The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 3, 1920, Page 6

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The Seattle Star of city, Ste per month; & montha $1.60; @ mentha $2.78) rear ington. tat 8, fm the 4.60 for 6 montha oF $9.00 per year, Pebitened Patty by The Mar Publishing Oo, Prove Meta ‘State of Washi = Outside ef ¢ The month wraide et * per iy carrier, city, 120 per Wilson’s Next Job . What is Woodrow Wils on going to do after March 4, when he retires? Is he to be the second Sage of Princeton, in the classic groves from which Grover Cleveland addressed his countrymen from time to time after his re- tirement? Or, if health is restored The dimness of our intellectual eyes Aris- totle fitly compares to those of an owl at noon- day.— Boyle. is LIFE! “Husbands don't kins their wives often after the first yeer of their mar- gays © divorce court Jedgn if hasbands kissed their wives more m tly,” asserts another bright amd Seu: wearer of judicial robes, “there Wonld be fewer divorces.” “usbamds are too chary with their .” insists another judge, whe has Bioken ine matrimonial shackion of 4.367 "a be fowew quarrels in the home Dusbands kissed their wives es often marringe as they'd like te be * says the investigating officer ef © “ ee Possibty Edward A. Stoddart of | Brooklyn, N. Y., has read the above Kissing advice handed out by divorce inl judses And, not knowing as “Well as many laymen, that judges very little of what they speak, entered upon a kissing career he would make himself solid with wite. He kissed her 50 ttmes a day. Then Be made it a hundred. Then he got _ Up to 200. One day he kissed her 300) They were honeymeoning. They had been mar- years when the husband heard >. “pb agree Ay be nose divorce courte sald’ about your wife and began his kisslag | Ci a PS : d ) . C. WEATHERBEE, 3127) way: We used to live on the most beautiful sections of Beattie. AL SHORTS, 1501 Broadway: , Usten, I am not @ property here, s0 I don't think I am ified to express an opinion. And I did I'd have all the real estate Piease excuse met WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT SEATTLE? QUESTIONS 1. What is the largest office Structure in the city? 2. Who was Seattie’s first mayor? 3. How did the University of Washington acquire 10 acres in the heart of the city? (Answers Thursday) PREVIOUS QUESTIONS 1. The name of the first news. Paper published in Seattle was the Gazette. Its office force consisted of &n editor and an Indian boy. 2. Frank Hamilton, alias Tom Blanck, was one of the famous out- laws that terrorized Seattle in the early ‘90s. He shot and killed Charies H. Bridwell, bartender in Billy Codrick’s Mug saloon, and later @ncaped trom the King county jail. He was killed shortly after. 3. Chief Meredeth, head of the Se attle police department, was shot ‘and killed in Guy's drug store by John Considine, famous theatrical excuse me! after me to buy a home.| to him, will he, like Taft, accept a professorship in a college, and go about the country lecturing to his fel- low Americans—a professor-at-large, so to speak? Obviously, in him there dwells not the spirit of adventure |that sent Theodore Roosevelt to the African jungles and later to the trackless interior of South America; and still later into another contest for the presidency. Rather, more than likely, Wilson will devote himself to writing, and from his pen the nation may expect the most notable contribution to the history of the times in which no statesman played so prominent a part as he. Only one president returned to public life after quitting his office. John Quincy Adams, retiring from the presidency in 1829, returned to Washington in 1831 as a member of {the house of representatives, at the act of 64. Friends feared this step would dim the luster of his great fame, but his service in congress only added to his renown. | As champion in congress of the anti-slavery movement, he incurred the wrath of slave-trading interests. History lsays he labored thus for liberty “amidst scorn and derision and threats of expulsion and assassination.” He was strick- en while rising to address the house after serving as repre- jsentative 17 years. He died two days later, aged 81, having coer greater distinction in congress than in the presi-~ | dency. | The Beach The man behind the oyster counter, who opens clams and oysters, | is practicing the eldest craft in the human world. | That's the conclusion ef Professor Thomas Cherry, ef the Univeruity of Melbourne No need to wonder at the cournge of the first man