The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 6, 1922, Page 13

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1922. THT SHATTLE STAR OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY AHERN | THE OLI) HOME TOWN BY STANLEY, THREE PUDDING SAUCES si By Bertha E. Shapleigh WELL MY LORD, T CONFOUND PY, MARTHA L « Wa WA THAT an! MAYBE LD ER Dit Ink cp EA o Smont OF Columbia, University HAVE Foun EMPLOY- \ | Yow COULD You BE A SANT CLAUS | | Gone KID New sved : Dream FMT HARD SAUCE MENT FOR You UNTIL | | parIV-to SUCH CONSPIRACY?) JOB FITS HIM \/ Witt Asi HIM AREARIN’ THER TNT An Ancmey A nicnt awe ny YO 1 oe Water. . 1 enn bevwa ieee 8 tadlenntene crea CHRIGTMAS I = I TOAMINK THAT TL, Wilo et eed ee, GOT LS A Shton” pr inci: M% teaspoon vanilla extrac . Z od : * L Cream butter thereiy, aad sugar —_ pelt i = Add cream a litte ARRANGED FOR MR, WOULD DECEIVE NOONE, |r| Welt promice FA THAT RED NOSE JZ : at @ time and beat until the smoothness of {co cream bed ig iv anee SHOULD BE COMPELLED KIDS EVERY] FROM COMING — r MORRO \G « PA , ; MOUSSELINE SAUCE MORROW NIG! || BY A PoSITiON OF THAT [7] \MinG BUT Down HoT f 1 cup powdered sugar Yolks 4 eggs Few grains salt WH GIVE NSTRUCTIONS NATURE “To BE TRAY \ TH’ GERMAN CHIMNENS ! ; % teaspoon vantlin 1 cup cream, stiffly beaten = ON A JOB YOU ARE “ME CONFIDENCE INDEMNITY! J Beat ogg yolks until thick, add sugar gradually and continue beating GOING “To “TAKE = Le . ook over hot water until thick, remove, and beat until cold. Fold il IN HIS “TOY oF fe DEAR LITTLE eo in cream, add salt and vanilla MM DEPARTMENT AS “TOTS WIT FALSE ( i NOTH-—If one does not have cream, the whites of the eggs, beaten 1 PROMIGES! = I . anti stiff, may be added tt ould b good oa, bu oun ° SANTA CLAUS * “Siionminean — 4 OPPOSE THE INTRIGUE! ae aN LIQUID SAUCE : un a S s yes 1 cup brown sugar % cup water 1 tablespoons corn starch q “ * % Ba\ WAS MISSING 41 GO BEFORE | Feu. INTO THAT PESKY CISTERN! \ oup cold water \ cup butter Pow Brains salt % teaspoon vanilla Boll sugar and water together five minutes, Mix cornstarch with the one-fourth cup cold water, add to sugar and simmer thirty minutes Add butter, saltand vanilla, and serve-as soon as butter is melted. Criumphs of 4 MJonquelle B by MELVILLE Davisson Post Service. Inc Bie death had been stran, | as tho the weight tn his hand drew un ppm yg ‘ aie an de his attention, he need at the HOSFORD, and that unde ‘ Mucnce had loft Geaford ali his $40,000 | “hips. Something about it struck Keeping his promise| him, for his manner changed. He UP TOA LATE HOUR “HE SEARCHERS HAD NOT FOUND THE BADGE , f @ 1009 NEA : THE FORTUNE TELLER . mectee angi Here Today Jand disturbed. He stood by the ry Saas, ted in the quiet of his Parts study. | table; and now, as by accident, he Nae ant 1 M iives meade from nis taibere auary | PUt Out his hand and took up the Sy ro “Woe, f the tale of @ crime that took place | Japanese crystal supported by the I) \ tra i years ago tn faroft Virginia. |necks of the three bronze storks. ; NY MARSHAL OTEY WALKER LOST HIS BADGE WHILE CHASING ; diary tolls how the son of | He appeared unconacioun of the act, | gil ze . . = 4 ‘ $30,000. distal spread the will out on the table and a ae a cf began to move the crystal over it, u yer, cet as aaueeas time eh ORO Op CR Minden, RTT ee ees stock the wu ena ently his hand stopped, and he HELLO ,TOM = SAY. OLIVIA HAD : ee THE ONLY THING WE CAN FORGOT TO SHUT, OFF Sererean tartans gisetettion Unvore emmn | ane, MooDee over, Maring inte thei] | AN ACCIDENT: CAN You ), DO.1S UNSCREW THESE THE WATER! gathered in the plantation | Oriental crystal, like those COME RIGHT HOME? SHE aT WASHSTAND AND PIPES AND PLL PULL THE fy @anKL | of black art who prédict events from |] | WAS WASHING HER HANDS AND . WB OVT ALITTLE wAys-) WELL HORRY Go on With the Story | what they pretend to sve ‘in these DROPPED HER RUNG BACKOF nee TO GET IT UP-MY FooT ph HO NO $ ee et, J - ene hog gre at his abil THE BATHTUB AND IN TRYING . ANAT maLeane. 