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j i “munsDaY. MARCH 16, 19 ‘aah sABEL OSTRANDERO~S™ | k REGIN HERE TODAY rphan, returns from reconstruction work in France rvous breakdown caused by overwork and the of her brother, THE SEATTLE STAR OUR BOARDING HOUSE V Vikniow MiSs CHURCH, \7 No MATTER How MANY‘ \ THERE ARE TO SERVE AT MEALTIME, I ALWAYS MANAGE TO COOK JUST SO MUCH TO GO AROUND FoR EVERY BODY, AND “HERE ISNT A SPECK LEFT OVER! RY AWERN SHE CAN TAKE A WELL NOW, \) UoopLe ISA | SOUP BONE AN’ D MRS. HOOPLE} cHow WIZARD}. TT THROUGH TH ONT HAT FA ue coup PACES OR A VEE opp % FIND A WAY I} AND I Ger SO MUCH TO EAT# OHI TELL You, “HERES , A KNACK IN KNOWING, HOW) To RUN ONES KITCHEN |= | THE OLD HOME TOWN LYS WATER AN’ ASTIPF BRUSH WILL IR, wealthy © gene from 8 ne ‘of the death in batt! ° im. At her summer home in Sandy Cove she ts met by her aunt, an | idow, Coren Yu DOR, and the latter's daughter caged has fallen in love with Pay's rejected suitor, : ¥ CADMUS, The summer colony has been made uneasy by the sup- | presence of @ “wild man” who ts thought utity of petty robberies ' ea Tudor estate, Fay is frightened by the sudden appearance at Br aa of a ghastly (ace With staring eyes Sheriff Hulse and his f tr JOHN PARRY, a New York detective, tnvestignta. Among at the summer colony are See ELAYTON, wealthy philanthropist, who has been attentive to saw Wilbur fall in battle, Captain Warren hat hip was shattered during the Argonne drive. GO ON WITH THE STORY ‘ a certain operation; SauEEEEERSSSEEEEEEEnES Bs sane Jeave me utterly | liked the grave, quiet man and ad to ‘bealta mired bis forcefulness, but just now @ restore me | she wanted to be by herself, to uy ‘and Tam going to the bor | to analyse this new emotion | F ”" Me spoke with; “i have something that [ am very ie [anxious to say to you." There was 1 shall be thinking of you/ more of command than pleading in for the success of the | his tone. “I looked for you every with all my might™ the) where both yesterday and today wea softly. “I think if I were! Won't you spare me fust a few min bie get about as you do now I) ules, Aline Tudor?” sy not ave the courage risk) Pay capitulated 1 ” They stole into the houme and out ry mean to come to you!| Upon a Uttle perch, Kenneth Clay ag ies I could ne| tom brought chairs from within the | big before,” he went on. “But | room, and they seated themselves | 1 1 could not resist the| well in shadow, | ibe of a—a little chat with| “I Dave never married, as you| determined not to tel!| Know,” he began. “This is the only chance to get really well, | house which it bas beem for several | i ow your kindness bas/ years my habit to visit, When 1/S***ing? Have you found some Please don't come to} found myself still anxious to avail | °° @ise for whom you care? x * ERNIE HICKS GOT ALOT OF ADVICE oN HOW TOGET THE BLACK FROM LAST NIGHTS MINSTREL SHOW, OFF HIS FACE DOINGS OF THE DUFFS BY ALLMAN - if all goes well may | myself of its hospitatity afier your) '4) "hook her head. Sum vou ue cace soere?”| departure for France I fancied that|. “There—there te no one,” shé said ||| GEE.! PROMISED DORIS TOM, DID You EVER PLAY THERE) Go- HEY, WAIT A ike darkness Fay could feel|{t was only because I admire your | tly | YD TAKE HER To THE PUT-AND-TAKE WITH ONE PuT TWO. ' MINUTE, 1T’s estenty’ fuah and |aumt for Her tenety and charm and| “Then I am satisfied.” He toll] tusarer TONIGHT BUT OF THESE LITTLE TOPS? | | HA-HA-HA-HA- TAKE Two! : 4 little, uncomprehended | more than all, her congentality ax |€Fed above her and laid both hands | You SPIN ‘THE "ToP AND HA-HA-HA MY TURN- To THE mth and glow settied about her|@ splendid pal, but now I know the | SP Uy on her shoulders. “I arm will: | | GUESS | CAN’T Do IT ‘OU HA-HA-HA- WHERE ARE ' ‘ jtruth. It was because a fiving|'"# to take my chance, Ob, my | ™ BUSTED! IF IT SAYS TAKE ONE OR | WIN “THAT “THEATER: You GOING ? be here waiting to see) memory of you lingered here, 1/%#". My deer, I shali make you) “TWO, YOU ‘TAKE ONE OR , ' 4 ‘Warren, whenever you | knew ft the other day when 1 stood | love me!” ¢ i AIT TWO, AN! SAYS PUT ONE: ‘ jin the bail and you came down the| “I Must not let you go away with i Gait’ Soe. Ted You PUT IM Two Teached the driveway | stairs.” | that thought, Mr. Clayton. I ean) | ~< ? paused beside a| “Mr. Clayton?’ Fay rose precipi-|5¢V'r care for you, mot in the way OTHER NIGHT || DOLLARS- SEE? You SHOOT FRST bet wan parked at a littie dis | tately from her chair. “Really, 1—"}¥0U Mean.” the others, and held cut) “Please hear me out,” he pleaded.| fle smiled. T should not have spoken now, but] “We will wait : Lif things shouldn't go just | serious disorders at one of my fac- — | | yee Must Promise to let me/ tories demand my immediate pres CHAPT Iv | begeed, “but I am sure, ence there, and I should like to feel ‘The scene with Kenneth Clay BL that they will! So I won't before I go that you have at least| had taken all the glow and won: * captain, bat fust ‘good lMatened to me. I have no delusions | from that earlier meett with € bgntl you come again.” that you love me now, Pay; but [| tain Warren, and Pay felt dispirited iither hand very tightly for| have never failed in anything that/and dimly dismayed as she lay then stepped into the I have undertaken. and I cannot fai! | awake. She had come to look upon Maes whirled away down the now in the one thing which I de | Clayton as a family friend: now al! sood where he had ieft/ sire more than all else in the world.| at once he had shattered that potnt Mntil the tights of his |! avk, | beg of you that when I re-jof view and she felt as tho he were around a turn) turn you will give me an oppor-|a stranger. ' ma Then she went siowly| tunity to win your love, to make) sof feotateps nearing her door Qouse, her brain awhirt| you care!" and a whispered “good night” “Oh, IT should not have listen’! eroused her from her troubled Fay cried tn distress. thoughts. She turned her head an the door opened and Laurel tiptoed | jin, « shimmering vision in her “Goodnens! Are you awake yet. Fay?" she whispered. ' “I don't feel sleepy,” Fay re sponded. "| There was a carious healtancy in Laurel's tone, the sume nervounly | tense attitude that Pay had ob! served on the day of her return DVENTURES Se et, Sn. te How LonG BORE A Cars MIN YUAT came home, but I didn't know how | you would feel about it.” Fay raised herself upon her pil lows. “Tell me.” she said. “Is it some-| | thing about yourself” Laurel nodded as she stepped out of the rhimmernig gown and slipped a kimono over her shoulders. | “It Wouldn't for the world have) you think that I had been a deceit. | . . ful Wittle cat and deliberately net | toned hm the other day. You don’ TL lout to take away from you some |™ Ue Cteead tae leant | | oue you cared for, while you were “after you bad gone Harry turned, Qrattle * (F ON'Rs GOING. Ito me for sympathy. I did think’ re {that you had treated him very badly a | |%¥o CLSQHT “THAT & | Something drew him to me and he} & BLACK STOSIGS waw at last that we had been meant | for each other from thé very begin @ | |Hees, ou'ct " of or i Have ‘ce Oren She uttered this highly original TH INDPoW Ae explanation in a dreamy, ecstatic ; Taner ede anita s comet ae _By Mabel Cleland = very glad.” she said soberly. | walncty dna T taser tealy anrda Bor Page 625 aS ; each other, Laurel, dear; we only | THE DAUGHTER OF THE FIRST GOVERNOR Then he searched for a lighthouse } | thought that we did. 1 hope with | “Davier” Pessy called, dancing ; and then up jumped Mr. Stanton ia his cave, Twelve Toes, the; ‘This time his glass showed the my heart that you will be happy. /7) around and around