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The f saaeg ATERS The Quick Meal There is nothing made in ranges that has been as satinfac tory In selling as this Quick Meal decause of the friends it has made for our store, Yours is here wait ing for you. We take your old stove in exchange and make & suitable allowance and apply on purchase of new range. A complete line of Heaters, suitable for all homes, for either wood or coal, now ready for your inspection, They are priced in our usual conserva. tive way LIBERAL CREDIT EXTENDED RUNBAU ome Roe? &, x WHERE PIKE MEETS FIFTH ofofoyoy poy Oyo .ofo,O.o)o} WATER SUPPLY TURNS SALTY; TOWN BLAMES RICE GROWERS ANTIOCH, Cal, Sept. 6—A town, Antioch has found her river supply of 3,000 people without a drop of|of water, like Lot's wife, literally fresh water in its pipes. turning to salt, and families are being ‘Three hundred miltion dollars’ worth | furnithed with water drawn in two of the richest land in the United) sprinkling carts from a well two States threatened with damage thru| miles away. The small families are salt water seepage. rationed five gallons and the big ones A $60,000,000 rice crop of the Sac-| 10 gallons a day ramento valley facing possibility of Her town attorney, B. D. M being a total loss. Greene, claims that the river ha ‘These are factors in a legal war be-| gone down because the rice growers ing heard in Oakland superior courts | above the city are using too much for with the fresh waters of the Sacra-| irrigation and that therefore the bay mento river as the bone of conten-| waters back up by the intake. Greene tion. is backed by the “delta” farmers who . find the salt seeping thru their dykes and damaging their fertile farms, He has filed suit against the rice growers enjoining them from us ing the water. The rice growers have some 180,000 acres under cultivation, and if the water is turned off for five days be- fore September 15 their entire crop MR. H. T. SCOTT HUNTINGTON Presents RUssIA's — PIANIST Signor di Zanco | EURoPE’s bh a YOuNG lcm to ek, IN JOINT CONCERT RECITAL | They have retained over 40 expen | sive Jawyers to fight Greene and John S. Partridge, representing the deita |tarmers. ‘The rice growers claim that lehe years of light rains have caused the river to become shallow and that | their use of the water is not to blame for the threatened calamity to Anti och and the delta ranchers. \Boys Lead to Finding (%s a Prosperous Still ‘The alertness of two small boys, who reported to the sheriff office henat two men were acting In a sus | pictous manner near Black Diamond, led to the discovery Saturday even- ling of a 15-gallon still and 200 gallons ,of prune mash. Deputy Sheriff Matt Starwich and Special Deputy George Uptin ac. companied the lads and raided the ‘still, The men were not found. | oe : |Fish Roping Proves a Dangerous Sport SAN DIEGO, Sept. 6—G. L. Fen \ner, cowboy from Arizona, in off of roping fish for life. He went out fishing the other day and to dem- onstrate his skill, Inesoed a leaping dolphin. But he hadn't fastened the rope to the boat. Over the side he went and was towed some distance before he could free himself from the rope. Fishermen rescued him. Rr) MME. EUGENIE DE PRINO ‘The “Female Chopin” A RIDAY, 9:30 P.M.) SEPTEMBER 10 Bex Office Open Monday, tember 6, 10 A. M. Admisatons: $1.50, $1.00, 7Be | and ie, ‘Wer Tax “ 6% PER ANNUM _ON SAVING COMPOUNDED SEMI-ANNUALLY is the liberal return paid Savers here for more than eight years. You can share in our next semi-annual dividend on January 1, 1921, by starting saving here on or before Tuesday, September 7. SAVINGS LEFT HERE ON OR BEFORE SEPTEMBER 7 WILL EARN DIVIDENDS FROM SEPT. 1 check or and receive You can start saving here by mail—send order for any amount from $1 to $3,000 savings book by return mail. money your DIRECTORS FRANK W. SHILLESTAD HENRY K, KING FERGUSON JANSON GEORGE R. HANNON EDGAR BE, CUSHING WILLIAM D. COMER THOMAS S. LIPPY MUTUAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION SECOND FLOOR, LEARY BLDG. REMOVAL POSTPONED UNTIL SEPTEMBER 10 Owing to unforeseen delay in securing possession of our new quarters at 815 Second Avenue, removal to our new street floor location has been postponed until September 10. ection anything..and wi COPYRIGHT 1 (Continued From Saturday) the after too, And murt have been five whole 1 t train went minures: before tha 1 had @ nee trip down to though rething much happy ‘This conductor was not near so nice and polite as the one I had seming up and there wasn't any lady with a baby to play with, nor any nice youn Eentleman to loan me 154% zines or buy candy for me, but tt wasn't a \ery long ride from the Junction to fostbn, anyway, So I didn't mind, Hesides, I knew T had mother waiting for me. And wasn't I glad to get ‘here? Well, I just guess I wast And they acted an if they were glad to see me -mother, grandfather, Aunt