The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 12, 1916, Page 4

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of Newspapers COLYUM PEAKES BEFORE? Buck Creek K. of J am oyster anc ic evening at thelr en “Diseases of Swine,” by F. V. Haw kins of ianapelis—The Buck Creek (Ind) News. This guy O'Bregon will have te travel some if he lives up to his name . FASHIONS FOR FATHERS “The bride was given away by her father, who was daintily gowned in a pale blue silk dress, with vell and orange blossoms lent Dy the bride's dest sister From an English paper oe. t OUR OWN TRAVELOGUES LO8 ANGELES—The natives ca Mt Loose On-gahi-cexe—and it @ loose, believe us, Amarytite. FO Are 600,000 people in L. how they live lordoniyknows course there are 25,00) people Work making movies, and we ha the guess that there is « number working in leg: they can dalance a b ail pickle, darque-load cream pudding an on one tray wi anything more au fait than « just a teeny-weeny drop of the soup, may Be, down a neighbor's neck, Los asics ts the biggest city on the fic coast, but San Francisco, Se ttle, Tacoma, Portia deny tt. Th eh, well, what's th ee NO, MACEDOINE, WE SADLY MUTTER, THERE AIN'T NO SUCH ANIMALS— Truthful lawyers. Homely actorines. Rich reporters. Spendthrift millionaires. Polite conductors. Strictly fresh exes. . Humorous (sic!) pertodicals. ore wenn ® SERGT. CARR'S IDEA OF A REAL SOFT SNAP | i lik ES ITh very ‘The time was spent ing peanut fudge and hearing a r on Harold Bell Wright, ¢ tt American novelist, by Mra. yh Hf. Milligers, The next meet- will be held with Miss Lickens, will discuss Pollyanna, a book has made a & hit tn Mterary jea.—The Red cw. mn. aville va) eee Jail Visitor—What crime Is this man charged with? Jalier—Nothing. He nappened to bbe passing when Mike the Bite shot @ man, and he's held out on bail! "se WOULD TAKE CHANCES “Sir, I wish to make your daugh- er my wife,” said the young man The old man hesitated. “Hadn't better see her mother first?” asked gently, after thinking a it. “I've seen her mother, and @oesn't make any difference take the chances.”—Hill Record. a RE: v NOT OVERCONFIDENT Jas. Hamet, better known “Bill” Hamet, who has here for several years, has gone to out hearing what | am going to! known before I saw your neurotic told me,” sald Dollar, quietly. “He te young man’s troubles; but he) +7 didn't mean to insult her par! antag —————— Los Angeles, where he expects to propose to you instead,” and he| friend.” |protested his innocence, of | Waited for George Edenborough to| ner.” said Dollar, in some dismay.| “Oh! there's not much to say,” Hive—Porterville (Cal.) Recorder.|tore the unfinished prescription) “Hasn't he told you all about |rourse i open his own heart, and waited in|etie the best waltzer on the {c¢| rejoined the other” enrdenicaily me - into little bits. “I happen to haywa| himself?” In absolute tears!” jvain till the last five minutes, | except Miss Trevellyn.” “You remeber When Fou chine tsi Some mining work is contem.| Chamber of Peace of sorts hef in| “tiardiy a word worth anything} “And what was your own impres.| When the boy began to thank him} “i's an Italian marquis," re-| prince's, doctor?” lated at a depth of 7,626 feet in| this house. It's my latest fad.|in a case like this, where the cause|sion, Mr. Vinson?” and ended with the whole story. turned Edenborough, in another| 1 qo, indeed.” razil. The element of difficulty | You've found it a name, and in re-| matters more than the effect. I| “Extremely mixed. I felt that he| It differed very little from the | voice, “Rocchi's his beastly name.| they’ both Spoke as ttt eons fe the great heat, probably 126.5,|turn I should like to offer itt you) gather, however, that he's one of|was speaking the truth, and yet not|prcond-hand synopels, Dit It conve no use for the fellow. But bel weeks ago for the night | the first lord's secretaries, a friend |the whole truth. He had an alr of which Dollar would have given jae nt waltz finished, there}, You know I told you r'@ had a of yours, on the brink of being mar-|gulity knowledge, if not of actual | uch to relinquish. The talk of in he fir be 4 |hard day out of town?” ried, and in more than the normal | guilt.” tolerable. suspicions was indeed | Were two more in quick succession,|""«1 remember.” 