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& «ing, another squealing and another MUNDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1 THE ISLE (Continued From Our Last Issue) t . doesn’t Alghtened, he 4 ® you as if ny sta were ® ost Your sweetheart that d sworn was yours to the tast ditch! I don't mean th she'd give rself to me—yet. She's ust the kind of girl I'd expect a weakling like yourself to pick out the type that would sooner go Wrong than endure hardship. And that’s why she’s more or less safe, for the time b t least, from me, Even if Sindy wasn't coming back me tonight—probabiy al ready there—you wouldn't have to fear Ned could not speak, but Dooms dort looked at him with the fire of ® zealot in his eyes. I don't want anything that’s that easy," he said with Infinite contempt. “Sometimes the game is harder, I take back someth that a an a know, he answered. Bess G kr ft {s a woman wort what and stroke out the ws left to his thoughts small voilc of the waste places, along with the wil derness night whose d was the aster word of life, and with the wind that sobbed unhappy secrets! as it swept his roof, He couldn't help but en, there in| the twilight. Thus the work of| training Ned Cornet’s soul went on strengthening him to stand erect when that stern officer, looked into his eyes the Truth, =e him the mastery of that bright sword) of fortitude and steadfastness whereby he could parry the most! pitiless blows of fate Thus began a k of trial for Ned. For first; time in his life he wus >wn wholly upon his own “resources, standing or falling by his own worth. Should he fall insensible In the wnow there were nc to seek him and bring him nto shelter. If he should go astray and miss the cabins there was no one to set him on the right path again. He was meeting the wilder-| ness alone, and face to face. Cooking his meals, cutting the fuel and building the fires that kept him warm, meeting the storm in its fury and fighting a lone from. the gray of dawn to day's gray close, Ned made the long circuit of his trap line. The qualities that carried him far in| his home clty—such things as wealth and position and culture—| were as dust here. His reliance now was the axe on his shoulder the hunting knife at his hip;! but most of all his own stamina,| his own steadfastness, the cunning of bis brain and the strength of his sinews, And every day found nim stronger and better able to meet the next. Certain muscles most tugging thru the snow, worn to shreds tho first day's ma: strengthened under the stress, and he found he did his daily stint with ever greater ease.| Ever he handled the little, daily crisis with greater ‘skill, and this! used in seemingly 923. ~ 7 OF RETRIBUTION in the lighted doorway of the home cabl 8 " ee no tl ung. x ne treatment in his. absence. ‘The| Creatures was seem! the — Oreamed Salm eat four that had. beén upon sy thing he had The BY CYNTHIA GREY 2 cups salmon, 2 cups thin white sauce; flake heart was groundless, after all: her) alt had been stolen fro mar) Dear Miss Grey: I am a constant reader of your column, the fish, add to hot thin white re agp _ frosts be eves bright, ae Wigrtinoas Sg iin>s"| and like all others, I have come to you for advice. I am on. oak The ene eee aplte:) 68 hike ‘aig eee inl go home, and a subsequent ight 28 years old and very much in love with a young man one Baked Hash face lighted with hopefulness. and|"2Owfal had concealed the| Year my senior, He pays a great deal of attention to me— % enp fat, 1% cups meat, Felief that was almost happiness rays ly ada Toads t have more than just friendliness, There is another girl in the potatoes, onion juice, salt and neas that ‘made ‘her seem wo" siow| aumwer to his high hopes.” But| C48 Who is younger than I am, but she is very grown-up| | "Grind the cooked meat and season. Melt one lebiecentig tuts his nerad he had cause to halt when he) iM her actions, She loves this young man very much, or, tablespoon fat in a baking d ri own great fire that caused to|Reared the trap on the beaver! rather, pretends to. He does not pay the least attention to gredients well, moisten with eon tbs lack warmth. ad ran | her, other than that necessitated by mere friendship. eae ae bensl Lise Kea been boyixhly icipato ol is c) ome: @ couldn't locate] This x a ra ate. Very. h