The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 3, 1925, Page 7

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Ls 30 hea} ja] sEATURDA ANUARY 38, 1925 21924 Ss MRGIN HERE TeDAY M kK a Sagres tha an » : : t i r rt x tempting to 5 oye, Bi : ernie r wefore the > < veng re 4 aod pee Now Desective ins west : ta adkerch ately after @ e and Yow GO ON WITH THE STORY Mr. De € “That's true, } ut ' , un . . Mr. Debbin: I at that south door unaccour 1 : : you must take : = me wssibility that the mur o—it was hin jaynor escaped that way 2 7 . Debdins contin T say t t - c dare bere ee known to 1 ry pave beer t ant Mr. : : gath door ve lm k 0 goakl like a swo ~ ni woh of you as t cree Avg yard. Mr. wages 1 mat, and remem my sup rt “{ heard the t (Ae sa fh qest veranda to ‘MY WORK I MUST BEG FOR A FEW MIN fa room, I went in, an Raynor on the f a re 1 picked it up ‘definite explanation, and at that| But your case Miss Turner snapped on the | out much hope pe len! a Turner sa You see Mrs. Raynor in thoy J face seeming (o com Recollect, you are on oath.” |thought or emotion of 4 eal “I am not sun hay op “are etned | to stay hero,” she sald, turni or going out | i with an alr halt diffider T was so amazed at the sight Raynor, and a little blinded by | light, I cannot positively /turned I think it ts your question. Put to the | proper th uld stay, and so Let my knowledge and belief she | ask you c a ma coming in.’* take th nd (The quiet tones, the straightfor-|I will ask air did more to carry conv than emphasis could have done. Nan Wooked at him gratefully, and Orry) jepured velnet at the words. ‘ "You think she was going out, Miss sure that I de Nan re- “I know she was,” said the nurse. | mo: “[ saw her even before I saw Mr Raysor and I can swear tastening out of the room.” | “Mrs. Raynor, do you care to testi- | \started off. *No—1'4 rather not,” said Nan, in| — A toice s0 low as to be almost inaudi- CHAPT: log Pennington Wise Bya Turner said nothing, but the} The newcomer at Flower A t look on her face told ofa good-looking, well set-up ma | ber conviction of Nan’s guilt 35 or so, with thick chestnut “T haven't spoken yet,” Kent said, |brushed back from his fore Pdliterately. “I suppose I have alk blue eyes and a manner fight to be heard, Mr. Dobbins?” inspired confidence ly—I wish you would ‘wnt what you saw when you ap-|and he was a justly celebrated pr ‘Ware on the scene.” | vate detective *Teame in at the south door,” Orry| Bra Goddard ha Began, “and 1 found the scene much} Ezra Goddard had come to you have all described it. Douglas |¥°TY definite conc Jusion: On gaged h i Jey on the floor, Finley stood near|these was that Detective Dobbins York 101 Tevolver in hand; Miss Turner |couldn’t swing the Raynor case, and Wis at the north door, or just inside |@0other was that probably any other Eab6 Mies Mattic was close to her. |Police detective would not do much as I came in at tho south door | better than Dobbins. By sister was just entering the west] The arrival uw the dete re She was not going out, she was | most of the household into | Met ‘fleeing’ or running away, she | tion. Fis coming in—I saw her—her face| Malcolm Finley was, on stricken with surprise and|S!ad, yet he felt a certain uneasine nd jas to what might transpire Nan Raynor and her brother looh ed aghast at the news of the arrival, yet tried to conceal thelr apprehen sions. Miss Turner was frightened, Lio- nel Raynor was angry, and Miss Mat- |tie, tho affronted at not having been consulted in the matter, was deeply interested and agog with curiosity as | to what the new developments would , | be Bo she greeted Pennington Wise with cordiality and welcomed him to da milies, the world | Flower Acres, while the others look- | 1 that they could hi dly keep |ed on with varying degrees of uncer- ‘s simple and | tainty. hold of @| ‘~Wogderful place,” W 5 manent | standing on the terrace. “Before by ginning my work hgre I must beg for ve thre onsterna- soon ¢arn ita in your home. int ny bottle, peer 2 2¥, ounces plain to fill up thes pint. Or, jous beauty!’ yi ified Fg h OT corn syrup, instead of SUBRE |t1g bel 0, he said, carelessly, ans -Either wey, it tastes good, at ie silent Sho was a penal ls, and gives you a fall pint 5 Bagng y2 cough’ reméay than ‘you |*crap of a girl, slender as a willo ‘Duy ready-made for three times | wand, inconspicuous, unnoticeable, pg | most invisible, so persistently did she this 3 teally wonderful how quickly | keep in the background. meee Temedy conquers & ways there, always 4 7 he Lieb 4p \call of Pennington Wise, and her as a" Sativa, oh s valuable as it ro sa dry, hoarse or | sistance was as valual cough, lifts the healg | unostentatious. phlegm, ind gives almost im- | From a secluded alcove of the ter- plendid for throat uimost hidden by a tall palm, cps dead bronchitis | 7191, for that was the girl's name, isa highly co looked out, raptly, over the flowery uine Mowie ne ex jacres. No one noticed her. been used for genera- | At Iast, Wise drew a long sigh, as 4 for throat and chest te. lof very surfeit of the beauty before the beck or awnited his questions with widely different anticipations. It was tea-time, al leasant | function the Ra e, and | Hara Goddard had arranged that the inquiries of tho detective whould nder the guise of a Quick Satin joist chat rather than an official grill lxnew the Biatoby of the case GASOLINE anteed to give i ago, oF money refi t. Wayne, Ind. urtiseme’ “He careful ur statements,” \ counseled. “There is nothing so uncertain as human evidence. If I am to get at the facts of this case, 1 wilt be tt it you don t get out « of doors | going for a long Pennington Wise was his namo, | -lforehand if there is a chance ‘lated |@ few minutes to absorb this marvel-| With him had come a strange lit-| Yet she was! him, and turned to the group, wha|~ [AV CHINU(RAEes Re PUNKS PAA & Olive Roberts Barton ). 6 —THI ] GOBLIN IN THE GROCERY “You'll have to use an eye-cup and wash them out with »me stuff in @ bottle three times a day,” said Dr. Hokus Pokus. TANCY iN r Jobnny | iH " 1 } ried. ® \ 1 ¢ v f hi ave & tcher Snateh th . So 1 wh wa t t from p to{ while John > at Twin net nd lim chim. | Were hunting f t Twins in Well, the fir o he came t } 1 A fast a off To Be Continued) ~ The Tangle ealed by private iette |] (am intimate story of tumermost emo Ney TTER FROM WALTER BURKE TO RUTH Bt ecgaal [be all in all to me Of all the love P 4 ra of history, r ag ever 8 a you “have c self, dear, that See oe tall: Vending, 3 Finally Found Health by i “xt Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound | Columbia, 8. ‘Your medicine am starting . sept aes ge ike Lowe my life tay with Leslie ! to it Foe three 1 you, please € I need we than and was treated| else in the worl i BOY by physicians, but stay accordingly they didn’t seems 1 wouldn't worry too much over 2 to help me_ any. | Then I took Lydia E.Pinkhamn’sVeg- etable Compound and fot strong enough to do my housework, where before I was ha ly able to be up. I have also taken the Vegetable Compound during the Change of Life and it has left me in for it. ‘ood health. I recommend it as the th, please do not make mo out fest medicine for women in the a saint or even a nearsaint Change of Life and you can use these Iman is a saint. Try and get this facts as a testimonial.’’—Mre. S. A. into Leslie's nind er under-| Hottey, R. F. D. No. 4, Columbia, stand that we are all more or leas | South Carolina. hoor sticks, and all tarred with the) | Why suffer for years with back- | beusbh. ache, nervousness, painful times and enone hg visa?” trouble “with all other fears common to women This 1 te ere rach is apt to 170M early life to middle age, when husbands and wive ach is apt tO 7 dig ae hamn's Vegetable Com- think that the other is an angel or Hound will bring relief a devil. Neither seems to have “0Y “ In q recent country-wide canvass idea that the other might be a bu: of purchasers of Lydia E, Pinkham’s man being. 