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By REBECCA § Office Phone, Main 600, /ENSON ne, Capitol 617, SOCIETY— Will Give Luncheon | Engle-Willis . A. G. Cushman as| ‘The wedding of Miss Amy guest, Mra, Arthur W. Tid-| Willis and Mr, Edward J. & Will give @ luncheon at the | both of Seattle, was solemnixed Club Saturday afternoon, urday evening at the home of |J. D. ©. Powers, who read the » ;] M nd Mra, Engle will be Mrs. Milburn Hostess tee, Mr. ang Albert I, Bouffieur the Bast to be gone ‘Cynthia 1 am almost 20 years old, and have b married over a year. I was married only a few days wi |my husband went to camp. He was gone 11 months. \never saw him until he came home a month ago. I did wro while he was away. I was living with his parents, but ! Confessions «ta Bride Grey 4 Dear Miss Grey Copyrighted, 1919, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association NK le, ‘| BERGHOR, THE SPY, GIVES ME A CLUE TO THE WHEREABOUTS OF BABS Seward Social and Literary Club | Dr left five and Mra. today for as weeks wed in this city Mrs. Anna Thomas Milburn will Mrs, A. G, Cushman with a at her home this evening. ; will follow the dinner, ~ ore Dinner for Baroness | dW’ Anethan Honoring Baroness Albert d'Ane | Mr. and Mra, Raymond Ausias renne will entertain with a at the Sunset Club this eve . Mrs. Robinson Entertains ‘To compliment her sister-iniaw ©. MH. Lind, of Tacoma, Mrs. J Robinson entertained fifty guests With a tea at her home this after-| ¥ . Mrs. Raymond Frasier and Dire. Chester Coulter presided over the tea table which was centered with a basket of pale yellow and) grange chrysanthemums, combined) with autumn foliage | Entertain With Dinner Complimenting Mr. and Mrs, Wak Foster, Mrs and Mrs, Joseph m were hosts at an informal ner at the Houlevard Inn Tues following ding trip. . Whist Party The military given by the Lodge No. postponed will ° ing whist party Woodland October 16, November Rebekah at the until of the present next Lorraine Chapter, OWE. S. Lor Chapter, No, 6, 0. will give thelr anniversary Friday evening, October 17 Masonic temple. |Hibernians to Give Dance | chiiaren dance in the Hidernians wil Saturday evening, October 11 w W, hall veral special tures are on the program Lotus Club to Dance The Lotus club will Moon ball Saturday eve ber 18, in the Shrine audi the Masonic temple. give a give a in) . Postponed Rehek ah} bas t Th Assembly meet dance in Rlue|Peturned to Harv : eee it will re home at they have and o© Mr turn t t and Mra, Lyinan ¢ week from th jthe Country Club, wh be|been spending the summer, cupy the house which they cently purchased, wee W. Hollis, with harles wenday Mr. their and Mrs. guests, Mr, and Mre. Jones, of Spokane, returned from Victoria. They came by way of Lake Crescent, where they were met by Mr. and Mra, Charles Borie Rhodes and Mr, and Mra, Boggs, lwho turned with 8.) Mr. and Mra, Je day for Portiand home from th | . Mra. Wakefield Corbet and two coompauied by her mothe who has been spending with her, will leave Thursday for Dallas, Texas, Mrs. Powers’ bome Mra. Corbet will re main for two monthe now will leave Fri and will motor the ra, Pow © summer fea Mr, Leon Auzias I Octo rium of Mra. J, Carey, who has been vinit ling her daughter, Mrs, Edward Stan ton (Gladys Carey), {n have re | Turenne has! Los Angeles, | The Seward Social and Literary| I was much closer to being a real) cour Club will meet with Mra. J. P. Beck than either idy or I sus w well, 4719 Wifty-fourth Avenue! pected. Inside of an hour I was in| “1 ‘outh. Mra. T. P. Fahey will speak) possession of surprising informa: | lik mn “Americanization.” | ' ee General Meeting, Woman's Century Club tective why my be the line of the ad the Miller estate—and both properties, park paralle joining estate The Woman's led hold a general ck in the ¥ hall, Parliamentary charge Mra. G. N. MeLoughiin. |The current events department will] Following the path, and trailing jbe in charge of the program, Mra.