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3 FRIDAY, MARCH 90, 128 : » SEATTLE STA PAGE 19 | wal ao 1 : THE SEATTLE STAR : ; q } i ® appealed to them —= er | | It would an equal share be ’ 7 - * ; Michael’s Wedding Gift ; BY E, PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM by FE. Phillips Oppenheim B.A. Service, Ine. tween the-three?” F urged. j tween the three,” 1 agreed. aera austell J. 'Y ADVENTURES We went to our work the next fortune might have in store for us on our homeward crawl We crawled round each corner, loltering at the Copyt paychol ge spot alv ata he BY VIRGINIA BRADFORD ts mine by slow development. No| 4 ame ev} n our hearta Hb penne tht sce opm fe Beye } ~ : ~ on" » The ffair noweve ot » SATE. oF ’ ‘é “ t else can z ceeate begins between MICHAE AYERS, noted} ....° Ponsa E . Line Hap ey bgt Pickford was about to start her new » dited es no one else, cal 4 4 criminal, and SIR NORMAN GREYES, once of Scotland | above or below; sometimes drivers! picture, “Faust.” 1 bad a rash tm may TN." PRS : A 4 Yard, when Sayers’ beautiful housemaid, JANET, saves| were too careful. On the fourth day.| pune, 14 try to see the first Indy were a girl just beginning | } 4 him from Sir Norman by : shooting dead an officer sent to a eg gy pen pia oe our per-Jot the films and ask her direotly|1'4 ask myself most searching y| q errest him. Janet becomes Sayers’ wife and accomplice, T had spotted from a distance came |r * Part what sacrifices te pride and comfort} ~ Janet takes passage to Marseilles, where a confederate of | round the corner where wo were, #9 My talk with her was one of those |1'¢ be willing to make for eventual : 7 : oor The thar |! fortunate “breaks” in the! success, If that thought made me| Sayers’, named Louisa Mertin, is jealons ef Janet and plots | to speak. nored, driven with that | IN . "Othe pextnaer seerats. Ta euit Hake there " : 7 full measure of recklessness which against her. Greyes, following on the trail of Michael, pi og cella lg pe cormae y lly sas traces him to his place of residence in Marseilles, It. de-| nis engine, can obtain, There was a|™ into her new bur velops that Sayers has eluded his pursuers: by disguising @ | wild cry trom the driver, a crash tnto lot, @ retreat eo dainty that I had Miss Pickford graciously ushered | sacrifices, make no mistake, are de-| low on the| manded in this profession! | “Y's glad I was born poor, It has| | | confederate as himself and leaving him at the residence, our wagon and over went the auto paca engin H, teeen bp = er ae painful progress ebile a » do th ide of the abo a oad ow de more bearabl . Greyes reaches Michael's hiding place just in time to rescue a ate ayy pA SHES. SH © a | of her own curly hatr, “I'd out five yeara off my age Janet. He is wounded by a shot from Sayers’ revolver.) 3t wax 1 who clambered down to| “This t# most presumptuous,” Tit 1 were starting again. The world Sayers escapes. where our ‘victim was lying, and|*ammered, “but have you anything | reserves its best for youth, Ambi-| For many months after my some-|and Jacques drank more than their | drew a pleasing-looking black pocket. |!9 Your new picture I could do? I've | tion, courage and youth move what ingenious escape from the cafe| usual stiare of the sour wine, gnd| Sok from the inside of hi t.|done some extra work x mountaing and movie audiences | of Madame Ponadour in the Maritime | afterward I propounded my scheme. Afterward I felt his heart, and dis 1 think you'd pleture well,” she “This one thing I'd Itke to impress | Quartier of Marseilles, I lived tn the} “Comrades,” I sulds"it ts a dog's covered that he was alive. I ordered | Parried, putting me at ease. “Your/upon you. Always have some other! ¥ o1 1 . Pierre to move the wagons over to|¢ye* would film dark, and that’s an | work to fall ba.k on. > Foret du Dom, on the far aide of| life wo lead. « i ~ m ‘ ; *; ‘ D Hyores the life of a.dog, There were| ‘They srowled assent our own aide of the road. and we se-[advantage. How tall'are yout" Bhe |" "i've pever jumped until 1've + ox A French Chef, famous the world over for his P three of us woodinen in the hut—| “Today,” I continued, n idea ereted the p k among the logs] Measured her 4 feet 11 Inches agalnat | janding p k around 4 p Pierre, Jacques and myself, came to me. If our-wagons had been | ¥® Were Carrying, Presently a pub-|my 6 feet 2, : _, [now for som to do when I) cooking, told her: Solitude more complete than that/an inch or two nearer the outside| Me touring car from Cannes, on its 1 am sure,” I told her, “I could |tinish pictures | | ° © The e ou even with the tle ‘ a y's hue 4 y which I shared with these two men I| corner of the road, or the man in the | WAY to Hyeres, arrived. The a ident you mh with the little ex Douglas Fairbanks, Marys «Pl. i aad * t fare never tmagined I read the| automobile a shade lees skillful, he| WAS explained; room was made for| perience T have had.” band, breezod in. His viewpoint and Flavor—flavor—that’s the one thing that counts q hy wit . 