Newspaper Page Text
Be Sure to Think Well Before You Act, but, Having Made Sure You Are Right, Let Nothing Turn You From Your Course
D ”
Rolling Stones A
Story of To-day
By ANN LISLE.
INovelisad from the play br Edger
Setwyn, now rusning &t the Harris
Wheater Copyright, 105 by lsterns
tenal News Nervice, sole owner of se
rinl rights )
(Continued From Saturday.)
*Well. .7 you feel that way about i,
why didnt you say something be
fore™ demanded Dmve
“Necause | never realised what we
were doing until | saw that fellow at
the safe. Lot's leave the money there
and take our chances the other way "
“You know what those chances are,
dont you™ demanded Dave “We'll
Be put in fafl that's what”
“I'll take my medicine” sald Puck,
Quietly
"Well it')] be a place to sleep, and
they'll have to feed um, anyway,”
eried Dave with a certaln youthful
lght-heartedness that made him very
Jovable in spite of his fallings
“Are you game, Dave® Are you
willing to take your medicine, toon?
Are you willing to fight it out on the
chance that they may see it our way
in the end™
Anna Appears at a
Prychological Moment.
“1 am if you are” sald Dave
“Then let's get out of here while
we have the chance”
t this moment the dark room wWas
flooded with light. It occurred to both
of the young culprits that the hour of
yeckoning had come now —instead of
in the morning. For one of them It
had indeed come—the hour of his
most serious reckoning. For Buchan
an Ryder turned to face the girl he
toved.
“How did you know we were here™
he gasped.
“f waited for you at the house and
you didn’t come, »o | knew you must
be here,” sald Anna coldly. This final
felony she felt she never could for
give—actual thieving was »o base and
contemptible in her eyes—there was
mothing about it of a lofty and daring
dealing with Fate--it was just a blow
in the dark, the sort of thing the low
est criminal might contrive. Buck
felt himself judged in her tone—
Judged and condemned, and he hard
ly knew how to speak a word in his
own defenve.
“Mr. Hraden and 1 ran down to get
some things,” he sald at last, un
easily.
. “That's not Mr. Braden™ replied
Anna.
“You know?" gasped Ryder.
~ “Pl've known all along.”
“You won't give us away, Miss An.
derson™ cried Dave.
~ The gir! ignored him. For her he
Pardly existed. The matter was a
problem in which she and Ryder alone
El'-o concerned.
~ “I didn’t believe it, because Ididn’t
want to believe it; but you are a
M after all”
~ “No, no, Anna; we didn't do that!”
cried Buck, following her glance at
5" shattered safe. “It was a bur-
W. but he got away from us.”
~ Anna smiled at the futile absurdity
~ "Oh, don't lie to me any more!” she
#ald, wearily.
;; “I'm telling you the truth.,”
. “You're taking the money Mr.
Strawbridge put in that safe.”
. “We haven't touched it. It's still
1 You can see for yourself,” sald
Ryder, a strange feeling of gladness
that this should be so coloring his
x for a moment.
~ “Then why did you come?” demand
ed the girl.
~ Ryder straightened up and looked
at her longingly. To be a man, to love
such a girl as Anna Anderson, and to
have to stand arguing with her coldly
about his own probity, was torture,
when all he wanted was just to take
her In his arms and to beg of her,
“Love me, little girl, and trust me—
M you do I'll be worthy of you.”
