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PAGE 10 C]hegy~LAND-OF [~ OTTEN MEN F by Cdison Marshall | GIN HERE TODAY Peter Newhall, Augusta, Oe vor he was P answering GO ON WITH THE sTORY I know it's a pretty big job for 1” Bill ax ‘ed, promptly re was a real M, D. on the within a thousand miles I t tack: tho I've -tack! some pretty stiff jobs a away with ‘em, too, m at sea. If I don't work on that he'll be 4 monster to at th of his life y think I can help him—I_ be he was conscious | he'd tell me to go ahead. Peter opened his eyes again. “I'm consciou: aid thickly, His jaw wobbled as tried to enunciate. “Go ahead.” ‘The sailors looked at him with no great amazement. “That's another complication—that you're conscious," Bill returned, “We haven't any anesthet “Go ahead, anyway. My face hasn't any feeling in it, at all, It feels numb,"* “I'm afraid it won't be numb when I get to work on it. But we're a thousand miles from a real surgeon, and you've got to have help. I'll be as easy as I can.” Bill went to work—to the absolute limit of his skill. He stitched great, ugly cuts, he bandaged loose, torn strips of flesh, tied _ bleeding he fastened again—with some a torn oyelid that was the result of a long cut that passed diag onally across his face and which had broken the bone of his nose, and he tried his best to set Ahe broken jaw ‘Thru it all Peter clenched his hands, bit the wedge that Rill had placed | between hi and “The boy’s got gut with emphasis, Stabbing, burning pain in his jaws and face woke Peter late in the night; and he was somewhat sur- prised to find Bill sitting at his bed- side. “Don't try to talk,” the latter cautioned quickly. “You won't do any talking for some weeks, my boy. But I can see you're better. jaws, Jd nothing, Bill had said Peter managed to grin wanly and | moved his hand as if in the act of writing. Bill understood promptly. “I'll get you a piece of paper in a minute. how to’read and write. look at some of those bandages first, tho.” He slipped off some of the stained white strips, sterilized the wounds, and put on fresh bandages. “Just doing fine, so far," he gloated with professional pride. “You won't look like you, but you'll look like something. You wanted a piece of paper? Wait a second.” He laid the back of an envelope on LEA&PERRINS SAUCE makes COLD SALMON taste better I've got to in that lunch basket you'll appreciate one or more packages of Bluhill ; Cheese $ SOUCHOHOROROHOZORORONG It's lucky for you to know | Released by NEA Service, Inc, | all of nk nd put a pencil The Peter's hand latter wrot nd from there » haven't ¢ s engagement din his bandages, me pain shook and HE SIGNED THE NAME “PETE LIMEJUIC The castaway indicated “on Then we'll be shipmates for some time. The captain'll be glad to sign You up; tho you haven't the hands of a seafaring man, there's always something you can do. What do they }eall you?” took the paper again started to write Peter Neville, name he had gone under—tho times he had occasion to give his name—during hin residence in the native village. But he halted before and the sudden, deeply moving thought flashed like a light In his mind. picked up the paper, “Pete, eh,” he read. Many men, tn this remote end of the North, go by first names only; and it is not considered the best man nera to inquire too closely as to what the family name might be. They were man to man, and Bill had no desire to embarrass his friend. He seemed perfectly matter-of-fact and grinned in a friendly way. “Lime juice Pete!” Limejuice Pete! Bill went out and left this Southern aristocrat to pon der on the interesting situation in which he found himself. CHAPTER IV Peter Disguised MEJUICE PETE! It did not j 44 surprise Peter Newhall that Bill |should take him for an Englsihman. | He was a pure Anglo-Saxon to start with, his features had suggested those of the better class of British. jers, but mostly Bill got the idea from |his Southern accent—an accent with which the crew of the Dolly Bettis was entirely unfamiliar with, because it was nothing else they knew, be- came English by the process of elim!- nation. Only the crew of the Dolly Bettis knew that there was a survivor from the distaster of the reefs. In order that the whole world should be made to believe that Peter Newhall, alias Peter Nevill, had gone down in the Jupiter he must tell his shipmates that he, Limejuice Pete, had been aboard and was a survivor of the auxiliary schooner that"had sunk among the reefs, the ship that the trifortunate Jupiter had gone forth to save. No one living, so far as he knew, could contradict his story. Thus the world would belive that every one aboard the Jupiter was lost, Peter Newhall of course among them. * He resolved to get up as soon as possible, take his place in the crew of the ship, and get what companion- ship he could from his shipmates. He would not pay for his passage: in the first place