Hattie, jand even Baby Lester. He knew me, and remembered me. He'd Krown a lot, too, And they maid I had, and that I looked very nice, (I forgot to nay that, of course, I had put on the Marie clothes to come home to though I honestly think Aunt Jane wanted to rend me home in Mery's blue gingham and calfrkin shoen, Ae if I'd have appeared in Boston in that rig) My, but it was good to get into an Automobie 4gain and just And He didn't come in all T watched for that lwhen he did come—well, I wouldn't have dared to hug him then. He had jhis very sternest Lam-not-thinking of youratall alr, and he Just came in to supper and then went into the brary without saying hardly any }thing. Yet, some way, the look on |his face made me cry, I don't know why The next day he was more as he has been since we had that talk in the parlor, And he has been differ: ent alnce then, you know, He really has, He has talked quite a lot with |me, as I have said, and I think he's been trying, part of the time, to find |nomething I'll be interested in. Hon jextly, I think hes been trying to |make up for Carrie Heywood and Stella Mayhew and Charlie Smith and Mr. Livingstone. I think that's why he took me out to the observa: tory to nee the stars quite a number of times, Twice he's asked me to play to him, and once he asked me if Mary wasn’t about ready to dress up in Marie's clothes again. But he was joking then, I knew, for Aunt|i: was so good to have folks arcur. Jane was right there in the house.| you dreased in something besides Resides, I saw the twinkle In his! don't-care black alpaca and stiff col eyes that I've seen there once OF| jars, And 1 said so, And mother twice before. I just love that twinkle | seemed xo pleased. in father's eyes! “You did want to come hack to me, But that hasn't come any since darting, didn't you?” she cried, giv mother’s letter to Aunt Jane arrived. |ing me a little hug. And she lcoked He's been the same in one Way, yetigo happy when I told her all over different in another, Honestly, if It! again how good it semed to be Marie didn't seem too wildly absurd for| again, and have her and Boston, ana anything, I should my he was) aucomobiles, and pretty droswes and actually sorry to have me go. But, folks and noise again. of. course, that isn't possible, Ob.) she didn't aay anything about yes, I know he said that day at the | tather then; but later, when we were dinner table that he should like to|/up in my pretty room alone, and t keep me always, But I don't think | woe taking off my things, she made he really meant !t. He hasn't acted | me tell her that father hadn't won j& mito like that since, and I guess|my love away from her, and that I he mid ft just to hush up Aunt Jane, | cidn’t love him better than I di} her and make her stop arguing the mat-/and that I wouldn't rather otay with ter |bim than with her Anyway, I'm going tomorrow, And| And then #he asked me a lot of I'm #0 excited I can hardly breathe. | questions sbout what I did there, arene end Aunt Jane, ond how she looked, CHAPTER VI father, and was he as fond of When I Am Both Together ars an ever (though she must have Boston again. | known ‘most everything, ‘cause I'd Well, I came last night Mother @lrendy written it, but she asked me and grandfather and Aunt Hattie | Just the same). And she seemed real and Raby Lester all met me at the interested in everything I told her station. And, my! wasn't I glad to| And she asked waa he lonesome; ace them? Well, I just guess I was!|and I told her no,.1 didn't think so; I was specially glad on account of !and that, anyway, he could have all having such a dreadful time with the ladies’ company he ated by father that morning. I mean, I was)Delng around when they called. And feeling specially lonesome and home | When she asked what I meant, I told sick, and notdelonging anywhere | ber about Mra. Darling, and the rest, like. and how they came evenings and You see, it was this way: I'd been | Sundays, and how father didn’t like sort of hoping, I know, that at the|them, but would flee to the observa. last, when I came to really go, father | tory. Ald the laughed and looked would get back the understanding|fUnny, for a minute, But right smile and twinkle, and show that he|®Way she changed and looked very really did care for me, and was sorry |#0ber, with the kind of expression to have me go. But, dear me! Why,|%h® has when she stan up in he never was so stern and solemn,|Church and ears the Apostie’s Creet jand you're-my-daughter-only-by-the |On Sunday; only this time she said order-of-court sort of way as he was |*he Was very sorry, she wan sure; that morning. that ahe hoped my father would find He never even spoke at the break. |"0m* estimable woman who would fast table. (He wasn't there hardly|™"ke @ good home for him. long enough to speak, anyway, and | Then the dinnergong sounded, and jhe never ate a thing, only his cof) *he