The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 17, 1920, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1920. eartol Ra - By Kathleen Dorris; COPYRIGNT BY KATHLEEN NORRIS Starting YNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPT beautiful and ciever, ¢ ‘ Rach y oe ine a on " Mrecke ty but the elopen thie r, th 1ot hh Aauanee : Laon alles that Warren te growing tired of and in int y interested In 4 Magsie Clay (Continued From Yesterday) | tage puraued, “which seema!that you can stay as long as you're faily for the ehild ake.|a good boy, down there where it we saw him|nice and cool, digging in the sand He looked down gravely, almoat] pity, cape dly, and yet with tenderness, upon | He's an attractive b eager fa He had nfound| With her at Atlantle City last winter| and going barefoot her lovable, endearing, and sweet;|"-°ne of those wonderfully dressed,| “I'll be the beat boy you ever ven out ¢ hideous smoke and| Patient, pathetic child always | saw!’ Breck aputtered, eagerly, “I'll © om tall charming and| With the grownups! ‘The little chap| work for her, and I'l make the other irable. He tghtened his arma|Must have a rather queer life of it| kids work for her—she'll tell you she about the thinly wrapped little| rifting about from hotel to hotel,| never saw such a good boy! And I'll t They're hard up, and I believe mont | write you letters y I think it’s all settled now, | of the shops and hotels have actually! “You won't have to work, old Magsie!* he said black|int Hoe would seem to|man!” Billy felt strangely stirred as) Well, then!” Sho sealed it with | be the sort of man who can not hold/#he kissed him. She watched hi of her quick litthe kisses, ‘Now nything, and, of course, there's| he rushed away to break the news of t down and read a magasine,|the drinking! She's not the girl to/ bis departurt to the stolid Swediah Greg,” she said happily, “and in ten|*ve him, She drinks rather reck:|«irl in the kitchen and the colored minutes you'll see me in my new hat,|lessly herself; it's a part of her| boy at the elevator, Ho jerked his all ready to go to lunch | pose.” little bureau open, dd be 4.6. 8 Oy wee eee 1 wonder if she would let the| scramble among his clothes; he xe | The blue tides and fell at Youngeter come down here and/ lected a toy for Jim and a toy for ’ c Hi r sun shone| ramble about wit my boys? Ra-| Derry 1 his mother noticed that Se healingly down upon Rachael's sick {Chel said, unexpectedly he had| they were hia dearest toys, She took Z whe | Ret seriously thought of it: the mug | him down town and bought him a ed boya| Seetion eame idly But instantly it bathing sult “i sandals, and new and lay in the | lok defini hold. “I wonder if she| Paajmas, and his breathless delight tonic Atlantic | Would?” she ad with more antma-|@% he assured sympathetic clerks her, Space and| tion than she had shown for some| that he was going down to the sh were all about; ume. “I would love to have him,| made her realize what a lonely, un | ae teensaiea ra moved stead. | “04 of course the boys would go wild | Comfortable little fellow he had been ily in, and shrank back in a tumble) With joy! I would be so glad to dq) @ll these months, He could hardly m1 | eat his supper that night, and had to | 4 trenamecmmepen tometer wine: cRNA memes arene cm WALLACE warm sa breezes NE GIRL— or ue | $10,000.00. warmth Of foam and biue water; guile dipped |D00r Old Billy a good turn. she and whe the spray, As far as|! Were always friends, and had some | be punished before he would even at hee aneaee could reach, up| deer tlmes together. And more than| tempt to go to sleep, and the next NE WEEK be and down, there was the | that"—Rachael’s eyes darkened—"1| morning he waked bis mother at 6 : aol warm color, blue sea|DeUeve that if I had had the right in:|@nd'fairly danced with impatienc last prepara fluence over her she never would, 4nd anxiety as th ne rried Joe 1 regarded the| Were made