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Cynthia rey. : tions and or u for Fifth Anni- Te osden Wed- ding. Miss Grey: Please tell me the fifth wedding anniversary should the decorations oe nat should be served. ‘Thank very mech. RIDE OF FIVE YEARS gre Auth ts the wooden wedding some 3 decorate with shav- Damdoo curtains, dere floors, og saredust covering the floors, is Queer, rather than Tt i much better to use and branches out from Serve the supper ‘uncovered (adie, using wooden owls and wooden pail or tud @ wooden or yellow-colored med chicken, sandwiches, French vanilla te aw peices, Berve sandwiches, maple ice cream, qaje ou lait and sunshine cake, Write javitations on cards cut from wood- gn plates, or on wooden plaics of the pmalicst Ee. ‘He D 7 ie “Two Masters” Dut I feel sure I may reach just people I wish to thru you col- pes man, but am lover of the T am of Southern tle bringing up. In s, | was somewhat ving never mar broken romance. worked in the and stationary hankering for drawing, and have preserved, young and 4 ate (1) a t i i 38 t i i it if mate ait it » 33 tHe Frhkis eft fl > a i i , i 33 i = e is not going to hurt the have the girls a little, Such wicked ankle,” hurled by the corner, are not skirts, Those make lewd a in steel armor. from the be- They always have say which is essential. in form as changes. Hi gee al ise - think that by dressing « t i: It was their atti actions that got the man. women who dreased a ly left unbothered by men because they car- ives, otherwise, in the Manner, while, on the other f i ete riled : i gee we do not want ts drenesas the knees or above them, stockings, vast elimina- from the back and We do not want ex- i fy i : wonder and jesting com- Mem, but there ix nothing substan- about them. Get this into your heads, ladies: Ta “~ of all that might be said by true beauty and propor- Clothes than they are by the The do not like you to be 5 ‘omg virtuous that your skirts the ground and a mantle ‘ide your tace. Nor do they want to Use com mon sense. Make yourselves look as . and withal as decent, as 70 can, and you will have the love, eyed and respect of the world time. } i MN. DYSPEPTIC Get rid of Indigestion and } Stomach Worries with “Pape’s Diapepsin”’ } eee e ees “Really does” put weak, disordered Somachs in order—really docs” indigestion, dyspepsia, gas. Sartburn and sourness due to acid fermentation — that — just that Makes Pape’s Diapepsin the largent stomach antacid and regulator world. If what you eat for- and turns sour, you belch gas STuctate undigested food or om i head te dizzy and aches; breath * tongue couted, remember the bps “Pape’s Diapepsin” comes Somtact with the stomach all much Vanishes It's truly aston most marvelous, and PY ‘gst harmiessness, A box of Diapepsin tablets costs #o lt ay @ug stores 100 —Advertive- i TUESDAY, M ARCH 8, 1921 | out of sight behind a point. o | the are not beautiful. True, | contrary; men are attracted | the | Poor Man's|| Rock | —nr— BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR ||| Coprriaht, 1920, by Little, Brown & Co. | (Continued From Yesterday) When be hag run a little over a month MoRae took stock. He paid jthe Crow Harbor Canning company, j Which was Stubby Anderson's trad: | ing name, two hundred and fifty a month for charter of the Blackbird. | He had operating outlay for gas oll, crushed ice, and wages for Vin jcent Ferrara, whom he took on j When he reached the limit of single | handed endurance, Over and above | these ¢@xpenses he had cleared twenty-six hundred dollars, | That was only a beginning, he j|knew—only @ beginning of profits jand of work, He purposely thrust | the taking of salmon on young Fer. | rara, For Jack MacRae hag it in his mind to go as far and as fast| as he could while the going was | |mood. That meant a second carrier | jon the run as soon as the Folly Ray cannery opened, and tt meant | that he must have in charge of the jsecond boat an able man whom he| could trust. There was no Question | about trusting Vincent Ferrara. It was only @ matter of his ability to handle the job, and that he demon strated to MacRae's complete satie- faction, Barty In June MacRae went to | Stubby Abbott. “Have ypu sold the Bluebird yet™ he asked. “I want to let three of those Bird | boats go,” Stubby told him. “I don't | need ‘em. They're dead capital But I haven't made a sale yet.” “Charter me the Bluebird on the! same terms,” Jack proposed. “You're on. Things must be go- ing good.” “I expect to deliver 60,000 bine | [backs to Crow Harbor in July,” MacRae said. “If you can do that in July, and in August, too,” Stubby said, “I'll sive you the Bluebird.” | “No,” MacRae smiled. “Il buy} her.” | “By the way.” Stubby