~ But with an efficient young businsss
n like Anna there could be no
ap to the emotions. Ryder knew
now he was at the bar of justice
o her calm mind and that it was that
e must now address and not the
";# m, pulsing sweetness of her wom
anhood. For the present Anna chose
%0 ignore the fact that she was a
woman and loved-—so Ryder knew he
Safe 7Ntk
for
Infants asd Invalids
HORLICK’S
THE ORIGINAL
TheFood-PrinkforallAges
Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form.
orinfants,invalids andgrowing children.
nutrition,upbuilding thewholebody.
esnursing mothersand theaged.
hful than tea or coffee.
y “HORLIOK'S”
: a Substitute.
must ignore 11, ton Me answersd
now with heevity and precision
“We came to got my salary, that's
&l It's due to-morrow and we nesd.
od It to-night. Put we realised tht
It was wrong to take it that way after
we began 1o compare our intentions
with those of the burglar who blew
open the safe We were Just going to
jsave O I know It looks rotten,
but please don't Judge us before you
know the whole story. I'm ready te
tell 1t to you whenever you give me
the chance™
“1 know everything and that's why
1 came. | wanted to be sure you de
colved me from the start. T bellevel
you against my own jadgment. But I
can't believe you against the evidence
befors my eyea And now 1 don™
want to ses or hear from you ever
again™
“Oh, you're all wrong, Anna. You
must give me & chancenot now, per
haps, but you will give me a chance
some time, won't you?™
Anna tried to say no, but her lips
formed a yes She knew that she
could act to Buck as if she were mers-
Iy his stern judge. But she knew, t»,
that though it wrecked her whole life,
‘wome day she must o to him even If
he came to her from prison bars,
“What's that T gasped Mr. Fulton,
who was politely trying to focus his
attention elsewhere so as not to hear
the conversation in which he had no
part,
“T'he police,” sald Anna, quietly.
“They were sent for”
“Good Lord. If they find us hers
with that safe blown open™ cried
Buck.
“They will think we did it” sald
Fulton, quletly.
Suddenly Buck realized that if Anna
were found with them she would be
thought an accomplice. Of whatever
evil she suspected him, of whatever
evil he knew himself capable, this, too,
he knew: that he could never allow
her to suffer for his wrongdoing or
even because she knew him. |
So now, in spite of her protesta
tions, he forced her to the door thut
led to the outer offices of the factory.
Then he switched off the lights, and
he and Dave dropped down in hiding
behind their bulwark of the desks,
The door opened and Jap Walter
entered. In one quick motion he
pressed on the electric lights and
dashed acrbss the room to the
wrecked safe—~then he reached in
and took out the packages of bills
which had lain there undisturbed un
til now.
As he started to put it in his pocket
Buck Ryder leaped from behind the’
desk In the throes of a sudden flare
of imagination quite similar to the
one that had Inspired him to call Ful.
ton “Braden” on the night when his
outraged landlady had\discovered him
feeding that chance acquaintance otl
the North Clark Street Bridge. This
seemed 10 be a popular evening for
would-be burglars.
“Put that money back,” shouted
Ryder. “Put that money back, do you
hear?"
The Tables Are Very
Suddenly Turned.
Walter turned in amazement and
then slipped the money into his coat
pocket.
“What are you feilows doing here?”
“Never mind what we're doing here.
We've caught you with the goods,”
retorted Ryder. |
“You've caught me! 1 llke that—
when 1 find you fellows hiding and
the safe blown open.” |
~ “We didn't blow the safe,” announc
ed Dave.
1’ “You'll have a hard Job proving
that,” said Walter.
' “We don't have to prove anything,”
‘said Ryder calmly. “You're the one
‘who's in bad. 1 Knew that woman
‘would get you into trouble.”
“What woman?" asked Walter
‘amazedly,
Ryder began to grasp some part of
‘Nlton'- idea, “That woman at the
Raleigh. Remember what 1 sald
about her, Buck?"
“We're sorry for you, Walter, be
cause we know you were tempted.
Put that money back and we'll give
you another chance,” sall Buck.
“Don't make me laugh.”
“You won't."
“Certainly not. You want me to let
it g 0 so you can grab it yourself.
I'm on to you both. That's what you
came here for. I've got a right to
this money and I'm going to hang on
to it. And in the morning I'll have
you fellows up for burglary.”
With jaunty coldbloodedness Walter
started for the center door, and even
as he advanced toward it, the sound
of a police whistle was heard, followed
by the quick shuffle of feet running
down the hall.
