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of xe! the pt to ane ot 0, 1928 THE SEATTLE STAR PAGE 17 ft y B 1 got to ¢ in her office Monday, Wednesday low ms Pe fir and ifriday, from 1 to 3 p. m. Fev the exchange of good recipes 1 Ta’ a blaht “An 't f one| pected.” He stopped to ¥ and on Tuesday aod Thursday GE iE. \ t 1 1 but i " Big I : from 11 a. m. to 12 m. each ma ‘ } i ‘ week, Please do not come at Ghe | _ os ne LAS a sthag age AB r waa his stock) Young a de Finds That Hubby Corresponds With} force sin her writine | - o> Reilent Seat oes Girl in Another Town Who Is Ignorant That He . ——— By ‘ f ~f AR Y SINCLAIR DRAGO amp to cihrivat: "hie dutebaatian tne tion ater," Tuscarora. ¢ Is Matilat —Feels Like Committing Suicide — , Mew many 6F the coal t h he sletaueue whaer manic oe mad boen per 1 by the astute Time for Composure Instead, | For £60 were killed i Oy Lif) © | n back. He ov ey | BEGIN HERE TODAY t th ft . of it to bis owr Dear Miss Grey: 1 am the saddest girl in the world. 1} Which cost the most to « t 2 As Bie | - ‘owns \ : ; Cue of bla Eivchiadisl ca hedtacioch was married five months ago to a young man that I thought |‘? ' F ig oer ret ‘ Atte & Sietode: chewed that | tbe Wobiter: ra was. to register the soul of honor as we had kept company nearly three) panna 000 ove A " fre ald and @ ch W, wit 5 scheme ryt years, | oe i ter, and “sone, a t t . But he « A to) Bt My his choosing tb nh “ t, and stary Do c But I have learned that he has been keeping comps What d ? } ‘. ane Cyo- het <open rg gp een bom the ‘same ¢ *®) with a girl in another town when he goes there on business.|_ 4 /im¢ white or “pecrride paded 1 a obnerve © before 8 soft and fi her; originally | ces from As Boe might i * many cattle as they! His work takes him to other cities quite frequently. maha from the sking ef- rupicapr H his right +t minut Double A branding was not} CHAPTER XXII I found a letter from this girl, and I knew from the way | tragus (the Alpine chamois) i NOW GO ON WITH sTORY dor Th fi | I i be y Fi " ¢ y done. eretore, | Bullding the Dam she wrote that she was ignorant of the fact that he is a tes posed of 25,000 women who love |) ge al {th steer carried his| cae mar unks are 0 : “s peg cb > is aitatiies, af aoe up. |, ld Tronsides’ son moved about the/ married man. I sat down and wrote her immediately and fos APL mttaer et 40 cook eur : : haa ‘ town ¢ mmands y * she aoewered that it was the truth, but that the affair) According to latest available statis To can belong to this club too. urst out the charm that dar B mplate the meta-| Rew dignity that was subtly remints-/ would stop at once, I believe that girl as she seemed sin-| tics, 74 bon ership is open to every- Needle this x abe pr shee taaide di ; Ei : i ae Rh: mer, Fe pmero was] cere and thanked me for writing, but how am I to know pe he ng eM . } " je down as Te- hed aside © too 8 orders froi - ay? ‘ ° to do to t felt his y jump ax he| touched. A ctrele burned around the | Esteban rom) that he hasn’t other girl friends in other cities? And if so. ing it becomes to the rest. For a 1 be caught sight of it id the shadow | inverted letters and tho deft placing| ‘Tho boy had, in truth, become the| Perhaps some of them will not be as honorable as this girl! every member is urged to con- Acklin unc d his logs lazily “Guess we'll put @ stop to that in @ hurry, Better send a couple of the boys over there to dry-cam r one in| nan muttered And Kildi ere the only » the fo racted his eyes, | red. “Ho # been Basques by now, Cash won't come back until men. Let Melody go ow started out, when Acklin| ed him back he rock,” need { mouth open began. ed in he cried “We're goin’ our dam.” flopped tnto a c weakness. Cash physica, “When do we begin?” chalr in actual he finally asked in an awed voice. | “Todey. I'm going to town to-| night to get the stuff started on its/ way | Kildare was glad of the chance to} be on his own. Ranging thru tho| But would give him an opportun- | valley was ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS 6“ Olive Roberts Barton of a doubt, it was arm that } n in the sand on Smoky canon. you get this?” Blaze do manded a aly “1 suppose it's yours?” d back. “1 know what I'm talkt When did you pick it up? “A couple o° days ago, in the sand around the hitehin’-post, outside the door at the Bull's Head.” Blaze handed back his wateh. Ne g about “I'm goin’ to keep this, just be and he hod! wire wax down. In double file they |C@relessly kept up the acquaintance of girls he knows in the cause.” He held the charm in his} roamed trailed up the dry bed of the stream,| towns he visits, without informing them of his marriage. open palm, The ee haired one had| Glasses to his eyes, Blaze sires their guns held ready, Twenty min Show your husband that you can forgive him thia time caught something between t his sweeping Inspection. utes brot within sight iy A , ae wee s ene . peeeys fe them within sig ‘| but