The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 20, 1923, Page 11

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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20 19 THE BEATTLE STAR (Continued From Yesterday) “But d say,” I asked Polly, “that every wo who comes you mean here thinks he’s got the right to we to behave like that? | “Of cour he does, sald Polly, casually, “Do you think he's goin to waste 40 minutes in a place like this woless he's out for a lark? If he’s not out for hand-holding he has himself done downstairs while he gets shaved or has his hair cut. If he comes up here, it's because he likes it; and a man will have his bit of fun, won't be? Well, cheerto!" In &® hoarse whisper: “I've got off with | @ staff major, He's taking me to the | Pay. tonight. He's bound to have a pal; shall I get one for you?” I refused. It's a beastly life being & woman. It wasn't altogether beastly, be- cause Iam what I am, and there/ hung about the manicure parlor an Irresistible stimulus It's disgusting to have a man persecuting you with Caresses, but still it’s flattering tn a mall way. Some were rather nice. and good looks matter so much to me that, on the fourth day, when a charming Australian put his arm | Found me as we got up, I only half Tesisted. Perhaps I was getting worn Out; perhaps he was rather nic Anyhow, I let him kiss me just once and pushed him away here,” 1] sald, “be good.” (I was already pick- ing up the language) As he tried to seize me again I hit him on the| Rose with the clothes brush and ran/| out of the curtained esa, laughing. I sx sed myself, but my sense of self-contempt was not so stronk as it had been. Six months away from Ciber Court, my working life had made a change {n my Ideas Tt wasn't a bad place A rough fel lowship arose between us three, We'd always lle for one another if by any ghance Porky came tn and asked why | So-and-so wasn't back and when did she go out for lunch? We exchanged references about the customers, too. | This one was awful; that 6ther was quite happy if you got him to talk about golf. There was very little | URSULA TRENT A Novel by W. L. George. pyright, 1921, by Harper @ Brothers. | was awkward |ton was spler rowdiness, Beyond some squeaking and some movement in the curtains it was quite a proper place, There was only ¢ ne in muy first wr The A jan came back with a friend, and, as I was en gaged, went in to Miss Morte with whom he had grown familiar 1 heard @ lot of laughing, and grave proaches, Just as | ushered out my miner frightful screams from Miss Merton's cut nd I rushed toward the re lowed by Polly's customer fol We found Mims Merton in the graap of the two} men, who were practicing upon her a horrtbie torture the other scraped her hair off a much too high forehead and paraded a looking-glass before her eyes, com pelling her to see herself at her most unfavorable. We all shrieked, and Miss Merton became savage, kicking, and trying to scratch. Then, to my amazoment, she addressed the man who held her down, and called him But I can't repeat the word. She grow quite pale “Let me go, you yd she remarked in a conversational voles. It gave him a shock. He let her go, and for a moment everybody at, all of you said Miss Merton. thed us all Her fury had exposed her common ness. She felt.tt badly, and for two or three days hardly spoke to us The Australians came only once more and tried to make it up with two pounds of chocolate. d. She went wn for the appr said, “here's a cc chocolate for you,” ans She Miss Mor to the of Then she turned to the Austr pounds and sald: “Is there anything olse I can do for you today? Anything ex cept. manicuring, and I'll be charmed.” T couldn't Merton. She was making such a mx if again her cc I felt, from ir fble slums. She was engaged to the head clerk of an state agent Polly was different, and much more ul strugs ness, § je came ed while one held her, | help respecting Miss/ showed wm « If 1 wa b present @ remarkable thing about Polty knew how to obtain s and yet prevent exces With splendid tm allowed herself to be dy who passed her lid It without vice ke a ly cat at who t to any ad to be tick called in fact that apparent | os was an evidende of her purity of mind. She was a | round, rosy, pleas ant animal She was engaged to ® young man whose picture I was shown, a young clerk ‘looking in a delicate way wearing a la wAtch chain on