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‘ar —— HER SON nY HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL Copyright, By HL A. Vachell Stuart's _ Dyspepsia , Tablets aken after meals relieve the distress of Indigestion or Dyspepsia— they give an alka line effect just as the stomach does in normal condition. QIATURDAYS are always more Sold for 25 years in almost ‘ US interesting than other dayn, every drug store in the U. 8. RE TODAY arent they (except maybe Sun and Canada. pee a lay)? No school, and going shop: | , ping with grown-ups, and wateh Have been recommended ing the ashman come, and having the whole day to play in if you want to dig a trench or make a by many physicians to aid digestion and thus keep the stomach sweet. Ouse. 7 David thought #0, and this par: | » You may eat > you like ticular Saturday he had decided best without fear SY distress. to go to market with Mother dear, And now he was just plain sorry and a little crons becaune the morning waa nearly gone, and he and Peggy had been ait ting in the car with Aunt Ellen for what seemed to him a very | long Ume, and still Motherdear didn't come. “Holgho!™ sighed Aunt Inen, | “Tiow thr have changed! Why David, do you know, lad, that if I had had @ chance to sit in an elegant car like t and watch | 4ll these people coming and go: | ing, when I was little, I'd have! thought I was in a fairy book “Well I remember one Satur | © were allowed to jen in a big pateh Imost all this Price S0c. Ask your drug- gist. pucd From Our Last Issue) | CHAPTER Il, | Th » Bargain She eyed Dorothy with tn-| ¢ alertness Then sho said| bluntly | You asked me to tell you every thing | I say” girl thinks her body ts a glove her heart Why should you believe what “Il think you will tell me the truth.” if T could get him back by telling Mea, I'd tell them, But I don't think he ever cared much, ful, th uck my knife into you then, | He was grate at's all.” Why should Mr. Richard ‘ yno be grateful to me? When a big pateh,” " met for the first time, he was g at the long tarving, I fed him. We had our first meal te Dick ther at my My! But he'd grit, | Ho might have crawled ations, but everything his land expense wan berry patch! Aunt Ellen told them xcept what he fashion’s foremost styles. Seventy different handsome styles and patterns to choose from. Look for the Mayer trade- mark and the name Martha Washington on the sole. helped him. I found him n the same house where I | and I found him work. AM thin tir we were pals, you understand, not ng cise. Believe thi Yea.” “It's the truth that was the winter before last, he tell you?” That he nearly died—yeo.” “I nursed him. The doctor said I “Tle wrote a letter, offering to at Ned him thru. I think he wanted some money; but I sent it back » die; but I wouldn't let him. I/Then I read In the paper about his | fought for his life, and I won it. And| marriage to you. That knocked me he was grateful, He sw how it was |out with me, and—and—you can guess| “And even now you will forgive! the rest.* |him.” said the woman. “some Silence fel upon the room. Dor in't, I know, He's no great) thy, unable to look at the epeaker,|catch for suctf as you, but you love stared helplessly at her surround-| him, don't youT nen. | ‘They had risen, and were looking | “Youll forgive Dick? Jeach into the other's eyes. | thy made no reply. It} “in the name of pity—" entreated seemed incredible that she had parted | Dorothy from Gasgoyne barely two hours be-| The coarse fiter of the actrenn| 4 that sho was going to dine|falled to interpret these subtle vi with him at § the same evening |brationa, happened the winter before| “Wha “ Crystal continued. “After he/ ft abou }got back his health he began to|girl How make money, Ho had his job; I had| “Fifty,” mine. Then his paper sent him to | pause, Balkans, an you know.” Pitty? Oh, I see. Well, I'm a The “as you know” plerced deep.|hundred and fifty. Now, look here, Derethy remembered Gangoyne’s al | what would you give to save my ce d,| were coming “And then “He never spoke of you to me,” Jcontinued the girl defiantly, “but I guesned that Mine Right had turned Then Dick fell Mi | up, and it made me mad. I told him Did |to clear out and never come back He never did.” “Rut, surely In May you arrived.” are you making euch a You're not a school are you, anyway? said Dorothy, after a liusion to pitch. Now, in some in-| soul? she laughed drearfly, “Come, lescribable way, the pitch seemed to | how much?” have touched her. She saw that Dorothy was at “We began again, but !t wasn't the| tempting to solve the problem. At }aame. And we had awful rows; Ijonce her sense of the dramatic lauppose I knew somehow that you|gripped her. She laid her hand upon | “a keener zest for play. Where does all our workaday energy come from? Food! It sakes energy to make energy. That’s why Sperry Flaked Wheat helps to put a man into | the stride of his morning’s work. That’s why it helps to put the younger members of the family into the swing of the day’s a and play. A breakfast cereal that gives you all the goodness of the wheat—in tempting, flaky form! Ask your grocer for Sperry Flaked Wheat —in the familiar Sperry Red Package. SPERRY FLOUR (0, : ’ U.S. AL f Ten mills and forty-four distributing points on the Pacific Coast. Sperry Flaked Wheat ts the counter-sign to a good morning break- yast and a right good morning's work. Org _——$—$— Page 23 ‘THOUSANDS of women buy ay bad told him he needn't come |] “we thought It wna the very bent these shoes season after season Ho told me a part of It sath rer a. rocgh Gash Seer because they get better all-around ee ee ih lp See nec ane. we CME go Meee |g satisfaction—more comfort and j.garothy hesitated; then sbe maid: [ “Sue: thin Saturday we were | wear and a wide selection from “Not kety (wet, Le the priate togeiher—severel children ef 03 mn her voice low ex! strongly — |doing thin dreadful th | eoyne, |hand, listened attentively, |rupting by word or gesture | punishment. |More tha | were THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1920 Seattle eland— + “We had as much fun as ehfl dren do today, but we had it our own way The boyn teased—jurt as boys do now, and the girls got cross at them—just like the girls to day, but, just lke the boys and girls you know, most of the time they spent just having fun even while they worked. “Well, we really were having an unusually good time, and were getting lots of berries, and beginning to think about eating, when I noticed the dor. “There was a great hollow log lying among the bushes, half overgrown with berry vines and ferns. And old Watch would go hosing around one end of it sniffing, miffing-—then he would brin p and let out a few si sharp barks, and tear aroun the other end af the log and sniff and sniff at that end. “Look at Wateh!