that you will not overlook a second offense, And don’t glanced at him. “The in” he went on, CHAPTER XX The Cattle Rustlers the advance of the eam driven by the slower Wash the destiny of Paradise iadissolubly link w treigt movir slow had the road In shape, Wh Mar tin canon na: d, a cable had been strung from k to bank. The ac tual building of the dam only the arrival of Wash and bis precious load of dynamite. THE SUBMARINE “Quick!” ered Nick. After the battle in Bing-Bang Land there were many things to be done. Nancy helped to gather up the | ‘wounded tin soldiers, and when the wooden soldiers had them all care-| fully piled up in the ambulance, she got up on the driver's seat and drove the ambulance back to the Red Cross Hospital After that she helped to put splints on broken arms and legs, mend broken heads, put plasters on shoulders and shins, an¢ made her-| self generally useful, The Tinker Man salt she was tho dest Red Cross nurse he had ever | eren. ' Out on the battle field the wooden army was marching their tin soldier | prisoners back to pris General | Nick at their head. Suddenly there was a loud explo- | sion up in the alr. Everybody had forgotten the sol- dier who had gone’up in the balloon to watch fhe enemy, but now they | saw him coming down head first out | of the sky. | And as his head was heavier than | his feet, his hat being so large, his | head stayed down. “The submarine!” He fell right Into the h and disappeared complete as he did not come up it’ was altogether likely was sticking in the mud at the bot. " cried Nick. “The Sub- Nothing could be seen of the un der-water boat but the periscope sticking up like @ stovepipe, for, whatever happens, that part of a submarine boat never disappears for & minute, unless the enemy shoots it off. The captain of must have been pertscope and noticed the excite ment, for the boat came to tho top of the water at once und opened its lid. Five wooden the shore and jumped tn. the aubmarine looking thru the soldiers rushed to Then the the othor | | | }and was on her way home when ah jeame upon Ackiin. ing love, only to meet too late the ningn look pretty had down t cannot gripe. man who awakened the real flame ot * he with a show When you are constipated, her life. With what result? A lite | well ¢ | Acklin contl | twice what I'd give anybody else, river with | ad | of the 1 4. Cash | le awaited | abe ho |¢F now submarine closed its lid again and | sank under the waves. “They'll get him,” Colonel Stiff Leg “Perhaps they will and perhaps they won't,” replied tly Colonel. “They forgot to take a diving suit along.” (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1933, by Seattle Star) ——— ADVENTURES oF “Where did we get them? Oh, that was part of the Christmas| tree. One year I recall we had two | Christmas trees in the scltool- house, all covered with dolla, | and gifts, wonderful things they | were to us, bought at the Tum-| water or Olympian stores. But 1| was going to tell you about the little Indian and my doll. “Ag I told you, I had this play: house in the woodshed, with all my treasures in it. And the In- dians were on the place. In the camp nearest the house was a little boy just avout my own age. “timé after time when I went out to play I would find some- thing missing, a broken dish I found or a bit of calico I intend- ed to make into a doll dross or anything I might have stored there. “'Mama!’ I sald, ‘some of those Indiags are taking things out o my playhouse, and I won't have a? maybe not’ mother ‘Maybe you put them somewhere else and forgot. You mustn't accise any one of ateal- ing unless you are sure. “Oh, anawered, “L was ‘nure’ enough, I kept on missing things and getting more and more angry about it, 101 one day L got to the woodahed door just in time to neo the little boy 1 had suspected walking off with my dent ioved doll, “Put that doil pack!’ t #oream- You put my dollie back! And don't you ever touch my dollles, not ever!’ « cpeeeenene eeenemes © M9 190 0 aememetecmenienseend LITTLE MAY “He gave me an ugly, grown-up sort of look of hatred and stub- bornness and walked on, carrying the doll by the arm. think all the anger which had been growing during the week boiled over at once, when I saw him with that doll, that precious baby doll, in hia dirty hand, and I picked up a stick of wood and flung it with all my might straight at him. “I don't think I thought whether I would really hit him or not, but I did, the stick struck him ‘in the back and he went down as if he had been shot “Tt was almost scared to death; I thought I had killed him; ho lay so still and didn’t say a word, but my thought was still on my baby, and J rancautiously up and started to pick her up. “But no sooner did I give a ull on the doll’# arm than the {ttle Indian let out « yell worthy of hia warring ancestors “Inatantly all was commotion, Indian mothers rushed ont and reached the #pot at the same mo- ment that mama