it might arouse suspi- cion of him—men of the class he wag supposed to be do not pay for steam. boat tickets when they can work "Mothers know the difference” Kiddies clad in Kute Kuts mean worry-less vaca- tions for mothers. Once your little gel is dressed for play in Kute Kuts she is dresse Shecan goon having oceans of fun—and no dan- ger of rips or tears or stopping for repairs! You will find these fetching peg-top at your dealer’s in khaki, denim and ot! to-wear, sure-to-wash fabrics. Sizes o to 12. OWT BUST EY MACE KOTE PEG-TOP PLAYSUITS Made by ELOESSER-HEYNEMANN: Kate Kut design patented U, 5, Patent No. 36450. Inte for the day. pyrite er sure- KUTS CO,, San Francisco + Los Angeles : Portland he had completed the first word. A} He was hardly aware that Bill had| PE Copyright 1923 dy Little, Bown Co. | Sally | jof the earth foregathered here—bo board. down to San Francisco, and thus into Featoration change in change in gen nee, Whil a GREEN, ecninmended for rediring, an. invalusble eling away with pulhnge and we The Tangle HE {An intimate story of innermost emotions revealed by private letters) ETTER FROM JAMES CONDON TO SALLY ATHERTON. CONTINUE 1 determ 1 ft when I had not t y 1 All this phizing, m dea was coming, but I confess 1 was/Sally, rather clutter a ery unhappy to find that you/|letter, doesn’t it But it have brok any engagement to|man, Think it over, dea I know 1 love you and I want to be with |aright ou. You are satisfied to let me} As writing you, 1 sat ove you, and your being with me|near half dozen men that I ht and by some mischan Tjone man to an ound myngif beside a table which| “That secretary of Jack Pre was fill ix men I couldn't | cott is certainty a hummer help overhearing what they said What's her name?’ they did not lowes ir y “She's a M Atherton answer I know ear t © thisled the otger ae — -— Widow aaked some one eine. i and in th eoond, the 5, Very, revently ‘ Over or under the grass the Lene Care ede eg Ol SP] ttthink she's laid (hin: awe carefully with a rose upon his shadow of happiness. He would not | bea gt take to the whisky bottle ‘again But she's not in mourning once. That wild, halfmad dream 1 rather think,”. ald the first Ten days thereafter he was well | und as she does not, you know she enough to begin hig first light taska |), just the kind of a woman who aboard ship: him up without and the captain signed This proceeding was. not an element of humor, the Southern gentelman signed the name "Pete Limejuicer” with a flourish The captain grinned widely, then as signed him a shift on the paint de tail that is always busy on ship. board. His wounds healed, his jaw and bens of his nose were sound again, and now the biond hair had begun to lengthen and mat about his lips and jowls. Because it he did not at first was gradual, realize the tre mendous, incredible change in his appe © since the night of the |wreck. In the first place health and decent habits had almost eradicated the re signe of dissipation. His eyes were ci shot and thin no longer blood the flesh of his face was firm rather than and soft; he was a deep, good brown in stead of a pasty white, and the net work of red lines at his cheek bones was no longer manifest. His burly from had stripped down until he welghed but 160 pounds, and now he had started to gain slowly his muscles hardened to tron. But these changes were all minor ones compared to the complete trans formation of his face. Bill's surgical work had been a huge success ax far ring his disfiguration, but in swollen as repa | #0 doing he had completely concealed the man's identity, He was changed as if he wore « mask Before he had had a rather full extremely youthful face. Now it was lean, the cheek bones showed, the chin was prominent, the eyes looked larger, more luminous and clear, and Much more sober. New lines had come in hin brow, his nose was Ir regular, no longer finely chiseled; his mouth no longer looked small and rather pursed but large and hu morous. He was no longer hand. some, not from any pronounced die. figuration, but simply because of the new set of his featuers, and perhaps, the presence of a few tolitale scars. His hair had only been fainty touched with gray before the dis aster. the last months of distress and dissipation had shot it full of silver. Finally his voice was completely changed in tone wince the fracture of his Jaw; it was still rich and full, and the differences were such as could not be narrated in words, yet the ear could never recognize it as Peter Newhall’s voice. Before that long cruise was done, he found a certain simple pleasure in the sailor's life, in holding his place as a man among men. The hardest tasks on the boat did not ap- pall him now fron, his muscles untiring. He liked the regular hours, the plain, abund- ant food, the hours of easy speech with his shipmates on watch. He did not, however, intend to follow the seafarer's