The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 12, 1920, Page 11

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How much have YOU got in the BANK? We offer you the Service OUR BANK Sl SERVICE: and Safety ot We strive at all times to maintain prompt, efficient and courteous service. appreciated is demonstrated in our rapidly increasi deposits, bank. SAFETY: That our efforts are realized and ng You will find it a pleasure to deal with this The FIRST consideration in the conduct of a mutual savings bank is SAFETY. The law under which we operate requires all your money to be invested in the best securities the market ords, For ‘This is the only bank in the State of W: You may start an account with $1.00. SAVINGS ‘Established 30 Years. Assets $11,500,000.00, TRUSTEES Red or Blotchy Skin | You realize that just beneath | h or discolored | eres an exquisitely | tiful akin of youthful tint and | pacy? If you could only bring complexion to the surface, dis-| ie the old one! You can—in moat natural Just get an of ordinary mercolized w drug store. apply nightly 7 lexion a b cover Mother’s Stock John T. Campion, treasurer of Rainier Products company, is accu t like | cream, removing it mornings ee eee tr neante|D. Ranke, deceased, and fraudu ire by gradually taking off the |lently distributing shares in the ring particles of dead and haif-| Ranke Investment company, by court cour: disappear a Nothing else will accomplish wonderful results in go short ROT A THEORY It’s a fact that the use of cohol even in moderate Ranke, the plaintiff. Gretchen Ranke asks that celver be appointed for the ment company. She claims Mrs. Ranke was suffering from ralysis Campion unduly a a % : * sand finally distributed stock in the d as taken in tonics is {estment company. taking 1. - spite telten habit-forming in effect. s=rew himself and giving his w 1,250 shares: that asks | SCOTT'S a MULSION easily oatientened wale nt supplies the body clements that contribute to strength Free from al or any other yy harmful element, is valued at $73,202 has convertible assets Gretchen Ranke says. VeexsV, t. Scott & Bowne, Bloombeld.N J. 114 Sister-in-Law Sues to Re- of unlawfully influencing Mrs. Dora Gretchen Ranke, daughter of Mrs. Ranke, in a suit started in superior Campion is the husband of Mamie Ranke Campion, sister of Gretchen invest while influenced her with regard to business affairs turn it back to the estate. The estate The company of $100,000, “YOUR BODYGUARD” - 30», 607. 7. this reason you never hear of the failure of a mutual savings bank.|be said : shington operating under a savings bank law of any kind.|!* *°"™ ASHINGTON soruac BANK 810 Second Ave.jand shame her for her daring ESTATE FIGHT the ned re- in 250 vite Ten Years unger Th: His Years Doesn't it make you feel d—cause you to straight- up and feel “‘chesty’— someone guesses your at ten years or so unger than you really You look into your , smile with satisfac- and say to yourself: ll, he didn’t make such mence at once to restore your energ: strength and endurance by taking LYKO d guess, at that.” e point is: You’re no than your vitality. in old i ‘ A aman is strong, vigor- General Tonic — mentally alert, fine and The Grest builder will hel 6 This master body-builder P 5 at 50 he has a better you keep young in spirit and mental of living up to 80 and physical action, because it will gee a man of 30 who is — serist Natur ng your Vitalie oh pes. | It enriehes the blood, resto k and run-down has of aang: = ally le ig up to 60. While none ia shorts will put ae | us can stay the years nor time, we should all 5 ean heroic effort tosuc- 74,7, 4, tks. sfully resist the effects curpgiess bow ne by ever keeping our ity at par. ‘ou sense a feeling ing down of your jsical forces—when your mach, liver, kidneys and organs show signs of s—when you notice of your old time im punch’’—in other i, you thou oa you'll feel after taking @ treat- ment of LY KO, if you are tired y | Season : Now Is a Good Time to It May Not Be Troubling You THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1920. “ ~¢ sf ~ By Kathleen! COPY RIGNT SYNOP: OF PRECEDING CHAI BY KATHLEEN NORRIS La. PTERS ng, beau and clever r hue Warren | enridge, & heavy drinker te not the | Kering r | ‘ reallaes that War | Magne