The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 15, 1924, Page 10

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. THE SEATT Eleven Advantages of | Amaizo Oil— | 1, Fries beautifully, thoroughly, quickly. 2. Does not smoke at cooking temperature. 3. Does not carry the flavor of one food to another, so can be used over and over, 4. Heats quickly. 5. Measures easily and accurately, 6. Blends rapidly with other ingredients. 7. Necessitates no melting. 8. Makes delicate, delicious cakes — is an ideal shortening. 9. Maintains the delicious natural flavor | of foods. 10, Does not curd in mayonnaise. 11. Its can is dustless, rustless, easy to han- dle and store. AMAIZO OIL Your Grocer time th ke « flash, th im that if the m Send for the FREE AMAIZO Cook Book All of its recipes are tested and avoid its charges ste, He felt ment attract monster saw toe b Then he « by stey eye wan cloned —Poofunny Land, frog with them. “Do hurry,” the frog kept saying.| suddenly Hooking back nervously toward the/liden «1 Bond to see if the brown mink was) cried we ~ “Do you think the fairy he gone?" taking the green 1 we do when the Twins that staggered rone at do you say if each of you up Ike new, and A take you to the houses of children | looked, me MH think not,” said Nancy. “She| who haven't many toys.” ing in rage and wait to see how you Wked| Instantly there were so many | Thru th | voices all yelling at once that the | cn? & “Well, 1 don't like myself a bit! fairy had to put her hands over hor | tains and I want her to change mo back sTAMT iene CHAPTE oyed he Clark, from fear, was desper binde, it was sharp. he might save himself yet Yet he dare not rise lest his the attent He lay stily and watched It was like « Then he struck put all bis strength in the His hand wa misstep 4 ——— caEeter — = | realized that on the success ADVENTURES fine th “ OF THE TWINS great, mirror & : D | reflected in it : He CS NO. 25—WHAT SILVER WINGS DID Nancy and Nick started back t k, “we all miss the children. | aid not have t With a roar that him, Clark dodged, turned and fled. He ter was flounder lL ery from the Clark looked u' A Story of Seattle and The South Seas “The Beacon Hill Mystery” BY FRED V. WILLIAMS ———————— | The monster, at his sppros rolled ts bt 1 He picked F for a a place be neath w t the heart of the « ter might lay, To his . © wh f the beast was tous 4 yielded to the pres . ¢ the blade, He left it im n the monster's flesh and The monster ned at his unseen |® enemy. It undered helplessly Great streams of blood gushed from in w it orambled to tts feet with lowered head charged mad Clark, watehing It, saw it drive for the sea. The beast reached the beach. It did not stop. It drove on Now it slipped and stumbled into the first wash of the waves, Then it gained its feet i, blood On it charged, streaming, staining the water, 0: on into the depth of the oce fl back showed above th face ~ Qark, rushing to the surf)» tide and wallow and fight im the he trough of eake Ove ed, over and over in the waves, Clark saw the monster's bulk become very still, It rose and fell, submerged and drifted, @ visible emerged and the grip.of @ receding tide. Clark turned and cleaned his knife in the sand. With fear, be noticed for the first time that the entire tribe, men and women, were running down the mountain side toward him lie could not flee. The ocean was et his back Me was cornered. There remained but the chance that his onqgu ne of the monster m by elevating him in the eyes of the natives. Far in the lead of the running na tives, her hair flying in the wind, Clark sw Toba The knife wae still gripped in his hand. Foo of friend, he could not find a» en wart to irhed and flung the thing far Bo he T his wide. He half expected to be seized, bound, car ried away prisoner, but no- She flung her arms about him. She kissed him. She held him | fast In an affectionate embrace. The women n Up, followed by the men, among them Smith, wide-eyed, Joyful, lark, you've saved our lives,” he They look on you as a god the whole fight from the hills, It was magnificent.” came to Clark. It bound hin veins. Leaped to his Made of him, on the mo a conquering hero. He stood erect, hin eyes flashing, tmposing, commanding and raised his hands ment peck out in| LE STAR City Jail Seems Filled With Innocent Persons At Least That Is What Prisoners Tell Justice a BY J. BK JUSTICE » 1 have been jirying to ¢ ut why so many ve * have #0 little respect fof the aw. I urred to me yesterday to « the net fite are to disregard awe and get t at it The chief kindly offered to show me thru, and we went all over the yuse, The entire top Moor of the public safety building is devoted to extraining persons who have no traint, and who believe in the of the law, more or The place is clean, and but for the r of disinfectants, is free from the asual smelliness common to prisons First, we went into the ladies room. There were o three in there, The rather young