didn’t say any more fee—I mean he drank it.) Then he| There was company that evening pushed his chalr back from the table | The violinist. He brourht his violin, and staiked out of the reed and he and mother played a whole He went to the station with me;|hour together. He's awfully hand but he didn’t talk there much, only |*0me. I think he's lovely, Oh, I do to ask if I was sure I hadn't for-|/"° hope he's the one! Anyhow, I I warmly | hope there's some one. I don't want clad. Warmly clad, indeed! And|this novel to all fizzle out without |there it was still August, and hot as|there being any one to make it a it could be! But that only goes to|!ove story! Besides, as I'maid before. show how absent minded he wa. nd | I'm particularly anxious that mother how little he was really thinking | *>S!l find somebody to marry her, so ent she'll stop being divorced. anyway Well, of course, he got my ticket ae. & and checked my trunk, and did all/A month later those proper, necesnary things; then} Yes, I know it's been ages since I've wo sat down to wait for the train. | written here in this book; but there But did he stay with me and talk to| havn't been @ minute's time me and tell me how giad he had irst, of course, schoc: began, and been to have me with him, and how/I bad to attend to that. And, of sorry he wan to have me go, and all|course, I had to tell the girls all the other nice, polite things ‘most/abouW Andersonville—except the everybody thinks they've got to my|parts I didn't want to tell, about when @ visitor goes away? He did | Stella Mayhew, and my coming out |not. He asked me again if I was|of s*hool, I didn’t tell that. And |sure I had not left anything, and | right here let me say how glad I was | was I warmly clad; then he took out|to get back to this school—a real his newspaper and began to read. | school—so different from that one up |That is, be pretended to read; but I/in Andersonville! For that matter. |don’t believe he read much, for he|everything’s different here from [never turned the sheet once; and|what it is in Andersonville. I'd so twice, when I looked at him, he waa|much rather be Marie than Mary. I looking fixedly at me, as if he was|know I won't ever be Dr. Jekyll and thinking of something. So I guess |Mr. Hyde here. I'll be the good one he was just pretending to read, so he|all the time. wouldn't have to talk to me. It's funny how much easier it Is to But he didn't even do that long, | be good in silk stockings and a fluffy for he got up and went ovet and| white dress than it in in blue ging looked at a map hanging on the wall | ham and calfwkin. Oh, I'll own up opposite, and at a big timetable near|that Marie forgets somegimes and the other corner, Then he looked at|#ys things Mary used to say; like } } an his watch again with a won't-that-| calling Olga a hired girl instead of | lots better than she does the violin-| trainevercome? air, and k to me and sat down. And how do you suppose I felt, to | Non, and some other things have him act like that before all} 1 heard Aunt Hattie tell. mother those people—to show #0 plainly that/one day that it was going to take he was just longing to have me go?| about the whole six months to break I guess he wasn't any more anxious|Mary Marie of those outlandish for that train to come than I waxs,|country ways of hers, (So, you see, and I didn’t see him again, though it|it isn't all honey and ple ev me, too. And it didn't come for | Ma This trying to be Mary and lages, It was 10 minutes late Marie, even six months apart Oh, I did 80 hope he wouldn't go|the easiest thing ever was) 1 don't down to the junction. It's so hard|think mother 1i it very well to be taken care of “because it's my | What Aunt Hattle said about my out |duty, you know!” But he went. 1|!andish ways. I didn’t hear all moch jtold him he needn't, when he was|er sud, but I knew by the way she getting on the train with me. I told | looked and acted, and the little I did him I Just knew I could do it beau-| hear, that she didn't tifully all by myself, almost-a-young | Word “outlandish” applied to her lit lady like me. But he only put his|tle girl—not at all. lips together hard, and said, cold,|| Mother's a dear. And she's like ice: “Are you then so eager to|happy! And, by. the way, I think |be rid of me Just as if I was the |!t ts the violinist. He's here a lot one that was eager to get rid of |@nd she's out with somebody! and plays, and riding automobiels. Well, ax I said, he went. But he! And se always puts on her prettiest wasn't much better on the train than | dresses, and she's very particular he tad been in the station, He waa|%bout her shoes, and her hats, tha nervous and fidgety as a witch, | re becoming, all that. Oh and he acted am if he did #o wish it|l'm #0 excited! And I'm having such would be over, and over quick. But) g00d time watching them! Oh, I at the junction—at the junction a|don't mean watching them in a dis funny thing happened. He put rac reeable way, so that they see it on the train, just as mother had| and, of course, I don't listen—not the done, and spoke to the conductor,|sneak kind of listening, But, «f (How I hated to have him do that!