her brother as a man from Kentucky—and Mr. ‘\ ra know of this?” ; laughed and laughed. He!two small figures stumbling down from a gnat back into his) tery dragon. And | that he must do some | 4 the glass mountain toward the quick- sand Twelve Toes laughed harder than I could find out how you felt toward || ‘now something.” we substitute the name of Wash. lhim. He wanted to tell mother to- | “Too bad about you,” David! ington for the word Columbia in ee he came into the hall, “I know | Stanton said: MN SSH a) fi No, You nothing was settled |} something, I know something. I| “"I move you, gentlemen, that « NS i Mt until you game back and Harry and | / S fo —/ Mt journey over the Seven Moun-\°"” ight, but we couldn't get her alone |f grinned. “I know two things| this bill; that every time the word he 4 (To Be Continued nelven ute!” “4 on . eee aged himself into 8! wopyrignt, 1972, by Seattle Star} y Be Seen — |] mysett. | Cotomble coourt, Wigruse the word ————————————— nee ——eenenememestiieess » : “ io, David,” ashingto: 7 only SN die Ses Sent ti a ask ant hour! The Pattersons | But I do, David," Perey in| Washington. It seems only fit Pa be searched for a lighthouse brought their celebrity with them, sisted, “sure ‘nough, I do, and 1| ting that one state in the Union Bis test was easy. Atl he had to that Professor Somebody-orother |] ‘spect you never did hear about| should bear the name of the first PSRs to light the tic lanterns up| ___| Who tx such @ famous chemist and them before, ‘cause we've won-| president of the country,’ Me top, that guided the ships! Leurel shivered as she came to Fay| who did such marvelous things éur dered | "> anne. to, Bevin’ ole We in the night, and turn therm | eevee lfor her goodnight kiss. ing the war, and he pinned mother ‘ my | i toward the land, wt | down for ages in a corner of the Mr, Bonney did tel me, Mr./ aren't you glad we know? And land ‘ ‘ 4 al ourself over in France.” | tiprary P Bonney said that it was just 69| whe » th < r Me the Seven Mountain | Lift Of sacrificing yourself over library nt Gletress signal ney waid tha t 60] what two things do you know 4 } f with Fingers) ic voice bt bap Fg are me, & 1 everywhere for Mr yours ago this month that Wash-| David hung up his cap, put Hiking thru his field-giase he saw | yg llegg : to her rescut, but he |} ington did get its name | away his books and liesurely went / | she let down her rippling dark ha wasn't to be found yi |*But people can’t help changing}/out saying goc night. Funny, | All the time it had been @ part | to wash his hands, Peggy trailing l sometimes; they can't help the dic | wasn't it?” of old Oregon, but sor |tates of their own heart.” | Fay did not reply. So this was|} think Oregon was too bi “Whatever are you trying to tel! the firs | me, Laurel?” demanded Fay. “Some| the porch lone I care for™ 1 cannot under- | signit 4.” | the of FREI tim specks \ike little fies 4 ina, Sade climbing up the a Glass. He knew at once Bey were the Twins Th hort he cried, slappin ‘All the better, my hearties! 1 have found you in a more place?’ nd he left with- | je did | after him all the white and wait and the | ing to be answered. Of course, of that interview on |] gettiers over here wanted to be a| you know as well as I do that Trivial im itself, it was | territory by themselves, so Mr.