Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
} TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12 ORTUNES : : 1924 4 “A ** RAFAEL bid him hold his hand rr SABATINI +* a t t ~ niverRaren ay 3 ; Gia ee RW, SATERPIED fore was it that, an ho Ay p Fleet Hitt, he @ GAPAN, DABATING [429+ RELEASED OY WEA SERViCRLINnc, #8 ee BEGIN HERE TODAY ‘ It is a Sattering conv Alas, | r ih . m, I do not share it." He was 4 mages Hn ean f Ho made it clear that he is he passed toward ¢ at with him tt 1 could be more| that linked on of t for jeaté. He rose, amil-| with the othe Uttle crooked! “Therefore| It wa pin my hopes to his grace of |curial th arte. hey may be desperate; |p | t faith, they're none despe and—now an if pee of wed! k He took up|ing reaponsit anx f word as he spoke passing the/orish bustie here colone! is mildly pussied when Mra. over his head and settling it| Opp the Horse Guards the Quinn susgests toh hat he ta shoulder, Then ho reached | colonel canto to a mont ! Unto himself a wif * hat, Mrs, Quinn regarding|the skirts of a knot of stand Now GO ON WITH THE STC” | him too while tn mingling wistful. |ing at gaze to observe the workmen ‘Now there I vow you d hess and hesitation, on the oo roof who we engaged tnju At last she roused herself, and}in ¢ there a weath ©. A * T've lea at whom he questioned | others. all see; wo shall sea, Maybo | formed him that this was for r Yo when all ts sald, a very I talk of ft aguin,” ‘oper man “Not a love me, delectable “Aye! But proper for what he protested, turning She pursued her theme v pausing to answer his frivolous qu © of the Lord High A Duke of York, so that b the might observe from his windows how the wind served the fleet which plague rc his immediate com. was expect & woma t 4 all other considera.| leave Texel at any a mart Colonel Holles moved on, ¢ across at the windows of the b ing house, whence, as a lad « seen lato kt © sunlight of a ¢ « to suffer And perhaps he that his own father, | ond the r Stuart yengeance—had jthe sign es of tho warrant which that deed was done. | He passed on, from the |into the shadow of He | gateway, and then, ¢ ed herself again of the paused ard, He need fi thinking of sp loas ¢ it, it Is that ps. But the remem ye la place is yours by right “By what right, good hostes “By the right of your birth breeding and military rank, which is plain upon you. Sir, why will you be undervaluing yourself? ‘The! means that would enable you to take} that had waited t since vious attempt to You think of everything,” he praised her, “You are not Mra. Quinn of the Paul's Head, you are benign Fortune pouring gifts from an inexhaustible cornucopia.” “La, sirf she laughed, as she bus. “i oe your proper place would be provided tea out. It would be wrong to eay | De turned to his + past th \ by the wife who would be glad to |that she did not un of & x into the court ® with you.” ois o where the Duke perfectly underst tA 1 1 shook his head and laughed! fd| of Albemarte had his res Here aasie; her some high aud flowery compli-| his Ungering doubt on t ment, which was what she most de-| whether his grate were yet returned ‘Do you know of such a lady?" | sired of him as an earnest of better | to town was set at rest by the bustle Because hef courage failed her at things to follow. in which he found himselt. But the this moment, Destiny pursued the| CHAPTER I. remained another de forging of that curious chain of cir. Albemarie’s Antech ber | ——— wr grapeiagrarngd oe task ‘9 | pau the nolsy bustle of Paul's| "I think,” she saidsslowly, at last,| 17, bic aaey ve L afleen |SWaggering assurance, despite his In 1 Society | Were hackney coaches in plenty, and considering the distance which he must go and the desirability of com ing to his'destination cleanly shod. Colonel Holles nomentarily tempted. He him — and sighed wearily over the reflection. of the alarming lightness of his purse Pry alarming heaviness of his score at the Paul's Head, where he had.so| sth of mind} those luxuries Below Ludgate, in that evil valley } @ a Hostess | watered by the Fleet Ditch, the: was is Kno vn, ssid And a most delicious breakfast, too. SHRED- DED WHEAT is all nourishment—all the ts , health-building properties |knew not how to pay. ‘There was| di ible form. Ready- | that ruby fn his ear, a Jewel that, be oad —ready| to’ serve. |ing converted Into gold, should keep| & man tn ease for the best part of a not by the company she keeps, but by the salads she serves.”’ jculpably lacked the st to deny himself any epicure. al ‘go id a fi | with which atte Past month he vere GOLD MEDAL Mayonnaise is giving many a hostess to- day the reputation for serv- ate most delectable Is ever eaten. GOLD MEDAL is real homemade Mayonnaise, in that it is made of new-laid and the finest of salad oils, It is “French” when it comes to the chef's art in seasoning. |twelvemonth. For 15 years and thru| many a stress of fortune it had hw | and glowed there amid his clustering | | gold-brown hair. He attached to that] jbright gem a sentimental value that| had become a superstition. There [had grown up in his mind the abso ‘lute conviction that this jewel, the| sift of an unknown whose life he had arrested on the black threshold of eternity, was a talisman and some. thing more—that, as it had played a part in the fortunes of another, so R @ Made fresh daily—always | should it yet play a part in the for-| at your grocer's. |tunes of himself and of that other |Jointly. There abode with him the u mea Write for your os r Copy of | iinconquyrable feeling that this ruby “The Salad Bowl” — new | was a bond between himself and that in two recipes for pete and | unknown, a lodestone that should ‘acid draw each to the other ultimately iscuits across a whole world of obstacles and THE BEST FOCDS. Inc. that the meeting should be mutually fateful. * 1966 Bryant Street, Sam Francieee.| There were times when, reviewing the thing more soberly, he laughed “PECOA is now known as ‘W ILSO The thousands of thrifty housewives who have preferred PECOA —the Master Spread for Bread—must remember that PECOA is about be known as WILSO. This change is made necessary owing to a baal Court injunction secured by a competitor restraining our = use of our name. The case, of course, has been appealed to a higher Court, but in the meantime, PECOA will be known as We trust this e in name will not cause housewives incon- venience. The change is in name only. PECOA is today the finest, Purest and highest grade product of its kind on the market, and it will tetain that position under its new name WILSO. The new cartons are the same in color and design—absolutely no change but the name. Do not allow anybody to force some other brand upon you merely becau pov have been te: he rgb mporarily eee fe pee tion. ot be t Our Guarantee seeains PECOA wader the name WILSO.” Wilson & Co., ine Napponigen dele that WIL8O will be WIESO is PECOA There is nothing added—nothing taken away. WILSO, like PECOA, is a Creation in Goodn the ef oo abel” thousands of housewives. Look Local Distributors Sinclair Provision Co., 1412 Western Avenue Phone EL jot-2044 Cynthia Grey: ] 1E STAR Young Girl in Terror Writes Cynthia She's 15, But Must Work in Factory Brother Beat Her. for Help Father and Dear Miss Grey: I do hope you can give me a word or two of advice [ am a young girl, 15, and my mother died when I wa a baby. My two older sisters were married when I was 10 years old, Since then I have been Jeft at home with my father and two brother My older brother worships mq, but is away from home most of the time. My younger brother and my father are as mean as the devil himself My father will not allow me to go out and play with other girls. He doesn’t want me to speak to any boys. But one day I overheard a conyersation between him and a young man 25 years old who had come to visit him. My father told him if he would wait another year he could marry me. He never said a word about it to me, except to speak of how nice this fellow is, after he went away. | My father has kept me out of school since I was 14 years} old and I have been working in a factory for the last six months. My wages are very small and once my father gave me a hint that I had to pay my board soon. f I do all of tho } ar na | whether his grace, being now return-| cook the meals eve , would condescend to receive him. | them and they both treat me 1 of the past | slave. 