which were fastene and masonic sig Bhe had comp! boy was anxious once, but tho she we edge it. she felt that they bh 1 too short a time clans Instinct wimming prizes ated tre to marry her at uld not acknowl! idles, Her ad been aly two made her time of Also, pensioner at naible ther uld marry look f trial ard of at her father and her irregular tn upor up tn jet lor and she ¢ mtil she'd done tt troussea to a normal four years dick did washing ervals, Bo they dep her, and she felt r of mtting least was a mother ad some idea ama! h igings, where they cc Ain't no th a blue ore was to get mt rather a expect to t one. m toa regulars, F nu- 4 and grow rather to walt, On they provide a cer Also, It's the thing to have. Every trade has Its blue rib bon, and the mank wdled over, humor when nate cross the ot when th or han y have | Overy man does not walt ¢ de the curtain, with 0 vigil for unfaithful sounds Thanks to my regulars, I was now three pounds a wee and was ace pting life with a cer. © of amusement were not dull; a few were but I still kept my rule nd gave nothing consentingly to Mr, Wilby, my soldier regular, the most difficult of them all. I realized that I had escaped from Mra, Vern ham only into a Iife that would lead me to nothing much more Excepting marriage, perhaps. had got married; Mixx Merton Polly were engaged. 1 wa ly remarked, a good plac bigamy. But did I want et married? I told myself 1 didn't, tho, « I aid. Mar lage Js the terminus for women; It's only leas final than death Some of attractive oven prectine Buste and . an Pol in which to sommit to course, apper I was told her I'd le at Ralcombe Street terviewed Mra ho did not conceal my new I had to gon aturday afternoon. cupation, id have tea ona Isabel was turto “How can you be much a fool? I suppose you think you've done some- thing clever? I suppose you think you'll get married in that manicure Sheik Turban } Cynthia Grey: %, ) ae Happy Hunting Grounds of America,” m | Slogan of Our Newest Week—That of the Sports- men—Let's Boost It! ' | Y CYNTHIA GREY Sports Week—Emerging from the maze of various | “weeks” it made its debut yesterday. It has been created by the Sportsmen's A ttion of America, and Seattle will pay | a fit tribute by displaying exhibits of Washington game and | fish at the Crystal Pool, movies, window displays and a | parade on Washington's birthday. | Every inhabitant of the great Northwest should be ea- | pecially interested in Sports week—it is a call from our sweet-scented forests, a murmur from far mountain streams, | where the ever-popular trout disports himself in clear, cool | pools, | And it is more than a call from the open spaces to the city- frayed folk—it is a magnificent advertisement for our state. | Did you know.that the State of Washington receives less |money from sportsmen than any other state, altho it offers | recreation in this line that is in a class by itaelf? | All together—let’s join hands in an effort to induce the whole world to taste our wares with profile | The girl the perfect | Wants to Take | owen it to herself aoquire one of| ) 4 | these new sheik turbans of twisted| Physical Culture | , | orep thus ¢ ne her features the Dear Miss Grey I am #0 unfor iday, fr oh © of @ lifetime to shine forth. | tunate te © about 40. pounds and on Tuesda Likewise, she should accomp | overweight. various tr f Mam t th the latest type of jewe tried strenuc exercine Please do r en, borrowed from the Orient,| reduced a few pounds in wa times, as it make the smartest of earrings.|but it impairs my health, and b fered with her writing Heads for the neck complete e | nides, I regain my weight quickly ee ip cture, but > not coms gate It, ; Ww hat 1 really wish to know is tiie tit ip’ brahewelt the reptlawitie | _ y another, but dt will be a short p UM | tall instead of a long inted ome that’s what you mean!” She grew + When the snake is pursued by embarraasod he sort of ga me . other reptiles or it often up. She no |b r tried to get mo tr drops a jo! of the I to satisfy the out of ure shop, but said f hunger of the pursuing one and then that I ought to go on the stage, I able a he Mt escapes fety without greater loas understood. Isabel ed @ conven y © I~! than the joint of the tail | tional cloak for the irregularities she 1, myself » not be Aas | ected, Hut was not unkind | eve that any two people should have) yoy far gt is from New York to reg