The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 3, 1921, Page 11

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Pree Veoreonv ” THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1921. Cynthia Grey Best Sort of Love Always| Courts Respect and Flames Brightly Above Worldly Dross. Dear Miss Grey: You may con: @emn me for what I am about to| write you, but I have learned that when love once clutches us firmly im her grip, we are powerless. * J am not a lovesick kid—am 27 years olf, and I am deeply in love with a married woman. It is not just a passing fancy, for I have loved her devotedly for six years, I feel pretty certain that ashe. fully returns my love, but she has a good husband loves her devotedly Don't ta that I go away, for T have tried it; but she Is never out of my mind wherever I go. What ‘Would you say about such a love? Surely you could not condemn me for something I cannot help. I have this, and just wanted your version. JARIUS, There is a theory that we love t Rateful, in spite of ourseives. Tf you love the woman in the dest! Way, you also respect her, and wish) 5 to remain high in the estimation others, And, therefore, you will gs y one else. ts the old-fashioned way in @ real gentleman faced the | West wretched of sentimental en- fanglements, and it remains the Finest way, even when opposed to the hi RGCSE ATPE SAE ‘Question for me? Can a young lady, Betray your feeling either to her! | Dear Miss Grey: To settle an) argument, will you please answer a The Wreckers Francis Lynde (Copyright, 1920, by Chartes Serth- wer's Sens) | (Continued Frum Yesterday) CHAPTER XXIV The Dead-Line We found the three disappointed | afternoon callers already on hand when wo reached the headquarters, | Fred May was back from his din. | ner, and he had let them in as far} as the ante-room, The boss said. “Good evening, gentlemen,” as p lant as a basket of chips; told Fred | he might go, and invited the wait | ing buneh Into the private office, | snapping on the lights as he opened | the door, In the big room he indicated the sitting Possibilities, and the three callers planted themselves in a semicircle at the desk end. No introductions were needed. One of the pair Hatch had brought with him was a lawyer named Marrow, whose home town was Sedgwick; a jsharp-nosed, ferreteyed man who | pondered long and seriously over) figured one of the many “local counsels” for Red Tower. The other, Dedmon, was a political place | hunter who had once been sheriff | te lovely, and hate whet is\of Arrowhead county. | “You've kept us cooling our heels in your waiting-room for just about the last time, Mr. Norcross!" was} the spiteful way in which Hatch opened fire. “We've come to talk| straight business with you this| trip, and it will be more to your) interest than ours if you'll send your clerk away.” While they had been dragging up their chairs and sitting down, I had | heard Fred May lock up his type-| writer and go, and had been listen- ing anxiously for some noise that! would tell me Tarbell was on deck. | I thought I heard the door of the} outer office open again just a» Hatch spoke and it comforted me a/ whole lot. ‘The boss didn’t pay any attention | 18 years of age, marry with-|to Hatch’s stggestion about sending | " out the consent of her parents? My/|mme away; ted as if he hadn't/ ) frlend says she cannot, until she|heard tt. Opening his desk he took 21 years of age. I say she,a box of cigara from a drawer and | M. D. without her parents bes Fee x BNGHY FA ce tee a BF |passed it. Dedmon, the ex-sheriff, Present time, a girl who|helped himwelf, but the lawyer and| Rae attained her 18th dirthday may Hatch both refused. With this con sah Si cession to the small hospitalities | ; Gut there has been serious |the boss swung his chair to face the raising this limit to 21. Jt is | trio. i i t by Ee rite ah aFeae iW. S i Q d fg gf &F cow died on"? FE. J. nothi: to give her; her a tune; goed cow, consider; ~ #0 grow; , good cow, consider.” "Number of Newspapers Published in U. S. Dear Miss Grey: How manf ey eens are published in the States and dependencies? INQUISITIVE. "and oblige TWO boys. from the furnace down a eee Deportation of Famous Anarchist _ Dear Emma Goldman deported? BROWN EYES. December 21, 1919. ‘Lumps OF | INDIGESTION “Pape’s Diapepsin’’ at once fixes your Sour, Gassy, Acid Stomach eee eeeees Undigested food! Lumps of pain Lelching gas, acids and sourness When your stomach is all upset, here is instant