Clay i} (Continued From Saturday) {thin that could allow any]ens of dressing in a yveary daze, ‘The | oung girl tq feel any married man,| boys, an was usual, came in during } thing a litte hard, | any her natural prey. She! the hour, full of fresh convermtion at down at Magsl¢/had come to love Warren just as in/and eager to discuss plana for the! poveth omething so benign, = trag a fow years she might come to love| day. Jim tied strings from knob to jand eo herqic in her beautiful face cone else, That was all per-|knob of her bureau drawers, Derry | jthat the younger woman was 4 ICC) minnie: regrettable perhaps for/amuned himself by dashing a chain| awed, even a little pusaled, where #he| Warren's wife, an unmistakable | of gla dn against the foot of the had been so sure, Bhe would have) calamity for Warren's boys, but,| bed until links gave and the tiny | liked to put her arma about her trom Magaie’s standpoint, compre-| balls rolled in every direction over hostess’ neck, and to weal t) °*\henalble and acceptable. If Warren) the floor | traordinary treaty with a kiss, DUt! were free, Magnic was well within] “Never mind,” Rachael consoled she knew better, As well attempt tO) ner rights; if he were not, Rachael|the discomfited junior, “Pauline will kiss the vision of @ ministering | was the last woman in the world to| cc in and pick them all up angel. Rachael, one arm on Mag! dispute it | Mother doesn’t care!" | sie’s shoulder, her whole figure and!" Arter a while Rachael began tol Derry, howe ether as ‘tnasd her face exp sing painful Indeci*:| move mechanically about the room.| soled, and Rachael, # pping, half Jon, had never seemed #0 remote, *© | she wat down at her desk and wrote| dressed, to take him in her arms, | goddesslike a few checks; the boyn’ little firat| muned while she kissed him over (he And—and you won't tell him Of / dancing lessons muat be paid for, the| tiny sorrow that could #0 convulse faltered Magnic »/ Man who mended the clock, the| him, Was she no more than how! Ah—you must leave that to M6") woman who had put all her linen inling baby robbed of a toy? Nothing Rachael said with a sad smile order, She wrote briskly, reaching! could be more real than Derry's sense For a few seconds longer they! quickly for envelopes and stamps,|of loms, no human being could weep looked at each other, Then Rachael) ang, when ahe had finished, closed ‘© desolately or more unreason dropped arm, and Ma, moved) the desk with her usual neatness.|ably, Were her love and her life no} a little, he visitor knew that @ | ghe telephoned the kitchen; had she|more than a string of baubles, soat | other sentence must be tn farewell, told Louise that Dr, Gregory migh{| tered and flung about by #ome irre but a! felt strandly awkward.| come home at midnight? He might! sponsible hand? Was nothing real curtously young and crude, Rachael.) pe at home far breakfast. Then she| except the great moving #ea and the except for the falling of her arm. | gianced about th et room, andjarch of stars above t apring was motioniess, Her eyes were far went softly out, thru the inner door,! nights? Lite ath, and laughter away, she seemed utt uneon-/to her own bedroom adjoining eland ¢ he unimportant they scious of herself and her surround:| walked on little usual errands | were! t years ago she had foit) ings. Ma wanted to think of ©n¢ tween bureau and wardrobe, steadily | herself to be unhappy; now ahe must! more thing to say, one clinching | proceeding with the changing of her| that in thone days she had known! sentence, but everything seomed to! gown. Once she stopped short, in the | neither sorrow nor joy. Since then ymething of the other! center of the room, and stood mus |what an ecatasy of fulfilled desire | pate orngele w iness and coldness of | ingly for a few silent minutes, then) had been hers! She had lived upon spirit seemed to communicate itself | pie 4, aloud and lightly the heights, she had tasted the full jto her © felt tired and desolate 1 Magsio—it's all so absurd! est and the sweetest of human da small and insignificant If for a few se nde her thougbt# emotions Wh other woman—Cleo jmatter that she had had her mo-| wandered, they always came mwiftly |patra, Helen, all the great queens of |mentous talk with Rachael, and/ back. Magsie and Warren had failen| countries and of art—had known jhad wuccceded in her vent: Love in love with each other—wanted to| more exquisite delight than hers had was falling her, life was failing marry each other! Rachael tried to|peen in those first days when ashe I hope—I haven't distressed you —too awfully, Rachael,” Magsic faltered. She had not thought of herself, a few hours ago, a# distros» Rachael at all. She had thought t Rachael be scornful might be cold, might overwhelm her with her magnificence of manner She had come in on a sudden impulse, and had had no time for any thought but that ger revelation would be ex citing and dramatic and astonishing She was sincerely anxious to have marshal her whirling thoughts; there must be simple reason somewhere in this chaotic matter, She had the des perate sensation of a mad woman trying to prove herself sane. Were they all craay, to bave got them selves into thia hideous fix? What definite, what facts had they upon which to build their surmine Warren might wa nearly cht years, planned together, But what pitiabdle folly! Present Magwie breathed a faint “Good-bye,” following it with an al- most Inaudible murmur that Denni son would let her out. Then the white figure was gone from the gloom of the room, and Rachael was alone. For a time she was 0 dared, #0 emotionally exhaused by the events of the last hour, that she ntood on, fixed, unsecing, one hahd pressed against her aide as if she stopped {with it the mouth of a wound. Oc casionally she drew a long, sharp breath as the dying sometimes breathe “It all rests with Warren,” she said presently, halfaloud, and in a toneleas, passive voice, And slowly ashe turned and slowly went to the window to admit husband! chael lay awake all qight. She com aleep, evaded chael! round in b her, Magale—Warren—Ra | r tired brain |kind, she was talking to Warren. Warren was shocked at thought of her suspicions, had seen nothing, had suspected nothing, coulin't belleve that Rachael could be so foolish! and the boys away. This was a bad jatmoxphere for wives, this diseased |and abnormal city, Warren said. She was buying steamer coats for Derry The room was dark, but twill@ht and Jim lingered tn the old square, and home Magsie! Again the girl's tense, ex- |xoing men and women were filing cited face rose before Rachael's fe jacross it. The babies and their| vered memory. “You mustn't. think nurses were gone now, there were! either one of us raw this comMfe!” only lounging men on the benches.) Rachael rose on her elbow, shook |Lumbefing green omnibuses rocked jer pillows, flashed a night light on their way thru the great stone arch,| her watch. Quarter to three. It was and toward the south, over theja rather dismal hSur, crowded foreign quarter, the pink of not near enough either midnight or street lamps was beginning to battle, morning. Tossing #0 long, sho would with the warm purple and blue that) be sleepless all night now. still] hung in the evening sky. The Well, what wan marriage, anyway? had been long delayed, but) Was there never a time of serenity, now there was a rustle of green'of surety? Was any pretty, against the network of boughs; a few |wponsible young woman free to set warm days would bring the tulip#/ her heart upon another woman's hus and the fruit bloxsoms band, the father of another wom What a sweet, good, natural world jchildren? Rachael suddenly thought it was in which to be happy! With of Clarence. How different the whole its wheeling motor cars, its lovers thing had seemed then! Clarence's sented in high security for the long | pride, Clarence’s child, had they been omnibus ride, ity laborers pleas so hurt as her pride and her children antly ready for the home table and | were to be hurt now? the day’s domestic news! The chat) She must not allow herself to be #0 tering little Jewish girls from one! pasily frightened. She had been of the uptown department stores! thinking too many months of the were gay with shrilly voiced plans:jone thing; she could not see it fairly the driver, riding lazily home on a) Why, Magsle had been infinitely pile of empty bags, had no quarrel more dangerous in the early days of with the world; the stnooth-hai her success; there was nothing to unhatted Italian women from the!fear from