iF iy rep Pose 4 | strictly the same exercises, inst ‘on? | mamma, who came up, weeping, of-| 40D" OF suggestions, for the simple | “"» 45 mites | fering fersivences and an allows reason that the person who works AS to a ghter grew more inde-|!Mido needs differe Ud) Who was the last king to be forced pendent and more cruel as her moth- | Met from the one who works off the throne of Great Britain er wept more, Isabel made mamma | 14% Instruction is so ge that mes II. This was in the bloodless understand that I'd bettor be lot | OM does not receive the at He) revolution of 1688 | pr | Would most benefit trom. 1 tuld eee | 1 told her that if she went on try-| Unk each should e just such ex the parent of a child be to nave you whe'd drive you to ines a® would s his own 10+! setermined by blood tests? | the devil | Cividual requirement. | Anthropologists doubt this very Isabel {s as brutal as me tn some| port of instruc-| much. However, Dr.” Albert Ab waya |t ve {ally | rams, of Ban Francisco, Cal., claims reductic ot that severdl such testa have been CHAPTER VIII al ¢ en to chemical | made with satisfactory results | Ding-Dong # that will reduce excess fat O66 | 1 me time will promote) what is the quantity and value of| maintain abu I was getting used to the life. | bronze imported between 1919 and) liked these girls, whether evant m not Inter tn any corre-| 19917 Nauntir The exists a sort of| spondence course—would prefer local | year Quantity Value | physical attraction between women, | teacher if - k you} j919 « ++ 16,596 Iba, $ 24,038.00 greater than exists between men, STAR READE 1920 “Sd 293.00 What I mean ts that men don’t #e« eachers in this| soa) ,” 858 5.00 to mind the ugliness of thelr clon print names and| . friends; we « it too, but sel 440.008 If you! what would be a good name for a dom is a man affected by male} eased and stamped | mininery shop? | beauty as we are by female beaut bs ou; but in| silady's Hat Bhop, Beauty's Mode,| Polly’s bright blue eyes were a ¢ ¢ the re-| The Rosemarie, The Bonn La tinual pleasure 1 mo Wan Mins Mer ng profes-| Parisienne ton‘s inh al ange girl, Mias| sional people or firms. ] ee Mert I never wu a her; ab #8 9 When will the next eclipse occur? ld never intr: herself. € t know any cept that she loved fancy-dreas balls Just then she left, suddenly, saying| purpose of securing more accurate that she was going somewhere elso,| knowledge for the benefit of and I never saw her again, She was! gators. | replaced by a girl called Hilda, who ae When ng about her, ex-| founded? was A partial eclipse of the moon will | ocour on the night of March $, 1925, by King Charles, for the| and will be generally visible in North America, About one-third of moon's disk will be obscured. reenwich observatory In 1675, The navi- led States will ocour on September | 3 Wet Contents 15 Fluid Drachuag AVegetable similating heFood by Keg A B ting the Stomachs and Bowel 3 Thereby Promoting Digests A Cheerfuiness and Rest (ont jam, Morphine of helpful Reme dy for Gonstipatic and Djarrhoe. and Feverishness 0 Loss oF SLE: P ASTORIA For Infants and Children, TS Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria lways Bears the Signature of For Over itment against him, and it was not n¢ had deserted me; it had waited months me out three days felting his ¢ in his mind, was that again. If he had come back after r, un but unable to re 1 could ha ved him. But I c not be the decoration of his week He must bh understood this, I never he d of or saw him He left me frozen and deter- 1 to profit by the lesson he h nm The natura) re; y natural, was that I sudde into the trifling rtion iful to y ple the she He bad made me #0 angry, bad made {t so clear to me that I'd been @ fool with him, that I a fool with others, For a ortnight I was geductive and care- Jess. I did not resist, and 1 was suc- cessful. I think I saw all the revues of the day, with a different man by my side and a different hand holding mine sents, choco- lates, g 8; 1 had too much to drink Only, some secret tradition saved me from the most extreme of fc There are limits that I can't pass something won't let me. I can’t play give myself to @ man without th I VEAL CHOPS STUFFED SRTHA E. SHAPLEIGH Of Columbia University - For stuffed veal chops take: 3 Six extra thick veal chops, cut BY from ribs, two cups soft. bread crumbs, two tablespoons finely, chop’ onion, two tablespoons bee con fat, on -half teaspoon salt, one= eighth teaspoon thyme, one teaspoon paprika and one-fourth cup tomate juice. Wipe the chops and, with a sharp” cut thru the thick part to the, bone. Lay open, sprinkle with salt, and stuff. 