The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 8, 1923, Page 11

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collect “smilo” had ing the EDISON MARSHALL are eS KAUSTRATED a FIELD « a ee SYNOPSIS OF PREC @riving rain takes her e beside him. He 5 and drives disappear Ned a te to wend | to Esk delivers of what she party st will ing the start of its with, mystery bring him reaching @ weakness He had never adm before. He had sure of himself, salt. ent things were dy found himself first time, th northern ad with the re ning to press this north up as him or the Ned Cornet was. He 5 that ho had moe He had read books ace ed among as masterpieces of works whose seemed to be face sex—but now he saw premise was were the of fa conquerable skies| and “ winds waste places, | Unlike Ned's rets were not that he had ever launched forth into the venture. Rather he found himself regretting that he was not better fitted to contend} with it. Perhaps, after all, his father bad been right and he had| been wrong. For the first time in his Mfe.Ned felt the need of great er strengy, of stronger sinews. What if.hie father had toid the} truth, and that strict trials await ea him bere. It wae no longer easy to disbelieve him. Almost any} disaster could fall upon him here, fn these wastes of suniit water, in the very shadow of polar ice. The| sun {teelf bad jost its warmth. It slanted down upon them from far to the south, and it seemed to) be beguiling them, with {ts goiden| beauty on the waters, Into some aly trap that had been set for m still farther north, It some way apprehenstve and dismayed. He wished he hadn't teen so sure of himself, that ho ad taken greater pains, In his wasted years, to harden and train himself. Perhaps he was to be weighed in the balance, and {t was increasingly hard to believe that he would not be found wanting. In such a mood he reealled his father's words regarding that dread realm of test and trial that Ia: somewhere beyond the world “some bitter, dreadful training Lenore, left | knew jit was LUTFLE, BROWN @ COMPANY, 423 EDING CHAPTERS hita on a fF xpedition. Ned a As he is tak hin fate fear of Was th mere] ¢ death! Wa monition soon t but he expe: nD Was be a these stars an old man’s childish The thought troubled and haunt ea him, but it proved to be the best possible Influence for the man himself. For the ume his ifo Ned Cornet was awake. He had been dreaming before: for the first time he had wakened to } Fear, disaster, the dreadful omn! potence of fate were no longer empty words to him: they stern and immutable realities, He what the wolf knows, when he howls to the winter moon from the snow-swept ridge: that he wasa hid in the hands of Powers so vast and awful that the sublimest human ight could not even reach nem! He could ste, dimly as yet but unmistakably, the shadow of that travail that haunts men's days from the beginning to the end. Hig father’s bic degree his father’s wisdom, was beginning to manifest itself in him. only a whispered voice 19 wholly to be disregarded in t ace of great temptation evertheless {t was tho finest and most hopeful thing in his life And ft came ¥ mp and in some yet too ADVEN orf THE TIPPY TRADE “I mustn* make a hole,’ Nancy and Nick Sister Gallop in his rocky cave when they were not traveling around with him on thelr ponies. Each of them had a nice made out of smelly pipe needles und covered with soft Indian blankets At night when Snow and Blackio | and Echo, tho three ponies, wer out eating sweet grass, and the leaves of mountain daisies, which they dearly loved, their little master and mistres# and the wee falryman were dreaming fine dreams of new adventures, But one night, while they were sound asleep and dreaming dreams by the yard, something more real was happening. Tippy ‘Trade Mouse peeped in. ‘The cave wis as dark as a fruit eollar because the onlight and arlight couldn't | , but Tippy de Mouse's eyes were just made the dark and he could seo every thing. He sniffed at Mister Gallop's lasso | and his high cowboy boots, and he | aid in ay sniffed at Nancy's clothes neat pile over a chair back, and he gniffed ut the magic shoes standing in « neat row under the beds. ‘Tien he came to Nick's clothes laid in a pile at the foot of hie bed yeady to jump into In the morn ing, | stayed with; ott bed | TURES TWINS MOUSE *he kept saying Tippy ‘Trade Mouse jumped up Jand sniffed at Nick's clothes. “Ah, |hat* he said, winking his bright lit- | tle eyes. “‘Hore's the very thing I've been wanting!’ And he took Nick's hirt in his teeth and out into the moonlight ‘Then he set'to work and chewed and chewed and chewed, “I mustn't | make a hole!” he kept saying. ‘That wouldn't be nice of me at all! I mustn't make a hole, I'll have to be | very careful.” After whilo he fintshed what ho was doing, and dragged the shirt back again Then he went awny, something in his mouth, And by and by ho came back carrying something else in his mouth and faid it in the shirt, This he did six times, Then ho left for good. "Oh, lookt” orled Nick wheti he went to put his skirt on next morn: ing. “Bomebody's out all the buttons oft my shirt and left wix little wtones instwad,”* “It Tippy carrying ‘Trade Mouse, as sure as anything,” sald Mister Gallop) “He is always trading something for something else, and nobody knows what he wants tt for,” (To He Continued) (Copyright, 1023, by Heute Star were) dragged it} THE : Cynthia Grey? «| Discussion on Married W omen Work New Topic: “Sh BY s to whethe voman ork eet the butcher ¢ It has been a li na been and hope of th out nd baker bil ely topic ¢ wonderful. I want our new discus young men, ar Miss Grey: It is not work if she is satisfied with waiting until pay day to But if the young husband | eit} Married it would be impossible he| salary to get a home. When aft| estate, building materials, m: ek well, it simply cannot be bride, I i o, if she i ible to attain it Dear Miss Grey: I want t perience it does not pay for home. Our } is not a nice little kiddies, but v working that we are and I have the other i want a home in the I married. I certainly home back on a happ’ she started working, of the luxuries so pine: averag po full Asis so I wou many Miss Grey fed in thi men work usbands are who man wh basis about an & week, and the rks on a commission Not every man can earn from $40 te | $50 a week, even tho capable, simply ause there e n of carn good as bare necenal: taxes, oto.? never wear expenstve cloth chil I things made of suge 1 my summers rais vogetabl nd t jon and but one more than had ¢ wonderful ht that a ma rector cc i effect shot up again, more ored now, and m & great { fire rolled o the aky ploded into a thousand flying frag eee ments, and left a sea of covery hu®) Dear Mise Grey: Much has been in the spectrum fn ite wake, jeald about the necessity of married Th Northern Lights he women of today working outside of himself, A quiver of the home to make enda meet passed over him. om my own experience I think There could be no mistake. heaper for a wife to tay In her was tho radiance, the glory and do all Red Goda reserve for thos*)there. We had two pay checks and ho seck the far northern trails. it took them both and more too. I ver tho dieplay increased in won-|had to have more clothes when I de A beauty. The eamers| worked away from home, had more w whisking in all tion: dry, more dry cleaning, had le now, meeting with the of} time to cook and sometimes we had collision in the dome the sky, re-|to eat down town or bought It. maining there to shiver and gleam! 1 am staying at home now, after {ncredibie beauty; the surg t ng earned a larger salary than # of light spread ever farther|my husband and we have more. I at mes, the sky was a flut-lam baking my own cakes, canning tering canopy of radiance. ray own frult, do my dry cleanin He thought of calling Lenore/iaundry and housework. 