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Smart for School
or Work in Office
PATTER* 20S5
When a girl leaves the house be
fore nine every morning, whether
she’s off to school or to work, she
needs at least one well-tailored frock
In her wardrobe, one that will take
her smartly through long busy hours
and bring her home at night looking
as freshly dressed as when she start¬
ed. Designed along tailored lines,
this frock adds • becoming “little
hoy” collar to its youthful yoke arid
tops Its smart front bodice pleats
with buttoned down tabs that look
for all the world like two perk’
little pockets. The skirt boasts a
panel In front which ends la two
Inverted pleats, and there Is another
Inverted pleat at the back. The full
back gathered to the yoke Is the lasr
word In cliie.
Pattern 2085 Is available oply In
sizes 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18. Size
16 takes 2% yards 64 Inch fabric.
Illustrated step-by-step sewing In
structlons Included.
Send FIFTEEN CENTS 15c) ft
coins or stamps (coins preferred) f«i
this pattern. Write plainly name
address and style number. BE SURJ.
TO STATE SIZE.
Address orders to Sewing OIrcH
Pattern Department, 243 West Seven
teenth Street, New York City.
HIS VIEW
Blinks—What do you think of thh
home loan plan?
Jinks—Not needed. Why bothei
about having a home any more when
you can’t keep any of the family It
It as long us there Is gas enough li
the tank of the oar to get away
from It?—Cincinnati Enquirer.
A Saving Idea
Itohert, eight, had prayed long and
ardently for a baby sister but with¬
out results. One night tie added:
“If you have a baby almost fin¬
ished don’t wait to put In the ton¬
sils and adenoids, ’cause they'll cut
’em out anyway."
Explained
“l’ou say you have dm on a ca>
ten years m.d never had any trouble
with a back seat driver?”
"That’s right. You see I drkie a
hearse.”
HILLTOPS CLEAR
By EMILIE LORING
Copyright by The Penn Publishing Co. WNTJ Service,
SYNOPSIS
Prudence Schuyler comes to Prosper¬
ity Farm to make a new life for her¬
self and her brother, David, h:s health
broken by tragedy. The second day
on her farm Prue falls from the barn
loft into the arms of Rodney Gerard,
rich young man, a neighbor. There Is
*t once a mutual attraction, but Pru¬
dence suspects men since her sister's
husband ran away with her brother's
wife. Len Calloway tries to buy Prue’s
timber, but she contracts with Rod to
dispose of the trees. David comes to
the farm. Prue accompanies Rod and
Jean, Rod’s thirteen-year-old niece, to
a circus. Chicot, an old clown, is ac¬
cidentally killed. He was the grand¬
father of Milly Gooch, one of the cir¬
cus riders. Rod became friendly with
Milly when she lived on Prosperity
Farm. Calloway intimidates laborers so
that they cannot be hired to cut the
timber for Rodney Gerard Milly Gooch
broke her engagement to Calloway; he
believes Rod was the cause and has
since been his enemy. After Chicot's
death Rod calls on Milly to see if he
can be of any help. Prue sees iri a
newspaper a flashlight picture of him
with Milly. Rodney goes to New York
for timber cutters, taking David with
him to help select men from among
the Rescue Mission hangers-on. Rod
sends word of his coming, with a crew
of laborers.
CHAPTER VIII—Continued
— 12 —
“Light the lamp, Jean," Bald I’ru
dence.
Jane Mack clutched her shoulder.
“No! No! The convict might see ana
s-s-shoot. I know folks.”
“Pull yourself together. Wait till
I’ve drawn the hangings, Jean.”
“Don’t go near those windows, Miss
Prue.”
“Nonsense, Macky. All right, Jean.
Light the lamp,"
Spooky shadows cast hy the waver¬
ing flashlight skulked into corners us
a soft glow suffused the room.
“That’s better. The light will send
your bad dream hustling, Macky. Sit
down and tell us what happened.’*
Jane Mack twisted Iter bony hands.
Jean, in her candy-striped pajamas,
put her arm about I'rue’s waist. The
woman sniffed.
"You two girls think I’ve had a
dream, don’t you? Well, I haven’t, I
was just getting Into bed—I thought I
heard a door creak down here. I stole
down quietly. I didn’t want to scare
you. I tip toed to this door. A man
was flashing a Might over that!” She
pointed a blanched finger toward the
safe. “You’d left it unlocked.
