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SATURDAY, M RCH 10, 19: The Honor of M. Lutard hebiensh, BY E,. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM a Noemie Copyright, 1922, by E. Phillips Oppenheim IT Guy Epoiw t he Bnglis M t governme The power to keep the leader Greyes meets Janct on the street NOW GO ON WITH STORY can help us to save SIR NORMAN TALKS I saw her are more than w » danger—of that I toms, for wh French, she w Mueh rest of his speech was or a seat the car w had f the matte been sent for me, but she shook he ve tained in his cor head. ‘ Lam going to the Gare de l'Est “wr take a * I asked. t agents of a very dangerous gang of criminals have been chief elieve to be tn league w nature, She was n ease, looking around the time as ve warning to Mon tho she were afraid of be b-| ? served, Somehow, I gathered when That hax been done He ts we parted that she was obsessed by |t and im s He will HOUSE ON THE STEEPLE “Your house fell down and now you've no place to live” This is what the paper said—the | They knocked once on the chim paper that was the last egg the | ney, and thrice on the ahutter—and Cut-Out Woman had given to thelthen suddenly a voice called out, Twins. “You can't knock three times on my It said, ‘When you go up the lad-/door for you don’t know which ock 01 on the chimney, |domino the door ts.” wice on a shutter, and three t on the door of the domino how must mean Jack 8 ered Nai certat rooster with for one am going see what f “Well, w have to be starting right away,” sald Nick. “Goodby.” “Goodby,” said the rooster Off trotted Nancy and Nick the place where Jack Straw’s house spun ‘round and ‘rot 3) “Oh, yes we dom” sald Nick. “King * | Even-St told us, It's the W'S \domino with the double five on {t.” And with that he knocked one, tw est’ said thé lthree times on Jack Straw’s front “And 1 | door stay around to} Suddenly bing, bang, crash! ns. The hous t thetr ears, and down tumbled the Twins. But they landed on tho roft to |mattress that came out of the ecg them. on top of # steeple. There stood the magical ladder |and all and there lay the magical mattress| ‘“Wh-what’s happened in case they should fall off the magi- | gasped. cal ladder. Your house fell down and now | absolu Up, up, up climbed Nancy. you've no place to live,” sald Nancy. Up, up, up climbed Nick “You had better give us your magic And when they reached Jack/ring so we can tir Mix-Up Land Straw’s house all the w’ stopped |Into Apple-Pie Land again.” blowing, and the house stopped spin. (To Be Continued) ning around. (Copyright, 1923, by Seattle Star) ar Seattle = Page 9 GATHERING APPLES FROM FIR TRE ly they came to a desert-) to dig, Old Bill wasn't ed camp, with a big sign nailed| !nterested, and everybody began | to say the prospect was no good to a twe, and hanging from the| and they would co back branches were sacks tilled with) Od Bill left One morning and Meson went up to Moose Creek pontof- provisions. TAKE ALL | fic¢ to neo if ho had any mail ‘The sign read, “TAKE Poor old Bill! He couldn't stay YOU WANT, BUT DON'T | sober when he got in a crowd WASTE ANY PULL THE| @nd for ae ye and 4. he stare : > 6WHEN YOU'RE when Dick went after him the SA UP WHEN YOU'RE] thew aii atlas THE no good.” I'm In all the week« since they had been on the way, the party had : without any gold? had no frult or vegetables and no wered in surpri nok suger, without trying any more than Ger ean juat Imagine their foy| that? Well, I'm. not.” over those bags. Some of them It's a long story and Interest held dried peaches, somo had] ing, but we must hurry on. Dick dried apples, and there was sug-| finally went in with another min ar, and all sorts of provisions In| er, worked like a beaver, found the others. the vast fortune of $19 worth of How had they come there?