1 and Mrs. Hardenworth; but some either and I can truthfully way the idea slipped out of his keeping my house, raising my mind. In a moment ho and loving my busband, we Jeep in his own mood even are healthler, happier and wealthier member that they existed. But ti than when I worked. only his exterfor world faded from| Where my heart I, my mind Is |his consciousness. For the mo-|also. My nature can function un he forgot himself; and with| divided. 1 self-love and self.concelt] We are both contented now and had pervaded every moment/T know this han been tho solution his past life, colored all his| Wives, make your house a home, not iews, and shaped the ends of his| Just a place to stay. It costs less tiny. All that was left was t A gains yor I tried both for ky and {ts weird, re-|10 years—no' amor {n the sea. This was Aurora Borealis, never to be known, in Its full glory, to) Did the ancient those that shun the silent spaces|better teeth than the p of the North. Suddenly he felt)ation. Did they ever |glad that he was here. Tho mo-|tecth? ment, by measure of some queer) Spectmena of ¢' in the pe of natural teeth Bound to- balance beyond his sight, was worth | shape alt the rest of his past life put to-|gether with gold, or artificlal teeth Wigne uel aii temptations might tear him) dreamed for a moment but that his own weakness and folly/ane had conquered and shut away past might Jay him low {| the appeal thet this man made to om oful disaster of the future;) per heart. Tt would have been yet be glad that he had come!) easy enough to conquer if ho It was the most profound, the most| only remained what he had been, far-reaching moment of his life. | gelfish, reckless, self-loving, inured Always he had ved close to andlts his tawdry philosophy of life bound up in a man-made civiliza-| put tonight a new strength had |tion, In his heart he had wor|come into his face. F |shipped it, rather than tho urge| would bo gone tomorrow, but to- und the inspiration that had mado] ight his manhood had come to it pdusible; he had always judged) yim, And she couldn't resist it. It the thing rather But for the first timo in his life} ho was clone to nature's heart. He| Jory, at nature's whim, nded the most glorious) beheld in his ne-| closer to redemp. | tion than at any time in his life, | A tow feet distant on the deck Boss’ eyes turned from tho miracio| in t tes to watch tho slow! | growing light In } Cornet's face 4 |It was jwell enough for him to find] M\\ Cream for the first \inis inspiration in the majesty of| time. White-Flesh |nature. Bess was a woman, and| - . yey as 6 that meant that man that is born} Send 106 for Trial Sire of woman wag her work and her PT. HOPKINS & SON being. Sho turned her eyes from ba God to behold this man. And it was well for Lenore ‘wis not near seo her face in the wan, radiance of the Northern Her woman's intuition would been quick to lay baro the secret of the girl's wildly-leaping heart Bous's eyes were suddenly lustrous with a light no leas wonderful than that witich played In glory in the aky. Her face was swiftly unulter: ably beautiful in is tenderness and longing, And this done brightly col ssbands wer id a wAKS so we could MRS, W. P, told exultation This! i 4 that | home am no lave that too | bables was more. 1 know. HOUSEWIFE. zee Egyptians have ent gener. wear falso ntal works | gethe Great trials ahead, | down, seabird thru the sky. 1 « Dantinued in Our Next Tasue) {had seen a that transc vork of man ever e city. He wa) Almost Unbelievable You can hardly realize the woader- {al improvement to your skin and complexion the mirror will reveal toyou after usin Gouraud’s Orienta Gouraud's - Oriental. Cream PORTOLIVE IS NOT A SECRET TONIC Port Wine and Olive Oil Phousands of alck persons are coming to realize that secret meu. cinos of all Kinds are worthless and often harmful, Tho reavon for the great success of Portolive i# that It contains only rare old Port Wine, the oll of the olive and other medicinal agents that are not only beneficlal, but harmiess, It is Invaluable for all cases of anemia, nervousness, weakness or chronic constipation. All drugglate well iteAdvertisoment, her that enough to ghostly Lights. have had she not very thing? fought against Sho had not DR. EDWIN J. BROWN'S DENTAL OFFICES 106 Columbia St, Seattle's Leading Dentist for More Than 21 Years ion as should prox ettle labor, believe, ambit ambitious, she th ie arreled ense of would e eem to think nece: for you can't have eve find plenty | nd ¥ think! decent, the work ponaible | had rhaps it| than the source.