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want more ir last lacided, jouble table more , omit corn es or bn the same swing from dried is on Ing is MONDAY LOW ING JUNE 11, 1928 PRINTED Ry ARRANOE DIENT (Continued From Saturday) A © than pretty, she regal e ber 2 D with fold A head lowe while t impersor ally, A ve black lace dre and sufficient ly low to display her A little too som 1. “She can af vnamefts, Jove! I'd some time to see her in some Orie thing barbaric next time I'm in New York Vi select a gown M skow entered at the mo ment atly flustered and ex trymely self-conscious, and here, cer Kinly, was no lack of ornamenta tion or of ¢ Ma wore all ber was an elab brilliant jade Ider of which r of green 1 the You both of you, but I can A eager fix you my way, Ma Bri . your face ts to b your Soar cher fy 1 Here, I have it! With swift in simplicity petuosity he unti now and you'll With his penknife threads that held the and re en 30 Ii an ador but and we ie motherly nostentatiously with me? an answer, daughter and range of a pier your eyes and Around Allie’s scarf, drew it then knotted it the length of chif. it about her head. n the ng the nd smooth, Next he snatche fon and bound His te was deft and certain; a momen had been fashioned to suit him. Then he stood back and eyed the tout erfsemble rgeous!" he ried, genuinely “That was the touch.| any cosumer to better it./ Open your eyes, oh, gypsy. princess!| And what do you see?” It—it sort of makes a difference, doesn't it?" Allie said, | A difference! Gray flung aloft his hands in exaggerated despair. “Heaven help me! I am inspired; 1 havea flash of geniu impulse, and with a magic pass I work a miracle. I transform you| rem something somber, dark, mio-| rose, Into a creature of life, of pas-| sion, of allurement.” He groaned. | “And you stand there like.a stalag-| mite. Why, girl, look et yourself!"! “Darned if she don’t look like a} pitcher T seen -som’er's—on an’ al-| manac,” Gus declared. | “Aha! A man with a soul! A} human being who sees beauty| where I see it. firet’ Gray burst Into infectious} laughter, and the others joined him.| , This proved to be an evening when people really did turn their heads as the Briskows were shown fo their table, but for once Allie! suffered no embarrassment, for she felt sure they were looking at Cal- Yin Gray, and in the shining glory] of his presence she knew that she| rents were invisible. It was the sort of situation in which Gray appeared to best ad- vantage, so he talked during the meal kept his com their surroun zs. On ballroom unconac it, Gray's you to dance even fresh with the coi hours his plans, and he her life—when she }lent him a certain | altogether too mechanical, and in a key that! ions unconscious of | their way|non so out they passed the entrance to the’ numb, y COPYRIGHT ISLE By ROX BEACH WITH METROPSUTAN MIWORAFER SERVIER, wave yon and paused to look tn The beat of the music swayed Allie ously; fore she i her waist then knew arm was arc guiding her out upon ‘Oh, mno!’ sho gasped. tumbled, but he drew h aying mm proud of you, show and I want these that you you ride. better than to the challenge inight Calvin utdoors for a t before retiring. He glowed jousness of a worthy well done. He had come to Notch expecting nd one but events of the last few had induced him to ™ Gray to sy change made up h now d to tay several days, Ho was ning tobe back in the oil fields, to be every hour away from them was an hour wasted, and al tho he told himself it was his feud that drew him, he knew better, As & matter of favt, when he thought of Texas it was of Michita Falls and when he visualized the | ace it was to picture a cottage int off or a smal tage “Tom and «B Park: and Insura: _ eagerly, selfishly urs until his retusa, was work t he alone cc and his ¢ skow told him with tremu stneas that he had saved confessed that od to kill herself, and she had inte ly Gray had put no faith claration, plain that the Briskows. them, He less tt that all three fend to guide with repignation, but reflected that inasmuch as he had put hig hand to the plow, he must turn the fur row, After all, he could well afford to spare k to put that girl on the road to happiness. was a we CHAPTER XVI From the day of their f ing, Henry Nelson and Calvin Gray had clashed. No two people could be more different in disposition and temper, hence it was only natural that every characteristic, tion of t should have a the other agonism. Nelson