The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 25, 1924, Page 14

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| Clheg~t-AND-OF BOTTEN MEN © by Cdison Marshall —< Re) d by b Rele« ADVEN OF THE kd NO, 15—A MIX-UP (Am tatimate story of tanermost emotions revealed by private letters) iPware, ~ wy . | LRTI FROM LESLIE PRES | 2re r | }\ s> f || COTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT | CARE OF THE Shonmet 'm . |e | DRAWER, CONTINUED { “Olive Roberts Barton rut TURES TWINS’ The Tangle — Soldiers’ Bonus Law ; ! ‘ mn In r : te ; t « r until | shmin wh ss hey yptil |, 1 SDorethy, but next day rescues his Pelt ne lv The| ar . Shea w. girl speb t low, dee 1 thoug er, I : 5 = v f t th wor mac o 6 a } t ereturn. Pete autiful v trea us with we . back to th " they | NOW Go ON Wrrn Tine ST a her eyes Phat | o wi king for infors : ; “Edo w Y in ghost va an t} You tot mart 1 et land that } 1 probably be me j : « arly t ight before. | the bra i It stuck pretty hard | ¢y he le 4 the truth. splace so far and I ourse aid. j s before. 1% urious wh arp Pitinue to keep it. Yor toes! No « an belie I ho got dressed ina hurry andjand you had to pull like every:|1 wondered wearily if 1 1 go on ; © for the breeds as we mortalit 1 not, strictly spe ed t nore mot jwith the party if the matter P scall it decicc you @ believe In ghosts. The w him, But he ne ; nd show Ben and Bly | way not settled some wa © the F mind, Dor v one more |knows of them ust belie « the pockets. | Bunny t uid, “They'd next night May to eee if the at “a might have saved|never belleve mo if I didn't show all these unhappy dght ; : ‘ As t f trouble later to them! T'll—why, hello, he th Aho ebuild D ; fir t re 1 ast | L on the merry from the front 4 | Alice, Huth and mynreit ke } _ tent. fi q that ton't | & M Go Lucky Park | “Wt bra s! Mow aid | whole and Iam sure not « : Tonight Iva. ed immediate mar: | plu I mean that I'v a t : a ; « A a a - 1 me oF see would bare te 1 ure } riage. When Dor sked him how, }subconsclously—all the time Then after that he was going to | drop; when 1 was coming infof Kari and Ruth, but—su my Py exiled as they were from cixilimation, | been hero—in some back part of my-|the Park and get his free rh | ni a ky I found it before | sister would not do such a despicable PP immediate marriage could be brought | self; and I can't imagino why I've —---——— - I+ 100 awa thing | about, he a ready answer. “Cuit/taken so long for my conscious self}to the guide's quarters, finding the| So he put it into his pocket, not|*+ The clock kept ticking, “Wat nd © marriages ur ¢ in civiliza|to be aware of it. The music sent/men smoking in comfort before their | *NOWing that it was the very cur nett and see— walt re PAion?” ho asked especially |it home to 1 ust now,” v fire Joe, isn’t it true you are ring his mother had been look ; — shy ali fee ¥ , wha simple he you kr that Nick] rt often es music, or some |a medium Ivan began addressing f and wh he had dropped eae z hayes Ma Be t “ ts Paviot is empowered to marry people. !other stimulus to the emotions, to|the witeh doctor, ‘That you can get | When the poste came ie clock's ad bed ne phon again As you must have heard, he has|send home the truth. What is it?"| word thru to the dead? Mr, Brad Away he went whistling to the | rane: Sally Atherton was on the HP Home sort of right from the Greek | he asked gently ford told us you had that reputa-| Bunny's house a Leslie, I don’t t to butt! Hehurch—hereditary, I guess— and it! peter is watching over mo. I feel | tion Ben and Billy were just up. tu on your affairs, but I Just want holds good thru all this end of nis presence just as surely as if he} Me talk with dead,” Joo ookes what I got? cried Cutie, |, er eae ts Parad t think] pak. A oense is pot re aulred !were in the flesh.” | ed simply holding up the brass ring Le geil iy pate arpecop tine. ero is no way to get I eg seh -tenight Mrs. wantsl Shatte des hat ts tt Where'd |22U, oueh and yo WE Just u legal record at best—and} CHAPTER Xi } egy The Mrs, Mewhal was Lat's see! What Where'd) husband telephoning you about a : . i al The Seance you to try to talk wi the man who | you get it Gee Aren't you lucky, etring of pearls 1 didn't mean to if you wish, tt pe " i handled /rrurey were both silent as they {lies buried her Ho pointed to the| tho!” wan what they said and Cutle/iiien but he was 00 excited he was Eenen we get to Seward. Marry me . |cross, wan and ghostly itself in the | was prouder than ever . my . | 4 i | & thought of the immensity of this; | er an und ghost! t prow an talllink i the 000 Gf tele Golan coe tonight, Derothy—then together we'll wi always (pale Ment, on the beach but a short Y ho admitted. “It was | me at the top oi and ‘ Russia, to the South | ‘be convoy to the dead, Ivar ays) you know my desk is in the same meee away—to Russia, to the § | something of a mystic, caught fire at |distance below the camp. He was | pretty hard work but I got it Just | room j a Beas, anywhere. . once and leaned t 1 her in deep.