relief —no waiting! eee eee 88 te ee ) two of Pape’s Diapepsin all the geation pain and dyspepsia distres: caused by acidity is relieved. Your disordered stomach fine at once. ‘These pleasant, harmless tablets of Jaw that he was re ‘WP personal opinion, if it were raised fe £3 for doth men and women, there) Would be many more successful mar-|a man fairly spoiling for a fight. \and slugging and black-Jacking pri | vate ¢apital and private business | prigons would we have many common we have? How be committed? the other in to make this jead of increas- we should have id see an inch + Can you tell me origin of the phrase, Im Beotiand and the north of Ire- land, the saying is common, and | @rese out of an old song: en old man, and he had took out his fiddle and played his te no time of year for the grass The cow supposedly died of hun- Consequently, an unsatisfactory : Rapence @ request or need is call- | 64, “The tune the old cow died on.” Tho thousand five hundred and Please tell us rough cast iron is called “pig- {ingots of iron, known aa} “pigs,” are so called from their aup-| Warehouse fs now a consolidated posed resemblance, when first made, |PFOPETtY, anéJohn Marerhall, Henck | to awiitter of piga in the act of suck.|*! 4nd L-éontrol a majority of its ing. When the iron is produced "t0C%K» How doen that strike you?” from the ore, the red-hot metal rung t strikes me that the people strat, channel, having at intervals cue exceedingly foolish to sell their 4 about four feet long, into which Ditthright. But that is strictly [their awn business, and not mine or lor, if they do not, that the railroad ympany will dd nothing to save its atrons from falling into this new the metal gradually flows, finally Pilling up the main channel and the 4 shoots. In this state it resembles _ @ huge double-sided comb. When ‘Broken up it is known by the term Miss Grey: When was ‘The moment you eat a tablet orjover to the alc indi-|tracks to onr old Red Tower houses g/and yards and go on doing business 3 lat the old stand.” witt teel| The boss sat back in his chair, ‘and I could tell by the set of his} “My time is yours, gentlemen,” he said; and Hatch jumped in like “For ix months, Norcross, you've been mowing a pretty wide swath | out here in the tall hills. You've} | been posing as a little tin god be I would like tolfere the people of this state, and to the new) has been introduced tative Rawsoh. Should pass and become a law, how all the while you've been knifing |wherever and whenever they have fon Gee, mM LONG BEFOR, FRECKLES : Roo-Woo. 0° } AOW WWE CAN'T GET LR BOATS —~ MCka - IND HIS AW-You st = watr AN SEE (mms OTTO AUTO Ga OTIOs 1 WANT TO REGIGTER A KICK ABOUT “(WE WAY You JUST SIT DOWN HLL ON, ) WANT HAVE DIWNER ON The TAOLE IN A MINUTE! FRIENDS THE SEATTLE Tom Can't Live on Hats! OV, MRS. BAILEY THIS 1S CERTAINLY “OM,MR DUFF, COME IN AND Stt Book git HAT! “Tom, You’ LL EXCUSE ME A MINUTE — Ky MOTHER, IM HUNGRY ! ALL THE BEAl THINGS 1 GOT NOT NOW, 1 COULDNT] “TELL HER AGAIN, ONLN \_Stomacnt pe —~ i VaN, WETS WRONG PR. SAN WBK> WHAT KIND OF Ar WASH DID You GINE THIS CAR? = WHY LOOK HERE « T.CAN WRITE MY Ni [AND HE SAID IME DIDN'T CARE DONT SEE WHAT YOU SEE iN HIM. THERES A GIRL ON TH" PAGE 11 By ALLMAN — eee APPRECIATE IT ON AN EMPTY [happened to get in your way. Now, jat the end of the lane, by Jupiter we've got you dead to righte—you| and your damned railroad “Cut out as many-of the person alities as you can, and come te the point,” suggested the boss quietly. “You think I haven't any point | to come to?" barked the rafter, | with rising anger. “I'll show you! You've beaten us in the courta, and your imported lawyers have—”" “Excuse me, Mr. Hatch,” was the! curt Interruption. “Abuse isn't ar- gument. State your case, if you | have one.” “Oh, I've pot the case, all right. You've been keeping your finger on the pulse, or you think you have, but I can wise you up to a few things that have got away from! you. You thought you’ were the only original trust-buster when you started your scheme of locally-| owned elevators and warehouses | and coal and lumber-yards and ran us out of business. But I'm here to tell you that your finehaired lit tle deal to rob us began to die about as soon as it was born.” “How #0?” inquired the boas, just | as tho Major Kendrick hadn't al ready given him his pointer about the how. “In the way that everything of | that kind is bound to die, It wasn't | & month before your little local | stockholders began to