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aes so bal- oa ja of phter i the } w to peer. in Men - Se ears for and soul. e to Keir get the ber hing Tous pass who RTS BEGIN HE F MoN heads the t NOW GO ON W t 1 d the innate vingu a ‘ Mak vom f ‘be Th . For the mome th were forgotten excep would come true we. . Perhape ™ io instant in halted in her breast ca wind and matter, which herb as in death er the deck more. “We want a each " you and T.and Miss Ha 7 worth in this one. The other girl will havé to Bet in’ here too, The other boat's sightly 1 or—Mra. Hardenworth, get_in with) McNab, and Julie” ‘. Hew anook hérkett with difficulty from her revery. ‘This as no time for personal isghes, to heark- en to the voices of htr inmost heart when the captain was shouting thru the storm. The onty texues rema. ing now were those of deilveran oF disaster, life or death. Even Dow the white hands of the wave: hing toward her, Ye terrible reality did not ax it, should. Instead, her houghts atii centered upon Ned the danger was always Ned's tn. tend of her own; tf was Ned's life was suspended bya thread above the abyss. It was ard to remember herself: the instinct self-preservation was mot even in the axzendency There ts a blasting were str this now terror in any great ulsion of the elements. Thene mi & One reality, “the eternal constant in| which *he plights his faith in a world of bewildering change: the air of he the sky cf stars, the. anutter mea Johnny Jack Rabbit was having the most beautiful time. He was racing with himself, or rather he was racing with his I can beat you to the aspen tree,” he panted, starting to run again without waiting for an answer. Suddenly he began to chuckle. M fool him,” he said to himself, “ll fool that ‘silly shadow fellow. Iii put on my wind brake and stop so quickly, go on ahead and not tiotice where I've gone, I'll hide in that patch of sweet clover and he'll never find me, I'm tired of him going everywhere I gb." Johnny Jack lopped along on his jong legy for a minute or two, his shadow sticking close beside’ him, neither getting ahead nor behind, and no wonder it made Johnny nervous, All at once Johnny stuck his enor. mous ears forward like sails on a cathoat (his “wind-brake” he called them) and it stopped him as sud * denly as a wreck. And then with. out alook fo right or left, he mild into the patch of sweet clover that grew ten times aw high as his head, and stopped. It was Ike going into # forest, all dark and quiet and sweet-smelling with not a bit of sun shine anywhere, Johnny looked around curefully, hold} 1 primitive| BUTION EDISON MARSHALL basa a Sia Lt ei dbanam at KE TODAY ITH THE STORY a 1 «put Mrs |boat, so she and Lanore | together ab told sen. "I'll get in the other.” The captain did not. seem to hear. Ho continued to shout his orders, In the work of lowerthg the tfe- [boat he had cause to lift hig lan. }tern high, and for @ moment its j yellow gleam was bright upon Bens’ Farther oft white-faced but erect in the beat of the storm In one instant’s insight,.a single giimpse between the storm and the se, he understood that she as taking him at bis word. For some reason beyond his ken—likel, beyond too—she had aske Hardenworth hers, to be put in McNab's boat so that! his wish he had spoken at the door of her stateroom might come true. How silly, how trivial had been! Those angry words 4 not come from his hea: ¥ in anger from some false, superficial ride of him that was dying in the storm. He had never dreamed that she would take them serious ly. 7 were the mere spume of a ¢ that had not yet learned |to be a man. 1. “Get In with he said shor “Don't be silly—as I, was.” “Hoe, hee, he Jost him that time! shadow of mine is still you, He'll wonder where I've Well, well! While I'm here I may as well be enjoying myself. Um! Um! This clover smelfs wonderful!" And he began to break off great bunches with his teeth and chew them up as fast as he could. He was #0 busy eating chuckling over his own joke that he never noticed a dark, shaggy figure with its nose to the ground, and that had followed him into the clover pateh. It was Sniffer Ky-oty, Johnny Jack's worst enemy. Huddenly Sniffer made a misstep and a twig cracked under his foot Johnny raised his head at that. “If that pesky shadow hasn't found mef he declared in disgust. “Well, Vil show him! I'm not, going to have him around," And he streaked out of the clover patch, right under Sniffer'a aston: ished nose, and tore home, Mister Gallop and Nancy and Nick saw the whole thing, “If Johnny had known that was | Sniffer, to move," “Bom fooli been too seared laughed the falryman times it's a good thing to be (To Be Continuedy (Copyright, 1923, by Seattle Star) Captain Knut Alread 1 wa 1 ‘ had 4 