{#lowly along it in order enjoy jorge D. | Schofield, — chairman. | the gorgeousnens of a warm October | Seepeen Te Miler, sty 6 of the noon, I skirted the labyrinth in which schoo! of business’ adminiatration of | T° RT Mie alah dee: dae the Univeraity ashingto 1 lost the gray ghost the mMght k on “Americantzation Rabe disappeared, 1.08 In the high boundary fence to my [right was @ gate—a roofed and ne 1 gate built after an Oriental pattern, It Was used daily by the mer and Miller employes | t particular section of the park wave me a cre Eloise had shot life, No wond that I jumped nervously when man's voice, an unfamiliar voice |from unseen ource, called to me Century Club will meeting at two W. C. A, assembly drill will be tn to the rear of to the country s whieh as a short cut from the house to my own bungalow took Lorimer | I at to conc Lor! The prettiest walk tn the = Literary and Travel Department Th ry and travel department of the Century Club will meet at lock in the Y A. A paper entitled, “A Thru Honduras Britton duras,” will b White, and on by Mra, U. M Eastern Star Clab Eastern Star Club, at their hall Heer cen Woman's he not a tion Kine aynt Tt to nave my not for me to exp! y Certeint astonishment, not on account of what he had said, but on account of how 1 was fac came and went as I pleased, It is hard for me to live tell him everything. 6 my unearinens % he replied thought perhaps you would] to speak to me, Mrs, Lorimer,” | teally, Berghoff? 1 don't see! 1 naid in what I considered bent noclety voles. f you do not see, madam, it is in,” ve ith a low vow Shou UN. r the immediate con- “, It would be best for tell your husband the whole truth and ask him to for- mv you He be broad minded and cha ie enough to consider your youth and the eir cumstances, and forgiv you. If he should forgive you, re solve that you are going to re pay him. ‘ou can do this by giving him your undivided love and making his home @ success. If you feel that this matter is too big to handle, why not tell your her everything and unk her Ip you readjust matters? Meet Him Half Way home to my mother. alone? Whate nequenc mut rerghott.”| Xi u very ¢ arted to walk on hank you, madam. m. Naturally tude that wine imer has #0 fortunately he would be interested observations made while in service, I mynelf would be, but still, ot a preasing one at the man in the utmost are Kindly hear might overt re in Dr hav the was He cin. h maid it His English that of an ordinary servant his words the precise pronu f the highly educated foreigner . . owing what I did of the Hun spy|« rer, Mime Gren oo om, I decided, in a flash, that y 17. 1 to face with a fine flower | wife, and my I married aft when I waa © tried to be a good | usband ts kind to me They never knew. with my husband now, and But if I do tell, it will mean sepa tion. I am afraid I do not love him as I should. I on ld I do this, or should I suj HAPPY AND UNDECIDED, | Would Rent | Wedding Dress? | Dear Miss Grey: vhere I could rent a wi i | gown? ALICE. | To rent a wedding gown would | be very bad taste, If you do not care to go to the expense or the | bother of buying one, it would | | Do you far better for you to be mar in some simple frock that have on hand, | Stveater Can't |Be Shrunk | Dear Miss Grey: |a pink wool swe |shrink? I washed it once f and it stretched. RENE. You cannot shrink a sweater that has onge been stretched, but you can prevent further stretching. Do not hang up the | er | | sweater to dry, This is ond of the causes of stretching. Im stead arrange the garment on @ clean sheet and change the po nition as the exposed part dries, |Good Powder Not Harmful Dear Miss Grey: Is powder jurious to the skin? VIOLA. Powder of the proper quality is not. A woman should be very careful, however, to wash her face thoroly each evening be fore retiring, so that the pores do not become clogged. TELLS DYSPEPTICS WHAT TOE Avoid Indigestion, Sour Acid | ach, Heartburn, Gas on Stomach, y evening. A handsome basketof| |. Sy J a eaves and dahlias in aw-/ Will be Married Tonight colors was used as a center! wi. wedding of Miss Ora Cords Mise Ishbe! rhe of Mr. and Mrs uy|non, B. C, is spending the winter » planer’ Mr. Joseph Lewis, with Mr, and Mra. BH. L. Murray home of the bride's G “f place t Murray is the British vice con ues Tea for Mrs. |#ervice will be read by the Rev jonor of her house guest ‘Willun C. Watt, of Philadetphia,} A. Matthews, in th ; and intima Charles Russel! Collins was |@tives and in vel ‘at am attractive tea at her| Marguerite Grant will attend . bride and Mr. Clarence Quigley peemereey onion pate . . e Party and Tea | Informal Dance compliment Mis» Antoinette | ‘The Ridgeley Rebecca Who left last