The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 3, 1924, Page 7

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SAT - fHE SEATTLE rAR f oe going to play bk — ~ — ——__—__—____—_—_—_—__ ——__—__ | A Story of Seattle and He Discusses coal I wes t be iH You have The South Seas . a “ » be or YU cry? So. é | Senatorial Courage keep the sailing and palite tittle ) eC a nN g. iY =" chap from erying, we have @ , | Written for The Star by Peter B. Kyne—Another Coming Next Saturday ay® consentec io be IT. When i we showed sigus of wear ' | ¢ the « f any to eat on e aan he. week ar cathed wor (An intimate story of innermost emotions revealed Im private tetters there be in t ‘ ha f Every thae he sald ‘Boo? tb - : T . = from world that it An congress and the country crept |i prren PROM La SLE PRES Wa , ‘ the . into » funk-hole and pleaded be neigery ; * 9 7 . . oS =! Custle-k i pleaded COTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT i “ . 991! . ‘ = a of japanuns > wie iar te epere us. CARE OF THE sECKET e acon ystery |: «why | ; “| the Jay DRAWER, CONTINGED BY FRED V. WILLIAMS \ ere ; athe. Mate. dae é : - fa : oo seks ce eee = coms reas png : i TOMORROW; Letter from Le : START HERE TODAY ,| came at him again. Then he saw | Saha well as Chipess and Hindus f t aoe : : Prescott to Leslie Prescott, care cote om teed el one of the men fice, screaming | Dilge ¢ n forgotten t rea id 8 n night i ‘ the Secret Drawer, continued. . woman in P as he ran. {or egaiore hey get to. Washing? 7 will, because afi J v ; Clark knew he was going for help, Ricks. w enators represe z the he wh to m Mr. H 7 mea ‘ ¢ oe ahene that he we 6 Women, that | press f the country must have f influence of abit , I 3 : onthe h eaters onat ae -9iSig —* ws : for t : GABRILOWITSCH ; : : dom would be gone. : Pacific « eaentatives t fonal A tors att : CIVIC SYMPHONY ; ait 8 aght as only a desperate 7 r and net t ¢ 5 ti . ® ; f great /ma fight and his enemies, | e* : ; in advancing | Yided that t ‘ . » atl : METROPOLITAN : : slaves. |p bs t ‘ t but unde : i reasor St an shipwreck F = Bs 4 acted on the | xtreme or ex paychologist he maid t ¥ : q to!’ H Pee Clark the ps f love is a now Clark did not abandon | bad ap buth : 4 ein the world,|they 4 © land that 1 4 hab : Peeeseessesseseees . : Math, the women believing that by fortune within his reach. He| man i he’s bad agi 4. byes ope of alfalfa ar 7 sitecss i daying their bus the moer- knew that it would take the native| {hat Hibernian quite me I'm The’ 3 . petore h row of thelr wedding t wie | can 10\de 16+ eluates te ‘eohkeh thea |400m te Chihatews and get Re BS nese ambaaador wrote a ae ne . ea, Cosy wil Moda. a deautif s other side of t and and as much | 00d Chinan I've vp : vat A than | and t may 5 : wm eve with Clar retu Ama. | the way you can hurt ‘ we an we @0,/ 7" tu, uses ae ¥ wed her, He flcos t man is to arrest. him’ fo ans. Ho waid, tm ; ; ittle rasca AT DeHONEY’S tires, The natives, filled w 1 rly ape t ® at 4 to human, mak he ‘ - gest SEITE erecks @ ahip'on (the i. ut that will, in t's htened sand Marian Page, & white gir the was I've often wondered why anybody pe nherit the earth aaa dare survives the @ ¢ leaped nd|should get excited because 40 or 50 em . . t Mr and prejudice rather ¢ rocks a Je | nice, plump, genta: clable, honest wn a0 ‘ 4 ~ iapal fires a: J He noticed a» he|play their native games. However ened them! soing to happen im four generations ee ee UGHT $4.0 emis later killed by the n nm that the water was/I'm not thinking of the heathen ; |if we permit w > veason | 4 + wadn'tt teo'6ld Clark and Marian are Chinee toda, The birds that roost Mmediate the ne why we should open ¢ and So my Captain Larsen, skipper One waye washed him full in my harried soul t to a spe. Was paiderably u write wel . for |* 496 to le of an old funk. pede ia body, stunned him, slammed jeies t had been led to believe wns Dd anthJ our econ rtiew be Ri ieeren ene BACK ° n back against the recky wall (extinct. { refer to the dodo, The |Mild:. "Sec must | karte oe Mt Bive Sta “Yow GO ON WITH THE STORY and he almost lost his grip on his nate of the United States of [to prove n the| that the e CHAPTER treasure sack, but he held on ys thied with thin Fh are tee ne a Canadian . space for| grimly ns ‘ame