Evening Star Newspaper, June 15, 1921, Page 35

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FEATURE:- PAGE: .FEATURE PAGE." ‘Purest and Best 15, 1931, . 35 cordon ef men are a! “THE -EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. U, WEDNESDAY, JUN —By Herbert Johnson and that watching.’ Wrayson laughed. vays : . 2l “A little cxaggeration; my friemd has been the reputation of SIPER. eti dw] :I HE A » ENGER :fi-‘é fantiord utcugked hia siiou> *“One nnot tell, he declared. “This, at least, is simgular,” he con- tinued, bending forward confidential- ly. “Since the arrival of these two ladies several strangers have been ob- served about the place, some of whom have endeavored to procure lodgings. They spoke French, but they were not Frenchmen or Englishmen. True, this may be a coincid can never tell. her commands?" Monsieur h lord withdre - Dunc My F rotten. oung English | what inat fetlow repeating it _to me they call her | G veon did A4 his companion listened moodly. When he had fin ed, Duncan was wazing steadf lover toward the chatenu. and kne {ing the ashes from his pip Sounds @ little feuda!. doesnt it? he remarked, drawing hix pouch from his pocket. “However I dont su pose is an oncern of yours or mine (Continued in Tomorrow's Star.) i BY !“_»PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM. - A Tale of Poit ical Intrigue and Private Revenge. (Copyright, by Little, Browa & Oo.) but Monsieur has any furt d none, and the land- smiling and bowing. tahle (Gontinued from Yesterday's Star.)~ | Wrayson asked. wDon't sk me that” he answered.| The landlord assumed .an air of “Only. tell me how loug you are going | Mystery. to stay.’ One, Not_another minute, really,” she declared. *“They will be sending out|M search parties for me directly And— Herbert—how did you get here?’ she dem‘m‘nd anxiously. “I climbed over the wall,” he an- swered cheerfully. “There didn’t seem 1o be any other way." he seemed almost incredulous, Didn't_you see any watchmen?’ she asked. “There was one at the gates” he answered. “I fancied he followed me up the road, ‘but I gave him the slip, all right” ‘Be_eareful how you go back,” she rench.”’ h, 1 couldn’t understand half of d. Do you mind he sald, “is & yi lady. The other—well, adame de Melbain.” “What The \exclamation came like a pistol shot from Wrayson's fellow guest at the inn, who, up to now, had taken no part in the conversation. He had turned suddenly round, and was fac- ing the startied landiord. “Madame de Melbain,” he repeated. “Monsieur, perhaps, knows the lady’ There was -a moment's silenc Then the man who had called himself Duncan looked away, frowning. “No!" he sald, “I do not know her. The name fs familiar, but there is no throughout its 30 years of public usage Send a Postal Card and Your Grocer’s Name and Address for a Free Sample to Salada Tea Company, Boston, Mass. )= gmalion’s = .7 Burned Fingers ¢ __Brought You Beef . —N — 3 begged “This place is supposed to|!ady of my acquaintance bearing it o ) (1L be_closely watched.” ware| e Samdlord looked a little disap- ] | 2 It happened when oxen were used vehuly you atenele Topparsr oked: TATel pointeq = 4 . < ' - 4 “Ah!” he remarked, “I had hoped | ) for sacrifice only. A bit fell from ey ZHow tsauch. did “the Basiméas) tell] ; SABT he vemariced, 1 had hoped that I should find | 0 EIve us a little information. There gne made |are many people in the village who | would like to know who this Madame | de Melbain is, for it 1s since her com- ing that all has been different. The | park has been closed, the peasants and farmers have received orders forbid- ding them to accept boarders at present, | and I myself am asked—for a consid- ¢ | eration, 1 “Nothing, except you here,” he declared. me promise that I would wait for an opportunity of seeing you alone. He took her into his arms again. “I have learned what love s h murmured. “and I have forgotten the other . thing: “That is all very well,” sh smoothin gout her hair: “b things may be very important to the altar. Pygmalion picked it up and returned it—then touched his fingers to his lips. That was the begin- ning — it makes you =~ today ask for } SWINDELL’S CHIPPED BEEF A food ideal for . out-of-door sandwich ////' feasts. Crackers, bread or rolls are enhanced by the rich beef flavor. The cleanly, inviting pack- ages, % and 13-lb. size, can be tucked into picnic baskets for cold cut use or