"I knew In a minute ’twas the es¬
caped prisoner I’d ’been expecting. I
guess I gurgled. He pulled his hat
lower over his eyes. Pointed his light
straight at my face, so I couldn't see
anything.
“ ‘Got you covered. Make a s-s
sound, woman, an’ I’ll s-s-shoot 1” he
hissed.”
Prudence's eyes widened with In¬
credulity. Could this vibrant, dramatic
woman be the taciturn, dour spinster
who cooked and scrubbed for her every¬
day?
Jane Mack swallowed hard. "All I
could think of was the money you had
tied up In those jewels, Miss Prue, an'
what ’tvvouhl mean If you lost them.
What was this old body of mine good
for, anyway? So I yelled."
“I’ll say you yelled. Then what did
>he man do?" Jean ‘demanded. “Did
he shoot?”
“If he did, l didn't know it."
"Perhaps he sneaked In to look
around because he was born here or his
father died here; we haven’t had one
of those old-timers drop in on us for a
week.”
Jane Mack sniffed. “Better look and
see If the ’old-timer’ got any of your
jewels.” Macky.
“Never mind the jewels, 1
deserve to lose them for forgetting to
close the safe. Sure you are not
hurt ?’’
“Sure, Miss Prue.”
Jean was on her knees before the
safe frantically examining the white
packets when Prudence reached it.
She looked up with frightened eyes.
“Gone!" she whispered.
“What’s gone?"
“The emerald and diamonds!”
• **•**•
“You ought to set the sheriff after
that convict,” Jane Mack insisted tor
the third time the next afternoon.
At the kitchen table Prudence was
snipping the stems of the roses before
placing them in vases of fresh water.
Impulsively she put an arin about
Jean's shoulder and hugged her as the
child drew a long, hard breath. She
knew what she was thinking, knew
lliat she was remembering the look in
her father’s eyes as he had asked if
the jewels were kept in the house. Of
course, Walter Gerard had not stolen
the gems, he wouldn't fall so low as
that, but—
“111 wait until Mr. David comes.
Macky. He will be here so soon that
we had better consult him before we
enter complaint.”
“Well, of course. If you can afford
to lose that emerald and the dia¬
monds, Miss Prue, It's up to you. If
you'd seen what 1 saw in my teacup
this morning—" With a sniff Jane
Mack disappeared into the pantry.
...**•*
Snug in fur coats, red beret and
green beret making brilliant spots of
color in the gray day. Prudence, with
Jean, hacked the cart ou» of the shed.
CLEVELAND COURIER
They were too early for the train.
In the village they indulged lavishly In
ice-cream cones, and still the minutes
lagged.
“Let’s drive out the pond road a
little way, Jean.”
Prue’s thoughts wandered. Why had
Dave decided to stay at High Ledges?
It would make it awkward for her. Of
course, she would want to see Dave
daily; equally, of course, distrusting
Uodney Gerard as she did, she couldn’t
go to High Ledges.
Rodney ! She had wondered if Callo
way had forged that letter about the
check. After Jean's revelation about
the photograph she had found in her
uncle’s desk, how could she doubt a4y
more? Walter Gerard had been -right
the unfinished word was love, Of
course. “Flitting from'flower to /Tow¬
er”! Mrs. Walt had been right, too,
her brother-in-law was unreliable. He
was the type of man Julie had mar¬
ried.
She must put the Gerards out of her
mind. They were becoming an obses¬
sion. Her own affairs needed all her
attention. .Who had stolen the jewels?
The escaped convict? She did not be¬
lieve it any more than she believed
that Walter Gerard was the thief.
“Here comes Mr. Calloway In that
snappy red car of bis.”
Jean’s excited whisper set Prue’s
pulses quickstepping. Calloway on his
way to the village! How soon was the
train due? She pushed back her glove.
Maddening. She had forgotten her
wrist watch. Jim Armstrong had said :
“I wish Calloway might be provi¬
dentially called out of town an hour or
so before that train arrives.”
Evidently Providence was busy else¬
where. Could she stop him? “Suc
cess" was in line with the pasture bars
from which a path—now a mere
shadow under the snow—led uphill to
the southerly boundary of her prop¬
erty, The Hundreds. That gave her
ati Idea. She would ask him to show
her the trees he wanted to cut. It
would he adventure with a capital A
to lead him off the scent, and she
loved adventure. She gripped Jean’s
arm.
