The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 6, 1923, Page 13

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for that dog! I've been to tho tall- or’s and the cobbler’s and the hat- ter's this morning, and I'll soon have no soles on my shoes," The Kiddie Lady smiled in «ym- pathy, “If you had one of the things the riddle is about, you could stay at home and do your buying,” she said, "But you folk from Mother Goone Land are all too old-fashion- ed for new inventions, Tell them what {t 1s, Nancy," for she could tell by the little girl's eyes that she Pitt hesitated, Aw—who wore someone else's hat! for a maid's ears, “They quarreled,| he sald shortly, “Was itabouta ... a indy? Minn hop relentiessly pursued him You might put it that way,” “What waa the lady's name?" Pitt's eyebrows went up; atill he answered, “Misa @'Ogeron, Sho was the daughter of the governor of ‘Tortug She had gone off with this fellow Lo- Vaasour, and «and Peter deliv: ored her out of his dirty clutches, Ho It was not a talo VENTURES “Or THE TWINS Roberts Barton A TATTLER the ridde that the Kid ed next day; “But when I do, I get a shaking, Until I'm mre my bones are break. ing. And someone shouts out in my ear, ‘Hello, hello, now can you hear? “So what's the se of being good? I can't do anything I should, Bo don't blame me, if you should own, A rattle-tattle ———." Bi soft and smooth with gentle MENTHOLATUM ‘This wa) dlo Lady I hear more stories, new and old, Than atory-books would ever hold, by Rafael Sabatini| © RAFAEL SABATINI | appt NEA SERVICE ne | (Continued From Yesterday) — | Meanwhile, Lord Julian, who knew | talk and talk and also hear, For I've & mouth and one good ear, “I know more Sphynx, secrets than the Nick thought he knew,and Nancy ‘That he should ever meet her again | the feminine part of humanity had not entered his calculations, had | better found no place tn his dreams, y Were, he conceived, irrevocably and forever parted. Yet, in spite of this, in spite even of the persuasion that to her this reflection that waa his torment could bring no regrets, he had kept the thought of her ever be, fore him in all those wild years of} filibustering. He had used tt as a curb not only upon himself, but also upon those who followed him, Never had buccaneers been so rigidly held in hand, never had they been s0/relations with firmly restrained, never so debarred from the excesses of rapine and lust that were usual in their kind as those who sailed with Captain Blood, It gaged in solving th! buceaneer, suspect, by Jealousy, admirable, matter. than Captain Blood, w curious problem that had so completely escaped the Ho was spurred to tt, I ‘tain vaguo stirrings of Miss Bishop's conduct in the perils thru which they had come had brought him at last to perceive that a woman may lack the stmper- ing graces of cultured femininity and yet because of that lack be the more He wondered what pre- clvely might have been her earlier | Plece of information, Captain Blood, and was conscious of a certain uneasiness which urged him now to probe the} th ag Ons His lordship's pale, dreamy eyes ‘Was, you will remember, stipulated tn had, as T have sald, a habit of observ. ing things, and his wits were toler. as we dare venture, was & black-hearted scoundrel, and erved what Peter gave him,” “I see, And... and yet Captdn Blood has not married her?” “Not yet," laughed Pitt, who knew the utter groundiessness of the com. mon gossip in Tortuga ‘which pro- nounced Malle, @Ogeron tho cap: tain's future wife, Miss Bishop nodded tn silence, and Jeremy Pitt turned to depart, reliev- ed that the catechism was ended, Ha paused in the doorway to impart a “Maybe it'll comfort you to know | that the .captain has altered our course for your benefit, It's his in- tention to put yeu both ashore on the coast of Jamaica, as near Port Royal We've go Iam a gossip of the worst, Whate'er first. “IT have more knowledge than tho book That tell cooks, never seemed to change Its level, “That he should alter his course for us ts in itself matter for