5 In making the stuffing cook the” onfon in the bacon fat, add crumbs. and seasonings and cook five mine utes. Add tomato juice and cook uns” til smooth. i After the chops are stuffed place. | them in a hot frying pan, in two tae knit the|1I wish I could, but Iican no more | blespoons of bacon fat, oil or buttery! and cook until well browned on both: | next solar eclipse visible in the Units| lusion of love than J can sell myself. | ides. Add to the pan one cup of to- matoes, one cup water, a little sugar, shop?” Jat once created some disturbance! I, there a jointed snake? 10, 1923, and will de visible as a par- salt and pepper and cook, dosaly, | ‘Well, one does,” I replied, aggres- | among Polly's regulars and mine, It wi vorth Polly didn’t face such complicated | covered, for an h | . no a) a 1 | There is a reptile known as the| tial eclipse general thruout Nort: 7 | isp nour. | | atvely. | War a nuisance, because in the manl-| jointed or glass make. It is not a| America, It will de visible in total) Problems. ne was kissed by any-} The veal will be thoroly done ihe To what sort of man? To|cure world the regular contracts a|enake but a legless Heard. body, but when she was married she | well flavored, and there will be This pe-| eclipse in Mexico and at Ban Diego manicured. | sort of marrta uriat. | would be beautifully faithful. I re- the sort of man that ge cullar reptile will disjoint at the tatl,| and Santa Barbara, Cal. . “I do hope the oven won't get warm today and spoil my small amount of gravy to serve with 7 - , I suppose you're doing it under your | No oth which comprises half the length of e 20e alized this as I came to know her/| the chops. a bread,” he said to the children. | @wei: ware?” lourtain; {t len’ . 6 4 “ heiten ates moeanne ee | e , e a curta! t ts the body, at any of these joints.| Do snails leave their shells fot iD ns, Week-ene) a i Mix-Up Land was full of queer holes in the middle, also. | “Yen. ‘There's nothing to be/ him as to th These parta may crawl away and die,| Snails never leave their shells ew | With her and her people their | ba " ge y x | “Of course,” 1t was Nick's turn to| shamed of.” | friend, amiably ut without but they never go back into their! tirely wntil they die. Thetr bédies| house in Hornsey. Polly had taken Meet to Try Man one \ can Mg say. “How do you make them?’ | , “Who's talking of shame? It ian't/tlon. Tho regular may have his| natural position. Persons have been|are attached to the shella and they|* fancy tome. As she put it: “You're Who E. “i When the Twins left King Even-| "7, O) od the hole first,” an-|*>ameful, It's silly. So long as you|nails done by nomebody cleo if his! known to catch them by the tail and| only come part way out of them.| ot one of us, say what you like. I} Oo scaped | Steven and started toward the palace | cwered the baker-man, “and after it| Were tucked away tn Mra. Vernham’s| «irl happens to be ill or away, t sec the rest of the body crawl away| When they die they dissolve or dry tke your ways; there something | BATH, Eng., Feb. 19.—With free of Jack Straw (who bad no business| pets a nice ahape, we put the dough-| Pack room nobody knew anything/|it is a sien of greater virtue to let! or into the ground. If the whole|up in their shells |'orty about you.” (Polly had h’'s|corder, mayor, five magistrates i frie : | nut in the middle.” jabout you and you were all right. | his fingers go until she comes back. | ————___ iensiia - tinction perfectly, but thought this humor-/| 59 jurors present for the trial of Bia to be there), they saw some wonder. | Dut on ae ra is aceite pleat’ | What s going to happon if you do| That is where Hilda proved} ous.) | Martyn it was found that Martyn had» ful sights. | dabeadt Nase? Guriohaty | marry? When later on you meet the| troublesome, She was too pretty.