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— ~ Saas = \=Sa : \)) _By Kathleen Norris; cCorp¥Riont BY KATNLBEEN NORRIS “4 aie YNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS P beautiful and clever—tn married to a man who cares more f wine and hie 12-year fi - for Rachael, Aithe Rachael tives in luxury, she yearns for the more complete f his daughte er nickname !9 At the exclusive Long Island Country erdrinking, te in bed. Hac my ar ere marriage to GO Fairfax euisn and how her father and mother had taken Rer_ to nd when she wae 24 years old, There Rachael aa tive aict's paradies. “There shen wun MM wig hhe+>- wae brouRht back to apend a wir er in New Y ‘ wer Ponvere e » Prat ended when fed. In } ‘aris ® A fire: w married him a tithe leagnte hen usury | age eye evated to z # dauahter : the * urdend het tra? declares mis Don’t let that ot of ecrema | h ree her Warren Grego 3 vo ul i. te ~] or similar skin e continue to! f + home reflecting on (his strange situation, He recalled how mother, W mt 4, had always held oy you. It is nly embarrass a old will eventually affect your (Continued From, Yesterday) } had, why had he not found the time|try. But do we try hard enough? pemes. Resin! Ountment will usually| De, Warten Gregory, riding away | { cross the water and go to see her? | Isn't there generally some fault on ne. mmlieve th ing and itching atonce, from the Breckenridge home, re.| Nothing might have come of it, true. | beth sides, quick words, angry, “4 and in most cases clear the trouble call how his mother has always! BUt she might have yielded to him | hasty actions, argument and blame, von ie rsa and | regreatted the fact that he was not pes readily as to Clarence Brecket | when we say things we don't a fealing, and its gentle ingredients |a good Catholic like herself, ridge and that we are sure to regret, eh “od goothe while they hea dane kik ot mela a I love her!” he said to himself,| We all get tired of the stupid round " ieee Mersey ade And it seemed wonderful, nd | of daily @ do w 1 it RESINOL SHAVING STICK 4 Catholic she had made him a| gweer pose Ber “ shee pap Pe o 6 uty, " of the —. ° vo contains these same qualities, mak i man, and tt was a fair and!) oy, os gall +t teppei try og Eeriiaa! for wen with ta conte ~ Pon jove per, Rut she love | too. d all like a change, lke to “ned lag it Ideal for men w th t ¥ : Warren | me or cating poor Rachael! She's | see if we couldn't do something else ~ed Ay atl droga a Soved. Einvercit tae ctmes cn ten |Pemporten rhe alrendyt better! And so comen the b and ve i ee oo 2 back to | gy 2it,® matter of fact, Rachael! the cloud on a fine old name, and all mt ast. Hie the * beck tO) thought about him very often dur-| 56 " . Rachae seemed to « pecause we aren't better roldiers—we “4 Tats go cat at Boldts—uptown, |Cachach It seemed to him that he ling the course of the next two oF|don't want to march in line’. Hien tail phd 3d Ave; downtown, 913 2d Ave, | OAS Mwave Known, Huw deeply, how) three days, and after he had left! mo, don't 1 know the feeling myself? ra —— ~ | "He had a thrilling memory of her| "tt that night she could think of/ Why, that good little wife of mine i ’ A = REATH as Persis Pomer Poof Ree Rothing else, ‘To the admiration of could tell you some tales of dlscour Picturization of the Oliver Morosco 4 ste spe id ars|men she was cheerfully accustomed; agement and disenchantment that ar re . ie Mi nin pon perhaps it would be safe to say that) would make you open your eyes! But ny year-old, with he 7] ©) not in the course of the paat ten! wie braces mo up. ab te heart inte orm Cap thick Braids, looped up at the neck Nahe braces me up, she pute heart in or Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets ¢ and tied with a flaring biack bow. | 2ee'# had she ever found herself) me—and the first thing 1 know I'm a at the Cause and Remove lt i. embered watching her, hear: | mn a man mpany yout) marching agai Posed _ ing for the ¢ time the delicious |°Ye*ine &@ more or lens definite dec And having comfortably #hifted the Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the| voice with its English accent: “Welt, | ration of his admiration for her.