15 GOING TO CHAPTER I. }in victory, regarded my father with | TO GET IT SHE GOT STUCK IN e SLEEP Tt was my father who broke the/q supercilious, ironical smile, stlence | “Sir.” he anid, “are you, by/ “Gosford,” he said, “what scheme | Chance, a fortune-teller?” } i > yer “A misfortune-teller,” replied my | mere you Oné Marshall about? father, his face still held above the "You may wonder, sir,” replied! crystal. “I see here a misfortune to the Englishman, continuing to write| Mr. Anthony Gosford. 1 predict, his notes; “I shall not tell you." from what I see, that he will re “But I will tell you,” said the boy. | ¢8#e this bequest of moneys to Pey “My father thought the states in| '® Marshall's son.” this republic could not hold together Sir,” said the Englishman, now very much longer. He believed that | Provoked Into @ temper, “do you the country would divide, and the| *Joy this foolery? Routh set up a separate govern-| “YOU are not interested in orystal ment. He hoped this might come| #82ing, Mr. Gosford,” replied my about without a war. He was in| father in a tranquil voice, “Well, I horror of a war. He had traveled; find it most diverting. Permit me he had seen nations and read their, ‘@ Piece out your fortune, or rather history, and he knew what they YOUr misfortune, Mr. Gosford! By were talking when they urged war.”| chance you fol! In with this dreamer ‘He paused and looked at Gosford. | Marshall, wormed tnto his confi “My father was convinced that neg greene + sonia to great| ia up an; ™en in England; followed and per Stans ctu wae he|suaded him until, in his ill-health, | hoped a war might not follow. He| YOU got this will, You say it writ-| believed that if this new vern. ‘#8 two years ago. When i were immediately recognised | {ll il, you hurried here, learned THE CORNER AND CAN'T GET ment Great Britain, the North would| ‘rom the dying mam that the will > Boo the inevitable and there| mained and where it wna. You father |™ade sure by pretending to write Rnd ar peovecy time irae letters in this room, bringing your Mr. Gosford somewhere—on | Portfolio with ink and pen and a ip, I think. And Mr, Gostora|P®4 of paper. Then, at Marshall's im convincing my father death, you inquired of Lewis for ‘a sum of money he| !*#2\ measures to discover the dead certain powerful per- man’s will, And when you find th English government, | 700M ransacked, you run after the pave tho wa} to an imme. |'*¥- diate recognition of the Southern re-| My father paused. public by Great Britain. He fol-| “That !s your past, Mr. Gosford lowed my father home and hung| NOW let me tell your future. I see about him, and so finally got his YOU !" joy at the recovered will. I will. My father was careful; he | %® YoU pleased at your foresight wrote nothing; Mr. Gosford wrote|!" setting @ direct bequest, and at nothing; there is no evidence of thin | {he care tr Mh beh ager a mage gs to} 4 | ave no evidence is plan, lest) pian, but my father told me, ane | the ae Giscover it, For I) 4 6 table | #%*. Mr. Gosford, that it was your 4 and ifved bie page theme table! intention all along to keep this sum | “And so,” he said, “Peyton Mar-|°f Money for your own use and = hall imagined « plan like that, and) Pleasure. But alas, Mr. Gosford, it| left its execution to a Mr. Gosford!” | "8% not to be! I see you writing | The Englishman put down his pen| ‘hi release; and Mr. Gosford"—my and addressed my father. father’s voice went up full and q “I would advise you, sir, to re-|*Tone—“I see you writing it in 3 quire a little proof for your conclu-| terror—sweat on your face!” sions. This is a very pretty story,| “The devil take your nonsense” Dut ft is prefaced by an admission | tied the Englishman. of no evidence, and it comes as a| My father stood up with a tasted, epecial pleading for a criminal act. | 'fenical smile. Now, sir, tf I chose, if the bequest If you doubt my skill, Mr, Gow required it, I could give a further|foFd,.€0 a fortune, or rather a mis. i SF : 5; i Hs RE 35 Fs OW, HERE (3 YOUR PRESCRIETIO <i WOULD SUGGEST THAT. You SCT FILLEDtaT THE DRVS STORGE JON THE SECOND CORNER. a a Janation, with more substance; fortune-teller, 1 will ask Mr. Lewis E @f moneys borrowed by the decedent and Herman Gaeki to tell me what they see.” 4 travels and to be returned to j : 4 + ga yw will, stir, stands for! The two men crossed the room HOW THEY DID IT “4 / Three hundred acres of land—a “And,” Mr. Calhoun wént on, itself, as Mr. Lewis will assure you.” |“54 stooped over the paper, while My father seemed brought up in| ™Y father held the crystal. The sac. His face was tense, ™4nner and the bearing of the men saws —tnewvnae | Changed. They grew on the instant 99 tense and fired with interest y y ¢ FOR tee “How do you do, my dears!’ he said pleasantly . The next person that the Green ja wisdom cap, I'd bo all right.” dyke to be built, all around it! | “that's when we had to hurry. As Eleven sloughs to have dams built across them! One man to do the work with the help of only | Pitch in. Often the other men on one man! Ms he do it? David | the flats would come and help; we wondered had no union rules, nor eight-hour Jow tides,” Mr. Calhoun went | awa, as long as that tide was out on, “you know don't wait for any | W@ worked. The men would man; they come and they go, and| Tumble sometimes, too, “This'll you must watch your work to suit | Mever hold. Building @ dam of thele Whiten brush and mud; it'll go out soon “On the East Coast the tides] 8 high tide strikes it.’ are highest on the full moon, but| “But IT had seen men building out here they are highest on the | dykes in New Brunswick, old ex new moon, Tides are high when | perienced men, and I kept right soon as the tide was out we would & the moc is full and again whenj on. A layer of little trees, butts . Wizard helped was one of the| “Why, 1 thought you knew every: |] it ix yew, you know," David didn’t | out, and a layer of mud, then re Tetu MS WHAT ~ You have proven “Seventy- -\ inisies |thing,” cried Nancy astonished, |] know, but he was glad to learn it. | versing trees, another layer and UNDGRTAKER You ae r1 Indeed, it was none other than “La, me!’ exclaimed Scribble “Well, in February we began | more mud, so that I always had seven” for Colds and Grip, std ¥ : |Seratch. "I don't need a magical |] the dams, the one hired man and | the heavy end of the brush aguinat Mr. Scribble Scratch, the thin school Gielen at Staulate: taraes Sabie wisdom cap, my dear, It's my stupid I. First we would cut a great! the tide, and a straight edge to . | pupils, If I had a wisdom cap, I'd many little fir trees about 10 feet | my wall.” One day he met Nancy and Nick | give tem each a turn wearing it. And tall and pile them on the bank of “Pretty slick! David exclaimed Influenza, Catarrh, Pains and 4 Soreness in Head and Chest, yen | walking in Whispering Forest. He !then think how smart they'd be!" the slough. Then I would build a n. Cough, Sore Throat and | was on his way home to his little! «why, that's a fine idea,” sald ‘flume’ or box, just on the same “We worked like mad; in a General Prostration and} gy vid hig age apg ta wy Nick admiringly. “We'll ask Mr. |] principal as your great locks and | night we would build a dam 10 or * we looked tired and discouraged. | Green Wizard at once.” dams in the canal at Seattle, and | 12 feet high. It was a big job, the Fever, | — try Dr. Hum When he saw the Twins, his face| Phe wizard did produce a magical|| I would shove it into the water, | sloughs were 40 or 60 feet wide, phreys’ Remedies for other | brightened. wisdom cap and the Twins took It|] step out on it, pole myself along | at the top, so It took a lot of trees diseases, ranging from in- | “How do you do, my dears! he}to Scribble Scratch who fairly éried |] to the position 1 wanted the flume | and mua to build a dam across. Sprue i said pleasantly, “I'm glad to see |for joy. to be in, and as the tide ran out} “And, my, but they were cage he old age—from Spru “Sir,” sald the Englishman, “do | you." A week later the Twins, passing, I'd bold hard with my pole and | hungry when they finished each A i you enjoy this foolery?’ |" “We're pretty well, thank you,” a sign up which said, “School | the box would gradually drop | time! Mrs, Calhoun spoke again. Doctoring Book mailed free. Pa ur eae ts janswered they, “And we're glad to at’ There sat Mr, Scribble |] down where I wanted it.” “Ir can remember how I would 20c and $1.00, at Dru see ith’ said the old doctor, |i, you, too. We hope you are|Scratch at his desk looking as for-| “Slick scheme!” cried David. have to have hot tea™ready and ‘or went on remittance or C.