5 to 18 years old. With One Pair | of Trousers Boys’ 10, from $1.00 up. up. & free lecture | e e! A. and] Member of the Scripps Northwest Longue Published Dally by The Star Publishing Co. Phone Main 9400 | | | | STAR—FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1916. PAGE 4. Being “Broke” Is an American Disease E DO not know just what the per capita wealth of the United State may be, but did it ever happen to strike you that most Americans are chronically “broke’’? In spite of all the optimistic reports of the savings banks and the postal savings institution and the building and loan companies, most Americans are always “broke.” The majority foreigners. Foreigners have cultivated INTENSIVE LIVING They have conserved the energy of agricultural lands; they have intensi- fied their HABITS of living; they have an inborn faculty for thrift. And why? é Because the necessity of saving has been beaten into them in a stern schooling —POVERTY. In the homes of many native Americans, thrift is scorned because it is considered a sort of neighborhood disgrace to be poor. If Willie Jones’ papa gives himadime any time he wants it, Smith’s daddy has just naturally got to do the same. Willie and Johnnie straight-away exchange this and repeat the “touch’. the next day. The thoughtless expenditure of small sums of money is one of the chronic symptoms of this =o disease—of being “broke.” And being “broke” is rSt a vocational malady; it attacks the man-in- business-for-himself just as it fastens itself upon the humblest wage-earner, only that its effect is not comparative. Somehow, it seems that the middle class worker—and we cannot deny that in democratic America we deliberately cultivate a certain class dis- tinction, determined by one’s earning (and spending) capacity—is the victim of this disease. Great honors await'the scientist who discovers the germ of IMPROVI- DENCE and a curative serum therefor. Are We Still Barbarians? Yes, Anastasia, 1 We Fear So Ae WE still barbarians? After glimpsing the Spring Maiden of 1916 on the main streets of our home village, we fear so, Anastasia, Can you see any resemblance, for in- stance, in these very much abbreviated flare skirts to the grass-cloth petticoats of the care- free belles of Hawaii? Do these new dangling earrings that our best debutantes are wearing, remind Zanzibar? (We believe of savings banks and postal savings depositors are you of the ornaments of the happy Hotteatots of that is where the H. H. dwells.) Do you think that the sheer, silken shirt waists (blouses, our fashion editor says they are) have anything in common with the single chaste gar- ment of the naiads of the South Sea islands? Of course, thus far, these few kind words will make the menfolk smirk. But listen, you men: What of you who believe your wives are just chattels—tike the kitchen stove or the parlor rug? What of you who paint up lick a policeman? What of you who cheer when anybody mentions Lincoln, the liberator of the slaves, and then hire a few stenographers or clerks for six dollars a week? The barbaric strain in our womenfolk isn’t harmful; indeed, we would be the first to protest if our own fair kin did not tog out as gaudily and gaily as the others. ‘bhe barbaric germ in men is what concerns us most. Are we still barbarians? We are afraid so, Anastasia, we are afraid so. Johnnie money for LUX- URI your insides with Hard Stuff and try to THE FINAL appeal issued by the Henry Ford peace conference to the warring nations of Europe is a fine and noble setting forth of - high principles, The only objection to it Is that the b of peace proposed would be ac ceptable to all belligerents at just about dawn of the millennium, st at|pened to open them at something | at your worst at just the time when thi getting hold of him, and that only! hind the sparkling mask that he/and the rink was a maze of sweep- and the glow showed restless hands almonds,’ as hoe’ called it, so that | in constant readiness; you shall bel by having the poor little bride to| wore unawares in all times of! [twitching into fists, but not the he might ‘hold in his possession fitted with pajamas, and I'll send “ , ae Ang Geaeh on8 eommates: face of which one look had been la assured the patient. notorious ju: it silver key to some chamber of tem- resided | chair. gray