night for ber! win give an informa! dance _Bevaberecdl = Clinton evening at Douglass hall ‘Bt the Wilkes, and with a tea at the Hotel Washing lon yesterday afternoon. . ee House Party in Yakima Mr. and Mrs. Julius Harrah will en with house party at their in Yakima, over the weekend. includ Mr. and Mrs. 4090 Arcade Building, at two-thirty | @fter I had passed the’ gate | has returned to Seattle, > o'clook, of that system. Berghoff, ike|but I realize, after six years of mar fhe “Madam! | | Certeis, was probably a German aris. | ried life ig we 4 Oh? ctor f ro . ~ oe Seen >yhood as | common know promis 0 gt tones and faced Berghott, the | to eet, trates a from his boyhood as/Sommon. I, knew tT priew can I putter who had interested Hob, He|4 professional spy. respect him, when. his ideas are all had emerged suddenly from the| Doubtless he eo ditterent trom mines He would shadow of the gate, Hat in hand, | ftiend and trum be unhappy if I left him, but I can his attitude was outwardly reapect.|a# his butler not change my ways, and he says But in spite of his butler’s at | But why had he taken employment |cannot change his pane advine tire, something jn hin demeanor seem-|&t the Millers? me. MARY. ed mont arrogant | I walked across the path and If you will not change your I concluded, immediately, that he | Picked some bitter-aweet berries from was bent on blackmail, for he had | the vines on the fence, welghing the whys, and he will not change committees consists! tived in Certels’ house when I waa|man rapidly, The result of my his, of course unhappiness will : continue in your home, But this nderwall, chairman * there valuation stood thus: He had sought Men. m tutor nd rm t. ¥ | L) pee ee eee eek Me. BSI Millers ‘in order in the wrong attitude, If you Johns, Mra. An well, the prest-| “Well?” I anid. “Let me see— are going to be happy, both of you must compromise tent, will talk on “Our Club and the |Your name. Berghott?” I drawied | , out my indifferently to It is probably just as neces- Marjoribanks, of Ver a | daughter \Cordz, to will take Conservation League Circle No. One, of the servation League of Amer Friday at two ‘eh rium of Fre In order to rm with small children arrangements have b for ‘their care in the joining the hall. The program lof Mra, Ralph V; Child tt had been Certein’ agent while acting .-* Martha ¢ . Mrs stherg haa re me, 2601 Fifth m Anne Boule Her sonindaw and daughter and Mra, Merle Denny, have leiven up their home in Mount Raker ‘ark, and will spend the winter with Mrs thers to at nm made nursery ad the the . Mr. Denny, who while in sery € has re ved his honorable discharge from: the army and is again in business in Seattle. Social etub . Friday wan wounded in on Certeis’ agent, set Chrystobel, Hami whether Certels were words sary for you to make certain changes to please him ox ft is for him to reconstruct himself along the lines you most ap- prove of. There should be no campaign on the part of either of you to make radical nges in the other. You should endeavor to make your husband care so much for you that he will unconsciously be guided by your wishes, be- cause he will want to please you. And you must let him know you care for him, and that |,,:ndieeation, and practically, you are willing to make con- | ical authorities, are due, Rime cesmions for his pleasure. In- | out of ten, to an excess of hi ntead of thinking of your mar- |chloric acid in the stomach, 3 riage as a failure, resolve that “acid stomach” ts exceedingly dam you are going to make it a suc- |gerous, and sufferers should do elthel cess. You would probably be as one of ig ge pee unhappy as he, if you left him, oy .. and that would be acknowledging and often dieagresa®le diet, ay that you failed. Make a greater irritate the stomach and lead effort. Don't be afraid to make | ce few concessions. To do so is jas show strength of character, tap weakness. jof the harmful acid and prevent formation of gas, sourness or mature fermentation by the use |little Bisurated Magnesia at meals. There is probably no better, lor more reliable stomach ant |than Bisurated Magnes! | widely used for this purpose. | It no direct action on the stomach, is not @ digestent But a te ful of the powder or a couple of five grain tablets, taken in a little with the food, will neutralize the @ cess acidity which may be and