The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 9, 1923, Page 15

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RETRIBUTION EDISON MARSHALL wa Intle past his usuai}and t opening naware of ne tonight Her depression} the onward march of ‘ pened, ho couldn't fight It] seemed like a child, hove " tay 1 malad befalling Ned r toll F ble hou tt r face, ‘ | man. tw 1 to shield it | 1 w tn warn n | wild, a b e. She m t | m his winter sleep or a cari tt 1 ep | en | standing facing he t was #.|not forget the cold, always wat £ taking rilous p i for He was walking } n the| w | whe} Hot | gaze, When h moved a t | back a few pac me| might be | forward at ace prote | What after camel H sare | a I at } And now / ft She co | © and let the wind 3 en to life, & ; - | : hind her, and thelr rendezvou: had loved | i © glacie him even firat, before ever his i} hidden reappear again.| Weary lifetimes pans manhood came upon him, but her And peering closely, she made out|fore ever she reac love had been an Infinite, an in B faint, dark Ike pencil/ steep cliff of the gia li effable thing in these last few } mark on the ice, just where | weeks of his greatness ‘ | e of hin victories had been a vi | tory to he sho had | e exh nifestation | ew strength. But oh | ved his boyishnens, too, H ooked hia brown « r his brow, h unaware of h ¢ of the snow fi down ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS WHAT HAPPENED TO THOMAS CAT i He looked as innocent as a spring lamb Thomas M. Cat came out of the kitchen door of Farmer Brown's house and looked around. He look. ed at the aky, then he looked at the ground and then he sat down and started to wash himself, He jooked as innocent as a spring lamb, and as mild asa pan of milk, had flattened out like a black rug. But he kept going on and on, straight for the haystack, with a queer wiggling motion like a snake walking on its tummy. By ‘nd by he stopped, crouching down in the stubble as fiat as w pancake. sSianciiaabat and as sweet as a barrel of sugur.| He didn’t see the figures follow ing, He was too busy watching ; But Mister Dodger eald to the : ut Mister Dodger said to the! ething He didn’tlook like « Twins (they had just been around } seeing if all the animals in Squealy. PE rare OB LSP be. Bie ROW 3 Moo Land were safe}—well, he said, | H® looked ike— Well, you should “Let's watch that fellow, When | 2ave seen what he looked like! Thomas M. Cat begins to look like | Then the Twins heard two squeaky neki: a Sunday school, that's the tin i sind ing to Mister Harvest Mouse. he's up to something. ‘Come on,” she was saying, “I By ‘nd by, Mister Cat stopped |, ave on my bonnet and shaw! and washing and looked around. Then the 4 he purred till he sounded like fly on a window pane | “Don't see a thing,” came Mister Finally he stopped purring and | Mouse's voice. “Looks safe enough!” walked down the path to the gate.| And off they started. Then he sat down again and} At that minute something big and purred some more, black & leap, Then he got up and crossed the} “Oc ked Mr. and Mrs, Mouse road and crawled under the fence | in ala into the field where the hay-stack| “Mec spit Thomas Cat sudden was, looking for all the world like ajly as tho something had surprised Rice apple ple. him. “M, H'm!’ nodded Mister Dodger,| “Ruan! Run knowingly. “I just thought so! Come | Dodger’s voice. on, Kiddies! Step softly and we'll| the tail.” follow t " | And you Thor M. Cat walked slowly | mouse people along the rows of stubble and pretty | coaxed. soon the Twins noticed that | bles are safo in be “and we if the road's clear.” Look | | | | fas called Mister “We've got him by may be didn't sure the have little to (To Be Conti (Copyright, 1923, by wed) Seattle Star) wasn't so tall as he had teen. He Every Japan Tea Drinker should try . SALADA” GREEN TEA The finest green teon procurable, Sold at all grocers. R. & H. C, COOK, WE st-4073, EL iot-0350, Distributors day was in her white face: wil was «tll « face itself seemed utterly| but the crevice itself seemed | blank. She seemed to be drawing clear to its mouth. within herself, into an eerle ¢ axe, lying just at the | world of her own, as if seeking chasm, showed where | shelter from some unthink 1 fallen | able thing that There we of seeking fur was hardly