was loulating plodder with little tmagination and less orig inality; he thought in grooves. His wag a splendid type of mind for a banker. He had put one weak point viz, a villainous temper, a capac ity for blind, vindictive r a weakness, truly, for a man who dealt in money—but a weakness that humanity and without which he would have been too color less, too efficient, Nature errs by making supermen. A drab man. in many ways, Nelson was meet a cool @ divine} extraordinary mainly in this, that] that if Provi | his mind followed straight, obvious | channels, and that never, der the urge of extreme passion,| did he depart from the strictly logical line of action. In thin, of course, he was superior to the aver- age. person, who too frequently un. dertakes the unusual. jebullience, hig dash, his magnifi- cence of demeanor, could be nothing less than an affront to such a man; Nelson could see in him only a pom- ‘An artist with my|Pous braggart, an empty, arrogant) able vagueness, but the man under strutter. Age and easy success had not improved the banker's apoplectic turn of mind, hence Gray's defiant) declaration of war, his impudent assurance that the recent misfor- tunes to the house of Nelson were the direct results of his own delib-| erate efforts, had proven almost un- endurable, In the first place, Nel- |son could not imagine a man mak- ing such a declaration; it was new |to his entire experience and con- incessantly | trary to his code. It was uncon- therefore it staggered was, in fact, a phenome- unique as to leave him He told himself that it must servative, him, It ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS & Olive Roberts Barton DOLL TOWN “She's all patch-work with stockings,” explained Nancy. Toot! Toot! went the Choo-Choo. Express, And away it rattled, Town far behind. Nancy and Nick looked out of the window at the fences and trees ftly- Mg by and thought they had never had such a nice ride, “What is the auked wien Mister ductor, came along. “Doll Town,” said Mister Punch, "Oh, good!’ cried Noney. “I'm Just sure we shall find Kuby Joan, my lost vag doll, there?’ “I hope you will,” said Mister Punch kindly. “I'l tell Mister ‘Toots, the engineer, to walt as long as he ean #o you will have time to look.” Pretty soon the train stopped and the Twins got off. A policeman doll stood on the Platform of the station so they went UP and asked him if he had seen leaving Game next stop?” Nick Punch, the con- Ruby Joan, “Bhe's all patchwork with paint: painted hair and polka-dot fed hair and polka-dot stockings,” ex- plained Nancy. “Well, if she looks like that, no doubt she has gone to the French doll to ask for some new clothes,” said the policeman doll. “Phe French doll has Jots of style and every. hody goes to her for advice. “If 1 were you, I should go thero and ask. She lives in that doll house with vines painted on it and real curtains at the windows.” But the French doll in her satin dress and ribbons and laces had not seen Ruby Joan. Nor had her neighbor, the dancing doll, or the doll-baby that said “Mama,” or the black doll or the Chinese doll, or the character doll—or anybody, Ruby Joan was not in Doll Town, {t was plain, so the Twins ran back to the station and got on the Choo- Choo Exprens. “Toot! Toot! went the engineer, Away went the little train, (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1923, by Seattle Star) seldom | except un-| he Calvin Gray's} THE SEATTLE STAR Be ir beer PASTEL SHADES, FRILLY LACE | departure of two callers on that day of the mee uc, Ono nev t madman wou Gray ha confessed hin n—a f natic of the . i ras There was but t olored chiffon the smartest material mn open to ¢ é . 3 " All new modes grated y him withou sn tn 1 rose | With ruffies, i en 1 Se 1, is fe it ma ure most in dem althe rated hy gle NOt n two-piece sults are still popu ures. There must ¢ 1 lace Is one of the newest | lar One would have to t power of unser that fp scrupulous as a pity © Cynthia Grey: The Old, Old Story the “Innocent Bystander” BY CYNTHIA GREY Dear Miss Grey: I will be very thankful if you will te me what is the right thing to do in this case. A certai auburn-haired woman—a wife and mother—tried her to vamp my husband, and, in a measure, succeeded a bargain made in good was blackmail, However, the tie of the Ne . Tell? so very glad that to be moved from that town, and I am refrained, for now my husband seems pal again, The problem, however, letter now he had