|Mrs. Newhall'y husband, as you | the samec 1" WORN ‘mcecing Yovetea a : ea i bere onic babe is Tee lest interest. “Pet rit has held w—and sho wants to get a mes I wuz you,” sald Billy Tork that pillage ar wed like the coal ying fire ' way thru,” she told|sage from him. Will you be willing I 1 Ben “yi a Her lips trembled piteously aq sho|™m* UP. all the way thru,” she rez Bea utd ane aitite’ ber and found that nome scoun Sy soweht his hand in the dusk. “Don’t | i ee conceal her emot ToL Decitt Mente Se moilidtirese call J waiten ir, J rescptt an ” ned. ai-| ¢ leas coal her er hd | a " a lanony s letter anking him oH talk te aig al rig ook A, se kept me from being afraid, all these |—no answe laybe get answer to ; he went to how Corny and | cnew t lovely atri: of pearia you — ee os days—and has comforted me when | night.” Cobby Coon. had been wearing wns real. Beapesemure ls so uncertain t 4 blew—and during those long| “You'll come too, Pavipf—and| “Humph!’ laughed fat Corny eee t ets tcagphdonlly EY ee He looked straight into ber eyes, |*he win « « i ‘sa I don't know whether th is if he would hypnotize her, “You're | HOWrs that I watched for the Warrior |Pete. We're going to make a with | Const who w ni sort of a clown, [beads are real pearls or not 1 a 7 to return.” b as 8. vel . Loe: mes on you! ve lust wanted you to k eet only ee erent aet “at's not yery flattering ‘o me Pete, it was. the crowning] like we have! ‘That's a good way to | 20" yet made up your mind to accept m tet the it of & Ginn could |touch « fantastic tragic: | get one | » Sed decision you are sure to make in bon } the end,” he told her slowly, with) * more we aenphasis, a won't quitibe } You've been a wonderful eet aes until you do it —because | 00." She paused, and her face was fove me in your heart, For this stark white in the dusk Ivan, do ISamme reason your future seems so |¥OU think we could get a memage > @ark and uncertain. Dorothy, marry ro hice ai RE 3 Aras 4 ee ata 01 van spoke very ey hans.” and put your destiny In| nity, “The deed have been, called © *T don't want to think about it|back. What do you want to tell NY more tonight,” she told him | him?” Dearnestly. “Ivan, I wish you would| Ssseplay. Sometimes music is lke a Aight helping me to straighten every. erthing out— | SHg took the violin in his slim} hands. He hesitated, then began} Bottly the immortal “Elegie” by Massenet. The song of tears, death-| Teasly sweet, brought her very nearly | to the answer of ner problem. she} = did not actually come to a conclusion | im regard to Ivan’s suit, but she be- ed she found the reason why she} Pas mad not yielded to him long since, | te more assurance to you than I." IN YOUR DINING ROOM, Necessary That Stereotyped Styles Should Be Fol- lowed. By MARIAN MOORE A dining room seems naturally to be the place of conventionality and formality, where rules for selecting and of furniture must be | i, carried out to the letter. But don't | “! “don't want to tell him anything Fou, housewives, let such a bold |-! feel that he knows my every Statement frighten you, for individ. |thovght. But I want him to tell me WDality can be practiced in the din- | S°mething. I want to know that he “ng room as well as the living room, |has forgiven me for any failure in "And the old stereotyped sort of |tuty toward him—and I want his ‘Foom has gone for good. Of course, | advice, how to go on.” individuality shouldn't be exercised | Ivan was fully receptive to her to the degree of making the dining |™ood, an’ he sat a momen with ‘Toom look like an embryo museum, | bowed head. We can try, Dorothy,” but if “that extra time and thought | he said at last. “We can hold a “HE “SAY — NAME" a room,” which I so seance—surely every advantage + is en preach about, is spent in this in our favor, Fortune Joe is a medicine man, and Bradford de ‘Toom, xour dinner guests will al- | 4 scribed what he called the spirit rite | He might bring a word thru knows?” “Get all five of us in a circle “The bigger the circle the bett Shall I summon the three men?" But they chose to walk together 1 It is much easier to keep the sur- faces of furniture, floors and wood- work dust-free and lustrous with Calol Liquid Gloss. This wonderful cleanser-polish leaves a brilliant, lustrous, dry finish that sheds dust and makes them twice as easy to A Handsome Server. clean