garnish for salads as. well. No fat, no bone, no waste—which is why it is admit—to receive no further guests. Naturally, we ask ourselves, monsieur, what does it mean? On does not wish to gossip, but there is much here to wonder a “What is she like, this Madame de Melbain?" Duncan asked. o one has seen her. monsieur, the landlord answered. “She arrived arriage, since when she assed. the 10dge gates. She has her own servan:s who wait upon her. Without doubt she is a_person of some importance! Possibl. she is eccentric. ' Taey say entrance to the chateau your skin with Resinol Ointmentand Resinol Soap. They soothre the inflamed epots, reduce blotches and oiliness and usually pro- duce a healthy complexion inasurprisingly short time. Try them and see. Seld by all drugzists. A man named Stephen Heneage | has taken up this Barnes affair.” he answered. “He saw you leave the that pight, and: he i if | inks that it might lead to any thing. to give the whole show awa He warned me to get away from Eng- | tand and—but you want the truth.! don’t you? excuses! . | | came bed —because {1 couldn't live Couldn't we ste and- never go IF You CAN'T SMOKE IN THE HOUSE AND LIVE IN A PORCHLESS FLAT, You MAY $TILL ENJOY PERFECT SUNDAY MORNING COMFORT BY STICKING ONE END OF YouR BED ouT oOF THE WINDowW - o 1 somewhere Why need we?: We could go to Paris tomorrow, cateh | he Orlent expros< the next day—Fi | know a dozen hiding places where w should be safe gnough. We will make our own world and our own life—and forget: “Forget: from him. Her “Herbert.” she vens 1 must W 7 { “The Lion @ pered it. T gaw him stop and look be- | in the villag [ hind him. Then he began to run, and | i he ran away from the ized Terror, al- | ing. { though the Red Terror was not fun. | mu ning “toward him. Hs ran as if he|out wanted to get away from there with- | thir X zuarded, She le away ed him. r hap- moment he answered. “down the “Onl note gerl in marn- you 1 cannot —1_must have a little time to i out being seen by other Mcn. 1 know, | decide. Be very careful as ¥ou go for 1 saw it )1, looking down from | back. If vou ure stopped, be sure and h up in the sky. He didn't ret the | make them understand t ” ted Terror free purposely. [ know |an Englishman. Good nizh that, too, for | saw .t. Ii was carc-| He kissed her passi 3 ssness. And now the whole beau- | ¥ielded to his embrace, but alm, tiful side of my Great Mountain is!medately drew herself aw ble to leok All the trees and | clutched at her hand, but she Lthe brushes and the With swift footsteps khe cros: | plants t grew beneath them are|cd the lawn. Just s she reached the gone and S0 ue many of the littie | terrace, the windows opened once beople who lived there and could not | more and some one called her name. Eel aws, And Man did this thing!"| 1 am coming in now.” he he King Lagle's always fierce-look ing | ANSWer. It has been uch a won were terrible to see. { tul night: ut other tree and and | - T - vines and plants will thare | CHAPTER XXIV. AN INVITATION TO DINNER. . will they not?" Bobby | The landlord of the Lion d'Or, who had appearcd for 4 moment to chat S H 8 & 2 At All Chain Stores, Groceries and Moarkets . and the { him. REG. U.S.PATENT OFFICE bushes Erow usked i J. T. C. MEMBER CONTRIBUTES DRAWING OF, VIKING SHIP FCR COLUMN. (Capreizht, 1921, by the Tuternational 8rnd caic.) es where hurriedly Red and the trees ! vines and plants may grow | Terror I bushes a passed i - {in time. but in other places the Red | with his guests while they took their | Washinzton. |ed me on by sending it. The schoollpo o cncy B e B = 5 X £ the very i coffee, Po'ntedsdownward into eman a X My Dear Pals: -1 am certainly get- | history tells us about ¢ Red,:<oil and i i morning cofee, upply an s o emothink for roois | he valley, where little clouds of mist | ting some dandy letters and some queer ones. 1 wrote you the other day about getting the paper from Alaska, #nd then I received a nice drawing from John Owen Evans in ‘Washl ton. One picture’ of a rac- ing yacht, and the other is right here, so I said to myself 1-will write s «|10 feed on. and no tree can ever grow agers dis- | there again” replied King 1 here | “Though my vears be muny. i ould mot havalnever sce a big trec on that side of | hooks et this!the Great Mountain again, nor will ‘ear 1000, | 4Ny one else now 2. It is a mat- x {ler for grent sadness.” He bowed his handsome white head in sorrow. * (Copyright. 