ther: of the lightless | 1 outward was all too! oices, It was Missez Harvest Mouse | hin , mov glorified he nd any power Sh hin name into the 1 some measure hen echo. way to yield air unt lant, faint fame had out. Perhaps co was not of such vast she been taught to Pe the nhattered be but ow} not dead, in the swiftly, cold had not yet him. She she could. And that cry did only darkness, She had haps the deadly had time to claim again, loudly called as ot go unheard, Ned had given up but a few mo ments before Bees had come, and her full voice carried clearly into the strange, misty realm of semt. consciousness into which he had drifted. And this manhood that had lately grown upon him would not let him ahut his cars to this! |sobbing appeal. His own voice sounding weird and hollow as the voice of the dead in that immeasur.| able abyss, came back In answer. “Here I am, Beas,” he aid. | “You'll have to work quic | | XXVI was bitter hard fight his way back twilight, ‘The cold had hold of! him. its triumph was near, and it| would not let him go without a savage battle that seemed to wrack the man in twain. So far ans his} own wishes went, he only wanted] to drift farther and farther] { 1 for Ned to thru death's} on, linto the twilight ocean, and never! return to the cursed island again.| But Bess was calling him, and he| jcouldn’t deny her. Perhaps in a | distant cabin Lerlore called him, too.| | Indeed, the call upon him more urgent than ever before. tore, Be- for ‘Letiore, but Beas, too, was al jern Islands, and is now living at |factor now, In that utter darkness Blaine, Wash, |Ned saw more clearly than ever| RUA! |before in his life, and while his| AUSTIN KANE, JR. who was eyes searched only for Lenore, he Inst heard from when living at | kept seoing Boss, too. Beas with 1518 Broadway, in June, 1922, is re. her never-failing smile of encour-| quosted to communicate with his ie |agement, her soft beauty that had | mother, Mrs, Austin Kane, 21 Wick. 4 him, in spite of himself, on low ave, Dublin, Ireland. their nights at Forks cabin. Hor bee need of him was real, threatencd Ce, 3) |by Doomadort as sho was, and he WILLIAM A, BROWN. —tast mustn't leave her sobbing so for- | heard from when he was stopping at |lornly on the fee above. Lenore Ithe Right hotel, Seattle, is. beng | |was first, of course—his duty jsought by R. Johnson, 6018 asth | her reason enough for lave, N. W. hty fight, But Bess’ wiele oved leeply ‘i A ba Mesos eae a LOUIS CHAMPAGNE, On LAM. He summoned every ounce of| A ! " if | BERT,—Missing for five years, ts courage and determination that ho | | had and tried to shake the frost} z | Wanted at home immediately His |from his brain, “You'll have to] fl | father 14 very ill. Communicate in: | work quick,” he warned again. His) was stronger now, but soft ened with a tenderness beyond her | most recklors dreams, "Don't be |too hopeful—I haven't much left in] |me. What can you do? Tho girl who answered him was| in no way the lost and hopeless mortal that had lain sobbing on [the fee. Her senttered, weakened | faculties had swept back to her Jin all their strength, at the first round of his yoice, Hoe was alive,| and it fs the code of the North, |learned in these dreadful months, | that so long as a spark ntill glows |the battle must not be given over. |There was something to fight for |now. ‘The fighting side of her that | Ned had ween Ho often awopt awift- \ly into dominance. At onco sho was a cold blade, true and sure; brain and body in perfect diselplin voles “How far aro you?" sho asked.| “{ can't soo—'" | “About 10 feet—but T can’t get) up without help.” “Can you stand | “Yeu.” Foroing last ounce of hin age, he drow himself erect. Reach ing upward, his handa were tons than a yard from the top of the crevice, | Bews up?" himaelf to the nerve and cour- did not make the mistako was} J his thought had always been| fl TUE SEATT LE STAR pore [ STATELY FRO CKS COMING ) BY MARIAN HALE ! PARIS, Oct. 9.