| course, I have to get all I can—for Why, I'm six whole months older,|the book, you know; and, of course, ‘mont, ! was when I went if I just happen to be in the window there) seat corner in thé brary and hear in my » I mean; not the| things accidentally, why, that's all conductor), all of a sudden he leane.t | right over and kissed me; kissed me—| And I have heard things: father? ‘Then, before I could speuk,| He says her eyes are lovely. He jor even look at him, he was gone;|likes her best in blue. He's very end I didn’t se him again, though it! lonely, and he never found a woman walked |& maid, as Aunt Hattie wants, and |saying dinner instead of luncheon at care i Py EleanorHPorter n for} isn't | for that | him to concerts | Mary Marie ! 920° i before who really understood He thinks her soul and his are t to the same string, (Oh, dear! sounds funny and horrid, and not all the way it did when he said it Was beautiful then. But in what it meant, anyway.) She told him she was lonely, too, and that she was very glad to have him for a friend; and he said he Prined her friendship above every ‘thing else in the world, And he |looks at her, and follows her around |the room with his eyes; and she blushes up real pink and pretty lot# \of umes when he comes into the | room. | Now, if that isn’t making love to jeach other, I don't know what in, I'm sure he's going to propose. Oh, I'm | 80 excited him. ned That at it well, that Oh, yer, 1 know if he doss propose and she ways he'll be my new lfather, 1 understand that. And, of course, I can't help wondering how Ill ke it, Pometimes 1 think I | won't like ft at all. Sometimes I al | most catch myself wish that didn't have to have any new father jor mother, I'd never neel a mother, anyway, and I wouldn't need }& new father if my father by-order |of-the-court would be as nice as he | Was there two or three tier in the observatory But, there! After alt, I must re member that I'm not the one that's doing the choosing. It's mother And if she wants the mustn't have anything to say |nides, I really like him very anyway. He's the best of the lot I'm sure of that And that's some thing. And then, of course, I'nt glad to have something to make this a love story, and the best of all I would be glad to have mother stop being divorced, anyway Mr. Harlow doesn't come here any jmore, I guess. Anyway, I haven't jaoen him here once since 1 came back; and I haven't heard anybody jmention hie name. | Quite a lot of the others are here, land there are some new ones, But |the violinist is here most. and moth jer seems to go out with bim most to | places, That's why I way I think {t's the violinist I haven't heard from father. Now jus my writing that down | that way shows that I expected to hear from him, though I don’t really |nee why I should, either, O% course, jhe never has written to me: and, of course, I understand that I'm noth ing but his daughter-by-order-of the court. But some way, I dil think maybe he'd write me just a little bit of @ note in answer to mine—imy breadand-butter letter, I mean; for of course mother had me write that to him as soon as I got here. But he hasn't. I wonder how he's getting along, and if he misses me any. But of course, he doemn't do that. If I was a star, now yen new Ke | Two days after Thankagiving. The violinist has got a rival I'm |sure he bas, It's Mr. Basterbrook | He's old—much as 40—and bald-tead. ed and fat, and has got lots of money. And he's a very estimable man. (I heard Aunt Hattie say that) He's awfully jolly, and I like him.- He |brings me the loveliest boxes of jeandy, and calls me Puss. (1 don’t ke that, particularly, I'd prefer him to call me Miss Anderson.) He's not nearly #0 good-looking as the violinist. The violinist is lots more |thriiling, but I shouldn't wonder if |Mr. Easterbrook was more comfort able to live with | The violinist Is the kind of a man }that makes you want to sit up and take notice, and have your hair and finger nails and shoes just right but with Mr, Easterbrook you | wouldn't mind a bit sitting in a big cbair before the fire with a pair of old slippers on, if your feet were | tired. Easterbrook doesn't care for music, He's @ broker. He looks awfully bored when the violinist is | playing, and he fidgets wfth his | whteh-chain, and clears his throat very loudly just before he speaks levery time. His automobile is big | ger and handsomer than the violin ist's. (Aunt Hattie says the vio | Mnist’s automobile is a hired one) And Mr. Easterbrook’s flowers that he sends to mother are handsomer, | too, and lots more of them, than the violinist’s, Aunt Hattie has noticed that, too, In