te rat an oynter raw! He did that before be became @ man. It was by gathering, opening and eating oywters that the monkey-tike animal, trom which | hemans evolved, developed a brain and became intelligent! lof man took place op the ocean beach. If man had developed tn the ‘forest his agetlong strugsie with mosquitocs and other forest inmcts diseases. Evolution en the beach would explain man's lom of a halry coat. The bare skin dries more quickly, and under seashore conditions te leas affected by the heat or cold. The ocean beach ly little frequented by turge and dangerous anfmats. | That would explain man's failure te develop great teeth, swift less, or other organs of defense or attack. Earliest man, living on the beach, developed fresh powers of oteerry- | tion and imitation tm the search for shell-f\sh, erabe and turtle eres. This development has «reater survival value for him than lengthening of canine teeth, says Professor Cherry. To sit on the beach and watch the waver hg « peculiar fascination for most men. No wonder, if that was the habit of their ancestors thra the long ages in which they were developing Into men who later would learn to walk om their bind legs, carry umbrellas and w derby bats! . The Real Reason Russia cannot be readmitted tnto the family of mations anti] she obtains @ government truly reprewentative of the Runcan people instead of Lenine and Trotsky. So say the other governments of the world. ‘The real reason why the wortd cannot do business with the soviet nment of Russia today is not that it is not representative of the Russta, but because the soviet government represents an kiea war with the ideas of the rest of the world The whole con- 3 | 5 Fark been reversed in soviet Russia, The world doce not like ; it does mot want this idea; it thinks It has discovered as a what has happened in Ruasia that this idea would be bad for world; that it does not make for happiness, but misery. iy why the American government refuees to do busines with soviet Russia. Representative government has nothing to do with the matter, The American government can do business with Persia. Afghanistan, or any other nation under the sun tn spite of their forms of government provided there be a basis of agreement that the statu ings as they have been built up in past centuries of civilization shal! be changed. ‘The United States got along with every nation in world when it was the only republic In the world Wealth Piled Up an4 thirty-nine of the leading Industrial companion, their inst annual reperta, show a combined working capita! 47,450 compared with $1,921,426,649, at the close of 1914," says Journal doesn’t inctude the many smal-fry profiteerx; fust the of $2,445,922,401 tn @ five-year period.” adds the the great inareased fmancial strength of the corporations.” docs not tnctude the enormous dividends paid by nor the huge salaries «given officers, it represents but Hi 3? & g g& peal ited i & Most people will agree with the Journal the strength of the big corporations.” Also, it shows thelr greed, their perfect willingness to gmb when they could, and their ability to gouge deeply while this nation and others were engaged in a death struggle Don’t Delay Many needless deaths are caused each year by persons who delay too Jong in summoning medical ald When a fire occurs in town, ne one walts to seq how destructive ft ts going to be before they call the fire department, nor would they try experiments in putting f out. They summon the fire department at once. So it should be when the first sign of fire (disease) appears in town (oar body). Call in the fire department (the doctor) at ones It fe far better to have him examine you and find nothing materialy wrong, than it fs to have something materially wrong the matter with you and fail to find out until it is too late A long, serious lneas is very expensive, and the sooner you begin proper medical treatment, the less destructive and expenstve it is Ukely to be. Remember, cancer begina ae a small tump,; tuberculosie as « alight cold. A persistent headache or a dull pain in any region may be the fore. runner of a serious condition. Why take chances? Call In your family doctor when you suspect four condition te not normal. He is qbvalified to find out what is wrong and correct it if taken in time. If nothing is wrong, your mind will be free from worry and you can go on your way with a feeling of safety. France Reforests ‘The French government is not only giving Its attention to the war. destroyed forests but also to restoring to the country