2 movie ther goes! “go omy me, Th days brother saw mo walking } tly answered that ree wat J Cynthia Grey will receive call em on Monday, Wedne and y from 1 to 2 p.m, and on hursday from 11 her office in The 1309 Se that his grac the bust nay + had aroused the! | Star Bu th ave. * ushers, and they had r to ask him supercill.| a boy that works where I do, an sly was he commanded by the|oh, Miss Grey, I got tho worst Upon his confession that he| whipping of my life, He hit mo wit his fists and alapped my face. My lps were all swollen the next da I told father about it; but he on laughed and said, “Serves right.” Oh, Miss Grey, I can't any longer, and I do not kr to do, Won't you, with y derful kindness of helping help me? Tell mo what I she do. How I wish I wero dead so I could have a moment's peace! was not, they informed him that the duke wag over-b ut those whom he had comrr ney bade him ex other day, He had not George Monk would be #o difficult of a remembering his homely re-| publican disregard of forms in other | days, But betng twice repulsed from his threshold In this fashion, he had taken the precaution of writing be. fore presenting himself now, begging y to receive anded ne Again some 4 that any stand mn his grace to give orders that he! Here I am 35 years old and should be admitted, unless ho no|paven't even a gif friend or any longer held a piace tn his race's one I can confide in, I'm sure I'm going to run away or do something Gesperate if I have to stay with! them any longer. Please write thru your column and try to help me as I am muf' ing as no child of my age sh I van't give you my real namo , I'm afraid my father will find out. and I don’t dare to gire you my | memory. | ‘Tho present visit, fateful. A refusal how he must re gard as final, in which ne would | be left to curse the impulse that had brought him back to Engiand, where |it waa very likely he would | A doorkeeper with a hatbert barred his progress on the threshold. “Your Dusiness, sir?’ ad(ress a my father would open “Ie with His Grace of Albemarie”| ny letter I might get. The colong’s tone was sharp ard con-|BROKEN-HEARTED LUCILLE, | fident, Thanks to this the next ques-| /¢ seems almost inoredible that n was lens challengingly delivered. | #ch @% outrage should be com | ga ane gaaceaaaed at mitted right in our midst, and we therefore, was| pposed to be an intelligent ‘ET have reason to delleve I am| Civiised people ower His grace is apprised of my| sry dear child, you do not have cor ‘4 fo put up with auch treatment for a minute, J/ you can come up t my office in The B8far, I will be glad to take you to the proper au doorkeeper looked him over again, and thep made way | He was past the outer guard, and j his hopes rose, But at the ofa long gallery a woodenfaced lcanfronted him, and the questi commenced, When Holles annou r|that he had written to beg an aud re: | ence: ced’ = (Continued In Our ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS us Sing a song of fitty cents “Why, I'm so surpriset to see, “And then there are the jugglers everybody here today!" declared the | That Juggle with their toes, Riddio Lady, looking around at Cid [rep-Pratet heed Niro balances on his none! the Riddle Land people and Mother | ‘Ang riders, and acrobats, | Goose Peopie—aiso Nancy and Nick, | And seals that make a din, the Twins. | And clowns al! turning somersaults, But ehe was only joking, and| That make your head spin! everybody ‘knew it, for the day be- i] fore she had offered somo bonoset | "And there are four-horse chariots,.