| ewept her heart as the wind sweepe) ig Comes to a We Let the Women all CYNTHIA GREY r it-ia necessary for the order to young home in today d the of the to thank everyone to whether the marriage, ting tead guc- for wrt girls, in 108€ will be as necessary for a young wife to living in furnished rooms and bills and buy neé ities 1as no nest egg when they are to save enough on an ordinary starts out to pay for 1 and then furniture, dish done. want a one her own p in every home of will he MR our pe outside We ha o much o the ex- the » two Oo say wife that from to work wife ng apart. She has one child the word—that is why to know how to get my We got g all right before Id say, better do without some ary to hap- rything. A READE year t © job again, day the Duffs w thelr place with the comic f The family f ivory, bone, « c ne, at tached to the natur C means of cord, or gold or silver banda or he found the which we Kgatures, jas of mummies, ably buried the Christian era. 00 or 600 year: What are the periods after billl Triliions, quadrillions, quintt sextillions, septillions, octillion iiltonas, and decillions. What will prevent a canary pe | pulling out itw# feathers? A plece of raw bacon hung in the cage ta helpful. as. 0 How many bushels of apples are produced in Washington, California, | Oregon and | The statistics for 1022 are | Weshington, £5,878000 bu.; Calt- | fornia, 7,456,000 bu.; Oregon, 6500, 000 bu.; Idaho, 8,900,000 bu. eae When was the first bank In the United States entablished and chart ered and where? Philadelphia, March Ist, 1789. When was “Black friday” In the United States? This is the name applied to two disastrous daya in the financial his- | tory of the United Btates. Friday, BIRD CAGE AND FERNERY ENLIVEN THE SUN PARLOR Introduce an Outdoor Atmosphere That Is Decidedly Interesting. By MARIAN MOORE The sun room Is the meeting place of indoors and outdoors! It Is the place where outdoor delights may be enjoyed in conjunction with | Indoor comforts, For this reason, the outdoor notes of sunshine, plant and bird life, should be tn- troduced into every sun room. The sun room In the Illustration | gives many valoable suggestions. The ever changing appearance of | the thrifty ferns in the long flower | | | | | | Nature In the Sun Room, |box at the window, tha cheerful song of the little occupant of the |wicker bird cage—the colorful | flowers of the bright cretonne—all | these holp to bridge the great dl- | vide between the interlor of the | home and the great outdoors, | The fernery ts part of the sulte | | to which the gate-leg table In the | foreground also belongs, It {s palnt- | ed French gray, with trimmings | of delft blue, ‘The Mnoleum on. tho floor {8 a black pattern of cream and gray. ‘The window shades are As unusual as beautiful, Bright col- ored cretonne, Ined with heavy muslin, has been attached to spring rollers Instead of the usual opaque shade Mnen of Austrian cloth and achieves a charming effect. (Write to Marlan Moore, care of thia newopaper, for advice or Infor mation abosit home furnishing or decorating, sending stamped ad- dressed envelope for reply’) Question: Tow much below the actual window length thould 1 make my curtains?