enid as MacRae rose to go, “don't you ever have an hour to spare in town?! You haven’ been out at the house for six weeks.” | MacRae held out his hands. They | were red and cut and scarred, roughened, and sore from ealt water And ice-handling and fish slime, = | “Wouldn't they look well clasping | @ wafer and a teacup,” he laughed. “I'm working, Stub, When I have an hour to spare I Me down and sleep.” | Stubby looked at MacRae a sre.) ond, at his worktorn hands and weary eyes. “I guess you're right." be said slowly. “But the old stone house | will still be up on the corner when | the salmon run is over. Don't for-| wet that.” MacRae went off te Coal Farber to take over the second carrier. A oman balcony over the porch | of Gower’s summer cottage com-| manded a wide sweep of the euif.| On a day in mid-July Horace Gower stepped out on this balcony. He carried In his band a pair of binocu lars. He put the giasees to hin eyes and scanned the gulf with a slow, | |searching sweep. At first sight it |neemed empty. Then far eastward his glass picked up two formless | jdots. They drew nearer. \ Gower | |focused the gags again. They were | what he fully expected to behold, | |the Bluebird and the Blackbird, Jack | MacRae’s two salmon carriers. They were walking up to Squitty in | eight-knot boots, to take the salmon | |that #hould go to feed the hungry |machines at Folly Bay. | “He knows every pothole where |a troller can te. He's not afraid) jot wind or sea or work. No wonder | [he gets the fish. Those damned—* Gower cut his soliloquy off in the} |middie to watch the Blackbird ee) te knew all about Jack MacRae’s oper. ations, the wide swath he waa cur jting in the matter of ptusback sal- mon, The Folly Bay showing to) date was a pointed reminder. | CHAPTER VI | Complexity of Simple Matters Jack MacKas siid overboard the small skiff the Blackbird carried and rowed ashore. He walked over low ridge behind which stood Peter Ferrara’s house. As MacRae drew near the houre {Norman Gower came out the door. |He glanced with blank indifference | at Jack MacRae, passed within six feet and walked along the path) |which ran around the head of the! Cove. MacRae watched him out of sight, then walked into old Peter's houre without announcement be yond his footsteps on the floor, as| he had been accustomed to do as| \tar back as he could remember. | Dolly was sitting beside a little table, her chin in her palms. “Hello, Jack,” she said. He came up to her, put his hands on her shoulders. “What ie it now?" he demanded. “I saw Norman Gower leaving as I came up. Afd here you're looking —what's wrong?” To his utter amazement Dolly broke into a storm of tears. He! had known her all his life, and even in their rough and tumble playmate daye he had never seen her ery. It was not just simple grieved weeping. It was a tempest that shook her. MacRae gathered her into his arms, trying to dam that wild flood. Like the tornado, swift in its s#trik- | ing and parsing, so this storm) passed. Dolly's sobbing ceased, | “Tell me,” he whispered. | “When Norman Gower went over | seas we were engaged,” she rnid |bluntty. “For four years I've been | hoping, dreaming, waiting, loving. Today he came to tell me that he ‘| married in England two years ago Married in the madness of a drunk en hour—that is how he puts it—a girl who didn’t care for anything but the good time hie rank and pay could give her.” THE DOINGS OF THE DUFFS OLIVIA 1S THINKING WHAT'S Com OFF HERE LE iG \OF TAKING VOCAL SSONS AND THE PROFESSOR IS TRYING OUT HER. Voice! AOW WHILE ARS BANDY AND T Go SHOPPING T WANT Nou ‘To PROMISE To pe 4 Good Bdy AND WEED Your SELF NICE Or * By Mabel C Page a + > eland 305 DAVID FINDS AN OLD MANUSCRIPT On Daddy's desk was a pile of; yellowed papers—a big paper) weight heid them in place, and seemed to aay, “Hands off, little boy! This ts not for you.” “What are they, Daddy? David “Looks like a lot of exami | Ration papers or something.” “It's a thing you must never touch, son,” Daddy told him. “I've been getting together some data for a pioneer meeting In May, and) T've got these old manuscripts, written by some of the older plo neers, to use for a few dayn” David looked wistful and asked, “If I were very careful coulda't I even read one?” he berged. “Not even ons, David; here, I'll read you this one,” he said, turn ing over the yellow leaves. “Thin | one is writter by Mr. Shelton of Port Townsend, 19 yearn ago. He anked. begins: “Fifty years ago, about the! first of February, the little schooner Mary Taylor left Port | land, Ore., for Puget Sound’ “Then he tells who were on board—five families and one young man. The children were fascinated with all they saw and he goes on to tell of some of