one gave hief a look the emed to an awer his question, when he inquired how she came to be there She ex plained that she hadn't done a thing Was living in the residential section ft t Somehow the sailors around her ¢, and} just for run her t 27 years old, and had| a boy whom sha had farmed out with some of her kin NO OCCUPANTS IN THE KIDDIES’ nooM | And the Indian maiden of some . * sald § she wasn't te ' being there ne ha imply brought her in the time she wanted to remain out When asked how many times whe had been there before, she sald. as well as che could remember, a lot of times. The third member of the party was a woman approaching mid die life. She id her trouble was the boore, This particular time she had nob been very drunk, but her grown son had thought otherwise, and had en- gaged & room for her, She confensed to have spent many days, on many different occasions, in the city jail, But this time she renented being there, She had fed her son all winter while he was out f job, and she didn’t think it was any way for him to repay her, = | The next room visited was very | Tt was the kiddies’ lost partment. It ts a homey | 4 is separate and apart from | the others. It ls here weeping mothers come to get the youngsters, they have lost. There were no occu pants this day | N r away from the kiddies room is the room for young girls who wildly take @ chance and get caugt t not mixed w This departm quests After Inspectin the “hard-boiled.” was also without kas are k night, and p" room, where can get a warm 14 night, | 4 “Hard ny down bed on the bare floor on a what might be c we enter Tuck Lane. | First there Is the large room where thowe who are fined. ing time”’ are con. | A sentence of 10 days Or 20) r any other number of days! t|ter give him « “But remember you won't stay new | Wooden waddle duck. : When they arrived, there were|!0"S- You'll loge cars and tails and | Mister Fuzs Wuzz and Silver Wings | 8** dinged and lose your paint and the tim "We don't care! We don't care! sang all the Doofunny Landers. tee « “Please do hurry,” croaked the “No, I didn't,” said the frog. “An . leusrmous beast was after ine'and 1(little. frog. ‘You haven't changed| hear that {s usually the end of all|™¢ ‘ack yet and the mink ‘may Teal frogs. I'd rather be made of |COMe any minute, sald Silver “Tl begin on you," eotton and er and last a while ‘gayle Wings, waving her wand, “That's the way with me,"| Instantly the little shivering frog] squeaked the little tin mouse, “In|M@nged tack Into ‘a puffy, cotton Doofunny Land I have only the|{foe with tlasue-paper skin. Ho} patent-leather cat and the stocking | oked very happy. Kitten to fear, and neither of them| Then one by one she changed all fire very fast runners,” the toys, and made them like new, “And you know how much chance |¢xcept the Cut-Outs. They were so bunnies have!’ declared the cotton |l¢-fashioned that they needed a rabbit, flapping his long, limber |W Set of clothes altogether. ears. The Twins helped Silver Wings to “The only thing is," quacked the | take the toys to their new homes, | ——— |! AS for Mister Fuzz Wrz, the! |ptpe-cleaner man, he wanted to go. jback to his old home cnd live with |his master, who made him. | Nancy and Nick said goodby to | Silver Wings, but as she flew away | Ver Wings when she spied the little! green fellow in Nick’s hand. brute. (Copyright, 1924, Seattle Star) | 10c a Quart Rich, pure, fresh daily from our herd of tested Holsteins—no pasteuriza- tion or preservative of any kind. . Miss O. S. Allen’ Tested Recipes <a 5 ——— no. 148 Onion Soup from Paris (An artist senda this simple and easy recipe from Montmartre) 8 medium sized onions 3 tablespoonfuls Crisco cupful water Steero beef cubes toast for 25 D parmesan cheese Peel the onions and chop coarse- ly. Put in frying pan with the Tisco and water. Cover and let simmer until soft. Remove the cover and fry until brown. Dissolve the Eteero cubes in one Hyde Cas 8 Add the onions. hi the aber it into ric! Grate the cheese. Sprinkle over small squares of toast and serve in the centre of each plate, (RISCO “Gets-It painless way to end coms fore | miles ahead of any thing else, Try Ke) ar \ ly two oF Loree Kia all drugelata, ely. Soon off with your fingers, root For ght, tender cakes trie Satisfactory ree For digestible and bod it corn or money back. For crop, digestible f Ld toda everywhere, & Co, Chicago, ete i 18 Bold in thy City AC baw Owl Drug Co—Advertisoment Clark, realizing he was under the eyes of the island, knew thai the vietor over this beast, which for generations had been dread. ed among these people, might in the end save his life, Clark no toni He approached it. He hoped he might recover the knife. |xhe called, "I think the Fury rinae | aoxniirve Aistribution of the now famous Big| The white man who has slain the {Queen has a new adventure for Finer Texture [Print Red Letter Bible. Our auc | beast is a godt” | you.” and cess hag been much beyond our an.