—S, Me'D, Anewer: Glass curtainy to the alll, aldo drapes almost to, floor, If home Ia a small cottage type, with Informal furntehing: the alde drapes are cut off at alll, Copyright, American Homes Bureau, VA Mediterranean Meanderings In the Acropolis, Where Paul Preached His Message Very Apropos Today Greek Worshipper Rock Stands 300 Feet BY W. 1. PORTERFIELD ATHE ( (By M wanted to fare h 0 yearn ag an ¢ effort of Fish the gold mar 1-3 and on Friday urred in the New ange h was f 4 “panto of 1873 and r example ing of time the « time is divided into periods 1 bells, The firat dell ts 12:30 a. m.; 2 bells, 1 o'clock ; $ bella, 1:30; 4 belly, 2; 5 bells, 2:30; |i bells, 3 bells, 3:30; 8 bella, 3 a, v4 observed, ¢ that the time be ttoeen belle is one-half hivur, and that the highest number of Dilla ta 8. Th four hours covered by the 8 bella are d six times in 2) hours venience of sea-faring refore, repea Was Jonnie Lind ever married? she married Otto Goldechmidt, her planiat, in 1852. How much 1s spent each year for chewing gum in the United States? Approximately $50,000)00. Where can one get a book which will outline the work of the various departments of the government? The Congressional auch an outline. It ta sold by the Supt. of Documents, Printing Office, Washington, D. C., for 60 cents, Remittance must be by money order. s and Service Ask Your Neighbor TRADES UNION SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION 1215 Fourth Ave. Dr. Wo, Chinese Doctor Licensed Herb Specialiat Treats all aliments Chinese mature herbs, Many ket well suffering stomach, rheumatism, head- ach#, catarrh, nervousn cough, cold, kidney, blood, akin, ‘bladder and female disorders. Ca’ write. M. Hee Wo Chinese Medicine 208 James Bt, cor, Bnd Ave., Seattle biished 1903. Phone Main 2195 Thoroughness Charncterizes every tran: jon, and our cua- tomers are accorded every cour- tesy consistent with sound busl- neas Judgment 4% Pald on Savings Accounts Account ubject to Check Are ordially Invited Peoples Savings Bank SECOND “VE. AND PIKE ST, our methods in | DENTISTRY Less Than HALF-PRICE ‘OR THIRTY DAYS $10,00 Crowns £8.00 Crowns $40.00 Plates $10.00 Plates 35.00 Plates Our Whalebone Rubber Plate $8.00 All Work Guaranteed for 15 Years OHIO CUT RATE DENTISTS Fetabiished 20 Years Second Ave. and University St, Open 0 to 6 Dally—O to 12 Sundays AB AMARA A A LEI Fy Bremerton-Oharleston- ort Orchard Take Fast Steamers at Colman Doo REGULAR SCHEDULE Leave Seattle Dally 80, 7318, 8:80, 10:30, 11:90 A. 6:80, 11:90 P. At +Hxoent Sunday [|SPECIAL NIGHT SERVICE rx From Seattle to Bremerton Gaturdny and Sunday, 9:80 PM. and Pa 6:90 and 0 P.M, E KERRY “4 apes to Bremerton Dally . M180 A. Me, 8100, 8 PM. % trip Hat, @ Sun, 9:90 P. at, nvonger Fare, H0e Round een Navy YARD ROUTE & Colm 3003 [*) EEE coor It wit be | Directory has! Hold Service Above City was & group of me jreek Orthodox chy 2 rns NERVOUS WRECK at Spee sap ger “ : Tells How She Was Restored to d king t the Perfect Health by Lydia E.Pink- of} bam’s Vegetable Compound nd} Memphis, Tenn,— awd year call to us from | was completely run-down and my were th nerves were @ wreck. I could not sweep a room without resting. I could not do my work except a lit- tle at a time, and the doctor’s medi- cine did not help me. One day some one threw your lit- tle book on to my porch, and in it I read several testi- monials of women who had been like myself. I went right out and got me a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound, and before I had taken the whole of that bottle I knew it was helpin; I took six bottles, and then in about three months I took two more. Now I am in perfect |ter of men’s thoughts health. I do all of myown work and “The God that made the world and | egyld do more. I can truly say that I all things therein, he, being Lord of | know Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable |heaven and earth dwelleth not in| Compound gave me my health.”