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\ \ om —— rc ' “NAMELESS RIVER” | THI EATTLI rAR MOXY aI OE eas A. OF TALS FCA Ue KFS Fe t in the Northwest Y Olive Roberts Bart rv | ) \ | BY VINGIE E, ROE LS no a __ Copyright, 1928, Dustield & Co) neo NO, 1~THE HOUSE THAT JACK BUIL' whey en SYNOPSIS s the hones best Hy good ¢ y, ‘ oO | ; ‘ ¢) | ) > eomte- nd xt 4 me F H { q f , Soa meee PUM : € Ly ' t CHAPTER XVI . pine The Ancient Miracle f f f 1 of I ie At has mare ower at / Perfectly asteurtved t 4 2 Litt Heave Dan Jack ‘ b A \ ‘ee Sr o> tre a MILK AND CREAM : sa a a ie TheTangle C . hha ak «uh fh nwith | "Pipotn Hill s "LETTER PROM LESLIE PRES | Ry uy t fn tithe tales lencene es} . cOTT TO THE GAY LITTLE | od : - sieneun eleti Se eae hence eer cena’ Mmeened | ouiallafens THE FAIRY QUEE MARQUISE, CARE OF THE 5,000 Seattle Homes and in 500 : > the ' steep to t Fo cp nc agalaermaadiad BAR ar ! N 1 SECKET DRAWER, | eattle Stores there is never ANY and kept| And right then, when there At . pen. an 8 CONTINUED tay a QUESTION about the Milk suppl) x lke vete around toward the atrange ! the sidie: | . . 2 ah tue beautify) thidee that had Bee And their absolute trust is surel) oe “eonte f ahoent : Re “eco EX tified by Kristoferson’s wonderful , f Kate|they find ght on t her an t , k record of good service during more : es te : : adh Yi-7 bling aah “dager cal Ba than a quarter of a century. swered : i , read ' e new from below and Sv "rot N J te ft 1 looke ; A . beak pet ae ore - atte, f The unquestionable source of the Milk, © jum ; ager . be T eaine t the price of the Milk, the regularity of n't & Sky Line } sand her butte . ud the delivery, and the high quality of ht! Come quick : hg one ne Sereda every Kristoferson product can be : Petras eeiect int come brought in in ¢ L | afely left to this splendid organiza- £ behind th’ Flang wax up and that he was in <n ; m nase Bare Sammy tion of intelligent Seattle Men and fei et ap ae ee Sn rigphrceelirm sa pcoagagy p things of God h ma Women, backed up by the finest and t Pi Hite eT most modern scientific equipment. ¢ affairs! | hen I put my bout Fried Oysters are so appetizing when properly seasoned. A delicious combination dressing is made of three parts of tomato catsup and one part of the famous LEA&PERRINS SAUCE RED RAS FACE AND HEAD Itched and Burned. Lost Sleep. Cuticura Heals, “ The trouble first started with = red rash that covered my face and head. Later it took the a 7 hd implea that disfigured my face. Vrne” pimples tehed and ‘burned causing continual ecratching, ti the scratching caused eruptions. My hair became lifeless and dry, and I lost sleep at night because of; the irritation, "A friend recommended Cuticure Soap and Ointment so I purchased a9 nd after using four cakes of Caticura Soap and two boxes of Catioure Ointment I was healed.” (Signed) Mise A. &. Dan, 1301 Peery S., Davenport, lows. Use Caticara vo cleet your skin, Semples Tree] Mal. 7 Labor’ Le Try our new 5I . and perhaps Jch his new friend | hed that the gray taking the und he chase the He range Pr ad 7 ing under geed, slid came down like nd, but there t an a J with it, The s iding in allence 1 to Sel meant death | iding his own | and presently | . for a fail 4 capture. waile against the stars, rushing up from the dim dark- | ness below to disappear into It above, | | e wind sang in his ears like a harp. | | It seemed Incredible that the tedt- | ously climbed slope could so | lquickly doscended—Cor he saw the} ithickening shadows of the moun- ltain’s foot racing up toward him, the | |pale gleam of water beyond which meant the river. And then-he heard |what he had been dreading—the p of a rifle, the whine of a ball Line, giving up capture, was |trying for destruction. | It was Provine he felt sure who eld the gun. | He dug in his spurs cruelly and| |the bay responded with a surge of speed which seemed certain death, | |but kept its feet miraculously, Once |more came the snap and whine— lagain—and again—and again—as |fast as the man behind It could pump es rifle. be | And then, just as the bay struck ¢ waters of Nameless with a leap and a , It seemed to Selwood that jthe he ng opened up, that all the} Ifire in the universe flamed in his} | brain. | He swung far out to the left, a |terrible lever of welght to the gal- |lant animal floundering beneath him, | and made the supreme physical effort | of his life to get back into his saddle. His fingers dug into the wet mane like talons, he clawed desperately with his right heel and felt the spur hook. For what reason ho could not have said, he opened hig mouth and} screamed—a hoarse, wild sound, like |tho soul's farewell to its flesh. Per: |haps he thought it was. Sud Provine, sitting his shivering horse where he had drawn {t to a sliding stop on the trail above, delib- erately