not b Ho knew a certain © sm so dani worth to them ® substantt him, and that wh could under no ance anything savoring of lence, nevertheless if some should befall Gray, if some God yhould put end there would be no disposition on Henry's part to question the divine) words is this: Not so long ago I had rous ¢ ried man, who has a family, too. His wife seems to kno nothing of it, altho everyone else in the community is awar of it. Now, husband's actions? won't feel the pain and heartache that I did. think of such actions? Sincerely, M. B. Have you never heard That “where ignorance is bliss, it i folly to be w I had made preparations for getting a divorce when w of the Ete rnal Triangle—Shall u n best € 1 my own dear a from a very dear friend who informs me that this same woman has transferred her affections to another mar- w re do you not think that she ought to know of her} Shall I tell her? I hope, tho, that she} What do you’ “)Buy Home Products | PAGE 11 origin of that calamity, Further Now, I really feel that this wife should know of her Presthad hg pe lly es aeons husband's doings, if he is really “doing,” but so often in some such mysterious manner, | J088ip takes matters into its own buttery fingers, caus-| would then be in a position|ing the breaking up of homes that might have gone hap-| amply to reward his employe for| 7 sae otiet: lara. ag apse y many didi oc tovany tbat het ap pily on, scarcely noticing the rift, if things had been at lowed to take their own course. You should have this by your own experience. The woman with the “auburn hair” | wrong, but she will suffer. man, and perhaps his wife, as a mischief-maker. parently passed ynrecognized, For instance, profitable deals were for ver coming up, new acreage was constantly being acquired, and it | Would be easy to carry a third party |for an Interest which was bound to make that third party rich. | All this was expressed with admir stood. So much accomplished. Nelaon | went to Dallas and there undertook to learn something about the size of| Calvin Gray's profits, who was be- hin dhim and the extent of their | backing, and what his prospects were. Hhe followed every avenue of information; he even went so far {as to hire an investigator and send him north to look up Gray's record and to follow his tracks as far back as possible, Nelson was reconnoit- lering behind the enemy’s lines and testing the strength of his. position. | When he returned home Gray was gone, whither he could not learn. As the days passed without further | developments, Nelson began to be known of many cases where women chose to take th attitude and often with very happy results. Just let these people alone. The she needs to know—in time. The man, his senses. They always do, you know, too, sooner or later, your life. did. Prick up your ears and listen! he ultimate consumer Only 30 per cent of the wood in | forest now pets into the form of se | soned, unplaned lumber, additional 10 to per cent is lost | What ts,teak? Where ts it found | jand for what is it user wood is two kinds, Indian | teak and African teak or African | } | | learned is undoubtedly in the You'll only be blamed by the A person who takes such a matter into his own hands, such as you propose doing, is very seldom thanked. Perhaps the wife all about the affair, and intends to keep her peace. is wife will find out what will come to| <= and whether it is tc be soon or too late will have no influence on I know that your intentions are of the best, but you ad- mit yourself that you would not want her to suffer as you Your truer self is making an effort to assert itself. a a Of this, an| in Neve that he had had a bad dream | oak, Both are valuable for shipbuild- | the process of manufacture. In ex-| and that Gray had merely been |ing and furniture. | treme cases as little as $ per cent of | talking to hear his own voice. He} eee | the wood in the forest may reach the | devoutly hoped that such would! yyow iw salt obtained? | finished product. | prove to be the case. | “The simplest method of extracting | peat be) A time came, however, when his| sait ia by the evaporation of water,| What do the letters F, P. E. ater | apprehensions were roused afresh,| but thie is seldom practiced except | a man’s name mean? and it was Barbara Parker wh0lin those countries or regions that| Forest products engineer. rekindled them. She had come toljack subterranean brines, or rock: | SEG the bank with an excellent proposi-| salt