The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 18, 1924, Page 7

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1 TUR saTURDA — He Discusses gait for THE SE ed lady’s one of (hese in ‘women who never learn ‘and never forget any ears her hat on the Be vee bead. she's as homely » fence and she’s full of ip ighe suspects all men, and fo know she suspected ape ond induced his wife to do 3 Te gil remember wh geared. Th iat the prospe pi his wife can m together ¢ lespalderable pleasure ou hold-or wheo men e ed age is a ee, D @id-tash! fevered and stood Seing mothers-(n-law—t we joke, which, by to have gone entirely fashion, together with the ence th ea Bear a good story now-a- Jew is the hero of it g eee , to get back to mothers D Ys wife's ma bas alway ays ho daug’ eapable of doing that the battle started when ied to his wife that ma ° and was he h run he children and servants yan him. He asked bi fetrid of ma or he'd have to ipbhimeeif. He said he wanted of his own castie and make of it.” mother or the wife's. Per- , Lthink the husband's kr does.” Become?” Eddie Smith queried. Mothers love their sons than they do their daugh can get away with mur- Be has to do to be forgiven his arm around ma and kiss fees if the daughter of the ' wrong only one thing rec then and there she fher mother’s heart and {f she’s Pm (which not infr Maver be permitted to for- i@ee she did something aw- ag to the average, no wo Sho has the misfortune to Mey ber worthless son x half good for him—tesides which, {t's with Women to note instantly host each other which a man ever notice, even tho he lived | jr tich of them a life-time “Ween like or dislike each other Mi—and most of them tolerat Goher, On the other hand. hey will condemn most heart- 2a member of their own sex. iis peeuliarity accounts for the , a great many cases, of Wis mother with the Will defend him against the at- Ot her own daughter—excuse fmmend him, pet him and thise with him; she will seldom him, provided he is un average chap, the Irritating character. ihe can see in some other man eee Houne, Dillingham's _mother- —— ot, UGET SOLIND i Cone and Mill Ports are) Lee SS abe d 2h erten for id= In Orens and Marvor, daily 2:00 id achedulen ce without °° SOUND NAVIG “ Datks Foor ATIONCO MARION ST the} Wil excuse in a man some-| young | ;CAPPY RICKS M others in-Law Peter B. Kyne —Another Coming Next Saturday “Weil, he told her all that and instead of obliging him she had hysterics all over the house and Dillie’s wife had the doctor in and the docte sent Dillie a bill for $10 which Diltle paid him ¢ s ba “You |}Grubdb ex have started » “That‘s “You ne 1 know female cortaint Dillie’s | tried to the city | becau That petition moth aw | council her motion picture “She censored and picked her husband into the grave and she's a miserable old hypocrite net, with nothing off for cash. She's nasty nice and she ought to be shot at sunrise, sembies piece of brie cheese feracker. Nevertheless dominated her to the she's known mother ever so much jlonger than she's knc her hus | band—added to which, she’s young |i like Dillie and I like his wife, and } I'm out to save their happiness if it's | the last act of a misspent life.” | “How long did it require for the | boy to get action, Cappy | “One solid month, punishment. Dillie says it was a ter- rible month—tears, quarrels, recrim- | inations, charges. He never talked back to either of them. A‘! he did | was look steadily at his mother-in | law and turmer ‘fat-head" tn a far-} | away tone of voice. | “When his wife quit kissing him | good night and good morning he con- |tinued to present mug for the} customary caress just the same. He continued to speak tenderly to her, | and that month (acting under my ad- vice) he made her ral valuable presents as proof of his Io “But ma was too much for him, and this morning his wife is Dillie for divorce. And THAT'S the objective yours truly, little old Cappy Ricks, was aiming at “Blucidate,” J. Augustus mother as much resembles a @ t 4 Indy imit; of course, | “4 tnay tt Ma's « pig for } ing |b suin Redel! | | t-head!” Cappy barked at him.