The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 22, 1920, Page 7

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COPYRIGHT 1919 BY EMERSON HOUG THE SEATTLE STAR (Continued From Yesterday) J someth wrong. Company of] “Oh, no, ma'am! | 7 CHAPTER XV | soldic e ed any day from| “It was very noble of you — ur : The Pledge Kansas, T » Doc Barnes ts| there,” *he began, on another tack the main guy down there, a major| "You saved my life, Not worth ater Dr. Barnes’ or something. They're watching the | much.” J Gardner apr head engineer for the Company, I| She was smiling cheerity as she 3 Beats in poc believe, No one knows who's who.|could. Sim Gage looked carefully at é “ne le A heap of things has happened that | her face to'see how much she knew, | 3 @uccinct fas oughtn't to happen, but looks tike| “Doctor Barnes told me that that ‘ pall Washington was getting onto the}man, the one that took me away “How's things down below?” asked | ™™° was hurt by @ tree; that you got} ji F Sim presently Well, I got to go over home and | th 4 Nag eng gh re But te j - of uneasy! * replied W! ook around,” he concluc Nak, 3"¢ 0! at Re nert ae Tet Wie. ck be oq ante tending b Aid try to shoot him, Mr. . “News had got down “ tes*ant" Daas you got to get-up an Why, did you, ma'am jand barn. Gage, “But then, it would of been a - and so have I | +} don't see why." anid Sim Gage|™racte if you had axhit him, your ; win don't, aid § 3080 | vce b poor, like. I reckon it's q uw e Bie. nat eo just a 1 you didn’t “On, 1 * he resumed sud: i - : = hay to net - t ng es denly, bethinking himself of the er : of sold the government p mY | d which had brought the Sebstall Pd coe cae aa and which had brought him hither “I got a letter fer you, ma‘am.” ed sialic could I, without no horses and no on Why, that's strange s ‘ ane money to get none? I'm run down! y giin't know of aay on 7 , Moman Finds Vicious Wea- | micnty tow, Wid, and that's tho, ' Sun know of ge truth. Mrs, Jensen can't stay along ok ‘hein ‘Ghaasioenh 3 pon Between Sheets here always, thé Lord knows what | ‘Tom Annie Squires ‘ Oh! what does she say we wot done if she hadn't come |... é Police detectives today were en-|now, One thing's sure —she ain't had the letter opened \ @eavoring to find trace of a prowler|agoin’ to stay here lessen things peut letter epaned mew is Who last night visited the room of] straixhtens out. You know who 1|“".h" sti: wakes nated Mrs. W Arnold in a hotel at 118% | mean _ “1 6 j : are ma'am,” said he. “I can't exactly Pike st wacked the place and left) wid nodded, his face grave under seo what it says—light’s rather poor Hut Wid, he read And she said it was all right with her, and that she was back in het Uttle room again, I reckon it’s the room where you both used to live.” isn't married! What did she & long-diaded butcher knife between | ity ¢ the sheets of her bed. Returning late tr Arnold discovered ¢ @f rare coins. t Was ready to re « the covers of her bed, she found the Sinister token left by the marauder. 3t was not until then that she theught the matter of enough mo- Ment to summon the police Detectives said they were search fng for Robert Dixon, 35, an ac! 1 stubble. “Yes,” said he in here just now “Say.” he added, suddenly, “You | jt n a theatre, Mrs. e theft of a know that letter we got fer her? Now if that girl that wrote it, that » Squires, could come out her into this here game, why 4 that be? You recken she m, not, matried. That's all off Her feller throwed her down. But she says she wants you to write to her right away and tell h we |tell her about things—you know—" “What dog she say?—Tell sno ex Naw, she wouldn't come,” raid i “But, say, that remind: wer did tell her about that er take It in to her,” said Quaintance of Mra Arnold. Dixon is S ghee Wid, turning away, actly what she sa! rey hate por ite gn Ho walked towards the gate. After! “One thing”—he plunged desper Sim had seen him safely in the dis-| ately—“‘she said she was sure you Police description. tanc ent w gard step to- | wa ppily mari a wl "he occurrence recalls the visit of ‘Ce he went with laggard step to-| was happily ma Tied. And she ward the door of his own home wanted you to tell her all about your ees i the apartments of an} "0 warren was not ash It| husband. But then, good God aged woman living at Sixth ave and . Se ee Se 7, 2 was her voice, ne greeted his timid tapping at the half, burned door frame loud, which | AY mighty! she didn't know? “Weil,” said) Mary Warren, fer I blood high in her face, “I'll have to Spring st. last winter. ‘He was never cau Come in. Who tell her all about that, won't 17 1°l oe | “It's me, ma’am,” said be; and en.| write to her at once 3 red a little at a time “y ite to her? What?’ Vete ans He might seen the faint - her how happy ri Guests color rise to heek ax she drew | how f I've been. I'l! on Yacht Party»! up in to talk to him me in even th + A clam-eating contest featured the Her fa 153 on Week-end cruise of the Queen Waeht club Saturday on w Members of the Veterans’ Voc @lub were the cuests. extended to Point Bolin in Agate | Pass where the party aped on the Indian reservation there. you might so different I'l tell ber how fine and splendid it's been of you to take care of a sick, blind, helpless girl like “You've not been in to see me, Mr.| me; and to—to—gtve her a man's rasan said she at length, bravely. | protection.” “look right into her| rier sera PA “Why didn't you come? I get aw-| He was speechleas. She struggied | fully lonesome.” on, red to the hair, ELIZABETH WORRELL, 43, em- “Is that so?” said he. “That's just} “You don't know women, how Ploye of the Pinkham Lumber Co., a| the way I do.” Fesident of the Wintonia hotel, 1431) “It’s too bad, all this awful trou Minor ave.. died Sunday in the Se-| ble," said she. “I've been what they attle General hospital after a short/ call a Jonah, don’t you think, Mr. much they want 4 strong man to de pend on, Mr. Gage; a man like you Chivalrous? Why, yes, you've been all of that and more. ru write to Annio and tell her that I'm very happy, and that I've got the very | best—the very best—hushand—in all |the world. I'll tell her that! I'l! say jthat—that my husband—” He heard her sobbing. He could endure no more. Suddenly he reached out a hand and touched hers very gently, “Don't ma’am,” said he. | God's sake don't ery.” It was some time after that “Fer neither could have told bow long he managed to go on, his voice you mbling. “Do ma‘am? for sur 4 feller | I'm not \ God! Yea, { mea it” “Putting it that way, now!” said Sim Gage, “putting it that |way, I'm here to ary to do nothing that's best fer And I want to say right now and here, I didn't mean no harm to you |1 swear, neither Wid nor me ever 4id dream that a woman you'd ‘ome out here—I never kn: |woman as you was in the wh |worid. 1 just didn’t know—that wa all. You won't blame me too much fer gettin’ you here into this awful | place, will you?” ; | “No, 1 understand,” said she gent jly. “I think I know more about you now than I did at first.”, “I ain't much to know, ma‘am But you—why, if I studied all my ife, 1 wouldn't begin to know you hardly none at all re loubt the reve mina the sweet Ne qurencas of th mean that, nat, real and ain't acared offered | $ If this ts the way want It he went on, “I'll u never 4 to bother you, no w world £ I'll be on the square with you, so help ~ with ten se- me God! I'll take care of you the » lectiéns best way I can, so help me God! I'll x work, I'll do the best I can fer you so help me God she, using his usly now. MUSIC FOR SUMMER —the light popular airs, the n I swear to be true ou, and to and the best offerings from v help you all I can, every w ca the sort of music an t ® ‘4 Laos way I can, We have all the r 1 do duty Do you unders' I understand a heap of things 1 f nothing about, ma'am,” said “I'm that sort of man t talk very much you can play them able Victrolas offered—and play them to your complete satisfac- tion. Come in and we will be glad to demonstrate to try to say that way,” said Then that’s our t's a promise, #0 fer as I'm i," said Sim Gage. scared from the first of lany woman coming out hero,” said jhe, truthfully “But whatever joe gay goes. But our gettin’ mar. When?” ‘he sooner the better.” They both nodded assent to this, neither seeing the other, for he dared not look her way now || To Make Hairs Vanish From Face, Neck or Arms | Keep a little powdered delatone handy And when hairy growths ap ‘pear make a paste with some of the (VICTROLA YI is another Popular Portable Victrola that is a Special Summer Offering with ten selections for $30.2%—and torms to suit the purchaser.) |powder and a little water, then spread over hairy surfa After 2 or 32 minutes rub off, h the skin and it will be entirely from hair or blemish, ‘This simple treatment is unfailing, but care should be exer. cised to be su and get genuine delatone, otherwise you may be dis- appointed. Advertinement 14.21 Third SKATTLE'S MUSICAL HEADQUARTERS CHICKERING—KIMBALL—MEULIN PIANOS said Sim | But 1] understand a heap more'’n I'm going | Sometimes it's that] WASHINGTON’S LEADING DENTIST | The Demand of the Day Is Sanitation to try and show you logical ways to do it. and good intentions. Good intentions should ee ness by assurance of personal responsibility. profession as a whole. ‘ It must be remembered that there is nore than one dentist, and there are suc- ‘essful men not having a very large prac- tice, and these men base their work upon the methods as laid down by the pro- sion as a whole. Each individual dentist may possess some special ability in certain branches of dentistry, but you ‘an trust a dentist who is conscientious in his work to benefit humanity. Stability, responsibility, cleanliness and training are good points to decide upon. 810 1-2 First Ave. Now Let's eat at Boldt’s; cozy boxes for the whole family Where | Pike crosses| Third ity. eee pure vir, in Olive Oil, properly medicated. 7s Slenriches the blood, quiets the nerves, bowels and builds up id Get a bottle today—all rene How to Select Your Dentist may enter your mind, and it is the intention of the writer The dentist you select should be a man of experience You never make a mistake in any personal service busi- Then, one man’s experience cannot be as good as the * he continued a little later, | the place seeming insufferably small . It’s your own fault it - you “don't 1 Teel | h| well, or if you lack vim, vigor and vital-| It is tonic time. Proud’s Portolive Tonic || fi 2 food tonic, composed of medicinal Port and| regulates the strength of the entire system, | me OQ © —) © ry pry | or | 2) oy handle. come first. EXAMINATION FREE MY PRICES Best Crowns Best Bridgework Best Plate Painless Extraction All Work Guaranteed Obey That Ever-Insistent Impulse and Visit Dr. Wilson Today Sundays—9 a. m. to 12 m. DR. J. T. WILSON Oppasite Colman Bldg. | to him all at once, I'll go down to the Company dam |hope you ain't agoin' to change?” "I think I've got] right soon, said he Ministers I don't cha sald Mary War get out in the air.” He pushed] comes in down there sometimes, Up|ren. “If 1 promise, 1 promise. 1] ¢ his box seat with much clatter | we ain't,got no church. I ain't | have said—yes © rose, agony in every fiber of | to churdh—well, scarcely in my| «row ig your bad knee?" ahe| his #oul : \ whole life, but sure not fer ten years. | asked after a time, with an attempt|_ “I suppose you could kiss me,” said | You want to have ft over with, don't |ts be of service to him You've|Mary Warren, hesitatingly It's never told me. usual.” She tried to smile as she “evel seb teher ‘an be ne .ouane | tmrnee bee tate 1 him. It was) Swoll up twict as big as tt.ou - @ piteous th errible thing. “That's just the way I feel! It/to be, ma‘am. But how come you to|“ Jt get be theses. . 1 Son't| y take a week o1 wo bel can ik oO nat? 0 nus! f i . , the ¢ ee acy’ midieter up! he T{think of that?’ You mustn't mind | ening I will, now, but T thank you| cs ' orl - ‘ You mustn't never *) just the same. You see, this ain't ———_—_——— of me a'ta | A usual case."Y Good-by!" him with a sudden wondering joy for me I wish Look out over the valley. I could see them m and see me when you can, won't you? come weeping to an empty world. (To Be Continued Tomorrow) ‘any part of the elty or county, dey or night, It as Rafferty fune ral Mrec lor Advertise, But Advertise Honestly There is only one kind of dentistry that can be ad- vertised honestly, and that is the kind performed by all men of reputation. tific journal in dentistry will put its O. K. to as correct. The only difference between my dentistry and any other high-class dentist is its price, and price is con-™ trolled by the volume of dentistry the office is able to & I have no so-called scientific methods or special drugs or mechanical work used exclusively by myself. I have to offer you the teachings of America’s largest dental school, supplemented by 15 years of con- centrated experience which is not surpassed. To benefit humanity is the first aim of the doctor and dentist, and that cannot be better done than by not only educating yourself, but others, and my sense of honor to my patients is of too high a character to hide my knowledge of the care of the teeth in my own office. The same is true of every reputable dentist. Does Dr. Wilson Meet These. Have you visited my office? Have you noticed the up- to-date equipment? noticed how clean-cut my office appears to you? you noticed my advertising in the papers for years, offer- ing you good dentistry as practiced by all men of reputa- said Mary Warren to Go out and look at the mountains And you'll fhe was talking to the empty room, | | The Dentiail Reputable dentists do their work according to certain standard methods and with certain standard materials. § Dr. Wilson offers only that kind of dentistry. It is the dentistry that every scien- ae se meaes @ Requirements? Have you stood across the street and Have tion? Have you noticed my office grow? Have you noticed I gained in my years of experience the largest practice in the state? Have you noticed how consistent I have been in meeting every up-to-date requirement of the dental profession? Every method known by the profession in painless dentistry, diagnosis and ex- amination of your tooth troubles are done under the very best of conditions. See your dentist wash his hands. ‘5 See that your dentist is clean is my fj big byword, and then see the instruments sterilized. Notice that I advertise and i practice under my own name. Lady Assistants seep Phone Elliott 1833 ee a8 ea $10 PER ACRE That is what you pay for Tide Flats 8 miles west of Mount Vernon, the heart of the best farming district in Wash- ington. You only need to see this land to be convinced. Fifty people visited this land last Sunday, and fifty sales are the results. Padilla Bay Tide Lands are going fast, and you will miss the chance of a lifetime if you don’t act quickly. Our * office, at 514 Second Avenue, is open from 8 a. m. to 9 at night. Come in and investigate. Sparks, Chase & Dye 514 Second Avenue

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