| entire trend of the conversat om a for calomel, act gently on the | whould say it was indeed *| But tonight's affair was a little dit! his parishioner to himself and found positively do the work. Well, I should say it was indeed: | UACtVe for several reasons. Warren) nothing insurmountable in his own Actoaa more than ten yeara he re.| CTC#Ory Was a most exceptional man,| problem, the good bishop would o i called the careless, crisp little an for one thing; he was reputedly @/ chuckle minchievously at find his 4 Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are @/awer to some comment from Peraia,|C°Mbblooded man, for another; and) eminent self quite human after all, settable compound mixed With olive! his first precious memory of | FT & third, he had been extraordl| and would suggest their going in to ni They act gently but firmly on the| pachael. ‘The giris, he 1 mbered, ' in earnest. There had been tind Mra hop, and having a cup t- powels and liver, stimulating them tO were supposedly too ing for a ftation, he had committed him: | of tea. These women, alwayn reat gatural action, clearing the blood, and; certain dance that was imminent, |"*l wholeheartec She was con:| tess and dissatiafied, were a part of Ee ske entice system, “They do they Ware copteiig thelr pourntul | @nml of 8 pl able thrill, How:| his work, he prided himaelf upon the which calomel does, without any . baffled roses and sun. |¢Ye gracious, however gallant War-| swiftness and tact with which he dis or two. jen was, there had been no social] PRIZMA the bad after effects. Take one or > Mrs. Pomeroy's big. placid h | posed of them RY ipery night for a week =e the) negatives. Gregory could still see | Prétense in his attitude tonight ach: mouth twisted wryly at ta pleasing effect. 10¢ and box. [the matren’s comfortably shaking Fag for a er gree ha let) the thought of him. No, she could tory ————| head, see Perais attacking again and |r imagination play pleasantly with! nor bare her woul to the bishop. | ‘ the aituation. It was at least a new! en SL Paal Stove & Plum! ain Uke a frantic butterfly, and | , te co “the little Enetian girl.” perched | ought, and lite had run in a groove} Nor could she approach Father Ze Firebacks, lMaings| 4, +). pores "rail : he King from | fr 4 long, long time. Granted tho| Graves with any real hope of a hel and repa’-s for all °" + hows aged" las i ly ing word, To seek him out in his ‘ citi 7 Cage ty. with | Preliminaries safely managed, it} 0 in © ge? Ree eee eerne, Omens, SNe. WHR) Ce ke a great tries ene | study—that esthetically bare and yet Intimate Scenes fanges and | fur-| her blue, serious eyes | 0B! hg « aie, Pema . th it n 7 sacee. Woter Becks | “why had he never thought of her|¥oman whom Clarence Breckenridge! beautiful room, with ite tobace« and connected. again until Clarence Breckenridge |"#4 Ignored to come back into this] brown hangings and monastic fur-/ brought her back with him, a bride, !8FOUp as Warren Gregory's wife nishing tn black eak—would be to} GUTERSON’S 608 PIKE ST. : : invite mischief, To ait there, with 875 six years later? tanec Goto Church _ Sunday, 7:30 P. M. All Seattle Episcopal Churches will combine in a wonderful mamed meeting of Episcopalians—you are invited—to dis cuss the Nation-Wide Campaign of the church, which is now sweeping the coun try. Remember the hour—730 p, m., Sun- day night. LEARN WHY All Episcopal Churches are pining im thie ta itien-wide effort igantic forward movemen' ing of which It has dreamed Americs. The if you have neo raed