The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 22, 1920, Page 5

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sale, My patient. to. ‘They are Don't forget to visit our Drapery Department and take &@vantage of our Lace Curtain LIBERAL CREDIT EXTENDED p GRUNBAU co. particular den- f} tist and my of- fice has that reputation. r The Best Bridgework...$5.00 Guaranteed to be the best and to last, and my prices Compare them reasonable ite Colman Bldg. Elliott 1833 oi ran Plates ‘ to Fit WASHINGTON’S LEADING DENTIST In_ fitting a plate I mean to satisfy and do satisfy every rightly lived and be satisfied. RAINY AND COLD EVENINGS are assured if you have been wise and bought your heater. If you have not, do so now—it is here waiting for you— priced from $3.50 % $57.50 The Cole's original Hot Blast Heater burns any fuel—it will solve your fuel problems—as it saves and serves. THIS WEEK SPECIAL 3 Royal Morris Chair, $42.50 B for $29.75. | Government experts, investigating | rumors of extensive deposits of tron jore in Northwestern Australia, have reported at least 97,000,000 tons in sight above sea level, of exceptional quality. / EAL PAINLESS DENTISTS: HE BEST RUBBER “PLATES $10 I Gua tea | ‘ - 7” The Demand of the Day Is Sanitation Prejudice and they are su and honest. up large volume of * adverti ng. Lady attendants at all times, sterilizing instruments before you. My laboratory is complete, and I know that my work is standard throughout. Get My Estimate, Which Is Free Obey that ever-tnsistent impulse and visit Dr. Wilson today. DR. J. T. WILSON 8103 First Avenue fofofofoyopo poy oyo) So many people are prejudiced because I advertise, not taking into consideration the fact that I advertise, and that their stores, banks and I claim ‘no impossibilities, and advertise under my own name. Some are skeptical because my prices are below what they are used to paying. You must remember I have had 12 years of success and have been able to gain a small profits—another argument for my (Continued From Yesterday) Ho came just on the dot, and I let him in and took him into the lbrary. |Then TI went upstaira and told | Mother there was some one down stairs who wanted to see her. And she said, how funny, wasn't there any name, and where jwae the maid. But I didn’t seem! to hear, I had gone into my room jin quite a hurry, as if I had for gotten something I wanted to do thera, But, of course, I didn't do. thing—except to make sure that she went downstairs to the library, They're there now together, And he's been here a whole hour already Seems as if he ought to say some thing in that length of timet After I waa sure Mother was down, I took out this, and began to write In it. And I've been writing ever since, But, oh, I do #0 wonder what's going on down thera, I'm so | excited One week later, At just that minute Mother came Into the room 1 wish you could have seen her, My stara, but she her shining and | ary Marie Py EleanorHPorter COPYRIGHT 1 cheeks, And young! Monostly, 1 believe she looked younger than I did that minute. Bhe Just came and put her arms around me and kissed me; and I saw then that her eyes were all misty with tears, She didn’t sy a word, hardly, only that Father wanted to see me, and I was to go right down, And I went I thought, of course, that she was coming, too, But she didn’t. And when I got down the stairs I found I was all alone; but I went right on Into the library, and there was Fathor waiting for me He didn't say much, elther, at firet; but' just like Mother he put bis arms around me and kissed me, and held me there, Then, very soon, he began to talk; and, oh, he said such beautiful thingy—such tender, lovely, mcred things; too sacred even to write down here. Then he kissed me again and went away, But he came back the next day, and he's been here some part of every day «ince! And, oh, what o wonderful week it has been! They're golog to be married It's looked pretty! —with eyes and the lovely pink in her OPEN THE DOOR OF THE GREAT UNKNOWN? If you are sick and want to Get Well and Keep Well, write for lit- erature that tells How and Why this almost unknown and wonderfully element brings relief to y sult Rheumatia Nouralg High Biood into your hy circula- sluggtiahnes to @ no and the next thing getting well. t proposition. You are thoroughly natlefled it |s helping before t PP ona ail, both rich sold #0 reas is within the reach of ang poor. jo matter how bed your ailment or how jong standing, we will be Pleased to Radiam Appil- radbury building, Loe FOREVER FREE FROM ASTHMA! Hundreds of Seattle men and women have been PER- MANENTLY relieved from the tortures of asthma by & won- derful new discovery. LEARN HOW YOU, TOO, MAY be freed from this dread disease, Write for FREE taformation , | married at a moment's notice. tomorrow. They'd have been mar- ried right away at the first, only they had to walt—something about Meenses and a five-day notice, Mother maid Father fussed and fumed, and wanted