te pe Pa ; ‘ ' Australa ase ! nh — ————__——_ foun t me t more m e th - be wate esas " _ ’ . ” barre oO a ding ed rr 7h a4 7 — und it;| It meant my FE aguante pun Br wb ho ' <dachents Chip 4 ' toy B yy. mechs CUT THIS OLT—IT 18 WORTH o0td againat |could earn is It meant every: ‘strongly than usual the truth of And, © Holy k-toed }|man, having iy fe wit ar :. T think 1 4 MONEY the palms of his hands. He plunged | thing to Mart to him now, Dom: that bromide t the ‘aeatinuma (rephet, they Gene i in a hand's bre te 4 wht t i ah 2 # ad and ten cents to Fole Ws arms deep into the metal mass | gedly he stumt attered by | or nat For t ret time in hla} “And that Is the puerile, infantile|has forgotten mé abject | thelr ¢ uble | woman 1 have ¢ 35 Sheffield Ave., Chicago. Bet scooped handfuls to the surface. jevery wave but dragging the sackitory, the senate has done some-|and wholly ludicrous reason which,lof hard work all pay, no with a. a | Hil, writing your name and addres Gere, Visioned all. that money and at last be reached the opening thing, sane, satisfying and specitio—|by @ divine accident, actuated the and childbirth than the Japanese |A™ay.” . “She ia very interesting. She, | Clearly. You will receive a ten cent would buy in his home, He had been |where the rocks guve way to sand. land yet you're not nalafied. I|United Btates senate to havo ac samen gree And why should| For several seconds Cappy manu. “Be of the new phases of |bottle of FOLEY'S HONEY AND poor, ™ had ony bw biage pag hae = nn gas the Leo oF thought you were in favor of Japa-|thing for the United States! Why,]we knowingly permit to exist on |fctured br hci’ ier h < TAR COMPOUND for coughs, colds teh He would have plenty, And|saw the old junk riding at anchor, He | nese exctosion , pan must belour soll forels i ' “jj {them in rows ho resumed: | YOUr we : x," 14nd hoarseness, also free sample Marian and he could live in comfort, | glimpsed the shadow of its skiff re “ Gear booth am FO he enane 15 Japan must be jour’ soll foreign: polpailes that will |Top ht ee Bally always was queer, Jack,"1| 4nd hoarseness, also free sams ; ; clasping his fat belly and laughing | forever remain foreign? no wen observed. “You see she had to eamn | Packages of FOLEY PILLS, a div Clark snatched the treasure to jturning to shore. Desperately he favor of the absolute ex himself into hysterice this morning.| “By the } Hor that’s excuse |and the way tead of . . S Her tied |Tetic stimulant for the kidneys, and hig breast, but as he did so an [tugged at the gold-weighted sack,! clusion of Danes, Swedes, Finns las fi : . Thich oe iy + Leight. w 4 short trail er ving carly ler father died | poLey CATHARTIC TABLETS fe arm reached out of the dark and | dra, it across the sand. and Norwegians if I knew that, [2° (oF Yours truly, Cappy Hicks Ing the door, int] Ty Year is that their amazing ac-| When she was 14 years old, and she |)“ Bitious: The " . a " ory hy "9 * |1'm sick et the stomach.” Japanese know it is a ar | had to*work immediately, not only nats Mousness. Th dreled his neck. It clasped him Far down the coast a shrill « as economic competitors, they t nay frighten them so. they'll wonderful remedied hive helped “ te “Well, what do you expect [sound and valid excuse and 10D may e to take care of herself, but to help | Wonderful remedies have helped m fight and held him. broke on the night. The women had! had my countrymen hull down ; _ 9 fos ; £ change their minds and apologize to | : 1 Mons ot paothe: Sie teaatradieet auee net lot GF the Wage St been Greweed. (Ou he stupsbled with|' on. the-heeisen. 1'd want fo: |' [rem tenaters “whe Rover mest jwouln't wound whew fesliniarint:a Tteminds mo of Moses |D€T mother, who was quite an in fst. He clung to it. He held treasure hole and straititd his body against it that he might resist the prtsaure behind. bart. Me was discovered, attacked, beld'a prisoner. By whom? Clark writhed about and faced his enemy ia the dim light of the moon. wea native, a man, a weak and exulted. If it had been ‘of the Amazon women he would known his chance for liberty life and rejoining Marian were But this was one of the little m, the warped subjects of their released his gold and to his enemy. He found in the half light. The | there Were no women emong