0 1 he Jured man; and « e “Many girls have told me that," reape « trasted . ° 3 newspapers, which we obtained with| could not possibly have escaped. Hia| t | oI Gimentty from the neighboring vil-| automobile would have been amashed, | Dolre was xiven' us, collected repended But it you " in cooking. Insist upon flavor. Demand flavor. ; lage—read of myself as the mc he would have gone over the| the passengers. We then made c 1 up acting be: " I've wanted to do, 1 torious criminal at of all| edge of the precipice. way home, and late a welyond y dev you might | hy , suid, “and pall f “ ah f iy ets famous datectivés of Lon-| They: me malide ta’ taste | ed VURRIOA ocr ey welreiard’ thal whele prefsotlon. 'earelines atarwanl. 1 jump. rm ‘and The one sure, unfailing way to get supreme flar y don, Paris and New York who had/ throats a > listen. openedhe pocketbook. I divided the|is a definite technique of acting;| figure out a landing “hile I'm ° § | i sworn to effect my capture, read of} “It Is a dog's Il *“Trepeated.|™money into three portions, but I)mere intuition is unreliable before | the air vor in coffee is to use ° ‘BCo ee, ; 4 my crimes, my daring, my cunnir “What we need, to make things en- | #Poke to them asa master ,| the camera," “Don't Hsten to him,” urged i durable, is money——money, so that Linten, Jacques, and you, Pierre,”| spoke of her own novice days | Mary a smile. “He “Its flavor comes from the skill, the money, the shanty on the hillside—and smiled.| you two can go down to the cafe at i “lam of justice, but | wh neer producers had turned | haps wition that opens ; Given a certain amount of resigna-| the foot of the hill and drink brandy > I am one of you, I have trav-| Mary Pickfo away; of “humble | door » din Hh ne may t sa y 7 fi k i fon and patience, and I knew very| with the daughters of the village led beyond thore forests, and I know | lodgings, modest meals, and the/fine for a young man, but I know lifelong knowledge of fine coffee, ck of every j a well that I was safe as long as I| they who leave you now #o unkindly| the world. If you take this money jtrying hunt for work mine le better for a girl can { ; chose. | alone because you have nothing to| ith you to the village tonight, you! “The only reason 1 have been able | pictures ‘ ; One day a chance Incident set me| spend upon them.” eco i drunk - truth will be _ in| retain my position,” she said, “is y k ° thinking. We had paused for a sec-| Their pipes were out of thetr| and we shall all go to prison willl that I have fought my way along| TOMORROW: Virginis Bradford} “You can ma i —as ond to fill our pipes with filthy to-| mouths now, and they were Histening | #Wear to you the woodcutters’ oath. | step py step. What T have today Laayy she ean rile—but not camels! @ eit strong or weak you er, bacco, barely a dozen yards round one | intently. the oath acroas the flames, that your| rsh of the hairpin corners of the forest; “A man like that one today would | Share shall be saved. But go to the} Snare but you'll always get flavor. Use MJB. You'll road, leaving our wagons, usual,| have money—a pocketbook, Whilst | Village tonight wit 0 franca each, | - i” in the middle of the thorofare. Sud-|he was unconactous, look you, wo| the pourboire given us by the Eng | find the results you get almost magical denly a car swung round the corner, | would take It. One of us would bring | tishmen, and let me keep the rest for| traveling too fast for the driver to| it up here, here where there are a/ YOu. or hide it for yourselves.” They had just sufficient wit to re- rs apply bis brakes with safety, With | hundred hiding places, in the ground, | 2 great skill he passed us, grazing the| the trees, the cracks of the earth, A/ Alize that I was thetr supertor tn in- —and for supreme flavor in tea—T ree Teme long trunks of the lopped trees and) pocketbook which ts lost. ts lost.