| gold, and after a while was «at foma other party had tried to| Isfied that he had enough gold carry it into the mountains, had| mining for a while and would be found it too much of a load, and| better off on hin father's farm left it for the next hungry party| on Dry Creek who came along. He got home with nothing at Well, they stayed there four] all, hin gold mining had coat him days, and again it was Dick who| $160, four good horses and his urged them on. They left thelr] supplies. urged them on. All Dick wanted| ‘The summer he was 20 nome was a chance to dig for gold,| cattle men stepped at hin father's and go home rich, ranch, and Dick heard them ash They strapped a 60-pound aack| ing about a good cowboy to help of flour, his blankets and a few] them get a drove of cattle over odds and enda on Dick's 16-year-| to Lewiston old back. It wan his share of the| “How long would ft take? Jond, no they olimbed the ateep| Dick anked trail to Bill's wonderful “pros-| ‘The man was a Frenohn pect.” And Dick began to dig. and ke In a funny = br David. asked about how deep| wa "A-bout — tree these holes had to be, and it] should aay, maybe wounded ike a lot of hard work| awered. when Mr, Wisemi uid, “Ob, I th anywhere from 6 t t You | sata * pn the gold Ia bh nd tt aet-| that's good pa 6 nettlon it reuches bed | back nd lies there in what mins | put he aian'e era ‘call the ‘pay streak,’ till] eo hin parents or his home again somebody diga it out,” for two long years But even after the boys began (And That's Monday's Story) UIRSULA TIRE Busineas Men Who for @ paltry sv thwaite's gratit He'd notze me were {n earnont, und the table stalled tn his © ax major-domo. can still hear in hia mort To give him a chance to meet bad three or four days of ab solute quietude. upsetting a I ran down the stairs, rtunately away from Piccadilly, and stopped at last on the other aide breathing hard, It was nearly dark and nobody noticed me drivers came and looked at me for while as I held on to the railings of the square, Then one of them raid, “She's tight,” went away, was abetiake “That was very nice of you,” I sald, and I was reaps ¢on't mean I wanted break my neck over Moses t give him nerves. And Ho wns fool enough to write | letters at a desk and p A servant bro which the M | the creature you love. It's got to be| Uf | just he Bo I don't know that I ought} fraid tt mig coursa, put the wind up Badsworth, who gave three months he'd call in th written on paper and signed by a very im was contained tn these Unes you told Mr. Batter- | can be altogether T didn't know what to da T walked up Edgware Road and tried to buy a hat Just be But Y had no Alfred's cheek I knew he'd nit didn't neem fair that | fore the shops closed I hadn't even got to retire to what Lutarde was pleased ny that was in my the*penny halfp to call my spy-hole t I was somewhere ng in his money well that I did so, was Janet wh for to my a near Maida Vale Warrington ressed Mones to nott erthwalte was fran in feot In some “You are the bea madame?” he queried. ne waloon bar. I walked away, and He asked mo to call mbled down about | when I went to-see Ba I wondered if they me in at the Rita, but and that the Cut-Out Lady had given | g © hundred-pound check. I was I was too near Dover along Jermyn Jack Straw tumbled, too, peg-leg | you and brought the | ight have been let 4 Satterthwaite,” he| he was attacked last night by an old Alfred had twice They knew 6 had to go down, | wasn't known yet, except by unable to move. and to beg that | me to haste The reception clerk hesitated some | time before giv do him the honor n his exhibiting com- I scooped It one left in the| wondered why i to have to ask , but the doe now absolutely forbids him to sta I have hore his ce triumphantly, clever and techn n do when th of things th Then I began to. work out} Alfred's check and th nature overcame I'd had a motor accl- have sald si to the chambermaid, come without suppose, as m which she had tendered. the affair in my own langu: 1 hadn't told Mr. Satter I'd like to neo the drawing- 1 where Lord Alfred would walt. | puld she show him up? to call his money “At which hotel do yo wouldn't have pres “The Hotel | Tranchard at sho assumed, I even amused by the revelation of ceived a shock, | the most notorious in Parts But why did you tell | the renters that Mr going to call his money ix “It was only “But if you hadn't told them they have pressed.” But ft couldn't be | I stayed in that hotel a fortnight. | “the neighborhood of the chard