mixtures, fancy striped fab- rics, neat navy blue serges. Sizes With 2 Pairs of Trousers $4 to $15 $5t0 $12.50 Wash Suits, sizes 2 to Boys’ Straw Hats from 50c | “THE UNAFRAID” | his old oak desk looking up from an unfinished pre acid, I hope to ough, with a face that would not get some sleep? have imposed upon an infant. ley to Trelawny, for a small quan. tity of the ‘essential oil of bitter Next Week “THE CRIME DOCTOR” | B Eleanor Ingram no. as for him, from no less an author! than the home secretary of Eng land, and no further back than th: him t ie had very evening at dinner. He had). ory whichever way you look type of sportswoman. John Doll as on hin feet , I've stayed Jonger than 1 ," sald he abruptly, “I promired to go up within half an ity S¢roms the North sea early in the| the Wednesday ». Year. Edenborough admita that he either lost it or had it stolen from He seems to have been more ing as in a circus—with single practitioners at work under dash log Instructors down thé middle of the rink—while the ear sang with a resounding swish of skates, One “He was never wrong when he tuck to poetry,” said the doctor, it wanted him, now with an flown the German whole thing's bound to be!’ j his guest a good place behind the) sons why nobody bnt Edenborough | things that have been done and ” |could have made tt.” lean't be mended. But in this case “Reasons that are not so good !n/ gigcovery may be the mother of Ww, apparently?” prevention, and I must have a shot xactly yet there's no case! with both barrels while there's le proficient {n that delicate and founding art | Edenborough said that he himself was not quite up to the standard of these displays, and suited the action He had come tn glum and grum-|to the word by taking the floor un bling; be went off gay and In-|steadily on his skates. As he seat cls subtly enlivened by. the very | od himself a gong sounded, the band guard.” |eravity of the matter, as ho al struck up, beginners dispersed, con- Pe ras [Ways was, But it was grave | ident hands clasped lissome waists, “You; it was the first chance of/ enough, as was Dollar himeelf be |long edges ended in lightning threes rather appealed to me.” And/a man wants to be at his best book shot back into its place. | “It’s on Thursday!" Edenborough jot the bit about the prussic/ecried, as one in exquisite dread. | suggested the doc-|“My Heaven, I'm to be married on 7 en : j , tor all the world as if in fun.| Thursday, and this is Sunday night! |and there has been no accusation | time a oe But I very much fear that traps! ‘What was that aid Edenbor-| How can I toe “yg by yr cle pooneet : are being set, and I've taken it on . myself t) put the madman on his the doctor opened t rusty steps. bund shrubs. In sleep “Leave that to me.” sald Dollar, ve everything to me, and come 1 keep the room ‘A little commission from Shel “4 straight upstairs dinner as well, Heavy work, Dol-| stress Dollar had never seen anything! graceful than the last Yet the first short waltz was not! over before an involuntary selection had eliminated all but a dark,| strong girl in red and @ swarthy jing to see you—presently. ugh, “Only by knowing the book,” he “Its rather a passage—and you had st been clamoring for at least a There was less confidence in thelia, myself. He was wonderfully| But this was not a case in which Doctor Dollar who ‘ran downstairs |¢rank, from his point of view. He|the crime doctor could leave well a little later and sat at bis tele jtold me that the alr of suspicion | Cnough alone. Every hour of the| phone with an urgent face. In an-|was driving him out of his mind; | Slsht he was upstairs and down er minute he had left the hou he said he hadn't slept for nights| again and in another two Mr, Topham | and nights.” In me.” wherever you've been?” the morning it was he who! Mustache. ‘0; you shall not go with-|in the time of what I ought to have That's the worst thing you've! checking Mr. a fudge, because that’s Lucy state about it.” “His physical condition bears you jand Edenborough had a better word She was waltzing with the hand-| for my honeymoon!” some brute again; for he looked no | less, with his deep blue chin and| sudden slang and satire. insolent eyes, and his air of con-| was driven to his only policy, | mean to say she'd draw back in the last week?” “She may not be able to help her. and, if anything, the breezler of the Trevellyn'’s skating, the two! I couldn't imagine a young dissembler had girl more like an old salt at heart. obtaining an reluctant Httle difficulty tn immediate invitation By mati, tmontha, $1.90) B06 per mon months. By carries, ofty, 260 = month, Fintered at Hentile, Wash, posteffice an ecoomd-claes matter y E.W. Hornung COPYRIGHT, 1914 The Bobbs-Merrill Co. (Continued from Our Last Iseve)! “Do you mean a room that sends | or—selling them!