The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 21, 1919, Page 18

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PAGE 18 y ‘ THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1919. j Beas vertetics of mustaches seem nae aoe : iy re rece" smens wvaren wore LUCY GASTON DOINGS OF THE DIRES among the most pop-| nae P C 1 Leer Yougs Chop AND being the briatly, the droopy, | PENS WAR WounD Vou LIKI ANYTHING , , a vy pup: | AVE GOMETHIWG Two WOLe DOTATZRS, ACcoRDut: Dury the wavy and the soupy REO tise, sR? i foR The varreR To se pis or pray They x ns Rheu- |She’s Leading the Hardest | Fight on Cigarets | | BY FREDERICK M. KERBY | a az N. B. A. Staff Correspondent. f } NEW YORK, Nov, 21.—The = a J cipal wants force In Amerion aa that 1 in the field demand 0 ing ."t © prohibition” as the next ? step in the moral cleanup of the aS United States (and of the world « y, is the Ant © League of Ameriea, which > become e Anti-Oigaret Le | the World, | ‘The league ts headed by Miss Lucey Pag on, has its headquarters in Chicago, and is out for a mem } doer rahip in 1. B.A. of 10,000,000. | It was organized December 19. 1899. | Home Its work haa been largely educa tional, by means of sermons read in the churches, and pamphiets and yg 4 Verses recited in Sunday schools rea.me dwelling on the evils of the cigaret | Butwns pledging children not to ane oe 8 amoke cig@rete were part of Its cam. | WEDLOCKED palen 2 Partly thru its efforts, assisted by other no-tobacco organizations, antl cigaret laws have been passed in ‘ eleven states of the United States, but of these six have repealéd the | Dakota, the law ts a de. 2 5 When the United States entered the Eurdépean war, and the demand for cigarets from the soldiers be.) s | came insistent, the anticigaret cam |paign was practically abandoned thas a te Certain members of the Ant! Cigaret | League expreased themselves an not | In the Spring of being opposed to “smokes” for sol-| diers; but another and emailer fac | tion insisted on the original plat: 09 we) I was attack- form of abolition of cigarets, and] b M 1 prohibition of their manufacture and a . dy cu With the war's end, however, and ~ the success of the liquor prohibition ad Inflammator y movement, the AntU-Cigaret League suddenly resumed activity, On theumatism. I suf-| sare» 27, ssnouncement came trom [the league headquarters that the ed as only those league had been reorganized, select ed Lucy Page Gaston as president, } and that secretaries were to be sent D have it KNOW, i'new vor rernrsed na the. cea del of Lady Nicotine—to open of- OVEL three | ite tnd wase reiontion war B. 1 tried rem jwsee fm, nn eee ( atte Ma at Chicago at a meeting in DLN] CEB, You dy after remedy, Worn: rerns.in son ml | Tier BSBA To Gaston took a leading part. A doctor after) in. 'cirataen pare of wien | | SFE SISTER Fo | has been in the form df letters to A Lone TAB, WANE You § DCLOrT, but SUCD] | newspapers by Mixa Gaston, slief as I received —_—— is only tempo-) ry. Finally I pund a remedy AL Cured Me COM-| pyatuta tees wT way ely, and it has|ct Misrgee savencure or rot. at er returmed. [)i £ hen she sakes him about the pail that he took the flour tn, ye given It tO @) rma, “They aidn't may nuthin’ about givin’ it back to me,” > imber who were! Mrs. Martin was frying doughnuts when he came back and she gave ib! afflicted him a saucer of the little round ones. é They were hot and crisp and cov- # : | ered with sugar, and Peter went out ndeven bedridden |: the death serch ta eae thems and to share them with Pan. When ‘ Rheumatism, the plate was empty he took it back . to Mra. Martin and found ber at the telephone. She hung up the receiv: me of them 70 to Jugs aa he enine tn, an4 tho she gave him @ queer look, she said not! 5 years old, and ™s.:.s*m,"5.%,"ue soming . ‘ however, a girl of about 15 knocked By WEE TIO ei tes coer ena manecs tare tame ° the flour pati. a Me aS 1D MY OWD “Ma's aweut sorry.” ane said, “but you know how Mandy is” | Mrs. Martin closed the door and FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS VWalL- NOs You Seb WE BEEN OUT OF NOU BEEN DOING mms ae he KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES ALOYSIUS P. MSGINIS, A MARRIED MAN HAS NO BUSINESS CHASING OUT AT NIGHT! MR. TONES DOESNT Do it! OND TURN IN A ARE ALARTL, TY LACE CURTAIN \S ON FIRE IN My Roord 1 SAID! YOu WILL NOT Go ouT-: ated | turned to Peter with a comical ex- I want every suf-' Page Sh bonsai niall fi f r om a n y Piston ppened to you this after. " A, So Peter told his story and M. form of rheumatic serin ana ates. startin laugwed and laughed trouble to try this “Mrs. Brown left her baby with i “ Mrs. Mathews while she went to town, When she saw you with th Marvelous healing {25} 2 20n ee | ’, ng it. She phoned me that sh Mandy is Mrs, Mathews’ daughter | a cent; simply mail «:0' ve: That's wat Ruth mea: 90 know how your name and ad-| any ined Mra, Martin, “I know, allright,” said Peter. pia : py FER ONIGHTER MOORE, send it free to ry. 5 Med ti and it has WAS SED FRIM | “2 OS eee) Ree \ GSEEMESAS steel OF Ye PEFORE YER DURA , ewe (1A DRINK, BH? That long-lookea, OPERATION SHADOW GITS CAD "for means of get- oe 3 Mrs. Wells of Petersburg 'ting rid of your Tells How. | ' rheumatism, y OU _petersvarg, Va—For two years! May send the price cmunm«,| ant pei in her right of it, one dollar, but sitet at, Uae 6 wad go bad . 