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AVTHOR OF “NORTH (Continued From Yesterday) [pointed them out to his hoate 4 It dawned upon Stella Fyfe in the | They we Pree OR: O08 65 See S . Millness of the season, when the first |Of the lawn, @ stone's throw from 001 Ortober days were upon them, |e house. #Ad tha lake shores flamed again; They're getting on,” he said ‘With the red and yellow and amber of | “Lucky beggars. Its all plain sail autumn, that she had been playing | ing for them, with fire—and that fire burns. There was a note of infinite regret This did not filter into her con-|in his voice, a sadness that stabbed sciousness by degrees. “She had Stella Fyfe like a lance, She did Stecled herself to seeing him pass not dare look at him. Something Sway with the rest of the summer | rose chokin y in her throat She flock, to take himself out of her life. | felt and fought against a slow well She ad-nitted that there would be a fap. But that bad to be. No word other than friendly ones would ever ing of tears to her eyes. Before she sensed that she was betraying her self, Monohan was holding both her 3 Pass between them. He would go| hands fast between his own, grip Away, and she would go on as before. | ping them with a fierce, insistent That was all. She was s p ure, speaking in a passionate Aware how far they had traveled | undertone. along that road whereon travelers converse by glance of eye, by subtle intuitions, eloquent silences. Mono- han himself delivered the shock that Awakened her to despairing clearness | of vision. He had come to bring her a book, he and Linda Abbey and Charlie to Bether—a commonplace enough lit tle courtesy. And it happened that this day Fyfe had taken his rifle and vanished into the woods immediately “Why should we have to beat our heads against a stone wall like this?’ he was saying wildly, “Why couldn’t have we have met and loved and been happy, as we could have been? It was fated to happen. I felt it that day I dragged you out of the lake. It's been growing on :ne ever since. I've struggled against it, and it's no use, It's something stronger than Tam. I love you, Stella, and it! maddens me to see you chafing in after luncheon. Between Linda! your chains. Oh, my dear, why » Abbey and Charlie Benton matters | couldn't it have been different?” mean vaperssead thet te Was mow! you mustn't talk like that,” she i 2 cedar or poke Mahe’ tae protested weakly, “You mustn't. It ° isn’t right.” beach together, oblivious to all but |" suppose it’s right for you to themseives. This afternoon they ehatted a while with Stella and then Sradually detached themselves until Monohan, glancing thru the window, | live with a man you don't love, when your heart's crying out against it?” | he broke out. “My God, do you think | 1 can't see? I don't have to see | things; I can feel them, I know 2 the 4 a | you're the kind of woman who goes q a S Way): hell for her conceptions of right and wrong. I honor you for that, |dear. But, oh, the pity of it. Why D. D. D. has proved itself a re- markable remedy. should it have to be? Life could |have held so much that is fine and |true for you and me together. For | you do care, don’t you?” “What difference does that make?” ie Chudine, Uiceee i, wtisease, in- \she whispered. “What difference erusts or eczema in any form.” |can it make? Oh, you musn’t tell this remedy will not disappoi me these things, I mustn't listen It has stood the test, an | mustn’t.”” for all akin dineases Tee ere | But they're terribly, tragically if D. today, We guarantee the first | true," Monohan returned. “Look at | bottle, 350, 60c and $1.00. me, Stella. Don't turn your face i & | away, dear. 1 wouldn't do anything that might bring the least shadow on y | you. I know the pitiful hopelessness e e @ of it. You're fettered, and there's oe s |no apparent loophole to freedom. I : The Lotion for Skin Disease | know it’s best for me to keep this |locked tight in my heart, as some- __.|thing precious and sorrowful. 1 never meant to tell you. But the flesh isn't always equal to the task the spirit imposes.” She did not answer him immedi | Jately, for she was struggling for a | grip on herself, fighting back an im- pulse to lay her head against him and cry her agony out on his breast. All the resources of will that she possessed she called upon now to still |that tumult of emotion that racked | |her. When she did speak, it was} in a hard strained tone. Put she faced the issue squarely, knowing be- yond all doubt what she had to fa “Whether I care or not isn’t the | question,” she said, “I'm neither: lit- tle enough or prudish enough to de- ny a feeling that's big and clean. 