Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
, OCTOBE ‘HE ISLE TESDAY i. Xi OF RETRIBUTION \LUSTRATED By RA BATTERTIEND nes (Continued From Our Last Issue) | But in spite of tt tship, the amuse was not had co ¢| founded ensued wa His first well of reser nly manife He strength girl e had « word he) litted covered her with a spite of her about the work x! supper.” It was a strange thing what pleagpre it gave him to see the warm! low of the| life stream flow Back Into her} bianched cheeks, and her deep, biue| eyes fill again with: light. Hereto- fore this twilight hour, at the end of a bitter day, had been the worst hour of all; but tonight it was the| dest. He hadn't dreamed that so/ much pleasure could be gained sim ply by serving others. In addition ‘© some of: the simple staples that pro-{ Ddison MARSHALL © UTE, BROWN @ COMPANY, 1083 found among abin's erved 8 sup great migan warmed ur of talk her the t and left He eht-hearted for all to drift was unexplain at sure ght. The wind we of logs wa cold could not tonight malter anima tn, then fleshed i the pelts she had preparing hi a hard bed for him ot the regret that they the or hut ¢ ways office cab wn was pr the ve ling when he fi toll. The tried w ing wilderngss traits. work in the morning s hold of him. farther mt expect he is careful to pile for the next comer the traditions the on necessity: the few se thus saved in striking the flame have more than once, at the end of a bitter day, saved the flame of lite. This is the hour wt nds count. The hands 4 to hold the irit despairs at utting fuel. It ts to lie still and reat rodamar tigue even when to pass that v a sturdy are sometimes too knife: the tired this labor of very easy, th and let the cold take its tol Tho‘ trails of these two trappers often crossed, in’ the weeks to come. ‘They kept close track of each oth or’s and they stem whereby they the Forks cabin at They ar without embar ch of them appreciat Ing the other's need of compan tonship. By running a few traps toward the interior from the forks, Bess made an excuse to take five days to her route; and for once schedules, worked out could meet almost _ every ranged it wholly rasament soon cireuit Doomadort seemed to fail to nee her) real motive. Perhaps he thought she was merely trying to increase her catch, thus hoping to avoid the penalties he had threatened. Ned found to his amazement that they had many common interoats They were drawn together pot onty by their toil, and by their mutual ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS Olive Roberts Barton MISTER GADABOUT GOBBLER And, oh, but he was proud of himself Mister Turkey Gobbler was limit. He was always gadding about | somewhere or other, with his wife| and relations trailing after poor things, until they were dead. along, afraid alone And, himself. As Mister Dodger said Twins, the peacock at the palace wasn't in it when old Mister Go bier spread out his tail like a fa and got red in the face, and swell welf out like a Fourth of July on ready to go up. hy does he like the almost Tecnuse their mammy them was | to leave at home| ob, ‘but he was proud of to the | to gad about} CORNS lift right off) te) ESS Joonn't hurt a bit! Drop a little eexone” on an aching corn, in réintly that corn s#tpps hurting, then whortly you lift’ it right off with fingera, ‘Truly! Your Gruggist sells a tiny bottle of “Hreezone’ for few certs, suf. “Because he is vain, I suppose, and likes show himself oft,” answered Mister Dodger, blowing a to corn-cob pipe. Then he pulled his on, Twins. That reminds me I heard Farmer Smith say to Farmer Brown that if he didn’t keep his turkeys out of his buckwheat field something dreadful was going to happen to them.” and said, “Come “Do they Nick inquired 2 they swallow It down,” nod- Mister Dodger. “They snip it vwéth their bills and eat it. 1 t blame ‘armer Smith for get- ross, Well, it's getting dark and the moon is coming up and Mister Gadabout and his family will be coming bagk to sleep on top of the Yes, sir, there they tramp it down?’ ded oft th woodpile. come now.” The Twins looked place where Mister was pointing, and sure enough! There was a long dark line trailing slow ly along toward the barnyard, They knew {it must be the turkeys, for nothing elwe could moye #o slowly— except molasses in winter time. toward Dodger the Pretty soon Mister Gadabout flew up to his roosting place, then his wife and then his children, and then all of his relations. And before long they were sound asleep “Now then, Nancy!’ said Mister Dodger. "Have you got a bit of red ribbon about you?" Nancy had the very thing right in her pocket “Well, 1 declare! vaid the fairyman. bow, N ? jat That's lucky,” “Can you tie a ney? I never was any good "You, indeed!’ cried the little girl excitedly, “What do you want to know for?" Because we're going to tle a large red bow of ribbon right around Mister Gobbler's neck. When ho kenw tomorrow he's going to bw ficient, To remove every ham corn, pott corn, or corn between the toes, and the calitises, without soreness or Irritation“Advertiwemnt, || the most surprived bird in Squeaty: | Moo Jand, I'll tell you why later," (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1923, by Seuttle Star gprs aca | Education Week to ab nt Start November 18 VASHINGTO: Printers Givs Mrs. Harding Tribute WASHINGTON Mre burst fn ling is th ofa after They brow by tt expected and hardest problems to the arrival on th employe oft president cabin and pol at ved them together them need anced they of mutual m of jiving began t t best ter was mor had ever @ tespairin: an g/ learning how u The very fewest numt demand| in such a The win rigorous than they 1 their most that o-| P help ma mum amount ng Wwe and They and th quickest pleasure, but the of life itself, ‘The s alone Ale yielded n stark insue 4| eat and} such} The mes as these mpanic It got t awh hip be a mystery with them} Ned, forgotten in they hadn't giv ft ¢ pl Kame and| Forks such fooia| pelts, sor ved, Again en ne es this dreadful, nightmare ultimate end of horror ing sometimes a fow before th: tired pelesa fight,| unheard« the backs to Wh almout each ment were eace? They f Freedom Just to fu ugh en came of| extreme talk they warmth, 1 the ash MIDDLE AGE — | RelievedofNervousnessandOther | Distressing Ailments by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Brooklyn, N. Y.—‘'I first took Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound four years ago, and am tak- ing it now for the Change of Life and other trou- ind I receive great benefitfrom it. Iam willing to let you use m: letter as a testi- monial because it could never threat But question they found no It themselves was powe beyond up debt to pay ey ‘could ind rest, Day after down, day laying ng the | wn the limbs of the » obscuring all old infinity had to be renet snow sifted ever deeper things his of white o traps dug out and These were sourdough" aly again and ag the days when the old the mainiand with | hin cabin, merely venturing to the door after fuel; but Ned and Bese| Lydia BE. knew no such mercy Their fate was to struggle on thru those ev ox frifte nt they Driven by master dared not rest even a day ing was no longer wahoes; and even id the soft 4 ti «x with snow, « & mile was the most breaking labor. Yet the to plow on, one day upd strange, dim figures thelr in. on remained a cruel ir Walk possible without these sank in the letter box and read it yng and that is | To how I came to take the Vegetable out meant de certain | Compound myself, It has given me Moreover they | quiet nerves ao that I sleep al! night, could not even move with thelr old| and a better appetite. I have recom- lelwure. The days were constantiy| mended it already to all my friends shorter, Just a ray of light between) and relatives,"’— Mra, ENGLEMANN, «re urtains of darkness; and) 2082 Palmetto St., Ridgewood, Brook- ly by mushing at the fastest pos-| lyn, N. Y. | sible walking pace were they able| For Semon seinen Hye thon | to make it thru. ‘vous troubles causing alec; ia, "the blues,’ When tho skies cleared, an un-|headache, hysteria, treamed of degree of cold took pos-| Lydia E. Pinkham V mene of the lid. Beemingly Pound (i 1 Bipcomadbede zon ye every trickle of moving water waa| cine. For tt thocnahs tis trlnoat already frozen hard, the sea shel-| Que evan be depended unos wathe troubles common at that as between to He | 4 very noon | seanion jtered by the inland chain was an|¢ooo} infinity of ice, snow-ewept an was | the rest of the weary landscape, } but now the breath froze on the jbeard, and the eyelids one upon| ——— |azotier| Zhe, ngers fore In ©") QPEN SPACES ADVISED IN PLACING FURNITURE removed, and the hottest fires could hardly warm the cabins, And} aE.) | jon