|, Tht aa the natives shrank back, | (To Be Continued) anc {cipation, and we are more than | her eyes fell on Smith, who cowered Larger in your k See Same Price M ! Wh t seoure a handsome Bible almost as y: a a a gift will have vanished forever, | (Get the next Installment, Clark | 2 id Look for coupon elsewhere tn to- {is in a new tangle, brought about by Skinn rl! day's paper. ithe native queen.) | y Girl! Mastin’s Vitamon 7 supply the health-elving, streneth- aliding Wi Sron and time | tat, well-round tes, successful, vi enutiful women an cars. mountain # Met ide. Gaueneat thi mathe i), is here served, It was well | the way I used to be. 1 wasn't! ,, . o ures of the natives his, amazemen| o with men, No women go to! © afraid of anything then except the|,,A!! right! All rightr* she laughed. -.ssed hin wounding of the beast. |™@M and women, dropped to th Jepartment. They ran all the! jth Prostrat®, way from first timers, who wore a troubled alr, to regular boarders, who were more interested In trying to get | knees and among them, the old queen, while Smith, rapidly interpreted what she said. ¢ had come to make capi be left out in the rain and every. | “The old girl surrenders the| ; and everybody waiting anxiously to es FY’) tal of his conquest of the mon- a smoke than they were in moving see what had happened. | eras, ite Slways that way when ster, Perhapa, he thought, the |throne, the emake skin, the' island, /101- boarq Most of thems claimed to | Well, did you like it? asked sil-|*iddies piay with toyn mere fact that he had emerged | ¢Verything to you," cried Smith with |i. entirely innocent, and could not| dolight. The natives circled around him, The womep, Toba leading, lifted him from the ground and marched him ¢ feared the great | ‘tiumphantly on their sholders to the see why they should be kept housed | up when they had a job waiting on the outside. | | The “dope” cell was well filled with throne. j Rervous, eager souls. One old China-/| Toba crept to his side. |man, who looked as if he would May inthe with thes,’ my taster?” | sree sen en ha cow e and chat. | * * | mht,” up and down and chat- jhe asked. Smith, at his aide, had tered hin troubles to the chiet,. He aterereteg. {hadn't done anything, and ought to | nae eee sed Clark srandly. “I)be out. He had never smoked the Lapsed copetledddlorw Mp | pipe in his life, And a young white The queen, tall, stark, wasted, (ian nearby sat and wriggied and| cangelltat ated him, Sho raleed | stared, and evidently longed for only eo apa neg —— But most of them paced jone shot, cried to the natiy one: | 0 floo toned, ” sf peng! the floor, and if questioned, declared "she | they hadn't done a thing. BER TSS ‘Two unfortunates, in separate |Last Week of Our Great Bible| ceils, wero making a Jot of nolse, Distribution | and begging to get out. It was With the idea of placing the most | Plain that their top stories were useful and at the same time the; Unfurnished, and that their final handsomest edition for home une oe ever published, we, undertook the | ¢ried for “A nacrifice to the new god! gratified at the praise bestowed up. | behind Clark. si jon our efforta, Our contract ex.| we epi Oe See |pires this week, however, and sat-|Smith. “The old witch has me urday in the last day of tho distri. | Picked out for @ sacrifice to you. bution. The fow copies remaining |, 7'Us to his words the queen are golng out with a rush, and can |™"sled him out and cried: only hope that no ono will be d “Tho old white mant Jappointed at the clone. We have| fitting that he die in thonor of |thia in mind whon we urgo every.| the great umbala. |one who reads this notice to lose no| The natives set up a cry, Clark time, but to elip the coupon that|turned to his friend. Smith was! |appears in today’s jesue and secure| deathly pale. He clutched Clark's the volume, We shall positively | arm, withdraw the offer om Saturday| “You are and a very unusual opportunity to |hoarmely. "Save mo! Jolume kings over 33 years Ounces for 25¢ king," he whispered V HY doesn’t sho take Mastin’s Vitamon and round out her face and figure with some good, firm flesh? | Countless women who used to be thin, scrawny, rundown and peaked-fuced havo used | this simple, economical way | to becomeshapely and pretty, | beautify the complexion, | brighten the eyes and put natural, healthy color into the | cheeks and lips, ‘ablets. sharpen ite, relieve constipation, clear help digest your food and turn h, red fi HOT CROSS BUNS Baked to the same High Standard of Quality as Butter-Nut Bread, Your Grocer can supply you. April 17, 18 & 19 amines, combined with organic whieh the body must have for 1d development, Nothi: et from 10 to 96 month are reported, ly teed or you thie Ny health wed by millions. Ad My Experience is that DR. CALDWELL’S SYRUP PEPSIN nd Chief Is just what you need destination would likely — he 4: re . e Dteliacoom. Each insisted that k eaters, Seek ieee This Will