the picturesque topography which was lent to it by the miles and miles of systematically placed trees which lined the roadsides, In the stress of war these old trees were felled either to hamper the march of armies by obstructing the roads, to provide fuel or to go into the supports of trench and dugout. Young straight trees are replacing | them, which in time will give to these roads their proverbial beauty. Along with this’ work the enactment of more stringent laws, being urged, for the better protection of the forests which remain untouched by war. The United States continues merrily cutting down ite forests, wasting wood, and doing Uttle in way of reforestation. Carnesle left $28,000,000; mighty few want to dle that poor, They used to burn witches; now they burn owlja boards Caddages drop and there's hope for the five-cent cigar. Manufacturers say shoes will continue to drop, Yes, many are dropping off. piano Maybde not, but some- Canon Barnes, of London, thing happened to him. A return to normalcy got a setback when New York scheduled another ste-day bike race. The handsomest bridal couple probably would be the girl em thea maga- wine cover page and the collar 44 man inside, Professor Cheyry finds many reasona for thinking that the evotution | would have made him immune to malaria, dysentery and other allied | SEATT EVERETT TRUE— SAY, HOW MUCH 46 YOU ASKING FOR WITH ABOUT Fiws DOZEN OF THESS | Dr. Jas. Writes for The days: Back to the Bible and the Constitution! The Bible must come first. older than the Constitution. seen more service. It has been tont ed out In fiercer trials, It spenke with an authority nothing eve pos sommes ‘The men whe would send the Bible to the sigg dump are not likety to rt & Tt bas} LE STAR By CONDO ainda Blah er TRUE, HAve 4 LARG® STOCK OF THOM, You Do — Fix MS LP I. Vance Star Today on Bible and Constitution BY DR. JAMES L VANCE This te not a bad slogan for thewe, not find the divine right of kings jin the Bible, They did not there |fore write so arrogant a Ue into the Constituuon, They did find the @ivine rights of |the common man in the Bible, and those are. the rights guaranteed in the Constitution. This ts the differ ence between the wornout govern ments of the old world and the re publia At omoe the peasant rose to property righta, and the laws and government based upon! a level with the peer, and common ‘life was dowered with all the privi- fend us to agything better, Men who cannot trust God are not safe lead ors for their fellowmen to trust. | tegen and perquisites of freedom. The moe has not worked out a bet-| It in a freedom with reatraints; the ter system of morals than the Ten | freedom to do right, to think with Commandments and the Sermon on / out fear, to act without conscrip- | the Mount. Any social order that de | tion, to worship without persecution; spinon theae sublime moralities gives but to do af thie with due regand ho promise of a better day. | to the rights of others, Amerion needs to get back to the! Anybody who wants more freedom Biblia That ls where we started. than {his wants = freedom that ts | The men who founded this nation|not safe Anybody who would be were not atheists They had been | better than the Bible has @ goodness trained in a school of life where the that must be suspected. Bible was the text book. | It th easy to make promises. Any It was mon thus trained who gave beggar can do that. But here are gs the Constitution. It te « doou-|two who have performed—the Bible ment of freedom bullt upon rights | and the Constitution, They have led revealed in the sacred Heriptures|us safe thus far. They can be The framers of the Constitution did | trusted for tomorrow. Sentences From Oriental Wise Men BY DR. FRANK CRANE (Copyright, 1920, by Frank Crane) (Ch. XIT) A Par away and long ago lived these| Mencius sid: (and oh, that mod Chinese wise men, yet their wisdom | ernity might heed} In learning ex jn green and fresh today, and the tensively and discussing minutely need thereof. | what t# learned the object of the Confucius mia: A man must firet superior man te that he may set despise himself, and then others wil! forth tn brief what le essentigl despise him. (Works of Monctus.