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Constant High- Tension Sentiment Unrelieved by Somber Moods Would Inevitably Lead to Asy- lum. 20, chers|| | The Wre Francis Lynde (Copyright, 1980, by Chartes Sorih- pers Some) | (Continued From Yesterday) At the gate we found the tax! river doing something to his motor, | With hi still shaking to make my legs wob-| the seare from wht wan . Mother of Three Gives Mothers Advice: Dear Miss Grey: After readin [SSerrowful Mother's letter in your mns, I would like to say T am only 24 years of @ouble that in experience, a age, but and am feel capable of extending a S@vice. There is only one way to train a child, and that is, to start 8 son as the child can understand Sha talk a little, which is usually about two years. ‘As I am writing my own expert @fice with my children, I will as an example. My second gtri fg now two and a half years old, and itt use alto the mother of three little girls, | Dear Miss Grey: If you can um-|Dle, IT xrabbed at the chance which “@erstand mo, you will be de good angel was apparently hold Much more than any af my family |!s for us GF friends can. Ido not even under-| “Let's ride.* IT euggested; and Stand myself. when we got into the cab, I saw ¥ Tam 26 years olf, and have had etrolt frm the s eral chances to marry well, but | comets ariv Mishly let them slip by, for which|inat got hit ponte wp" I was sorry afterward. ‘At | Sena t gihe ante |to town on the front seat with Tam about to be engaged to @ fine] canny when the alige _ Pp a @ — eS au 1 {cranked and started. T béd a sight ee IT am crazy about him, and) ce our extra fare’s face when he onl — when he comes, I feel/aimbed up and put his back to us, inaiftoren A ; . and I knew it was Tarbell, But Can you explain these moodst/E Norcrecs didet. fia do you think it advisable to} Wher we reached the Mullard the MARIE. Tho. ent righ to his rooms From what you have told me of! Crh 4 i‘ ttle tnve i nth to meprect?, I would not soy make, and I stayed ir the } t te Gre different from any number of |i t, OM ee ts, te of fer girls, Your moods are ate nee eee he groun of the ordinary ones to which the av-| pass : Brag, Snip ye milage Rumen being te subject Ex names written just after the arrival Glted sentiment cont 4 indefinite our train — i e iy “dy fea ty woxld lead to the madhouse or the |, Pima , Catece om" Save. A period of calm does not). pre rr) oa 7 Mecessarily mean that ad. | = yD ull gan The advisadility of marrying the|* 1g Hy ape te mot for any third person to] Under had come in from the W @iscuss, in view of the ited te 3 _ h = a bit — ~ it ‘mation co ed pur bette a haat vex snot "» |direct from New York, Waiting for a good chance at the clerk, I ventured a few They were answered prom Young Mr, Collingwood come fn on ghe 7:30, But he been in Portal City a w too, stopping over for a day Yes, be was alone, p jbut he hadn't been on the oth casion, There was a man with him the earlier stopover, and he registered from New York. Th a | enough ad on alse, jelerk didn't remember the other |man's name, but he obligingty looked it for me in the older reg It was Bullock, Henry Bullock, from the badness of the handwriting }the clerk said, jokingly, that he'd} bet Mr. Bi was a lawyer | I suppdee it was up to me to go Me im & stubborn and determined|to bed. It was late enough, in all| Stage not to mind, and I can see} Consciende, and nobody knew better Phat if I did not have persistence to/than I did the ear rising, early Bet the upper hand she would soon | office ing habits of \ wham unmanageable and disagree refoss, G. M. Just Uy same. | lable to every one in the home. The|#fter I had marked that Mr. Colling- p ther night, at the dinner table, she | Wood's m key was still in ite GIG something for wh should | box, I went over fo a corner of th H fe said, “Excuse me.” i when | lob and mat down, & to d to do she just set her little|keep my eyes open, if euch a thing and wouldn't open her mouth|Wwere humanly possible, until our gay a word. I had a time, I will|rounder should show up you, before she finally said it.| That determination let me tn for a ‘always stay with her, no matter|stubborn fight against sleep 1 hard it ix, until she does what/habit which ran along to y fx told. Several times since _ been asked to excuse herself, she has not hesitated a minute jer sivter ig now 5, and, I am ud to say, is now rewarding me fer the bard hours I put in with Ber. She does not argue when she fs told to do or not to do something does she talk back. I do not let children forget that I love them, @nd can play quite often, just as Bard and carefree as they. Dear “Sorrowful Mother,” t¢ I were you, the next time your daugh ter anounces that she going out forthe evening, I would simply my, “You get a book, or some sewing, &nd sit down right here, for you are Mot