to come Nation - Wide Campaign by such able epenkers as: THE RT. REV. F. W. KEATOR, D. D. Bishop of the Diecese of Otympia ARTHUR G. PRITCHARD, of Tacom: REV. H. H. GOWEN, D. D. The massed choirs of all Seattle Provide music. Episcopal Churches will METROPOLITAN T SUNDAY NIGHT BOX OFFICE OPE Appearance of the Indescribable Phenomenon . M. Eddy DEMONSTRATING | : SPIRIT POWER IN THE LIGHT ft “f Producing Such Phenomena as FUOATING ‘TABLES AND CHAIRS, SPIRITUALISTIC RAP. 8. SLATE WRITING, MATERIALIZATION, REMARK- I ABLE TESTS OF THE HUMAN MIND, ET Ke tm darkness but in open light. Produced with all the weird 4nd impressive surroundings of the seance room. - Or, rather, having thought of her, as he undoubtedly | THE SEATTLE STAR Rachael got into bed, Minging two! | her eloquent eyes fixed upon his or three books down beside her pi - lar Gnd Mahilaw the. amad ap) baunting voice wrapping itself about that stood at athe bedaide, Bhe| his senses, would be a genuine ceu-| ORCHESTRA dein nesenlt unchin to vend toward a harmiens, wellinten Z “Wouldn't Florence and Gardner| tioned youth whose herolam in ab ER buss!” she thought with smile, |Juring the world, the flesh, and the} ...Vietor Herbert ‘And if they bussed at the orce,|@evil had not yet been great enough} what wouldn't they aay if I really did|t© combat hie superb and dignitied| EET: SA ipeacry?” Bai the oles “ae it let. |@motiam. At beat, he would be wor | SANE Sertetentraet i SS and Rachael reaching for “The Way |? mi hael's revs n st her soul — — = . . to jong a rankly indisereet talk wi ¥ Mek Uf it ia tent tae tne ante | ot: he own: at worst, he would con.|Billy was breathing hard Clarence.| sets. must perforce breathe on a|Havitand questioned, anxiously. 0,| fe Bagh eatcad oe ace carry out plane, or I never do, any|strue her confidence in an entirely |shakily holding « fresh match to his| warm spring morning. “Do you real-|of course you Gen't! He's not him | Tiler ON store, 1108 First |more. I used to feel equal to any| Personal sense, and feel that she|cold cigaret, gent a lowering look |tze that it's almost 11 o'clock?” cif now, for several reasona For |of 8. Sirkel's shoe store, 1198, First | Gtuation, now 1 don'troetting ola |eame net at all to the priest and ail whter to wife. Rachael only | erfectly'” Mra. Breckenridge sald.|one—and that's what I specially) ave. during the night. bigg Berge gece: ee nergy themes her shoulders I alept until 9, and felt quite proud |eame to speak to you about—for one| was gained thru the skylight. | A dreamily at the soft shadows in nel Dismissing him from her councils Well, I'll have my breakfast,” she] of myself to think that I had got)thing, he's Ly so Dros nne rosed bere tek | big room—" wonder if things are an| Rachael thought of Florence Havi.|*#4. and turning she went from the/ thru so much of the day! a bor St iy, “and joe Picker | a queer to mont people an they are to|land, the good and kind-hearted and|feom and down stairs to the sun| Mrs. Haviland gave her a sharp) land. significantly, |mo? I don't get much joy out of life,|capable matron who was Clarence's|*%iny breakfast porch. There were| look In a: Y. BAk quien Gianggeey- | A, p it is, and yet I don't dare cut|sister and only near felative, she| flowers on the Jittle round table, a) !ng. yet far from pleased. | Rachael raised somber eyes, but} |}oome and go away. No maid, no club,|and Florence had always been good} >risht glitter was struck from silver} I started the girlies off to § o'clock | did not speak | | | living at some cheap hotel—no, 1! friends, had often discussed Clarence|*"! Slass, an icy grapefruit service,” she said capably. “Praulein} «1, carol here?’ her aunt asked, t } couldn't do that! I wish there was|of late. What sort of advice would|M!N& With Juice, stood at her wees Wee eee See See nares Se ane ‘: { someone who could advise