| (Ch. XV) Book IV, Part I, Ch. VITL, 4) Moncius nid: With those who| 20W LONG WILL HE RESP iy? throw themesives away it ix im pomaible to do anything. (Ch, IX, 1) Moncius said: The path of duty Nes in what in near, and men seek for it in what ts remota (Ch. X1) The work of duty los in what is easy, and men seek for it in what is difficult. (ame. Sincerity is the way of heaven. To think how to"be sincere is the way of men. (Same, Ch. XII, 2) Mencius sald: Of all the parte of the body there t# none more ex-| cellent than the pupil of the eye. Tho} pup! cannot be used to hide a man's wickedness, (Same, ch. XVI) Listen to a man’s words and look at the pupil of his eye. (Same, ch. XV., 2) Mencius maid: The respectful do not despise others. The economical do not plunder others. (Ch, XV1) Kungaun Ch’ow said: Why is It that the superior man does not him-| self teach his son? (Ch, XVIIL, 1) Mencius replied: The cireum- stances of the case forbid its being done. The teacher must inculcate what is correct, When his lessons are not practical he is angry. When he is angry he is offended with his| non, Also the son says: My master | inculcates in me what ts correct, but | he himself does not proceed tn a correct path, The result is that| father and son are offended with! each other, When father artd son are offended with each other, the case is evil. (Ch. XVILL, 2 sale department because of unset. ‘The ancients exchanged sons, and|| tled business conditions. The action one taught the son of another. (Ch.|/ is the result of a decision reached XVIIL, 3) by the board of directors after mak There are many services (things || ing a thorough survey of the pres: one must do for others), but the || ent woolen market. service of parents is the root of all|| The Seattle Woolen Company ts others. There are many charges||one of the oldest and most widely (things to wateh over and keep), but || known manufacturers of high-grade the charge of one’s self is the root of || woolens In the West, having been all others. (Ch. XIX,, 2.) established in 1892, Their straight Mencius said: ‘The evil of men ts|| forward business dealings were the that they lke to be teachers of|/ means of earning an enviable rep- others, (Ch. m1) utation throughout their territory, Mencius said: Mon must be de-|| The company's decision to discon: cided an what they will not do, and|| tinue the wholesale business will then they will be able to act witn|| serve to augment the business of vigor in what they ought to do.|| their retail store, and the manage. IV., part TL, eh, VIIT.) ment will devote its entire atten Mencius said: ‘The great man does || tion to it. According to a statement not think beforehand of his words|| of a member of the firm, it will be that they may be sincere, nor of his||the aim of the company to give actions that they may be Just; he|| their thousands of satisfied custom- wimply is what is sincere and right.|| ers the benefit of its advantageous (Ch, X1) quantity purchases of prewar qua). Mencius said: The great man ts he!l|ity woolens at prewar prices. who does not lose his child-heart, Joe: “There wns something wrong with the man's eyes. He saw double every time he read anything.” Marry: “That made it diMoult for him to get a position?” Joe: “Not at all, He's got a swell job now reading meters for the gua company.” PIONEER WOOLEN MANUFACTURER QUITS WHOLESALE BUSINESS WILL DEAL DIRECT WITH PUBLIC The Seattle Woolen Company pioneer woolen manufacturers of Seattle, will discontinue its whole. The Thing’s the Play Copyright, 1920, by Doubleday, Page 6 Co; published by sapecial ar- rangement with the Wheeler Byn- dicate, Inc. Being acquainted with @ news paper reporter who had a couple of free passes, I got to sce the per-| formance « few nights ago at one of the popular vaudeville houses. One of the number was a« violin solo by @ striking looking man pot much past forty, but with very gray thick huir, Bot being afflicted with & taste for music, 1 let the system | of noises drift past my cars while| I regarded the man. | “There was @ story about that, chap & month or two ago,” said the) reporter, “They gave me the am tignment It was to run a column and was to be on the extremely Nght and joking order, The old man weemn to like the funny touch I five to local happenings. Oh, yes, I'm working on « farcecomedy now Well, I went down to the house and got all the details; but I certainly fell down on that job. I went back and turned tn a comic writeup of an Bast Side funeral instead. Why? Ob, I couldn't reem to get hold of it with my funny hooks, somehow. Maybe you could make a oneact tragedy out of it for a eurtaln-raiser. I'll give you the details.” After the performance my friend, the reporter, recited to me the facts over the Wurzburger. “I see no reason,” said I, when be had concluded, “why that shouldn't make @ ratiling good funny story. Those three people