In cer I at once turned south. couldn't risk mecting people in Pic. didn't know besides, I was not feel I wondered whether wanted to avyold pe o I lunched tn chop houses in Fleet to think of But I couldn't g One day, as T was Frills came not a fit place for band #0 much in hay to go to him,” has come, | want those shares to go down | that his presence in Pari known, and my away from pec }lunching in the Strand, have known newspaper woman would hang about | She was yery nice ; | viously sho knew what had happened | and was tactful enough to talk only | of the aristocracy, but, tho she asked | me no questions, I must ha that T was ving in a hotel T sald some foolish thing about run- | ning out of the sometimes ast ervice work fred me to say that if you pre. erred not to risk being a locality, he would endeavor engaged on | Satterthwaite frightened Mr you turned the renters upon Mr | cure an ambulance car from the hoa: | pital and come here,” “Such a thing would ba unheard Lutarde protested worth was taking hia money out aid Jullan, “I shouldn't put hotel and buying Eve |Like food for the body, they be: three days later, ‘ pica Jcome food for the mind, and by| ate for young rid old— bed In the afternoon, of exhaustion, I didn’t want to “The moment lying on my 1 was untriendly to Haven't I done all T I get Lydbrook to put him on bis legs again?” “mashing him and making peak to him, poor old Mose en me and the door as soon gs he I began to ery he took mo In hia|deed-energy. Our ° | Dictionary would supply you with —for women whose kid- “she Is the wife of a well-known English criminal,” 1 declared | story was plaualble bu Jablg, What about tho letter arms and tried to make me tinued in Our Next Issue) bout busine all the tine THE GREAT NERVE BUILDER HEAMOTONE | pushed him away T don't know |for I felt my little boy needed Mak bon tint of JOVI MEMOIRS, 1,400 easy, appealing tears, A man who wasted, NT | Cynthia Grey:['<2"2 fepect Their Stenographers to Put On Daily Fashion Show Aren't Right Sort, idvises Former Stenographer’in Answer to Girl Who Was Fired Because She Didn’t Dress Classy BY CYNTHIA GREY g clothes are out of place entirely in a busine of fi gist of a former stenographer’s letter to Ardeen enough to suit her employer. The question Ardeen is trying to settle for her own peace of mind is whether the average employer cares more about his stenographer's appearance than the way her bratr function Let's have some first-hand information from the employer Dear Mi In regard to the letter from Ardeen 1 would like to f words I think all of this talk about stunning, swell and cla clothes in a business office is absurd. If they are worn, let it be at social functions, at home, in fact, anywhere, but not in offices. A young woman is not there to attract undue at tention from her iployer and business associates by her dress and aring appare Of course she should always t and well groomed, and if in addition to this she does her wo ell with a cheer- ful, willing spirit, I think she has met all of the requirements ary for any good, moral oung woman g is 4 not duet a LD t I © t 4 th b He was promoted from cap A fair Canaan 2 rried ‘ er a chance. A right think 0. A motion presented, and duly , . true wort nded, can only be withdrawn by and not sim-| ifs mover prior to its adoption, Mc tons must be nullified or abrogated by action of the body to render them inoperative. What ts the The center of population may be considered aa the center of gravity for the population of the United see States, If the surface of the coun-| try were asaumed to be a rigid level ie s plane without weight; 4f all the in Wedding Ring habitants were of equal weight, and Dear Minn ¢ If a married were distrivuted as at present; and if Wife Keeps , Almost Unbelievable My husband tells me I will have to|| Youcam hardly realize the wonder- return the ring 1 haven't ful improvement to your an engage I supp skin aud complexion want that back, too.’ I would the mirror will reveal k ate yo! 4 Mra. J toyou alter using fi m permits a woman to keep Gouraud’s Oriental the engagement and wedding rings y Cream for the first {f she wishes, in case of a separa time, White-Flesh tion, A man who would even so Rachel. 