these clear, bitter nights the! Effect on the Room Is Compared | Northern Lights were an ineffable With “Reste” in Music, glory In the sky | A strange atmosphere of unreal ity began to cloud fheir familiar | world. They found ft tncreasingty hard to belleve in their own con sciousness; to convince themacives they: were still struggling onward Instead of lying lifeless in the It was all dim like » dream | —sncw and silence and emptinens and the Northern Lights lambent in the sky. And for a time thi) color, with restful spaces between Pad ag ac i {nat Femained:| the pictures on the walls and the| they were hardly aware of the! Dleces of furniture in the room—| | measages of pain and torture that) Ln is as much harmony as the the nerves browgiit to the brain.| “vest musical selection, We are} land then, as ever, there came «| “timed and soothed by its beauty | | certain measure of readjustment. | pm | | ‘Their bodies bailt up to endure leven such hardship as this. The Bi fact that the snow at last packed) B | was a factor, too: they were able to skim over the white crust at| e. You should give it s fair trial now. Advertisement By MARIAN MOORE Spaces between groups of furnl- ture in a room are as important as the rests in music. Indeed, the room where furniture is crowded together is comparable to some of our so-called music where rests are unknown. The room with subdued | coloring in the larger areas, with | few accented notes of bright! him, | cloud of corn-silk smoke out of his!q pace even faster than the bent time they had made tn early fall.) sven the children had to tote|corn-husk hat down over his eyes| They mastered the trapper's craft, | | | | TESTED Mrs. H. A. G.’s Boston Cream Pie (The Brooklyn teoman who sent || ss this recipe secured tt from one | of her New England cousins) | 1 cupful cream | 144 cupfuls milk | 14 cupful sugar Restful Use of Open Spaces, as we are charmed by beautiful music, However, while beautiful | music can be executed only by the trained musician, a beautiful room can be achieved by any housewlfe who exercises good Judgment and good: taste in the selection and ar rangement of her furniture, ‘fhe room in the picture {8 a small living room, The Housewife had n decided preference for_over- stuffed furniture; but the’ dimen- sions of her room prohibited ita use if she wanted an uncrowded room. Therefdre, she chose a suite of cane and mahogany, with slen- der logs and graceful curving arms, |along the refined lines which gained fame for the Adams broth- ers during the Revolutionary war. (Write to Marian Moore, care of this newspaper, for advice or Infor. mation about home furnishing or decorating, sending stamped, ad- dressed envelope for reply). Question; Is it proper to hang a mirror elghteen Inches wide and three feet high above a freplace?— GR. Answert Yes—If you can place It lengthwise. Conuriaht. Amerloan Homen Ruureoa | egg | A pinch of salt 2 rounded tablespoonfuls (not cooking | flour | spoons) | 14 teaspoonful nutmeg Beat the egg; mix together the flour, sugar and salt and add to the beaten egg. Add to the milk and cream, put in double boiler and cook until thick, stirring all the time. Make a pastry shell by covering an inverted pie-tin with pastry. Bake and cool and fill with the cream when cold. Sprinkle nutmeg over the top and set on ice until used, | (RISCO For light, tender cakes For digestible and flaky pastry For crisp, digestible fried foods PAGE 11 yuthia Grey: | We Offer Not Necessary to Be Bohemian to Be Best Seller on Marriage Market Advise a Test Tabe Free Happily Married Girl Who Hated Petting Partie Dear Miss Grey: I column recently from an old-fashioned gir would help me pas have girl to get I was raised to think it wa as 1 walked down the men would passing in machine My father told me liberties 1 never allowed any I have always © senseless and maudlin My marriage was about as good a “catch” in our town a We are happy and fairly prosperous cause of my good looks, him real good to know that hi him f proud of me b lieve it doe herself before she afterwards. chose I wish you could pass this So many of them are trying to convince the that a girl who does not smoke cigaret invited, and participate in petting 1 thing but a wallflower and later an Thanikc fortune, I know thi 'I am accuainted with a number of girl | fashioned idea they frankly manifest thei: most desirable eligibles A girl may have to be I “unsettled of which I suppose. But she doc “best seller” on the n't one Does lime } 16 both fertilize and for white wash long exposure to the It ts satisfactory for fert not the v wash most sativfact What comin man enguged tn f work need each diy The following would prove satis factory in most cases: & (fresh weight) of vegetables fruits, of which siart may be in canned or dried form. ounaes of food from a cl may be called “meat and mi stitutes,” that 4s, jerately meats, poultry, fish, egos n of food does rly hard muscula and cheese uded. i pint of » If very bacon either of these allowenc not be enough prote I aon these me and salt pork are 4 r this rea ats are considered in terchangeable with the 12 ounces of bread, having about the) Zonite destroys the germs which cause blood poison- ing and other similar forms of infection. It also short- ens the process of healing and greatly reduces the us- ual pain and inflammation, read who inquire if married along my masculine hated petting partic olemnized two year .” but I notice wish t sob there ha marriage pounds used Twelve ase which t sub fat | foods and 1-2 4 there wilt fata, Ten te ence and everybody understands that letter it po , that I your ible wish val ti you experience beneath me to flir treet corn me if I allowed them acquaintance to | because they seemed ago. I married there , I think My husband not especially. But I be- wife respected well as or a husband, a along to other young women rest of them , drink when she is tic inot be any Millions of people have found new beauty, new protection, new delights, through this test we offer you. It is time you knew these bene- fits if you don't know them now. They are results you need and | want. Let this test prove them to you. old ma isn't so in some cases, at least. who laugh at “old- of them are married, tho “capture” some of the none mian to be popular with the in every community, to be Bohemian to be a ket, I take it MARGARET. ———$— th will receive call Film and offense Film on teeth is unclean. It mars beauty. At first that film is viscous. You can feel it now. With ordi- nary brushing, much of it clings and stays. Soon it discolors and forms dingy coats. Film also holds food substance which ferments and forms acid. It holds the acid in contact with the teeth to cause decay. Germs breed by millions in it. They, with tar- tar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. Few people escape these film- caused troubles they fight that film. on Monda ay 1. and on ‘om 11 to the Star same food + cipht to products nine as lue a9 eal, corm meal, meat drippings or] or an equ other ewect. Dental science, after long re- search, has found two film combat- ants. One disintegrates the film, nt amount A wian who works hard of doors all day probably would neod more food than this, and one rita all day at a desk would The amounta given are who, lke a wales ney or strup al of some Protect the Enamel Pepsodent disintegrates the film, then removes it with an ent far softer than enamel. ever use a film combatant which contains harsh grit. who need less auitable for a ma s about more or work, requiring about the same expenditure of energy. vull aimed in behalf of a void, by its The right ch | state to nullify ment of the general which it deems wnconstitutional, Bouth Carolina, objecting to the tar-| iff dill of July 14, 1832, called a con-j{ jwention November 19, 1832, and on| | November 24 passed an ordin ot Now advised by leading dentists nullification, declaring the Tariff Acta of 1828 and 1832 vold. On proc-| the world over. llamation by President Andrew Jack- json, nullification was crushed by or make povernment | The New-Day Dentifrice * methods effective. Pepsaodént In Ten Days The results will amaze you, if you fight the film on teeth the other removes it without harm- ful scouring. Many careful tests proved these on a new- type tooth paste was created to apply them daily. The name is Pepsodent. In seven years it has brought to homes the world over a new dental era. Also fruit effects Pepsodent also incorporates other principles, learned from the value of certain fruits in the diet. It multiplies the alkalinity of the saliva, also its starch digestant. Those are Nature's agents for com- bating acid and starch deposits. Pepsodent twice daily gives them manifold effect, just