| telligence and that my advice was § te my , escaping the precipice by a matter of| What do you say, comrades?" good, So we growled an oath tn the She's 38, He's 23. Asks if T) if They Should Wed—Com Inches, That night T saw that Pierre| ‘Thore was no doubt about how the| Mtrange dialect of those parts, and I mon Sense Ought to Intervene. - gripped thetr gnarled and knotted | | bands, which reminded me always of BY CYNTHIA GREY ADVENTURES | the roots of the trees we felled * ; aR Oe id | “ | Our next adventure, enginesred in| Dear Miss Grey: I have been keeping company with a OFTHE TWINS similar fashion to the last, brought| Young man for one year. He is 23 and I am 38, but we| é us & matter of a couple of thousand) think the world of one another, Is there enough difference france, | This time, however, therein our ages to cause unhappiness on either side if we were was broken as he pitched head fore-|tO marry? I have been married before. MILDRED. | most from the seat of : and] Lets see—twhen he is 38, your present age, you will be his wife, who waa only 53. Do you venture to suppose that the man will feel then jJured, gave vigorous evidence a las he does now? | the poait of our wagon and the} " Bs : disappearance of her husband's}. A good many conspicuous experiments of this kind~have pocketbook after we had dragged his| been made recently and all have ended unhappily. It is use- body up from, a ledge of the prect-| lees to argue, as many do, that a young girl can marry an| pice. A gendarme from the nelgh- Bihar ath Ents casein jagsine threes eR | old man and be happy, and that the reverse must therefore| night and made a careful search| told true. There are no parallels in the lives of men and | the quests, may be required to quess| thru our belongings. There was/ women, | what each parcel contains and what | | nothing to be found, however, and by| Jf you actually do care an z : | kind of weather it will signify. The preserving @ stolid silence and leay- fy y uthing for the boy you will cer-| J orelia in this ease indicates “shoro- Tay oh onsahe ta wancoey oneipaniatns} | tainly refuse to marry him; you will never tie him down! ers” of many varieties. Offer a pric escaped nuspicion just an I did. After. | to the sacrifices which will be inevitable if he marries you. | for the beat ouesses. | If you serve tea and sandwiches ward, however, I spoke to them sert- s ) ously, Easter Guadae Mine Grey will recetve callers || you can gather your guests about the “Comrades.” I pointed out, “this| Dates fa her office Monday, Wednesday | | dining table and pile the gifts im the zarne {a too good to last. For atime| near aise Grey: Will you please and Friday, from 1 to 2 p. m. || center. Each guest may be re- we must go warily. Afterward we . ” ay | {and on Tuesday and Thursday | | quired to make a apeech to the bride will sock one more adventure, which | tell me the date and the month Eas-/| from 11 a m. to 12 m. each || as she presents her oift we must select with great care, for|ter Sunday fell on In the year 15957|| week. Please do not come at || ete it will be my last, If it 1s successful, | Also it ¢ Bunday han come in| | oder times, as tt sertously inter- 1] 7) Enter “Excuse me for not ue my y hat” |1 hail leave you. Afterward you) —— oe | | foros with her writing. IW.S-C. | two had better bury your savings In | ie Dear Misa Grey: Can you inform The very next person the Twine} so much trouble. No doubt I'll find | the ground and abandon the game,| hihina Wrhda se ti ane March any year alnce 18967 me as to whether there are certain met in Sugar-Plum Land was the/{t. But one has to be careful, If, | for it needs brains to be made muc-| then tal pther uiuehine | A READER. | requirements necessary to have in Easter Bunny. by any chance, I Weft the Easter|ceasful, and you two have not the| ‘$0,000! | Easter Sunday fell on April 14, (| order to enter Pullman for a “home | ‘There he was in a fine red coat, | baskets under the parlor curtains on| brains of @ rabbit between you | | 1895. Bince that year it has come in decorating” and a “domestic sctenc hopping along with a large basket | April Fools’ day instead of Easter,| They know that I was right, and| |March the following years: 1908,| course? Gt. on each arm. It would be shocking. The kiddies|they held thelr peace. It was aj | March 30; 1918, Morch #9; 1918,| A student must have high school [pacer “Goodness, I've lost my calendar,” | would think I was fooling them. It | month later, indeed, before we made March $1, and 1981, March $7, | eredits or the equivalent in order to he was saying over and over to} would be just as bad for Santa | our last coup, and it ended In a very gies ind lenter any college. If you write to himself. “I can't remember where I| Claus to fill their stockings on the | different fashion from what I had Cheese the registrar, Washington State col- put it.” Fourth of July.” | anticipated. From my lookout place ‘Then catching sight of the Twins| “We are going to the Cut-Out/on a@ stretch of the road above the he hopped up alongside and said| Lady's