shoved his gun into its saddlo- straps. “{ guess that’s th’ last of you, my buckko,”’ he gritted, “that's your last ride, damn youl See how you like th’ water.” And he turned back up the slope. At dawn McKane, who slept in the store at Cordova, heard something untoward. It was a rapping that soemed to come from the floor of the porch outside—an odd, irregular stroke, as if the hand that made It was uncertain. He rove, drew on hig pants and |hooking his suspenders over his | ,noulders as he went, opened the front door. A bay horse, gaunt and bedraggled, lgtood at the porch'’s shoulder-high edge, and hanging half out of its . but there | a, vith 3 Visit Our Moovern Mitk PLanr AT 1300 RAINIER AVENUE *: alway 7 7 made the frown habit the frown Lo Sho did tranqui Grocer —or #0 & to th and open face | loven eve pected of t oft 1 v 1 Always there was under the sure Brand to wh Phone BE. 0040 face of her mind th ining ques nd ¥ t 1 awe) Bhe t 2 t What was nd ir to ar and 7 — And always there lurked | at ba n he and | aff fim background the word ut him, this tien wfully.| home. She dep Was it true? Was the child | Ir th 4 one spot of light in the} me with sweet ¢ And if it was true—where | dark f ubles it was the | welcomed everything wht was the mother? child ways his pleading cyes. his for her wi apprecta | A deep and terrible ache seemed t >| sh oa C0 lighten the load] As I have wu r all thru] | these tr take her very bones at this thought—! (Continued in Our Next Teeue) times t the funeral, ——== —==——— ee ——===|1 have marveled at how much the | |heart may bear and yet not break. | | Karl's and Allce’s telegrams were | ke them, Alico’ held a covert re: | nof that no one stopped to con- | sider her feelingn beforo all else. | Karl's wag unselfish kindness person ified. like him, and I knew No Waste—No Failures Mieay TE was) DiS ey See Once Tried—Always Used fevas to Karl ahe would go for sp 1 she would go for spir- | {tual comfort mpat and sincere & | understand tho | h 4 *, Little Ma ise At | the time of my marriage she was not as selfish and arrogant as she Is now, |but ever since she went abroad she jhas seemed to feel that sho has be * leome not only quite the most import: | the most importagt young women in} BAKING POWDER \« t, | TOMORROW; No Kitchen Complete Without It tinued, SALES 2'/, TIMES THOSE OF ANY OTHER BRAND 2) tov is 1101_the fourth patent | | ever issued in this country—has been | |found by the patent office of the de E. A. Service, Inc.) This letter is con-| | | | | MRS. IDA M. COFFMAN otenres F there is one thing more than another a woman dreads, it “ is a surgical operation, and to be told that one is necessary is very disheartening. | partment of the interior. The pat | ent was signed by George) Wushing®| Hospitals are grand institutions, and undoubtedly many op- | of matrices for making printing type. | erations are necessary. However, we have received hundreds of letters from women who have been restored to health by, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound after an operation had been deemed advisable. Every woman who suffers as Mrs, Coffman did naturally wishes to avoid an operation if possible, and the remarkable statements which she makes in her letter will be read with interest by women everywhere. Mrs, Coffman's Letter Follow: SIDELL, ILLINOIS.—"I was a nervous wreck. T uffering from a. pain in my left side which was ne t all time but etimes it was almost unbearable and 1 could not even let\the bed-clothing. rest on my body at night. 1 had been sic seven years but not so badly until the last 18 months. and had bec wn that I cared for nobody and would rather have’ died " do my work without help and the do: 1 would not Vv Made with Milk Sweelened with Honey begged me to take it. V mast deel’ tan veces young >» full of hope, 1 do all my housework and had a large garden will be without the Vegetable Compound In the house and © sirls reach womanhood I shall advise them to teke it"— RD , Sidell, Illinois, Another Operation Avoided nd had threo would be able Compound, en bottles of it and al 0 Wash and I soon gained my health, I women who feel badly and have troubles of all letters nt to me by women."—MRs, GRACE Ihio, Before Submitting to an operation Women should try Lydia E. Pinkham's Ve getable Compound LYDIA ES PINKHAM MEDICINE CQ. LYNN, MASS, difference in. bre doctors. They in bread y better, My week's. of the ne about the L: Kham's Ve. wan to feel better, It Pills and used your Sanative your medicines to nd T will answe , 270 Valley Str Liver B. GILLE: ‘ That’s what has made CREAM CRUST the popular loaf. It’s made with milk and sweetened with honey—you’ll like Cream Crust Bread. Your Grocer Has It WASHINGTON BAKERIES |yaddle, held only by the right spur willl caught ip the balr clnch und