gving to leave this house tonight Without my permission. And I am sing to know with whom and Where you are going.” If she r@ ‘ to mind, march her to her and see that she stays there the evening. Why do you send out alone to night school? You she does not have to work, so not go to school in the day yy will so many mothers sit with their hands crossed and daughters go to ruin, when ttle spunk and perseverence bid show the young iadies that Were not to rule the roost A ther should have the same regard for her groWn daughter that ehe had flor the child of 2, so far as obedi @nce is concerned. If you cannot do anything with your daughter, “Sorrowful Mother,” put ber in a girls’ boarding school. Take any big step that is necessary, mo matter how hard. Remember, t ft would be to save one who than all—your “i$ GREATEST ON EARTH,” STATES SEATTLE MAN “Nobody Can Be Around My House Long Without Hear- ing Something About Tanlac,” Says Se- attle Man “Nobody can be around my house Png without hearing something bout Tanilac,” Mark Wilson, § 223 25th Ave. South, Seattle, a few) k. whatever you c But fin ly my patience, to call it, was re warded. Just after the baggage porter had finished sing songing his for the night express weat boun@ my man came in on the run. He wan etill wearing the cap with! two visora, and the long traveling coat was flapping about his lees When he rushed over to the coun-| ter and began to talk fast to the night clerk, I wasnt very far be hind him. He was telling the clerk to get his gertps down from the room, adjectively quick, and to hold hotel auto so that he could the midnight westbound the boy was gone for the my man made a atraight |shoot for the bar, and when I next got a sight of him—from behind one of the big onyx-plated pillars of th tarroom colonnade—he waa pourir neat liquor down his throat as if it were water and he on fire inside | That was about all there was t |it. By the time Collingwood got | Dack to the clerk's counter, the boy down with the bags. The ree ular train auto had gone to the sta | tion with some othes guests, but th clerk had found a stray taxi, and | was waiting. Collingwood looked up wrt of nervously at the big k and paid his bill, And while the clerk was getting bis change, be grabbed the pen out of the counter je out tur jinkstand and n shading in a pic on the open register | A halfmanute later he was gone. jstriding out after the grip-carrying | lobby boy as straight aa if he h been walking a tight-rope, and never | | sho = his bar visit by so | as the shudder of an eyelash en the tax! purred away 1 turned as if he was or something recent w to the open register to see what our it maniac What to had been drawing in © bad done was comp’ rate his signature. He had ratched it over until the past ter of all the hand-writing that ever lived couldn't have what the name was. (Continued Tomorrow) | MEXICAN TAMALES 1 large chicken yellow cornmeal elorpeme Sane cumin seed ‘The Mexican cook sald, “Tee an old rooster, dress {t,.cut it up a cook it In enough er to cover. Persona I should say that a hen| ys ago. “Both my wife and myself have! it Tanlac to the test and we con-| er it the greatest medicine on) th. My wife wuffered for years) irom indigestion in its worst form f was also very nervous and Heouldn’t sleep well, had awful dizzy lis, and was bothered almort cén. tly with coughs and colds. She weight and got into a terribly| tak and rundown condition. “But Tanlac soon restored her Appetite and her stomach trouble Misappeared. Her nervourness all ett her and she got to sleeping like} | gid [& child, her strength and energy Came back and now she is like a Gifferent person altogether. “As for me, 1 suffered a great @éai with my stomach and got bad-| ty rundown. Besides this, I had Pheumatiom in my legs and hips bat hurt me the time, and it ms all I could do to walk about.! @eep, and it took very little to tire t out I took Tanlae and now I; eating and sleeping fine and iRever feel a touch of rheumatiom fee] more like working than I have lor years, 1 will always speak up lor Tanlac.” Tanlac ie sold by the Bartell Drug} Btores— A dvertinement, i Take the meat from the bones, Add cornmeal to the stock to fairly thick mush. Salt to taste, Grind meat and pepper. More | peppers may be used if a “hot’'| tamale is desired. Put a pinch of cumin seed in a cloth and crush ft enough make a | | Mix seed well with ment. Corn| abucks or squares of cheese cloth are spread with the mush, the meat is put In the center of each shuck or | about a year old or ® rooster the . i you have a bad taste in your mouth— same age would make better t 2 . rbd ome a | than an “old rooster." When the He Oi noes shoul chicken is tender drain off liquor.