house,” said Nancy, “We | Wagons, I saw a gray touring can} politely, “Excuse me for not tipping|can ask her. Perhaps she has a| Piled with Jumeage and golf-clubs, ap: | my hat, but my hands are other-|calendar on her wrong side, an she | Proaching from the direction of Can- wise engaged. I wish to ask if you!was cut out of a magazine.” jnes. Thare was a girl in front, seated happen to know where I can find Suddenly the Easter Bunny set />¥ the driver, and an elderly gentie- | & calendar. I can’t romember|his baskets down and began pat-|™An behind. I called down t6 the) whetber-I put mine in the refriger-|ting himself all over. “I believe—I | others: ator, down the cellar hole or on the|do believe—" he sald. “I really be-| “Comrades, this !s our chance,” I| root. And now I can't tell when| lieve I have that calendar on me|®"nounced. “Move the wagons on Easter comes.” somewhere. I think I put it—yes, | @round the corner, and be prepated “We don't have a calendar with|sir! Hero tt is with my grocery re-| for what may happen.” us,” Nancy told him, “but we can|calpt. Now we'll see when Easter|, What did happen was not tn the ask <Mr, Peerabout, the Moon-Man,|comes. Here it is! Why, Easter |/eest what I had expected. From if you like. He fixes dates for every.|comes on the first day of Aprit.| Where I lay, crouching amonéat the thing.” It's on April Fools’ day after att’ | %tub. I could ee that something : 3 was wrong with the car. The havi at “Oh, thank: you,” remarked the (Te' Be Continued chauffeur was rocking In his seat, THOR sales e| Easter Bunhy hastily. “Don't go to| (Copyright, 1923, by Seattle Star) | ona the car was swaying from alde led J] ath ers About t ds y apie rp Manuscripts | Will you kindly tell me the rules Sticks | |tege, Pullman, Wash, asking for one Dear Miss Grey: Will you-piease | °F their explanatory pamphicts and | tell me how to make cheese aticxs | 2"v other information you desire, you jand oblige. OUT-OF-TOWN, | #! receive same. Cut bread sticks in halves length- ae Ninn eee |wlse, spread thinly with dutter, sprinkle with grated cheese seasoned jwith salt and cayenne, and dake un- | tit delicately drowned. ; er Asks About | Film Star | Dear Miss Grey: Will you please | give me Katherine MacDonald's FOr 17 pears jira” SO" rot Read, , Los Angeles, Cal, oe Keep your white satin slippers) wrapped in blue paper and they will | I not become yellow or discolored. | Sale BOYS’ SUITS But {t was the girl's face from which I could not remove my eye * That’s the logical result | requiating a manuscript before it of Hurley standards— |"!!! be accepted by @ publisher, al She must have fully realized the danger sho was in, but she showed the best means of getting results not the slightest signs of fear. She {s bui | Jeaned over and tried to put on the every Thor is built to be- | from a magazine publishing com- {|| foot-brake, succeeding re far, in fact, come a permanent asset | pany. M.A. CG. {}) |as momentarily to check the prog- tothe homeit enters—and | chohaeebel 4 should be neatly type- | | reas of the car. The chauffeur, sud- |toritten om one slde of regulation | | - |Genly seizing his. opportunity, Thor has done this in over | paper, Name and address should | We really have more Boys’ Suits Jumped from hin seat and rolled over three-quarters of a million | appear in the upper right-hand corner 4 : By Mabel C1 le in the dust. The girl's foot appar- to date! of the firat page—approximate num- than we know what to do with—which ently slipped from the brake, and the ber of words in the upper left. En- The fuel that you like to explains the reason for this sale. ai a lose self-addressed and stamped en- ‘age 2 Mabel C car once more gathered apeod. There are definite reasons | © have in your basement all § Y i Y aw hat eyeh as the car.came ui velope for return of M8 in case it ts i THE PLAGUE gene 7 WALKETH AT NOONDAY ieleiting Mewar the blll, heard the for Thor leadership—Thor | ; jected, the year round Is $18.50 BOYS’ SUITS at......e. Whether it started among the| some families not one was left. wild shouting and Indians, or whether {t was| Mother would go Into stricken brought by some ship's passen-| homes, help with the nursing, ger, or whether {t just flendish-| comfort the mothers, while we ly got up and started like a regu-| did the work at home and walt. washes clothes clean \ie- | There are no certain rules one may out injury, in the best and follow that will insure the success of : iy, |@ manuscript when submitting 4t. quickest way, with a minis | gay carefully the style of stories in mum of attention, |the various popular magazines and exclamations of the old gentleman behind, and