1 think that Is because Vegetable ¢ pound over 200,000 anity, unless it ts idealized, Is Eee were ved, and 98 out of not at all romantic 100 reported they were bene- Karl and I wero talking abou fited by its use. \Jack just before he left, and Kari leaid “Jack Prescott is at bigy|~ normal man, with Leslie's affairs, They'll right them Jnelves or they wili not. Wor won't change them one way or th verything passes, you kbow, es you glad or s¢ of belng sort you might be sorry after. Sort \comes fast enough without react | red-biooded, normal men’s big f and lit \tle meannesses. He }man's ability to rise to great hi Jand, alas, he has tho misfortune to be able to drop down to earth jwith a thud “He 4 Ii the rest | ter. He to have his fun and let someone else pay the piper He tries to make his suffering, if} suffering comes to him at the call) lof temptation or « yaity, vicarious. | He is selish, egotistical, proud of| jihis physical strength and carcless of his moral weakness: 1 i hin “put for all that, I admire vs hea S tc Walter, for I know, unlike him, I LE AILSA ETE skin troubles iS lforts on tho part of you all to # speak | Resinol Ointment usually Stops itch- Ithe truth, Let ts take this point of | Ig at once. It quickly and easily heals Mrs. Raynor's position whe t cases of eczema, rash or similar | | Turner put the lights on, Miss " distressing skin eruption, not due to | ner, ean you swear that Mr us internal conditions, Physicians aving the room” prescribe Resinol Ointment regularly | on, y¢ so you need not hesitate to try it. “Was she frightened:-lookin “Ale-how did you observe thir when her back was toward you? How do you know that she did not wear | an expression of trlumph—" etiks Pip ahers ge opeiarinn ‘Continued in Our Next Issue) Raynor has done me 80 much good that I feel |}; years I was sick a rut rAR CAPPY RICKS He Digcusses Oriental Honesty Written for The Star by Peter B. Kyn As I t mn Egypt to t The Bible bh t Phar nd t the brids t n p Mt. t f the Red t I f 1 with t f ort nat the I me lst Nat as 1 man, fale versant id and wav tv 1 fail of t t 1 should be expected Vin willing to admit that Moses and his crowd erassed the Red sea, but somebody fur nished transportation, and after my various experiences in the Far East Vi bet a new hat that Moses did a little conti dential business with the ad miral of Phar avy made his gelaway in Pharaoh's boats. ite armor to himself Well, that t Matt, since the Orient lve all faith in G and Exodus has an Oriental origi Holy Pink-Toed ¥ believes any Orientals bs subject for a psychophatic ward. ry tim ming from dite, IT reme United State United State 20 patrol to a Chinese r a! for $1,600 and escay Then I m comfront marine w unboats ¢ t Asia ¥ he ¢ lo of mankind, They make one be eve in atavism. I left the ship t Singapor incidents like this are about the PUGET SOUND STEAMER SCHEDULES 7 0 Single 45c Trip 80: VICTORIA, Be Port Angele Po tro fl i on trip leaving urday midnight, ANACORTES 10:00 P. M. © Kach Way Port” Townsen: nections and Mil aA. t Monday Trip Only) BAN JUAN ISLAND PO Dally 10 PF. M., via Anacortes ARKEC Hee BRINNON t Six roun necting “Steamers und Ject to change w Puctt SouND NAVIGATION C9 A DotK- FOOT MARION 5 If we should get stuck with pay the bill smilingly to signee give him a bonus to re the shipment non-moldy, This will the price for kill With the increase of tourist travel I look to the begging in dustry in all Oriental countries to supersede the motion pleture in dustry as the fifth largest indus try in the world. them a couple nd they would r They charge a