i a aa ani ‘6 in a moderately ho iy exultant, "Yet ft was ll sweet|the trap, Thea he saw that “the| optus Sir! knows that we are very much in love with each || 99 top. ‘Ths recipe serves aix enough. The girl fluttered a single| wire, fastened securely to the bank, other, and she is jealous. * She is quite a flirt, which is the instant tn his arms, and he felt|had become mysteriously taut, Not| reason she is unloved by decent boys. Jealousy being her Fish Souffle repaid for everything. daring to hope he began to tug! hobby, she is ready to disgrace me by telling lies. She tells 2 emps fish, 1% cups thin wh! EC nl ee eee he touna| 3, Sitl friends that I am encouraging the boys by flirt- and § ogee, besinn neparetaly. hold “her. “Don't tet Doontsdorf| his tran. and in yi pablo ping aud, everything she says about me is untrue. i ses. Ho might kill you——" large beaver, drowned and in prime ese statements cause my friends to turn against me. 1 But it came about that she didn't finish the warning. Presently she| the moment was really a atgnif felt his arms turn to steel. She} icant one for Ned. The littie| felt herself thrust. back until herltrans of steel, placed here and eyes looked straight into his. |there thru the wilderness, had She had never seen Ned tn this! seemed a doubtful project at bes mood before. Indeed she couldn't) but now they had shown resul ever remember experiencing thé) rhe incident gave him added con- sensation that swept her now: S| fidence in himself and his ability eretly appalled at him, burnt with his fire, wavering beneath his will She didn't know he had arma like that. His face, when she tried to meet it, Hardly seemed his The flesh was like gray tron, eyes cold as stones. ADVEN OF THE TURES TWINS “Let's talk: about something Piggy Wig Pig and Saucy Snout Pig and Twisty Tail Pig were all lying side by side in a cool, muddy puddle in Squealy-Moo Land. They looked like three sausages that had been stuffed too tight and were ready to burst if you toched them. Piggy Wig Pig was black. Saucy Snout Pig was white and Twisty Tail Pig was black and white, but jast now they were brown all over, the three of them, for they had rolled in the mud and dried off and they were sights to behold! “Let's talk about something to eat,” sald Piggy Wig Pig. “Yes, let agreed the others. But to Nancy and Nick and Mis- ter Dodger, the fairy man, on the other side of the fence, it just sounded as tho one pig was grunt- snorting, such funny noises made when they talked, “1 ike buttermilk with corn cobs floating in it” said Piggy Wis Pig, smacking his ps, “And I like the days they apple ples” said Saucy Snout they have ‘Then they dump all the apple peolings and apple cores into the trough Um" “Oh, 1. ike anything” declared Twisty Tall. “I'm not particular, Clover's good, tho, I like th Now, I didn’t tell you that there was another little pig in the field, but there was! A nica, clean little to eat,” says Piggy Wig Pig red fellow, who wasn't very fat, or very big, or very curly—his tail wasn't—and he wasn't dirty at all! But he was very hungry. Farmer Brown had bought him from a neighbor, and ho felt very lonely and forlorn, for the other pigs wouldn't look at him at all! Just then there was a loud bump. | ing. It was Farmer Brown empty- ing his slop pails into the trough at the pig-sty. * Instantly there was a scrambling, and off started the four pigs for their lunch, “Get out!" Pig at the si “Wait ull squealed Ker, re thru,” Piggy Wig w Saucy Snout over his fat shoulder. “We'll give you what's left,” call. ed Twinty Tail. That's the way it always was, No wonder poor Reddy Pig wan so thin grunted and hungry! anything lef! But suddenly something happened. Naney grabbed one greedy pig by hia hind foot, and Nick grabbed an other and Mister Dodger grabbed the third, “Go on, Reddy, and eat your fill," cried the’ fairy man, Which he did without any coax- ing. There was never any more trouble after that, for the plge all promised to be good. (To Bo Continued) (Copyright, 1928, by Seattle Star) For there never was | The The first few traps had not been spr Outwit wild | condition. to battle successfully these perilous wilds, The rich, warm skin would |help to clothe him, and he would easily catch others to complete his wardrobe, not oft sawing He size. it beaver was