1 | OF FIFTY-THREE hear the kid peeping,” he said to Stella quite casually, “and I n tha outside as I came in 3 see what's up with him.” Trained to repression, schooled in self control, Stella rose to obey, for under the smoothness of his tone there was th Her heart apr She tried to smile. her face was that Jack Fyfe iron edge of command but she knew that tear-wet. She knew had seen and under- stood. She had done no wrong, but @ terrible apprehension of conse. quences seized her, a fear that trag: gr f her ly own making might stalk in that room. er In this extremity she banked with | 454 l her they were gone. implicit faith on the man she had!” ghe peard her husband walk thru Married rather than the man the house onc ter that. When! loved. For the moment she felt over: | ainner was served, he was not there whelmingly glad that Jack Fyfe was!i¢ was eleven o'clock by the time iron—cool, unshakable. He would! piece on her mantel when she heard | never give an inch, but he would| nim come in, but he did not come tol Se tee ee . rebigr! scene-| their room. He went quietly into) She could Not visualize him the jeal-| the guest chamber across the hall. | ous, outraged husband, breat conventional anathema, but were elements unreckonable in that room. She knew instinctively that Fyfe once aroused would be deadly in anger and she could not vouch Monohan’s temper under the strain of feeling. That was why she feared. e lingeres second or tw So she lingered a second or two lessly. outside the door, quaking, arose only the sound of Fy body settling into a le and following that the low ble of his voice. She could not dis tinguish words. The tone sounded ordinary, conversational, She pray- s heavy SECOND AND UNIVERSITY Splemdid Collection of 50 Warm Weather Dresses Of Taffeta, Satin, Georgette and Foulard that sold regularly up to $65.00, at 939.50 —Some lightsome and filmy; others more tailored; straight line and waist line models; all cool and summery. —Georgettes-Frocks with bell sleeves and graceful draperies. Taffetas and Satins in correct styles; pretty Foulards in dots and figures and Georgettes in floral patterns. —All the happy summer pastel shades | and all sizes are represented in the col- lection. —They are especially priced for to- morrow at ..............«.... $39.50 —A pparel Section, Third F! New Liberty Vanity Beautiful Georgettes | Fraser-PatersonCo. PHONE MAIN 7100 In a Wonderful Array of Gor- geous Colorings | * ‘- The Trimming Section is showing new ar. | —Priced From $7.50 to $27.50. rivals in Georgettes in figured and shadings Another new shipment of fhe pretty Liberty which are most beautiful in colorings. | nity Cases arrived for Wednesday's showing. Dark blue with re 1 henna combinations. ‘They are in patent leather of several differ. Black with Morning Glory Pinks. | ent styles in black only, The ning is of —Saxe Blue and White. fancy silk and they are fitted with large mirror, Dove with combination of dainty blue, | lip stick holder, rouge box, memo book and rose and yellow | coin purse. White with black | —These popular little bags have been quite —Beige with r and brown | the vogue of the present season and these new and many other shadings. T Georgettes | ones will meet the instant approval of those are most suitable for gowns and blouses. 40 | who admire the new things. inches wide, priced, at yard | —Leather Goods Section, Virst —Trimming Se | — | rently ceased to beat. | vinrant w | for | herself right before him, but there | hat pulled low on his forehead, ther chair, | not even look up. even rum | straight | Copyrignt, | | | | | which the members of the league at- | der them in their work before they | group, in the Pacific just south of the . THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1919 BiG TimMBER COPYRIGHT BY BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR | \ | | | | see no shame in that. I'm afraid of}ed that hif intent was to ignore the} it--If you can understand that Kut | situation, that Monohan would meet that's neither here nor the I know| him halfway in that effort After- what I have to do 1 married with ward there would be reckoning. out love, with my eyes wide open,| But for herself, she neither thought and T have to pay the price. So you} nor feared. 