“Stop a minute I Drive the car
home, K. K. Don’t go to the village.
At the crossroads take the turn to the
right; that will bring you to the back
of the red brick house.”
“What’s the big idea?"
“I'll ask Len Calloway to show me
where he wants to cut. If he con¬
sents, I will keep him away from the
village until the new gang is at High
Ledges.
“Good afternoon, Mr. Calloway.”
Prudence acknowledged the sweep of
the dark-eyed man's ten-gallon hat
with gay friendliness. "This Is a clear
case of thought transference. I sup¬
pose seeing that path to The Hun¬
dreds brought you to my mind, I hate
quarreling with my neighbors, It’s so
—so tenement-housey. Can’t we arbi¬
trate? Perhaps when you have time
you'll tramp over the land with me
and show me what to cut—but I’m
detaining you. Drive on, Jean.”
“Jnst a minute!" Calloway’s near
set eyes were triumphant. “What’s
the matter with now. Miss Schuyler?
My business at the village can wait.
What say If we take that tramp now?
This snow won’t amount to much."
Prudence smiled the most radiant
smile in her not limited repertoire.
“I’m all for It, if you are, Mr. Callo¬
way. I'm the original ‘Do-it-now’ girl.”
She looked intently at Jean. “Walt
here, won’t you, K. K. I-’’
“Don't have the kid wait. I'll take
you home, Miss Schuyler.”
“That would help. Drive very care¬
fully, Jean, and straight home, remem¬
ber. Tell Miss Mack that .Mr. Callo¬
way is personally conducting me over
The Hundreds. Go out to the barn
and tell Mr. Si. He and I were plan¬
ning to set an incubator this after¬
noon, 'but that can wait.” Having
posted which two sentinels on the
ramparts of protection, she stepped
over the bars that Calloway lowered.
Why didn’t the man speak? He was
leading the way along the snowy path.
Woods stretched endlessly ahead,
dense, dark, dismal. She didn’t for an
instant doubt Calloway's respectability,
but she had a shivery sense of re
pressed fury smoldering under his
I urbanity.
"Here we are!” Calloway stopped
to brush the snow from the top of a
granite boulder. “See that B cut In the
stone? It marks the southeastern cor¬
ner of the tract your uncle purchased
from my father. Here's a trail.
We'll go in a little way so that you
can see the quality of the timber.”
“All sweetness and light again, aren't
you?" Prudence mentally addressed his
straight back as she followed him. He
paused and turned.
‘Sorry to have made trouble for you
about your timber. Miss Schuyler, hut
when 1 say I'll put a thing through. 1
do it. no matter what the consequences
may be to anyone else.”
Prudence looked up at hint. Wist¬
fulness was entirely out of her line,
hut she did her best with voice and
eyes.
“Suppose—suppose—is it too late to
change my mind and let you—”
The shrill whistle of a locomotive
shattered the silence. The train had
arrived! In a moment or two the
gang would be on its way to High
Ledges, and Calloway was here! Pru¬
dence lowered her lids. She felt as If
her eyes were twinkling stars of
triumph.
“Suppose I agreed to let you cut my
timber, would you still try to, stop
Uodney Gerard?”
Calloway, who had started on again,
turned. Prudence stopped so as better
to preserve the distance between them.
His massive figure blocked the trail
where it divided and ran east and
west.
“Do you mean that you’ll chuck Rod
Gerard and give me the contract to
cut? Do you mean that?”
His eyes burned red as he hurled
the question. Perhaps it was the
shadow of his theatrical hat that gave
the effect. Whatever the cause, she
didn’t like It, Prudence told herself.
She would hack track as soon as she
was sure the men were well away
f row the village.
“Can't a girl change her mind?”
Calloway’s eyes flamed. He caught
her shoulder. She shook off his hand.
“Don’t!”
“Sorry. I didn’t mean any harm.
Miss Schuyler. Say listen, I’m a just
mau, but I don't stop at anything, get
me, anything when I’ve been double
crossed. I’ll pay Rodney Gerard for
interfering in my affairs—it goes back
long before he thought of cutting tim¬
ber—If I never do anything else in my
life, hut I don’t want a fight with you.