of course and the skin stripped under the little, kes of his skinning knife, rather surprised at its came off nearly round, and | would stretch fully 32 inches in diameter. Washing it carefully, he put {t over his back and started jon, Other | long the | frozen; was trapn ylelded his day's march. ‘The trap on beaver landing contained a muskrat; he found several more of the same furred rodenta in his traps along the creek; and small skins tho they were, he had | piace for every one. Once an ter, caught securely by the hind leg, showed fight and had to be dispatched by a blow on the head with a club; and once he was startled when «a mink, scarcely larger than his hand, leaped from the snowy weeds, trap and all, straight for his ankle. There was no more ferocious creature in all the mammalian world than this, “Little Death,” pelts In a ot for over eighty years has relied upon Gour- aud's Oriental Cream to keep the skin and complexion in perfect condition through the stress of the season's activities, White Flesh-Rachel. 4 Send 10¢ for Trtal Sixs PERD. T. NOPKINS & SON, New York Gouraud's Oriental Cream Lame muscles? Try th simple treatment You can keep your muscles from stiffening up, and you can take out soreness and ache with Sloan's Liniment. Every night stroke it on gently—you don’t have to rub it in, Tense muscles relax—aching stops. Get a bottle from your druggist today—35 cents, Sloan’s Liniment—kills pain! COLLARS FOR BLOUSES EDISON MARSHALL | . t 4 not ‘ 1 \ | Ned turned h ‘ . gawalted night i Twith leas e of ¥ ore h 7 at aw an . a ing of a swollen , ore eee ns Perilous ‘morass or the. climbin us re the wilderness unrolled tts p SRA ne: SRG, Mee beauty wae, to his eves. |" lees; Mt was enbanced, tf at | ‘The little daily encounters witt by the flush of the wind on the wold life were ever a t on : a. Mey = avy under oyr Ban pane seep debra tar ih he had been thru, He held lesser, scurrying people he met] her interest but slightly as he told on the trail: he found a m of his adventure oni the tra eaten Ge ene eae” clea When in turn she talked to him, It pack, in a vivid silhou-| Was of her own wre and the ight ofa bell caribou tos his| how failed to reach his heart. But fursspreading antlers sent his blood] !t Was all he could expect on thi moving fast in his ve By the/terrible island. He ‘must thank grace of the Red Gods he was/| What gods there were f * one afforded the excitement of being} kiss she him a be obliged to backtrack ) yarde i oe was aeak lorder gracefully to yield the trail | to a great, surly Alaskan bear! Often, tn the little hour after already seeking a lair for his win it the stove, be wak r sleep. Is revery to find that He crossed the divide to F . m think about Beas. abin, followed the sy to! § me in from her line T ty Mile cabin, descended t the us day and had gone out t sea, and along ° to) again: and he ad not ¢ amed the home cabin. n had) that her abs e could le such | been told to his} a gap their little et He as he went in what seemed! had hardly rded her at all, yet| nim the fr like r he found himself minst She every I fort had!) was always #0 taught him to increase cournging him with r a ca Of course that he we © ft Collars lke these are very smartifacing to front facing, notches be 3, te ; s Just now on tailored blouses and on | matching. P the seam open. ie a one-piece dresses. They look a bit} The? baste the facings to the gar P ment—collar and front facing t absolutely exhaust * smplicated, but are really easy! -ctiar front opening-—right widen t Of course he didn't f that he had at p-| enough to make If one works care-|gether and stitch. Close seam at other things being equa lation of hor iness, her | fully lower part ¢ « below opening. five days were his ea courage, her sweet solicitude for! ‘The dress ts slit down the front for} Before turning the collar right side Actual trap’ had 1 ) arti him. On her lonely trap line out|the c ng collar Is cut of | out, trim the edges close to the ed: he had not been obi to) in the wantes {t was as if she had/double material, one to be used for| stitching line. Then turn. Baste all stop, thaw out and s IATK-| gone forever. He found himself | facing. around opening and collar close to er animals as we found dead) resenting {ho fact that Lenore had| Sew the collar to the neck edge|the edge. in his traps; nor y k late Into) but cold ass to his praise of) with the notches matching, Clip the| Turn under raw edges of front fac the night fies stretching her, wholly unappreciative of the) seam edges at the shoulder and press |ing and stitch. Slip stitch the upper the pelts. <A greater fact that her own caso was due) the seam open from the center front|edge of the facing to the shoulder the moderate weather largely to Bess’ offer to do addi.