the simple, apprehensive Ghetto, with shawls wrapped over! Magsie of this afternoon! The only their full breasts, and serene black | sensible thing was to stop thinking eyed babies toddling beside them,| of it, and to go to sleep, But Ra were placidly content with’the run|chael felt sick and frightened, expe of their days, It remained for the|rienced sensations of faintness, ren beautiful woman in the drawing:|sations like hunger. Her eyes seemed room to look with melancholy eyes} painfully open, #he could not shut upon the spring-tifhe, and tear out|them. Her breath came fitfully. She her heart in an agony no human|pighed, turned on her side, She | would count one hundred, breathing deep and with cloned eyes, “Sixteen. she| seventeen!’ Rachael sat suddenly boys, | erect, and looked at her watch again power could cure. “It all rests with Warren,” Rach ael said. Magsic was nothing, was nothing; the world, the were nothing. It was for Warren | ‘Twenty.two minutes past three to hold thelr destinies in his hands|* ¢ «© «© « # « # and decide for them all, No use in| Morning broke with wind and rain raging, in reasoning, in arguing. No|the new leaves in the square were use in getting forth the facts, the| tossing wildly; sleet struck noisily palpable right and wrong. No use| against the windows. Rachael, wak- after not more than p,*went thru the proc in bitterly asking the unanswering|ing exhausted, heavens if this were right and just, an hour's sle Drive Out Catarrh direct from the forest, which com bat disease germ in the blood. ‘Thin During the Warm Weather, great remedy has been used for But It Is Still in Your Blood more than fitty years, with most satisfactory results. It has been c arrh is not only a disguating | successfully used by those afflicted disease but i# a dangerous one, and with even the severest cases of you should never let up in your) Catarrh. It relieves Catarrh, for it \ efforts to get it out of your syatem |treats the disease at its source. 8. 8. 8, in sold by druggists every: where, until yod have done it thoroughly. Get rid of it, whatever it costs you | | in trouble and money For the benefit of those affilcted Mild weather will ald the treat-| with Catarrh we maintain a medical ment and this is an excellent time | department in charge of a specialist od of skilled in this diseas It you will the germs of Catarrh and be for-| write un fully, he will give your case to thoroughly cleanse the bl ever rid of the troublesome sprays careful study, and write you just and douches that can only relieve|what your own Individual case rev you for a time, | quires. No charge is made for this . 8. 8. is a purely vegetable blood | service. Addresg Swift Specific roots and berbs | 263 switt her husband, that was one fact; Warren loved her, that wan another, They had lived together for they knew each other now, heart and love for another woman's Thinking, thinking, thinking, Ra- posed herself a hundred times for and a hundred times sleep ‘Their names swept round and She was [talking to Maguie, so eloquently and the mere Warren's arma were about her, he was going to take her| she thought] irre | had waited for Warren to come to her with violets? The morning went on like an ugly dream. At 9 o'clock Rachael sent [down an untouched breakfast. tr Mary took the boys But into struggting sunshine. The house was) etill. Rachael lay on her wide couch, staring wretchedly into space. Her! head ached. The moon-faced clock struck a slow 10, the hall clock} down etairs following it with a brisk | silver chime, Vendors in the square be there at 11 + please have everything ready. Mins Moore, who was @ veteran nurse and a privi leged character, asked some ques tions as to the Albany case; Warren wearily answered that the patient too bad—too G. Ames Heary R. King Cc. B. Vilas Warren freed, but not so swept/soul. And there were two #ons.| called their wares; the first carts of | T. Condon William A. Peters FW. West away by emotion that she could not) These being facts for Rachael, what| potted spring flowers were going F, B. Finley Pnheiewigrtiens Rae appreciate this lovely setting and!facts had Magsie? Rachael's heart their rounds Raymond &. a 4 Whitcomd her own picturesque position in the 1 wild rush of confidence.