me—some| Florence's 45 years be apt |The little room was all windows, and | maids free to go when they please”) «Dregging,” Rachael answered,| } disinterested person, somecne who—-|to give to Rachael's 26? “Don't be| today the cretonne curtains had been ae _" one of cabs te] fr | briefly : 1 well, who loved me, and who knew|so absurd, Rachael, half the men in| Pushed back to show the garden| ‘orlls tualens. | Ckentnee Bete | (Continued Monday.) i} Take “‘Cascarets’’ if sick, { that I've always tried to be decent, | our érink as much as Chatence| rave in new spring green, the ex: | Sis meet aS, eee eee eat core eran incite 67 Sil + |always tried to play the game. All does. Don’t jump from the frying ite Sresknens of <n 8nd’ looms vag porte ce: gens nt . : + Bilious, Constipated. ; t I want Is to be reasonably well|fan into the fire, Remember Elsie] ‘ree# that bordered it. and far away | tetted, set conmigo a a |Loses Suit Against i “ ; treated; to have a good time and be| Rowland and Marian Cowles when rang ee Pie ve $1 che coer abd hago hg, seal re gta Pog Ae ome | * Le aa ete among pleasant people you talk so lightly of diveres ]the meariet and white dota that were| “Was Gardner at the Berry Btokes| “Traction Company | pisoy tite: straighten up! Yoo | He thoughts wandered That would be Florence's probable | ©) cocked ne ROHA. Grade inane asked pevern ph hapa = Aer for Injury Damage” stem i fled wath liver and bowel } or the various friends whose attitude. Stil it was a bractn t ; reali 7 G . 7 Tt cae ‘ 2 <y | K 1. abdgansiok iho reba redechod be sig alterna plore prt iain bc and purple lilac rustied ip | All comprehension at once, bY Spetiaattes Seay othe Pahl Muoaha Hoe pale aon erage ag crag }to clear her own thoughts and sim: thing Florence did and #aid. And nts of green leaves, a bee o, be couldn't, Mr. Payne wd irra Po mi sewed comaty| ack Dee toe ee | plify the road before her. Strangely | Florence was above everything a|Dundered from the blossoming wis-| the Londen branch was here, you) ’ reaponatels, 2 me in| Gussie tides paneieme par cat wae ~ * A dog a ‘i taria vine into the room, and biun-| know, and Gardner's been terribly | W9% not responsible for injuries in-| turning into poison and you can not enough, Warren Gregory's own! good church member, a prominent! 1 tol again, Far off Rachael| tied. He left yesterday, thank gooa.| curred by A. W. Nimtz when he! feel right. Don't stay bilious or con- mother was the first of whom she Christian in her self-sacrificing wife |) asa a cock breaking the Sabbath |neas! Clarence went, of course? Oh, | Stepped from a moving street car at! stipated. Feel splendid always by jthought; that pure and austere and |hood and motherhood, her social and| hound & Conk Beeline The Ruin) tear, dear, dear?” |the corner of E. Madison and 27th| taking Cascarets occasionally, They uncompromising heart would certain. ‘charitable and civio work. Sho might! ,. tne clock in the dining room| The last three words came on a|@¥e. last March, a jury in the U. 8./act without griping. or inconver ly find the way. Whether Rachael /be unflattering, but she would be! 104 one allver note for the half|gentle sigh. Clarence’s sister com-| ‘strict court before Judge E. E./ience. They never sicken you like had the courage to follow it was an-/right. Rachael's last conscious)... tne bella of the church in the| pressed her lips and shook her hand.