|to the shoulder, and slip stitch the back of the collar fall and temperature a 1 work | Sew the facings together—collar|to cover the ream. ing, @ considerable variance from) y+ a1. bianket hace a A ‘ = ke Eee the deadly biizzards that would . oe AR a 0 eee enste. Tr, and he rose in the early Rar anti “ee tive: aoa he hours, breakfan ed, and started out ° ’ strengthened himself with the on his lonely trap tine He was o thought that Lenore awaited ee a8 3° OR ee (a at the Journey's end; and she had|%ult® of this morning's tramp. oO Rever seemed 10 lovely to him as) V0? Maen ae Protein evs) when, returning tn the gray twit. s , meee 7 ny , ss light, he saw her standing framed) ‘*T: !mpending cold “Shall I Give Up My Friends or My Lover?” Asks Perplexed Miss of Eighteen | have pleaded with them, but she is a nice girl in spite of | everything, and her stories are believed. What shall I do? Give up my friends or my love? question is bothering me, and I am undecided what to dé about it. Please advise me. BETTY. Well, Betty, I think you're taking the matter too seriously -the love and the lies—and everything! The sentence that this typewriter writes oftenest is, “You are both very young to believe yourselves in love,” and it applies splendidly in your affair. Eighteen and 19! Why, that’s what the writers of fiction term “puppy love.” No doubt about it, such ro- mances often terminate happily, but those are the ones who wait a few years to test that same love after maturity has been reached. I am aware that all this is aside, in a way, from the question you asked me, but I think you néed it, and where I think a little preaching is needed, I always lay aside all my scruples and give it. Forgive it, but don’t forget it. If these so-called friends are ready and willing to believ lies about you, Betty, they’ simply aren't worthy of Sie name of “friend.” Friends—real friends—are those who stick by one in adversity, regardless of the opinion of others. I don’t believe I should worry over these girls. Make new friends now and keep the friendship of this boy you write me about. He seems to be quite a splendid person, and per- haps—but who knows? | or-ee eee | What is the population -of Ur-|matertat are easy to rebuild. The | uguay? | Japanese have learned to build these | According to the last census, 1,-| homes in such a way, that they are | 494,958. |not easily leveled to ground, and| there is less danger than in heavily |constructed buildin, Why do Japanese build thelr homes of bamboo? One reason {a that earthquakes are common and that houses of this ght | oe | what is the Pennsylvania old age pension law? | This was passed last spring, It provides for a straight old age pen- |sion, to be eligible for which one muat be over 60 years of age, a citi- |was a name for him in an aborig inal tongue; and It was perfectly |in accord with his disposition, His leyes wore scarlet; he. opened his rapacious Jaws so wide that they resembled those of a deadly | #or-| | pent; he screamed again and again in the most appalling fury. This was the demon of the Little Peo ple; the snaky Stealth that mur. |dered the nestlings In tho dead of| | night; the cruel and remorsdless | hunter whose red eyes froze the |gnowshoo hare with terror. | Tired out, barely able to atand| erect, yet wholly content with hid) \aay's catch, Ned made the cabin| in the twilight, built his fire, and r } cooked his meager supper, After} supper ho skinned out such little} Janimals ax he had not taken time Do your gums bleed \to nkin on the trail, fleshed and easily? Ifso,takeheed, stretched his pelts, then hung them ‘ up to dry. He was almost. too Pyorrhea is coming, tired to remove hin wot gnrmonts Itstrikesfour persons when the work was done, Ho out of every five past hardly remembered drawing the forty, and thousands younger, endanger- ing their priceless