their experiences on the trip. | yo lay at Astoria several * Daddy went on reading days. the bar, three trials before we ventured out t sa, and were three or four days get Ung upto Cape Flattery. ° * ° Our first sight of the Indians in this part of the country was at Neah Bayt We heard ugly things about this tribe and prepared them by stacking our fire arms ready for une about the masta. °* They want ed to trade fish for tobacco and trinkets. We threw a fqw picoss of tobacco into their canoes and We made for they commenced throwing fish aboard; such fish! * © * Bull heada, rock cod, kelp fish, mack- orel, fish an fiat as your band, akates and other montrosttien. “‘Another incident which I re call happened near Bpit and few of them. Dungeness as there were only a we allowed them to come aboard our schooner “The (chief) introduced himself as Lord Jim; he wore « plug hat, a swallow tailed coat, a shirt and an air of great impor. He had evidently met oth Tyee tance er white men duomt his credentials. “"One read like thim “To whom It may concern: This will introduce Lord Jim, aMoted Indian of this part of the coun and proudly oe pro: ° - akipping the parts he thought) try Look out for him or he will David wouldn't like, “ ‘waiting for| steal the buttons off, of your a favorable opportunity to croas! coat.’ * kekrin It soon became known that ff one, stood on the Equator at midday, all wicked charms would be broken, and fn that manner the wicked fairy, Snitcher-Snatch, lost all his helpers. The cockatoo and the French poodie came immediately when the goat showed them the way, and Mr Bobadil «pent the next few weeks trying to undo all the harm he had done while he was enchanted. He even brought the lobster, | have heard, altho I trust he returned him) quickly to the sea, for dear knows the desert is no place for a lobster! With every obstacle = removed, Nancy and Nick continued on their way in their Magic Green Shoes. Over mountains and lakes and rivers they flew. Over cities and forest and farms, ‘The little star looked und sm co wh im, Jown on them at night until they got to the p they could no longer see As they got further south, It be. | gan to get cold again and they cross. ed great icebergs floating in the ocean, But they had no fear of therm |now, nor of huts, nor ields, nor ADVENTURES OF THE T Clive Roberts Barton Sure enough, there were the toys in two-great sacks! | the “meta cages, For the wicked Jinn was no Tobacco Man Dies ™* icone : | SORMAD. 3. ©. Slesek 6—Ciee, |) ee ee re eee man | M,N. C1 460. | wins and puffin birds were waitin W. Watts, Durham capitalist and Fn Sas whare the wave of the multi-millionaire, with large hold. | vo a a. ings in the American Tobacco Co., When they arrived, Snitcher. died at hia home here yesterday |gnatch was out, #0 tiptoeing to the | oceanic | cupboard, Nick unlocked it with his To pay the present British gold | Golden Key. Sure enough, there were} ett, It would take 47171 tons of|the toys In two great sacks! Nancy twok one sack and Nick the other WINS B and in a trice they were out of the cave and flying toward the North in their Magical Green Shoes as fast as they could go Santa and the Fairy Queen were waiting to thank them. “Are you ready for another ad venture?” asked the Fairy Queen (To Be Continued) ‘BETTER THAN GALOM, Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a Harmless Substitute Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets stitute for calomel laxative almost i colored. ta Edwards’ liver and bowel complaint with calomel. antancous. These little olive- lets are th result of Dr. The pleasant little tablets do the ne that calomel does, but have nao ad after effects. They don’t injure the teeth like strong liquids or calomel. They take hold of the trouble and quickly correct it. Why cure the liver at the expense of the teeth? Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the gums. So do strong lic s. It is best not to take calomel. Let Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets take its place Headaches, “dullness” and that lazy feeling come from constipation and 4 disordered liver, Take Dr Edwards: Olive Tablets when you feel “logy” and “heavy.” They ‘clear’ clouded brai SEATTLE STAR the sub- are a mild but sure id their effect on the liver is determination not. to treat Tom Agrees With the Professor Pay ME BACK THOSE “TWO BERRIES, WALDO. iM GOING ‘TO BAWL YOU OUT ABOUT IT IN FRONT OF “OUR GIRL OR MV NAME by the Association Copyrighted, 1921, Boterprice THE BOOK OF MARTHA | SUBTLE TEMPTATION | “Your husband's last exploit re {leases you, Martha. Even for Lor | rie's make, you can’t live with him any longer,” I asnerted. | “I wonder!” Martha mused. “If 1 | leave Evan hin life will be a thing of shreds and patches, If I stay, I can make it a unity, link his old age to. his youth, give his life a meaning Since I see the possibility, dare J put it axide?” | “I wouldn't be able to advise,” 1 Answered. “Personally, I can't see that Evan ia worth the sacrifice Especially since a good man like Arthur Mansfield is waiting to—* | Martha's maid errupted with a special delivery letter. Martha read it, handed it to me with “Of all things—« proposal! You're going to be stunned, Jane Lorimer!” In it possible that Arthur Mans field would propose to a married woman, I asked myself? A glance at the signature of the note Martha tossed me relieved my feelings, The writing was familiar, The letter war |not from Martha's platonic friend } The flourish at the foot of the page as characteristic of Van's peculiar penmanship! | Van's letter contained an admirable | paragraph | “After what | feet that T can |and dignify it happened last night I best Justify the affair for your sake by of fering you my name. I urge you to rid yourself of the one you now bear. and I assure you that it will be the supreme happiness of my life to make you happy.” “The noblest emotion Paut Van has ever had,” was my comment. “But still it’s preposterous that he | should consider himself fit for you, | Martha" | “Society's greatest, lover succumbs to the charms of a woman who| works! Martha reread the letter | | with a cirious smile, “Sounds im-| possible, doesn’t it?” How I'd like to advertise tt to \the smart set,” I ed. I was Much more exeited thin Martha, “I want to tell the scheming mothers and Vari's goddesses just what type of woman Van thought worthy of his ancient name! My goodness! I can't leven tell Ann! Let me, won't you, Marte? She ought to know! Maybe if she saw thru hie flattery, and all jthat nonsense about collaborating in | play-writing-—maybe she'd be a little nicer to poor Jimmy! “Toll her—if you think she be Sure Way to Get Rid of Dandruff ‘There ts one eure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely and that is to dissolve it ‘This de stroys it entirely, To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, or linary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to jmoisten the sqaip and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not af, of your dandruff will) be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissolve and entirely de- stroy every single sign and trace of it, no! matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all ttehing and digging of the scalp will stop | instantly, and your hair will be| flufty lustrous, glom silky soft, and looR and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store, It is inexpensive, ur ounces is all you will need. and ana |! ‘TOM, MEET PROFESSOR SO-PRANO- HE WAS TRYING OUT MY Voice! Nou cenrainy wave Y OBEDIENT CUILDOEN MRS: M&GOOSEY © So CLEAN AND G00. PAGE 9 By ALLMAN PROFESSOR, Do You “THINK SHE CAN MAKE A POSITION AS A A LIVING WITH THAT STLE ONA A® BREAD DOUGH RISES, IT G' RADUALLY FORCES MILK BOTTLE DowN WITHIN) UP DISTANCE OF INFANT. PYONOGRAPH POTATO MASHER- THE NUT BROS- CHES & WAL war's comme O4/TH TAMING - ' UN “Mis WILD-FLlower! GAUE A ROCK ON RECORD HOLDER, AND AS DIGK REVOLVES, ROCK STRIKES ROD CAUSING AN UP AND DOWN MOTION, “THOROUGHLY MASHING SPUDS IN KETTLE « kinder to Jim. Tell her by all means. And please post my reply to Mr. Vafl Eyck when you pass the postoffice.” | A refusal—of course? | Not exactly,” Martha ans I caught my breath. Could I believe my ears? (To Be Continued.) Why Be Afraid | Kat What You Like Rest, But Fel- how it With « Stuart's Dya- pepsin Tabict When the stomach sours or be- comes gassy with heartburn, it needs the alkaline effect to offset the acid condition. This you get from one or | two Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, | Relief is usually very prompy, ‘The ular blets after Is and small | p to digest mn be bold | noug baked beans, fried | RRR, sausage, buckwheat cakes and many other things you thought would make your. stomach miser= | able Get a 60-cent box of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets at any drug store, and you will then eat whatever you This simple remedy has never been known to fafl.—Advertsement, " like, and be fortified against the acid, sour stomach due to indiges- tion’ er dyspepsia, JAVTHORITICS DON'T Seem TO of Good Food? "= mens WAS chi EVERETT TRUE THERE'S AN AWFUL S'Grr OF SMALLPOX GOINS AROUND. THE FS BE ABLE To erteck IT, AND = NO Dover cr’S BounD To —— sPREAD FAST. WST THs FORENOON A DOCTOR TOLD Ee = You've Got THE GERMS 1 CHASED CLEAR VO ON THOS Qies wace tt! ——> as TAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS a} #