next time. It’s a product devel- "Ways know you as the hostess who| Ped by the Standard Oil Company | _ wants her home to be different | (California) after years of study and from her neighbor's. experiment. Large users — schools, Tt was in one of the “different” sort of diaing rooms that I saw this Most attractive server. It is of hogany, like the rest of the , sexol-circular in form, and has nels of marquetry inlaid with va- ‘Tlous kinds of woods. A border of AN another kind of wood mukes writable pictures of the two front panels, which are probably exactly What the designer intended them to be. Doesn't this server remind you of the old French commodes or cab- 6 seen so often In old illustra- “tions? ‘The old French influence is iin felt in the chairs of this sulte, | ith thelr oval backs and fluted hospitals, office buildings, institu. tions have proved its efficiency. ‘Thrifty housewives everywhere are finding it indispensable, Order from your dealer today, STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) i (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.) ion: Are spinet desks In taste for bedrogins?—W. B. " Answer: They afe, if the bed- suite is in the same sort of od and finish. Copyright, American Homes Bureau, ™ * help, | Who | + | mystery {in which Nquid fire | more. comic # answered quickly. no Hew here dead—under ¢ There was « br jthen the natiy There ensued { spell of stlence, ‘moaned again. nd of struggle seemed to leap Then thru the chain of their hands Joe's trance seemed to deepen, “Dead man—he here,” he: sald slowly. “Man died in the water |lay under cross. What you want?’ | “Ask him if he forgives every |thing,” the girl whispered. Tears softened her voice. “Ask him if I am to go ahead—and do what Ivan wants me to do.” The medicine man’s blanched face and subdued struggles seemed to in dicate tremendous difficulty in get ting the questions thru, their answer. His face worke “You {make fun of me,” he moaned softly. “You laugh at me—" Dorothy cast one indignant glance about the circle, saw that every face jwas intent and sober, then pressed Htight the nagive’s hand. “Oh, no! We're not laughing. Get what mes. sage you can for me then—" She waited in ineffable anxiety for this word from beyond the grave. “The man—he here,” the native mut- tred, half-intelligibly. “He drown— rocks, He say—‘change was something conetete, and the girl trembled in the brooding of the mome! “Ie that nge my name? name Me no get no Everything else all clouded,’ Yet was it not enough? Dorothy did not doubt but that she had her answer. all—to ch “‘Chan surely that meant nothing more or less than to yield her destiny to Ivan. The man who lay dead wa willing that she should, but the fact of marriage, disclaim his own proud name and take the name of another. They waited a while more for fur- ther word from the other side; but the medicine man seemed only con fused and faltering. ‘Can you talk to Paul Sarichew?" she asked. “May- | be you can get in touch with him. I want to know that everything is for- given—over there. That all debts are paid.” (Continued 1 our next issue.) THE CAN OOLIDGE Davis or La Follett rt of men aro these C look lik do they You want to know What about t don’t you? bulletin ready for di. candid: for president, It will question: Fill out the coupon below and n pee POLITICAL EDITOR, Washini 1822 New York Ave,, Washingt T want a dates,” and. in stamps for same, 2 2 5 so herewith Name St. ald No, or It. D w and hearing To change the name—and | lcountry, |ishings y played in their countries’ affairs up to date? What ribution covering the biographies of the three of the bulletin, My goodness! laughed Cutie. “1 Yet there was a solemn air to the| wisht you'd tell ma how to get a |littie meeting that was held straight. | tall first.” way on the grassy land just above| And they ail laughed and laughed the grave. The medium sat between that |Dorothy and I Pete was on the; Cutle was quite a hero and he = other side of Dorothy and Paviof| was getting prouder by the minute. Lunch Suggestion: next to him. Tow & hands light But they do eay that pride goeth nen rane ly, they silent before @ fail and I believe it's true sandwich, a ¢ Fortune Joe had gone into what met Mosey Mud Turtle| reg apple ple, a seemed a half-trance; his head was or next and Mousey was croas| of Hollywood milk. bowed, his h un-}@nd sulky that m ning. Beniden, 4 as cy. pala delight utterable him | he was jealous of Cutie becauso be! yoo inte the Io moan softly, could run so fast. He could breakfast “What yo + have a brass ring thou: | last. “Mo s and when Cutle held it floating no was furious. j A brass ring! Why, any- | body can get a brass ring. T can go {ght this minute and get one off my mother’s cu Look here fellows, 1 you o brass ring is off Cutle’s mother’s curtain | pole."