there came to me one of those extraordi- nary moments which I make no at- tempt to explain. $20.00 BOYS’ SUITS at......0- $22.50 BOYS’ SUITS at... $25.00 BOYS’ SUITS at. $27.50 BOYS’ SUITS at. Cassidy lar bolshevik of a germ, nobody| ed in hushed awe for her homo- I half slid, half scrambled, 4 | send your work: to the editor of the . ror seems to know, coming and news of our little }| tne idboe into the road, poe ta fay Prove this at your Thor | pudiication your story ts most apt to | $80.00 BOYS’ SUITS at...roress Port Townser a yasn't only in our home, ‘ort, a ycholog' mo- | Grays Harbor, remembers the| it was in every home; they knew || ment leaped for the front splash- Day of | prices ‘they G3] exceptional values. | year of the diphtheria epidemic.| no health laws; they answere board. I found myself sprawling C pea ae the Week It means the best serv e Motherdear was in Kent the| to the law of human kindness, across the seat, but my left hand R Dear Miss Grey: Will you please jee for the least money 27 t P Freee en oe ee ee ae iod corcan | {ran aber the wheel Wo were with enuine ley fee le ak ey Cents a Pair cause it IS EFFICIENT and lasts much longer than Inferior conls, but also be- the year around is WASTELESS The small amount of ash speaks for Itself. Try this MODERATELY publish what day of tho week Sop- can be bought for as low a$ | ternber 7, 1888, came on? In K. $ ; Friday answers your question. School Age in Washington Dear Miss Grey: Will you tell me $ D what the school law in this state is LO Downe rece ee ese a cn Mae alance In 12 equal attend until 16 years of age? monthly installments B.D. if The law requires that a child must Cushion wringer, rolls, standard | enter school at the age of 8 years Thee BS supplied with Morale | and attend until 18, flintex told to her by a plonewr who| and spread ike a prairte fire and §|!" two Inches of the precipico after was a little girl at the timo of| before long we were all down. 9|™Y, Jump, and we just touched the the epidemic. “The doctor came, told father }| farther sido of the road with my “You know," she bega Ya | and mother what to do and tnd 9) Stab at the whoel. I righted the car a strange thing, but our ploneers| to go on, he couldn't stay long, | Without much difficulty, applied the on this coast didn't have any| “Father was @ good nurse,and || >rake, gently but. with. Increasing trouble with infections in thome days wo did whatever || ore took the corner with only a “Thingh that would send any-| thé doctor aald, 1 remember wo || Moderate skid and brought the car to body to the hospital now with| had to drink a tea made from red J) % standatill within a few fect of the blood polsoning seemed to take| pepper and they blew sulphur J| Ween. When the Kirt saw It, the care of themselves, Togs crush-| down our throats thru a quill. See conuntad For Rena: LAE ed by falling logs, breasts torn| “Wo all had it, but we all got WN eidenid dda nile dl by cougar scratches, tingers cut | well deep with ax or saw, all sorts of I've had doctors who camo in for the famous “Iron-Clad” Hose for Boys and Girls A beautiful showing of new Spring Top Coats for, children. Ages 3 to 10— $10 and $20 A few drops of Inseed ofl applied cylinder at el/g) tra cost, epee things Just healed over, theme Iater years doubt the fact || With cloth to the outside of the oh Aahay PRICED “They didn't. know anything| that we had real diphtheria, but || aa stove or tho Inside of the oven The Thor Electric Shop Shower for about antiseptic, excopt turpen-| 1 do not doubt It; no ordinary will keep the stove from rusting and Bride fuel today, and save on tine ahd pitch, and knew nothing! sore throat or tonsilitis 19 going make it easier too care for, 222 Pine Street Dear Mins Grey: T am planning your coal bills, of quarantine and contagion. | to cause clifldren to die by the lephone Main 356) to give a simple “shower” for a young woman soon to be married. Please give me a few suggestions about prosenting the gifts and some other features of entertainment and refreshments, NATALIB, Hang a large Japanese umbrelia Jrom a light flature and attach the pift hundles to the umbrella by vari- colored ribbons, The bride or all of “I remember there were nine| hundreds, and sweep like one of of us in our' family when the| the plagues of Egypt over the diphtheria plague came, Nine} whole Puget Sound country, and childven who needed to be “pro-| that's what happened that year. tected Agairist it, but mother! “Hundreds and hundreds of In didn’t know, dian children had It, too, and the “Child after child took sick and| whole land was filled with nor: died in this meighborliood, In row,” ARR ® "