wonder; but that he should take a risk on our be- half-that maica waters . . T have said.” Miss Bishop raised her eyes, and looked at him. very thoughtful. ered curtously, “| xewmed to For all ho grins and wisely winks, I know more news than all the press, That prints the papere—can you guess? takes place, I hear tt of ships and Kings @04/ su qy9 @ habit I can't break, I know it's bad—there's no mis take— Whate'er I rattle, As quick as neat, bear, with throaty I go and tattle! he should venture into Ja- It amazes ‘me, as “There have been times I've turned digcreet, Deciding that I'd not repeat, The things I'd heard of this and Sho appeared to bo ear ‘Then her lp flick. thought she knew, but both of them walted to hear what the; Riddio Land people would have to aay. “Well, well, well! declared the Old-Shoe Woman, “That's a hard one. It isn't the wind ts {t? Lady Wind {5 an awful gossip, I always tay to my children, ‘Listen now, my ttle dears, if a whisper reaches Itching ears— “Oh, do have done and give the | rest of us a chance!’ admonished | Old Mother Hubbard, Then she | turned to the Riddle Lady. “I wan Just passing by on my way to the butcher's to get my dog a bone when I heard what you said. I'm plumb worn out traipsing around | knew, “A telepnone?’ she sald quickly. (Copyright, almost scornfully, it him, Mor slender fingers soothing, healing (To Be Continued) 1923, by Seattle Star) their articles that in these as in other about, and if this wind holds yo'll| drummed the table. matters they must submit to the com: | ably acute. soon be home again, mistress,” | “What ts atill more amazing in that mands of thely leader, And because) Ho was blaming himself now for) «vastly obliging of him,” drawled|ho does not hold us to ransom,” sald ot the singular good fortune which /not having observed certain things! nis lordshp, acolng that Miss Hishop |she at last. attended his leadership, he bad) before, or, at least, for not having | made no ahift to answer, Sombro-| “It's what you deserve.” n able to tmpose that stern condi-| studied them more closely, and he|oveq she mat, staring Inte vacancy “Oh, and why, if you please?” ton of a discipline unknown before | was buslly connecting them with! «Indeed, ye may say 10, Pitt| “or speaking to him as you aid.” among buccaneers. How would not| more recent observations made that | agreed, “He's taking riska that fow| ‘I usually call things by. tholr these men laugh at him now If he/very day. Would tako in his place. But that's | names. Were to tell them that this he had} He had observed, for instanee, that | anways been his way.” | “De you? Stab me! I shouldn't done out of respect for « slip of @| Blood’s ship was named the Arabella, “rf went out, leaving his lordship |boast of it. It argues elthe girl of whom he had fallen romantlo-|and he knew that Arabella was Miss | pensive, those dreamy blue eyes ot|youth or extreme foollahne ally enamored? How would not that) Bishop's name. And he had observed | niy intently studying Migs Bishop's|lordship, you seo, belonged to my laughter swell if he added that this) all the odd particulars of the meeting | face for all their dreaminess; hia| Lord Sunderland's achool of philoso girl had that day informed him that /of Captain Blood and Mina Bishop, | mind {nereasingly uneasy. At length |phy. He added after a moment: "So she did not number thieves and/and the curious change that meeting | | Miss Bishop looked at him, and) doen the display of ingratitude pirates among her acquaintance. had wrought In each, poses A datat colosaeterad'tn' bak Geel. Thiet and pirate! The Aroma how they bet | ‘The lady had been monstrously un-| “your Cahusac told you no more) "Your lordship Is evidently aggrieved okens the perfect blend. How the words clung, civil to the captain, It was @ Very than the truth, it seems.” with me. Iam disconsolate, I hope stung and burnt his brain! ‘ of : no| cumstances to adopt toward & man |y.» aig his lordship. “I am wonder |than your views of life, It im newa i if f H d: d. Ch psychologist, nor learned in the tortu-|in Bloods; and his lordship could not |in'¢ precisely why eoenatthae-inaratitodaiave fault only R.