couldn't have ected in & more absurd and prepos terous manner if they bad been real actors in @ real Ueatre, I'm really afraid that all the stage le @ world, anyhow, and al) the players merely men and women. “The thing's the play,"is the way I quote Mr. Shakes prare.” “Try 10," anld the reporter. “1 will” 1; and I did, to show | think 1 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1970. HUMOR PATHOS ROMANCE Clarinet and a touch of the ‘cello Imagine the « Frank, white hot, with the ery of a man wound €4 to death bursting from him Helen, rushing and clinging, trying to explain, Hoe catches her wrists and tears them from his shoulders ones, twice, thrice he sways her this way and that—the stage man ager will show you how-—and throws her from him to the floor a huddled, crushed, moaning thing. Never, he cries, will he look upon her face again, and rushes from the house thru the staring groups of astonigned guests. And, now, becanne ft is the Thing Instead of the Play, the audience Must stroll out intg-the real lobby of the world and aMirry, die, grow gray, rich, poor, happy or sad dur- ing the intermission of 20 years which must precede the rising of the curtain again, Mrs. Barry inherited the shop and | the house. At 3% she could ha bested many an Iyearold at @ beauty show on points and general resulta, Only a few people remem- bered her wedding comedy, but sbe made of it no secret. She did not pack {t in lavender or moth balls, nor did she sell it to a magazine One day & middle-aged, money- making lawyer, who bought his legal ap and ink of her, asked her across the counter to marry him. “I'm really much obliged to you,” said Helen, cheerfully, “but I mar- ried another man 20 years ago. He was more & goose 8 & man, but love him yet. I have never seen him s about half an hour after the ceremony. Was it copying ink that you wanted or just writing fuia?* The lawyer bowed over the counter with old-time grace and left a re *pectful kiss on the back of her hand, Helen sighed. Parting salutes, however romantic, may be overdone. Here sho was at 3%, beautiful and admired, and all that she seemed, to have got from her lovers were re- proaches and adjeus. Worwe still, in the last one she bad lost a customer, too. him how he could ha made & humorous column of it for his paper. There stands a house near Abing- don Square. On the ground floor there has been for twenty-five years & little store where toys and notions and yonery are sold. One night twenty years ago there was a wedding in the rooms above the store, The Widow Mayo owned the house and «tore Her daughter Helen was married to Frank Barry. John Delaney was best man. Helen wen 15, and her picture had been printed In @ morning paper next to the headlines of a “Wholesale Fe male Murderess” story from Butte, Mont. But after your eye and intel Ugence had rejected the connection, you seized your magnifying giass and read beneath the portrait her description as one of @ series of Prominent Beauties and. Belles of the lower west side. Frank Barry and John Delaney were “prominent” young beaux of the mame eide, and bosom friends, whom you expected to turn upon each other every time the curtain went up. One who pays his money for orchestra seats and fiction ex- pects this, That ts the first funny idea that bas turned up in the story yet. Both had made a great race for Helen's hand. When Frank won, Jon shook his hand and congratu- lated him—hbonestly, he did. After the ceremony Helen ran up staire to put on her hat. She war getting married in a traveling dress, She and Frank were going to Old Point Comfort for a week. Down- stairs the usual horde of gibbering cavedwellers were waiting with thetr hands full of old congress saiters and paper bags of hominy. Then there was a rattle of the fireescape, and into her room jumps the mad and infatuated John De- laney, with a damp curl érooping upon his forehead, and made violent and reprehensive love to his lost one, entreating her to flee or fly with bim to the Riviera, or the Bronx, or any olf place wh@re there are Italian skies and dolce far niente, It would have carrio@ Blaney off his feet to see Helen repulse him. With biasing and scornful eyes she fairly withered him by demanding whatever he meant by speaking to respectable people that way. In a few moments she had him going. The maniineas that had pos- seared him departed. He bowed low, and said something about “irresist- ible tmpulse” and “forever carry in his heart the memory of"—and she Suggested that he catch the first fire-eecape going down. “I