Ciark was desperate no’ “Come on,” he hissed. The to his surprise, leaped to the ek. ff Their numbers—there must have ‘a ‘been half a dozen—gave them cour. pCa hit out viciously. His ded with resowidin: their feet and grimly to the rocky entrance to the} Cold fear stopped the beat of his the gold. “Runt” Larsen, straining his oars [heard those cries and shot hin skiff jto the shore. He saw the struggling ifigure’of Clark some distanc jand ran to help him | “Give me a hand!" shouted Clark. Together they dragged the sack to the boat Far down the beach Clark saw the figures of the women run- ning, leaping in the meontight, their hair flying. He knew Toba was leading them. | The sack was dumped into the skiff. Clark, almost exhausted, {elambered into the boat and sat in [the prow. |ife shoved away and fought in the | teeth of the surf. The waves were choppy and heavy | Redell, and only the old sailor's skill saved into the ocean. Shrill cries ashore, and. Clark. saw. the Amazons frantically race to the |Surf. The foremost among them plunged into the waves. “Pul begged Clark. jall you are worth.” Larsen, with a sailor's oath, bent tocthe oars and said between gasps for breath: “This is all your fault, “Pa for to get away if you had not gone back for the gold.” he rail and watched the skiff siowly battling thru th® waves toward its mother craft. She saw bronze figures, shim- meting in the moonlight, plunge ADVENTURES OF THE iB, The next place Mister Muggs took te Twins in Once-Upon-a-Time a, a8 to see the Poor Cobbler. Altho indeed he was not poor Dow, oe very, very rich and Needed cobble no longer for living. . Be However, BOMB and he was out in the ya A tree smoking his old pip Mid blowing great putts of smoke into the air, wife” called Mister When <n parked the lit ry the gate. iP & “Of courve, o cobbler, course!” said the ome right In and Mity, I think she has just made Hie fresh cookies, and the Jersey gives rich milk.” Nick eight, the cobbler told his © were very, very poor,” he a how o1 other every. tick, tometimes my wife was ANd sometimes both of us to 7 Our savings in the teapot Mantelplece got less and less and finally disappeared m ly. a At last ¢ Hah leather tert Tate one ni then Bet up ear aa pis the ww eo Rext morning when t went ‘nto My shop, there lay the shoes banich all finished to the last M00 sewed 20 neatly that I here fe was only one pair of 1 cut them went to bed so 1 in the morning riches had not spoiled | eWe came to see you and your Muggs tle car “May we come all Sally and we can have a Nancy had had six cookies Gone wrong, Sometimes TWINS got twice the price for them I usu- ally did. “I lost no time buying enough leather for two pairs of shoes, Next morning there they were, ready to the last button, altho I had done nothing but cut them out. “This went on for many nights, ach night the mysterious visitor |sewing twice as many shoes as he had the night before. I became the jrichest man in town. | “My wife and I decided to watch, so one night we hid behind the door, and at 12 o'clock two ragged |hand. They jumped up on the work-bench and began to sew, They must have been fairies, for never \have I seen shoes made #0 fast. A stitch and a snip and they were done. “We sald to ourselves, “Tit for tat. The little fellows need clothes. Perhaps that {is what they are working for.’ {$0 next day my wife made two tiny sults and knitted two tiny jackets and caps and laid them beside the leather. “Then we watched again. The little men came and when they saw the new clothes they shouted for Then they put the things on ‘We have never and disappeared, seon them since. “But a queer thing happened, I |had bought some green leather— jenough for two pairs of shoes. It | disappeared with them,’ “They most have made magic shoes and given them to the Fairy Queen," cried Ni “And she ave them to us,’ i (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1924, Seattle Star) little men came, no bigger than my| © away |the boat from being overturned or| laughing stock of the swamped and the! two precipitated | 7-— | We would have had plenty of time | .w, | | | 1 | | | | | | rail. keep out the Irish for the same reason, And if I vetoed the Squarcheads, my Blue Star Nav- igation Co, would lie up in Rot ten Row forthwith, because we wouldn't have any sailors for our American mercantile ma rine, and without the Irtsh traf fle cop the eets of our princl pal cities id resemble the we battle of the Marne, What grav: els me, centlemen of the Bilge- water club, Ik—not what the senate has done, but the awful way i@ did it.” Larsen manned the oars fv It was a unanimous vote, wasn't it? I do not call that aw ‘ou're a Diithering jackdaw,") Cappy informed Mr.