“Grab him, Dave!” cried Buck, act
ing his part along the lines of the
inspiration that had come to him a
‘moment before.
~ With right good will the partners
lniud Jap, and even while he was
struggling the door burst open and
the voice of the officer was heard de
manding, “Put up your hands—all of
you! The whole gang, eh? Welb this
is some haul. A clean blow, eh?" 1
(To Be Continued.)
“Country Club” Suit Latest Model of Dress for Urban Occastons
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Broaddoth and Velour de Laine Are Favorite Fabrics for Early Season White Costumes for Out-of-Town Wear—Upkeep Costly
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Developed in emerald green velvet mx..g@:m‘;‘:w°.. "
e y bove ) ts beaut [ T'he scarf-collar of ademi-tailleu
an evening gown abore Ads 18 Deauty tnd how the !I."' wearing ',,,"q wets where once the ankle watch was |of brown wool velour lends distine
enhanced by metallic embroideries the thing la chic. 'tion.
By GERMAIN GAUTIER.
URING the last few weeks a
D good many white cloth suits
have been advanced for wear
out of town, as well as for urban oc
casions. Broadcloth and velour de
laine are among the fabrics favored
for the white costume, and since they
form a splendid background for the
application of dark fur and braids
they are likely to have a very good
vogue right through the winter.
The exploitation of the white tail
leur comes a little earlier this seas>
than formerly. Hertofore it has been
Ireserved for introduction immediately
after the holidays, when fashionable
women are generally considering the
’couectlng of a demi-season wardrobe
for wear in Southern resorts.
Of course, there are any number of
women who have neither the opportu
nity nor the inclination to spend
weeks or months at the smart ren
dezvous of the leisure class, but al
ways they are interested to Kknow
what 1s going on in the way of clothes
preparation, because a good many of
the models of the midwinter period
frequently become the standard styles
for the spring.
The white suit is not to be advo
cated for the woman who can not
complacently face the dry cleaner's
bill at pretty regular intervals. It
is a sartorial offense tb wear white
garments that bertay the least bit of
soil. One can not clean white clothes
at home, and so it is better not to
possess them at all unfss one knows
In advance that she can afford not
only the inital purchase but the up
keep thereafter.
Natural muskrat is being used to
trim the white cloth suit. The fur .3
really quite unattractive in itself, and
always before the present season it
has been dyed and known generaily
as Hudson seal, being one of the best
and most satisfactory imitations of
genuine sealskin, However, now that
there are dyeing and dressing prob
lems to be reckoned with in the fur
world, many pecltries that never ha:d
the courage to come forward under
their own names have been given a
foremost rank, and have, indeed, meat
with astonishing favor.
A suit that i{s a very good exampie
of the sort of model in vogue just
now is known as the “country club”
sult. It is of fine white cloth with a
‘satin finish, and is made with a flar
ing skirt, topped by a circular tunle,
‘whk‘h is in reality an extension of the
‘blouse coat. The fur bands are of
‘sealskin and the girdle of heavy white
silk cord Is tipped with sealskin pen
‘dants. The collar is of seal and is
‘raised high about the neck In the
‘modish funnel effect.
- In the dark colprs, brown is ox
tremely popular. Some of the most
recent models introduce a cutawaiy
coat fashloned, however, on ripple
lines that make it totally unlike its
cutaway predecessor of two or three
seasons back. A new model of brown
wool velour shows embroideries of
gold threads and brown floss on the
demi-belt. The collar is interesting
because it gets away from the choker
lines and indicates a scarf effect,
which may be thrown back or fast
ened snugly under the chin. The fur
is of brown fox.
Everyone feels that she must ac
quire a separate coat for wear with
the separate street dress or to top the
informal afternoon or evening frock.
An exceedingly smart model that will
recommend itself to the woman of
sound sartorial judgment is made of
navy blue cloth. The lines are semi
fitting and the feature of the model
is the slash arrangements of the
pockets on either side of the front
above the waistline. These pockets
are decorated with buttonholes which
are trimmed with dahlia-colored vel
vet, forming a striking contrast with
the white buttons.