—At t 7 able Py you he much about the “robe style." Aa I make it out, this means as poaaible, r 1p. poned to be at all, would Ky wa try t of the wlann minutes more (Continued Tomorrow) | CONSOLE TABLE FILLS A VACANT WALL SPACE As Effective in Living! Rooms in Hallways, | BY MARIAN MOORE | “Why does everybody look at my | mirror and say I should hang that mirror over a console table?” queries a woman reader. We can't blame her for being puzzled. Mir | rors and console tables have sud- | denly become the Gold Dust twins of wall spaces—we let them do the work, instead of making wall flow. ers of our chairs and davenports. A mirror similar to the one In the picture would be a mere “spot” on the wall if the table were not | below it. When placed above the table it becomes part of a group | which 1s one unit in the furnishing Console in Living Room. | of the room; also giving helght or | varying the skyline, we might say, | in a room where the majority of the pleces are low. With a decora- tlve bowl or pottery plece beneath | the mirror, and two tall candle: | sticks to unite table and mirror, it | has all the appearance of a sinyle plece of furniture, achleving dig: | nity instead of the fussiness of sev- eral individual pleces. ‘The frame and table In the ple- ture are of walnut, with a dull} rubbed finish, The bowl and can: | diesticks are of pottery, (Write to Marian Moore, care of thie newspaper for advice or Infor. | mation about home furnishing or | decorating, sending imped, ad. | dressed envelope for reply). Question: Can the fireplace In the living room be furnished in| fyvory and furniture in overstuffed | mahogany be used? Or would a | foney brick fireplace match better? | —J. dG. | Annwe The Ivory fireplace would harmonize better with tho | fine texture of the mahogany fur. niture. Copyright, Amertcan Homes Bureat, It Is the antithestn of the standard zed tallormade frock If you have a fooling for the state ly, flowing robes worn by tho I entine Mapr of the middie Just copy some old p exactly, a ou have ar le atyle Remember, too, to conform to the period you select with jewel ir dressing, shoes and all accessories. Then you can have all tho fun of being in a costume play, except that than the stage And some of the costumes you see | this year would draw the attention of the average woman from the mont apley French review to the specta tora themselven, Lanvin and Luelle probably have the greatest success with robes de atyle Lanvin particularly h created the medieval modes, Some of he velvet frocks have very full, long ts, and very plain blouses whic al dee lenlastical Her n teresting head m them, for they are al ax well as authents jer where she can posaibl © patterns for her love deries and jewel. at they all hark back age axe, too, supplies in- of the “| Very most pic 1, long 1 in plain A, are jolt little t with the houlder Gold and silver tissues are com- bined with the most costly laces nd embellished with the most col ful ribbons and flowers ‘There is no end to th vidual- ty possible in these lovely costumes but th direrimination used Not ev n has the assurance and poise neces- sury to looke like Cleopatra or Cath- erine do Medici, when other womer are all striving to look as 1923 as sible, be mu as to type. ery wom |Bureau of | Missing | Relatives | Invites its readers to uso this in finding missing | The department ie | to beip In reuniting those who have b separated. 2 the disappearance directly to The Stas Headers who may know the whereabouts of persons mentioned In this column Fequested also to report to| Other newspapers are Invited | @ reproduce such items as will interest ie readers, | Cie) | FRED M. HOYT, for whom an inquiry was printed in thix column two months ago, writes to The Star that he recently returned from a| stay of three months in the South formation as to his whereabouts to | MRS, M, SMITH. Reported to have been soon at the | Hotel Atwood, Seattle, carly in| June of this year, has been miasing since. Her mother, Senora Edelmira | 3, de Biermann, Js anxious for word of h d can be reached thru the office of C. F, Deichman, American consular general, at Valparaiso, Chile. ANDREW FARDY, who left St. | Johns, Newfoundland, 20 years ago, | in company with Stephen Melville and Patrick Byrne, ix the object of search by his niece, Minnie Fardy, of 8 Carter's Hill, Newfoundland, CLAUDE CHATTERTON, — Mina. ing since July, when he was in| Seattlo, Is requested to write to his mother, Mrs, George Chatterton, 1942 Minneapolis st, Los Angeles, Cal, Who needs his help, THREB-PIECE SUITS: Three-plece suits of black molre are © novelty