|forearm. She was small-boned, full | (fectiwene Scquieroes enckned & Month belones baker-man who | nc... ‘ }men you have manicured? She had the most perfect, honey-| Sgured and erect Diners weedeat ET free ae oe i pe pak ee bread | 1 ners rant phy SP ea er | “Perhaps I sha’n't marry,” 1 re-| colored hair, water-gray eyes, adead-| Hilda was absolutely mobbed; she voshagenesapad “a is | ” ie Motte ae round." maid Nick |Piled. “There are other things than| white akin which made her thick| fot so much work that some fell to| ee ne ee ao Le Smee | hot ta Maie-Up Land” said the | parTiagt | mouth seem exceedingly red: her Hpa|Polly and me, which was satistying | ment of the Twins the next thing he did was to plie some large chunks of fee under the oven and close the door. “I do hope the oven won't get warm today and spoil my bread,” he said to the children. “Yesterday the sun came out and the Ice started to melt and the bread got sour. One can’t have good bread unleas he has an ice-cold oven.” “How very strange!” said Nancy. “Where we live the ovens must be Hot to bake the bread.” “Ah, then you don’t live in Mix- Up Land,” said the baker-man, “Byerything is changed around here. No doubt you make doughnuts with baker. “They're square. All mone is square here except paper money and paper money is made of ailver, so there isn’t any.” “Oh, my!" sighed Nancy. so hard to understand “Not when you are a Mix-Upper,” said the baker-man. “But there! I've talked too much! 1 forgot to put salt on my sugar-cookies, and the children won't buy them unless they have a thick layer of salt-icing.” “Then we'll go away and not both- er you,” said Nick. “Good-bye.” “Good-bye,” said the baker-man, (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 9123, The Star). “Tt's all te * Pag Once upon a time, when Wash- ington was still a territory and things were just getting good and started, they found that they needed a railroad, back into the hills where the coal was hidden in the mines. ‘There were money and time and men to do the work, and the rail- road building went on much as railroad building does now, with a few little differences, such things as Indian children who played pranks on the workmen, cougars which stole the company’s meat if it was left out over night, and bears—lots and lots and lots of bears. ‘There were about three hundred men working on that stretch of road between Puyallup and Wilke- son. Most of them are forgotten,J but Imlak deseryes a place in our Story Book. In the first place, not only was Imlak very foreign and funny, with a well developed “funny bone” of his own, but he had a stammer in his speech, so that no matter how serious he might want to be, he stuttered and stammered so that everyone laughed, Now, Imlak heard «@ lot about the bears; this man had seen a OD bats 4 ar Seattle + + Cd e 917 IMLAK bear, that had almost stepped on one; another had met man one face to face on the trail; sev- eral had bearskins to sleep but Imlak had no bear story to tell. He got tired of It, ‘T11LIm nnnnngt to-to-to-to- s-s-s-stand tt,” said he, “LLII'm going to-to-to g-g-5-Kot one m-m-m-m-myself.” “How?’ they teased him, “How are you goin’ to get him, Imlak?” 80 Imlak stammered out his plan. Sone night he was going to it up all night and watch. The men said bears prowled about the camp all the time and he was ‘eee Koing to gee Rot one, b-b-b-by jing-Jing Jingo!’ 80, one night, one frosty, cold night, Imlak did not go to bed in bis bunk, but but under the starg all alone he lay down on the cold ground to watch. My, but he got cold and sepy! But he wouldn't give up. The stars rodo in a glittering silver procession across the sky; the creek nearby rippled on and on; the Maves stirred faintly in the night wind, but no other sound broke the stiliness Then, quite distinctly, in the underbrush, Imlak heard a move: mont, on, goin’ (To Be Continued) KICK MICK mney “Work!” sald Isabel, sardonte, . only work,” I replied, and sald more than I meant. “One doesn't need to marry to know men.” | Isabel understood me at once, She | seemed to detect some change in my features, “Oh!” she said at length. “It | were always a little chapped, as if | ahe were consumed by a fever. She |had the most exquisite hands, «mall, shadowed in sepla inside the joints: | the nepia shadow recurred at the el- |bow joints. If I had been a man I should have wanted to kiss her {n the somber hollow between arm and } THE ONE-M AN WOMAN | BY RUTH AGNES ABELING | CHAP. 68—A HOUSE OF SORROW | “Can you nee anything?” Latham asked, following the direction of Kate's gaze . Kate was looking toward the back lof the shop. From the room, off the |dim passageway, which nize@ as Sing Loy’s gorgeous room, rays of light