deposits, or cheap supplies. Rock | tion and was doing her best to} satt ix sometimes obtained by mining, | silk sell it; in the course of her con-| but in most regions the salt is ob-| Put a teaspoonful of lemon jut versation she referred to Gray In| tained from subterranéan sources by | in the last rinsing water after was! a manner that gave Nelson cause] wells, With thesc%the natural brine |ing the ha’ for thought. is either drawn to the surface or else, | 98.8 e looked this lease over,"|as in the case of rock salt, water is | “Bob” was saying, “and I've eased down a well tube, the salt | niece permitted? the books, It has been producing|taken into solution, and tMe artificial| No. 150 barrels a day steadily, Produc-| brine taken to the surface. see tion like that is cheap at $1,000 nk it When, where and how was the barrel, It is worth $150,000, Henry, What happens when a national). 8. San Diego sunk? “Why is it offered for seventy-| bank fails? | five? The depositors are paid off in so|istand, by striking a German min “Bob” shrugged, “How did a ‘boll|far'as the asscts of the bank will eee weevil’ like this Jackson ever make| permit, The affairs of the bank are| How much has the use of autom: even a 150-barrel well, in the first| placed in the hands of a receiver,| biles increased during the last place? Where did he get the money|and he may, or may not, asseas the | years? to drill? He is sick of the game, I| stockholders in the banks a certain| In the United States there wei suppose, and would be satisfied to/ amount, based on the amount of their | 1,000,000 automobiles in use on N: get his money back with a reason-| holdings in the bank. This, however,| vember 1, 1913; in 1922 there able profit, It is a find, really. | docs not alicays meet the losses or | 10,505,660. “Looks so, for a fact. How did! liabilities of the bank, There is no} bg you get on to it, ‘Bob'?” absolute protection offered depositors Don't know him." “Mallow {x as queer as tho res! of his kind, and I put no faith {1 his story until I investigated. But| made the trip around the world in | the well is there and doing 150/95 days, 24 hours and 46 minutes, | barrels as regular as clockwork.’ oe and 11 minutes been equaled by any- one without the use of airplanes? Yes, John Henry Mears, in 1918, How many horses are there in t United States? About $20,200,000, compared twit 18,597,000 in 1900, eee northern part of South America, t northeastern part of the ocean, and the extreme northeasie part of Asia, The path What Is the pulse of a new-born infant? From 180 to 140 a minute. one fruit, uncooked if a soft fruit and \atewed if dried or hard fruits, and beating wit an egg beater with the addition of sugar as needed, ~ _ What is the annual fire loss in the United States? About $250,000,000,000; very much A lovely hat of orchid horsehair | higher than the fire losses in Euros braid has a large bow at the back of | pean countries. uncut velvet ribbon in a deeper shade “ee of purple, It is also bound with the Of the timber that js yearly eut in darker shade, our forests, how much of it reaches Merico, the northern part of Low ORCHID TONES an, * of the Pacific oc STRAW HATS Discolored straw hata may bleached with sulphur fumes, 1 SHIT What will help make hair soft and | ice | he | Is marriage between an uncle and UL) July 19, 1918, off the coast of Long ne. | | | i} 0- 10 | re 0- were | What is the salary of a congress- n? is “Purely by chance, Thru a man| in case the bank fails. man, and does a new member get named Mallow, a ‘scléhtist’ of some Pee ery pald when congress is not in sessiot sort with a magic tester,” the girl! Has Nellie Bly's famous trip) $7500 @ year; the new member laughed. around the world in 72 days six hours | “ready drawing hia salary. he ith (Continued Tomorrow) How much coffge 1% consumed in| When will the next total eclipse of the United States?) How much tea?| the sun occur? A EERE IE Ta Aba! 1,868,818,188 poutdd of co; September 10, visible in the United FRUIT WHIP foe were imported and 72,196,059 | Statea as a partial eclipse; visible Any frult whip fa a delicious des-| pounds of tea. generally in the weatern part of the sert and ls made by’ masking tho eee Atlantic ocean, North America, the he Pacific rn of total eclipse passes thru the Carribean ae a, yer California and the northeastern part be The Union National Bank Hoge Bldg. Lumber and Mfg. Co. 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