|, you see that the poor foolish has let that virago of a mothe sell her an idea she can't get} with, to-wit, that Dillie has ruel to her? No judge is going to give her a} decree and the custody of two dren just her husband serted manhood and called | mother-in-law a fat-head. Diilio ca | prove his mother-in-law is a fat-head | —no, he won't have to try | “I'm going the of the superior cot | because re | his is} esiding | here and} set for t jin the court of a judge that ma cam-| |paigned against at the last electio: She said terrible things about him} jafter he refused to agree to do some: | |thing for her provided the women’s club vote “On the oth prove that he has never spoken cru- clly to his wife, that he has been| kind and tender and given her many | | valuable presents, even of inte; he'll | tell the judge he loves his wife \that she loved him until his mothe: in-law came to with them and jrefused to leave. The judge will |deny the divorce and give ma Hail} | Columbia from the ber @ resuit-| jant publicity will make Dillle's wife | sick and, of course, worman-like, she'll | blame her mother for the scandal | “Then ma will blame he ey'll quarrel, ma will the ter of thé quarrel, and then old Dillie | will step in, put his arm around his} |wife and say: ‘Come home, dariing,| and let's start all aw \bye, mother. | suppose Dillte’s {to go back to him? | “Weil, if she refused for a year, he| can sue her for divorce the| grounds of desertion, and the | children, and she won't receive any | alimony, and she'll lose a good thing | —in fact, I hope she does refuse to lgo home with him. In about a month e'll miss the good thing and be fed | up on ma, and—well, I haven't lived |my three score and ten and then }aome not to know that there are |more ways of killing cat than by choking it with butter | “T have yet to meet the man or |woman who didn’t miss the water | when the well ran dry ti |have Tce al} live and bet over fe refused} on et Two months later Cappy bustled| into the Bilgewater club and crooked his finger at the walter ‘Vereafter set another chair at our ta- informed that individual. Then, turning he E owatlor- item, he said “Dillingham will cat with ua hereafter. His wife has de- | clared mintice and has agreed bio pay the bill for reparations, Old Dilite's free, married and happy, and | you will ble,” he to an is | | tr | someone t a he has asked mo to share it wt one, of the business?” T sald quickly was called away make a great I'm the miracle yelled. | sounding chorus jtors had given up? | Bil, | them our babies rules thi ored | red iy ence fi ma to put it over rec nd | : battle, and my ad “NAMEL BY VING TheTangle LETTER cOorTT FROM LESLIE PRES rO RUTH BURKE CONTINUED ESS RI VER” n the Northwest IE ROE (Copyright, 1923, Duffield & Co) en a 4 mome m to adase here will One night NOW GO ON WITH STORY remembe \s Tam too 1 of afra ppinens, too wis ¢ what time will bring to me. I presume T wa John to be a and I am far from being A superwoman I was erie by reason I a hin winter that will t M superma: rought out of my sad rey. | “Deares! must teleg: sealed t Tam Also Sydney Cart with § me placed 4 : at more th has upon m “Your fath great respons! Lanile Ran not even Karl. j with rings—and the ot! who mt “He bas asked you to take charge |° ler “Yes, dear pee: Before he could tell 0 gasped = lamp. nad gone low me more he fi! b . dear, thin Is going to! cha all our Ive you some more when It sty TAL ter You can # will we 1924 opytight TOMORROW: Wire from dohe Alden Prescott to Karl Whitney. man that brought it about.” J, Augu: rought a hi Rede who had pocket | “Ar a1 am hot rea! lank of co s to the filled the glasnes 1 around raised his I drink confvxion to al pt mine,” he et tab mh I am ready, mo on! orn aw—ex od, ne Mammy Bligewaterites echoe i Who e end > make xet and “My mother-in-law “Who gave you a stake whe were broke? mother-in-law hold hard on your by knowing that it can not that other force that if all Kate will ap—and I hope Selwood th , came the re m ‘ou to always after the doc- . “Who saved the baby are goer be be as it is now, ith should aw Cattle “Our mothers-in-la as it caught in her own Lord it § “Why- ny. met sald Nance, ight in my dark good that t day I wot oy you in t Now I understand the messenger whose feet 4 utiful on bills, Bible who good tiding! M tered,” went new alwa that h before me, that m t hidden from His sigh some time, all But some waterites “Who hid you from your wife when you came home pieeyed from the annual banquet of the Wholesale Lumbermen’s Associa tion? “Our mothers: “Then,” naid Cap I find T don't r tistics a here, The hand adie of our wives and| ft th to I felt you for es on tt the in-law ‘ rig! rocks the © bears has never say faith jon ¢a f be an occasional exception to | har ule!" appy, there t wi you well spoken Eddie Smit that would be | timen it 1 “my experi) | what enables | Yoa—Ci itrant moth: | hard—if she main tent of 4) and there n in on a private | nis low voice, ics to you young | now hard.” pups is to steer clear of a domestic! “pias she Nance and always! |hesitated, “has she made it hard for = ese you heard and ome way te with us hard.” her-in her-in-law! would make it 4 reason,” he of bitterness in od and I kno w like the I never ho n-| was an “only € - ked row Somehow