The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 6, 1920, Page 17

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m Phone Main 2551. Don’t ask for Crackers—say SNOW FLAKES A Teasing Dash of Salt SOME MORE P.C. B. PRODUCTS —a crispy just-out-of-the-oven dain- tiness—the most delicious soup is enhanced when Snow Flakes are served! PACIFIC COAST BISCUIT CO. CHARLES SCHWARTZ Starving Man Is Optometrist and Mfg. Optician Heir to Fortune Eyce Examined and Glasses Fitted | | LONDON, Feb. ¢—Found mtarving | . in a wretched shack, John Francis, | | Strand bootblack, is entitled to $10,- 1000 as the heir of a friend of his mother, 237 Epler Bik. § S13 Second Ave. | sagnanare if they KEGEL (“ IPED os FIRST Ave: BETWEEN, PIRBAND UWION STS. ENTRANCES FIRST AND SECOND AVENUES associate with married men SATURDAY SPECIALS-Market Closes 6 P.M. WESTERN DELICATESSEN COMPANY CENTRAL PUBLIC. MARKET (Upper and Lower Floors) 1422 First Avena CLUB SALAD, 2 pints. Pee | WALDORF COMBINATION, 2 pints ......... SEATTLE MARKET Occidental Avenue and Yesler Way PRESERVED FIGS, per pint ... BLACKBERRY PR SERV per pound ...... MAYONNAISE, LOGANBERRY PRESERVES, Bper pound ................... per pound .......... EXTRA SPECIAL—MILD FULL CREAM CHEESE, per pound. . AMERICAN GROCERY STORES 00. HELP YOURSELF GROCERY—UPPER FLOOR, CENTRAL PUBLIC MARKET ENTRANCES FIRST AND SECOND AVENUES CENTRAL GROCERY—LOWEK FLOOR, CENTRAL PUBLIC MARKET SEATTLE GROCERY—109 OCCIDENTAL, SEATTLE MARKET Federal Milk, 2 cans. | Borden’s Milk, 1 can Flour—Drifted Snow, 49-Ib. bag... Rolled Oats, pure, 5 ibs. 9-lb. cloth bag Small White Beans, 10 pounds Crisco, 1 pound 38¢, 114 pounds 3 pounds $1.09, 6 genni 9 pounds Del Monte Solid can 19¢, 2 for.... Best Standard Tomatoe 6 cans . Finest lowa Corn, can 17¢, 3 cans. “Old Colony” Best N. Y. Corn, ean M. No. 1 Soft Shell Walnuts, pound. 2 pounds Grape Nuts, package. Kellogg’s Corn Flakes, 2 Ralston Bran, package Olympic Pancake Flour, package Quaker Rolled Oats, small package. . .25¢ 39¢, No. 2 can. Bartlett Pears large. can. Royal C package ...... Campbell’s Soups Uneeda Biscuits, Booth S. urdines, “My Wife's’ ounce bottle Bulk Macaroni, 2! Dried Pears, extra f Hire’s Instant Coffee, Galt Blue Ribbon sale), pound 59 package. . large cans. large .37¢ ans. 12¢ pounds tin Wy pound $1.57, 5 pounds .... Hills’ Red Can Coffee, pound 214 pounds Instant Postum, 99 Coffee, large t pound. 13¢ 3 pounds Washington Fruit & Vegetable wiensand Lemons, dozen . Japan Oranges, dozen. , dozen Delicious Apples, 6 for 25¢, do Florida Grape Fruit, 2 for. Brussels Sprouts, pound.. Fresh Spinach, 2 pounds.. Head Lettuce, each. Celery, each Green Onions Sweet Oranges, dozen Lemons, 5 for. Florida Grape Seedless California CG ‘ape Fruit, cies 106 -15¢, 25¢ .15¢ n.15¢ .23¢ Jonathan Apples, Large Delicious New Jersey Cauliflow Dromedary New Large dozen.... Apples, 5 fo weet Potatoes, Dates, acka, large bunch. Pinas Winesap Apples—Special Sorne more of those juicy Yakima Winesap Apples, 4 Ibs. 15¢, 7 lbs. 25 biggest apple bargain in Seattle. Ask your neighbor. American Fruit & Produce Company Lower Floor Central Public Market—Next to Central Grocery * Cane and Maple Syrup, ancy, pound... Crescent Cream Coffee, pound.. Central Fruit Stores pound. . 