« J. Angustus who had interrupted him, “The senate has mede ua the thinking peo- into the waves. Clark, too, saw them and counted 12 hasky maidens, swimming with long, overhand strokes toward them. “Look!* he cried to Larsen.-""They aro coming after us.” The olf man glanced shoulders and shouted: “Throw the gold overboard.” “Try and save it.” begged Clark. over his are almost there. It means everything’to us.” The old man silently rowed on. Out on the junk Marian clung t0/ciark watched the amooth bodies of | {the Amazons glide thru the water, / rise glistening on the waves. Now they were very near. He saw their teeth gleam, their eyes ‘jad | their long hair trail behind. A cry from Larsen and Clark jooked up to see the junk above them. Marian was looking down. The old sailor swiftly ran “ne boat to the Junk's side. “Keep them clear of the skiff while 1 get your sack aboard,” he cried. And Clark ran to the stern. The foremost maiden—she was not Toba ~—reached for the boat. Clark fought her away. She came back. He struck again. “All readyf’ shouted Larsen. He was aboard the junk now, Clark Jumped for the rope ladder and clambered to the deck. Larsen was already heaving anchor. “Watch all sides while I get under way,’ commanded Larsen. Clark dragged in the rope ladder. In doing so he had to wrench it from the grasp of two maidens in the sea. And then the old junk swung about and a puff of wind, for which the skipper profanely thanked heaven, nosed her into the open sea. ‘They wero under way. A cry from a dozen throats came from the water and a dark form reared itself at the rail, by the bow. Clark saw it at the time of Lar- sen’s warning. He rushed to the It was an Amazon, He thanked God it was not Toba as he fung her back Into the ocean. Now the junk rode heavy swells and the island began to fade. “Marian,” said Clark brokenly, sweeping her into his arms, “we're free! We're going home,” (Contniued Tomorrow) Thoroughness ol acterizes every transnctl tomers are necorded every cour- nsiatent with sound bual- ons 0, teay oo ness Ju Pald on Savings Accounts Accounts Subject to Check Are Cordially Invited Peoples Savings Bank SECOND AVE. AND PIKE 8ST. Finest Popular Priced Hotel in the United States Fireproot Absolutely FREE GARAGE BUSH HOTEL A. ©, MITCHELL, Prop. N: Union Depots SEATTLE, W: . 200 Roems—61 Per Day Up Weekly and ly Mates Tub Bathe any Japanese coolies, The only |if wo had the co to | Mr. Hanthara rage to apply katein, who used to be president! Japs they have ever seen are jour restrictions on the entrance ¢ Ndiey aggreeld students or governmental em- |unarsimilable brown men the same | ® bank here in the Cvs wilt ployes. They sco these emi | principles that the wise Japanese |benks did more pawnbroking Ait grants eating with a knife and japplies to unassimilatle white men! |!e*# banking than ts the eu fork and conctude they'll make |The Japanese would respect uns | OW-*days “Moses held a deed of trust on m) good American: jthen. ‘They must despise us now.” | belonging to a wop My dear Augustus, they do not| “But, Cappy,” Ulysses Grubb pro. | house and lot belongitg Uy & wie }think abort it at all, All they ever ted, “we can't have them inter. | «arbage gatherer on sehen ean think is that « lot of wild-eyed Na-|fering in our legislation and thrent-| note fell due the wop fs kts ot tive. Sons of the Golden West arejening us unless we make lawn that | ViAined that he wis nin nT nation that’ean and will fight Ike!) “W the indomitable Cap. | Please. Would er i. Mosce Eeck- fiends at a drop of the hat. Forty py declared, “I can't under. oy wouldn't “the, Wap. wept five states do not desire to be put) stand this andden acres of | NUS Brat att to no. avall to the expense and annoyance of 4| patriotim and civic virtue, “nD Pee ee could promine War to please three other states. | The Japanese