slanted ed to her that Sing Loy’s wailing |came from there. | Dared she venture back? she asked | herself. “Will you wait here whike I go k? 1 know him a little—perhaps he wouldn't object to my coming,” she whispered and then left Latham |standing alone in the shadowy front lroom, while she made her way cau- tiously toward the back of the shop, | A low, flat pile of freably washed land dried clothes lay, ghost-like on a long table, She halted, frightened for the minute | But like a magnet the sound from |the back attracted her, She moved on. As she entered the passageway back of the ironing room she stoppde Jagain. The place was narrow. Ita intense blackness was broken only by the thin rays of light which slanted from the room ahead. Kate stood waiting, fearing to go on. She sensed a presence back of her. Suddenly {t seemed to Kate that her throat had become paral; 4. She wanted to turn to see who was near her, She wanted to speak, But she was powerless, A hand tor trembled. Th intensify. “Kato,” the word was barely audl bie Kate relaxed. Latham had fol lowed her, It was his hand which touched her arm, She was glad he ched her arm, Sho arknoss seemed to was the She realized that she had been more afraid of the blackness than she had wanted to acknowl edge. didn't want you to come back here alone,” whispered Latham, “but Vil keep out of sight as you reach the door.” she recog: | bed: | It weem: | ACROSS THE BED, WRAPPED IN A RADIANT KIMONA, WAS ALICE, Hor hand closed over his for a |necond, ‘Then Kate started silently on toward the ght ahead. The door, she found when shoe reached it, was all but closed, Thru the opening, only a length of scarlet satin shimmered, The light within was dim. The volce of Sing Loy, somewheng on the other side of the partition, had died to a low, crooning sound ‘oo spellbound to utter a sound, Kato touched the door, It gave un- der the pressure of her hand, As It moved slowly back the brilliant satin- covered bed was visible, Across the bed, wrapped in a radiant kimona, one white arm thrown above ber head, was Allee, (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1933, by Seattle Star) This made me con- sider whether I was pretty, for I was not used to being eclipsed. But by dogrees we settled down, thanks to a| man called Lawrence Knighton. He practically settled the Hilda problem | by becoming crazy for her and com- ing to be manicured every day. He was tall, rather dark, had nothing to do, and was, I discovered a ttle} later, th I don’t think Hilda encouraged him much; she was too cool and too care- ful. but humiliating. afternoon thru an fll-drawn curtain. | He waa sitting opposite the girl, who had just finished trimming his nails, gazing at her with an awful air of abasement. He tried press her hand, which she withdrew, and so they stayed. It's a funny thing, the helplessness of mon before women when there know how to hold themselves in. So many were passing before me every day, men of all sorts<old men, feobly gallant or frankly disgusting; boys out for a rag; married men, rather ponderous or inclined to confide their miseries, phflan anxious to take @ little stimulus and not to en- » themselves too deeply; or a more physical type, going from shop to shop, seldom persovering, deter- mined to find easy adventure, One gets to know men like that, becayse few can ait alone with’a girl, hands touching, without confiding some- thing of their hopes, disppointments, and vanities. We had a tea party once, and Mr. Knighton, a stranger and myself, Everybody got familiar. The stranger kissed me, half rebuked, while Hilda held away, with those marvelous water-gray eyes, the hum- ble Knighton, who at last went down upon his knees and was allowed to Kiss the sepia-touched fing So far I had refused the perquisites of my trade, except that twice I went out to dinner and to the the- ater with Mr, Wilby, who behaved very well, even in the =taxi going home, He morely sighed when I re- pulsed him, and said that he was a Jonah and girls didn’t ike him. I think I lost him that way; T was not very successful then, “There was ers, Hilda a lack of yield about me. These triflos that men expect were not trifles with me, T can't play. I had a model before me in the shape of Freda, whore whole name was Fred- orikn Watterdal, some sort of Swede, Thelleve, who was engared, owing to the new businoss brought by Hida Freda was matn!y