| David doesn't always remember to of the ponsible difficul | situation in the future |f Millard Fillmore told the congress | Ff, asi do all these things without being TE be turned the lant “. * Harry™ Taurel blorted out./uniess she could immediately con |f ®t Washington about it. He said| told, but there is something about MEE thar: le. mt “When you misjudged his motiv | vince Clayton of the absolute hope |] these people had wanted to be a| making our sisters wait—well, ye toons directs on podbot agnontnigeon Shove alle bape core Mad endl parr ta || territory for two years and be be-| you know, but at last he was | tection for you ou ma urel whivered as she came to! ‘That was what h know iti He enys that you den't| Fay fore geednight kien amt |] lieved congress ought to let them. | ready : when care either, any more; that you told; “It is almost ltke autumn,” she! “And so—and so—" Pegsy was| “1 know where the daughter of i, | him #0 flatly at the beach yectertay Jobserved. “I believe a storm is com pri ata waeiak po ye a | the first governor lives and 1 F morning, and I do hope for your] ing. Do you think we had better|{ he Wasn't a ‘ 0 ear ty i sake, Fay dear, that it ix true.” leave all the windows open like|} talking about congress, and ter. | know when daddy's going to take one “St js.” Fay affirmed. “T'd for-| this? |] ritories and things. “And #0," she | us to see her,” he said im- the | 0 o Conti: i] stumbied on, “they told him they | pressively ‘otten he was alive until you men-| (Continued Tomorrow) soa . orn ; I] “thought he was right about it (To Be Continued) 1 Shp thane girth me ‘i | eae ' w “Don't know what the everything |Jt's @ battle of character, dear. The | The epleode of the contract from|pansies for thoughts” which he | is, sweett t, but I sure do love | trick of it ts not to act on impulse, which Viola had helped to | flipped gaily before her nose. |you—in spite of-—your doubting it!" | When the mood hits you to murder ed. But Polly's batred and| “Well, Pussy cat, how are we feel ather unhappy, | Me, for instance, or go run away, on, tormenting |ing? Any more brainstorms an | don’t do it till you've thought it over nderful to get |mind-cyclones and temperamental | Y, and so have I, | Welland talked to me about. itt back home | upheavals and whirligigs?” Seriously, dear,| We'll both be better and stronger ple she loved | He swept her into bis arms and/you mustn't have such moods, But | for it every time, Polly and Paul—and Paris By Zoe Beckley (Copyright, 1922, by The Beattie mary | Rigaud CHAPTER XXXVII—“BRAINSTORM” Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little é ning nth ol ‘nen | , v's outburst was not 6 Lies re tl po teen ae not 1 people who thought | danced her around, despite her strug | remember this, that they are only “And now, pack your old kithag, Age t off. with | mash. o . ng | ber bright and clever 1 He kissed her hair, her neck, | moods, and will pass. No twe peo-| for we're going to spend the week« it righ "8 questioned in| wife, with h of ishments| Paul could stay in Paris till his | her face—all ¢ in little dabs, and unless they're absolute bone: | end in the country—Robinson, where t sells a tiny bottle of | > avery oe > term of work was done, Then—if | would not stop. Polly's grim mood | heads, can possibly be together al-| they eat dinner in the t s! 1 a few cent ufficient | W her tor) he shouldn't want to come back jshowed signs of breaking. Surely | ways and not have litt crashes now | want you all to myself in a "ys te ve every hard corn, soft corn, | ways question me time “eae Like Viola | Well, he could have his choice. this was not a man who preferred and then. It’s life. It's marriage.| Robinson! ‘The name struck her or corn between the toes, and thejafter -her marriage: “Am I res Acie anes toe hiki When Paul eame home, his arms | someone else to her! “Remember what Stevenson wrote |ear with a little shock, Where had cal without soreness of irrita | womén or nile gpm s lwiul she?’ hin if she really tried. | were full of flowers, pink and red| “Paul—you do love me, don’t you, ut marriage being no bed of|she heard it bef tion ~Advertisement. The more she brooded, the oftener | Will she? i land creamy-white, “and a buach of |dear—in spite of—everything?* roses, but a field of battle? It's true. | (To Be Continued) *