ambassador has ie ie sould put it up to the It’s much easier to lose Cali been controlling Japanese emi | 8" 1N8E TO ee put he held out fornia, Oregon and Washington than to go to war; California means nothing to that vast ma- | Jerity whieh cannot afford even as day coach tourist return trip tleket and bring your own hard- gration to the United States for 15 years and we have been let- ting him get away with mur. der, He pretends to a certain naive ehildishness whenever the subject is broached, In effect, hope of a | | reason.” | ass sand gage: ‘ “Well, the next i RO. pe Set tan ntiriohes bed : ae gat Lae) es and the day called on Mones | Alas: The board Cynthia Gre | door, renewal oh (he explained to the wop) he didn’t| she 4 want to appoar heartless, so he’d/ what is it?’ | do’ hin best to make the board se However, day the board y after the wop for his answer. would not agree The wop nodded, locked the put the key in his pocket and 10) | to 4 renewal. ‘The bank must fore-| ij close unless the note was pald at | —_—_ - = | drew a,cheese knife about 18 Inchey |Does the Man Whom a Woman Forgives a Great | Rake, ini. Cites Meret ye Wrong Respect Her More for It, or Less?—Several| treeay yours ‘out’ Immediately Women Would Like to Know. | fexy. old. Mosga threw. up, bat BY CYNTHIA GREY | How does a man regard the woman who forgives him a great wrong? I have several letters dealing with this question in vari- ous forms. For instance: “The man I am engaged to has been receiving love letters from a girl he formerly kept company with. He ended the |pair for 15 years. correspondence when I found out about it, and he insists | thelr little old pair jthat we be married right away. But I am not happy any | ‘Pei, bankroll—in more. 4 jJast September. Tt seems to me that he must think I am small and alto-| gether lacking in ideals if I take him as a husband after he} 1 it's mind.’ ‘Poor little murmured | } little | has deceived me like that. We promised to be faithful al- ways, and he broke his pledge, while no power in the world could have made me break mine.” sitery. | Here’s another one: | | My brother’s best friend has been making love to me.| And I am a married woman. Unexpectedly, he seized me in his arms ‘and kissed me. | Now I am not afraid of him or myself. I°can manage the situation perfectly. We have an understanding. He! can’t seem to see that he has insulted me. |Copyright by Unit What worries me is the fact that he has been a friend of| ‘cate, Inc. All our family for years, Can he possibly have any respect for| eprotuction me when he places me in such a situation? | And this: My husband made love to his office girl. When I discov- ered it, he begged me to pass over “the incident.” his idea that it ever can be “an incident” to me. He swears| \that he loves me. If I believe him, and forgive him, how will he regard me? As worthy of devotion, or just as an ‘easy wife” he can put anything over? I fear there is no concrete answer to this question—that is, except from the mind of the man who has had experi- ences along this line; but he never does tell. I suspect that “respect” docen't enter Into his perspective. Ho is thoughtless about any feel: ings save his own. He doesn't con- nect the worda “respect” or “disre- jspect” either with the wife he wrongs or the girl he flatters. He is like a child—he sees what he wants and reaches for it completely uncon- scious of onlookers, Just as unconsciously, many men disconnect their personal desires from their {deas of ethics in love, 1 don't may rest assured us a bit, elther, he has another know Japs!" Cynthia Grey will recetvs call- ers on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from 1 to 2 p. m, and on Tuesday and Thursday, from 11 to 12 a, m,, at her office in The Star bullding, 1309 Seventh ve. Our whalebo! | mot cover the roof Rubber, r | teeth .. borhood, but have found no trace of him, Hoe is very large and has a white nose and feet; he had a small collar with a bell on it, gum, set of teeth .. GOLD CROWN BUIDGEWORK ., whose work is still It was © | tetaction, accept the man’s determination to marry her as preof of his unquall-|rhanking you, A READER. fied admiration for her, Sho feels : sho is lowering her atandard of mor. |e a te very much tot als by accepting