fame. “Don't worry, I wald, she tan't h hurted if'he can yell like motber did worry and it would be hard to tell who talked the fastest, the indignant brown mother or the sorry. white one. “An well oa she knew she do- manded that T be punished fo* crime, And mother was on point of doing as she asked n fath me up and gaye a tittle Indian wag bad,’ he suid, ‘and got no moro than he deserved.” Little May ta now the wife of the sheriff of Thurston county, taid Nick to! arrow across them left not whersbip leader of hix people That ove Miss Grey, I am so miserable I feel like ending it al) How shall I act when he comes home again? Shall I tell of Acklin's ng, an hour before sun- What a sucker Acklin ts," Bod wot, they w to strike 4 chuckled, as he burned his points| In orderly precision they moved on| Him I know about this or act as tho nothing had h«ppened? into ng seer on which he| the Double A wire. When they were YOUNG WIFE. knelt within @ mile of It, they spread out k it from the It will be best to tell your husband frankly what has taken west | place, y and Gloomy loosened their| fanwise to atts Febsn You have nothing to be ashamed of, and your know!- Buck k the steer in the | and south. riba, and {t dashed down the arroyo, | Gueo were ready, the wit! to do or |€49¢ Of this affair, just at this time, may be the one thing T miles to the north of them|die in thelr hearts; but not a shot "eeded to make your husband realize the gravily of his was f Th A quick conduct, | It may not be quite as serious as you think ¢ was ynguarded. une of nippers He may have and the He again caught a hint of smoke dead trees t at marked ‘ae PEA rionsthy Veron g 5 nee of the Webster and the Reet, /07get that everything depends upon your attitude. This i as he watched, 4 They stopped. no time for eniveling and thoughts of suicide, but of com- ack cloud rose Into the sky Horses were loft behind, here. In| posure and determination to make your marriage turn out : dant. He handed the| Indian fashion they swarmed past! a nnil) s to Melody as another patch | the face of the mesa on which Kil ppuy. e- | of smoke went up. oP: stampin’ « Melody dare baud lain wan diverted. Esteban posted his lookouts, Picks and shovels took the p! the night tho water fire out | muttered as he Dear Cynthia Gre buff intertwined with white; transport corps, purple, fow ordinance Just a of tho corp young | bac department words for the bene motor kel ce of gur who says # lady fs 25 and has Kildare was putting his saddle on| With muscles primed for thelr task, siege his horse, and a will to fire them on, they at fer been in love, and wonders tf) what national bank of the United They are better than an hour! tacked the barrier that had impo } ah should marry without experienc. | States has the biggest capital? ad of us It'll be black night in the canyons in two hours. We got to} be in the open before then. a chance; that feoling. By all means, > » aaks, “What ts love?” From my knowledge and experience, love is in |from seeing a miracle that was hap-| definable. It ts a sensation which = | pening, even as they worked. Unno-| there Is no language adequate to de- CHAPTER XXI tleed, the swift current of the Rebel | scribe. It creates the desire to give An Offer for the Rancho dropped to sluggishness, No longer | from the very soul; to want to be al No hint of the building of the dam | did it dash into the mouth of the| Ways with cr near t d one and had reached Kildare and Melody. | Webster. The change was slow and| doing for hir f his every | Owing to Morrow's vigilance and | gradual; but over at Bodine's ranch | Want and satiafying !t with the be |old Walnh'a fondness for the mighty | it bad been appallingly sudden. there is in the giver; to forsake all jdollar, no word of the work had} (Continued In Our Next Issue) | others and cleave only to him. It ished them, The very It’s Just | they applied let’s pound leather!” | The ? York, of ational City Bank capital $40,000,000. intentness with which themsolves kept them Passed the Double A frontier. | - ——|nometimes means going thru “the , iC | < Owing to Mercedes’ care, Esteban | valley of shadow"—drinking the only a rich crispness. was an well as ever. He kept the dregs of sorrow—but at last to come da supplied with enough water smiling thru"—realizing it was bare necessities of life the bed vorth it In the end Better to live alone alwaya than to marry without experiencing the ec stacy of this most exquisite sensation Many a girl han married, not know Nota Laxative Nujol ts a lubricant—not medicine or laxative — so shallow weils in Mercedes had gone to the cemetery sympathy, “I suppose you are pre couraged 7” “My people were never easily time of unsatisfied longing and in expressible anguish and bitter pain. This is the advice of not enough of Natare’s lo- bricating liquid ts produced in the bowel to keep the food raged in the p EXPERIENCE, red with pride waste softand moving. Doc- Pray's