to try for pe. cial dispensation, or something; but Mother laughed, and said, certainly not, and that whe guessed it was just as well, for she positively had to have a few things; and he needn't think he could walk right in like that on @ body and expect her to get But I know she she didn’t mean it. | didn’t; for when Father reproached her, she laughed softly, and called him an old goose, and mid, yes, of course, she'd have married him in two minutes if it hadn't been for the five-day notice, no matter whether she ever bad a new dress not. “bana that ‘s the way It ts with them all the time. Theyre too funny and ly together for anything. (Aunt Hattie says they‘re too silly for any- thing; but nobody minds Aunt Hat- tle.) They just can't mem to do enough for each other, Father was woing next week to a place ‘way on the other side of the world to view an eclipse of the moon, but he sald right off he'd give it up. But Mother said, “No, indeed." she guensed she wouldn't give it up; that he was going, and that going, too—a wedding trip; and that she was sure she didn’t know a bet- ter place to go for a wedding trip than the moon! And Father was so pleased. And he raid he'd try not to pay all his attention to the stars this time; and Mother laughed and raid, “Nonsense,” and that she adored stare herself, and that he must pay attention to the stara, It waa his business to. Then she looked very wise and’ got off something she'd read in the astronomy book. And they both laughed, and looked ever to me to mee if I was noticing. You will find the best equip- ment possible for money to buy and installed in a modern way. You will find an office with a refined atmos- phere! and Skeptical churches advertise, ecessful. It is modern business, which permits And I waa And so then we all laughed And, as I sid before, ft ts all per- fectly lovely and wonderful So it's all settled, and they're going right away on this trip and call it a wedding trip. And, of course, Grandfather had to get off his joke about how he thought it was a pretty dangerous business; and to see that this honeymoon didn’t go into an eclipse while they were watching the other one. But nobody minds Grand- father, I'm to stay here and finish schoo! ‘Then, in the spring, when Father and Mother come back, we are all to go to Andersonville and begin to live in the old house again. Won't it be lovely? It funt mems too good td be true. Why, I don't care @ bit now whether I'm Mary or Maria, either. In fact, both of them call mo the whole name now, Mary Marie. I don’t think they ever said they would. They just began to do it, That's all. Of course, anybody can see why; now each one is calling me the other one’s name along with their own. That fs, Mother ts calling me Mary along with her pet Marte, and Father is calling Me Marie along with his pet Mary. Funny, isn’t it? But one thing Is sure, anyw: How about this being a love story now? Oh, I'm so excited? CHAPTER IX Which Is the Test Andersonville, Twelve Years Later. Twelve years—yea And I'm twenty-eight years old. Pretty old Protty old, little Mary Marie of the long ago would think. perhaps today I feel just as old as she would put it, I came up into the attic this morning to pack away some things I shall no longer need, now that 1 am going to leave Jerry. (Jerry te my husband.) And in the bottorn of my little trunk I found this manu- script. I had forgotten that such a thing existed; but with tts laborious- ly written pages before me, it all came back to me; and T began to read; here a sentence; graph; somewhere else a page. Then, with a little half laugh and half sob, I carried it to an old rock- THE SEATTLE STAR ashe was) But, then, nobody else does, | And, weil, | there a para- | = . Jerry cally me Mollie~and I had wondered what were those contend- ing forces within me. I know now }1t is the Mary and the Marie trying to nettle their old, old, quarrel It was almpst dark when IT had finished the manuscript, The far corners of the attic were peopled with fantastic shadows, and the spl ders in the window were swaying lazy and full-stomached, in the midet of the day's spoils of gruesome wings and legs I got upg Slowly, stiffly, shivering a little, 1 felt muddenly old and worn and ineffably weary. It in a long, long journey back to our childhood—sometimes, even tho one may be only twenty-eight, the manuscript. It was written on the top sheet of a still thick pad of. paper, and my fingers fairly Ungled suddenly, to go on and cover those unused white sheets—tell what happened next—tell the rest of Ul 1 looked down at the last page of | | | story; not for the sake of the #tory— but for my make, It might help me. It might make things clearer, It might help to justify myself in my own eyen Not that I have any doubts, of course (abouté leaving Jerry, I mean), but that when I saw it in black and white I could be even what was best for him and best for me ‘ So I brought the manuscript down |have commenced to write. I