* enough for two, and they havefand joy. three were soon gone without CHAPTER VIL you off instead of drugs?’., “Is it as bad that?” Dr, Dol-|tastes tn common, I told you he| It wan the height of the skating |alarums or excursions, except on The Golden Key Young Edenborough was looking lar asked Vinson. could draw a bit, but ahe's a little |afternoon, and the glassy strip | the part of the crime doctor himself. “Ghelley was quite right!” ex-| puzzied, but for the moment taken Stockton swears {tt ts To | artist, tho you wouldn't think It if) opaque pane on which a little giant He was neglecting his practice claimed the young man at the book. out of himself. He had heard of ™¢ it’s tneonceivable. But he/you saw her teaching him to skate | might have been scribbling with @ for the case in hand; be wag no- shelf, with the prematurely bent | Doctor Dollar as a rather eccentric |£iVee chapter and verse of at least/at Prince's or taking me on at big diamond where to be found when badl. back turned upon Doctor Dollar at consultant, but the very man 09 drawing that found its way golf lucy Trevellyn’s the best The eye swam with pairs rotat-/ed on the Tuesday night, nor yet on morning; and this was the more extraordinary in that | as George Edenborough who, ashier | face than ever, arid now on the teie- | Trevellyn produced —and parted ‘ednesday his| about which there's been all scription. come straight round from Portman b it bh lees. Aba : 7 riety ‘ 3, it—during the summer. But | hour to see if he was a » pd of the workers was George Eden- phone in a frantic voice. Bo wth gave a guilty start. Ho) Severe. se eiiic a aaa ian JR sen, Pon Crouble has begun| be will be. But what's a night's boroug ho © off one leg,, At dusk on the W pee) - jutioosiate, RE Treck Py jaro eaactiy i fo mean’ again. A dockyard sketch-map has reat against such a tragedy as the with a glistening forehead, to find key turned {in the latch, and next | tgouble. day's bridegroom burst from the | ot you to show her the ocean, come - Se doctor's patients came silent Rog para op Rae Pa home to roost by some means into ee, , a meg sugmested | barrier : . aiting room at the same moment “Did yee on baad Aig word “egy hing for one “Bich we'd better not Inquire, and ‘pha | Vinson. wee ae So glad you're not late ee == | jd I say anything?” he asked 1 would give anything for one). cnounced by Stockton a bad|OMly get to the bottom of that, Dol-| waltzing.” he said nervily I've CHAPTER IX. wigan’ exaggerated embarrassment. - decent night,” he said ae’ = imitation of one made for him by lar, we might know how to act \nad a long day out of town, and Z “Quite true; ‘on thought something aloud,” are far too good, sir, especially to Edenborough six weeks ago.” Tm not a detective,” returned | qian't get here myself till much nborough's Plight | borough, but said Dollar, smiling “Don't let it a man you know nothing at all “Why a bad imitation, I won- the doctor—but the atiff words | ister than I expected. Lucy's writ ae alk. keke cual et worry you; that’s not one of the about de were hardly out before the stiff | ing a letter in the lounge, but she'll lenborough; tho something else had stuck in” straws that shows an fll wind. What “IT ought to know more in the The etlatael bas ‘been te the lips relaxed in a smile. “I've sald | pe here in a minute for the en- and looked so ghastly in the elec- his mind. of Shelley's, Mr. Eden- morning, Mr. Edinborough, but ft fret tarde ceokieen Mamgetiin B he | (hat before, Vinson, and I shouldn't closure, and after that we'll have tric light that Dollar did not switch dous H | 0 . t r will keep very well till then says the copy mest have been made wonder if you made me say it) tea : \! -~ otha consulting room, or ask jumping up. “Only a bit of one of his