| Shortly after 10 o'clock she heard * Frazier F. K. Struve Eugene B. Favre, Spokane|eyer of her beautiful rival had no basis for her preten-) Warren run upstairs and inte his ¢ Janson William Thaanum Ll. ©. Janeck, No. Yakima] “Oh, no!’ Rachael answered, per-|sion. Massie wax young, and abe|room. She could hear his voice at j tunctorily polite, and with her eyes) bad madly and blindly fallen in love.;the telephone; he wanted the how - . — - still fixed darkly on space. And as|There was her ningle claim: she|pital—Dr, Gregory wished to speak The envelope was invented by a) if half to heruelf, she added, in alloves. Rachael could net doubt itl to Mise Moore | meenton, Bug. bookseller, in 1830. breathless, level undertone Jafter that hour in the aitting room.| Misx Moore? Dr. Gregory would . Se It all reats with Warren!’ To love and for Chapped, Rough, j i had not rallied; it wi bad! Once it would have been Rachael's Jdelight to soothe him, to give him [the strong coffee he needed before 11 o'clock, to ask about the poor Al bany man. Now she hardly heard }him. Beginning to tremble, sho ant jup, her heart beating fast Warren! #he called, in a shaken | voice. He came to the door immediately and they faced each other, his per functory greoting arrested by her | look “Warren,” said Rachael, with a desperate effort at control, “f want you to tell me about—about you and Magnie Clay!” Instantly his face darkened. He gazed back at her steadily, narrow ling his eyes. "What bout sharply Rachael knew that she was grow ing angry against her passionate res jolution to keep the conversation in her own hands iH | it?’ he asked, “Magsie came to seo me yester day! she said. panting Had she touched him? She could not tell. ‘There was in his impassive face | “What about it?” Jafter a silence no wavering} he asked again His wife pushed the rich, tumbled} xo weil, “I think, frankly, that Mag-|for, what that volcanic little heart Bale tr " sear vir Ao 4 wild £%| sie made a mistake in coming to/ would be in love— Time went on;|| for ture, as if she fought for a you. The situation isn't of my mak-| we saw more of her. I met her, now! . | “What about #7" she 1, in @ling, Magaie, being a woman, being|and then, we had the theatricals Varicose constrained to’ etl with that] imputsiv nd inpatient, has taken/and the California trip. One day,! Veins * ed shallow breath, “Do youl the law into her own hands.” He|that fall, in the Park, I took her for||| Made to order think it si customary for a girl tol shrugged, “She may have been wise,|@ drive, innocently enough, nothing/f only. Fit guar- come to a man’s wife, and tell herlor unwise, 1 can't tell!” | prearranged. And I remember ask- | anteed. ond re, for Mgt Do Fac He paused, but Rachael did not/ing if any lucky man had made an/ 6 think it is customary for a girl tolaneak or « . Phon have tea every day with a young| een or oUt avast Ph ssc | Eiliott 1698 actress who admits she is in love | British trade unions and British F.0 . with him—" cooperative societies with a united || Fe! . Ginnever “I don't know what you're talking about!” Warren said, his face a dull red | “De you mean to tell me that you | don’t know that Margaret Clay cares for you!” Rachael said, in rising an ger, “and that you have never told her you care for her—that you and she have never talked about it, have | never wished that you were free to belong to each other!” “You will make yourself 111!" ren said, quietly, watching her. His tone brought Rachael abruptly to her senses, Fury and accusation were not her best defense, With Warren calm and dignified she would only hurt her claim by this course. In a second she was herself again, |her breath grew normal, she straight ened her hair, and with a brief ahrug | walked slowly from the room into her own Aitting room adjoining. Following her, Warren found her Jooking down at the square from the window. “If you are implying anything against Magsie, you are merely mak- ing yourself ridiculous, Rachael,” he anid, nervously. “Neither Magsie nor | 1 have forgotten your elaim for a sin- |qle instant, If she came here and |talked to you, she did so absolutely without my knowledge,” “She said 80, heart and mind in War her,” Warren went on, —unwilling—to discuss it now, There concerned, it; we shall not agree, That