7 eI Lightfoot’s friend shook his head. |¢ame from, Are those your hounds)else’s dogs have broken the law.|from here, and so tired that he can: _ wen Hen. i understand, I do ppv Rete | A m" { “No,” aid he, “L don't. mean any. |P8Fking over there?” You knew that’those dogs had driven | not move. Just as long as he will | 4 any work. For! 1 Side 66 Gane: of een toad thatl « led the hunter, promptly, | that deer into the Big River, and/stay here, he will be safe, and I} ae S 4 . T know the law just as well as you| you promptly took advantage of the| hope he will stay until this miser — not want your oat l= D Money unless you) ee Fl A OB ll ‘ , alts are perfectly satis- ig she would tere & 2 een mull me 3 fied to sendit. Isn’t i. eee ¥ ; Lydia BE. Pink- BY THORNTON W. BURGESS ham's Vi bl ‘ sir that fair? Why suf- ‘ims jee compound, eng at een tt Some fer an y i on g er Anally consented. From the very ‘OW he knew he was safe, Light-;boat. Lightfoot's friend was waiting | beginning it helped her, and now foot the Deer couldn't have told | just at the top of the bank of! ‘ £ she is enjjrely well, and telling! you, He just knew it, that was all.| course, the hunter saw him at once when relief 1S thus) wverytody dow much good it has He couldn't understand a word sald| “fieto, friend!” oried the bur ff ed fi val North ‘na oy W. D. Weiss, 226 ny the man in whose yard he found| “pid you see a deer pass this way 1 orier you tree!) ; ams St, Petersburg, Va. |nimacit when he climbed the bank|fow minutes ago? He ewatn necous | 5 > | every girl who suffers as after his long swim across the Big/the river, and if I know anything Don t delay. Write! Mis Wells dia, or trom irregular |River, But be didn't have to under: |apout it, he's ton tired te tracer fe ities, painful periods, backache, stand words to know that he had|now.* I’ve been hunting that fellow deer is not to be killed if I can pre-| do, and it is against the law to hunt| fact to try to reach that deer before | able hunting season is ended. Now E deer with dogs. I don't even know | he could get across, You are not| go!” ; who owns those two hgunds over | hunting for the pleasure of hunting,| Muttering angrily, the hunter got | th | but just to kill, You don't know the/into his boat and pushed off That may be true," replied Light: | meaning of justice or fairness. Now| But he didn't row back across tht foot's friend. “I don't doubt It is| get off my land! Get back into your | Big River, true, But you are willing to take | boat and off my land as quick as you _ advantage of the fact that some one|can! ‘That deer is not very far} Next story: The Hunter Lies | pare putea sh Be om “ Wait for Lightfoot. at one ¢ ys ° \ lavy Yard, Puget Sounc Colds @re Catching sUnder Openings Nov. 2 } and Nov. 28, 1919 Proposals will be received at th Bureau of Supplies and Accounts > Washington, D t f EASY TO BREAK RIGHT UP | Novembe: toda | sideache, dragging down pains, in- found a friend. So he allowed the | several days, and if I have any luc P . for dell is hacksaw Vy. | Sazamoation or ulceration would man to gently drive him over to an| at all, 1 ought to wa ‘a this Hieber) Don't pass your cold to other mem- ; clogged-up nostrila and tho air pas. worsted Bephy'. Colm Ma k H J k only give this famous root and open shed where there was a pile of “{'m ‘ateald you won't have an bers of your family, Don't atay|#es of the head; stops noso run-|‘ > fi 7 on tnoers! os r » JACK=| dep remedy they would soft hay, and there he lay down, #9) 1,04 ‘ut all,” wuld Lightfoot’s friend.| ‘The h looked surpried, ana|#tuffed-up! Quit blowing and anuf. |!N&: relieves the headache, dullness, aa, SS" Selcuk a ; | soon find rellet ee Suffering. tired that it seemed to him. he | !¥ck "aad 1 rien: hunter surp: We eitat 1 debe: 6 “alata Oud’ C feverishness, sneezing, soreness and er 28, 1919, for delivert son, No. 213F Gur- Th couldn't move another step. vu ee, I don't allow any hunting | then his surprise gave way to anger. ; ore om: | stiffness, ranges and bake ovens, parrafi 4 le he jetters constantly being pub: “ ; tor me land, pound” taken every two hours until} “Pape's Cold Compound” te th and eperm oil at the navy yardse S Ushed from women in every section) It was only a few minutes later) ‘The hunter looked surprised, and | vent it, and while he is on my land | three doses are taken usually breaka| quickest, surest pellet know: a | posais “tothe ‘Navy, Ward. Bu ney Bldg., yra- of this country prove beyond ques-|that the hunter who had followed | then his surprise gave way to anger.|1 think I can. The best thing for|up a severe cold and ends all grippe | costs Only a few cents at ai m, and} posals to the Navy Yara. ot : tion the merit of Lydia ®, Pinkham’s| Lightfoot across the river reached| “You mean,” said he, “that you in-| you te do, my friend, is to get into|misery. Tt acts witheus drug stores. | 30 wy : ie P17) N. - Vegetable Compound, the bank and scrambled out of his| tend to get that deer yourself.” your boat and row back where you| The very first dose opens’ your|nice, no quinine. hanlotance, tastes | nic A ll aster 3 , e -

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