prevent its further fot ‘This moves the whole cause of trou! and the meal naturally and healthfully need of pepsin pills or art! gestents. Get a few ounces of B Magnesia from any reliable Ask for either powder or tablets never comes as a liquid, milk or rate, and in the bisurated fo | not ative. Try this plan | eat at you want your |meal, and see {f this isn’t the advice y watch Corteis’ wite. living or dead! No information was too meager to be unimportant to a spy of his type, no incident too trivial to pass un noticed by him, no employment, not even abduction, too dreadful for him | to undertake. I resumed my walk, saying, as I gathered the bunch of red berries in i my arms “You are quite right, Berghoff. The matter of my stay in Dr. Cert house is now--ancient history Joan dearest tat ts ath" I atill have a fecling of unreatity—| “Madam!” A certain eagerness that all this exciting melodrama of broke the usual even tones of the Randy and John Merron’s meeting is|™&n’s voice, “Madam! I have im |a dream, and that I shall wake to|Portant information for you. For find myself still Herron's secretary, | YOU--e@lone!” working like mad, half admiring him (To Be Continoed) half tonging to do some ¢ _ to throw him off his t But n 1 have done my last ser- vice for him. I have set my desk in order, and the old meretary, Watts who fell I] at Silversand, has wired he can come back. An I nit here writing I ean hear echoes of the strange affair still going on. Randy and Herron aré talking in the office. Only it is Randy who ts won llaying down the law, and—miracte of day of every month at two o'clook, | MrAcles—Jobn Herron who is listen- the ladies’ parlors of the church. |!9# 8nd ansenting The flrut meeting will be Friday. “You will agree, then,” I fust over- oat heart Herron saying, “not to mention | Borrowed Time Chub the Ridgeley Lakes land development The Borrowed Time Club meeta|atfatr to Milln and the directors?” every Thursday in Mal Hall. 9% ely on condition that » Fourteenth Avenue North F i fro Bast | Forty-fifth funda to the people you robbed,” ‘our Randy's reply ndy continued, in a coc summer place at |v od Chr ivi 7 "I insist upon your are again in their ny a full retraction and apology a Mille’ wife for the nasty #1 in Bentavite You, 1 quite nd it will be hard to get. But get it. John Herron has the reput jtion of getting whatever he oe ‘ aoa Pr al Our Club Life A reading servation,” will be given Zeanick, Mins Mar ‘The Witches’ Dance,” | Tho hostesses for the afternoon are Mre. Kt. 1. Vander wall and Mra. Hoasie Smith eee Chautauqua Cirele The Chautauqua Circle of the Unt versity District will hold its opening nesting Friday at two o'clock at W, A. T. Camp-/ eenth Avenue North dy of American probe lems will be taken up for the year’s work | Engagement he St Mr, and Mra. James D. Exary an-| nounce the engagement of their] y¢, ; Iniece. Mise Nancy May Garrison, to| MT. and Mrs. C. Ww. Wiley left |3tr. Cart Raymond Gustafson. The | Ar wee foe i et Te la” pen | wedding will take place in Novem | gone of the Todd shipyards, in Ta per: coma. ©. Henry, Mr. and =| Green and Black Club H.| The Green and Biack Club will give their second daftcs of tie sea s Lawrence Mpete, json, . Seethall informal, Saturday f. and Mrs. Raymo! Vright, a levening, October 18, In their ball and Mrs. C. D. Stimson. jroom at the Mount Baker club) | eee | | houre icale for Mr. The committee in charge of the |for New York, to be gone about #ix Mr. John Spargur, director | } nformal will be: Mr, Leon | Weeks. They will return by way of Spargur |toorait Serr nrold Morford, Mr_| California, where they will make a the Seattle Symphony Orchestra, guest, Dr. and Mra. Fred: hharles Richeson, Mr. w gos oe vind ‘honor Dever, Mr. Reimer Phillipa and Mr 4 Hick Bentley entertained the Seattle | Casper Rice. BH | Mr. and Mra. Warren Hinton nave | mon Friday at two ¢ at the ius! Art Society and thetr| fat their home last evening.