this season, ‘They may be embroidered in bright col ors, or meroly popped up with col. Jars and cuffs of white satin or fur, iS 9956S ESES AGPICKER KILLED BY JOY News of Fortune Too Much for Frenchman R relative. wife was and asked three to |nothing but his BY JOHN O'BRIEN the fortune. (United Press Staff Correspondent) PARIS, Oct. 9—“The joy that kills’ was experienced by picker of Perpignan, in the France, who was the plaything Fate. When Francois Palogry, of a} ist and the tune of about four million francs, | approximately $250,000, the au try to find his heirs, | The genealogist’s researches con: |same name, Francois Palegry, of |Perpignan, was the nearest living This Palegry was a rag. picker and lived in a hovel with his | children. establish jidentity. Being illiterate and having | with tissue paper when you p military n |show who he was, the ragpicker|they will retain their shape muc was about to give up all hope of| better than they would without this) But an old priest of | precaution. e |the town dug up official records es- ‘ |tablishing his identity beyond doubt 1 rag-|Palegry was instructed to proceed to | uth of | Nice with the documents. Laying them before the genvalog-|ware together and the cooking d representatives of the mysterious person who had lived in | judicial authorities, he was informed Nice for years, died, leaving a for-|that his claim was good and that he had only to make a cross on a certain paper to enter into posses- thorities instructed a genealogist to| sion of the millions, ‘he done so when he put his hand PAGE y € 2, SS to his breast’and toppled over, dead, The sudden ending of the suspel had proved too much for him, | widow and their children got mor Hig. STUFF THE CROWNS Stuff the crowns of your Palegry his own card to|them away between seasons, STACK ‘EM UP Before washing dishes, stack up as to size and get all the together. You save time and when you are thru. GINGHAM IN HANKIES White linen handkerchiefs, checks with color in gingham patterns very smart now. 3 Scarcely had = dinates he Ladies! OOD health cannot be camouflaged by powder and rouge. ‘The eyes will tell, ‘That sparkle and clearness that denote good health will not be there if you are constipated. Mrs. Clara Proctor of Pottersville, Mich., had been told by doctors she had this and that disease, and one advised an operation, but she knew she had been constipated all her life so first tried Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. She avoided the operation and now feels better than she ever did, Likewise Mrs. William Appleton of Eddington, Pa., who was badly constipated and now looks her best again after using Syrup Pepsin. On Sale for 30 Years Intelligent women are realizing that health and mere outward complexion are two differ- ent things, and more and more are taking Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Over 10 million bottles were bought in drug stores last year, the yess selling liquid laxa- tive in the world! Go to your druggist and buy a bottle. The cost is less than a cont a dose. You will see how much more NGM neste Ctthe healthy, look that SYRUP, PEPSIN Gives is Natures Own This Beats Cosmetics] If You Want to Try It Free Before Buyin, “Syrup Pepsin,” 516 Washington St., Monticello, Illinois. I need a gond laxative and wontd like to prove whats bout Dr, Caliheelt Peprin by oetual fest, Send me wfree trial bolle, Adress to me DR. CALDWELL'’S ders or pills, and without shock to the system. Safe Family Laxative Jse it regularly a day before and a day after the periods. The gentle emptying of the bowels will give you great relief, and lessen J headaches and congestion. Take a spoonful fF at bed-time and see how much better you feel in the morning. It is a vegetable compound of | Egyptian senna and pepsin with le. aro~ matics, and entirely safe not only for you but for the youngest child. Keop a bottle of Dr. Cald-: well's Syrup Pepsin constantly in the home you or some other member of the family need it any moment to relieve constipatio1 to break up feyers and colds, to clear up bil- iousness, indigestion, a pimple, a fever sore and other disturbances that show constipat a Syrup effective a spoonful of Syrup Pepsin is than tablets, pow-

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