we made for ourselves.” | tors prescribe Nujol because Does the Iaw require more than “But I don't want to fight you," ned in that same low tone. “I'l buy © you a good pri one man In the pilot house of a ves nel while the vessel is in motion? Yea it acts like this natural labri- cant and thus secores regolar bowel movements by Nature's own method — lubrication Try it toda: eee What do the colors of the hat cords of eplinted men in the United States army signify? The branch of the service to which they belong: Infantry, light blue; | cavalry, yellow; artillery, scarlet; en |gineer corps, scarlet ed “Not No! We may starve; you may even take the Rancho away from us by force, But we will not well!” “Here comes Kent and your broth You talk it over with Ex-| intert |teban, I'l stand by my promise.” with white; signal corps, orange ¢ “Hello, Miss Mercedes,” Tuscarora | tertwined with white; medical de- called out |rartment, maroo quartermaster Gem Nut Margarine A wholesome spread for bread. like it. You will be pleased with the saving on the grocer’s bill. Order a carton today. Swift & Company, U.S. A. FOODS fried in Snowdrift do not have the unpleasant fatty flavor that often hides the flavor of the food itself. out the flavor of the food fried in it and adds ira Jresh ||: Snowadrift ene in a/ieyplure Jairtight bucket |, as easy to open as winding the clock / make the aoe refer Snowdrift brings Snybody cise tribute her household ideas, and, especially, her choice recipes for the pleasure and profit of the rest of the members. Because ae ion has grown amazingly tis peat year the Borden orca decided to } publish this colamn from time |) to time in the newspapers so that the club benefits may be extended to as many women as possible. You will “8 6 1 Contributions Invited H C, Probably you have some |) ideas of your own which will appeal toevery other woman in the club. If you have, send them in. All kinds of contributions will be wel- ff come. And the beat of them |f will be printed in thiscolumn. |} Names of contributors will be printed too, unless other- [i | wise requested. G, One of the features of the club is a yearly prize recipe contest. Here are some of the prize winners in last |j year's contest When are at your wits’ end to ff think of something new to i eat, try one of these. Vari- ety and flavor are what 4 j im place of fresh) 2 coe Foe. alied Iter, trea |] 1 Sp meshes, bute fe emall |] 56 Raat wrton mad double boiler. Add the onion, parsley, | Stir and five echt] minutes. Add the | mushrooms ‘and - miento and cook fi minates. Stir in the flour. Dilute 134 cups of milk with water and pour in slowly, stir- | ring until it thickens, dd the | lobster and cook ten minutes, | Just before serving add there maining milk to the Add tor mixture sd cok The Aristocrat of Foods— Lettuce, traces its “lineage” back to the ban- quet tables of the Roman Empire. Julius Caesar erected a statue to the “wonderful health- giving plant.” delicious by 33] GOLD MEDAL | | Mayonna: Se the Aristocrat of salad dressings, the perfect mayonnaise. Made of new-laid eggs, the finest of oils, the most delectable seasonings, after a recipe a Caesar might well envy—Gold Medal delights the connoisseur and proves a revelation to those who have tried only the ordi- nary dressings. Try it today on the salad served at the most elaborate of Roman banquets — Lettuce is valued even more highly today because it is known to be rich in the magic vitamines and because the tender, crisp leaves are made far more Lettuce and Egg — On crisp, heart-leaves of lettuce, serve quartered hard-boiled eggs— made into a banquet by golden Gold Medal Mayonnaise. minutes. Serve i aie peeled oron toast points. 1? pe the mushrooms may beg and chicken substituted for the ster, Miss M. G. Champlin, New Tok Cibgh | . . DidyouevermakeKromesquies? ff ee are truly pave ions butter, milk diluted with water. Addthemeat or fish and season to In these seientifie days the thonght- | fal housewife gives carefal consid: eration to the planning of nourishing meals, Healthful food can be made the most delicious food in the world, Toate recipes show how easily #t J can be done. With the use of Borden's Prag ted Mill you can save time, trouble and money. And you can be sbso- lutely sure of its complete parity. Won't. YOU join the scecipe Cub? “}} Send 260 to‘ Jane Ellison, ine Borden Bldg, 350 Madison Ave, New York, This is the only expense you ever have, Ifyoubelong to the club you receive the Prize ipe Album and the Monthly Bulletia and other interesting things. — Conducted by THE BORDiiN COMPANY | Our delivery wagons cover the city “like the dew” always fresh at your grocers. A. Magnano Co., Distributors 1213 Western Avenue, Seattle, Washington —so Gold Medal is Why? not remain in this condition. See our Specialist | FREF an? have him TE) YOU HOW ‘TO GET WELL» How 10-12, Sunday: 11-12 a, Lincoln Memorial Clinic 1822 8d Ave., Opposite Py oO