|” De Edwards’ Olive Tablets—a sub- titute for calomel—were prepared b Dr. Edwards after 17 years of sti You will know thern by th }no pimples, a feeling of buoy childhood c the liver and bowels like calomel—yet have no dangerous after effects. OF THE DUFFS || OWsTOM, | wan You To Come IN /| AND MaeY MY FRIEND MISS. HAPP (| SHES A WoupeRFuL PrANisT - You've PROBABLY READ ABour HER! MBE; ae Ber RiGNT wi 4 “TAG =SEND ME SOME ‘a * * * OD POON. Page 265 ‘To meer ner! — PAL CARDS THE en tin sore! ‘ PD Lice WMM- I'LL MAKE IT HOT FOR You FOR THAT: r Shattle -. WAS tn the very ecarty Gxys,|@ians™ mid the man. “Hetp me 0 earty that a man who lived a mile or two away waa counted a near neighbor, and the Indians were all wild savages, who knew #0 little of the strange white men who had come to their land that they feared and hated them. In the valley between Seattle and Tacoma, in that atretch of | >.” country thru which onr Pneffic Highway winds its smodth trail, | The there came a man with his br tion, her to settle on a river claim. They built thetr cabin and cleared their land and worked side by side making a home for their children and their children’s chil put a ¢ren. In were block houses and forta into the little new towns there which the people went when the Indians attacked them. But when a settler decided to be a farmer had to look out for himself his family as best he could, dnd when they went to bed at night the rifle had to be within reach, for any hour might bring a band of howling #avages about the cab he and quilt at ov Ine wav them, ins. "A One summer night when the | wash, forest about them was still, when | their there seemed nothing alive for| Afte miles and miles but the man and his wife, they were wakened by a | until sudden shot outside their open |the w window. Tr “Indians™ they whispered, “In-! sheet Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets | If your skin is yellow—complexion llid—tongue coated—~appetite poor- | Yr. Edwards’ OliveTabletsarea purely | ablecompound mixed witholiveoil olive color Tohavea clear, pink skin, bright eyes ncy like | ys you must get at the cause. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act on pquare and small rolls are made. If| They start the bile and overcomecon- | "!» corn husks are used several layers! stipation. Take one or two nightly and} 0m the of husks covered with mush are tied| note the pleasing results, Millions of | Your ther with the meat In the center Stearn 15 minute: PRUNE WHIP 1 cup mashed stewed pruncs 1-2 cup sugar 1% teaspoon salt \%, teaspoon cream of tartar 1 teaspoon vanilla | 5 exes (whiten) | sugar, milt, cream of Fold into the! till stiff pan Mix prunes, tartar and vanilla, whites of the ergs beaten nd dry. Pour into a butte 4 set in a pan of hot water to| bake, Bake about 25 minutes. Serve | when cool with whipped cream or| boiled custard made with the yolk of the eggs boxes are sold annually at 15¢ and 30c. | not MOTHERS! to your children to new method of w pring neentrat rie’ and demonstrate ogress in udio Recitals. A. W. WHISTLER 404 Monteliun Munste Bide. a] 2704, asses wil their splendid ular =Saturday Indians slipping from one tree to another so that “cover up, and be very still think T oan manage but did as her husband told Then the man wrapped him- self in a sheet and over that he and stood close to the wall. Whe wny acrons the clearing he let the |} a still, ann came nearer he began to n the white man took off his “California Syrup of Figs’ Child’s Best Laxative look for the name Californ package, then you are sure child is having the, best and harmless physic for tho ‘little fasten the door and the windows, but be as quiet as you can.” From the window they saw two | | | BETTER THAN KILLING | | | creeping toward them, they were never long tn the open. “After I'm outatde, get back into wits, |) 1}, the man ‘told his wife never asked a ques dark quilt and slipped out of the cabin, and hin wife bolted the door after him. Around the cabin he slipped as quietly as the Indians themselves, the Indians were half. lo from hin shoulders and ere in the star-lit darkness white form, Then as the hie arma and move toward ghost!” they cried tn St. and turned and ran for making no sound. | | ot them ran the ghost, and neither savages nor ghost paused the Indians disappeared tn A, and returned to his wifa | een ———_---—_ HAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS MOTHER! Cl direc tren er and bowels taste. F You must say ‘ fruit ee ( charmed I'm) f | 8 the midst of the sea, It was a very «mall t= SEATTLE STAR — “Yes,” answered one end of the i. a powerful flop with its tail. After Nancy and Nick had left the) rching for wicked Bobadil hig lost wishin Ifhtu, their M ried them along on their journey her hand Nancy box containing Fairy Queen's [ee oF by Ol THAT TRAFFIC COP “TOOK WAP, | hope ( You wit FAVOR. (US WITH A SELECTION On Te Piano! GOODBYE, TAG - “TELL FRECKLES” ‘To WRITE ‘To