as eating fruit would do, The peoples who con- stantly eat fruit are markedly im- mune to tooth decay, Watch the changes Quick cl es come when Pep- sodent is used. They will surprise and delight you. Send the coupon for a 10-D:; Tube. Note how clean the te feel after using. Mark the absence of the viscous film. See how teeth become whiter as the film-coats disappear. = you will realize how much this new method means to you and yours. Cut out coupon now. 10-Day Tube Free THE PEPSODENT COMPANY, Dept. R114 8. Wabash Ave,Chieago,IIl. Mail 10-Day Tube of Pepsodent to Only one tube to = family. government forces, and the state re- | : ; zi peated the act in convention March |thew are more courtesy titles. Ken- 16, 1833. tucky is one of the leading states in |e production of honorary colonels, | majors, etc. sae & man bring sult for breach of Promise? | Yes. However, even when a mon j ts otven the verdict he ia astidom lawarded any damages, as the courts Jare inclined to regard it aa frivolous |wohen @ man brings such a awit. | Pier they a An Unfailing Way To Banish Hairs (Beauty Notes) Has the government a standard| Usly hair growths can be removed | award for a remedy for the extermin- |! the privacy of your own home if of Canada Thistle or Quack| you get a small original package of | detatone and mix into a paste enough of the powder and water to wover the hairy surface. This y men, expecially | Should be left on the skin about two uth called “Col-| minutes, then removed and the skin onels | washed, and every trace of hair will | Buch tithes are bestowed rather | have vanished. No harm or Incon- |Mberally on elderly men who have} venience can result from this treat- of promin- fooms but be sure you buy real dela- tone.-—Advertisement. j ation | Grass No. . oe Why are no mal in. the § achieved some measure FE Pa Fy Fi ba ba ba Fo +++ +s -e-rT Fiby bY Ed Lame, Achy-- All Worn Out? OES early dull, tired, autumn find you achy all over— crippled with a bad back? Are you tortured with sharp, stabbing pains at every sudden move? Do you feel lame and stiff; worn out, (A RR ; = ! nervous and dispirited? Then some- thing is wrong and you should lose no time correcting it! More than likely it’s your kidneys. The kidneys, you know, are constantly filtering poisons from the blood. But weak kidneys allow these poisons to accumulate and upset blood and nerves. The effect is soon felt. You suffer daily backache, rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness and annoying bladder irregularities. tired, stiff and achy. Don’t risk some serious kidney sickness. ened kidneys before it is too late! Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. Doan’s have helped thousands. says: “L had kidney mi permit lifting, every muscle in my body Doan's Kidney hought a box from my back and muscles, My ened ina fine ALBERT PREMEL, 6721 Carlton Ave., trouble back wan so bad that after | walked a few blocks, I had to stop and rest were being y back was too and mornings ached. Himba and back became so stiff T ® hard time in moving around. I Villa advertised, 4 drove the stiffness left my were strength= Every druggist has Doan's 60c a box. They should help you. Askyour neighbor! Read How These Seattle Folks Found Relief: MRS. L. Y. MORRIS 4066 Twenty-sixth Ave, Southwest, says: °My kidneys were weak when I was a child and I had no control over their action, As 1 grew older, this all- ment held me firmly tn its grip. Finally my bladder became inflamed and there Was constant pain in the small of my back When IT moved about It aggra- vated the trouble. My mother gaye me Doan's Kidney Pills and they did me a world of good. 1 used about three and they rid me of the bladder i lo, backnehy and kidney com- {n general.” and omy My ways: k My had waw sot pain Doan’s Kidne Foster-Milburn C You feel nervous and depressed— Help your weak- C. L. SMITH, Merchant, 2085 15th Aves W. “L took cold and it settled In. My back pained and ached the time and I was afraid to stoop for foar it would double uy; weakened me and IT The action of my kidne: most of the time. Kidney Pills and had only used them & few times when the backache oased, continued to took the pains and aches from my bac and flushed my kidneys.” ait ‘The paing Reve Foes was slit T learned of Dine cou use Doan's and they Manufacturing Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y.