will away,” said John Delaney, “to the furthermost parts of the earth. I cannot remain near you and know that you are another's. I will to Africa, and there amid other scenes strive to for—" “For goodness sake, get out,” said Helen, “Somebody might come in.” He knelt upon one knee, and she extended him one white hand that he might give it a farewell kies, Girls, was this choice boon of the great litde god Cupid ever vouch- safed you=-to have the fellow you want hard and fast, and have the jone you don't want come with a {damp curl on his forehead and kneel | ito you and babble of Africa and} love which, in spite of everything, | shall forever bloom, an amaranth, |in his heart? To know your power, and to feel sthe security of |your own happy state; to send the unlucky one, broken-hearted, to for- eign climes, while you congratulate yourself, as be presses his last kiss upon your knuckles, that your nails are well manicured—say, girls, it's galluptious—don't ever let it get by you, And then, of course—how did you guess it?—-the door opened and in stalked the bridegroom, jealous of slow-tying bonnet strings. | The farewell kiss was imprinted upon Helen's hand, and out of the indow and down the fire-escape rang John Delaney, Africa bound. A little slow music, if you please— faint violin, just a breath in the Bustnesd languished, and she hung out a Room to Let card. Two large rooms on the third floor were pre pared for desirable tenanta, Room- erg came, and went regretfully, for the house of Mrs. Barry was the abode of neatness, comfort and taste, One day came Ramonti, the viotin- ist, and engaged the front room above, The discord and clatter uptown offended his nice ear; so a friend had sent him to this oasis in the desert of nofse, Ramonti, with his still youthful face, his dark eyebrows, his short, pointed, foreign, brown beard, his distinguished head of gray hair, his artist's temperament—revealed in hi Ught, gay and sympathetic manner—was & Welcome tenant in the old house near Abington square. Helen lived on the floor above the store, The architecture of it was singular and quaint. The hall was large and almost square. Up one side of it, and then across the end | Helen’s hall-office-reception-room and 4 bis love with the tenderness and ardor of the enraptured artist. His |words were a bright flame of the | divine fire that glows in the heart of | man who i» « dreamer and a doer combined, “But, before you give me an answer,” he went on, before she jcould accuse him of suddenness, “£ tmuat tel) you that “Ramonti’ ts the loa name I have to offer you. My |manager gave me that I do not know who I am or where I came |from. My first recollection ts of opening my eyes in & hospital. I wag a young man, and I had been there for weeks. My life before that is |blank to me. They told me that J was found lying in the street with # | wound on my head and was brought | the in an ambulance, They thought I must have fallen and struck my head upon the stones, There was nothing to show who I was, I have never been able to member. After 1 was disch | from the howpital, I took up the vie. |lin. I have had success. Mra. Barry -I do not know your name except that—I love you; the first me — saw you I realized that you the one woman in the world for |~and"—ob, a lot of stuff Uke |. Helen felt young again. Firat wave of pride and a sweet little thrill of vanity went all over her; and she looked Ramonti in the eyes, |@ tremendous throb went thru heart. She hadn't expected |throb. It took ber by surprise. The musician had become a big factor im her life,"and she hadn't been aware of it. “Mr. Ramonti,” she said sorrow fully (this was not on the stage, re member; it waa in the old home near Abingdon Square), “I'm awfully sorry, but I’m a married woman.” And then she told him the sad jstory of her life, as @ heroine must do, sooner or later, either to = theatrical manager or to @ reporter, Ramonti took her hand, bowed low jand kissed it, and went up to bis | reorn. Helen sat down and looked mourm fully at her hand Well she might, Three suitors had kissed it, mount ed their red roan steeds and ridéen away. In an hour entered the mysterious | stranger with the haunting eyes, ting a useless thing in cotton-weol He richocheted from the stairs and stopped for a chat. Sitting across the table from her, he also poured out his narrative of love. And them he said: “Helen, do you not ber me? I think I bave seen it your eyes. Can you forgive past and remember the love that | lasted for 20 years? I wronged and | deeply—I was afraid to come jt you—but my love D re my reason. Can you, will you, give me?” | | of tt ascended ap open stairway to tra: the Moor above. This hall space she bad furnished as a sitting room and office combined. There she kept ber desk and wrote her business letters, | the and there she sat of evenings by a warm fire and a bright red light and sewed or read, Ramonti found the atmosphere so agreeable that he spent much time there, describing to Mra. Barry the wonders of Paris, where he had studied with a par- Ucularly notorious and noisy fiddler, Next comes jer No, 2, a hand- #wome, melancholy man in the early 40's, with a brown, mysterious beard, and strangely pleading, haunting eyes, He, too, found the socicty of Helen a desirable thing. With the eyes of Romeo and Othello’s tongue, he charmed her with tales of dis tant’ climes and wooed ber by re- spectful inmuendo, From the firet Helen felt @ marvel- ous and compelling thrill in the presence of this man. His voice somehow took her swiftly back to the days of her youth's romance. ‘This feeling grew, and she gave way to it, and it led her to an instinctive belief that he had been @ factor in that romance. And then with a ‘woman's reasoning (oh, yes, they do, sometimes) she leaped over common syllogiams and theory, and logic, and was sure that her husband had come back to her, For she saw fn his eyes love, which no woman can mistake, and a thousand tons of regret and remorse, which aroused pity, which is perilously near to love réquited, which is the sine qua non in the house that Jack built. But she made no sign. A husband who steps around the corner for 20 years and then drops in again should not expect to find his slippers laid out too conveniently near nor a match ready Ughted for bis cigar. There must be explation, explana tion, and possibly execration. A lit tle purgatory, and then, maybe, if he were properly humble, might be trusted with a harp and crown. And so she made no sign tliat she knew or suspected, And my friend, the reporter, could see nothing funny in this! Sent out on an assignment to write up a roaring, hilarious, brilliant joshing story of—but I will not knock a brother—let us go on with the story. One evening Ramonti stopped in ¥. For she stood with « divided The fresh, unforgettable, love for her bridegroom was treasured, sacred, honored mem ory of her first choice filled half ji soul She leaned to that pure ing. Honor and faith and sou! was filled with something a later, fuller, nearer Influence, So the old fought against the And while she hesitated, from room above came the soft, petitionary music of @ violin, The hag, music, bewitches some of the noblest. The daws may peck upon one's sleeve without injury, but who ever wears his heart upon his tym panum gets it not far from the neck, This music and the musician called her, and at her side honor and the old love held her back. “Forgive me,” he pleaded. “Twenty years is a long time te main away from the one you you love,” she declared, with a Atorial touch, “How could I teft® he begged. will conceal nothing from you. night when he left I followed him. I was mad with jealousy. On dark street I struck him down. did pot rise, I examined bim, head had struck a stone. I did intend to kill him. I was mad love and jealousy, I hig near by faw an ambulance take him aat Altho you married him, Helen—” “Who are you?” cried the wo with wide-open eyes, snatching hand away. % “Don't you remember me, Fel i the one who always loved you best? I am John Delaney, 3 yea) can forgive—" But she was gone, leaping, stun bling, hurrying, flying up the stairs toward the music and him who had forgotten, but who had known for his in each of his two exist : and as she climbed up she sobbed, cried and sang: “Frank! Frank” ‘Three mortals thus juggling the years as tho they were bt balls, and my friend, the report couldn't see anything funny tn itt od A cover for sewer outlets has beem invented that prevents the entrance of rats or other ani mals. — er enry ae ff Ip order to tntroduce our new (whalebone) and strongest plate known, covers very lit late, which ts the tle of mout ou, San eet teeth gee ane TEETH work guaranteed for 18 yenra ing and get teeth same da; yoars. EXAMINATION FREB iaaye impression tak 2, eee he Examination and advi jays From © to 12 for Wi ‘orking People OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS Popeaiie FrmserPatee Oe O82 UNIVERSITI 5T. . | Helen was in the willow rocker, kal® | Frend — weweeuwuds

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