| tea mixed with sulphur and molas-|40d Romans that race, ses for a prizo and not a gsoul| And elephants that do a dance, would have:it | And march all ‘round the place; » dears, if anybedy goes to |AP4 Inst of all the side shows, a aed, Gant nybody goes 6 |) rat folks and thin; give you any sulphur and molasses Now ci tel wond this spring, or anything dreadful | “°* pases I ship. wondrous like that, Just because it is spring, | Sem look hard at the bottle it is in| Where T have been? ' y what beci of ft, | T don't’ know what became of it, | «A clreust? shouted everybod; = Air eather 86 fe | “Good!” Jaughed the Riddle Lady. | one! | "And here are tickets for 1-40 talk more and| poay. rot all about | every: | But there! say less, don't I! 1 (To Be Continued) the riddle. Here it {s: (Copyright, 1924, by tile Star) “Sing a song of fifty cents, A pocketful of dimes, I went to a big show, Greatest of all times When the tents were opened, We went crowding in; It's fun to seo the animals Before the acts begin. Beef Hash Bite of cooked beef, carrots, potatoes,onion, tomatoes finely chop- ped., Cook in gravy un- til tender. Then season with that finest of seasonings LEAS PERRINS SAUCE ‘THE ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE “Popcorn and peanuts, And tubs of lemonade, And wagons all painted |(The ones in the parade)! Balloon. men and ticket men, What a lovely dint I'm sure it is the grandest place ‘That I have ever been! “Lions, and tigers, And camels lying down— The giraffe with the long neck Who sees all over town! And elephants, and leopards enocnon With spots upon their skin, And kangaroos and crocodiles | With such a silly grin! | u i] “The hippo and rhino With horns upon his nose, ‘The brown bear, the back bear With patent leather toes, Tho zebra, the mountain goat With whiskers on his chin, a fifteen cent hil e i Bluhill Cheese contains more actual value than 15 Cents will buy in any other kind of Cheese The antelope, and porcupine ‘With quills sticking in, PAGE Child’s Tongue Shows if Billous, Constipated Sick ( Children Love its Taste and it Never Fails to Empty Little Bowels Even Cross, Feverish, if your child is listless, full of cold, has Millions of mothers keep “California Fig colic, or if the stomach is sour, breath bad, | Syrup” handy, They know a teaspoonful tongue coated, a teaspoonful of ‘California | today may save a sick child tomorrow. It Fig Syrup” will qui start liver and bowel | never cramps or overacts. Ask your drug- action. Ina few hours 3 self how thoroughly it works the constipation poison, sour bile and waste right out and you have a well, playful child again. ou can see for your- gist for genuine “California Fig Syrup” which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Say “California ju may get an imitation fig syrup. thoritles who will offer you tmme-| and tell them I sent you. Do not! proper surroundings, ‘where you ite protection, and sea that you|be afraid to do this, and to tellimay lead the life of a normal, placed in achool, where you be-| them tha truth, They are staunch| happy girl. ng. If you cannot do this, go to| friends of all boys and girls, cape-| And don’t forget—4f I can help 200 Broadway and ask to eee Dr.| cally those in trouble, and thru| you further about this, or anything Merril or Jw King help you will soon be in| else, do not hesitate to come to me. Dykeman| their - Raisin Pie special for Wednesday Out of my ovens they come tonight— rows and rows of beautiful golden pies! My special Wednesday baking. They’re filled with big, plump, juicy Sun-Maid Raisins—the finest table grapes from California’s vineyards. Fromerust to crust they’re packed with fruity goodness. Serve one for tomorrow’s dinner. See how much the family all enjoy this famous pie! Restaurants and cafes serve my Sun- Maid Raisin Pies—top off your luncheon or dinner with a satisfying slice. Hot or cold, it’s equally good. And Raisin Bread Tomorrow also brings my special baking of the finest Raisin Bread—beautiful loaves, filled and flavored with the fruity, healthful goodness of Sun-Maid Raisins. Rolls, too, and coffee cakes, muffins, cookies, cakes, “‘snails” and many other tempting Sun-Maid Raisin Foods come fresh and fragrant from my ovens. By bakers everywhere The finest Sun- Maid Raisin Pies, Raisin Bread and other Raisin Foods are pre- pared “Special for Wednesday” by . bakers every week—everywhere. You can get these delicious and health- ful Raisin Foods tomorrow at any bakery, grocery store or delicatessen. Ax healthful as it is delicious! Raisin Pound Coke—rich with fruity goodness Endorsed by bakers everywhere, by American Bekers’ Association, and by Retail Bakers’ Association of America aisin bread special on Wednesdays