woman w ‘ ' K i w, K nd 4 , 1 might 8 her t be could tell 1 have da even, the atnst th then of bein away f the own | 6 wan j them now cy alone in an empty prey to the whims of the North The pillars of their strength had fallen.. Man's civiltzation that }had been their god wan suddenly |ahown as an empty tdol, helpless }to ald them now. ‘Tho light, the | beauty, the strong cities they had |lived had no influence here: seem ingly death iteeif could not make these things farther distant, leas availing. For the first time since) jthey were born Ned and Lenore lwere face to face with life, and | the death that shadows ife. For the first time they knew ne was they could do. were impotent prey to whatever fate awaited them, Capt Kautsen, migh of frame 8 blood |surging fiercely thru the avenues }of his veins, and Bess, schoole to hardship, were ever so much better off than t They ¥ better disciplined, misfortur better qualified and F stronger in to meet Y no other reas 0 t for these z respec ean—they we more rmiy dressed, their chances were better for ultimate survival But what awaited them when| the nigh as done? How alight }was t hance that, in this world lof gray waters, they would ever encounter an inhabited fwland. It t islands surrounded }them on all sides, but mostly they but wastes of wind-swept not one in four having habitations. Mostly islands were large, and such tations as there might be were | scattered in sheltered valleys alons | the shore, and it was wholly prob able that the boat could pass and miss them entirely. They |couldn't survive many days wintry The meager was true were | tundra, human habi little on these waters. Police Sergeant | Testifies for Veronica| Philadelphia, Pa—Police Sergeant | Alfred Millington says for the bene-| | fit of humanity, he feels it his duty to set his case before you with the hope that if you are troubled as he was you will give Veronica a fair trial. 1 | “I was suffering from a kidney trouble that had laid me up for six | | months at a time and I would rwell conalderably. I began the use of Ver Jonica and found this swelling began | to reduce rapidly, which somewhat alarmed me, and I sought the advice | lof my physician, and when I told him | what I was taking, he sald, continuc with the water, ‘This I did, and to | day T am a well man, have no trouble of any kind. I give Veronica Water |the entire credit of my cure, as 1) ltook no other medicine from the time I commenced it use. 1 have | recommended it to a number of the | men in our station house who have been equally benefited by its use,” Alfred Millington, Sergeant, 4th Dis- | trict Police, Philadelphia, Pa, | Veronica Water is bottled exactly ns it comes from the Springs, and It has been Impossible for chemical ex- perts to reproduce artificially this marvelous water, provided by nature. Thousands of users of Veronica have found relief from chronic stipation, Indigestion, rheumat kidney and bladder troubies other stomach disorders, You, too, may find that Veronica ta "The Wa tor Way to Health.” A big, genorous 1 1-8 quart bottle at your druggists, only 76 cents. Veronica Water Advertisement, rn, | and} »| prog: Many “Old Maids" Would Be Eliminate d if ’Twere Hurry Up W Those Letters. BY CYNTHIA GREY If every “wall flower” would get busy and propose there « 1 be less fussy old maids trying to miz into other fam- affaira If there is an eligible man around and he doesn’t know enough to get a good wife, he ought to take his medicine and be proposed to, If he docen't like it, he can refuse, or marry with the proviso that he can get divorced ayain tn a year, if she isn't a good provider, . The woman whe women and crowing hens proposes ig in a class with “whistling neither good for God nor men What next, Miss Grey? Who could want proposing women? They'll be growing beards and smoking pipes be- fore long. It's time the men got together and headed 'em off, or else this won't be any place for wnyone but “shes.” If a man is so mean aa to leave a nice girl be a wall flower he sure ought to be very happy to have her do the proposing. Maybe she will find out tt ain’t so easy to ask @ person to marry her. I know a good many men who would marry if the girl we girl wo t ask them reader A feu lettera on There the “Sha Here are one Don't wait till the discussion is nearly over or closed before you mail your reply, please. you are, phrases from two others query or Send yours Ing families and being sheltered tha Should Not : A READER Can Choose | Right Man f\ Miss Grey I Ike the {dea of a ttle | girl proposing, It gives ques, |to show who she prefer Then t a cha instead of ext nest egg saved u marrying who she can get, I thin |{t would mean that more women |would pick the right parties ar Women Are there