whol# thing too lightly: 1 could have Billy took him down to’ Clark's tried, in a different way, to prevent| Hills herself. She had not notified it, at least. Iam certainly going to| Rachael or answered her in any way write her, and ask for little Brecken.)D¢Ver Questioning that Rachael} ridge. It would be something to do| Ould know her invitation to be ac: | for Clarence, too,” Rachael added in| cepted. But from the big terminal & low tone, and an If half to herseif,| tation she did send a wire, and and for many years I have felt|Chael and the boys met her after the that I would be glad to do something | "Ot trip for him! To have hin grandson here Billy, It was good of you to come At the moorings, and sent bright) doen't it neom odd?—and perhaps | Rachael said, kissing her quite natu ght nat the weather) 10° jh ag ¥Y ® hand; it seems al-| tally worn planks under the pier. Rachael | , i most like an answer to prayer! He I never thought of doing any when she saw Derry’s little : prayer! Hi ue sky, white sand niingling with yellow Anes, until] al! colors, in th® distance, swam in a haze of dull gold. Now and then, when even the re was hot, the boys elected to nd their afternoon by the bay on other side of the village. Here there was much «mall traffic in naies and dories and lobster-pots tides rocked the Imtie craft “The Lottery Man” MAX FIGMAN’S BIG STAGE SUCCESS The Comedy of Embarrassments P “NOTHING BUT. THE TRUTH” Could you go one week without telling a lie? : Watch how Taylor Holmes does it the stow they met , = " . » on é ye : can sleep on the porch, between the| thing else,” Billy said, breathing the A STORY OF THE HIGH COST OF LIVING K head confidently | resting | toys, and if he has some old clothes| fresh salt air with obvious pleasure. | against the flowing, milky beard Of) and-asbathing suit—" {"I had no idea that it waa such a AND A HUSBAND FOR A DOLLAR— old Cap'n Jessup, or heard ie * ©. © © © © « e/trip. But he was an angel—look at|@ bronzed lean younger man shout to My @ear Billy,” sho wrote that|them now—aren't they cute to! er we om 2-4 F older son, as to an equal. “Pitch! nicht, “1 have heard one or two hints| sether?’ that painter, w Jims lor late that you have m good many| Rachael's boys had taken eager| i She spoke infrequently but qui lthings tn your life just now that| Possession of their guest; the three/ Jot Warren to Alice. The Older! make for worry, and am writing to| Were fast making friends as they | woman discovered, with @ pang Of} now if my boys and I may borrow | trotted along together toward the old [ate Pine) dismay, that Rachael's attitude was] your small son for a few weeks OF & that Rachael ran herself 16 PIKE fixed beyond There ws) month, so that ong amati complica It's @ Joy to thom," their mother a ie ‘ at ae 3 : fi . ete ee nm Of & summer in the city will be| Maid. “Get in here next me, Bill. l ] t_] | : ‘ ane. Rachael «pared you. We are down here on|!'m not going even to look at you ian bed, ann ‘ Lor land on a strip of high jand, Until I get you home, Did you ever “a — : ~ i Ra v ‘3 4 . : wor unl the very ocean, and when Jim|4!l go down for a dip pretty soon ey must of course be he and not in the one they|! live so simply here that I'm en St. Paal Stove Repair & Plumbing ©. | 5 She would take them amay to | are in tha ethan Tr witt be| tirely out of the way of entertaining And then Firebacka, linings oe, oe ep | great joy to them to have a guest,|% guest, but now that you're here MUTT f . ia .