his. secure some sort of work for a The married woman feels that the worthy young man who is deat. lover would not have inflicted his) | tre ig experienced in carpenter lovo-making upon her had he respects!) wor and painting, but is will. ed her. Perhaps so. ing and anxious to do anything, These situations prove nothing! | 319 has been unable to obtain more than that the man’s emotions! | omployment because of his at. are shallow when he divides them, || friction, If anyone knows of so shallow that he cannot compre || work for him, please call mo at hend tho depths of the misery of| | yr in.0600, the woman involved. { oes Dear Miss Grey: 1 am_ nearly frantic. My smoke-colored Persian cat broke his rope Wednesday, about 7 p.m, and disappeared. We have advertised and searched the nolgh- 23497 My address is 2436 W. 60th. Second Av. and discomfort Iching, | | tion with { | CYNTHIA GPEY, res They make digestion ful clogaing, 29, 2,2 " ‘ i In 1922, 8,263 persons were killed moverne in the jungles of India by wild ant. mals, tigers being resposible for 1,603. Most of our present recommended by our ear! Wome however, take conduct!nemp rope, quite long, and I fear| All work gua ; 4 4 3 ination £ much more seriously. The writers of | might have gotten it all tangled |Oma'e tse Dalle tho letters above cannot seo the dit-lanout him and po starving seme |ferent situations as almply an thelbiace, t¢ anyone should happen to CHIC DE men did, The engaged girl cannot fing him, will he please call, SU nset- CHAMBERLAIN’S TABLETS cary, and cous the 10 necessary to good health. Easy and pleasant to take—only 25¢ hands‘ in horror and gasped: ‘Don’t. | The board of directors has changed! In the laught that followed Cappy | made some more bread pills and shot them at J. Augustus Redell. brown sympatheotically.| “They've played the game on brothers "he one Then they: lost their nayy and that carthquake And the senate got brave and calied their bluff. “Poor little Togo! island won't hold all of him and tre's leaking over; he's got to leak somewhere so he leaks into the best available ter- His tight blame him a bit, but if we kick him out you he'll not blame And I'll bet ace up the sleeve of his kimono, or I don’t (END) ed Feuture Sy: Rights Reserved. | Prohibited. aire E E T H EXTRACTION FREE DAILY Tubber, which does of the mouth | @ two or more teeth, tronage ta ¥ patients, giving good sat- y after meals, ting id health-destroying constip prevent harme regular daily —Advertisement, NTISTS University St. | NDIGESTION Relieved of its poignant diss tress, flatulent (gas) pains, A. | “For some reason, Jack, that you may know bett than I, being a jman, men have always admired } Sally Atherton greatly, From the me she was 16 until she was nd married positions because she resented the }unwelcome attention of some man} higher up in the office. Just what it is about her that invites this, 1 to} 20 ow is darned words came m k us they. were pulled out. of him Bremerion Sat- hin Sunday, 9:39 p. m., d daily 11:30 nat is w at every mar AUTOMOBILE FERRY Jack, ¢ haw come | bg Seattle fo Bremerton Daily 7 “é “ *9: 11:30 «. m.. ithin the radius of Sally “Ather- ‘8 smile, Yet she js not pretty, Pp. m. joesn't dress particularly well zl ‘Exeept Sunday. } rs Passenger fare 80c Round Trip “T don't know," he answered, “1 |) Navy Yard Route think perhaps it is because she | Fj Colman Dock piques your curiosity, and then she seems to be so very well able to| The Father of Thrift said “the way to wealth is as plain as the way to market. Waste neither time nor money but make the best use of both.” A Savings Account. at the Dexter Horton Na- tional starts you on the way to wealth. { j | Savings Department open Saturday even- ings, 6 to 8 o'clock. Resources $35,839,098.71 Dexter Horton National Bank Third Ave. and Cherry St. Second Ave, and Cherry St. GEORGETOWN \R) BALLARD The Seattle Star MA JONG COUPON Clip this Coupon from ‘The Star for two consecu- tive days, Fill out with your name and address and bring or send {t to The Star office, 1307 Seventh Avenue, with 60 cents. (Mall orders 10c extra.) ‘This will entitle you to one of our complete Ma Jong sets, NAME ADDRESS .., PHONEINO. .i. ys cesicsgscsidaensets tees

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