1921, Us T. W. Burgess.) hung over the lowlands. | “The messicurs wiil find themselves | ‘Here, only Eleven hun-: l.m-ereu | found grap Ihw-n 80 very cold there will be a breeza. dred feet up, and only three miles; date sometiing hef. ” the “Perfect Grocery T ;wE well exemplify the law you learned in your geography books, that of “supply and demand.” We have it in working order. Constant de- mand for standard goods permit con- tinual fresh supplies. Package goods do not stand on shelves for weeks as may happen elsewhere. Standard prices prevail and deliveries are fast upon one another. What you want and when you want it is our service-program. he had }from the sea! It is wonderful. eh - Wrayson :polnted--across semurd. the, chatcau, WHORE tewers “rose - (pOm / thw: bosom of the cool greea woods.. “There also,” he said,”*it will bel very pleasant.. The ohateau is as high | as we are, -Rot 807" geThe landlord “Ehrugged his_shoul- 1 ¥ t i d had hlown hin up | | d New England in October in- i} of where it did he would ot ! | | ders. sas - = “There i5 litt1t* difference h think he had found Indi hictory writers all that | ———————————————————, | mitted, “and in the woods-therc i3} l always shade. ‘But'who mly g0 there? the Norsemaen and vikings did not kink they had found anything im- portant and did not return in many cases to tell what they had found. Packing. Never was an cstate kept so zealously Mod. o private, and, does monsieur know? Modern trunks have so simplified | Since yestsrday a new ordcr has been ;mckmx. proolems that if one pos-(issued. The villagers were forbidden Ses¥es an up-to-date wardrobe trunk, One book I read said that the word of discoverey did not get out of for many ycars. Anyhow be was having a_lot of trouble those days. just as she {s now. I guess, G people”did ‘mot_have much time | ] { with drawers and hangers, and boot ;l)ucke!s, onc need not worry much )about how to pack. 1t is 0 easy to {rut one’s gowns and. skifts on the ! hangers, hang them neatly in place, jand tuck the odds and ends into the | little drawers. But for t peo- i < . ut for the many peo-| 5re% " 1int the chateau to friends. |ple who still use the steamer trunk.!Two ladies are there, and one gentl y iman. 1t is all” {ine o feure out fust where those|or the suitcase. or the handbag for |man. It finyk Uhey sailed, bt few agree as to | the week end visit, it may help to} "Do vou know e e P a1 ot beiknow a trick or two about packing. Strange if those men sailed up the |Heavy things should so at the bot- Hud Rrieer ' Hudson did|tom. underwear in neat piles, like o s o enry Hudson did 410" fogether, and all corners HOME ECONOMICS. BY MRS. ELIZABETH KENT. For just such happy moments as this, Coca-Cola was created. delicious and refreshing. THE COCA-COLA COMPANY ATLANTA, GA. even their ancient rights of walking {acroes the park! The head forester { has posted a notice in the village. _“I" have heard something of it, Wrayson admitted. ~Has any reuson been given. Are the family in resi- idence there” The landlord shovk his head. Madame la Baronne was never ko exacting.” hé replied. “One hears tha: In ahout the out with thirty-five men and came to a land he calied Markland. hecause of the woods on it. Why that name I do not know. Then they came to an expanse of water and sailed up a river. They landed and_built huts and found the grapes. Thé history riters have spent a lot of time try- ing to fenre out fust where those who they are?’ Joneph Owen Evana of Washington sends his idea of a Viking whip to the bers of the Junlor Travel Club. a travelog about the vikings for lot of people think they discovered Amerlca long before Columbus did. Thanks for your letter and the drawing, Joseph, but ¥ do not know what a lot of work you start- | King Eagle’s Story. PBY THORNTON W. BURGESS. A moment's carelessness may end What all of time may never mend. Ting Esgle. “Tell us about the Man who started the Red Terror on the Great Moun- tain,” begged Bobby Coon of King Eagle, sitting on a branch of a tall. dead tree near the pond of Paddy the Beaver. “Why did he do such a dreadful thing? Those two-legged creatures called Men are the most awful creatures. They do the worst things. . Every fall they hunt me, when 1 haven't done a-thing to them. And they seem to think it Is fun to try to kill me.” . “Yes, and some of them set traps, and that is the