pursued by a man called Mr, Higham, a very rich wid. ower, who owned many restaurante Froda was interesting, extremely tall, cool-looking, with an equivocal gleam in hor dark eyes, She spoke very little, and then in a careless tone, She was chaffed about Mr. Higham, eldest son of an Irish peer. | T caught a glimpse of them one | and merely replied, “You, he's old and COPYMONT BY MP CALLS Clothes worn at the Southern win- ter resorts generally are regarded as forecasting the ensuing summer's styles for higher latitudes. Such belng the case, light weight woolen crepes and light woolen plaids will be popular for suits, Many striped and figured novelty materials are shown, White predominates, but trimmed in bright colors and combined with black. not pretty.” That was all, ‘That was how she took life, I belleve that the attitude of Freda and the return of Philip altered my point of view. Phillp discovered me by making a flying visit to London and, one morning, following mo from Balcombe Street to the manicure shop, He then came in to be mant- cured, For a moment I was melted by his good looks, but T wouldn't speak to him, Beyond asking him whether he wanted them long or short, round or pointed, T would not anawer him, tho he explained at length the needs of his careor and the impossibility of things going on forever, tho they might go on at in- tervals. I refused to say good-bye to him, tho I took bis Up, I felt a re- Syrup Pepsin Loved By Hosts of Babies Half o teaspoonful will make a fretful youngster happy and playful HE mother has her choice of many remedies for her baby's minor ills, but she should be care- ful which remedy she selects lest she do the child harm. What might be safe for herself may do in- jury to an infant. (ou will find that if the little one % cries and doesn’t +t want to play that its bowels are con- € stipated. First look carefully to &; the diet and give the child one-half teaspoonful of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. You will then see results in a few hours. You will not have to force it on babies or children: they actually ask for it, it is so pleasant-tasting and free from griping. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a compound of Egyptian senna and pepsin with agreeable aroma- tics. The ingredients are stated on the package. It is a mild, gentle vegetable laxative that ev- eryonefinds effectiveand pleasant. Itis better for you and yours than purgatives, coal-tar drugs, or salt «TAKE DR. ANY FAMILY MAY TRY IT FREE Thousands Parents Mert can I find trate themseloes, *"1 seorthy laxative that “anyone in the Samily fe can use when const you to try Sy in. T will gladty provide a liberal free sample botile, sufficient for an a: test. Write me where to send il. Address Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 515 Washington ‘St., Monticello, Illinois, Weshington icello, Iinois waters and powders, which may concentrate the blood and dry 1 the skin; or mercurial calo which may salivate and loosen the teeth. Use a safe laxative like Syrup epsin, and especially for the children, for invalids, growing girls, nursing mothers, elderly people, and persons recently oper- ated upon who need bowel action with the least strain. Mrs, Lillian Brenington of Woodruff, S. C., awe nes her children Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, and Mrs, A. E. Blondin of Muskegon, Mich., will not have any other laxative in her home.” Your druggist will supply you, and it only costs a cent a dose. Try it in constipation, colic, biliousness, flatulency; headaches, and to break up fevers and colds, cawets9Y RUP. PEPSIN The family laxative CANADIAN & PACIFIC “Princess” Steamships leave Seattle Daily for Vancouver and Victoria, B.C, from Colman Dock, foot of Marion Street, Fares from Seattle to Victoria $3.00 One Way | $5.40 Round Trip (80-Day Limit) $4.00 Week-End Fare (Goind Saturday or Sunday, return limit the following Monday) The Day Boat for Victoria and Fares from Seattle to Vancouver } $4.25 One Way $8.50 Round Trip {Continuous Paran each wey, 90-Day ‘i alt) Vancouver Daily, at 9,00 A. M. The Night Boat for Vancouver Direct, Daily at 11:30 P, M. Direct Train Connections at VANCOUVER ‘for all points East, through the Wonderful Canadian Pacifle Rockies, CITY TICKET OFFICE, Telephone, MAin $587, 608 SECOND AVENUE BFL Sturd

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