|Overscas Club to Give Dance Mra W. Wiley left The Romances Summer Girl Miss Angela MacClellan, who has been visiting Min Lillian Michaelis in Victoria, returned Wednesday Seattle. KhA ie thi nd Mra, Loss K. MeDonald. tm nt, will leave Saturday On Board the “Wayfarer,” Mr 1 Wednesday W. ©. TU, of Ballard W. C. T. U. of Ballard wit cl The e oe a to net | Popular Shades For Coming Season Dear Miss Grey: Is brown going to be the leading color this f winter? kK. W. Brown promises to be very popular this winter, but navy blue always remains a good sec- ond to any favored shade; black also is good. To Reduce Double Chin Dear Miss Grey: duce a double chin? 4 Frequently this is the result of holding the head incorrectly. Keep your head up and chin out Practice exercises that bring the muscles of the neck and chin into play. Massage is 6 el . |taken the Langdon C. Henry home| home of Mrs, Emily, Thorgrimaom id program was given by aporate wet at the Highlands for the winter 18 Weat Fifieth Street. The pro. | 3 ph Fathers gram will be conducted by the legin- olyn Geary Ruge, Mise Mre. D. Stimeon and MragAtex ative superintendent, Mra. Earnest Tanner, Miss Edna Me-| 7 ‘and Mr. Earl Alexander, | the receiving line with Mrs.jat nine o'clock. were Mrs. Lewis Fielding | for relief work Mr. John Spargur and Miss Mire. H. Jackman will have charge | time i t of the #0-\o¢ the punch, and Mr. H. Jackman, Mrs. A. E. Boardman and/ Mr. A. H. Gibbons and Mr. H. A. Nellie Cornish presided over | Sinciair are the reception committee. | ‘coffee urns. Later in the month the club proposes | a hte have a benefit dance for children a for Guests orphaned by the war. compliment Miss Lillian Petti- of Palo ec ‘ourse of Study Thomas Wentminister a shortiGuid of Presbyterian Ess Church, offers to the women of Se- attle & course of study upon Ameri Mra. W. EF. Perkins, who went|canizAtion, Americanizing the for Bast with her daughter, Miss Jane, | olgner and Christianizing the Amer- will return next week. jican. This class will De taught by oe {Dr. M. A. Matthews, The clam Mr. and Mra. Robert Moran and | will meet the second and fourth Misa Nellie Motan, of Rosario, wiil| *eloccupy the home of Mrs. A. Rocke: 25) Robertnon, who leaves Tuesday for | the East, to be gone all winter, dur-| = | ing her absence. urday evening | sire putbitt Proceeds are used | hy. Stimuc Mra. F. Bible and | gsiimson will o returned, but Mrw and Mrs. remain for In an English churchyard there fs a yew tree estimated to be centuries old. tea at her home yesterday n. The decorations were out in t® spirit of autumn, masses of bright autumn foliage @bout the rooms, and flowers ponizing shades. Mrs. Bow ‘was assisted tn receiving by Edward B. Ballinger and Mrs. MeMillan. Mrs. R. A. Ballinger Mrs. W. W. Felger presided the tea table, assisted by Miss Bremmond, Miss Naomi .Nor- Miss Betsy Booth and Mixx Coupe. Little Miss Hope Me received the cards at the ble Shop Dance | Miss Katharine Crawford and M Marion Haynes are in charge Of the regular dance the Jumble | tonight. * | | | Henry I. Eagert returned Monday from Stehekin, on Lake Chelan, where they have beon for the past two weeks. oe How can I re- bi 1. T. Mr. and Mra. ayment STORE, Second and Uni of | Rt Mr. and Mre come in from th Colby, and Preston Carr have Mra. Walter Ti. ing severnl wee Nettleton ts spend io the Eas | undorete: IN “DeLuxe Mr. Fred McKenale, who has been the guent of his brother, Mr. Charles McKenale, for several months, will after, ham't be? Randy mocked. leave Monday for Florida. } There was slience. 1 could see al pe | mental picture of Herron sitting | SPECIALISTS fet lnteoaty feadban wel testes Beal IN BLOUSES spirit against the bars erected with Jeuch amazing suddenness by this ob- | PEPLUM BLOUSE AT $10.85 seure young men, “Randall Lewis, of It's a sure winner and can Bentsville.” | He will agree to all of Randy‘s| be had in all colors, designs and sizes. Mra. Robert G, Denney ts spend- ling a fortnight Jp Spokane. ee |_ Mra. Winfield Smith will leave cee ghter | Wednesday for the East to spend the setts Ges sie ae ye | winter and Mrs. Ralph Hawth +4 bea onsen |! Wilkes Theatre | are the birth of © daughter, Sep-| cee Mrs, James D. Lowman has re lturned from Ellensburg, where she |has been visiting her sister, Mra. —lHenry E. Hathaway, for the past | week. up terms; he must. He had one weak | lnk Jn his armor—and Randy found {t. His whole earthly ambition ts] for power. Yet he ts wise, He knows & man,cannot hope for big success | with a black chapter in his life like |that Ridgeley Lakes affair, I see John Herron learning his les- | carefully repairing his mistake, land going smoothly on, wary land but successful—aining but forded | to walk the straight and