AE SOMETIME, OUR NUMBER! whit, CAN YOu TELL ME HOW MUCH NINE “TIMES TEN 13? ADVENTURES THE TWINS ive Roberts Barton LT THE STRANGE ISLAND Jinn se x ring in thi agic Green She carried the c the Golden Ke charm and thet it of 4 car In arved y, the r pre clous map, The twins were still very far north going the Teach the § their Journ b it quite un 08 set them but we low that the wa stantly. Inde¢ uth Pole at the rate they re in a fair and the py nightfay tedly the n on an ish w expe ves broke d, there over was n were y to d of Green and in nd, and #0 it con 0 ary apot to be found anywhere, and the twins soon ga nap. his Is aq CONFESSIONS OF ‘A BRIDE«.. ANN BREAK HA If lov woven ideal i We kne dout heart-t oneself and the self In another. existences, ve up trying. ueer place,” sa INTO NESS ix attainad’ Bob JAN rr ° last findin at the orgetting neat and I wvered it aftersour Inst sc of Nick | opened the carved box and took out id he. haps this will tell about it.” le tn Me one I spent my waking hours planning how to please my beloved and my darling husband seemed bent upon making amends to me for some of the wretchedness I had lately e dured, I could see that this w would be @ paradise if human beings would honestly try to put more into life, for others instead of striving to get so much out of it for Our joy made us very tender of those who Martha's miser Jimmy-boy’@ lo: a serious side sorrows to bear. Dear tes became our own ng sickness took on we had never before Nickiet We w ed land happened to be h “I think it is myself,” said th wand, “A very good thimg for every- body concerned.” “Goodne: cried both children in amazement n you talk “Yes,” answered one end of the ts la But Nancy ish wizard, must be up. It's a . Ragtime or Nothing for Tom had an I know what has happened. ourselves miles away to escape from the wick and the hundred miles pod thing this is- | . CPmVvery FOND OF , Rac Time! id and, while the other gave| idea. a hun nd while the other end gave a pow. erful flop with its tafl, “I lea hundreds of years ago.” It's a whale “Yes,” nodded Nick, “and he's not | on the map at all, I think we're| lucky, What if he had not been| here?" | But scarcety had the words left | his mouth wh er, the whale, be | (Copyright, 1 suspected; we discussed the advis-;his wife so much attention and he;mired her, and Ann, observing, of telling our dread to his] en red Ann to accept all of}played her ingenue tricks to the . | her invitati He was perfectly | limit as when she kicked off her |} As for Ann—wen—T wonder why | Willing to Van take care of| pxfords in a crowded room! it is that whenever I am perfectly|Ann if the occasion required an| Plainly, Ann was jealous—but happy, Ann Lorimer always snatches |¢scort. Ann Lorimer was having] not of her splendid husband! at my omar i j the time of her life. “Ann is” manufacturin, Whatever were my preoccupations, Daddy Lorimer has always; voree as fast as she can Ann and Van were always op the| called Van “a ladykiller”—-strange, to Bob. ltringe of my consciousn and| Old-fashioned term!—I suppose Jim| My husband looked very severe, | cient tubradesous. were et jr.|considered Van quite safe because |slmost as if it were all my fault, ritating me {he never had been known to inte {for a divorce in the Lorimer fam- Jim Lorimer was not getting|fere with the matrimonial affairs| ily 1s unthinkable—from the well. His relatives had to face|of his personal friends, He thought | standpoint of the Lorimer men, the truth, Only his wife “gnored| Van never would, (To Be Continued.) Jit. Jim was able to ride up tho| Certainly I didn’t wish Yo Inter. RS i «great drive to his father’ house, with Ann Lorimer’s flirttation, and he could walk th short dis I could see that she was get-| tance between his bungalow and/ting too conspicuous. People soon Bob's, but he bad no strength and| would begin to gossip about her. no desire to do more Ann had only herself to blame. It was a winter, and the|She played up to “Van whenever second season of Ann's extraordi-|/she had a chance. The more Van nary social suce dJimmy-boy was|saw of Martha Palmer's spun gold pleased to have his friends sbow' coiffure, the more openly he ad- ‘ yed Naney, n the island, or, rath > sink slow Xx. B.A) RIGHT NOW + yr! y 4 By ALLMAN You Poor. CHume, THAT GiRL IS A STAG! SHE DON’T PLAY AROUND IH PEOPLES HOmEs- SHE PLAYS AT CoucERTS ANO GETS Five HUNDRED DOLLARS p—— Pe Twenty | fae A WIGHT FOR ITT mo wees Att | Around HERE ALL EveHING WASTING WER Time? —-—-=— AYSOUL To TAME* WELL GooD-BY God. TM GOING To CALIFORNIA IW “TH! HETHINKS HE DID- TWAS UPSIDE “Oh, \ dred ne is- | rned ly ON Your HATI— YOURS Gone our! || TMe PUBLIC LIBRARY 18 ONS OF THE MosT DANGEROUS PLACSS IN THES WOR! FOR YOU IN YOUR PRESENT CONDITLON ! F YOU DOUBT I(T, JUST TRY TO Come WAILCS JIM AROUND I! + THE BOOK ¢ OF MARTHA ~