| Cushman brought in a verdict Fri-| Catome!, Salts, Oi! or nasty, harsh other question, fhe loved old Mra./thought, ax she went off to sleop,| iit’ tie nelle OF Ake COUrll It oon | tome head |day absolving the traction company pins, They cost £0 little too—Cas- Gregory: they were good friends. Rut | was that she would take the carliest |! s Iw he very bad?” she asked, reluc | °f blame for the accident |careta .work while: yom seep. ; Rachael dismissed her with a@ little possible moment to extract a verdict | ° cee ate Po , | tantly . . Nimtz had asked for $25,000 dam- ~ shudder, as from the spatter of icy oO © comfor ne beauty, and “4 |ages for injuries received. He al- . ‘ou water against her bared breast. The © © © ¢ e/the harmony of all this, however,| “Pretty much as usual,” Rachael | jeged that the conductor had opened | 1414 34 Ky Sorel Bs yes bishop? Rachael and Clarence duly She went into her husband's room| #chael saw and felt nothing, Her answered, philosophically, “I had) tne gates and called the station, and) ——————__ e vane. kept a pew in one of the city’s fash- at 10 o'clock the next morning to find| btief interview with her husband had Greg in.” And suddenly, unexpected: | that when he stepped to the strect | ; jon.able churches: it was the Brecken-| filly radiantly presiding over a toad.| left a bitter taste in her mouth. She/ ly, she felt a quick happy flutter at) the car was atill in motion. A pass i ridge family pew, rented by the fam-/ed breakfast tray, and the invalid,|felt neither courage nor appetite for her heart, and a roseate mist drifted, ing automobile struck him, hurling d ‘ly for a hundred years. But they » and pasty, and with no par-|the new day, Annie carried away the before her eyes. | him over 100 feet, maiming him for } | never sat in it, although Rachae! felt ar interest in food evinced by the bow! of porridge untouched, re It's disgraceful!’ Mrs, Haviland) life, according to his complaint Give the folks t vaguely sometimes that for reasons twitching muscles of hie face, never.| Porting to “She don't want no paid, eyeing Rachael hopefully for al SI AS oa at home a treat undefined they should, and Clarence thelens neatly brushed and shaved, |€8s*. "Or sausage, nor waflles-—noth- wifely denial, As this"was not forth for Christmas. |was apt in moments of nentiment to propped up in pillows, and making a|!%& more!” coming, she went on briskly: “How-| SAY§ STRIKES COST | Choice Salmon reproach his wife with the statement | visible effort to appear convalese Ellie, the cook, who boarded a four: | ever, my dear, Clarence isn't the only | ice that hia grandmother had been a How are you this morning?” Ra-| year-old daughter with the gardener |one! They say Fi Bowditch is| U.S. $37,000,000 A iy faithful church woman, and his/chael asked, perfunctorily, with her|and hin wife, at the gate lodge, was|actually"—nher voice sank to a di®| strikes, since the first of January.| Carefully packed mother had always attended chureh | quick « ¢ moving from the books|deep in the robust charms of this|creet undertone as she added the/i9i9 nave cont the United States in ice and re-iced on pleasant mornings in winter om the table to the wood fire burn-| young person, and not sorry to be) word—"violent; and poor Lucy Pick | shipping board $27,000,000, the +. sel Fr wither But the bishop called on Rachael !ing tazily behind brass firedogs.| uninterrupted ering needed a rest cure the moment | cuits of an investigation of the ser. tination ia reached. once a year, and Rachae} Nked him, | everything in perfect ord Thank goodness she don't!” she| she got her divorce, she was in tch| ious economic waste in marine ced Express prepaid to 1 mingled an alr of pretty peni-|iHelda’s touch visible everywhere. |. “Do you want a little waMe|a nervour state, I'm not defending] snipyard strikes during the. period Rhy aprons Ofna tence for past negligences with a! “Pine.” Clarence answered, also| all for yourself, Lovey? Do you want| Clarence Foe’ Wmateiaeh “hae meee. ce *“Guaranterd to gracious promise of better conduct in perfunctorily. His coffee wax un-|to pour the batter into ma’s iron| “What are you doing, then?” Ra-| Copaing to information received t arrive in excellent future. His Grace was a fine. touched, and the cigaret in his long| yourself? Pin a napkin around