life, for the simple reason that he knew it would sooner or later carry him into danger. When he returned to Alaska he would get some kind of an outdoor job at one of the canneries where he would bé mostly out of gouch with civilization and the law. ‘The bdat touched at Unalaska on the return trip, but because the ends as cause it was the meeting place for the wayfarers that cama and passed thru this empty, far-off edge of the East—he wisely decided to stay on But he would not continue on the toils of the law, The captain had agreed to put him off at one of the native villages, farther down the peninsula. (Continued in Our Next lissue.)) REDUCING MADE SIMPLE AND EASY ee teeta: vo a lew Ingr. it Dissolve Fat. Z A French woman now America in feports that a new treatment for ohesi has been f¢ 5 seientiot; (any bya well-known Pr bination of ingred it cl tablet called “SAN.GRI- hieh helps mature in {owing off Unnecessary rming element... tI * ible tar fat (0 form and aeeanalet he body. Alread: 4 Shs Meter We a arkably ah of marvelous nd in ntirely relieved. Wah bh antged absolutely” hurt tan) ments will be prosecuted of Bartell’s or Swift's Drug Store teommen 8 and nurses realive way 10 take off from § to 6 ek, SAN-GRIENA” is gold ing drug or department stores, BAN-GRIENA can now be hh His hands were like | would scorn to pretend to do po. I do believe,” before had n “that a woman of the style of this Mrs. Atherton could really wear enough crepe to give the impression not remarked a who spoken. AR THE OF 6 woo ADVENTURES TOT OTS OCT OCT OC OM OAT TBR VY NAVA VAV A Vole = ; zi TWINS DCHUCK’'S PRESENT d 3 ‘ . 7 § a - a “Happy birthday!” said Mrs. Woodchuck. ‘ I don’t believe you're ever going , Nancy! Goodday, Mrs. Cottont 5 sald Mrs. | “Happy birthd id Mr Nick. Ever | Woodehuck the xt day when her thing have nd came wn to breakfast - RU ng nk you, feat uid the : thi worne her ) lid down | is this And icked up the Us over her eyes, and Nancy had to} package off his plate where his wife é él Ors : fix jer all over aga had Inid it | But by and by she got settled “It's Bomethir that came by Bs Nick said, “Now, look plea mail,” said Mre. ck proud: ploture was taken and jt} S80 Mr. W k hin knifi E | 1 hope you didn’t mind mo look.| Package apd out de r >. ing on,” said just then, and) sn Seiad friend: i ot the hiee ma eee Sree Mra Cot) icture, but I can't seem to make | OW that so many women are starching i waa a out just” who is. 1 see whe has fe HWhiy,” Mra, {Cottontail 1, didn't }esr ze oe Tt Me eee et all their wash garments and household is |seo you," 'naid Mrs. Woodchuck. “I |imy how her ears do stick up th | didn't hear you come in at allt “Well, here I am,” laughed Mrs. | Cottontail, “I came to get my ture taken. You were all talking so much I don’t suppose you could hea thing but your own] of grief. She looks to me like a| “It’s to be a sceret about my ple- Very self-centered woman who is in-|ture,"" maid Mrs, Woodcbuck. “I'm | dependence personified. having it taken for a surprise for! “What's Jack doing with her?|Wally’s birthday tomorrow he Has that lovely wife of hia and he| mustn't know a word about it. 1] had any trouble?” know you won't tel | “Wifle’e out of town, 1 believe Not a word, Mra, Woodchuck,” | remarked another man with « leer./eaid Mra. ¢ - TN be @ Sally, dear, I wanted to knock his! sient as—-as—ae—anything | [head off When will my pictures be done?” | | (Copyright, 1934, N. EK. A. Bervice, Ine.)| “They'll be di uf past | TOMORROW: ‘The letter con: five.” said Nick | tinued. Just mall the pictures to Minte v Wo tuck ey'll come Radio manufacturers and others eakfant ote lay the |auggest the use of jocast” in © on plate a t toad of “broad er. Goodby, Nick Aby ‘Better _ Easily Made |Tastes Better—Looks Better—Costs Le Fails BY ANN Everyone loves raspberry jam For a spread on bread or hot bis. | cults nothing seems to equal it. Its | Wonderful flavor makes children of us all, Until now, however, an ex- to make It, and >, the property pert was required jit has been expensive, Cor {natural “Jeli making of | fruit, has solved the problem so that everyone can make and eat a lot of thin delicious preserve. | To make raspberry jam by the quick and easy Certo method, fol low this simple recipe: Crush about 2 quarts ripe berries in separate portions, so that each berry in mashed. ‘Thin allows fruit \to quickly absorb the sugar during | the short boll. Measure 4 level cups | (2 Ibs) crushed berries into | kettle, add 7 level cups (3 Ibs) jsugar and mix well. Use, hottest |fire and stir constantly before and | while boiling. Boil hard for one full | minute, remove from fire and stir In \ bottle( scant % cup) Certo. From time jam is taken off fire allow to nd not over 6 minutes by the clock, before pouring. In the mean- time, skim, and stir occasionally to cool slightly. Then pour quickly. Use samo recipe for strawberry, blackberry, dewberry