1t was a problem to be must never talk to me of love Youg face that was all And so, the mustn't even see if it can be) breath of her coming in short quick avoided, It's bet that way, We_| respiration e went to ker room. | can't make over our lives to suit our-|There was no watling from th selves—at least T can't. I must play |nursery, She had known that | the game according to the only rules Sitting beside a window, chin in know. We daren't--we mustn’t| hand, her lower lip compressed be: trifle with this sort of a feeling. | tween her teeth, she saw Fyfe, after With yo! footloose, a all the) the lap of ten minutes, leave by the |worid before you—tt'll die out pres-|front entrance, stopping to chat a ently minute with Linda and Charlle Ben No,” he flared, “TI deny that. I'm| ton, who were moving slowly toward not an impressionable boy, I know|the house. Stella rose to her feet| myself. |and dabbed at her face with a pow | ‘ed = chamois. She couldn't t He paused, and the grip of his hands on hera tightened till the pain| Monohan go like that; her heart cried of it ran to her elbows. Then his|QUt against it voce kee er fingers relaxed a little would never m again | She flew down the hall to the liv wh, I Know," he said haltingly: ing room. Monohat stood just within | “I know it's got to be that way J} the front door, gazing @ resolutely have to go my 1 and leave you t | over his shoulder. He took a step yours, Oh, the blank hopelessness tao teriniek fee, ts alemeees of it, the useless misery of it. We was drawn inte eullae ihmeg. &} made for each other, and we have to p flush mantled his cheek | grin and say good by, go along our Listen.” hk said tensely “T'vel separate ways, trying to smile. What| been made to feel like—like—- Well, @ devilish state of affairs! But 1/1 controlled myself, 1 knew it had to love you, dear, and no matter—I—/pbe that way. It was unfortunate. I ah— think we could have been trusted Jo His voice flattened out His | do the decent thing. You and I were hands re ed hers, he straightened | preg to do that I've a { quickly Ha turned her head. | pride, 1 can't come here again. And| Jack Fyfe stood in the doorway. His! T want to see you once more before 1| was fixed in its habitual mask. |jeaye here for 4, I'll be going| He was biting the end off a cigar.’ away next week, That'll be the end| He struck a match and put it to the) of jt—the bitter finish, Will you slip| cigur end with steady fingers as he|qown to the first point south of| walked slowly across the big room Cougar Bay, about three in the after-| noon tomorrow? It'll be the last and| only time. He'll have you for life can’t I talk to you for twenty min utes?" “No,” she whispered forlornly can’t do that, I—oh, good-by by.” Stella, e Stella,” heard isper follow after she his But she ran away thru the dining room and fling back hall to the bedroom, herself face down the passionate protest that up within her. She lay there, | r face buried in the pillow, until uttering exhaust of the Abbey | . growing fainter and fainter, there to choking She waited thru a leaden period Then, moved by an impuise she did not attempt to define mixture of motives, pity for him, a craving for the outlet of words, a desire to set she slipped on a dressing robe and crossed the hall, The door swung open noise- Fyfe sat slumped in a chair, ands thrust deep in his pockets. He did| His eyes. stared | ahead, absent, unseecingly fixed on nothing, He seemed to be unconscious of her presence or to ignore it—she could not tell which. “Jack,” she said. “And when he made no response she said again, tremulously, that unyielding silence chilling hér, “Jack.” (Continued in Tomorrow's Star) 1916, by Little, Brown & Co. All rights od. Homekeepers Sell Carload of Fruits Altho the sale did not get under way until the middle of the after noon, the Homekeepers’ league opened their market at Second ave. and Virginia st. Monday, and dis. posed of a carload of fruit before evening. The sale of the fruit was scheduled to start in the morning, but delay tribute to the influence of Western ve. commission men trying to hin- have gotten fairly started, held the sale up until the middle of the after. noon At the price-cutting sale Monday, 18-pound boxes of peaches went for $1.50, apples sold for $3.50, or 10 cents a pound, and apricots were priced at $2.40 and $2.60 a box, Earthquake, Tidal Wave Hit Island) SAN FRANCISCO, J 22. An earthquake and tidal wave sweeping over the town of Pangal, in the Tonga equ April 30, devastated the island, and brought Its 269 inhabi- tants and 50 traders near starvation, was the word brought here Monday | night by Capt. Jacob Olson, of the} schooner Otilie Fjord, or, Teachers Organize to Force Wages Up To form a statewide organization | to obtain higher salaries, 25 teachers | now attending summer school at the University of Washington met at Denny hall Monday afternoon Guy Dunning, superintendent of the Washtucna city schools, was elected chairman of the meeting, and | was instructed to appoint a commit: | tee to take charge of the formation of the organization LEAVES $5; PROMISES | DIVORCE; DISAPPEARS | Leaving a note for his wife in- closing a $5 bill, and stating, "I will! send you a divorce,” Max Hiat, 36 | 115 19th ave., left home Monday, and! |has not returned. Mrs. Hiatt ap- | pealéd to the police Monday after- |noon to find him. Hiatt is believed |to have gone to Canada, where he owns property VETERAN TALKS TO | 100 PER CENT CLUB Richard Seelye Jones, formerly president of the Seattle Press club, and recently sergeant-major with the | American forces in France, spoke on “How to Develop the 100 Per Cent Club” at the Tuesday noon meeting of the organjzation in the Masonic club rooms, "\Utah Man Endured Months) | treatment good. | all druggists or direct from the Dr. for the free booklet, “Building Up the on rheumatism, INVITE WILSON TO SEE FLEET Legion Also Asks Roosevelt and Daniels to Come | | Secretary of the | Lieut. | been | President Wilson. Navy Josephus Daniels, and Col. Theodore Roosevelt have Jellies invited to visit Seattle when the Pa- | cifle fleet comes here. Invitations | were iaqued by Mimer J. Noble, Post Many women have been so discouraged by this trouble a American Legion, Monday that they have almost stopped putting up fruit. Bel ge Macndenk olin arid peo Yet, there is an easy, simple way to avoid it. Use 4 PECAN canine” WOT TS ibnetied Karo (Red Label!) and % sugar in your preserving syrup, by soon, the post if] t wag pointed out at the meeting tMt 75 per cent of the discharged ervice men had dropped their insur, ance, and the post went on record s ready to assist men in getting re instated, A letter will be nt to Capt. Harry A. Field, com ndant | or Pues of the Puget Sound navy yard, offer: | the “fruity” flavor. ing assistance during the reception to be given the fleet REGAINS HEALTH AFTER SUFFERING FROM RHEUMATISH | | me | | | of Pain Before He Tried | Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and Gained Relief | “After trying many medicines and visiting different springs recommend. ed for rheumatism without success, I have at last gained health and release from pain by « careful and regular | with Dr, Williams’ Pink | says Mr. J. M. Jones, a paint: | ntractor, who lives at No. 163 | First West st. Salt Lake City, | Utah. “The rheumatism was so far ad. vanced that all my muscles were stiff and sore and my joints were in- flamed and swollen for days at a time. I b me very nervous and jumped and jerked in my sleep and there were many nights that I got only a few minutes’ rest. ‘The pains seemed to travel all over my body. My appetite was generally poor and when I craved food my stomach both- | a me. | “I heard of Dr. Williams’ Pink! Pills, and when nothing else seemed | to help me I decided to give the rem. | edy a trial. In two weeks I was so much improved that I was able to sleep better. dually the pain in| my limbs became less sev and the inflammation and swelling of my joints disappeared. I have prac tically no pain now and have a fair appetite and can enjoy my food, I have gained considerable weight and feel better than I have for a long time. My wife has also taken the pills and has been greatly benefited by them. We are both strong en- dorsers of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills | and believe them a fine blood build- | et Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by | Teas tae avin Williams Medicine Co,, Schenectady,| BREMERTON, July 22.—Earl M. N. Y., on receipt of price, 50 cents) Davidson, 24, plumbing inspector at per box or six boxes for $2.50. Write| the Puget Sound navy yard, died Monday as the result of stings re- ceived when he stumtfied into a hornet’s nest while out picking = mal Dn Wut Blood,” containing @ special chapter Do your Jams and instead of sugar alone. Karo is a fine, clear syrup, with a natural affinity for the juices of the fruit. It blends the sugar with the fruit juice—brings out all You, too, will obtain perfect results this summer if you will use % Karo (Red Label) and % sugar instead of all sugar for preserving. You will find your jelly clear and firm—your preserves rich with heavy syrup—your jams deliciously mellow and “fruity”. Not a sign of “‘candying”’. For Cooking, Baking and Candy-Making Karo (Red Label) is used in millions of homes. baking recipes use Karo instead of sugar. delicate flavor, and brings out the natural flavor of the food.' blackberries at Lilliwaup falls on | Hoods |.the body stated that Davidson died | as the result of undue heart action | caused by the suddeness of the at-| tack and the poison from the stings. Let’ ptown, 1414 3rd Ave.; downtown, 913 2nd Ave. METROPOLITAN HURRY 0%, SATUray NicHr onty With Mats. Wed. and Sat. 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