& H.C. COOK, WE st 4073, EL lot 0350, Distributors 0. undreds of arming ous workings of the feminine mind,|{magine Miss Bishop as normally’ Receiving no answer, he continued|to be found in the young and the| — ame” that the fact that she should bestow |foolish. Yet( in spite of her rudeness, to observe her silently, his long, tap- | foollsh.” | upon him those epithets in the very |in spite of the fact that she was the| ering fingers toying with a ringlet of| "I didn’t say #0, ma'am." There| the golden pertwig in which his long|was a tartness in his tone evoked) meeting was in itself curious. He did gurd as his enemy, Miss Bishop and| tice was set, Dyithe. tistneas sha hed weed. <"te) not perceive the problem thus pre-/his lordship had been shown the ut-| xiisy Bishop sat bemused, her! you would do me the honor to iisten, | sented; therefore he could not probe| most consideration aboard the cAD-|rrows knit, her brooding glance seem- | For {f unlike you I do not always say Mt. Else he might have concluded|tain’s ship. A cabin had been placed /ing to study the fine Spanish, point| precisely what I think, at least I say that if in a moment in which by de-/at the disposal of ench, to which thelr | inne edged the tablecloth. At last hig| precisely what I wish to convey. To un a n - fouaidherglalen ease thy tanatiog olyedd braqedrsin rai esgic be ae auly| “ile amazes me, this man,” eal! display it ts childish.” ed herself in bitterness, it must be be-| transferred hey were given the! y. 4h 4, Aas ra (Contian aaaereah 3 cause that bitterness was anterior to| freedom of the great cabin, and they | M*_! his slow. languld voice thal Ssrentenromabtchassce 150 pure Pongee Silk. Over- the gratitude and deep-seated. She} had sat down to table with Pitt, the blouses; guaranteed 12 momme had been moved to it by hearing of| master, and Wolverstone, who was a afi tease your taste with the weight; 4, - length sleeves. | jh hi ? eT was what he did not ask himself, or|shown them the’ utmost courtesy, | What to Look 10 Years mtd pg hcp bye Men) Ply ag Bc Round necks or Peter Pan col- some ray of light might have come} Also there was the fact that Blood, | you get some. And the salty tang does s ) to brighten his = be beervty thar a mak pes kept haa studiously | Younger ? taste great! Paisley-pattern silk in fast col- dospondency. ely she would never | from intruding upon them. ; * cen so moved had she not| His lordship’s mind went swiftly hemi ae Parte ere se ors. The last word in real value in real silk blouses. if, In other words, you are interested in keeping your youth—our contain 1400 calories to the pound. Boiled Crepe de Chines, Batikd in Washington bure: a booklet that will {Interest you. No one ‘ the crow’ feet CAN be kept away; the often, They're good for you. Use them high shades, Velvet Jacquettes, ) such a degree of| Miss Bishop. For this he must wait y » CAN nished; the double chin CAN be made to in salads and sandwiches, too! Buy a ==" Beaded Slip-On Overblouses— hiuntil Pitt and Wolverstone should behave; the extra avoirdupols can be made to shrink—lf you really bottle or two to-da have withdrawn. He was hardly Write {i Not|}made to wait so long, for as Pitt tel on go, however, reaxoned Captain Blood,| rose from table to follow Wolver. Indeed, that night he reasoned not at| stone, who had already departed, His soul was given up to con.