get together | and swap stock and sell it. In a whole string of local plants was in twenty, with John Marshall at the head of them.” “So far, you haven't told me any. thing new. Go on.” “If I showld name Marshall's {bunch, you'd know what's coming jto you. But we needn't go into statistics. Citizens” Storage « Most deeply interested have been {the railroad company’s “Wait!” Hatch snaried. “It's go ing to be both yours and the rai) road company’s business, begpre you are thru with it. Marrow, here represents Marshall, and I represent Henckel and myself. What are you going to/do about those ground leases?” “Nothing at all, except to insist upon the condition under which they were granted by the railroad company.” “Meaning that you are going to try to hold w§ to the fixed percent age chargé for handling, packing, loading’ and transferring?” “Meaning just that. If you raise the proportional market price charge on the producers and merchants the leases will terminate.” “l' thought that was about where you'd land. Now listen: We're It-— Marshall and Henckel and I—and) what we say goes as it lies, We) are going to use the present C, 38./ & W. plants and equipment, charg- ing our own storage and handling percentages, based on anything we fit. If you pull that ground. ase business on us and try to ‘larive us out, we'll fight you all the lway up to the supreme court. If |you beat us there we'll merely move other side of your ng to be Pape’s Diapepsin neutralize the | panie-stricken. ful acids in the stomach, and give almost instant relief; besides they cont wo little at drug stores.— Advertisement “You are taking altogether too much for granted, aren't you?” he put in mildly. “You are assuming ONE WAY TO DO IT 66C)\H, NO, CHILD! member long, long ago, and I never had a little girl of my hostess looked down at her with kind eyes full of the same puzzled | trouble in Peggy's own. “But somebody did tell Peggy argued, atreets, but just only trees, and I} thought when there are only trees it does have to be early days, and “Maybe so; maybe #0; that’s all| rue that there was nothing here! when my husband and I came to Over there,” she said. pointing acrona an arm of the/| “was a clearing, and over there, and here we started to dig out and chop out our own place. very short time the control of the the hands of a hundred men. To-| day it's in the hands of less than) This time the boss let out a notch. | when my husband was gone all day and I was working here alone with not a soul within sight or | csochath Gd aeih hs ~ call, I would have strange visitors | ar and her two cube —deer would step daintily by or} dash thru the woods, skunks cami and went, and bears were no un tanrne n lity the ‘terms of the ground-leases Hatch snapped his fingers. you are coming to the he raped out. what we're assuming. once for all, fight us in the courts, are you going to harass us out of y the thousand and one petty persecutions that you railroad buccaneers make use of to line your own pockets!" “But if we refuse to lie down and you walk over us and our pa soft and glossy. water add one ounce glycerine. can be boug! very little Hatch’s eyes blazed and he smac' iy obtained fiat into palm. “Then we'll knife Jo it to a velvet long a time, younger. you played it pretty damned | election deal; CUT THIS OUT—IT 1S WORTI Cut out this slip, enclose with be 2895 Sheffield A Chicago, Il, writing your name and fou will receive in| |to Foley & Co address clearly Foley's Honey Is and croup, that the courts will eventually null “I do remember one day when 1 wasn't so little afraid, tho, That |day I was just about as badly | frightened as you would be ff I own. How can I tell you @ story?" | should turn into @ bear right now. Peggy looked troubled, an& her| “I had gone to make a call on my neighbor two miles away and was coming home thru the woods when I had that queer feeling one sometimes gets—that somebody jelse was there, “that when you) came to Bremerton there wasn't a| bit of any town here, “I had a basket of apples on my arm—oh, yes! we had applest This was only 28 years ago—and was walking along at a pretty good pace when I felt tt, and I sort of slowed up and looked back over my shoulder, but saw noth. ing, and hurried on, “Again I felt it I wns sure I felt eyes looking at me. Sure that I was not alone and somebody or something waa not only near me, but was watching me as I moved. “I hurried on, hoping to make home before whatever it was | should. overtake