most unfair thing I know of.” spoke up Billy Mink. Farmer Brown's Boy doesn’t and he doesn'’t let anybody else do eith of these things if he can help it, My! How clean and appetizing! Lily ‘glasses’ are for your lips alone. No wonder the best foun- tains boast: ‘“We serve in Lily “Glasses’—the most popular paper giasses ever made.” PURITY SPECIALTIES €O, 5 It means dollars and cents to e Charles L. Huff, Owner and Manager, fucke up Chattersr the Hed Sauic a Bosel to Bave guesth boaie of venient sturdy cartons or strong cotton : Denckla: Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. the Red Terror, Did that man do it “that fine bed” Encased in bags. pu i el s Cot e 'SAVE THE FRUIT CROP es— interrupted Sam- ‘Aud T saw a man way downd near the foot of.tho Great Mountain.” con- tinued King Eagle, just as if he hadn’t been lnltrmrlfld "He was walking along a little path. By and by he stopped and put something in his mouth and then he took a tiny stick and struck the end of it on a stone l.:g the Red Terror sprang up on the end of that tiny stick and he touched the thing in his mouth with the:- Red Tefror. _Thén' he threw the tny.atick l | were alt herocs. In the Smithsonian Institution here vou can see all kinds of boats that peopie of a lonz time ago traveled in and all 1 can say is if they went very far in those kinds of boats they How strange they look now beside flying machines and submarine models. Write me more letters and tell me what you would like to see here in Washington. RUSSELL BURK The Travelog Boy ‘Washington. down in the path and didn’t once look to sce where it fell. 1 guess he ught there was no ionger any Red ror on the end of that tiny stick. But he didn’t look to see. He didn't even look to see where that tiny stick fell. But I saw where it fell, It fell in some dry leaves. A few minutes later'I saw the breath of the Red Terror rising from those thot Te “TELL US ABOUT THE MAN WHO STARTED THE RED TERROR ON THE GREAT MOUNTAIN,” BE GED BOBBY COO! leaves and then the Red Terror itself. It -ate up those leaves and th jumped to the leaves beside the path. It'ate faster and faster and the foel er it ate the greater the Red Terror grew. It began to.climb ' the - trees, and in a short time it was.racing up the side_of the Great Mountain fast as LightToot the Deer can ru “It was"then -that ‘the' Man-discov- A firmly filled with small soft things which crushing will _not hurt, as |stockings or vests. To fold night- gowns, petticoats. dresses, skirts and plain gowns, hold them upside down {with the ends of the under arm lines las extremities, fold once lengthwise {and shake the upper part of the gar- iment into the folded position. Then lfola crosswise as often as necessar: nightzowns three or four times. ar- ranging the sleeves neatly; petticoat, once, half way down' gowns once at top and dress skirts preferably not at all, but if unavoidable, as near the waist line as convenient. To fold blouses. or men's shirts or coats, lay them flat, back down, and fold the sleeves over at the shoulder to make a straight line down the un- derarm seams. If necessary, fold crosswise once or twice. It ig well {0 remember that a crosswise crease in most garments tends to disappear when the garment Is worn, if not pressed in too hard, while a' length- wise crease does not. The chief general packing is to pack closely, so that things shall not .slide about in _the trays during severe handling. Even in the drawers of wardrobe trunks fairly close packing is required if fine soft stuffs are not to be badly crum- iplcd. (Coprright. 1921.) Brand Box Spring is far more comfortable than any woven wire or open coil spring. Conscience Brand Box Serings INTERNATIONAL BEDDING CO. Bairisonz axp Ricumonn point "in . good |. | | the waist line with the blouse part on | and red. There is so much nutrition in preserves that they should replace more costly winter foods. The cost of your sugar is a small part of the value of your pre- serves, but the importance of the right sugar is great. . “Sweeten it with D Granulated, Tablet, Golden Syrup. - Don’t let raspberry time slip by with- out doing up all you can—both black When ordering your preserving sugar see that it’s Domino Granulated. Domino pure cane sugars are accurately weighed, packed and sealed by machine, in con- Domino’’ Powdered, Confectioners, Brown,

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