narrow in| ert ain his place of power | ] A But, oh, Joan darling, what of me? feel smirched and unclean realized the ugly misunders' vas creating in the dear hom: eee | |. Mr. and Mra, C. A. Kinnear spent | | $4.45 to $6.45 Mr. Samuel H. McDonald left A whole “flock” of taffetas Tuesday {8r the East, on an extend-|{| In plaids and stripes that can ed business trip. } ed on Fifth Ave. at @ few days of last week in Olympia. oe e son, hard yin shrew Myron Col oma, and Mra will nd. Col gate from Post of the to attend which will have a he Cramer, of © presidency of the road, have 1 with a fresh get that heretofere Sizes up an't be been the America state conv th shipment surpaas shown to 48. fitted. ot anything at this price, Don't say you the ‘ation, I never wsion ndings I love. 1, power, wrve, . Mr. W | from Chatham, during Red Seal Records § 4) .x:::2°. | the Hotel Sorrento for too, was ambitious dear, but to love, to be for the cb lov to have the imple, sweet and lasting thing When that joy seemed denied me, was ambitious for business success, was all that was left hip is bad enough, but an old maid with money is treated more like a {human being than an old maid who is poor. And now, THE MARKET BLOUSE SHOP 107 Pike St. 107 Pike St. Durable Durham Hosiery is a product of industrial democracy wer of Child Labor. We have no strikes or lockouts. Four Fine New Old maid Steady wearers of Durable Durham know that it is all we claim it to be Truthful statements and good value have sold Durable Durham to the women—and men—of the country. It is hungry to know more about} really the hosiery of the American family. Hundreds of the darling little house, and your | women know it is as good as advertised, because they plans and dreams. have found it so. It saves money because it wears so “I'll try not to be heartstck, Joan, | much longer. There are fewer new pairs to buy—and E You know T love you better | ; than anyone :jn thi whole living| far less darning to do. wortd, ee ay Bee | And it is surprising that it sells at such a reasonable Randy, oe price. Ask your dealer to show you Plain People Ever Ready to Help and to Serve Spt nat DURABLE DURHAM HOSIERY viona cat little frightenee FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN MADE STRONGEST WHERE THE WEAR IS HARDEST dear, I must go back to old job. Life, in olor, turns drat » back to t 45 Tam to have a talk Iam hungry for news| FRANCES ALDA e ae th |S befor Sings “Laddie 0’ Mihe”—$1.90 one in, JULIANA Elastic ribbed Nica wea Bele Bniah Sronely dauble ntorced heels toes. Feet No. with Randy of yor house at MISCHA ELMAN Plays “Tango”— GALLI-CURCI Sings “Sempre Libera” from “La Traviata”—$1.00 Here Are the HAT Which express the season's style decrees in shapes, colors and trimmings, No, they are not expensive, if bought at this Second Floor Shop We can suit you toa T FIVE DOLLARS Al nee. down for an en I'm not. GLUCK and ZIMBALIST Render “Swedish Cradle Song”-—$1.50 Only a has hap- | Hl the loneliness that is The talk with Randy | od very loving * DOLLY. FRENCH PEASANTS ARE MAKING MONEY| PATS, Oct. 9.4-French peasants many of them—are sald to be making _|as high as $5,000 a year as a result of the high prices 'of f66d,, Yet they | }pay no me tax, On the other! hand, the peasants criticise the gov rnment for slowness in reestablish ) of communication with the That's the story of The! Salvation Army, and it needs your assistance. yoned, and | ahead, will do me Your VICTROLAS $25 TO $430 Convenient Payment Terms TAR HEEL A medium weight fock with 3 thread, strongly Feinforeed heele ’ Give in sustain service, an amount to a year’s home Every pair is strongly reinforced. Legs are fulllength; tops are wide and elastic; soles and toes are smooth, seamless and even; and the sizes are accurately marked. The Durham dyes do not fade. Look for the trade-mark ticket attached to evety pair. You should be able to get Durable Durham Hosiery at any dealers. If you cannot—write our Sales Depart- ment, 88 Leonard Street, New York. ry Mills, Durham, N. C, 88 Leonard Street, New York | | | toe to come and rs rent en patrons Sherman Low | |OPPORTUNITY WEEK, ae OCTOBER 6 TO 11 WE DO REMODELING | Army ‘Today Second Floor, Denny Bldg. | 1408, Second Ave, | ay & Co ae” avy, gray, ine Let's go eat at Boldt's—uptown, LTD 1 A ES 111 3d Ave.; downtown, 913 2d Ave.