The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 5, 1924, Page 9

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of Seattle and outh Seas “The Beacon Hill mystery’ BY FRED V. WILLIAMS | id man’s hand: life You'y never repa a sTaRnT HEAR TODAY " ~ ved my We ca i YOUr, frie . r looh about the strange “What kind of a kite do you fly?” he asked. a m ‘ “You art a queer sort of sail magic automobile with Nancy Jand if there's a war I'll chase the Kine rian! Of” he said, but the skipper Nick and Mister Muggs, the/enemy, What are you going to 7 volunterred no further yman, sped thru Once-lpona-| when you're a man, Nick?’ 5 s tien and Clark went bel Time Land at about a hundred “Mebbe I'll be a soldier or a pe “afk | make comfortable quarters for | miles an hour | ticeman or a conductor, Or else 1 P me Marian Page It passed seven casties and seven| build houses and bridges ors 4 y s t ™m™ and Clark | mioate and camé at last to the place to lead a band ar ative ark a . wht OM) went how of the ahip, where/ where Jack the Giant Killer lived, | thre big at and catoh it - . i t out ac the blue and| Jack was out flying a kite, but I'd like to wear a ta ark ried mecoming on he saw the visitors he wound | fur t with a at unde an Nat . i a... Lif ope fair for » thé string and came ove ehin @ red jacket all cove act 4 trea w. The visit of the old mariner) He was extra glad to nee Nick./ with gold braid fre he makes and the three | te ¢ and had been like a gif What kind of a kite do you fy?*| And still nobody thought of » pail, the W « tror . p in Seattle he| he asked when he had said “How| much as mentioning a giant Yow Go ON WITH THE STORY 4 to n 7 Marian if 4 u do.” “Whea I grow up I'm going . t him, and open a st Mine's & red parrot,” said Niok,|wear a pinkepangied a CHAPTER > would try to t 1 like this kind better, Next| jump out of a balloon,” ea XN c t ndertul f I'm going to get one like t tho nobody had ask baruge The day rode lazily on, Larsen You know what they | any the . would ‘ 1 proved himself a man of few r | for v saved Ri ve ad words. The three ate in silence, i ‘ a put in Mister | I've t t may for of Mu om kite, and he| Jack, “Bu on What of I wee with their t ictures wit t. Me b lehute on « I pining perhay benefactor when he indicated era fixed t ne Way, And) Jump out and xm. plainly that he did not wish to wants to take the p I want to He did not love her, He had talk Jof a mountain top of some We'll have to be ¢ now never loved her, It was foree led the sea y high, he sends up the kite and| said Mister Muggs. “It's a mante of circumstances, fear of death, stif-preservation that prompted th 4 to Clark on a s wheel way bel camera anc picture is} And then Nick remembered. him to submit to her wiles and You may stand wat taken,” Did you really kill any giants caresses, wis I never do | All this time nobody thought of a|he asked suddenly To this w ms went /xafer if you do, There is no telling! gant | ald Jack, as tho 5 rea. where ther one of theee islands} “Some day when I'm a man e-lwere speaking of outos or » To femain on t 1 would | is, they're not charted. I never! clared Jack, “I am golng to have an/thing. “Oh, say, can you play ba have meant deat! them both. | cared whether it hit the rocks or the | airplane, I'm géing to learn to ball? I wish you could stay fiven if he could beach or not | nose dives and tail spins, and (To Be Continued) ile would have be watched him] to > the | (Copyright, 1924, Seattle Star) he exclaimed. And then In the moonlight they sat | any }by the wheel and watched. Then he turned again to the girt| The sails, the rigging, the gt his side « to each| chimsy bulwarks of the old vee | other in the new coming| sel cast weird shadows over the | Bday while * mn hunched) decks. They were alone, and | goer the wh yet— The sack of gold lay on the Clark bad the impression that some one besides themselves a i the He tried to deck. canto count the coins. counted until satisfied that it w indeed a treasure worth the risk he had taken. ‘The old skipper called wheel and plied bim wi and Clark im of the i Clark opened it and be- He [old skipper was near. throw off the feeling Once he took Miss Page's nd about to declare hi fand ask her if she could marry when they reached their native land, hand love mm | M was of his advent Larsen smiled} Ut the phantomlike presence of| of > page ~~ lanother persisted and he refrained. | th: t . ad shed. em chee Clark had finished. | Ghe looked up into his face won-|th those wometi many years ago when I | xaneta * te said | op #23 Just a lad," he xaid. “Some of| | Marian.” he said a. ; sailors yeod to tell of white men |*PoKen of this before, but I must | = > kidnaped or shipwrecked andj athem gods there, UE iat I never believed them “The island is off the course. I was off my bearings and that is how I came to be near enough to see your light last night.’’ “I love you, I have loved you from the time I first saw you on’ the beach and took you Inte my arms, but I have not dared to tell “Now that we are free and are on| our way home, I feel that 1 can} speak." | | She turned her head away. | voled was low and vibrant | “If I accepted your proposal it! would not be fair to you," she re | jp Her) Why, I do not even know who 1 jam. I know only that my nffmo is | Marian Page and that Iam an Amer fean. I do not know who my people jare. I may have been promised to some one cise. “That terrible experience in the memory of the past. I only live and know the present. You have been kind to me. You have been brave. I appreciate it all. Yes, I love you—’ Clark clasped her In his arms. she resisted feebly “I do not care about the past,” hoe i. “Some day your memory may be restored. It is only the present or| the future that really counts. I have no one else in the id but you; you | have no ono but me. She surrendered her lips to his and there in the moonlight of that tropic night they pledged their troth. Both were ideally happy. They felt that they had not a care in the world. There was nothing upon the horizon of their future to disturb them and yet Clark, in the moment that he released this girl whom he had told of his love fett the same dread presentiment of an- other's presence. | He looked up and across the and out over the sea. | He thought he saw a shadow jacross the deck. | | Clark's muscles became taut as he Grapefruit | Try it Tonight . Here’sa delicious appe- fiver for the first course of a dinner. Grapefruit cocktail, easy to prepare this way: Remove the pulp from jankiet Gr : in bowl ee ei el thoroughly. eh ready to serve pot in cocktail glasses; cover ih grape juice and It provides beneficial salts and acids and abun- dant vitamines, so is healthful as well as lus- cious, Always ask for Sunkist Grapefruit to get the fresh, deck | flit} | LETTER FROM I “T bave not} you mean by ‘taking care of herself.’ | tooted. TURES TWINS JACK THE 4 n pulls a atring, and that works |way back and time is fying | O) the bank, and how to loc The Tangle (An intimate story of Innermost emotions revealed in private letters) AE PRES. | Somo girls seem to t COTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CARE OF THE SHOKET DRAWER, CONTINUED I just couldn't understand what|that there is nothing much lett to y husband was getting at, little | protect, and so the arquise, and I paid splendid thing that “Dut surely, Jack, it is a good| them, ing for @ woman who works to} nk ahe can take care of herself.” “It all depends,” ho said, | ke care of them wolves too carefully, if I mean they pay protection, bu h for it sometimes, nly given | | that Is the Mra. Athertor she doesn’t want to be She didn't want t |tected when she married. jthin perfectly ite nas to] “However, 1 think | great trouble with “on what | Lestic be pro: Bhe made obvious to her hus | “Oh, she and Bam thought thoy were madly tn love with each other fat that time, but Sam was not a money-ma , and, of course, you {know that Sal I don’t think | it's a good thing, Jack, for a wife| to be able to earn more money than h nd. ‘There's something in Ithis that makes a man's gorge rine. | A man with an inferiority complex Apricet Shert-Cake (Delicious! And as good to look jis always a very disagreoable man at as it ia 10 eat) live with. In fact, I think 1] 2 cupfuls flour would rather live with the most 4 teaspoonfuls baking powder = oo tiatical man alive 4 mul ealt “Now tell me about Syd," T sald, 4 tablespoonful “You've no Mea, dear, how inter. ested he is in that foolieh little about % cuptul sweet milk | coral gimerack he sent you. I Mix an for diseuit wouldn't be surprised If he went looking all over the earth for one Just like it, ordinary dough and cut into large sized biscuits. Bake for about 15 minutes in a hot oven. Split “syd's a splendid chap, Lealle, | each biscuit; cover half with nd he'd make some girl an awfully | apricots (diced), which have been ood husband. 1 wish he would | cooked, sweetened and washed. | marry. In fact, I've never known Cover with other half spread | wiy ho didn't marty, {'m watlefied with more apricots, top with | there's some hidden page in his lite, pebeaiees cream. This recipe | nut just what it Is I have never should serve six people = known, Intimate as we are.” half cee of apricots be “He'd make a nice balance whee}, | by ches don't you think, for a gitl like, Sally?" T observed. | “Never in a thousand years," was | Jack's Yehement assertion, “Don't{ ||You go to making any matchmak. | |\Ing plans that will take the most jlefficient secretary I have ever had For light, tender caken jj@way from me." For ble and flaky {| I couldn't help smiling at Jack's For , digestible fried || Carnestness, for in my heart t knew jthat Sally was the last woman that \Byd would fall in love with, I just | half arose. Marian looked up into| sound, juicy kind. gteaaen |his face In alarm, C 1 > ‘There is nothing you regret?’’| orn |she asked, a. if 1a | He laughed. “Nothing. Just al |sudden memory of all that we have been thru, that's nll.’’ She was relieved. ‘I must go now,’’ she said. “1 must rest and maybe when T am really myself again, I will re- member who I am,’’ He kissed her hands and stood at |the wheel watching her us she went |below. Then he turned to face the night alone on deck on this strange! |#hip and to fight that feeling that lanother beside himself was present on the deck. Sunkist Grapefruit California Fruit Growers Exchange Los Angeles, California | } | | | Clark imagines that there is a} strange person on the ship; he even thought he saw @ shadow pass above the hateh opening, What is it? Read The Star tomorrow. , Sa Bathers May Come Under County Eye Mombers of the board of county commissioners Monday were faced! with a new responsibility—that of | leensoring bathing suits, Protents |have been received from the Wom-| aseoclation of the Mountain w chureh and the Parent-Teach- ussociation of the Mountain| y school that hoys and men who} jswim in Hickens’ Jake, near the} | school, wear iittle or nothing. Swear. ing is also complained of by tle women. All Drug Stores Leave it to the children— they'll decido—every time in favor of Scully’s Skoo- kum Syrup. And there’s a reason—the distinctive flavor. No other syrup has that particular “smack” of goodness. Dixie’s pure cane sugar— New England’s renowned maple sugar direct from nature—that’s the answer, You'll say — it’s “bully.” In air tight, double sealed screw 40) cams—your protection. SCULLYS KOOKY INDIAN FOR BULLY PURE CANE AND MAPLE SYRUP | Your Kiddies Know M SI . ~ iS ll | California Sunkist Ova Uniformly Good Delicious Smaller Oranges For Breakfast Juice Bargains Everywhere f ature has made most oranges smaller than usual this year. But she has madeé them luscious. Sweet, tender, flavory — rich in essential vitamines and valuable salts and acids, Full of zestful juice. Being smaller, they cost less, but they are twice a bargain due to their quality. So buy two dozen now where you've bought but one before. Or buy them by the box. Start every day with orange juice and know more healthful days. Doctors and dietitians, all advise it. Do it now, don’t let a day go by without this healthful morning drink. Ask for— nges jband. In this whe Is not clever, for! “ is ere | ‘ | Wanted to know what ‘ack would r. th Marq Jac and jevery married woman should makelny atout jt oe } rs car” 5 be og ta [her husband think, that he is pro- ad had something new to talk even if in. her heart pel | Lat a sleepy led }about, and talking with some one knows he ian’t and couldn't be it he|™* from the room, I hea hui 1 love on new thi is very tried. — wo in Red hin bedroom, and Ij diverting and eatiefying, if thru it . new that he ¥ pre forall there runs an undercurrent of | | rather wondered why Your!ted. 1 had had ove ion which tells you that some | | friend ever married at all.” ae bot ; pai na 2 fe S * ie Marquise, until I return from New | > pread It York LESLIE, . ¢ (Copyright, 1924, by N. EL A | With Service, Inc.) | | TOMORROW: Letter from Rich. shaw. RED | : | Legi | | | | vestigat \has Churned in Seaffle sontatiy the cont i staterne Hard Summers to WASHINGTON uncovered Representative Ziehiman, Maryland, j improperly | hot write you again, little; ea you, Grim- | } | Beatrice slator Freed of Bribe Charges | May 5.--The in-| jon of the house committee no evidence that) received money, Repre. | @ Burton, Ohio, chairman of amittee, declared in a formal nt today Fin our ta in Coffee, and slic HERE is just one coffee-taste that just snits ‘ou, Strong or mild or half-way, can help you find it. For the flavor of M always in the cup, The stren, Make the test and sce! 2 The Enemy of pretty teeth is film. For beauty’s sake, combat it A new way of teeth cleaning brings many results, and millions how enjoy them. Whiter teeth is one result which users see at once. It is something all folks desire. But those whiter teeth show how this method fights the teeth’s great enemy. That enemy is film. How film-coats injure teeth Film is that viscous coat you feel —ever-present, ever-forming. Un- der old teeth cleaning methods, much of it clings and stays. Soon it becomes discolored, There are now two ways to fight film, which research has diseov- tered. One disintegrates the film, often at a touch. @ removes it ‘without harmful scouring. Able authorities have proved these methods effective. A new- type tooth paste has been created to apply them daily. The name is Pepsodent, The use has now the world over, largely by dental ad- vice. Careful people of some 56 , nations employ Pepsodent today. What users see and feel ~ Ste | forming dingy coats. Then teeth The use of Pepsodent quickly | Temain unsightly and unclean. brings a new conception of what | ,, Film causes most tooth troubles. clean teeth mean, : | It holds food ince which fet- ‘Tt does more than fight film. It | ments and forms acid. It holdsthe muttiplies the alkal of the acid in contact with the teeth to cause decay, Germs breed by mil- lions in it. They, with tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. Such troubles are almost univer- 2 among people who don’t fight im. saliva, That is there to neutralize mouth acids. It multiplies the ptyalin in saliva. That is there to digest starch deposits on teeth. These combined effects are most impressive, One cannot doubt their benefits, Send the coupon for a 10-Day Tube. Note how clean the teeth feel after using. Mark the absence of the viscous film, See how teeth become whiter as the film-coats disappear. We promise you a revelation, Cut out coupon now, Protect the Enamel Pepsodent disintegrates the film, then removes it with an agent far softer than enamel. Never use a film combatant which contains harsh grit. 10-Day Tube Free THE PEPSODENT COMPANY, Dept. K., 1104 8, Wabash Ave., fe . & A. Mail 19-Day Tube of Peprodent to Papsauant The New-Day Dentifrice Based on modern research. Now advised by leading dentists the world over. N ia, gdvtned byleading dentists. | fn shinies cpestsntihtenaneteniferatnenan, J Bis th is up to you, Ghiy one tude to @ tamil.

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