me, but I was just half way when, making a sharp turn in the trail, I came face to face with a great big “I couldn't move. I couldn't make @ sound! There we stood, | Just stood, looking at each other, and then the bear and her cun- ning babies shambied off.” HOW TO DARKEN GRAY HAIR {A Cincinnati Barber Tells How to Make a Remedy for Gray Hair A well-known resident of Cincin. nati, Ohio, who has been a barber for more than forty years, recently made the fol “ANY one can prepare a simple mix- ture at home, at very little cost, that will darken gray hair, and make. it! To a half-pint of ounce bay rum, a smail box of Barbo Compound and 4 These ingredients ht at any drug store at ost. Apply to the hair twice a week untii the desired shade This will make a gray: | haired person look twenty years) It is easy to use, does not color the most delicate scalp, is not jeticky or greasy and does not rub off." Advertisement, owing statement: PIANO STUDY Revolutionized. The use of the faculties of the super-conscious nind render drudgery on finger exercises and etudes useless, All pieces hnic developed fro Mental training unexcelled. Pupils, young or adults, become confident performers; progress surprisingly A. W. WHISTLER 104 Mon) Music Bldg. 2794 FOR OTHER THEN, NO Dou’ THE "NO HUNTING” SIGns = AS You CAME VF THe Houcow It!) «ST, YOU SAW The Jinn changed his shape again, this time into that of a young man, ‘ : an] #lippera to us?” sho asked, turning | After the wicked Jinn had taken] an eager face to the Jinn, who was wicked act #0 mi that he was ac- shape again. This time he became young man, Then he turned to Nick “What have you in the little carved nox?” he asked, attho he knew per fectly well that it held the children's |most precious treasures. p Nick looked down in surprise at the box he was still clutching tleht He had forgotten that he had I don't know,” he said slow “Nancy, do you know what tt Where did I get itt Tut Nancy was as much puzzled ont remember, haps it isn’t Then she noticed Nick's feet | “Did you give these ov She had forgotten that | Shoes when they entered the loe-pal- ace, and that the old woman who had made the exchange had disap. “Yes,” nodded the wicked Jinn. “I gave them to you and you may keep them as long as you wish.” “Thank you,” said Nick, looking “This is a nice place and I should ike to stay." “Then you certainly may,” nodded ll wee to that. Now give me your box and I shall put it away carefuly in my strong safe.” Without a word as her brother. Nickie,” she said. that It contained the precious Map, the Golden Key and the Language Charm, but he had forgotte CONFESSIONS OF A BRIDE”™...". THE BOO IN THE MIDST OF A MOB Soon we perceived that it would be useless for us to make any plans Nick handed it He hag not only forgotten and her own. You know I've sworn to take that man and now, I'm asking you to give m the law—a fair chance—" But when did an unt to the woman's wing of the prison. From where we sat, Martha and I the steps which the jail offices and the mob leaders who guarded the men aorking with torches at the locks of the entrance Even if they break into the these chaps will not go near the women's block of celis.” “It would be as easy to get Ann spoke in the voice of a big man out of this beseiged fortress chance? Came an interruption, @ Wart” ing from one of the eager mai unters: “Don't lissen, fellows! throats came directions of other would-be leaders. Orders were the back of the prison, 1 clutched Mar “It's such an old build. From dozens Phey'll hide the gink there!" “Sure—he'll be. with the skirts!’ yelled another, to blockade cops get her’ ; “Finish it—before the firemen come with their hose! yelled @ young son of mischief: separated the courthouse from the of the jail office opened, so suddenly that the men working at the locks almost | As suddenly, it came to with a bang, stood before the in the mob! Martha, I must phone to Bob!" ated the besiegers. raised one hand as if asking for silence, and the mob knew him for brave man and held for a second or | mass of angry the corner of the street, and with a roar and a rush, filled the place, as water fills gate is opened. wealged into that} edge of the crowd which was close are,” two and let him come out to tell you to do my duty! Ann is safer than we “Let's hope that I'm gol he had them. Nancy, too, had a thought of their errand. (Copyright, 1921, re ever give anybody @ (To Be Continued)

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