|Miss Bishop detained him with a| between the almost sacred love question hho had borne her in all these years} “Mr. Pitt,” she asked, “were you and the evil passion which she had| not one of ‘those who escaped from now awakened in him. Extremes| Barbados with Captain Blood?” | touch, and in touching may for “I was. I, too, was one of your | | ep Su we foolish attitude for a tady in her clr.) “1 percelved that you were testing | your lordship's grievance t# sounder perb in flavor Try it today. It did not occur to him, being moment and circumstances of their/ niece of a man whom Blood must re- Uivering her from captivity he de-|scanty remaining belongings and] ioraship broke the ailence. be ungrateful may be human; but to the course had taken. Why? It} Blood’s Heutenant, both of whom had} hungrier and hungrier for them. Then lars of pongee. Others trimmed Py t to look 20 when y: or 40 whe! 50- felt that in what | but carefully down these avenues of F you want to look 30 when you are 40, or 40 when you are das have only 765. Serve green olives want to keep your youth and ¢ * that were formerly $ 5 observing and connecting ¢ might have rea-| Having exhausted them, he decided If you want a copy of the booklet, HOW TO LOOK 10 YEARS YOUNGER, fill out and mail the coupon below as directed. of this could|to seek additional information from Association AMERICAN IMPORTERS About 20 Sweaters that were formerly $5.85, now to go for $3.45. Sleeveless Coats, Swag- ger Coats, Tie-On Models, Just a few of each style left. SWEATERS AT $3.45 AT CLIP COUPON HERE ~~~ 200 Pith Avenve, New York City panish OLIVES All queen ollves and stujted shoes wre Spanish Crome’ Oliecs DITOR, Washington Bureau, The Seattle Star, ork Ave., Washington, D. ©. I want a copy of the booklet, KEEPING YOUNG, and inelose herewith five cents In loose postage stamps, I am carefully PRINTING my name and address below, NAME STREET AND NO USE PENCIL—NOT INK co nfused, indistingul ‘a slaves.” aaer pen yee ot sone “And you have been with Captain hate were tonight so confused in the | Blood ever since BELSON oul of Captain Blood that in their] “His shipmaster always, ma'am.” | fusion they made up monstrous} She nodded. She was very calm passion. and self-contained; but his lordship ‘° i ved that she was unusually iaigt ae pale, tho considering what she had at_was what she deemed him, |¢} undergone this afforded no out cation, oblivious of the far wéediy. deep wr you ever sail with a French.| perate case in which he found him jman named Cahusac?” self after his escape from Barbados,| «cahusac?” Pitt laughed. The and all the rest that had gone to! name evoked ridiculous memory. | make him what he was. That he|«aye -Fie was with us at Maracay-| ducted his filibuster-| yo, with hands as clean as were pos-| « le to a an engaged in such un ngs had’ also not occurred to} 11s lordship marveled at her mem. as a/charitable thought with! ory of these names. ofnitigate her judgment of @) “Aye. Cahusac was Levasseur's ad once esteemed. She had enant, until he died.” no charity for him, no mercy. She ntil who dled?” had summed him up, convicted him “Levasseur. Ho was killed on one tenced him in that one! of the Virgin Islands two years ago.” He was thief and pirate in| ‘There was a pause. Then, in an s nothing more, nothing less./even quieter voice than before, Miss then, was she? What are! Bishop asked: those who have no charity? he asked| «Who killed him? the stars. Pitt answered readily. There was Well, as she had shaped him hith-|no reason why he should not, tho he erto, so let her shape him now. Thief | hegan to find the catechism tntrigu- and pirate she had branded him. She | tng. should be justified, Thief and pirate} « should he prove henceforth no more! «ry nor less as bowellens, as remorselens 43 all those others who had desery those names. He would cast out the maudlin ideals by which he had sought to steer a course put an end to this idiotic struggle to make the of two worlds. She had shown him clearly to which world he be longed. Let him now justify her. She | was aboard his ship, in his power, and he desired her. Hoe Jaughed softly, jeeringly, as he ed on the taffrail, looking down | at “the phosphorescent gleam in the| ah wake, and his Inughter startled him by Its ¢ He eck et . and s ‘ered. A ob broke from him to end that ribald t urst of mirth. He took his face in his hands and found a chill moisture 8 br yakTont wash teeth! wash teeth! wash teeth! wash teeth! Over 200 of the newest Waist 95 styles just arrived. All over- blouses.. Crepe de Chines, Vel- ===" veteens, handsome beaded and embroidered