might be more happy homes | INTERESTED. Too Forward Misa Grey too forward, for t ‘tne| Not Worth world. There is more c ¢ of bu-| Proposing to ty being fine and wholesome and| Miss Grey: What would a womar salve when women atick to|/want to propose to a man for? There thelr regular God-given job of rais-|are very few men all that — trouble. It sure would make the men so high-toned and egotistical, you couldn't stand them around. And Women are & worth the jugs of would suppliea ef food and water In the lifeboats be exhausted, and who could come noon > thelr ald? Which one Ned'n| Women to propose, Then some would t iat done. wou t would be left in the cold peuse in his play one moment weg PURELED. igate his fate? ‘ oi There was a savage| Doll Up, Let ¢ thought of the holiday| Him Propose mh he had undertak on the expedit And the volces he had heard out of the sea had evidently told him true when they foretold hw death For bis natural optimism, the odds against him sectned too great over) ner to doll up and try belng more ate to overcome. And Yhere was but tractive than she ever was before. one redeeming thought—« thought! Maybe that would do more for her wh Miss Grey: I am sorry for a wall flower always But I think the rem- edy for her position ts not in trying to take the man’s prerogative from him in the mat of proposing. In- own so dimly discerned in the secret than trying to argue some man inte mind of the man that {t never) marrying her. IKE. fully reached his conscious self; o- so bisarre and strange that he! no, Cynenia Grey: Will could only attribute it to tne delirium. It was bimply h bad already fortified himself, in some degree, to meet the training camp thereafte (Continned Tomorrow) hesaas DRESSING TABLE FOR A PRESENT TO YOUNG GIRL A Prized Gift That Will Be Con etant Companion. By MARIAN MOORE Please tell me whether a person who bas just been given an interlocutory decree of divorce can leave this state jand marry without the final decree? E. B. | No, the marriage ts not legal wnt the final decree is obtained. You see, You are not really divorced until such time as you pet this final decree. Why do we shake hands with our right hands? In the days when everyone carried @ sword or knife, tt was mary, ‘A girl's sixteenth birthday is 2 |G) \ne coisenne ap Kune wee momentous occasion. Before that | noid out the right hand to show {$ time she ts “one of the children,” | neq no wenpon of attack but after the great day has come ee and xone she is “My Daughter,” | and the whole family is proud of her girlish beauty, her progress in school and music, and her athletle How did the ferris wheel gets its | name? | Named for the inventor, George W. | Ferris. The original Ferris wheel was Prowess{ Of course she may still | erpivited at the Chicago world’s fatr. play football with her younger Cie 6 brother, but she is no longer the Uttle girl, The question of a suitable gift for daughter's: sixteenth birthday is an In it correct to serve salad with the dinner or in a separate course? At an informal dinner, salad may be served with the dinner, When the dinner ig more formal a separate course (a generally preferred. In the sentence correct, “He will tell me whether or no.""? Yes. “No” ts used sometimes as an alternative after whether. see Is it true that Shakespeare made the error of using “these kind"? Yes, this ig quite true, altho it is known that in Shakespeare's day the error was not considered altogether torong aa it is at present. The fol- lowing examples of this error in Shakespear have been cited: Twelfth Night (Act I. sc. 5.) “These Kind of Fooly"; in King Lear, (Act II, sc. |. “These kind of knaves,”; in Othello (Act III, sc. 3,) “These are a kind of men.” eee Who was the greatest hero of the world war, Bergeant Alvin Yorke would prod. ably be named by most Americans, | If your little keepsake has been Weve |loxt, phone a Want Ad to MA in. 0600, perhaps you may haye it re- | turned, For the Young Girl. important one, It should be some. thing she can keep, something that | will ever be “seful, and yet some: | thing that ‘sbeautiful, The dress-- | ing table in the photograph would be an excellent choice, Think how this gracefully curved mirror, typleal of her youthful grace, will reflect her image as she dresses for the parties and dances which will mean so much in her school ife—It will reflect her gradu- ation dress—and then, Inter, her bridal finery. ‘The dressing table In the pleture fe an adaptation of a Louls XVI model, in walnut, The Iittle bench, also of walnut, has a cushioned top. (Write to Marian Moore, care of this newspaper, for advice or infor. mation about home furnishing or decorating, sending stamped ad- dressed envelope for reply.) Question: What colors are best for a breakfast sulte?