teeth and health, blankets over him, ‘Thus ended the first of a long series of arduous days, Tho hard: ship was incomparably greater than that endured by the great run of those hardy men, the northern trappers, not only because of his inadequate clothen, but because the} Jine had been laid out by a giant's) rule. Doomsdorf had spaced his cabins according to his own {dea of a full day's work, and that meant they wero nearly twice as far apart an those of the average Brush your teeth with FOR THE GUM The} Conducted by are in home cooking readers Stuart Building, Sea APPY is the housew away from the custc baked meats and produce that are both easily digested to the appetites of her fam In this lesson I am going special methods of cooking. One of the first steps is t of a white sauce, either thic are quick, simple recipes: Por thin white sauce take 2 2 tablespoons butter or substi until thoroughly mixed, Ad cook about five minutes or u thickens, and add makes one cup sauce. ‘Thick white sauce is made jx except use twice the flour (4 These sauces can be used in in preparing either fish or mea 2 cups salt and apart in salt and to thick then pu cool. Shape, rofl in crumbs, beaten egg and again in bread in deep fat. This recipe serves six people. | | Carnation eral delightful ways in which fish or meats ean be enriched in flavor and made more nutritious by the addition of sauces or by White Sance seasonings. Fish Croquettes 1 cup thick white sauce, ing a fork. Season with Drain and garnish with parsley. Hom L €sso ttle, Washington. Lesson 2 Easy Ways to Serve Fish and Meats Flake the cooked fish and season. Cool the fe who can get thin white sauc omary fried or savory dishes 1 and tempting ily, to suggest sev- of hot er. % teaspoon sali spoons butter, % nation Milk, 1 cv 2 tablespoons flo spoon pepper, he preparation chipped beet. k or thin. Here oughly blended. per. Let boil sionally, Add beef and continue cooking until beef is heated through. Turn onto a hot plat tablespoons flour, tute, % teaspoon ter and garnish will serve four nalt, % cup water, % cup Carnation Milk. Melt butter or butter substitute, add flour and stir id the milk and ntil the mixture This recipe Ts there any ust the same way, tablespoons) and = removed. Not 2% tablespoons butter or substitute. @ variety of ways Can you tell ta, table? Mre. B. cold cooked fish, pepper. Pull fish free to you on small pieces, us- 5 call Carnation the milk “from ”"?—Mra. J. M. C. est days of its mannfacture Why do you contented cow In the earli pepper and add white sauce; t on a plate to then in slightly crumbs, and fry milk from dai on nation Milk. sauce and serve x people. 3 cups mashed pepper, chopped ish. Mix the in- Carnation Milk ofled baking dish oven until browa people, Ite sauce, parsley beaten yolks and mix exes beaten stiff. Bake in buttered indtvidual baking dishes or in a pudding dish set in a pan Bake twenty minutes, or until This puffed and brown, recipe serves six people, Creamed Chipped Beef butter, add flour, stirring constantly until Questions and Answers tion Milk? Mrs. T. M. B. No; Carnation is just pure cow's milk evaporated until about half the water is Full directions for this will be found on the inside cover of the book, “One Hun- dred Tested Recipes,” which will be sent it was determined that only high-grade tain regulations in their care of cows, was sufficiently good to be used in making Car- care and feeding of cows are observed, the animals eould not help but be con- tented, and it under such conditions a cow will give more and better milk, | a Cobh 3 “Mrs MaryBlake C LESSONS This new serics of lessons on milk cookery will appear weekly. Mrs. Blake’s counsel will be helpful and stimulating, because of her practical experience She will answer any question om cookery asked by her Address Mrs. Mary Blake, care Carnation Milk Products Cag —) e, add the fish, then the well- Fold in the whites of Serve immediately. it, 2 table p cup up water, ur, % tea %' pound Melt the thor Add the Mquid, salt and pep until thickened, stirring occa- with toast points. This recipe people. sugar used in making Cerna- hing is added. me the proper way to seta W.S. request, ries which conformed to cer- Where these rules for the a well-known fact that Products Co., 1100 @tuart Bldg. Seattle, Wash, Be Cynthia Grey will receive call- ¢rs on Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 1 to 2 p. m. and on Tuesday and Thursday from 11 to 12 a. m, at her office in the Star Bldg., 1209 Seventh ave. | | cen of the United States for 15 years, land a resident of Pennsylvania for jat least that length of time. There jare other minor requirements. The | maximum rate is fixed at one dollar ja day. The appropriation to carry the law into effect was cut to $2. 