can’t jfinish it tonight, of course, But I have tomorrow, and still tomorrow (1 have #o many tomorrows now! And what do they all amount to?) |And so I'll just keep writing, as 1 | have time, till I bring It to the end. I'm sorry that-tt must be no sad land sorry an end. But there's no jother way, of course, There can be but one ending, as I'can see I'm sorry. Mother’ll be sorry, toa She doesn't know yet. I hate to tell her, Nobody knows—not even Jerry him- sclf—yet, They all think I'm just making @ visit to Mother—and I am til I write that leter to Jerry. And then— 1 believe now that I'll watt ti I've finished writing thia, I'll feel better then. My mind will be clearer, I'll |know more what to say, Just the leffort of writing tt down— Of courwe, if Jerry and I hadn’t— But this is no way to begin. Like the ttle Mary Marie of long ago I am in danger of starting my dinner with fee-cream instead of soup! And so I must begin where I left off, jof course, And that was at the wed- ding. I remember that wedfing as if it were yesterday. I can se now, with Mary Marie's manuscript before me, why !t made so great an impression upon me. It was a very quiet wed- ding, of course-—just the members of the family present. But I ness of Mother's face, nor the splen- did strength and tenderness of Father's And the way he drew her into his arms and kisned her, after ft wns all over-—well, I remember dis- E. M. HOUGH HAS — MADE A GAIN OF TWENTY POUNDS First Time in Many Years —Gives Tanlac Credit “I am not onty enjoying good health for the first time {n years, but haye also gained twenty pounds in weight,” said E. M. Hough, Al bany “Hotel, Bellingham, Wash. a | well known employe of the Blodell Donovan Lumber Co., in relating his |remarkable experience with Tanlac | recently. “For a number of years I suf. fered from indigestion, rheumatism and other ailments, which pretty near put me out of commission. Rich fgods of any kind always caused me to suffer agonies, but no | matter what I ate I bloated up fear fully with gas and suffered from shortness of breath and palpitation of the heart. “Il also had cvheumatiam, which got so bad last year that for two |soli4 months I was unable to do a liek of work. Ttie pains in my legs, I was barely able to hobble about. “At night I was #0 nervous an racked with pain that sleep was nearly impossible. I suffered con- dizziness. My appetite left me al- most entirely, I lost weight and got weaker all the time, “Well, ft was certainly @ lucky day for me when I got Tanlac, I began to improve as soon as I }comes quick enough for me, now, a touch of indigestion. I have been left me, “The headaches have stopped bothering me, the rheumatic pains have gone entirety | from my legs and I can get about | ing-chalr by the cobwebby dormer | yi rood ng anybody. Tam no longer| window, and settled myself to read | nervous, sleep like a log at night} it straight thru. and wake up feeling fine, in f And I have*read it. I am just in the pink of condition, Poor litle Mary Marie! | Dear little |maniac is the best medicine in the Mary Marie! To meet you like this, | world, for it has put me on my feet, to share with you your joys and sor-|and 1 just can't say enough for it.” rows, hopes an@ despairs, of those! ma is sold in Seattle by Bartell years long ago, is lke sitting hand| prug stores under the personal di: in hand on a sofa with a childhood’s | retion of @ special Tanlac represbn. friend, each: listening to an eager | tative, “And do you remember?" falling | — constantly from delighted Nps that cannot seem to talk half fast enough But you have taught moe much, little Mary Marte. I understand so many things so much better, now, since reading this fittle story in your round childish hand. You see, I had almost forgot | ten that I was a Mary and a Marie I understand—oh, | Niliin idiom ly y WR = TAGLETS= BA Better than Pills| GET A For’ Liver. Is.! 20€ Box KAR:RY MAR-RU COMPANY, Tacoma, W =. De ae Wer sale bs Druggista, more convinced that I was doing | to my own room, ahd this evening 1 | | } The Natty Small Fur Scarf ‘8 the vogue for Fall and Winter. Thelr attractiveness adds a din tinctive touch to your eult or dress and may be depended upon to give your apparel the finality of correct style. Our Fur Section on the Second Floor Gisplaye @ very complete stock. The Showing Features Choker Scarfs of Gray Squirrel at $20.00 to $89.50. Natural Pastern Mink st $25.00 to $75.00, Dyed Skunk at $19.50 and $25.00, Ermine at $19.75 to $65.00. Fitch at $15.00 to $45.00. Hudson Beal at 625.00 and $30.00. Mole at $19.75 to $55.00. Stone Martin at $95.00. Natural Hudson Ray Sable, $95.00. Dyed Hudson Bay Sable, $95.00, Scarfs in Animal Style Black, Taupe and Brown Wolf at $25.00 to 5.00. Biack, Taupe and Brown Fox at $45.00 tw $135.00. Cross Fox at $125.00, Red Fox at Natural $95.00. Black ‘Lynx at $125.00. White Fox at $89.50 and $125. BLOUSES—SPECIAL $1.59 Upper Main Floor 'N this broken Ine of Blouses are models made