What Is a Day?
A day is generally supposed to be a
period of 24 hours, but thig is not nec
essarily so. The period of the sun's
position above the horizon also consti
tutes a day.
The actual measure of time covered
by a day as we know it is 23 hours, 56
minutes and 5 seconds.
In some parts of Norway the day
lasts two whole months without inter
ruption! Three and a half months
constitutes the period of the longest
day in Spitzbergen, while the short
zst only registers two and a half
ours! That is, judging the actual
period of light, which would be the
natural day.
Petrograd's longest day is nineteen
hours and the shortest five. At Ham
burg the longest is seventeen and the
shortest seven 4
. Sideligh
g idelights on
- the Famous
)
B PP A A AL AP A
ING ALFONSO has a private
K museum containing all the ob
jects which have placed his life
in danger, from a large glass vase
which fell and nearly killed him when
a child to pieces of the bomb thrown
at him in Barcelona, and a fragment
of the landau in which he was seated
with President Loubet when his as
sassination was attempted in Paris,
e ¢ .0
M. Poincare has a collection of
books on antique furniture that is re
putedly wortix $50,000. There are T7,-
000 books in the collection, some worth
no more than a shilling and others
hundreds of pounds.
. o
King Victor Emmanuel always
carries his camera on his frequent
trips along the fighting line, He is
the only Italian whose war pictures
have not to be submitted to the cen
sor. y
The Better Course.
Bindleton—That man invariably
agrees with what I say.
Bowles—Rather complimentary.
Bindleton—Not at all! He would rath
er agree with me than pay attention to
what I am saying’'
3
’ )
:-: Which :-
g o™e IC * 3
{
! {
By JANE M'LEAN.
Y mother says, “Now Bobby,
M dear,
When you go out to play,
Don’t soil that nice clean linen suit,
And don't go far away.
Don’t get that awfu! Freddy Jones
To help you tie a can
To poor old Towser's battered tail,
But learn tc be a man.”
My father says, “Hello, my son,
You're too good to be true;
Why don't you get those curls cut off
Like other fellows do?
You'll have to lick the neighborhood,
And be a baseball fan,
With grubby fists like Freddy Jones,
To learn to be a man.” 1
. Some Tongue Twisters, |
Do you want some very good tongue
exercise? You can get it by reading or
attempting to read rapidly the follow
ing sentences:
“Six little thistle sticks."”
“Flesh of freshly fried fish.,”
“Two toads, totally tired, tried to trot
to Tedbury.” '
“Glve Grimes Jim's great gilt gig
whip.”
“Strict, strong Stephen Stringer snared
slickly six sickly silky snakes.”
““She stood at the door of Mrs. Smith's
fish sauce shop welcoming him in.”
“Swan swam over the ! sea; swim,
swan, swim: sSwan swam back again;
well swam swan.”
““A haddock, a haddock, a black
spotted haddock, a black spot on the
black back of the black haddock.”
“Susan shineth shoes and socks,
socks and shoes shineth Susan. She
socks and shoes shock Susan."”
You know the tongue-twister Peter
Piper, but there are others which are
harder. One of the worst is ‘“mixed
biscuits.” Try saying that rapidly, and
if you succeed say this: “Stop at the
shop at the top of Sloane street."
'l'Een try saying over and over again
just as fast as you can: ‘‘Six slender
gaplings,” and see if your tongue doesn't
get nicely twisted. : 1
San Francisco confirms your selection
Awarded Gold Medal
Highest Honor for India-Ceylon Teas
San Francisco, 1915
E‘
R dgwgfs /
New York City ea
“SAFE-TEA FIRST" and Always
Awarded Gold Medal, San Franasco, 1915
mmmemme=. At all L. W. Rogers Stores. -
- Why Are
T Alike?
¢
wins Alike
s — ——
{ » .
~ An Interesting Question
i | —
3 .