* t's my| Kues end, repaire for all t on, ahe a ore Lay . A : | and © delight to me to take good care | ¥OU must stiry and have a little rest} and en FINISH SIGNED si ga oe Fen ne aa Se your boy. I think he will enjoy it, | Yourself? { paces. ‘ater backs dren ‘le a sane, balance 1 and it will certainly do him geod. “Oh, thank you, but—" Billy be and colle put ia) there.” I often think of you with great|#&n in perfunctory regret. Her ton and connected, I will be everything to them until he oe gt 0 Mn eal ci . re tad and | Sot ak affection, and hope that life ts treat-| changed: "I ahould love tol” she said 608 PIKE ST./.. |they are—aay, ton and twelve.” ab) jie vou indy vs ap yard borane ’ | /Big Three Make It Part of| a1 “ Pon . metimes T fancy Main 875 g ee Make art OF adie pe Sentns o and then |that my old influence might have! Hachael laughed. “So -funny to they will begin to turn toward thelr) been better for you than it was, but| ear Your old voice, Bill, and your to them, some day they) tur them, and doing better next time 1 was Just thinking that you've] AO Wears BO)| corn te. senrnryn| at i ates as S| Sage, Soo el ge eng POEM ant h of restoration to its|their mother’s fault-—that's the wa “ ne: Gi: ek i've: pine haiet = RACHAEL dh ut gray hair jet ‘ SEATTLE'S LEADING DENTISI || former status of an independent|with children! And so I'll P8Y) Three days elapsed after this letter| ting old fast, Billum!” | BY mayen 5, peo, D: D. 8. [| kingdom is gone—dispelied by a pen| again.” was dispatched, and Rachael had| “And how's Greg?” Billy did not! * — 7 - ED yo a . stroke secretly applied during the) “Dearest girl. you're morbid" | time to wonder with a little chill if| Understand the sudden shadow that . pes | iis 20th mile stone as a [recent conferences of Lioyd George,|Alice said, not knowing whether t0/ sno had been too cordial to Billy, and| fell acromn Rachael's face, but she|'0, and your grandmother, and auton had married a Denver man} They're mortgaged, anyway.” dentist in Seattle. Clemenceau and Nitti, it became] laugh or cry |if Billy were laughing her cool Httle | saw it, and wondered jof us who made him what he was./whom nobody knew; the Parker} “But, Billy, wouldn't that Year etter year my known | No, I mean it, I truly mean th laugh at her one-time stepmother’s| “Very well, my dear.” |1 didn’t love him when I married| Hoyts had a delicate little baby at|¥ou in a fair income, in itself, it oe seem This action was taken duting the! It in disiilustoning for young boys) nospitality and moralizing | “Does he get down here often? It’s| him, and he was the soft of man| last; Vivian Sartoris had left her|Was once filled?" Giea and enlarged secret Uiplomatic sessions surround.|to learn that their father and mothe But as a ma of £ the invi.|@ hard trip.’ who has to be loved; he knew he|husband, nobgdy knew why. Billy My dear, pert my offices to p - « 20) the Flume m eo.) Were not i] rmal tation wld not have been more har ‘Te always comes in his car, They| Wasn't big, and admirable was quite her old self as she retailed | do you think y nw AR The norandum handed to|sons, able to tle 5 pily timed for young Mrs. Pickering. | make It in—T don’t know—something| *trong, but many a man like Clancy | these items and many more for Ra-| ¢ring to do it? As long as the cn Foreign M Scialoia Pr fe ry has been| pitty, without any further notice to| like two hours an@ ten minutes, 1/ has been made so, been made worth | chael’s benent in the bank lasts—I forget At the end of thle * mier Lioyd orgs, nm behalf of 4 f that two) Mag had been to see Mage This ie my house, with all ite| While, by having a woman believe in But Rachael saw that the years! *@¥eTal thousand, more than “bgp pope ‘ jreat Britain and ance, dispose “ their imme: | mana coolly betraying her friend's Arangeas in full bloom’ Yes, isn't| him, 1 never believed in him for!iaq made a and change in her before | thin’-—wegi go along as we are, completed a Mental he little kingdom as follows ‘ oo» | ar plans, pledging the angry And here's Mary for Breck. | ne second, and he knew it. I ¢-| the three days’ visit was over. Poor | 4s 4 half interest in a patents @ organization for Se- iy ‘ | wi rmitting the question to] don't talk #0 recklennly and bewildered Howman to secrecy, | eMridge’s bag”, splsed thm, and where he sputtered) jite, impudent, audacious Billy was|“@Y, Some sort of curtain