|With a queer, foreign expletive | ¥ | 4 BR yer 4 - Paros! Post Humphreys’ | “And 1” eried Lewis, “sce some-|™ }lorn as a rainy day Yes," Mrs, Calhoun laughed, | plenty for them to eat, a4 4 schoolmaster sighed “Just| “What can be wrong?” asked “and I used to be so uneasy for “And the day you finished? Do Homeo. Medicine Somegerr. 166 Wil-| thing more than Pendleton's vision, | Harn Bireet, New Yor! |pretty!” he waid. “I wish I had you | Nancy kindly |] tear he'd fall in, 1'4 bog him to | you remember that day?" ~ Rees eee ete OM lea cae to help tne.” “hoy all got #0 smart they knew || keep close to the shore.” (To Be Continued) The Englishman sprang up with | iwese helping the Green Wis | everything, agree quhocinamer — aan ur er an oath and leaned ncrows tho table, |@ explained Nancy. “But. per-|ruetully, and, now hey won't come | te ga Fhe ge Then he suw the thing haps we can come when jand I'm out of a | My father and Lewis gaped ike] Gosford, seh ‘Srtea gsd Ssiio bar ba onc iba onl ‘ y= ps8 hing!’ sald Mr. Serib:} “c don't worry,” Nick assured|men w . ? “ * rned and fuml in his Ht-} chemical reagent the figure The very thing!’ said Mr. Serib Qh, don't. worry |men who neo a penned.in beast slip! “Colorst they sata, for tho| dia {med wna f cancant ‘anterhee: Gana Rheumati m ody father's hand held the crystal |... geratch suddenly. “You can help |ni “Give us the wisdom-cap an t th imagined Hh a fi in th mn labove the figures of the bequest |”! on sey AD hs cd heomert er i isingenicn yp MOUs tard An | Bele passage. | changed figure in the will was) «1 carry a bit of acid for my peo-| fully; the bar of the 5 turned: Fwritten to the body of the will, The |S Where you are. Will you ask. the | we'll bring you a dunce-cap instead.” | There was eilance. Then suddenly, | Mask. ple's. indigestions, It has other|and the remainder of it focused lens of glass magnified to n| W'2ard if he has such a thing as a (To Be Continued) in the strained stillness of the room,| “why, yes,” replied the old man, . pe | 5 ul ‘ t had! (Copyright, 1922, by Seattle Star) | ola Doctor Gack! laughed, Gosford |i tg very pretty.” or hie peri tey p Met ls St ge he! petite pets Degen aye nee hacagh oy fle reached across the table and| notes and Marshall’s signature. have trapped a rogue!” ropy sing ®'Y| drew over Mr. Gosford’s memoran-| “See! he cried, “Your writing is} “And 1 have lost a m Knowing from terrible experience the suffering caused by rheumatism, ; ‘i Mrs. J. ©. Hurst, who lives at 608 .| great diameter, and under the vast |™#sleal wisdom cap? If 1 J R gg AR 348, Blooming . lil, | enlargement a thing that would es-| ~~~ ae Piel cut of dunt ,|cape the eye stood out. The top) across two uprights. less like wood, his body rigid; then anxious to tell all ‘ors|curl of a figure 3 had been erased,| ‘The figure 3 had been changed to|he stood up and faced tho throo| uth dum beside the will, blue, Mr, Gosford, and Marshall's} good acid,” replied the old t how to get rid of their torture /and the bar of a 6 added. One could) 6 so cunningly as to deceive the| men across the table, “Why do you laugh, my good) “you are progressive, sir,” he|r he began to gather up the Mire. Huret bes nothing to nett, |8¢ the broken fibers of the paper|eye, but not to deceive the vast| “Quite so!" he sald in his vackous|man?” he said, went on; “you write in fron-nutgall| With an oath the trapped mah) his broken bottle from the mail your own name and ad-|on the outline of the curl, and the magnification of the crystal, The| English voice. “Marshall wrote a 3| “I laugh,” replied Gackl, “because | ink, Just made, commercially, in this| struck at Gaeki's hand, . The vial - e will gladly w ve A bar of the five Iny acrows the top of thing stood out big and crude like| by inadvertence and changed it. He! a@ figure 5 can have so many colors.” | year of fifty.six by Mr, Stephens,/fell and cracked on the table, The| Another triumph of M. jon fntirely | the three and the top of the o be-|4 carpenter's patch, borrowed my penknife to erase the| And now” my father and Lewis) But we write here as Marshall| hydrochloric acid spread out over lypo ditiacment,” 8" ¥°" | ning it Uke @ black Inth tacked| Gosford's face became, expression-| figure.”, wore no less astonished than Mr. wrote in fifty-four, with log-wood."| Marshall's will,

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