fact, I guess there isn't janything about Mr. Easterbrook | that she doesn't notice. | Aunt Hattie likes Mr, Easterbr jist. I heard her talking to mother one day, She said that any o | would look twice at a lazy, shiftless | fiddier with probably not a dollar | laid by for a rainy day, when all the | while there was just waiting to be picked an estimable gentleman of in dependent fortune and stable posi tion like Mr. Easterbrook—well, she |had her opinion of her, that’s all She meant mother, of course. I knew that. I'm no child Mother knew It, too, and she didn't like it, She flushed up and bit her lip, and answered back, cold, like ice “I understand, of course, what you mean, Hattie; but even if I acknowl edged that this very estimable, un impeachable gentleman was waiting to be picked (which I do should have to remind you that I've already had one experience with an estimable, unimpeachable gentleman | of independent fortune and stable | position, and do not care for an | other.” “But, my dear | Aunt Hattie again, without any money—" “L haven't married him yet," cut in mother, cold again, like But let me tell you this, Hattie, I'd rather live on bread and water in a | log cabin with the man I loved than malace with an estimable, un hable gentleman who gave shivers eevry time he came into the room.” And it was just this that I interrupted. I was right in plain sight in the window-seat reading; but | guess they'd forgotten I was t for they both jumped a lot when I spoke. And yet I'll | | began marry a man after she said violinist 1] much, | that | not), I] Need Accidents to Make Jaded | Public Aviate SPOKA Sept. 6 zed, roomed, swooped, b and flipflopped thru the air for lens than years, kiek-hunting public already is tiring of flying as @ report It's only a few montlis since avi ation companies put on commercial pleasure flying a» part of their bust Having jax el-rolled two the ness And ready the naye public's sick of ft al lAeut. Tom Symons, stunt line of ships here the pleasure ting he only salvation « air lines | | More accidents! ntrary to general belief, pleas trips always show an increase ana t, empecially a fatal Symons says People want to show thelr friends thelr sweethearts, maybe — that they aren't afraid and they flock to | the airfi in droves every time a | whip crashes.” Local lines have reduced pleasure trip rates from $10 to $5 in efforts to attract business. Crashing ships ts too expensive, they declare. And besides, it uses up good pilots. ure after one,” leave it to you if what I said wasn't perfectly natural “ot se, you would, mother!” I cried. “And, anyhow, if you did marry the violinist, and you found out afterward you didn't like him, that wouldn't matter a mite, for you could unmarry him at any time, just as you did father, and But they wouldn't let me finish. They wouldn't let me say anything more. Mother eried, “Marie! in her most I'mshocked-at-you voice; and Aunt Hattie cried, “Child—child!” And she seemed shocked, too. And both of them threw up their hands and looked at each other in the did | Youever-hear-such-a-dreadful - thing? way that old folks,do when young folkn have displeased them. And jthen they both went right out of the room, talking about the unfor- tunate effect on a child's mind, and | perverted morals, and mother re. proaching Aunt Hattie for talking about thone things before that child (meaning me, of course). Then they got too far down the hall for me to hear any more, But I don’t see why they needed to have made such a fuss. It wasn't any secret that mother got a divorce; and if she got one once, of course she could again. | (That's what I'm going to do when I'm married, if I grow tired of him— my husband, I mean) Oh, yes, 1 know Mra, Mayhew and her crowd don't seem to think divorces are very nice; but there needn't anybody try to make me think that anything my mother does inn’t perfectly nice and all right. And she got a divorce.! So, there! | One week ‘There hasn't much happened— only one or two things. But maybe I'd better tell them before I forget! especially am they have a good) deal to do with the love part of the} story, And I'm always so glad to get amything of that kind. I've been #0 afraid this wouldn't be much of a love story, after all. But I guess it will be, all right. Anyhow, I know mother's part will be, for it's getting more and more exciting—about Mr. Easterbrook and the violinist, I mean. They both want mother. Anybody can see that now, and, of cou! mother sees it. But which she take I don’t know. Nobody knows. It's perfectly plain to be seen, though, which one grandfather and Aunt Hattie want her to take! It's! Mr. Easterbrook And he & awfully brought me a_ perfectly bracelet the other day wouldn't let me keep it. So he had to take it back. I don’t think he liked it very well, and 3 didn’t like! it, either. I wanted that bracelet. | hut mother says I'm much too