polep attle that will af- discussed by the supreme coun el mmniled s land applying for the position on her| Fachael had got out of the car, and} 4nd stammered and raged, I was COO!) gone forever—Rilly, who had always | “Ways going to make usa ford, every orphan etl perhaps I can be a £004! own account in the course of one| NOW she gave Billy's boy her hand,|@nd quiet, and smiling at him. It/ boon so exquisite in dress, so pret-| “Put, Billy, if you and the boy needy person an op- | “The river Boyana will be open » them, even ff they don't! price visit and 1 ready to help him down inn't right for human beings to feel) ty consp| nous on the floor of the!® little place somewhere, and@g me!’ she mused 3 Well ck,” maid portunity to haye |for free international navigation as| towman would not commit h “do you| that way, TI see it now. I see NOW! baltroom, so superbly self-consclous| 8d One good maid—up there onjtm™ a ee cares |the sout border of the Kingdom} | “I have | t c conctusion.”| elt. t0 ging Billy, but he was| think you are going to like my house, | that love—love is the lubricant every-!in her yachting gear, her riding|PORY farm, for instan ie 26. coe aol of the Croats lovenes.| she tolk 6 one day, about a fort-| inani od to her for the news| end my little boys? Will you give| Where in the world, Bill. One needn't! Jotnox, her emart little tennis con | WOuld be saner, surely it plish this, I In view of this Montenegro is t night later, “while elvilieation t# 99! of Magwic, and told her #0 frank Aunt Rachael a kis be a fool and be stepped Upon; ONC) times! She was but a shadow of her| Wi#er, than trying w think of oF fy Pay Ps made part of the Serb-Croat Slo it is, divorce is wrong. No matter! 1+ was when #he returned home! Billy said nothing as the child em-| has rights; but if loving enough g008) 014 geif now. The smart hats, the|*t@se now with him on your ng worth while te.” what the circumstances are, no mat-/ trom this call, and hot and weary, | braced his new-found Uve heart-|!nto everything, why, it's bound tolsine “gtockings, the severely trim} “Except that I would simply aie EDWIN J ter *wh ight and wrong lt.) was t: to break an absolute, {@Y. nor when Rachael took her up-| come out right.” frocks were still hers, but the old| Billy said. “I love the city, t 106 Columbia St PAPER CONTROLLER QUITS pres a nen ot | Promise to the boy, involving the Zao | stairs | show her the third hammock | Mh, Ido reafael it!” said Billy fer-| gericious youth, her roses, her limpid | @xeitement of not knowing what Wi OTTOWA, Ont 11—8. A are cases dice cream, that Rachael's letter| between the other two, and herself | vently, kneeling on the floor at Ra-| 2.2. the velvety curve of her throat|‘UPn up. And if Joe would l piteatia Canaiiad paper controller Alice #ub-| arrive linvested the v n blue overalls | Chael's fect, her wet, earnest eyes) Moy iy these wore cone. Bitty | himself, and if T should make } yesterday beckuse of die k read it thru, sat thinking! Nd 4 Wide hat, But late that eve-|on Rachael's face, her arms crossed) )..4 heen apirited, now she was noisy, | WHY: We'll be all right.” with: the "government or the ard, and presently read it again.| "ns, after ence, she sald sud-|/on the older woman's knees |She had been amusingly precocious,| 4 aueer, hectic, unsatisfying d ae be ; har The hen, hae gathan |e" 1 ve Rachael anid “that 19) now ahe was assuming an innocence, | 't must be, Rachael thought, d 3 7 x hard youse qian Maas, Abia Y ‘ re charming than ever, | those seven years I might have won| a naty that were no longer bers, |8°0?bye to her guest a day OF i dial A man at sixty - 2 | one a ith God a ¢ alan Sk rt an | Ra re one of the sweetest ur fath to something better itl had never been natural to her at aug] ae Dressing, rouging, : cD years of age is ent the “singing” of tele-| witness: and no blessing iia ; . - gilaren ‘ r aay T had cared, He Wasn't en eee ee eae anes ty ie | pinning on her outrageously exp , ee othr @ alte lhc trae tect aie ted or tel ' , Duislest and ’ vu snel sald, with Just desperately weak, I've {ought ginerent to the lives of other men| Se hats, jerking on her extravagant 4, r hou re muted by p think myself t ther © not! ing eStats Po ie 0 se to of ew we » of it #0 often, of late, Bil here jwhite gloves, . or a success. BEECHAM’S| tin: 0: me YSN esi are eae (Bese ase not| hapotent womens Ana ct a oten, of ate. Hu. There |snd women, New she was embvtered|" 146, woes, Grnking, Foaling 7 f fitt . , ¥ t had «ee to tle Pe 2° ne as to own death anc of|* * it PILLS have been made for sixty | pie : = fitting corks on to aghet i The last line, however, meant © grown Ko itle, and | had a funny little pathetic fondness) 0st her own destiny. patented anger, Billy was one of that ’ years and sap naa a sale of any |‘ | ¥ more than ail the # just now, to, #000 aid Bi a little awkwardly, | for babies, .And he was @ loving sort eeeky tee she knew. She chanced) /@PS® class of women that the big medicine in world! mere ( t ! “4 i t at because o 5 a * "city bres : Millions use to I ckering He Was impression ® just becau: bwire ss yee r* an't he?’ Billy's eyes upon the name of Magsic Clay, iittle | wend ning and that can not live ’ m’s | | a, bt . eo he or a and because youhave| immed again. “Always that to mej teaming. how. straight the blow) cat's in 6 te é 7 [of | | not ¢ ha of life herself, Ra-|*tch a nice way with children, but 1| brimmed ag Always that to mol went to Rachael's heart, but had ex woald ride in a thousand taxteaba, | | @ should] chael's opinions aho had always re-|——1 4m ever and ever so grateful to| But, not to you, Rachael, tellent reasons of her own for not] Worrying as she watched the meter: se in the ceneral discomfort, And | ents nemreaning line about payin gave no hint of Magsie's rich and ves in gen iscom ‘41! for them, and doing better mysterious lover, She did tell Ra-| PILLS . ve: divans ence; #h€|spected. And now ftachael admitted |¥0U! I've often thought of you, all|cat ‘that 1 was—I knew it, But youl Cine ine belief that Magsic|""® Would drink a thousand giaseea) ‘sate & sroebe i pos: | tha saben and nadea| this time, and ‘ot the O68 Giys, an I had no particular reverence for |“ of champagne, wondering anxi Sa ce | t life was all mistakes, an "| would soo » the stage, > ly Bold ba bones, 10¢., 480 | sible, and involved three other sma be 1d that so much happiness | marriage, either. How should 1 would soon lenve the stage, and #011» 56 were to bay fOr 1G; Sen of every sort has come to you. At| Why, my own mother and my halt gossip of a dozen successful acti bar Wy Wey . 5 I never should have married Clar yi » 1 am hot—and 1 nover| [rst I felt dreadfully—at that time, | sisters—hideous girls, they are, too— without the self.control to work nue am ho reve A y chae] that she herself meant to go id Removed by Lydia E. Piles) onc0, tocause 1 didn't love him ')had any lunch—and you said you] ¥eu kn« Pee et te eae nent, TOR the stage, but imparted no detatis| one-tenth of thelr success, male | ham’s Vegetable jdidn't want children then; I never} would!" fretted the little boy, finging| She stopped and faltered, but Ra-| year I didn’t know them as to her hopes for doing #0 would move thru all the life of # felt that the arrangement Was per-| himself against her, and sending chael looked at her kindly, They were|could have made your life much theatres and hotels without ever Compound. manent; but having married him, I] wave of heat thru her clothing sitting on the wide perch, under the] « Raghael, 7 8 Tete) ee ee ee tt ade ing her place among them, and b pegs hould have stayed by him now| q ' : J ack arch of the st sky,|Was thinking that this afternoon fi ge gpm ambled a Muskegon, Mich.