10¢ and up -25¢ e Figs, each... Del Monte Sliced Pineapple, large cans ‘ystal Shaker Salt, highest grade, -10¢ an (Less than whole- 30¢ J. B. Coffee, Aah 54¢, 3 pounds 2.49 10¢ 10¢ box $1. If you got some you will want more, andif you didn’t you had better hurry. is almost as dangerous as a jackpo' in the hands of a man. There would probably be fewer were permitted to A jackknife in the hands of a boy | | } | |v hipple | squatters culd |tered the shack without quite know |not to | of voices. |benches and a stove and table would lcorral where the pupils might keep |taken possession of the place in his | Devil's T COPYRIGHT!1919 BY LITTLE- BROWN 4&CO. From Our Last Issue.) | 1 Coaley fre stable mounted and rode trail, His eyes were somber with re saw the fresh Lance's horse in the places, Of the three boys was his favorite and it burt him to think that Lance had so little} of the Lorrigan pride that he would ride a foot out of his way to speak} of the Douglas blood. pricked up his his pig, bright taking shadow of a horse beside a clump of Wild currant bushes Tom grunted and rode over that way Lance stood with his back toward] them. His hat was pushed far back | on his head, and he was looking Mary Hop who leaned against t rock and stared down into the valley below Atl of this {# none of my doing,” she was saying, with her volce that may either regret or resentment Ye hate my father, and you mad | because I canna side with you and hate him too, 1 am sorry the trouble up, but I canna’ see ou expect me to go on coming to # your mither when ou know my tather would ne permit it.” You can’t make me swallow that Your father never permitted you to come in the first pl and you know ft. I’m not saying anything about myself, but it hurts Belle to you throw her down right now. , the circumstances it makes 1 as if you thought we were and stole your dad's year sentment whenever | hoofprints. of sandy Lance one ears and eyes a dullness in} Have meant came how ‘ou ought to know that with all between your father and my fath 4 “Well, your father doesn’t our outfit a darn bit worse than ever did. He found a chance to knife that's all It isn't that he never wanted to before." Ul thank you, Lance Lorrigan, accuse my father of knifing nybody He's my father and if your father was half a She stopped abruptly, her face going red hen she saw Tom sitting on his nd the shoulder of rock, regarding her with that inscrutable smile which never failed to make her squirm mentally Lance turned Tom's us, horse be slowly and met without flinching. How uglas? Lance, a'yuh do, Miss dinner's getting \d waiting for you.” Tom lifted his hat to Mary Hope, turned, and rode back whence he had come, never glancing over his shoulder but nev ertheless keenly alert for the sound He was not quite thru the Slide |when he heard the hoof beats of Lancé's horge come clicking down over the rocks. CHAPTER VII. A Little Seotch. ACK RIM country was at best but scantily supplied — with schools, and on the Devil's Tooth range seven young Americans three of them adopted from Sweden were in danger of growing up in deplorable {gnorance of what learn ing Hes hidden in books. Wherefore Mary Hope Douglas home from two winters in Pocatello where she had gone to school and had learned much, was one day in vited to teach a school in the Devil's Tooth neighborhood. ‘True, there was no schoolhouse but there was a deserted old shack on the road to Jumpoff. A few transform it into a seat of learning, and there were an old shed and their saddle hours. Tom Lorrigan, riding home trom Jumpoff after two days spent in Lava, pulled his horse down to 4 walk while he stared hard at the shack. From the bent epipe a wisp of smoke was ed above the pole-and-dirt roof. seemed incredible to Tom that have come in and horses during school short absence, but no other explana tion seemed reasonable. ters were not welcome on the oth range. Tom rode up to the shack and dismounted. His knuckles struck the loose panel twice, and he heard the sound of footsteps. When Mary Hope Douglas pulled open the door, astonishment held them both dumb. He had not seen the girl for more than a year, As she backed from the doorway he en ing why he should do so, Compre hensively he surveyed the mean little The three Swedes, their rusty buttoned to their gorgled at him round-eyed over the tops of their new spelling The four Boyle children, also bundled in wraps, exchanged sidelong glances. “School, eh?” Tom observed, turn. 1s Mary Hope pushed the door the wind that rattled} “When did this! room. vercoats necks, ing shut against the small shack happen? When Mr. Lorrigan.” I started teaching here, | Then, mindful of | her manners tempered’ the pert ness with a smile, “And that was yesterday Will you sit down?" », thanks—I just stopped to see wh livin’ here, and He broke off to look up at the dirt roof of his fist had been the shaking of¢the wind. and plumped down in the middle of | You better hazo ‘em all home at| and get where it's warm be you catch your death of cold,” Tom advised, ‘This ain't fit for cat such a day as this.” 6 dismissed the children primly, | self-conscious dignity and their boorish clat-| their absolute ignorance of dis-| cipline ‘I shall ring the bell in ten minutes,” she told them while they} cuffled to th door skoll go the Sw to bellow at ‘Ole got lor vt be fore with a ome chagrin at | old: | long | the stopped her from the Helge skoll gol way from school home now,” est enough mec by dark ven ve come | The to. the wind carried them at a ru Looking after th from the window that faced the cor ral, Tom could not wonder that they were to start early. “You better let the rest go, advised the perturbed te looking out at the four Boy! dren huddied in the shelt shack, Them kids have °o 12 miles to ride, facing this wind! yy anxious too,” }duetion such a ha most of the to ride five home, Pore uk after way mile T little a cow-eritter undown “You not ur must have discipline Mr. Lorrigan, I can't permit: my pupils to rebel'against my authority. | You would not let your men dictate | to you, would you? “They would have a right to call for their time if I asked them to do ome damfool thing like sitting tn| this shack with the wind blowing thru it at 40 miles an hour, I don't reckon {t's my putin; only it’s any man's business to nee that women and kids don't freeze to death. And by the humpin’ hyenas—" Tom went stilting on his heels to the door, pulled tt ope! 4 yank and rounded the 1 you've got ‘em to gO I wouldn't this wind deviln, to face stand that 1 in this school high with | ner | where the four Boyle children stood leaning against the house. “You kids straddle your cayuses and hit for home," ‘Tom told them There ain't going to be any more | 1 today.” i 1 Tom turned to re-enter the for a final word with Mary | he found that small ‘pe nm standing just behind him with set| lips and clenched fists and her hair | biowing loose from {ts hairpins. | “Mr. Tom Lorrigan, you can just| call those children be she cried, | her Ups bluing in the cold gale that beat upon her, ‘Do you think that with all your lawlessness you can come and break up my school? You | have bullied my father—" “I'd do worse than bully him, I had him in handy reach right now. Tom drawled, and took her by the shoulder and pushed her inside. “Any man that will let a woman sit all) ny in a place like this—I always have heard of Scotch stubbornness but there's something beats that alll to thunder, Git yore things on, Yore horse will be ready in about five minutes." He bettered his estimate, returning in just four minutes to find the door locked against him. “Don't you tare come in here! Mary Hope| alled out, her voice shrill with ex citement. | Whereupon Tom heaved himself against the door and lurched in with | the lock dangling. Without any apology, he pulled! her coat off a nafl near by, and held | {t outspread, the armholes conven-| lent to her hands. He did it exactly | as tho he was handling a calf that he did not wish to frighten or hurt For a mile Tom kept close to Rab's