her,|chael asked, with her cool smite. line dedueneed Mareen of tos ean condi breezy, broadminded man, polished | holder had gone out, but Billy was|Anniet An’ then you can eat it out) “Well, I~" Mrs. Haviland, who! io, o¢ Commerce Included in ‘the way our oie in manner, sympathetic, and toler-| disposing of eggs, toast, bacon, and|on the steps, darlin’, because it Just{had been drifting comfortably BIONS| net of losses are marine a “er . » Fast of jant. He had not risen to his present cream with youthful zest. Clarence’s| seems to be a shame to gpend a min-/On a tide of-words, stopped, a little| ior ‘strikes, longehore strikes and $2.00 Mins. River eminence by too harsh a rebuke of| hot, sick gaze rested almost with hos.|ute indoors when God sends us a|at a loss, “I hope I don't have to} J . Thee e “and 82.25, the sinner. His handsome young assistant | Father Graves, as he liked to be alled far more radical. But great deal was forgiven this attrac |tive boyish celibate by the women jof the Episcopal parish. They joyed his scoldings, gave him their| Lility upon his wife's cool beauty; in 4 gray linen gown, with a transpa al wh the throat esh sp Headache? indiffere she lc & morning. raid the nicely mod tv en: | ulated. confidences, and asked his advice, answer. A dark, ugly look came inte | th they never followed it His| his face, and he turned his eyes sul |alender, black clad figure, with the|lenily and wearily away. | Roman collar, was admired by many| “iow was the Chase dinner, Bill?” | bright eyes at receptions and church | pursued the cheerful visitor, una bazaars bashed | Still, Rachael could not somehow! “Same old thing,” Carol answered consider herself as seriously asking | brief “My dear Mrs. Breckenridge, that Clarence is now passing thru @ most | unfortunate, most lamentable, period in his life is, alas, perfectly true His mother lovely woman—was jone of my wife's dearest friends, one lof my own, His first marriage was | much against her wishes, poor ‘dear|as if he'd never touched jlady, and—as my wife was saying | stronger than malted milk!” |the other day-—-had she lived to see | don't tmagine I'll have much hitn happily married again, and her| trouble steering him off," Rachae grandchild in such good hands, it|said, coldly. “His Sundays are pret could not but have been @ great soy | ty well occupied without—sick calls! |oing to way you're asleep, so keep |quiet up here. € again?” unexpected vigor you can, Preaching at me last nigh: “Bteer him off to her. Yes. * * * Now, you and 1| There was a delicate and scornful jknow Clarence—-know his good/emphasis on the word “sick” tha points, and know his faults, That's | brow with each other?—oh, yes, I know we} The glances of the three crossed. ent white ruMe turned back from her ked as fresh as To this solicitude Clarence made no either of these two clergymen for You're not up to the Perrys’ lunch vice, She could see the bishop. ay, are you, Clancy?” | fitting finely groomed efingers to ‘Oh, my God, no!” burst from the gether, pursing his lips for a judicial | sufferer reply. Well, I'll telephone them. If Florence comes in this morning I'm} Do you want to seo No, I don't!’ said Clarence, with SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1919. her MMER ONE WEEK— Starting Today - SEATTLES BEST PHOTO PLAY HOUSE: It’s all about a honeymoon— The strangest honeymoon on record They hardly get a chance to kiss, and they can’t spoon at all! Starring NATURAL COLOR SCENIC “Marimba Land” Stage Success “SCREEN STARS AS THEY ARE” AUGMENTED then down comes the others at 9:30, or later, the way she never has a| Moment until it’s too late for High! I told her she had a right to look for another place!" | “There's worse places than this,” Ellie said, watching her small daugh ter begin on the waffle. A general) nodding of heads in a contented si-| lence indicated that there was some | happiness in the Breckenridge house: | hold even tho it was below stairs. — | .o. 6 A Cee oe el if t anything ht the blood to Clarence Breck:!and hot bread with superiority only | lone of the sad things about “us poor |e ‘s face, Billy flushed, too, and| possible to a person whose own| |human beings, we get to know each|an angry light famed into her eyes.