— temples made with hands, neither is| Mrs, O. J. HinckLey, 316 Union he served by men’s hands as tho he| Ave., Memphis, Tenn. |nveded anything, seeing he himself,| Lydia E. Pinkham’s Private Text- giveth to life and breath and all Book upon “* Ailmenta Peculiar to things; and he made of one, every na-| Women’’ will be sent you free upon tion of men to dwell on all the ‘face | request. Write to The Lydia E. Pink- lof the earth having determined their | ham Medicine Co., Ly Mass. This |appointed seasons.” book contains valuable information, And I thought of the Greeks t 4 y to drive out the Turks and the Turks murdering Greek and Armenian | women and little children and of Bul inded by fireets and #qt kness of the could ern the mov nda ming egular fl The darkr ading ray y € ace ‘6 blue ng dg steamship steering by the from the Phs can r the ra fixed { of a ¢ And here had J upward to the mighty 1 and statue of the Athens, and here h | all the power and solemnity stood Pa of a mas peice | Mrs. Belle Smith Government | | For skin blemishe: eResino Don't be annoyed and embarrassed any longer by an ugly, blotchy skin. Apply a little Resinol Ointment and | use Resinol Soap for your toilet, then note how much better your skin looks and feels. This wholesome treatment seldom fails to restore that healthy color and clarity of in which every man desires. Resinol Shaving Stick soothes tender aking. ‘These three products at all drug- oiets. Real Estate Loans Lowest Rates No Commission We Make Monthly Payment Loans Annual, Semi-annual Payments and Straight Loans one best Weak or Nervous. | |This Letter Is of Vital Interest to You Spokane, Wash.—"Several months |ago my health failed and my back | ached all the time. I had con \tinuous pains and was as miser able as could be, when I remember- ed that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre scription had benefited me at various times before, and thought perhaps |it would again. I found that to be jtrue. It helped me so much that | kept on with it until I had taken | three bottles and was then abso-| jlutely without aches or pains and | in better health than I had been} |for a long time."—Mrs. Belle Smith, | }214 S. Walnut Bt. j | Your health fs most important to you. Why not write Dr. Pieree's| |Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for free, confidential, medical ad.| |vice or send 10c for trial pkg. of | |Favorite Prescription Tablets.—Ad. | | vertisement. Try This On| Your Catarrh Ordinary methods of treating| catarrh are fatlures, simply because | they do not reach the affected| areas, You've got to heal thosd raw tender spots that are hidden awa: whero liquids and sprays never} touch them. The best and most ef-| fective method Is to inhale the fumes of “Deo” each night and morning. | Gently heat @ spoonful of “Deo” | jin a tin plate and draw in deep Jbreaths of the pleasant, soothing| vapor. This penetrates every nook Washington Mutual Savi cea ta Reneesen xe mont | AVBUEUAL OAVINES | graduall: healing inflamed mom-} branes. Right away you will begin| Bank better. Hawking and spit-| to foel 1101 Second Avenue suits your needs. We give you the most liberal repayment priv- | | | —whichever ileges known West. in the ting will lessen and your head will) bo clearer, Deo" is the trade name of Den- nis’ Eucalyptus Olntment —com-} osed entirely of antiseptic, heal ing oils, Guaranteed to give satis factory results or money back. Sold} in 60c Jara ¢ by leading druggists every wher nnis Mig. Co., makers, Berk jo Adver- tisement PUGET SOUND hf? SS TEAMER SCHEDULES SAVE MONEY Travel by Steamer TACOMA Daily 1, 8, 11 oh ee op Singl 45c mis” ICTORIA, E Port Angelos Strait Potote Daily, 12:00 Midnight Dally 10:00 p.m, Fort Townren = sand Nill Porte feet Daily § am. and 8 pm Dally 10:00 a. m., 6:20 py Auto and Passe: Terry Abundant Hair ay Cared For By Cuticura edule Benes with Cutic ra Ho receded wy Haht applic tom indo hi ure Olnt: skin, ment to the scal Nears the neat of dundfufe allay ele alla) fs he rien oti qa fe. the 'y condition reduce & fet lant growth fata a tac a ida ici esalntriaasinns Mot.and ‘Thira, 10180 p. en (Goes Thra to Nowh Bay on Monday Triy Only) i a Dally, 10 P.M, vla Anpeortae Rte fect to change without netloe, DLMAN DOCK FOOT Ma RION ST i

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