letters,” | Enough for the night that you're)? ir bok 4 again. | am out to stop things Dollar ascertained that the waltz Ho question as he shut the door. interes! said the young man. “I just hap-?a friend of the home secretary, and| ‘TOM Memory; but he has good ree payoening, not to bother about!ing enclosure wae a close quarter-| It was one of those mild, unsea-| inconcei of-an-hour for all but those more or sonable days on which the best of | apart servants keep up the biggest fire: Fren: ) window that led from his den, down into a foul and futile | happens enclosure of grimy gravel and mori- | expected. the meantime Edenborough had not taken @ seat as mechanic- ally bidden, but had planted him- self in defiant pose before the fire; that golden key to the chamber of a special messenger anywhere you/ iar drinking their healths and| And on one point his confidence lhike {t in his Hfe, for artificial ice enough. , perpetual peace.’ ree . }like for whatever you may want {0 | vnowing what was in the air! The| Was fustified without delay; the | was tn its infancy in London before, “You might have left word where ES That was it,” said t P youth at the morn ng. Cone I am burn-| only comfort was that Edenbor-/ young man in the Chamber of the war, and ever since he had been You Were!” he began with great ngth 1 may as well be honest | ing to give my Chamber of Peace &/ ough knew as well ae I did: {t was| Paace wax found drenched already ja busy man. He followed first one, bitterness about it. But I don’t know how on | crucial test, because I know We! written on his face, if you had the|1n slumbers worthy of the name he | couple and then another, and each I! have just done so,” returned earth you knew shall all come out with flying col | yoy and I hadn't to do much beat jhad unwittingly bestowed UPON |geemed to him more competent and, Dollar, “at your rooms, I was wait- |. The doctor gave a kindly little ors!” ing about the bush when Tot him|that magte fastne It seems like fate, to find you here before | “I supose you've heard the latest, pursued man with bright eyes and a black | Edenborough, aware and Jealous of | some independent perplexity on the Til | porary peace!” | Vinson was opening the door to} “Altho no accusation has been|Catried up the patient's suitcase, | “Those two are the best,” sald he| part of Dollar. | “You said you would give me/pim in Portman Square make?” woke him up, and watched the ris-|_-that girl in red and the heavy| “I have heard so much!” sald one. Doctor Dollar.” | “I can stay five minutes,” “Altho not an open word has|!2& tide of memory drown the | gjen* |the doctor, dropping into a chair. nd now I think I won't,” sald| Dollar, looking at his watch, been sald to connect him with the| thanks fn his throat. “Do you think so?” erfed the de-| “Better be explicit—and as expedi. the doctor, rising from his aged! hear as much as you can tell me|bad copy of his own map!” Now was hg oot athe ro of | Mghted jenbdorough, “Then you're| tious as you can, my dear fellow inson's o more consistent with a guilty con- r y “IT meant with my chief—Lord “I'll take your points tn order,” | out,” observed the doctor with re-|gclence than eieitia sisa, 1 Mgr jfor Miss nak BOs petoe | Stockton—seeing his new brood of jtaid Topham Vinson. “George |luctance. “And the poor devil's to| was duly followed by the admission | 1° Wt Only, 8 Bi) vie ee eeeeay | Submarines.’ Edenborough 1s not only one of|be married tn four days’ time!” —|that nobody had expressed. such | nome coiistrees lent herself to his| “In their unfledged state, T sup- | Stockton’s secretaries, but the most There my pity’s on the other suspicions in anything lke ee lweees he a vert a gusto equal to | D08e!” private and most confidential of | side. saaiy mands ay ere bd . “| ephat was it—and making the or Bo Ss the crowd. I've been a friend to} “But the girl's another friend of The crime doctor was sorry he|” “Dm tad that’s bier,” eal Babe eadel wketabes That's my job | him for family reasons, and found|yours? May 1 ask her name had put the question; it was the |porough, as she escaped with her{or Was! [ was Stockton’s walking 5 é ; 4 him a nice enough fellow. But the| “Lucy Trevellyn.” only one he asked, But by ex-| iif, from the desperado’s clutches, | kodak until yesterday afternoon; New