—‘‘For six years pips wae soppy baa ps | Velvet-biack arch of. the starry aky,| Was thinKiNy tee eee vou cmp iamned th aekihe jshare of their little glory. And ai] 1 was so weak in may beck at U mood in which Clarer vk Listen, Breck,” she sald suddenty, }4 chi oceasional twinkle | when ck was ing you carr | most as reckless in action as she Wag” that leouldharaiy |own life; be never loved m catehing him lightly in her arm, and/| 0 tw on the dark surface of the|him out Into deep water, clinging to] "Oh, well”-—Billy had always hated|in speech, she would cling to Monday and walk, Lydia B,{4!4 Bill, but he wouldn't have done] gmiing down at him, “would you like | 4 | you so cunningly. He ix a cute little] statistios—"we sold the Belvedere | brink of the conventions, never quite: esedas p Pinkham’s Vege-|'t if 1 had been ther aoe eee with the Gree| “YOU may say anything you lke|kid, isn't he? And he'll love you to] Bay place last y you know, but|a good woman, never ayite anythl uesday table Compound; “! not ler Clarenee Bre iar hie | Riv: Rachael «aid death! He's a groat kisser, it was a p t wreck, and the| els a fe and loyal if a foolish: . was recommend. |°"' a lows to He Alice said.| iy aay ane * abt: threche, | wan on vu know how] “Hie's a great darting,” smiled Ra-] Mouitons said they had to put $17,000 / and selfish mother, some day noisily ed to me and it; “!'' ha dle Clarence esahtt m Hilly said quickly.|chael, “and all small boys | adore.|into repairs, but I don’t believe it,| informing her admirers that she aot” SESSUE i a) mademe good and |" who would have been a loss t atin Gn i hn shore." Biny| "Eve so often thought that perhaps| He'll begin to put on weight in noland that money, and some other| ally had a boy in college, and | MMl\istrong again so| Rachael mused. “He iéash ak. tanaka WOR. aa ae ere the only person who knew| time, And—I was thinking, Bill—he| things, were put into the bank. Joe|ing their flattering disbelief. And #6) it all meant to me, I only| would have reconciled Clancy to you| was just making a scene about it—we| Would disappear the last of the hand perhaps; one can’t tell. If I] have to draw now and then—we sank|some fortune that poor Clarenes's that I am able.to pr “i to be pr 1, And he) bathing every day,.and roll in the dA all my work. |ioved children; ona or two babies in| curt, and picnic, and sleep out of |thought he would be angry for a/and Jo si |while, I thought then, that had not left him, Clarence might/I don't know what into those awfut|father had bequeathed to him, HAYAKAWA —in— I highly recom-|the nursery would have put Billy in| quot" mend your medi-| second place. But he bored me, and|- “pia they ask me? he demanded, |WUld surely win him. And after:| have been living today, that T know. | ponies, and we,still have that place—|Clarence's grandson must fight 4 cine and tell}! simply wouldn't go on being bored. | ‘| ward, I thought I would go crazy,| He on did what he did in one of|it's a lovely house, but it doesn't} way with no better start than a | | | everyone I meet} so that if I had had a little more Ty nother ata. and she says) thinking of bim sitting there in the| those desperate lonely times he used|rent, It's too far away. ‘The kid/ grandfather had had financially, whatitdid for me.’’—Mrs.G. SCHOON-| courage, or a little more prudence in| club. I had failed him, you know!] to dread so.” * |adores it, of course, but it's too far} With an infinitely less yseful brain 7 66 | FigLD, 240 Wood Ave., Muskegon, |the first piace, Billy, Clarence, per I've nover talked abouf it. I guess Ah, but he was ‘terrible to you,|away—it gives me the creeps. It's] And less reliable pair of hands, Billy e Mich. \haps Charlotte and. Charlie, Greg, NASAL CATARRH I'm all tired out from the trip down.’ chacl!? Billy said, generousty.| just xoing to wr too. Joo says| Might be widowed or freed in some Joe Piokering and Bity| | it was clumsily expressed; the! "You deserved happiness if any one| sometimes that he's going to raise | leas unexceptionable way, and then — Woman's Precious Gift | «rry. i" t all one were|ever ald!" Again she aid not under-| chickens there. I see him!’ Bily| Billy would marry again, and it om, It Inn Se-| wrung from the jealous silence of| stand Rachael's sharp sigh, nor the|scowled, but as Rachnel did not) would be a queer marriage; Rachael” at This Season | tne long years, but presently Billy| little silence that followed it, Their| speak, she presently came back to| could read her fate in her character, was beside Rachael's chair, kneeling|talk ran on quite naturally to other|the topic. “But just how much of} She wondered, walking slowly the words came as if ever n happier, to #ay « of the general example to so-|Thonah Very ¢ rious Dine ‘The one which she should most zeal- | """'" ously guard is herhealth, but she often |""’ soa neglects to do 60 in season until sore | Courageous [ hear that Billy is unha tion of the mu- 99 i y a sex has fi DP) an in Cowar Po ell Bong $x hag fae Jenough now,” Alico naid, pleaved at] oot Merbranc causing «discharge, {on the floor, and thelr arms were|topics; they discussed all the men|my money is left, T don't know |short mile that lay between her and. | fected women may rely upon Lydia| Rachael « unusual vivacit Ina.[and Is agiravated by colds and sud- | about each othe and women of that oki world they) There are two houses in BE. 100th-—| the station, when Billy E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, | belle Haviland told my Mary that|den changes of wenther i depends |r killed him!" sobbed Billy, “He|both had known, the changes, tho| way over by the river, Daddy took | Just how a discerning eye might read soful in restoring health to suf-| vore }eonsumption breaking down to Berry Stokes that hehe loved| Mrs. Barker Emory had been much| Rachael remembered them perfect.| Just what did the confused mixture | Nicate lung tiveues and impairing lime, And he had a little old picture|taken up by Mary Moulton, and was|ly, But she could not revert to the|of good motives and bad motives, er |» remedy that has been wonderfully Cousin Billy was talking about di] When chronic, It may dev spoke of me the last of al, He said| newcomers, and the empty places.|them for some sort of debt.” her own fate in her own character, | 4) | | “His Home Sweet From Joe?=4e that so?" R \ en. nel enlth Home wy have the slightest doubtthat| looked up inter ! 1 hadn't] Eein treatment with F Jof me—you remember the one in the|a recognized leader at Relvedero Bay | days when she wax Clarence's wife} mitic unselfishness and even more gp, ; > Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Com4|heard it, and somehow 1 don't be-|wapariia at onge, Thin dainy frame-—-over hia heart. Oh,| now; Straker Thomas was in a sani | without a@ pang, and so let the al) matic weaknesses that was Rachael, Biograph Comedy ound will help you, write to Lydia B.|lieve it! They have a curious affinity | purifies the blood, remover tho ony Daddy, Daddy!—always so good to) tarium; old Lady Torrence waa dead;| lusion g° jdeserve of Pate? She had bought: and Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) |thru all their adventuves. Poor iit] Ci? Gee yeen entirely satietac- | Marian Cowles had snatched George| “Why he took them I don’t know,”| some knowledge, but it had ry to three rations , Bill, you mustn't say that you| Pomeroy away from ono of the Van-| Billy resumed, “10 flats, and all/dearly bought; she had bought v, b vice. letter) tie 1) hash er uch of a [Laan Mee fee etree aaarared pl iitesn St himen't bem much of 9) t01y \eadieriie Tenaga, take Hood | @ woman, and beld in strict confidanes. | hey say she is going on the] tniiven the liver regulate the bowels, killed him,” Rachael id, turning|derwall! girls at the last second;| empty. They say. it would cost us| se0dness, but at what a copt of pale, “If you were to blame, I was,! Thomas Prince was paralyzed; Agnes| $10,000 to get them into shape. (Continued Monday) Ford Weekly

Other pages from this issue: