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—_—— > S$ TODAY MARCH 14, 192! The Three Malefactors Th ratwne, BY E, PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM 4nd took up my temporary at the Magnificent hotel. dence Within a MICHARE SAYERS, 4 oriynistad, and Hin NORMAN GREYION once af Seclined | Minutes of my arrival the mans. | st Yard, whe es Deautiful house |8er himself walted upon me, Almost Soe « him from fir Norman py / tere We bad shaken hands, he had | th a the officer . but he many @ work for Mra, Trumper: wealthy widow living at ent hotel at Rrighton, whe al diamonds, urer and pre commenced to unburden himself. ‘There is just one small matter,|are trying to straighten out “ie | rios me a litle, jail the time practically under arrest. | her, sir| He has loft the hotel and is staying! re-enter the suite, even tho his idea | tm lodgings on the front, but he ts|of the time seem watched night and day.” suming that “There seems to be a moderately | then, tho, clear case against him,” I remarked. | becomes obscure.” Norman,” he said, Mr “which wor: | w Sidney Bloor ts “In many respects it would appear convincing,” the manager assented. ’ “His antecedents are NOW GO ON WITH STORY | tentions to a woman nearly years| pl very to swear hs at-| Johnaon the honor of a visit, accompanied y Johnson, who was an exceedingly painstaking and capable officer “You say that none of the jewelry has been recovered?” I asked “None of the jewelry tn question, 1 fear,” Jobnagn admitted. “Mr Bloor has two Very handsome pins in his possession, but he was clever | by B. Phillips Oppenhelm Sr oicn bes by teresa N.E. A. Service, Ta "You haven't been able to collect | TB }| any evidence as to his having spoken to anyone outside, on his wey back! to the Royal ”* | “Not at present, I ain sorry to say, at “What about this discrepancy in he alleged time of his visit?” “That I another of the things we Avy who le & is prepared Iloor ay, the night-watehman. respectable fellow that he saw Sidney to be out As the theft took place| motive for the murder | “A Mr. Bloor’s own story?” “He came a terrible cropper, str,” declared, @ ttle trium-| "He at first stated that he| hantly his senior are difficult to explain onjonly left the bridge-table when he JANET TELLS THE STORY He said good night pleasan’ and any basts except that of self-advan-| cut out, to get some fresh air tage. He escorted her round to the| he leaned over the wall of the prome- five y been perfectly happy with my little famils nearly as I could hope for under the adverse economic con- ditions that haye prevailed during the past few year | Anyway, the wife and I were real pals and lover that| been a serious problem as tho wife ts & dead game Little sport, @ real tower yitlnia Mother-in-Law Encourages Her Daughter, Who Ia a} Mother, to Attend Dance Man Is as Good Dear Miss Gre I am a youn ing your advice on a problem that is driving me frantic and is threatening to destroy my home, | To begin with, I will say tha rs, have a little boy 4 yea: two grown-up kids, “hardly acquaintances used to say, who | Just as much as it was possible for us to be. verses forced us to leave the little love nes engaged in constructing in a small Oregon town and to re- turn to Seattle, This tn itself, tho, would not have left me. I went back to my room,| Royal hotel to play bridge, cut out|nade, looking at the sea, the whole | undressed and donned a complete |during the evening, came back to|of the time. Afterward he admitted | Of Strength and helpfulness, But un sult of Mr. Bloog’s evening clothes | thie hotel, and was seen by the fire-| that he had visited the hotol andj fortunately her mother lives tn Se and theater hat, which I bad taken |man, who acts as night-watchman, to|gone up for a moment to Mra Sttia And her mother, tho It seoms the liberty of borrowing from his | enter Mra Trumperton-B8mith’s sults. | Trumperton-Smith’s suite, where he| !scredible, I am convinced ts trying oom. At the time when I knew| Mra Trumperton-Smith and he re-|thought he had dropped his cigar-/ #9d apparently succeeding 1n leading that the night watchman's back was gurned, I slipped out, descended a few of the stairs which were exactly epposite my door, ascended them Again nolsity, walked along the cor fidor, entered Mr. Bioor’s room, waited there a moment or two, out again, and entered the sitting | w Toom of our suite, In ten minutes I turned together earty tn the morn- | ing, evcorted her to her suite. His story ts| been adjourned.” jthat he stayed there for about five} minutes and had a whisky and soda| man,” tn the altting-room, parted with her| “The evi came} on friendly terms and subsequently between one and two, and he to hts room." ‘And what ts your comment upon | t! 0." | “The inquest," I remarked, “has| wea back In my bedroom with the| his story?" I asked | pomaible, to have a few words with diamonds. In an hour's time Mr.| “Just this,” was the earnest reply:|the night porter and with the de Bioor’s clothes were back tm his| “There ts no doubt whatever that|coased’s mald Foom and the diamonds safely dis-|the young man did return to the| Tho former, whose name was John| posed of. Be - noted alone, but whereas the night-| O'Hara, proved to be @ very respect- | watchman swears that he saw him/| able, stolid and obstinate man. Noth- | GREYES TELLS HIS SIDE enter Mra. Trumperton-Smith's suite | ing o sayy eek his conviction that Tt was really, in the first place, not) at half-past ten, the hall-porter| he had seen Sidney Bloor enter Mra Swing to any request from my | downstairs, two of the pages and a|Trumperton-Smith’s mite at about friend Rimmington that I became|reception-clerk are equally positive | half-past ten and emerge from tt five interested tn the Brighton robbery |that {t was exactly midnight when| minutes later. He admitted that the and murder case, Philip Harris, whe | he came in and went upstaira” corridor was badly Itghted, but he Was a director of the hotel company,| “This divergence of evidence,” I| would not hear a word sald against Wrote me a persona) letter, asking | observed, “ts interesting, but I acarce-| his wate 1a sod him with the ime to represent the interests of the |ly see what it leads to. Perhaps I| Conviction that, so far as he knew tt hotel In any way I thought fit, and ft was on the strength of this appeal! little time.” | that I traveled: down to Brighton end gold crown, As Nancy and Nick walked thru) ApplePie Land they met all Mix-Uppers who had ack into Apple-Pie Landers. Every- Body was as happy as could be and thanked the Twins for being such a help. King Even-Steven came out of his Palace in his velvet robes and gold | and said how was for turning him back from @ beggar into a king. Down was no longer a rabbit, but the apple pies was now coming out of the king’s kitchen. The automobile was back on its own wheels again and rolling ‘round in dizzy circles for vary joy. The oa trich was stretching his own wings}a nico red which he had never hoped to see | that no longer | everything was in fine shape. again. “The wind-mill wi in a hole but whirling its wheel mer- rily on top of the clock’s hands were back in place| ‘and it was striking a hundred times to show its delight. Tommy's manners improved at r “What I saw was a whole bunch of squaws trampling down my fine grass, and digging roots on my land after Ud already driven them off twice. “So I got a gun and went down again.” @he young mon went down into the fleld; Dick, his brother and a friend and “Squealin’ John,” each one bearing @ gun, and all more than a little provoked that the squaws had come back to dig camas after they had sent therm away. Dick’ walked up, to one of the wornen, and showing her his gun, told her that she and the rest of the women must get out of there and Weep out, and get out quick! The women dug roots, Dick told them again; someone raised a gun, but not a squaw had been touched, when suddenly they lifted up their voices and ran pell- mell from the field. Dick saw them running, but “gquealin’ John” heard an ans wertng yell, and looking toward the hill, he saw a long line of featherdecked warriors topping the rise of ground, "Look!" Ihe tried to say it calm ly, but his voive, rore to a thin, frightened squeak like a trighten- 1 rat. Ho ried out again, pox!’ This time the cry anly rumbled in his thront, the others looked, and Sauealin’ John begun urging them to flee, | San emmmaleialeielal King Even-Steven came out of his palace in his velvet robes) once and/he no longer the|doors and upset chairs. The Mix- been turned | Up and sald the alphabet from A to Z, in- ‘The rabptt called One-Up-and-One |lovely maiden and cake dog with the King’s cook and the smell of hot |tumed into a fine sheplwr dog. into a real soldier with a rea! and @ real sword. | Smith's death?” said “Nothing Under,” turned ground. The | Twins,” thing the Twins heard as they de- parted were three loud Hurrahs! ‘a * Page 936 “DICK HIT ME” had better talk to Mr. Johnson for a| he was speaking the truth. Then I wnt for the maid. There was a The chief constable himself paid| brief delay, followed by the sound lof soft footsteps outsid d the t | | | | slammed | school also improved at one tead of from Z to A. Cows ate grass in the fields while | tured. the whales returned to their proper place tn the ocean. ‘The baker-man's The Cut-Out Lady turned the chocolate. pink-leing ears "The bread-pill general turned back e2n| The Five-and-Ten-Dollar Store that into ‘o-and-Ten-Cent Store| jothing Over," and} anid “Lat'a give three cheers for the cried Tommy, and the last) (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1923, by Seattle Star) Seattle — « | Up ana down he squeaked and rumbled. “Come on, boys! Come ont Let's go get the soldiers, Let's go get help! They'll massacre us; there's « big band of ’em.” All the time he was running as fast as ever he could, away from the Indians. “All right, John,” Dick called, after him, “You go get help, it you want to; I've got to tend to the Indians.” And they say that Squealin’ Jotm never stopped even to look back till he was 10 miles away. ‘When he came to a fence he rode right thru it or over it, or tore it down. Gates were too slow for John. And indeed there was excite ment enough behind him, Up rode Chief General Mitchell (Mr. Wiseman doesn’t know his Indian name, but he called himself Gen- eral Mitchell), crying, “I want Dick Wiseman, Must seo Dick Wiseman.” Mr, Wiseman stepped forward and asked him what he wanted, “My squaw ery. My squaw any Dick Wiseman beat squaw. Me, 1 kill you for that ‘The two men talked, the angry red man and the angry white man, who knew be was falnely ac cused, andsafter a time the red man rode away, calling back as he left, “I go now, but when we Jopening and shutting of a door. 1 her back pressed to the closed 4 her finger |as Janct Stanfi momenta, | if she gave vent to any exclamation, | it was inaudible. Her eyes were fixed | upon my face in @ stare of amarze- | ment. | nere,” she ald. the copy of h YT had been think th lan from Hara’s evidence wh tudying, and I received, 1 he greatest shock of my life. ¥ ed up inging to the handle, iad known tood the woman whom I Nelther of us spoke for several Her Ups were parted, but Janet came alowty over toward me, | “I did not know that you were “Nor I that you had re-entered do- mastic service,” I replied. She flinched @ little, but she an- | wan in the same room, in bed. Bome-|) 0 "Po conquer me Kiven tf he failed, thing seemed to have happened to It, | ; “Poverty is a hard mistress, When | a ifully tid; the 1 bad |you met me in Bond Street some) {OF everything was beautifully tidy. | ed over this @ good deal, months ago, and F'lunched with you, | § Pies I was engaged at @ dresamaker’s| yy | |They talked to mo Kindly, told me establishment. Then my hysband| j 4 been stunned and would soon be |sent for me to go to Paria Se cane Hee be : know very well what happened to ua) ater J know that now I.would have there. I returned to London wores| F | th onstructed off than when I had left it oli yaga cary, ay my situation. Then I became a mani- curist. I stood that for about three| roing in pain, but rather light-hoad- weeks. puree when } saw Mra Trumperton-| ing ong I'd seen in tho afternoon. 1 Smith's advertisement. I answered {t) think I was delirious for three or and came here.” | wered me quite quietly. You| I lost | I had nine shillings in my| “You are better off now? I ven-| | “Hadn't you better warn me that/ anything I say may be used an evi- fire melted all | dence against mo? much obliged | the ice and his bread started to bake | ingly. as it should. sho asked mock- | “I agree, Yet I shall ask you one} into &| question, and one only.” “I do not promise to answer It.” “But you will answer it,” I {naist-| ed, watching her steadily, “and you will tell tho truth. Had you any-| thing to do with Mra Trumperton- “I had not,” sho replied unfalter-| ingly. “You were not even an accom- “One question you promised to ask, and one I to answer,” she sald | “I have finished.” I was thoughtful for a moment. at the inquest. The coroner asked him whether tho injuries on the throat of the deceased could reply was there on the deposttions before me: “I should think tt very unlikely “Very well, my second question. make an appeal to you. T noid, “T will waive Instead I will I am here robbed and murdered your late mii “There will certainly bo a reward for the recovery of tho jewels.” “1 should very much like to earn it," she admitted. “I do not know who stole therm.” “Have you any ide “why Mrs, Trumperton-Smith the hotel for her bridge-party night without any Jowolry at all She considered for a moment “Mr. Bloor suggested that sho should take off her diamonds and leave them at homo,” she answored. “And did she?” “Yost” ‘ou know that back to the mite?” “I have beon told #0.” “And you know that the evidence is very confitcting am to what time he pald the visit?” “You, 1 know that he have pald two? “It in an idea ” T asked her, left that Mr. Bloor came Why shouldn't * I admitted, “Do man we want?” “Why should you Imagine that 1 would help you if I could?” she asked coldly, “rom the little T have heard of Mr. Sidney Bloor, I should hava looked upon him as a nincompoop,” T continued. (Continued Tr omorrow) NEURALGIA or headache—tub the forehead —telt and inhale the vepors moet again, Dick Wiseman, one of ty will die.” (To Be Continued) Y!ISks ua Over 17 Million Jare Used Yearly | 1 know that I ha have been inflicted by a woman. The| way disappointed. to try and discover tho person who| tress. n you help me?’ “If I could why should 17” she demanded. “Wo are in opposite) camps.” you think that Sidney Bloor is the her daughter astray. To Ulustrate the kind of woman | abo ta, she has urged my wife to at- “Till Thursday week, Str Nor-| tend dances with a chance woman | vent the apparently inevitable crash, the chief constable told ma.| Scquaintance when I was forcibly | 1 am THB | ce given at the inquest | detained from home. And only re-| First of all make eure that you ie at your disposal at any time.” cently they returned from one of| paven't let your imagination run| “1 have already studied tt—| ‘hese, or somewhere else, at 3:20) away with your better judgment and hanks,” I said “I should itke, if}% m. Also this mothor aw has| that you are not unconsciously in-| said tn the presence of her daughter and myself that “one man is od | 5, ther and a woman shouldn't confine herself to any one man,” Now, I am not attempting to lay | ¢ town rules for the future generations: | insanity board. | they'll look after tlemselves. But I be — wilt writing, q The poatetfice department has returned to our Washington bu- reau mail for the f ng read ent or ince D. C, giving correct address, the mail will be promptly forwarded to them Lillian Rogers, 115 St. Victory way, Seattle; Mra A. Shaw, 1124 35th ave, Beattle, Wash. (Continued From Yesterday) mt When I regained consctoumess, I) A pleasant, elderly man stood by my ‘There was © nurse, too. all right. It was only tn the night, the scene. 1 had fallen down, I remem- | bered that, ed. The nurse looked different from | four days, during which cgrend visions ocoupled_ my mind. Some- times I discovered the last scene @nd|tused to go down to Lord Alfred's place. Then I was recited | heard myself scream. with Mrs Vernham, and lotic love passages between ‘and ladies. Occasionally I felt a cold-} ness on my head—tca, perhaps. And the face of Julian forma, very lovely nd sorrowful. But why did I hate it so? weak. two nurses. Julian | for half an hour, | comes twice a day and 3 let him tal I'm too weak | to hate him. I like the doctor, He} doesn’t talk about illness and strange | plice 7” | canes, as the nurses do all the time | Ho admires my drensing jacket It was only a week later that I] | understood my situation completely If I'd boon sensible then, I should have been giad, for what| should Ihave done with it? But 1| I'd boen done out | of adventure. And I felt so i 1) had to go into a nursing home for some obscure operation. People were rather grave when they talked to me; | 1 was allowed no visitors until th 4th or 5th of Decem In the mid die of tho month, when I felt strong-| er, Jullan spent an hour with me, He was charming; I nearly forgave | him, not because he looked anxious, but because I*had suffered so much | that hate had run out of me with! pain; ‘as if suffering had cleansed mo of pettiness, After he had do- nied Sadie’a accusations, at which T) anger, after he had smiled without | protested his love for me, which I chose to belfeve, I sald: | “Don't let’s talk about !t any more. Let's forget it Let's start again.” At once he smiled like a Uttle boy forgiven, kiased my hand, and said “Phew! I'll be glad to get you home again, You used to sméll of mille fleurs, but now lysol.”" 1 was discharged just before| Christmas, after seoing many visitors, Christmas, after seeing many vistors. fatterthwaite was worthily active. Tt was ho ordered n cur to fetch mo on the day 1 legt the home; he, too, rominded Jullan to order a potito| | marmite and boiled fowl for my first dinner, It was even Satterthwaite | rice and made her put tx to air before the fire T didn’t find it out at first I thought {t was Jullan, and noarly forgave him entirel: But not quite. T couldn't. It wasn't that I had any- thing precise against’ him, for we'd blotted that out, but there was some. | thing missing between us; my sens of mmfcty was gone, Tho first o ning, as T went to bed, f hesitated for | f moment before the door, ‘Then T| locked It, Well, I'd done It. 1 didn't | suppone that could fo on forever, for |we couldn't live Ike that, but 1 couldn't leave the door unlocked, On the third evening Julian rattled the handle, then desisted. Nothing was ald about it, but he didn't try again, T confoay it wax the fact that ho did TTL | sence—Also Makes the Broad Assertion That One| as Another, and a | Shouldn’t Confine Herself to One Man, fluenced by the age-old mother-in- auch a raw statement she must de) * 4€ such ap arrangement | aly residing im the same house; but) work with mo at the prosent|4y you are, move your family away | room. two families main at home in the evening where} Ore, eetieen Wf the readers tor || S40, belongs to care for hor enitd, | et te il wen intended wit || wAHe vow are away gaining the nom thid mail was intended will || WAHe you ore away gen | write our Washington bureau, nererolthal to make tf posstdle. 1822 New York ave, Washington, Make your stend clear. Tell your mother-in-law to mind her own no interfere your wife, ahe should have the moth- | erly instinct soribe. A Novel by W. Copyright, 1921, by Harper & Brothers nice, going out every evening. were going away on the Zist to stay at Walmer with Lord Alfred, I was deeply offended. other troubles, I I arms and legs felt I I brooded over it, for a woman finds an, Thal I was quiet now, after! console himself with somebody else. | A woman's too particular, | lords | please him. | fan enormous brick house on | the middle tongue. Then I'm conaclous again and very | mile south of Walmer castle, rather | I know what has happened. | askew to the sea, but so near as to | in the eighteenth century they would n T\ "phat fall had made an end of-my| was thinking of tho doctor's evidence | cniid, Strangely enough, 1 did not| had foe) reliot. | bells, and, I belleve, made love in the drawing-room, It was significant that the 20-year-old landslide had | Mr. Brougt | front door STAR Grey: s in Her Husband's. Ab- Woman