Magsie could come here and talk to you irprives me, 1 naturally don't know || ——_FAlM married I suffered and dizzy. After Frong and recommend 2 Rachael admitted, wait “From a sense of protection—for | them. I did not}names and tell you how much we have come to| lished with mean to each other, I am extremely | tell their friends. ia nothing to'be said, as far as I am| ailments, try that well known It 1s. better not to discuss successful PAGE 11 STORE HOURS 9 TO 6 EVERY DAY | . A Full Page Ad Could Promise No More Notwithstanding the fact that we are conducting no sale, and in spite of the sales now being held else- where, we solicit and invite a close-up comparison of goods and prices in full confidence that at this store will be found greater economical advantages, greater opportunity for genuine savings, plus the privilege of selecting, without restriction, from com- plete stocks of standard quality and up-to-date mer- chandise. Lang established business relations with conscien- tious manufacturers whose reputation for integrity precludes even the slightest suspicion of profiteer- ing at public expense, places us in a position to back up the foregoing statement; enables us to protect our customers against extravagant profits. We be- lieve it is purely a matter of good business judgment to hold prices within fair and reasonable limits. A personal inspection will prove our contention to be absolutely correct. Sole Agents: Buck’s Pipeless Furnace, Buck’s Ranges and Heaters ‘M.A GOTTSTEIN FURNITURE CO. C HOME + 1514-1520 Second, Between Pike and Pine she gave you. I would only remind] Warren had rolled up the paper, you that she is young—and unhap-|and now, in his pacing, reaching the py.” He glanced at the morning pa-|end of the room, he turned, and per he carried in bis hand with an/ thrusting it into his armpit, came air of casual interest, and added in| back with folded arma. & moderate undertone, “It's an un-| iow that this thing has edine happy business!” up,” he said in a practical tone, “it * Rachael stood as if she had been|is a great satisfaction to me to shot thru the heart—motionless, | realize how reasonable a woman you dumb. She felt the inward physical|are. I want you to know just how convulsion that might have followed | this whole thing happened. Magsie an actual shot. Her heart seemed to|has always been a most attractive be struggling under a choking flood,| girl to me, I remember her in Paris and black circles moved before her| years ago, young; and with a pretty eyes ‘ little way of turning her head, and Watching her, Warren presently | effective eyes.” began to enlarge upon the subject.| “I know all this His tone was that of frank and un-/ael said wearily ashamed, if regretful, narrative, Ra-| “I know you do, But let me re chael perceived, with utter stupefac-! capitulate it,” he said, resuming in tion, that altho he was sorry, and|a businesslike voice; “When I met even angry at being drawn into this) her at Hoyt's wedding I knew right talk, he was far from being confused| away that we had a personality to! ashamed. al with—something rare! I re 1 am sorry for this, Rachael,” he| member thinking then that it would began, in the logical tone she knew | be interesting to see whom she cared Announcement- Dr. H.T. HARVEY (2x-President Michigan Board Dental Examiners: Dental Surgeon Diagnostician Pyorrhea Specialist annonnces that he has re- turned from an extended trip to New York and Ch ia where he has devoted time to special Pyorrhea Re- gearch work, and is again at hie offices— Warren!” Rach Cor. Second Ave. and Pike St. Elastic Stockings membership of 9,000,000 will unite to! get better distribution and prices for! commodities. 602 Wash. Bidg. 705 First Ave. rees Woman From Suffering. N. J.— Bayonne, je oe 4 Money and Fine Dishes are vastly different articles, but alike in that if full benefit is to be derived from them they must be used carefully and extensively. Let this bank help you to work out the best possible use of your funds. NATIONAL CITY BA OF SEATTLE Second at Marion‘ nd I could work fox medicine — Mrs. A SLEVA, ‘7th Street, Bayonne, N. J. herlth, Eetimonta, NK ce remedy Lydia E. Pink- Vegetable Com wri If you need a medicine for

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