arrivals in Norfolks and Sia a dee peri hl if they do ' Any relation of Admiral Trevel-/horting Kdeuborough to get all the) +1" gay, confound, that fellow|then I got the boot for a wedding . marr is one of us.” yn?” exercise he could, and by sayl | , " patch-pocket styles. Beautiful “if!” eried the doctor. “Do you| “Own daughter to the old nendog, he had heard great things of Miss |Wocch! (Read honermiente ee ee The harsh voice broke, for all its Nar mt of ety, one your, 87 06; @ pte duplicate of one of th ings of yours A duplic “Well, a ike.” Mt you The doctor paused as tho he finished @ sentence, as tho amended phrase had int bin thought. Bild Well?” said Edenborough get ‘Did you hear how the: ‘ fgg) y got hold “Intercepted in the post, 1 ered, on its way abroad be: “In our post?” said Edenbor Almost @ casus belll in ttself { should bi thought!” ! “And have you no {dea how came there?” asked Dollar blunt. ly—but now he meant to be blunt: he was not sorry when his may | flew into a feeble passion on the spot “What the deuce do you mean, | Doctor Dollar? I know no more about the matter than—I was gp ing to say, than you do—but I be gin to think you know more thay you pretend!” “T didn’t think T had pretended,” said Dollar, simply. “Well, what do you know?’ de manded Edenborough, in a fury of | suspicion. “All, I suppose?” he added, with a schoolboy sneer, when the answer was slow to come. Yes, all,” said the doctor, very | gravely and reluctantly, as tho | driven into a pronouncement of lite | or death. There was no outcry of surprise from Edenborough. He had some pride. But his knees began to trem ble in the firelight, and his um clenched hands to twitch. “I don't believe it,” he exclaimed at length. “You tell me what you know!” | “All that you yourself suspected, |and made yourself {I) with suspect ” ing-—and couldn't sleep for suspect- | ing—long ago!” | Pitiful tone and tender hand car ried a heavier conviction than the words. And now it was the patient who had sunk Into the chair, the doctor bending over his bowed ané quivering shoulders. “You are not the first man, my (dear Edenborough,” he went on, | “who would seem to have been be trayed in cold blood by a woman— by the woman. Mark my words closely. I say it seems so. I would not condemn the greatest malefac- tor unheard. I meant to hear Miss Trevellyn first—feeling in my — bones, against al! reason, that there may still be some unimaginable er planation. But, if the worst be true ‘of her, then the best {s true of you: for you are the first man 1 have known to bear the brunt as you have borne it, my dear fellow!” “What makes you suspect her? groaned Edenborough to the ground. It's not a case of suspicion— | don't deceive yourself as to that, | Edenborough. I know that Miss one lant Arey, imitation, with—those last two sketcl I only suspect that almost as son as they were made, |on the plea of her tremendous im | terest in the navy.” f he did,” said Bde — s tho he did not ap preciate what he was saying, a ~ “But it was a treme® interest his life, indeed! ble that his daugnter— from everything else |found her—that she of all | should do a thing like this?” I am afraid the Imost as often as the ut ~ said Dollar, with a sigh. |"Criminology indeed prepares us | for little else. Think of the per © fectly good mothers whe, hare flown to infanticide as the tre | lief of a mind unhinged! | version of the ruling pi one of the sure symptoms of in — sanity.” “But of course she’s mad,” cried | Edenborough, “if she's guilty at all. But that’s what I can't and wont believe. I tan believe it one min ute, but not the next, just as I've suspected and laughed at my suspk |cions all this nightmare time. One § look in her face has ajways been enough, and would be at this min ute.” “Well, we shall soon see,” sald Dollar, glancing at the clock. “But [1 can only warn you that my evb |dence is overwhelming.” “Let's have it, then; what is your evidence?” demanded Eder borough, In a fresh fit of stone | blind defiance. | My dear fellow, you force my jhand!” said Dollar. “Heaven knows you have a right—and it — can't make matters worse than ” they are. My evidence consists of a fall and circumstantial confes sion by a scoundrel to whom I took your own dislike at sight, and whose career I have spent the week |investigating, I needn't tell you I mean the infamous Rocchi.” ’ “Rocchi!” whispered Edenbor ough at th second attempt, a tho his very tongue rejected the abhorrent name. Yet now he stood | perfectly still, like a man who sees jat last. “Well,” he added in aa © ominously rational voice, “I must jlive long enough to send him t \hell, whatever else I do.” & “You will have to find him first,’ said Dollar. “He has gone back te |his paymasters—not his own coum } trymen—they kicked him out long ago. I've taken it on myself to do the same, instead of handing him over to the police and doing an im |finite deal more harm than good. (Concluded in Our Next Issue) |. You can get a lot of good land bargains in Star Want Ads. W.H. FISHER. MGR, that this evening from the boy him-| For Infants, Invalides and growing children. (self. It will show you what chances | Pure autritionupbuilding the whole body, he has had of giving things away Invigorates nursing mothers, and the eged, More nourishing than tea, coffe In the home, or at Hotels and Cafes, Substitutes cost YOU Same.Price hor man could interfere! | “Only three days to go!” said Dollar to himself. And two of the $2.90 If you use glasses you should be up to date and take advantage of this offer. Get the deep curved lenses; {mprove your ap Pearance and give you a larger field of For $2.50 we will give the deep curve cut, including a careful examination We do our own grinding and guarantee all We make Kryptok Amethyst and Sit William Crookes lenses self,” was the grave reply. “George sea if she could; as she to tea at Prince's Skating club. aclous mastery. Kédenborough plain-| “T'm not going to pretend I don't| Edenborough is under a cloud that | a little pillar of the ly loathed him, chafing visibly as/| know of this,” he sald. “I know of | may burst at any moment.” |Navy league—a engaged to the At the Skating Rink the pair swept past with certainly! it from the home secretary, A A sudden cloud? first lord’s best young man! Could lenborough had departed with ® the appearance of some extra verve | Out of the blue for me. | only|you conceive a more { nious Imost radiant at the pros: for his benefit heard of it from Stockton on Frt-|{rony, or a greater tragedy when the t he had scare poke | Dollar himself was very disagree: day ni But it's no new thing|truth comes out? t must of his beloved until the subject of | 4 impressed, and that down to Home of to him. He might b told mejcome out ‘ore Thi if its skating cropped It was a8 tho the end, when Rocchi skated up sooner, I think, seeing was thru jever coming out at all! that was the only relation in which | with the lady, whom he surrendered the B est me that Edenborough ever went to} “Is it otherwise a Hkely match?” |!he could still think of her without | with a gleam of palpable bravado him The very likellest, but for this |pain and shame; and in due course | yet that impression altered with “In some special capacity, 1) World's goods, and there'll be more | he was discovered on the ice with |the very opening of Miss Trevellyn’s rather gather?” of th one day, She has got the same look of lingering pride| not leas resolute mouth, She had} Yes; he can draw a bit—in tact, | i : pane “7 jgood teeth and a hearty voice, and he's not a secretary at all except | jeyes of a breezy and humane! in name, but the first lord's ginal audacity ‘si draftaman. Stockton's a * tor Malted Milk Dollar thought of Topham Vin-| owsiees details, so he makes his inspections Nourishi son's tribute, and agreed. But never} with Edenborough and @ wketch| —Belicioue had he been puzzled more complete. book, {llustrated notes are taken at| ly than before he took his leave, — | work every turn, and all sorts of impos wee ; They had talked about the wed. sible improvementa worked out in| Poe Powder dissolves in water. ding, and their presents, and the subsequent collaboration, I had | Rie Milk, Malted grain extract in powder, | The Original Food-Drink for wedding trip, as tho neither God MARCUM OPTICAL CO. Glasses on Earth (Bring this Ad) Manufacturing Opticians 917 First Ave., Near Madison inconceivable AR! HY anf t weet Satur- iv as | | SISISISINISISISISISTISISININISINISISTNINININININISISININISISISISISININI SISTINE VAVAYAVAVAVAVAVAVA)

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