models in all sizes and all the new colors—Green, Gray, Brown, Navy, Black, Rust, Holly Berry, Fallow, Blue Jay and Gold. Marvelous values. BRUSHED WOOL $4.95 GOLF COATS at All sizes in a popular Buff shade. You can’t even approacfi this price elsewhere. AT 8 Waist models at this Special Holiday Bargain price. Heavily ™=" beaded Crepe de Chines in 50 different styles. Tailored Waists in Crepe de Chine, Georgette and imported English broad- cloth. White, Navy, Bisque and Black. Every style of collar and some of the dain- tiest trimming. About 60 Canton Crepes in guar- anteed fast printed colors. Just one dozen All-Wool Duvetyn Blouses with full length sleeves. A material never before offered at this price and can- not be repeated. AAA eee n@ another Frenchman named Levasse her Hundreds of the very finest at the Liberty Music Shoppe NOW —DON’T LET another Christmas pass without giving your home the very best music obtain- able. Unlimited musical enjoyment every day in the year with a Victrola or Brunswick phono- graph. ain Blood killed him." Ce iy _ Mel i Victrola No. 210 $100 be: TESTED RECIPES No. 58 Chicken Pie from ; ” “Way Down South (The mayor of Allanta, Georgia, writes that he likes chicken pie prepared Dixie way) (AN mcawerenants level) 1 chicken cooked Ki Ib. veal cooked 4 02, bacon 2 tablespoonfols Crisco Shard boiled chopped part salt and poppe Ma teste pastry Cut chicken and veal into #mall pieces, — Cb and sed ing dish with layer of pantry; place In bottom of dish layer of veel aver of slices of Meg chopped pars- 7. No. 200 Brunswick $100 —Get your Christmas Victrola or Brunswick at the Liberty Music Shoppe—now. We offer you a helpful and attentive service, and you are wel- come to take your own time in comparing and considering the various models. Easily the largest assortment of Sweaters in the city. “Chay SWEATERS ie Coats,” Golf Coats, Fibe AT $5.85 Kill Taarastiee wall - Ore Brushed Wool Sweaters and some brushed fronts only, in Buff, Brown, Navy Blue, Silver and com- bination colors, Scores of Beautiful DRESSES rr Special Christmas Terms Investigate our Special Christmas Terms and you will find it an easy matter to receive just the phonograph you want—not the ono that lack of ready funds would ordinarily cause yo to choose, Ask about these terms. We guarantee that they will meet with your entire satisfaction. —By all means make your selection now. You don’t want to be caught in the last-minute rush; nor do you want to be disappointed in not being able to get Christmas delivery on the particular phonograph of your choice. GIVE RECORDS Give Records to those of your friends who have phonographs. They will be heartily received. Our complete line of Brunswick and Victor Rec- ords makes it easy for. you to choose records that will please them. Exceptional dance, popular and classical numbers for you to choose from. Spe- cial Holiday Record Boxes. York Model Brunswick $150 from betog teo dry. |G pastry, lay over top of ‘oven 1 bour and « halt. us use mushrooms; saute them in Pai 2 captule oar euptal Crisco One dozen (Qiiffon Velvet Mod- els in four different styles that formerly sold at $32.50. Sixteen Twill-Back Velveteens in eight dif- ferent styles that formerly sold at $22.45. A big assortment of Can- ton Crepes, Crepe-Back Satins and Poiret Twills that were priced 0. Twelve similar models that were formerly $26.85. Every one of these beautiful dresses now reduced to $14, 1 fabtespoontal lemon jalce lee water snfficiest to hold mix ture together—}; teaspoontal Sitt four and salt into a bowl © Crisco with knife into flour; add ually egg, which has been well beaten ie mixed with lemon jules. Alk-v box for an hour. ry much. Victrola No. 215 Open Evenings—Shop Early EL iot-6181 For light, tender cakes For dfgestible and flaky pastry For crisp, digestible fried foods Best for Rarebits it never cooks stringy Bhi & the quality spread cheese Royal Model Brunswick No. 80 Victrola $100 and polishes ~ does not scratch or scour, AYA

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