Make Digestion Easy Tt re HAT the dyspeptic needs is coated tongue, offensive breath, ads ella, and longed f wi asda. ond esseoeh on and ailments open, The younger one, wh breath perfumes but « medicine e deranged stomach trom 1 na, had been ’ that will belp his bowels to move Many serious dis- merchandise to sell for a friend. F making th he was lo ge mission, In the meantime the got him, and he could not | owner of the go had done nothing regularly, for dyspepsia and con- are stipation are allied. If you will timely aid. ¢ Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin stematically as the directh on the package of you will soon digest your food properly end pass it out normally, and heartburn, belching, dizziness, nervousness and bloating will vanish. In time you can dispense with all medi- cines as Syrup Pepsin will have exercised the intestine! and stom- ach muscles so they act for them- selves. Mr. Lewis F, Schultz of Reasnor, Ia., Mrs. Victor Knodler of 3625 Bank 5t., Louisville, Ky., and hosts of others will verify this. prevented by this Formula Plainly Stated Have no hesitancy giving Dr, Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin to eny- one young or ola + is @ mild, gentle e free from nar. cotics, not cramp or ' The ula is om the peckagn compound of Egyptian seana with pepsin and simple aromatics, A bottle can be bed at any drug store and averages less than @ cent a dose. Economical for fam- ilies and fully guaranteed. You will find it a great improvement in taste and action over castor oil, or “candy cathartics” mede from coal-tar Pst cause skin Over in @ corner room were of Italy and a white man from M tana. The Italian said he w cused of trying to hold up a store, but wasn't the p He greatly interested in getting a » and wanted the chief to send up razor The white man was at a | know why he was in § done time in Montana on « larceny charge, but that had settled, He had also taken his baby boy and skipped out from his wife World Acclaims Success Dr, Caldwell's Syrup Pej in is } the prescription of a well-known diseases, calo at loosens the because she wouldn't stay sober and physician of thet name who prac- teeth, salts ter or powder behave herself, Maybe he was | tised successfully for 47 years. that concentrate the blood and for kidnaping, but the t was } It has been on the market thirty dry the skin. and they could not ma hat tick ears and is today the The man w uinely troubled selling liquid f argent laxative in the world Thousands of families bave it in their med- icine chest ready when any member showssigns dyspepain, ipa torpid liver, sour stomach, biliousness, about the boy. He had left him 4 bearding house, and was anxious to know what was happening to him The chief promised to find out an jet him know 1 guces paling ond would like idecell's Syrup Pepsin Send mea free trial bottle, Address to Name he said, “that I had bet nome good family He's too fi kid to be raised by either my wife or me. So far we had not found a single male person who thought he qa ——— —— =; guilty of the charge, or ought to-be 4 ake pia een: a ae “no |to ape in jail, I was on the point of ating to the chief that he turn . have to tell whole lot out, when we came I stole three shirts from the}, no one el a real criminal, who wasn't afraid | place where I worked. I had always | ¢¢ He wanted the to admit it wanted a shirt like that, but chief to her #0 I fell for it be | Being the o1 what I was doing.” | Jail, I am tnel: One of the shirts he meant to give | will be inter He was a white boy, 16 or 17 have the mone years old. He was nervous and fore I realized pretty well shot to pleces. When y gullty man in the ed to think the chiet 4 in his case.” Hot Cross Buns Special this week. Good, old-time Hot Cross Buns! Don’t miss this famous Lenten treat this week. I bake them every night. The very finest of Hot Cross Buns, specially made with Sun-Maid Raisins, Order yours early— especially for Good Friday. You can get them fresh from my ovens at any bakery, grocery store or delicatessen in the city. Raisin Bread tomorrow And remember, tomorrow brings m regular special baking of Raisin Brea ; together with rolls, coffee cakes, “snails,’ and other tempting Sun-Maid Raisin Foods. And Raisin Pie, of course, filled with he oe fruit of California’s vine- yards. . By Bakers everywhere The finest Sun-Maid Raisin Bread and other Raisin Foods are prepared “Spe- cial for Wednesday” by bakers every _week—everywhere. . Serve them tomorrow, as so many women have formed a custom of ania For dinner—for your own and the chil- dren’s luncheon. And don’t forget H his week ‘get my Hot Cross Buns clustered gropes Many binds of Roisin Rolls, fresh and tempting Badorsed by bakers everywhere, by the American Bakers’ Assos cietion, and by the Retail Bakers’ Association of America . Raisin bread . Special on Wednesdays Not How Cheap, But OH! How Goop|

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