whe dreaded his rep It was long eryptic Concert . Ruth Pinkerton Noted Contralto Plymouth Church MONDAY EVENIN October 20, 8:20 Tickets $1.00—N For Snle Hush & Lane Sherman-Ciny Palmerton-Mendel Mu 421 Union other last bitter dregs but some tous! For ade it hard to the ) that unfashionable |times existent thing jand at la death Itgelf, in black disgrace Nance jmaye one To death } caught her breath in dis } d sympathy i She is cold as stone,” went on th |man, “brilliant, strong and ru |Sho sets herself a point and cle straight to it |what she tramples on the way. Yes—like wanting our land, She means to get it one way or anothet.” Exactly. That rope you told me |of was a bold stroke for it. Your |father was gone—your brother was the only other male of your family With him gone, too, you should have |been easy “It was murder she m Nance, “no lens We've known. that,’ “And what about your father's |denth? ‘Toll me about that—if it is {not too painful ‘We don't know much Our Pappy was « mountaineer—born in the Kentucky hills, lived in Mis sourl, a man who loved the outdoors, |He was a hunter and © woodsman Ho way careful, never tong chances, That's why we've nover bten recon: clled to the dept thot killed him Tureau Gino Pills FOR THE KIDNEYS Kidney disease is dangerous inless checked. Gino Pills will remedy all kidney troubles. Get a box to-day hefore it in too Ja Write for free sample Na-Dru-Ce. Inc., Buflale, NYy \ational Lasy Liver Pilla for aby nt,” always about it coming, and then | sho} broken heart, | regurdless, of who or| said | © foot of Re n di was fou curr f he wt an he ou and I could have F « profitable ape dle heriff, more Cathrew And 1 It's and 4, “and shor want to make about ER, you #0 Cattle sald the ewhere ‘Tm stranger {I'm not a happen-so. Kato Cathrew for two yes (Continued in Our Next Issue) a a i ® about, » clear crack ¢ I've hu the 4 of a ba arm Fair flong | down neath | rm | u must be slender to have hobhed hair- Tortheshinglebob orthestraight bob, you must have a youthful silhouette, One simply can’t be stout—or even overweight, How thankful we should be that there is one pleasant method of akingoffweight. Noexercises or diets —just use Marmola Tablets (thousands of men and women each year regain healthy, slender figures this way). Haveyouevertried therm? Many of yourslender, vivacious friends use Marmola Tablets. bs hid in the «warning wh was the sou ng door beyond sald, ‘*Nance | “Don't fret, pered back, “I'm rigt neratch A something window before you make u Bud's shuffle jtable and he knelt beside her, for her hands | “Mammy!"' ed passion; “I'll have my jun now—or go with bare |You got to gimme it!” | Nance got to her feet with Fair's jarm about her and pushed the door shut. Then the mother struck light and restored the lamp to t table. In its yellow flare they peelod the sloeve from the girl's found a shallow roux, about three inches Mammy whis- | all just a ; } , } } } came he cried with restral: Pappy's hands POM Seta | | | | arm and straight above the} SUFFERED SINCE YOUNG GIRL Words Failed to Express Benefit Received from Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound w elbow. Vor a long time Brand Fair looked jat it | Then he face | "Fight 4 to | raised sombre eyes to her the right,"* he d it would have been lyour heart She nodded tle Kate sho said; she'll get me. Not if I can get Fiar grimly. ‘Now let's have hot water strong with salt.” j A | Mrs, Allison set about preparing| Greenville, Texas. — *‘ Words can thi bitter tea one | NOt express how much good Lydia EB. who een foud before dripped} TTT Pinkham's Vege- down her weathered cheeks MH] table Compound boy Bud stood by th | has done for me. i Aibek My care MeL Beha Vee |) Every month I opening and closing his hands and| wouldbavecramt muttering under his quick breath: a8 Heatache, se “Pappy's gun—it's good and truc I felt like I was sighted. Not high-power—but I can freesing to death, hide and wait—close—close— | IT suffered in this “If you'll forgive a stranger, Mrs, | fray fron thetime |Alligon,” put in Fair, straightening I wasa young girl, up and looking at the mother, “I'd| and ail the doctors |say—give him his father's gun. And| id was ‘opera- Vd sa uddy—don't go to pieces =eed tion.’ For months |now after such a brave and conserv:| I had a tired, sleepy feeling all day, ative fight, Be a defender—not «| and when night would come J would murderer be so nervous I couldn't Bay in bed, | ‘The boy turned hiv dilated eyes to} Our druggistrecommended the Vege- jhim, wetting his dry lips. table Compound to my husband and In the long look that passed be-|' he bought four bottles. I have taken n them, something seemed to} every one and I think I have a right | n in Bud, the antagonism he had] to praise your medicine.’’