reaxonable price per carat, judged by Occidental standards, but I hope to tell you, Matt, that the Successful men are slender men Successful men—the men you find behind mahogany desks in private offices, the men who get abead in this world—are slender men. These men realize the danger of being stout—how excess weight saps ir strength, slows down their hinking, mars theis appearance, hinders their advancement. That's why for many yeers suc cestSul men have used Marmola Tab- leca—the pleasant way to reduce. It’s no trouble at all to get slender by using them, Just follow the direc tions—no exercises or diets, You one itto yourself totry Marmole Tobias. All th abor. Or oy wil be et in ple appet portpsid by the MarmolaCa1700 General Rloctrs Bldg, Decret, Bich. MARMOLA Prescription Tablels The Pleasant Way to Reduce BABY TROUBLED WITH PIMPLES Was Fretful and Cried at Night, Cuticura Heals. “My baby three months old was troubled with a breaking out ind pimples on her The pimples and a few of Her clothing tated the affected parts, and she was fretful and cried nights. I tried different remedies with- My mother recom- Soap and about a box of Cuticura Ointment she was healed."'(Signed) Mrs. Adam Holeman, 246 So. Ivy St., Medford, Ore. Give Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum Be care of your skin. Se ee | | Resolutions Marcel Grandjany World’s Greatest Harpist \ Florence V. Orr Plymouth Church JANUARY 5th 8:20 P. Tickets—$1 10 ; and $1.65 Tax Included Tickets on Sale Churel get more carats into a stone 1 tt than I need 4 t r * 1 " m ESS SSS ASTHMA STOPPED IN 10 MINUTES D Aller Taking Firat Dose of Asthimn p Tabs.” Is the Amazing Statement of & Canadian Hesident ‘Gargle Throat With Aspiri tow espe tor-mach aso Clip This if Subject to Sore Bnd: His eetienoently they Ce Throat or Tonsilitis onesty, not infreque elve the of their lives ee In Ceylon I bought lece of | Prepare « carved | and when receiving my nang low who sold it to me ried, in 4 ence slip m handful of American cigar store cer y dissolving Aspirin in t He thought they were money and when I enlightened him his howls and imprecations rent the | Bayer with the et along very well in vad in trade if we wate Jascha Heifetz World Famous Violinist in Concert vening, January 14, sbyterian church. ule Monday, January 12, Sherman Clay & Company Prices $3.00, $2.50, $2.00 Mait Orders Now Sherman, Clay & Company I will not be careless about my health. Some Good I will never allow a cold to wear off—it wears away the powers of resistance to dis- ease instead. I will remember that a neglected cold often leads to Grip, and more serious illness. These Out and Paste Them Up Where You Will See Them Every Day | I will remember that this can be prevented by taking in |time Father John’s Medicine. I will avoid “Patent Medicines,” “Cough Cures,” and so- called “Immediate Relief Remedies.” | I will remember that what is mistaken for relief is really |deadening of the nerves by the Opium and other Poisonous /Drugs Which the majority of them contain, which weaken the body while the disease remains and gets a stronger hold. , | That if it is a Cold or GPip, it usually turns into some- | thing even more serious, because the drugs have robbed the {ody of strength and vital foreg—the only power by which | disea@ can be fought off and overcome. | I will remember that Father John’s Medicine is neither a ‘“Patefft Medicine” nor a “Cough Syrup” and that it is all pure nourishment, gxee from Opium, Morphine or other Poisonous Drugs. = I will remember that Father John’s Medicine builds up and makes strength, at the same time giving relief from the cold and throat trouble. If I catch eold, I will not neglect it, but will ask my dru. ist for a bottle of Father John’s Medicine and take it z directed, Advertisement i

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