone. The have been asked to help find him. Mrs. Melvin said her hu: | his 5011 Ninth ave. N. October 4, to go to Wenatchee a bakery. He took $800 with him. He was to have wired when he rived in the apple city. He didn’ Melvin suffered injuries in an au! accident a few years ago. He was. nervous as a result of these injuries, The wife is inclined to believe missing spouse is suffering from a temporary loss of memory. “Papa is the nicest man you almost | ever saw, I mind him when I want to but you | bet we both mind Maw! “And what did you give for your reason?” BY THE STORY LADY ; — James Augustus walked to school ie James Augustus { jasked Papa i | “Rest in the class. If time is money, there is no use — in a man spending so much time try: — ing to borrow a little cash, ‘ A lost opportunity seldom finds its way back. The Distinctive Screen Personality Sessue Hayakawa In His Latest, Biggest and Best , “THE MAN BENEATH” —AND— “A Lion in the House” ]. A Cc i. An 1 edy | Use bent pins pricked thru the center of the face of the clock for hands. UNITED STATES RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION a Director General of Railroads GREAT NORTHERN RAILROAD - DAYLIGHT-SAVING LAW CHANGE EFFECTIVE SATURDAY EVENING, ER 25, and on this Date Only IN 2—“ORIENTAL LIMITED". will leave Seattle’at 12:45 a. m. Sunday (instead of 11:45 p. m. Sat+ urday night) for Everett, Bellingham and Vancouver, B, C, TRAIN 356—“OWL”" Will leave Seattle at 12:45 p. m. Sunday (instead of 11:46 p, m. Sunday night) for Everett, Bellingham and Vancouver, Only these two departures on this one date will be set back one hour from regular schedule, United States Railroad Administration Director General of Railroads Northern Pacific Railroad Important Announcement Saturday evening, October 25th ONLY, Northern Pacific R. R. trains Nos. 334 and 401 will leave Seattle and Tacoma one hour late on account of Daylight Saving Act. Secure information from Consolidated Ticket Office, 714-716 Second Ave., or King Street Station. Ticket Offices ‘714-716 Second Ave. Children! Make this clock for your dreaser or doll's house. Elliott 5830 Use a piece of paper eight inches long by two inches wide.