—A. 1. Answer: French gray trimmed with blue; Ivory with blue stripes You can find many good building lots advertised thru ‘The Star Want Ad Real Estate Columns. clans every Sat 7 0% Advanced clase Wed, blue with white. stripe © the || (tango taught), | Priva popular combinations, They are)! ii" ana Watt ntelt equally good, | MISS BRIGHT, 1604 4th at Pino, Copyright, American Homes Bureau, sais hiiieshiisetb sine muppore it became the fashion for | . I think ft would be well for | The Information will settle an argu- | ring ition your FULLER furniture Up to date” Srytes in furniture thange with the times, just as do styles in dress. That is why many ingenious housewives rely on Fuller Enamels and Decoret Varnish Stains to bring their furniture up to date, ion of natural wood such as Dark se Decoret Varnish Stains. The new- ¢ surface in imit 4d Waln Oak, Rosew est colors when painted furniture is in vogue Art Decorative Enamel. Then there is Silk Gloss Enamel, which produces an inte ish for the woodwork of the room. Whether treads, —wh are refinishing a piece of furniture, the floor, the stair a natural wood finish or an enameled or find a Fuller product adapted to your ether you 1 Puller Pai hes have been manufactured est grade mate: » by scientifi: mulas. As! by name, at the local dealer’s. Or write our Service Department for ¢. Our “Home Service’? bookiet is ret. Whatever your ing need, W. P. Faller & Co, makes a paint for the purpose. and Varni W.: P> FULLER & CO, sion Street, San Fran 301 M 21 Branches in Pacific Coast Cities - Factories: San Francisco and Los Angeles PAINTS VARNISHES 1713 Yesler Way HOLLAND HDWE. 5350 Mallard Ave. A. HERAPER, 4320 University Way ALNERT CHUVE SIT Florentia St. MecFARLAND LUMBER CO, 125th and Vietory Way TWEEDY & POPP, 2108 N. 45th St. SOUTE D FURNITURE CO. BU HARPER LBR. CO, le, Washingt 5919 Duwamish Avenue White Ceuter Station AYERS & ZIEBARTH, E. B. HOLMES CO. POWELLS PHAAMACY 1839 Broedway SEABORN LUMBER CO, 7554 35th Ave. 8. We MOUNTAIN VIEW HDWE. CO, 7202 Aurora Ave. JUNCTION HDWE. 4234 1 85th and Greenwood HOWELL ST. HDWE. 1112 Howell St. W. Alaska A. BE. HOSKINS, JACKSON FURNITURE CO, 2805 Alki Ave. 625 Jackson St. G. J. HALL, 2215 Jackson St. TERRY & DARRAUGH, 230 Brondway N. STANDARD PAINT CO, 2415 First Ave. J. C, HOWELL'S, *th S$. W, and Holden St. CHAMBERLAIN STORE CO, 23rd & E. Union S$: YORK GROCERY Co, 3400 Rainier Ave. Final commodity sales are now being scheduled. Stocks of Quar- termaster Supplies are to be of- fered at auction at Brooklyn, Sept. 27; Chicago, Oct. 18; San Antonio, Oct. 24; San Francisco, Oct, 80, Additional sales will be announced as schedulori. Important sales of Real Estate, Buildings, Plants and Ware- houses will be held at Camp Devens, Ayer, Mass.; Ordnance Reserve Depot, Amatol, N. J; Ordnance Reserve Depot, Toledo, Ohio; Camp Knox, Loulaville, Ky., and Camp Lowis, American Lake, Wash, Definite dates will be announced later. Look for the Eagle before you shop. VAR D REMENT, Look for the Eagle before you shop IT IS THE GREATEST SIGN OF UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY IN EXISTENCE TODAY—and wise indeed is he who throughly and constantly in- vestigates what the Government has to offer for sale from its War Surplus Materials and what he can buy it for BEFORE making his purchases. No matter in what direction your needs may lie the probabilities are that the wanted materials or mer- Siena or ene ee be ee the as Well or better ma; foun ese War Materials. . —_ And then comes your opportunity to buy at price con- siderations which are well vorth wide out this toa comes your big chance to make for yourself and the people in your community an economy of extraordinary merit. Don't be short sighted. Learn what your Gorern- ment has to sell and when it is to be sold. Investigate. (it’s easy) the actual offerings. Buy them at your price. Take the action which not only assures a fair and reasonable profit for you and economy for your customers, but which also aids your Government in disposing of its War Surplus Materials. The Way to Investigate Watch your Commercial Business Publication and the Metropolitan Dail ai mek rene fae fu toys ie announcements of specific Gees Send for the Catalog mentioned in the anncancem Check off the items that interest pone,” “ Send arepresentatice to the sale to inspect the materiale—| advance, if possible. To ensure you more lee: sen address) at once to Major J. L. Frink, Ch Section, Room 2515 Munitions D.C. Advise him the charac! are ‘ed in, and if auch items are available in future sales’ your name will be placed upon the War Department mail ing lst and cutatoge of auch sales forward tab as sales are scheduled, crete 20m Eas ? an 4