—Mrs. J. |break down in Bud, the antagonism | B. HOLLEMAN, 2214 E. Marshal St., ho had felt for Fair seemed to meit | Greenville, Texas. Jaway, ‘The mysterious comradery of | For fifty years Lydia EB. Pinkham’ honest manhood fell upon them both, | Vegetable Compound has been used jand the man held out his hand by women from girlhood through The boy took it and his eyes be.| middle age. camo sane It is a dependable medicine for ‘"We'vo troubles common to women, Such us," said Fy symptoms as Mre, Holleman had are be In the right relieved by correcting the cause of the dig out the nest trouble, lor sale by druggista every- Line, but we'll where. business —I—don't means “but her first,” 1 while had the of ot job cut a big re aravoly at over out for and must point, We'll of vipers at Sky do the job cleanly, salty jook out * a headache. Ot s Tweekano d For ther com Davy off, right But fish’ ponder under t you Now Down up « I's rig tt in c nose (To Be Continue 924 BE, A. 8 $12.50 $1 the reputation for square dealing of the old r e Boston Dental Offices, our experts will take special care to fit you with just the proper plate to fit the con- tour of your mouth and give you s natural, pleasant appearance. Examination and Estimate Free. Remember this—this office been In one location for Thav’s pretty good proof that have satisfied our patien d_xtood behind our work. Wo'll be right here to eee that any work Wwe do for you will sal and please you, Boston Dental Offices 3422 Second Ave. WE STAND THE TEST OF TIME 22 Years im One Location $7.50 we ELIEVES IT “CAN’T E BEAT” FOR COUGH OR COLD A veteran of the World War, Leo |Des Jarlais, whose picture is shown, has very warm words of praise for Father John's Medicine. He says that he has used Father John's Medi cine for his cough which has both-| him every winter for many lyears. In a recent letter, Mr. Des; |Jarlais wrote: “I shall always keep | a bo of Father John's Medicine on hand because I give {t to my chil |dren and take jt myself. I think it} can't be beat. gned) Leo Des Jar-| jlals, Summit Lake, Wis. A history of more than 69 y 3 of success proved that the soothing, healing jme in Father John's Medicine are ithe most effective treatment of colds land coughs. Father John’s Medicine | |soothes and heais the mucous lining | lof the breathing passages and at the same time gives strength with w h ficht off colds. It is sate gor all | Af You Are Young or he family to take because it is guar- | Even Middle Age a d free from hol or danger-| = This Advice vit r ‘ous drugs in any form. Father John's | ence Dea A hw Medic is sold by good drug & Ad tisement. B B ered | | 1 | da a sk at Wash.—"Dr. Spokane, Pierce’ Fayorite Prescription the best medicine I have ever known for girls growing into womanhood and |for women at middle age. I have jfound the greatest of relief thru taking the ‘Favorite Prescription.’ |When I was quite a young girl T became run-down, and suffered se- vere pains, but after taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription T got Jalong fine; aid not experionce any |more trouble. And when I came to the critical time of life, the ‘Fa- ‘ |vorite Prescription’ was the only Now. Bt 100) ConMAUA BE |medictne I took and I came thru in the twenty-three years that) this period in as fine a state of have passed, more than 170,000/ health as any woman could wish patients have had their dental work | for."—Mrs. Laura J. White 2113 1. done at theso offices at a saving|sprague Ave. of over $2,000,000 to them. Be! FHealth ts your most valuable as- jcause of the high business prin-) set Do not neglect it. Write Dr. ciples and reasonable prices, this} pig, >; Has* ierce, President of the Invalids' Ho- office ts still doing a remarkable N.Y. al y | business, which whows that tho pub- | ‘*%, ! Butfelo, X- all about youre bas f or daughter, You will rocelve |e appreciates the nervice at th 5 > a confidentiad medical advice FREE of BROWN DENTAL OFFICES, 106] 11 cost. Or, send 10¢ for a trial pk Columbia Street. Rath al pis KDWIN J. BROWN, st eresoriptin Tablets.—Advertise 8.— On July 15, 1901, DR, EDWIN J. BROWN Took Charge of the BROWN | DENTAL OFFICES DDS FREE TREATMENTS —Fron— RHEUMATISM Catarrh, Cedar Asthma, Bronchitis and Rheumatism Taking the free treatments places you under no obligation te continues them, This is simply our method of introducing and prov ing the beneficial results of the Herculon treatments for theac ailments. Offcet Hours: 9 a, m. to G p.m. 7 to 8 p.m HERCULON CLINIC, EN HERCOLON SANTTARIUM D-10-11 elow Wullding 4 Fourth and Pike Soap Lake, Wash,

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