6 mich ak, saaeat Send 10¢ for Trial Sta that she return them te a mighty poor sort, I, think. || BT. HOPKINS & SON ‘ ‘ - ries is ignoble and irreaistible. “AN right.” I said, at lant, laying Gouraud my hand upon his balr, “Let's make Oo t, ] Cc Wane Oriental Cream Faithiens, lar, practical as acces semen sen Grey will receive callers each i ne at usly inter- point—that 4s, tts center of grav~ ¢ influence of cach person i maintaining the equilibrium of the plane would be directly proportional int, © center of gravity. Thus the elties of Heattle, Kan Franclsco and Loe ation han the citie Baltimore, Buf and, Philadel~ ph 4 “ ith a combined 04 / 62\. The center by the re. located cast corner of me the natn « of fiction? Faust") rea “Othello"}; akespeare’s “King Lear"); Arthur Dimmesdale (Hawe Letter"); Modrea of the King"); cr (Btevenson's Mr. Hyde (Steve vil and Mr. Ryde}y ns “Olver Tuhat py (Tennyson's “Id: h ers (Dickens "Nichae aN Uriah Heap (Dickend Davt ti Brengalt (De rler's “Trilby“); Philip Nolan “ Without a Country”); Morriarty (Conan Doyle's “Sherlock plane were balanced at tts plvote for that skin eruption You don’t have to wait to know that Resinol Ointment is going to overcome your skin trouble. It gives such quicl relief from the itching and burning and % genera.ly succeeds in clearing away the ercption that, with Resinol Soap” “ws the standard skin treatment i=” thousands of homes nd I loved him all the mame. | It's easy enough car | ing for an upright, handsome, clever man who loves you, but it's not love, | not really, To love really, you| SS mustn't care how vile, how base is an to despise myself I ought to envy| 4h mypolf for Joving like that, Suddenly | feeling I had expertenced before | came over me and I freed mynelt. “What is it? he asked, afraid I| was going to repulse him again. | P___o} “I don't know, Don't touch me. I feel iL" ‘Then I turned away from his perplexed eyes and was just tn} time to reach the basin, where I was violently sick. | Ho was very sweet to ma He| washed my face with water and eau/ de cologne, and helded me to the bed. eae “Don't look at me," I sald. “T know | = Dae “ When the stormy winds do blow® I look hideous, Ab! it's horrid being *] So goes the old ses song, and it Id be good edvice to add sick. I wonder what's the matter “Oh!” he said, staring at ma, “You look rather queer, Little Bear, Very | “Lat me alone!” I snapped. 1! t want my appearance criticized st then. I only wanted to be com fortable, to get back to the flat and sleep. vo went back. Julian insisted on | my seeing a-doctor, who told me that | in another seven months I would) have a child, It was an awful feel-| ing. What was I golng to do? We! couldn't marry. How could such a} thing have happened to me? | “Don't worry,” sald Jullan Yow do you mean, don't worry! | ee I was Iiko that two ae DRINK pretty, of course, but thin tn the B k. 9 C Re | aKker Ss Vocoa It is warming and sustaining, for it has genuine food value, and may be safel;) indulged in any hour of the dey for it is stimulating only in the sense that pure food is stimulating, It is delicious too, I'm going to have a child, and I'm| Made only by not married. That's something to| “Well, you needn't have !t,” he sald | [ory about, tnt it | WALTER BAKER & CO. LTD. slyly. | Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASSACHUSETTS © I understood at once, In my new world one did I don’t know why, | but the suggestion enraged me. That | sort of thing wasn't done “Well,” said Jullan, “if you won't you won't. We'll put {t out to nurse and perhaps we can get married. after all T'll see about it.” He wa Booklet af Choice Recipes sent frea fon inaie'tattnoe"ss | When Kidney Trouble troubles, I sent Lord Alfred the 75 Pyu'was wane "| Attacks the Children (Continued Monday) SA THERA’ ae There Is Just One Thing To Do and Mrs, Raymond \WORKS AS Tells How To De It BRAIN FOOD ms 2, Standish, Michigan, “My two boys aged nineteen and fifteen, have suffered from Kiéni Lahruage ts sometimes called the instrument of thought. 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