heels, Then, swinging up alongside, he turned to Mary Hope. “L ain't blaming yuh for being ntch and stubborn,” he said, “but on’t yuh go back to that board cullender till the weather warms up. | And tell yore folks that Tom Lorri gan broke up yore school for yuh, so they wouldn't have to break up a case of pneumonia.” Mary Hope was framing @ sen- tence of defiance when Coaley wheel: | ed and went back the way they had come, so swiftly that even with shouting she could not have made} herself heard in that whooping wind. | CHAPTER VIIT. The Lorrigan Way. HE Lorrigan family was dining comfortably. Belle had finished her dessert and leaned back with a freshly lighted cigaret poised in her fingers, “What have you got up your sleeve, Tom?" she asked abruptly. “My arm,” Tom responded promptly. “Aw, cut out Hope, if the comedy, Tom You've been doing something, and Lance knows what it is, Now, I'll get it outa you two if I have to shoot it out.” Lance, just returned from Berk- eley during Easter holidays, lifted one eyebrow at Tom, lowered one lid very slowly, and gave his mother a level, sidelong glance. “Your husband, my dear madame, has been engaged in a melodramatic role created by himself. And—do you want to know, honestly, what dad has been doing?" “I'm going to know,” formed him trenchantly. “Then I'll break it gently. Tom, your husband, today rode to an al- leged schoolhouse, threatened, or- dered, and by other felonious devices hazed three Swedes and the four Boyle kids out of the place and toward their several homes and then when the schoolmarm very discreetly locked the door he straightway be-| camo a bold, bad man, He bursted | that door off its hinges—" | (Continued in Our Next Issue.) Get Rid of Fat Where ItShows | Belle in Do you realize that nothing but good, substantial food, and plenty of it, will build muscular energy, and that you must eat and eat heartily in order to retain your strength? ae: KE Dicting wenkens you, and over-exer cise tires tarda th atter consumes too | at is why you find the old-fashioned method of fat re- | ship. Why not} get rid of your excess fat in the| harmless, Marmola Prescription 6 prepared in exact accord= lance with the famous Marmola F cription, are perfectly «ate to, Use, id have been used hundreds of ersons in this country and Europe wonderful suc Within a can be getting rid of | two, three ur pounds of fat a week. No starvation dict on tiresome | xercives are needed. @ can be comfortable and you can enjoy the | food you like and want on after | taking off many pounds, there will | be no flabbiness or wrinkles remain- ing and you will feel 100% better, druggist can supply Mar- cription Tablets at $1 per hey will be mailed direct in rapper and post paid if you send the price to the Marmola Com- pany, 864 Woodward ave, Detroit, estlake Public Market} TIMES SQUARE—SIXTH AND VIRGINIA FLOUR 49-1b, sk. Gold Bond 49-1b, sk. Westlake 49-1b. ak, Centennial E SUGAR STA Lower ZOBLE GROCERY CO. Stall 105—“Why Pay Mor Snow Flake package Sodas, 15¢ and 35¢ pkg. Albers’ Rolled Cane and M 90¢ | eee . 25¢ n Royal Baking der Stalls 16 and 17 Westlake Grocery Store Phone Main 1434—“The Basement Stor 5 bars Crystal White Soap.. 2 cans Blue Ribbon Milk... 3 cans Tomato Soup... 30¢ pkg. Washing Powder... Ibs. small White Bean n Deviled Meat n Pineapple can Ripe Olives » cans Tomatoes. . uglas OIL—Pints Quarts OSTBERG’S CASH GROCERY Stall 192—“Where You Buy OM aOR _.30c 2 Ibs. good Prunes at. 3 cans Soup ope Dandy Toilet Soap... 4 large rolls Toilet Paper Small can Log Cabin Syrup 1 Ib, Crese Coffee 1 can I. X Sauce y's ‘Tom! 2B¢ 30¢ 33¢ L. Macaroni Every grade of Tea 100 below Marked Price; 2 pounds 25¢ be- low Marked Price, Delicious Apples per box Jonathan, Winesaps and Newton . Sunkist Oranges, medium size . M. CINNAMON Stall131 Stall 131 Fronting Three Girls’ E ‘he last of U for the SATURDAY ON Mixed Tulips, 3 doz. Bend for P Price List 1913 Westlake Ave. Idaho Peace Officers Are Now in Session! "« meeting practicaty was rep- ((United} BOISE, Ida, Feb. 6 Press.)—Idaho's peace officers met here today in a school of instruc- tion. Robert O. Jofes, sioner of law enforcement, head of the state called the meeting with the object of gaining closer co-operation, Attending the convention sheriffs, police chiefs, repr tives of United States marsha a | revenue officers. | Jones planned to outline details! and) \ \ AYFLOWER MILK is se- lected from the of . Washington. are properly fed, cleaned and that ar The pure richness wholesome ayy - B3¢ | I ase¢ | FREE-_Flour Sifter with a purchase of $1.00 | ™ J. 8. . 25¢) jof a new finger print system which commis: | 7 constabulary, | radicals, | - other city employes and citizens peel- Cows flavor is immedi- Yakima Potatoes, 5 lbs . 256 , dozen ... 25e Cauliflower 10¢ Always the best Fruit Vegetables SOAP tal White Lemor and up | 6 bars Cry ane oRub Naphtha 84.70 ub Naphtha . Stall 106 Liberty F, Stall 106 & V. Co. SUGAR STALL—Lower Floor TOKIO Stall 130 Free Delivery Phone Main 5952 No. 60 Ho Drifted ?"—Phone Elliott 4314 10 sack Patent Flour Albers’ Peacock | Flour $3.15 Buckwhea y Flour, 83. po Snow Flour. ct 1 Sipe $6.45 & large Harting ; Del Monte Pork and I MM oe 1 case COFFEE Red Can, 1 Ib. « 1 Ib. M. J. B., 5 Ibs 95¢ Lipton’s Tea, lb. .75¢ 40c Olympic Pancake Flour for .... 25¢c Van Camp’s Pork and Beans . 17¢ 30c Cream of Wheat. .25¢ 3 lbs. Ghirardelli’s Chocolate for....$1.09 Good Walnuts, lb. ... .25¢ 1 lb. Blue Ribbon Tea 59¢ lg. cans Tomatoes. .25¢ Ibs. Rolled Oats... .25¢ lb. best Jap Rice. ...15¢ pkgs. Kellogg’s Corn Flakes for .. pkgs. Macaroni bar Lenox Soap.... .58¢ can Pink Salmon. White Shortening, per Ib. ; flake Alls’ Stalls 16 and 17 cans Sardines cans Corn or Peas.. oto ne moo for Less”—Phone Elliott 170 1 Ib, Cream Ch : at. 5 large boxes Matches at. 2 large cans Sardines. No, 10 sack Oats..... Vinegar, Bluing or Ammonia . pkgs. Teco Flour .. pkgs. Jello, assorted. 6009 Broom ... ese... 9 Ibs. CAN ma Gems or Burbanks, 100 Ibs. Newton, Jonathan and other varieties. The Combination pee Stall 116 Stall. 117 Orange Blossom Cream Almond Cream and Strawberry Cream Layer Cakes Regular 60c Special 55c Stall Opposite Cinnamon’s Fruit Stall 3 for...ececeee Del Monte Bartlett Del Monte Peaches, ° 8 CANS picewcccccws Satisfaction Guaranteed Stalls 6 and 7 FUNERAL SERVICES for Alice d’Evers, Seattle woman died in Chicago Wednesday, be held ‘there Sunday. Mr. d left Thursday to attend the will be state wide. resentative of the entire state con- stabulary, for each of the state of- ficers attending can be called into that body on a moment's notice. jaho ts the first Western state to have ‘the constabulary. It has proved effective in rounding up 4 ba vat inuous Qi Members Chicago Board of Ten shares and upward, MAI i SH or PARTIAL BAYME! Grain, 1,000 bushel id 50s LOW SS MEN, firemen and ed coats Thursday and aided in grad- ing new Mother Ryther home prop- erty, 44th st. and Stone way. ty Washington. Best Dairy Cows. ately distinguished in May- flower Milk. Babies thrive on it—children like it at every meal and grown-ups prefer it to all other milks because of its rich- ness and high percentage of fats. We deliver daily to stores in all parts of the city. Your grocer shoutd have Mayflower Milk. It’s pure, wholesome and satisfying. best herds that properly > healthy. and fine ower D air Sst Honest Milks « BEAT THIS IF YOU | Nice, clean, medium size ‘Yakt- | with 1 box of Apples—Yellaw | eeineee Senees Se eussanee ns

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