* All Cutie’s friends began to take sides then. Some said he did and | some said he didn't | Poor Cutie was in a dreadful way. “Nick and Mister Zip can tell you fig 1 did or not,” said Cutie. “Sure he did.” said Nick when | they got there. “I saw him get it! myself. But thin isn't it. | | But when Mrs. Cottontail heard | the story sho laughed apd laughed. And there {t was on her curtain pole! wasn't so far from (To Be Continued) 1 (Copyright, N. B.A. Bervice Elks’ Convention ’ for Bellingham | BELLINGHAM, July 26—Three | lively days are promised for the state jeonvention of Elks that opens here |Monday, An interesting program of | jentertainment has been arranged by | |the local committee headed by Paul P. Wells, A trap shoot will be held Monday |morning, an outdoor smoker in the |afternoon, and a pavement dance and | |cabaret ball in the evening. ‘Tues. | {day there will be a handicap if |tournament, a baseball gamo, and an | evening parade and dances. Business | sessions of the convention will begin | Monday afternoon and be concluded | | Wednesday with election of officers. Summer baking is simpli- fied with Crescent Baking Powder. No longer is it necessary to mix the batter or prepare the dough during the warm and hurried hours just before actual baking time, He beige Nee evenin, before or in the cool of the pitt, EL batter may be mixed. Two leavening units in Crescent Baking Powder make it possible for you to prepare the mixture, then set it aside to be baked as | required, You can rely upon Crescent Baking Powder. It never fails! | Tt assures you a fluffy, wholesome foods. Crescent Mfg. Co, Seattle, Washington 'Grunbaums Return From Eastern Trip O, 8. Grunbaum of the Grunbaum Bros, Furniture Co, Inc, returned | Friday to resume his duties at presi- dent+of the company, after a five | weeks’ tour of the East. During the | trip Mr. Grunbaum visited all the principal furniture markets of the studying and purchasing the latest designs and most popular |creations in furniture and home furn- Ife was accompanied by Grunbaum, DIDATES e? Mrs Who'll be the next president? What haye they done? What helr or amilies? Washington bureau has a | answer these and many other mail as directed, igton Bureau, The Seattle Star, lon, D. € The Presidential Cand five cents in loose postage "a } Gt. and No, or B.D... -cesesssseeees Se sbeu dtabbdleseoss Jack. 1 could think of no ¢ } np wo . . } City GUND 4:06 ns sésnccccnesseses ; { Pretty soon Jack came nd ) EE EL PRICY SE Tis SE a aS Se S EDITOR, Washingte The Seattle Star New York Ave., Washin: Bureau a, D.C BONL 132 I want » copy of the bulletin, “The Bonus La inclose herewith five cents in loose postage stamps for same Name 500,000 Children Destitute in the Near East duly 21, lee mre k . Mhemenakt, Testers Outfitting Company, 1538 Bnd Avenue, Beattlo, Beshington. rr ty Pear ir. Chemenekty bres, sb Puls te our pratetel asimeniet Pompe to you of your very Kind effer to Gupiicete sk the arrangesent whieh your Portland house ante fam on our if ~ te aliew “ on the pur- ev oult for an ol euit or yO to donate this use¢ base price of oatume tarred slothing te ue 3 Betwuse of the neot a the refugees ee tn the wear Mest, wy are scliegeing sloth: SS here in Seattle On "Buntle Dey” A gust 15 yay = ee that it Mey reech then tz Lime fer next Ss Finter Me went ree te Buoy that in tne re: =) rm oe camps among people whose only protection = ee ina’ the fleree winters in the Hear East Ssi~ end among the orphaned children who are alloted =the te weer shoes and stock! Py tines = ts the sloth from freest invaluable, + Baite b men's end w sepee again thenk you for this great terion offer. It te 42 the northwest and of Seattle more particularly. Cordially yours, QRATTLE CLOTETNO coutzcticn comirery AE, Dermbart Crairmen Your Discarded Garment Will Save a Life Children—destitute little children of the Near Kast need your discarded suit or coat to protect them from the rigorous winter. We ask your help for these unfortunates. Bring your dis- carded suit or coat to the Eastern and donate it to the refugees of the Near East. We will then allow you $5.00 on the purchase of a new garment. This is an opportunity to express your sympathy for suffering humanity. Bring your discarded garment to us NOW. $5.00 Allowed For Your Discarded Garment We Allow You $5.00 on a Man’s Suit $5.00 on a Man’s Overcoat $5.00 on a Lady’s Suit $5.00 on a Lady’s Coat $2.50 on a Lady’s Dress | seailiant lll “SJ. 209 Union St f 1352-34 Second Av,

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