* I ¢ be ar aa teehee Dorothy's arm, } “If, tonight, T went down to the river, and stood on Westminster Diridge, with nothing betwee the water, except you—wor put off your marriage to save me? “No.” | “I thought not? | *One moment. If I could think of a way But it's not your threat of ng which ix driving me. No, If you jump into} the river tonight, I shall marry Dick, | do you understand?” | “It 1 go back to my work and keep straight, will you put off your mar.| riage for one little year? Yes or no” } Dorothy heattated. To marry Dick immediately seemed tmporsibie | “What in one little year to you? whispered Crystal, 1 Dorothy clutched her arm. CHAPTER IIL The Parting When Dorothy returned to her home and the man awaiting her there, it was nearly § o'clock | Susan told her Mr. Gasgoyne was | in the drawing room. i Sho let him kiss ber, wondering | if i were for the at time. Ther he said: “How very late you are, | Doll. Where have yeu been? “In Vauxhall Bridge road.” Afterwards abe feit that she bad! dealt him too sudden a blow, He stared at her intently, and repeated her phrase. | “Yea, Crystal nouncement of our Wride saw the an marriage; she |came here; I took her back in a cab. she told me everything—everything.” | His Drain leaped to a triumphant conclusion. “T have forgiven you," she said! duly. “Thank God! Doll, she helped me when I was starving; she nursed me but I didn’t abandon her, She drove me from her.” | “I know that. Dick, I have made of bargain with Crystal “What 40 you mean? She told the story from beginning to end, with simple dignity leaning his head upon his not inter When she had finished he sald, with seem. ing irrelevance “L bave just been asked to h an expedition into Central A Gas |I refused, of course." He stared at jher tentatively. “Doll, you have let Cryntal get the better of you. She in very clever and an accomplished actress. You have sacrificed yourself and me. Let us admit that I deserve But loving you, know ing that you love me, I protest against your ppnishment.” He closed his lips, as if he were afraid of mying mora. | “She loved you." “Love! What a word to use!” Gasgoyno laughed bitterly, “You think time will put things right Doll, time is not #o kind as that. A year hence——who knows? It will not be the same thing.” | “Why not?” | “The experience of all the world is against it.” “I have promised.” | Gasgoyne sighed. He saw clear-| ly; and her vision was blurred. “All right.” he said tenderly “From this moment you are free, (Continued in Our Next Issue.) FU RAL SERVICES FE. B wer present Washelll cemetery. TEA AT IBERTY MARKET between Pike and Liberty Theatre YOU are a fath- er, see the end of the road, then tell your wife 4 Sperry Flaked Wheat | “A Sperry Product ” what tu tell your daughter. SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET | Two-Pound Wool Bats | y Priced at $2.95 Each : Each bat weighs full two pounds and opens out large comfort size, 72x84 inches. Just 100 of these All-wool Bats offered Wednesday at this very special price. ‘ “eer SPecia Second Floor, basa —Dedding, To Meet All Seasonable Demands in , Correct Footwear for Smaller Feet —Our lines are now complete in High and Low Shoes of all the accepted <4 styles. —Juvenile Shoes which combine comfort, wearing qualities. —A variety of kinds and a full range of sizes in the different types for everyday playtime, for roughest usage, and for dress-up occasions. —Sketched are two styles of High Shoes in current demand: good looks and dependable Complete Satisfaction for Everyday Wear —Infants’ and Children’s Natural ; Color Elkskin Lace Boots, of our i special make. Made on foot form lasts. “The Little Siwash,” sizes 6 to 8; $4.00. Sizes 81% to 11, priced at $5.00. —TInfants’ and Children’s Brown Col- ored Elkskin Lace Boots. Made on foot form lasts. Sizes 81% to 11, at For Dress-up Occasions —Black Patent Leather with White Nubuck top. Also with Brown Kid Top. Sizes 2 to 5, $3.00 a pair. Brown and White Tops, sizes 2 to 5, at $3.25 a pair. Sizes 514 to 8, at $3.75 a pair. . The Children’s Shoe Shop, Second Floor. 500 Yards Printed Georgette 4 Specially Priced for Tomorrow . —The very new patterns in Printed Georgette, 40 inches wide of the qual- ity which sells regularly for $3.95 a yard. An extraordinary value for “- one day only, at $2.75 a yard. —Trimmings First Floor, : The May Patterns---Just Im —Butterick Patterns for May, with the newest summer styles, and clever, original ideas for the home seamstress. —Patterna, First Floor. Silk Hand Bags At Prices Unusually Low —A special purchase secured at a decided price advantage for this sale. —New Silk Bags in seasonable colors to harmonize With the new spring costumes. —Made attractively full and pouchy, daintily lined in keeping with the general color scheme. The frames are of three styles, heavy oxidized silver, self cov- ered and decorated with beads. In Four Price Groups: below $6.00 and $7.50 Qualities for $4.85 %, above ' $10.00 Qualities for $6.95 —The colors are Navy Blue, Taupe, Chestnut Brown and Black. ~Hand Bags, First Floor above $5.00 Qualities for $3.45 —And an unusually smart 4 bag of novelty shape with a “peaked” oxidized frame, regular $12.50 qualities at $8.45.