of organdie and votle, in plain colors and stripes, finished with white collars and cuffs, These were marked to nell at $4.95 and $5.75, then reduced to $3.46, and for Thursday marked for a clean up at $1.59. There are 75 Waists in the lot, in sizes 36 to 44, but not each size in every style or pattern. MEN’S TWO-PIECE ‘ UNDERWEAR Main Floor bee these complete stocks, men, or women who shop for men, will find the garments they like best, and of a quality which we recommend for service and satisfaction. Shirts and. Drawers Fleeced Cotton Garments, heavy enough in weight for fall and winter wear. These are shown in ecru and:gray. Drawers, sizes 22 to 44, Shirts and Drawers Light and Medium Weight Garments in oc Ada steam shrunk of 50 per cent woo Shirt atzes 34 to 48.... Driver nie 12 wae, } A Garment, $2.25 Shirts and Drawers Steam shrunken garments in light and medium weight, containing 85 per cent wool Shirt sizes 36 to 60..... Drawer suee 32 to aie. [| A Garment, $2.75 Shirts and Drawers Heavy garments: of practically all-wool, mee especially for cold weather and hard service, shi 34 to 46.4 i pda dey lag A Garment, $4.50 shall | tnetly that even Aunt Hattie choked never forget the fine, sweet lovell-|up and had to turn ber back to wipe|Mary Marie was happy. her efen, (Continued Tomorrow) They went away at once, first to lew York for a day or two, then to Andergonville, to prepare for the real wedding trip to the other side of thi world. and because nothing of consequence happened in all months is the reason, I suspect, why the manuscript got tossed into the! bottom of my Utue trunk and stayed there. In the spring, when Father and | Mother returne back to Andersonville, there followed another long period of just happy Enjoying Good Health for |¢irinood, and 1 suspect I satisfied and happy N I stayed in Boston at school those weeks and Pe, and we all went | to think of| writing. After all, I've n i when we're sad or something that we have that tingling to cover perfectly good white paper with “confessions” and my life.” I'm doing. | And so {t's not surprising, perhaps, | that Mary Marie's manuscript still lay forgotten in the Iitle old trunk | trou! over “stories of | An witness right now what atter it was taken up to the . like fos have been discovered in Coos Bay, Ore. EPILEPSY be STO Fer Over 50 Yous ~ ‘There is one sure way that has! failed to remove dandruff at! once, and that is to dissodve it, then | | You destroy {t entirely. To do this, especially in my joints, were so bad| ever Should « girl keep her husband or sweethtart guessing? SEE ‘The InferiorSex’ @ A Simple Way to | | Remove Dandruff Just get about four ounces of plain,!}! lhave been the ideal Family Laxative for 40 years—a guar- lantee of reliability. Gentle in’ action, they are entirely free from injurious drugs, and common liquid arvon from any drug-| a eo | store (this is all you will need), apply | stantly from headaches and spells of | at might. when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips, By morning most, for| Your dandruff will three or four more applications will| | started taking it. Mal time never | completely dissolve and entirely de-| stroy every single sign and trace of Jand I can eat just anything and i tno ai mugh dandruft} hing 1 wan v 1] You may hay page ge Fang, never feet) "You will find all itching and dig- ; calp will stop instantly, built up wonderfully in weight and] ing of the scal all that sluggish, tired feeling has|#"4 your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, | glossy, silky and soft, and look and and @lzziners | feel @ hundred times better. if not all, of! be gone, and/{| Semi each. some sets, to bu ago. intended especially for constipation, gestion, torpid liv- er or inactivity of the bowels, Your druggist sells them, Warner's Sate Remedice Con, Rochester, We have just 49 dozen of these I. X. LL House Brooms to offer at this unusually low pri of very good quality, made of select East- ern corn, strongly sewn. Special at...85¢ (No Phone or C. 0. D. Orders—None Delivered) Thursday we are going to offer White POULTRY NETTING Special for Thursday Here is your chance to buy Poultry Ne barfrain. of Netting that should have been here many weeks prices. 18-inch—Regular price, $3.08. Special at $2.29 roll” 24-inch—Regular price, $3.92. Special at $2.98 roll _ 86-inch—Regular price, $5.35. Special at $3.08 roll 48-inch—Regular price, $7.13. Special at $5.38 roll jf 60-inch—Regular price, $8.91. Special at $6.69 roll Special at 85c The I. X. L. is a light broom Semi-Porcelain Cups Special, 15c Each -Porcelain Cups at only 15¢ Nearly every household needs odd cups to fill in broken dinner etc. Don’t miss this opportunity —_ y them at, each..........eceeecece ee cens LOG ata We have just received a delayed shipment We are going to offer it at greatly reduced { 2-inch Mesh—Roll Contains 150: Feet THE STORE FOR USEFUL ARTICLES ©

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