or loganberry jam. The above nearly recipe and 100 other Jams, Beteg Pras and Raspberr large} atten 3 yJam | in 15 Minutes and Never | PROCTOR Jellies and Marmalades are in the Certo Book of Recipes which ts en- cloned with every bottle of Certo This Certo process banishes all the }Kuexs work or worry as perfect re- sults are certain when imple recipe in followed. Unitke the old/ metho und for pound” mixture | boiled thirt or more minutes, with derable juice, color and |favor of the fruit being boiled away, the economical Certo method requ’ res only one minute's boiling, the juice to! jam, That more sugar is and thereby make one-h {the only reason why |used with Certo. | Certo is a pure fruit product {contains no gelatine or preservative. | more Certo positively saves time, fruit,| flavor and guoms work. It makes all kinds of Jama and jetliesy-some 1 have never ix highly indorsed by thorities and tasted before. Certo national au local cooking experts. | Every woman who tries tt recom- mends it to her friends and says she'll never be without it. Over| seven million bottles were used last year | Get a bottle of Certo from your right away Start the new sure, quick, economical way | of making jams and jellies that keep | indefinitely. You'll never return to the “old hit or miss” method. Make| tah of raspberry jam this year— no home ever has*too much. grocer the ime a Snoqunee P.S.—Tree Tea ad nt any oy igs meets ever, bas ‘Meets every taste in tea fabrics with the remarkable new starch dis- covery, Limit, it is difficult to tell which are cotton and which are linen. it! Most remarkable, “Mra, Woodchuck ture shriek of I should may seized the ple und gave ¢ 24° Mre. Cottonta had been stan x right behind her gvhen Nick took F at ihe pietioe and he took Mrs. Cot All such fabrics not only look, but feel ” | tontall’s ears, too, altho n of the 7 hs 6a “pn rest-of her could be seen at all like linen, The reason is that List pene- - ‘ Y oodch uc ” on he ha b; she ane pion een trates every thread of a garment and fastens 3 COLUCY ati pied all loosening bits of fibre back into place, Te can ‘ell you all that happened b it pretty soon Mister Zip put up It thus strengthens each thread and helps fi a sign over the door of the photo. sald “Closed!* prolong the life of the material, while it gives the whole fabric a soft, pliable finish, just as you find in goods fresh from the store. And since Lintt eliminates lint, your garments stay fresh and clean much longer. ph place which (To Be Continued) oa t 1904, N. PUBLISHER DIES. Crawford, Who Came West in Covered Wagon, Was 97 “ Id ¢ A. Bervice, In ERGEEE REPRET2, but mark Crawford, plone do’ three years to reach the 1 body of uns is sold by all grocers—10c. r publish. | laid Saturday JOHNSON. LIEBER CO. Seattle, Wash. Death from old age was the simple| statement of physicians | oseant" ® ™|#8 Makes Colton look and feel like Line Crawford was 97, He was a broker, | US Rone er, to rest ss wi a and in the early days was part owner mrmraramauaa ae aaaaaaaaaaae rep of a Seattle daily paper. He ts sur. Reistectects sa fo. Bs se Stacie ce cts Se ee. vived by @ son, Ronald M. Crawford, of Olympia, a daughter, Mrs. Law renc oth, of Seattle, and se eral grandchildren and great-grand. Hdren, Park and jelubs, but, capacity of Lake View Ca as the big ferry 50 passengers, theft ‘Moonlight Trip on Lake Planned He was born in Havana county,| Residents of Seattle and visitors |tation to attend has been madi New York, | 7. He was married |are invited to see the canal locks and|eral. Music will be furnih jo Oregon in 1852, and moved to! enjoy the beauties of Lake V dancing on the Jower deck. Olympia in 1869. He came to Se-|ton by moonlight on an excursion to] The Leschi will leave the attle in 1877. He was a member of|be given Wednesday night by the] park ferry lagding at 730% St. John’s Masonic lodge, and was) Parkland Community club on the|Madison park ferry landing known as the oldest Mason in Seattle. | ferry Leschi. Death came to the pioneer at the} A speci home of his sister, Mrs, A. C. War-|has been ren, 3834 Fremont aye (Mt o'clock, making a run thru thet to the locks before making its light on Take W which will last until 10:30. invitation to participate sued to members of the Baker Park, Madison cruise Madrona, Children love this! Raisin Bread and milk. And it’s good for them—the nourishment of good wheat bread, fruit and milk in a delightful form. Give it to them for lunch and before bed time. Have raisin bread at its best~on Wednesdays. T pre- pare a special baking for mid-week —beautiful, golden loaves filled and flavored with Sun-Maid Raisins. Place a standing Wednesday order for this finer raisin bread. Phone your order now. Endorsed by bakers everywhere, including the American Bakers’ Associationand the Retail Bakers’ Association of America e ' Place a standing Wednesday order with your Baker or