g married man and am seek- | t I have been married about} rs old, and until recently have} —or at least, as —just | grown up” some of our} were in each other’s company But financial re- t which we were Mins Grey will receive callers in her office Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from 1 to 2 p. m, and on Tugeday and Thursday from 11 & m, to 12 m. each week, Please do not come at other times, as tt seriously tnter- fores with her writing. Hoping that you may throw some! ight on the condition that will pre-| law prejudice. ] If your wife's mother really made | demented and (a a fit subject for an You do not say whether you are at once, even tho tt be to ona humble | No house (4 large enough for! don't ever forget that. Then your wife will be forced to re-| business ond that you will tolerate from her, Ae for that would warn her ainat any euch conduct as you de- L. George. We Jullan ought to try t was better he should try. 1 brood- ed hideous; my fo gelatine, Still, mike advances, or thinks she can’t. | Also because @ map, aa ® rule, can} CHAPTER 1 Alco I At tho last momefit I nearty re- I looked too hideous, But Julian overruled me, and I went to Notley, which Lord Alfred referred | to an “his little place in Kent,” was) two | floors, in the shape of an EB without It stood about a have been affected by a landallp 20 years before, which had made the north wing unaaferNotley was most~ ly corridors; the north wind seemed | to enjoy so much entering at one end | and coming out of the other that it went in again as soon as it Came out. If the onk doors had not been fitted have flapped as in a bungalow, Not- ley was very like Lord Alfred. Some | rooms had teen furnished by Chip-| pandale; others combined Heppel- white furniture with maple beds, lib- | erty hangings. I never saw so many oddments in a house, and the untidi- | noss was extreme. Lord Alfred | seemed to have dropped his fishing rods In my bedroom. In a@ sort of) cellar I found three pianos, which, | Lord Alfred said, “must have come from tiomewhere.” It was a real} bachelor’s house, where the servants adored thelr master, s¢ldom-answored only now been noticed, and that was why Lord Alfred's architect was staying in the house, He came tn the nick of time. Woe possexsed all the elements of a} folly party. Besides Jutian and mo, | Lord Alfred had invited Ninette and Roderick, also two odd girls, one with red hair, who was called “Dick,” and fa little thing who fluffed out her fain hair and insisted on being called Gaby. There was also the architect, on Christmas Evo our host informed us that ho expected that some men would float in some- time. How we -atol At Lord Alfred's they didn’t dust much, but they cooked. In three days he mado us eat six Christmas dinners, drink so muoh lquor that I him when he said that he got it cheap from smugglers who landed it at his} It was rather fun, for on Christmas night we all got into pajamas, and I was lghtheaded enough to dance,, Another dance was going on in tho servants’ quarters, judging from the sounds. I liked it, for everybody got so untidy that 1 belloved didn't look so dreadful as I might have. But T wasn't a success. Lord Al-~ fred told me that Little Bears didn't have the hump, which was reserved by camels. Jullan danced a lot with “Dick,” whieh annoyed me, Tt should not, but the red-haired girl seemed to like him so much, and laid hor head upon his shoulder ax they danced, Of course, she'd had much too much to drink, T had a atily (i) F PAGE 13 IDA M. COFFMAN prerregres | there is one thing more than another a woman dreads, it is a surgical! operation, and to be told that one is necessary is very disheartening. Hospitals are grand institutions, and undoubtedly many op- erations are necessary. However, we have received hundreds of letters from women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound after an operation had been deemed advisable, Every woman who suffers es Mra, Coffman did naturally wishes to avoid an operation if possible, and the remarkable statements which she makes in her letter will be read with interest by women everywhere. Mrs. Coffman’s Letter Follows: BIDELL, ILLINOIS.