000, s0 it is hardly probable that it | will be possible to do anything at this time except the necessary prelimin- ary work towards getting the law linto working order, Should a distinguished man guest |be served before others? He should be served ocfore other men, but the ladies of the party should always be served before the gentleman. I have red spots in my eyes and yet I do not feel that I need glasses, What can T do for this condition? A red spot in the eye deaotes eve strain, First of all give the eyes a Miss Allen’s TESTED RECIPES No, I Louisiana Fried Apples (The Creole Cook Rook published in New Orleans is famows the country over. It gives the follow- || ang recipe for fried apples) 3 fine apples 14 cup of white powdered sugar Hot Crisco || Pare the applex and cut into | round slices, Fry them to a delicate golden brown in a pan of hot Crisco, Place them in a heated colander, in which you have fitted a piece of rown paper. Drain in the mouth of the oven. Place in a dish, and sprinkle with sugar and serve hot with roast meat, roast pork, etc. (RISCO For light, tender cakes For digestible and flaky pastry rest. Avoid sewing and Take a nap as often as Avoid strong or direct light. the eyes wtih the following: acid, 1 ounce; rose water, 6 ounces. See an occulist if this trouble con- tinues. reading. possible. | How do most people pronounce the name “Eleanor”? This is amatter of personal pre- ference, It is pronounced “el-a-nar,” | Should young children ever wear | mourning? Wo. This is not necessary or wise. | If desired a child may wear white | dyesses with a black sash, or subdued |colors, but never black. The Light that Lures Men’s Eyes will glow in your hair, if you use a shampoo that contains a touch of henna. That is the secret of the fashionable hairdresser—the secret of the lustrous hair of New York society women, HENNAFOAM SHAMPOO Cony tains a touch of henna scien- tifically treated to bring out all the light that lies in every ‘woman’s hair, Bathe | boric | WINDOW DRAPING A FRAME FOR THE Beautiful Outside Scenery a Part of the Room, ene ees ee By MARIAN MOORE ‘The person who can afford | dery of beautiful pictures is fortunate. But doubly | Is the one whose windows | over a bit of God's own There {s an ever-cha: 3 for those inside the home— spring, the faint green of grass, and the shy beauty « spring blossoms; in the | the gorgeous beauty of | which Jack Frost brings. The dows ever present a perpetual ing picture to the o A Osh Attractive Window Setting, would be nothing less than a sa rilege to cover such windows curtains which would obscure a part of the scene. The housewife who arranged noom in the picture was u of her good fortune. See ho casement windows have been’ ed to make them seem on glass over a lovely painting, the curtains the frame. carry out this idea, the a are of gold sunfast silk, with i Begin using HENNAFOAM SHAMPOO and watch it kindle in your hair “the light that lures”. 5 Ca bottle at Drug Stores and Perfume Counters ennafoam "eae A te SHAMPOO “Makes the hair glisten” STEWART & HOLMES DRUG trap line, Besa had been given the lino he had std out for his squavw, More than a tooth paste hardly half so rigorous, yet all the Y average man would cara to at. it checks Pyorrhea tompt. 35 and 60c in tubes (Continued Tomorrow) For crisp, digestible fried foods COMPANY Wholesale Disiributors —— valance of printed linen co gold, scarlet and touches o on an ivory backgroun: ing fern basket on the Ivory brings the interior of the harmony with the scene the windows, (Write to Marian Moore, cai this newspaper, for advice on inf mation about home furnishing decorating, sending stamped, — dressed ele for reply), Questio! low many curt rods do you advise for glass oi tains, overdrapes and valanc ‘Answer: Three. One for @ eet of curtains and the valan Copyright, American Homes Bure