Whick Puzzles
| Em— B E—————
i »
le\ologuto
|L:“WJM~(’* oPt i
; AVE you ever noticed that twins
| resemble each other in a marked
F dogree?
t In this country and England, there
(are more twins than, for instance, In
NMaly, for Infants in duplicate are not
nearly so common In warm latitudes as
in eold countries. Relatively to popu
lation, twins come inte the world In
Russis three times as often as in Spain
The tendency to produce more than
one child at a dirth runs in families
Triplets In the United States occur
ence In every 7,010 bhirths Onee In
every 371,125 births the proud-—or per
hape indignant—father is informed (hat
his family has been suddenly augment
ed by four simultaneous offsprings
There are In medical history authentic
records of twenty-nine instances In
which quintuplets have been born
Where mere pairs of bables are cog
cerned, they are of the same sex in
two out of three cases “Identical
twins,” however., are always of the
same sex wheither bovs or girls
Physiologists differ as to the reason
why of entical twins. They are un
deniably different from ordinary ones
being in effect one person in duplicate,
and sharing, as it were, & single iden
tity. The same mental, moral, and
physical attributes are common to both
It 1= as if they were halves of one and
the same individual
' Do You Know—
-5 !
A A A A A A
A shell welghing about 70 pounds ex
plodes into a shower of 1,200 pieces
- - -
The “Pritchard Millions'" propert)
which led to the recent raid on a burial
vault in search of documentary evi
dence, & now valued at $20,000.000, and
includes 1,000 acres of freehold land
properties at Rhyl and Abergels, tea
plantations In India, and mineral righie
in Denbighshire and Flintshige.
- - -
Madagascar possesses the only oxen
cavalry regiment in the world. The
climate is g 0 unhealthy for horses that
some substitute had to be found The
oxen have bheen trained to maneuver
with surprising skill, but, of course, are
not speedy.
» ” .
In England any pergon being an un
discharged bankrupt who obtains credit
for £2O or upwards, without disclosing
the fact hat he i 8 an undischarged hank
rupt, iz guilty of a criminal offense,
and is liable to imprisonment
. - <
When frightened, rabbits ‘do not cry
out, but stamp several times on the
ground with their hind feet, making a
sound which can be heard a long wa)
off. 'This is the danger signal to their
fellow-rabbits, who scamper off to safe
ty as fast as they can.
e ——— ———— S —
When you talk about buying ten cents
or one dollar's worth of foodstuff, what
do you mean by “worth?”’ The only meas
ure of genuine worth in the purchase of
eatables must be nutrition. But do you
keep nutrition in mind when you buy the
family provislons? Let us see.
Meat is probably your biggest item.
Yet no less an authority than Dr. Huteh
ison, the dietitian, says that meat is a
dear food. Why? Because we pay far
too much for the amount of nutrition
that we secure. Meat contains 75 per
cent water—think of that when sirloin is
chalked up at 35¢ a pound—three-quar
ters water!
Now, take Faust Spaghetti, made from
Durum wheat, a rich, glutinous cereal.
Of spaghetti and its allied products, the
same authority says that they contain
only 10 per cent water, and these foods
are absorbed almost in their entirety—
go to make blood, muscle and tissue.
Faust Spaghetti costs 10c a large pack
age—nearly all worth,
MAULL BROS,,
st. Louls, U. S. A.
e —————————————————————
Relieves by Inhalation and Absorp
tion—No Stomach Dosing.
Plenty of fresh air in the bedroom
and a good application of Vick's
“Vap-00-Rub” Salve over the throat
and chest is the best defense agalnst
all cold troubles.
The medicated vapors, released by
the body heat, loosen the phlegm,
clear the air passages and soothe the
inflamed membrane. In addition.
Viek’s is absorbed through the skin.
25c, 50c or SI.OO.
e ‘I"‘NU.WI HAS IH!S TRADE ’MRR
VArorRUB'
rour = S ATV
Pneumonia