| breakfast is several hours past | jother so well! And iwn’t it equally hats not fair, Rachael!” the girl} “Rachael, you lazy woman!" said true that we're not patient enough | said, hotly, “and you know it's not”) Florence Haviland lightly, breathing Rachael's somber revery was pres: ently interrupted by the smooth crushing of wheels on the pebbled drive and the announcement of Mrs Haviland, who followed her nami promptly into the breakfast room. A fine, large, beautifully gowned woman, with a prayer book in her white-gloved hand, and a vel) hold ing her close, handsome spring hat! in place, she glanced the coffee | deep, a8 @ heavy woman in tight cor: of Your Favorites Rachael flung up her head tiently, then dropped her face hands. “I don't want any open break,” she} muttered “You do? Oh, you don't?” used last year~ to KILL COLDS BILL'S CASCARA Stan wy opiates—bre Thoure—relieves grip in joney back i genuine box op with Mr. picture, At AN Drag QUININ in tablet form—eale, eure, 8 cold in 24 | ails, | has a. Red | impa: | in her} Mrs. | fo | 34 Bre | Hill's Stores | | shipyard walkouts. have oc AIS OC mornin’ like thi | @efend your own husband to you, Ra-| cusreq on the Atlantie, Pacific and MPANY It must have been grand, walking | chael,”” she anid, reproachfully Gulf coasts. The loss i Pler 5% |to church this morning, ail right,"| “I'm getting pretty tired of itr’| (jUlf Coasts. Tile lows incurred by 1525 Railrond Ave, |said Alfred, who was busy with golf|said Rachael, moodily 1 ne ee ee root ec aa et ee sticks and emery on the vineshaded| Mrs. Haviland watehed the dow A aR RE Ne PERS: pored jcast beautiful face opposite her with! Tm unique collection of Chincec “It wan!’ said Ellie and Annie to-)a sense of growing alarm. |works of art made by the late Li gether, and Annie added: “Rone from| “My dear," she enid, impressively.| tung Chang, one-time viceroy of Bowditch's was there, and she says! “of course, it's hard for you; we all|China, which for years collectors she can't get away but about once a| know that, But just at this time, tried vainly to acquire, has finally month. She always has to wait on| Rachael, it would be absolutely fatal| been bought by a Swedish syndicate the children’s breakfast at 8, and|to have any open break with Clar-| for $280,000. : A-GOOD, STRAIGHT, HONEST MEDICINE. VERDICT AFTER THIRTY YEARS “Some thirty years ago, a friend of mine recom mended Peru-na to me. He told me the good he had received from it as a good blood purifier and system renovator, I tried Peru-na to a ‘satisfied satisfactio My family have used it ever since. There i¢ no mis- take, Pe-ru-na ts a good, straight, honest medicine. It gives satisfaction to the whole body. ' ‘This is the way Mr. C. 219, Bellingham, Wash., using it 30 years. Pe-ru- thousands for nearly treatment of catarrh, H, Swartz, R. F. D. No, 2, Box feels about Pe-ru-na after a has had the confidence of haif a century as a reliable It 19 by regulating digestion, eliminating poisons from the system, purifying the blood, soo the nerves, that Pe-ru-na exerts such @ wonderfully bene= ficial effect upon all mucous membrances irritated by eatarrhal conditions Pe-ru-na isa tonic laxative, ready to take, ch no home should be without. Have it ready for coughs, colds, catarrh of the head, throat, stomach, bowels and all catarrhai inflammations No remedy can compare with Pe-ru-na for rebuilding the bodity health after protracted sickness, the ¢ panish influenza. AN FISHERIES i