—"l was « nervous wreck. I was suffering from # pain in mo lel aide Which was noticeable at ai} tims but sometimes Tt was. almost unbearable and I could not even let the bed-clothing fest on my body at nigh! } had been sick for seven years but not so badly until the Jest 18 months, » had become #o rundown that I cared for nobody and would rather hay than live. I couldn't do my work without help and the doctor told me ti operation was all thero was left for me. J wou ot consent to that so my husband brought me @ bottle of Lydia B Pink Vegetable Compound and taken fourteen bo I do all my how ork and hed a large this year, 1 Aine, wil Be without th ML, etab! Compound in the ho: when my two litele girls reach womanhood J shall advise them to take it’ RS WB SE COMP AN? RE Nor 2." Bidet, Lifinots, i Another Operation Avoided COKONA, N.Y. —'d had a terrible pain in my left side and had to go to bed every 80 often. Doctors had told me I must be operated on, but I do not believe Inthe Knife and would rather suffer than xo, through it” My mother also did not believe in it and sho made me take Lydia % Pinkham's Vegetable Compound because it had helped her. It has also helped me for I am better and am a’ to do all my works I recommend your medicine and lye you permission tou RY otter an 6 testimonial” MEM J, Busch SR. if B Ralisbad Ave, Corona, Before Submitting to an operation Women should try Lydia E. Pinkham’s begked me to take it. I hav of It and I feel young Life is full of hope. == rs haps tt was because my hot water | ana I laughed out loud to nee him was nearly frozen. Also the bath was out of order. mye It was the sort of holiday when one wants to quarrel It froze on Christ mas Day, and froze harder the day after. and came back with streaming re@ t harder not to be wanted by ® man | eyes, to find the architect warming than a man to be rejected by a wom- | himself at the fire, with a sheep dog partly because whe can't | asleep in his arma. This did me good, LYDIA E,PINKHAM MEDICINE Co. iy A LYNN, MASS, Y Kez = nursing this enormous (creature. He looked about 35, was shortish, broad, rather undistinguished in feature. He had gray eyes and a reddish cropped mustache; he wore loose gray tweeds which didn’t sult his complexion, But be had a good voles, and a sort of blunt self-essurance that was not unpleasing. His Ohristian name, I gathered, was Alec. Plucky thing to do.” "Yes. I'm frozen.” In despair I went out alone, ment’ “Tt! New Year.” not try again parted us completely. ‘Ho was gadding about, and, tho very wrangle with Julian, I forget about what, whon we wont upstairs, Per And then it’s GOOD-BYE to the great Dictionary campaign. Just a few days more and the distribution of The NEW UNIVERSITIES DICTION. ARY by the ' Seattle Star ENDS FOREVER! ‘We can only remind those who have not yet secured this great educational masterpiece that it will sometime be a source of keenest regret if they let this unusual opportunity go by. A LUXURIOUS BOOK D it is remark- able that such a wonderful book could be secured for our readers at. mere ly nominal cost. The time in which you can get itt on our great coupon offer is short, so you’ll have to hurry. Onky one coupon now needed Clip it from this pa- per now and present it with 98c for ving the publi and to adyance the cause of education, the well- known BARTELL DRUG Textile Leather, IOTIONA STOR consented to us in this great distribus tion, Coupons can be pro- has anaiat and dictionartes obtained either at the office of THE SRATTLE STAR or at the above mentioned store Mail , 05), tent Orders explain in coupon, wonted GREATLY REDUCED SIZE Many now words make this dictionary exclusively up-to-date, Needed daily In home and office, CLIP COUPON TODAY PAGE 2 Vegetable Compound “Hullo!” be sald. “Been oft? “Have a warm?’ He painfully shifted along the hearth-rug, drag- ging the dog with him; after a mor hesitation I sat on the chair, freezing stiff,” he sald. “There i be no hunting this side of the (Continued Tomorrow) Bound in Black Seal Grain! Ae TSO IRE US RST spear