young to wear much Jewelry on, | will the time ever come when I'll be old enough to take my proper place| in the world? Sometimes it seems as if it never would! Well, as I said, it's plain to be seen who it is that grandfather and) Aunt Hattie favor; but I'm not so sure about mother. Mother acts | funny. Sometimes she won't go with| either of them anywhere; then she seems to want to go all the time./ And she acts as if she didn’t care which she went with, so long as she ‘was just going—somewhere. I think, though, she really likes the violinist the best; and I guess grandfather | and Aunt Hattie think so, too. Something happened last night.! Grandfather began to talk at the dinner table. He'd heard something | he didn’t like about the violinist, 1/ guess, and he started in to tell moth: | Jer. But they stopped him. Mother | and Aunt Hattie looked at him and, then at me, and then back to him, jin their most see-who's-here!—you | musn’t-talk-before-her way So he | shrugged his shoulders and stopped But I guess he told them in the \library afterwards, for I heard them | jail talking very excitedly, and some | loud; and I guess mother didn't like what they said, and got quite angry, for I heard her say, when she came! out through the door, that she didn’t believe a word of it, and she thought | it was a wicked, cruel shame to tell jatorign like that just because they | | didn’t like a man This morning she brok ment with Mr. Easterbrook to autoriding and went with > |linist to a morning musicale instead: Jand after she'd gone Aunt Hattie {sighed and looked at grandfather and shrugged her shoulders, and said she | {was afrair they'd driven her straight into the arms of the one they want-| ed to avoid, and that Madge always would take the part of the under dog. I suppose they thought I wouldn't! understand. But I did, perfectly They meant that by telling stories jabout the violinist they'd been hoping to get her to give him up, |but instead of that, they’d made her turn to him all the more, just wuse she was so sorry for him. | Funny, isn’t it? * later nice. He beautiful | but mother | an engage: | { | One week later | Well, I guess something has hap-| pened all right! And let me say right jaway that I don't like that violinist now, either, any better than grand. father and Aunt Hattie. And it's not entirely because of what happened last night either, It's been coming on jfor quite a while—ever since I first ‘saw him talking to Theresa in the, hall when she let him in one night a week ago, heresn is awfully pretty, and 1) guess he thinks so, Anyhow, I heard him telling her so in the hall, and The Rhodes Co. |} hode Sketched From Stock OU are cordially invited to view our dis- i play of Fall and Winter Millinery, Coats, © Wraps, Furs, Suits and Dresses. HE display will be ready for your inspec- | tion Tuesday morning and will continue throughout the week. a I N the display is shown wearing apparel | suitable for all occasions at prices which we are sure will please you. H4 TS from $4.95 to $45.00. Exclusive Paris models not included in these prices. Z Coats from $15.00 to $175.00 Suits from $29.50 to $175.00 Dresses from $15.50 to $75.00 she laughed and blushed and looked | next day he tried to kiss her, | sideways at him, Then they te mM*, | after a minute she let him. and he stiffened up and said, very| ema, once, too. And last roper and dignified, “Kindly hand “ae card to Mrs. Anderson.” And, "eard him tell her she was the da Theresa said, “Yes, sir." And she|est girl in all the world, and was very proper and dignified, too. perfectly happy if he could Well, that was the beginning. I| marry her. can see now that it was, though I| Well, you can imagine how never thought of its meaning any-|when I thought all the time it | thing then, only that he thought| mother he was coming to Theresa was a pretty girl, just as/|now to find out that it was Tl we all do. he wanted all the time, and he | But four days ago I saw them only coming to see mother again, He tried to put his arm | could see Theresa! around her that time, and the very (Continued Tomorrow) JUST ARRIVED—A NEW SHIPMENT OF Fancy Decorated English Earthen Tea Pots Special at $1.29 and $1.69 a These are beautifully deco- rated English Earthen Tea Pots; they are in the smooth, glazed finish and come in as- sorted sizes. Special at $1.29 and $1.69. aes Tah 2) ete Ay, Here is an unusually big value— Number one size Galvanized | $5 34-Foot ONE-MAN SAWS These One-man Saws are. made of high quality, spe- cial tempered steel, sharpened and ready for use, 8\o-ft. size, special at $3.69. Hotpoint Demonstration All Week Hotpoint 3-Heat Grill Will Be Featured Tuesday The 3-Heat Radiant Grill is a wonderful appliance for table cooking as it pro- vides for two operations at the same time—one above and one below the glowing coils, Price $17.50. Manufactured by the Edison Electric Appliance Co.