I’m crazy about you. Marry me, and
I’ll cut your logs, sell them, and turn
the money over to you. You can have
your own bank account.”
“Oh, c-can I! You don't r-really
mean It? Your romantic attack of the
subject thrills me.”
She must not chuckle like that, and
She had better cut out sarcasm, she
Prudence Darted Along the Trail
Which Turned Sharply East.
warned herself. How long since the
whistle had blown? She hated the
eyes looking down at her. He was
coming nearer. Perhaps he was a
little mad. Vlolent-tempered people
sometimes ended that way. Should
she make a break into the woods. Of
course, Calloway would follow, and
somehow she would elude him. She
couldn't get lost.
“Well?”
"Really, Mr.—Len—you've surprised
me so that I'm all Jittery.”
Her laugh made no dent In his glow¬
ering regard.
“Pm not In the habit of snapping
up an offer of a heart and hand. You
must allow me time to think.” She
pushed back the sleeve of her cardi¬
gan. “My word! Have I dropped
my wrist watch? I must go back.
David pave it to me and I wouldn't
lose It for all the timber in the world.
Please help me hunt for it.”
Her suggestion roused opposition, as
she had hoped it would.
“We’re going on. Looking the lay¬
out over was your idea. Don’t be a
quitter. I’ve got you here; you’ll stay.
Ptl go back for the watch. I can find
it quicker alone. Wait here.”
Taking compliance for granted, he
stalked back. As he disappeared
around a bend. Prudence darted along
the trail which turned sharply east.
She went on cautiously looking for
the blaze on trees. No sign of human
occupation. She stopped to listen.
Was Callowny following? Did he think
her a quitter? She wasn’t. She was,
to use a favorite legal term of David’s,
merely “in the exercise of due care.’’
while she diverted his attention from
the village.
The trees thinned. What was that
sound? A brook ! She couldn’t be far
from home if It was the stream which
crossed her lower meadow. She
climbed a high bank, drew a long,
ragged breath of relief. No danger of
being lost now. She had her bear
ings.
“Hulloa 1 Hul-lo—o—!’’
Calloway shouting. A thin gray fog
of doubt dimmed her satisfaction in
the success of her role of Providence
Perhaps luc idea hadn’t been such a
knockout tfter all. She had better
get home. The trail on the other side.
LIKE
must produce
LIKE
The first step in raising
prize-winning stock is the
careful selection of parents
, . . sires and dams whose
characteristics have been
determined through many
generations of perfect sires law
and dams. The same
applies in the vegetable
kingdom. The Ferry’s
Purebred Vegetable Seeds the
you buy this year are
children of generations of
perfect plants. They will
grow true to firmly estab¬
lished characteristics of
size, color, tenderness and
flavor.
Vo;ua NDGHBqWooJ
Rustian Inefficiency
The Russian army was so poorly
equipped In 1915-16 that unarmed
men had to be sent Into the trenches
to wait until their comrades were
killed or wounded and their rlflei
become available.
Quick, Safe Re! ef
For Eves Irritated
By Fxoosure
To Sun, Wind
onri Dus* —
/' EVES
Aluminum Plentiful
The most abundant metallic el»
ment in the earth’s crust Is alumi¬
num.
Relieves Sluggish Feeling
Night or day, -when you first begin
to feel sluggish and need something
to straighten out your bowels (to
relieve constipation)—take a dose
of reliable Thedford’s Black-Draught.
“We take Black-Draught for bili¬
ousness, constipation and any bad
feeling that comes from these con¬
ditions,” writes Mrs. Luvena Owens,
of Springer, Okla. “Black-Draught
cleans the system and makes me fed
much better after taking it.”
Freshen up by taking this purely
vegetable laxative, if you have a tend¬
ency to constipation or sluggishness.
THEDFORD’S BLACK-DRAUGHT
Skin Torment
Cracking. Ifchin^,roughness. easily relieved
and improved witti
Resmol soothing
NEED BUILDING-UP?
Mrs. T. E. Adams of
1205 No. FranJclin St., Plant
City, Fla., said: “I was of in
such a weakened state
health I could scarcely stand
on my feet. I suffer’d from
lose of appetite, and 1 was as
miserable as could be—did
not feel like lifting my hand
to do anything. But
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery soon
had me feeling fine—my appetite returned. I
gained in weight and strength and was able
to attend to my household duties without
feeling all worn-out.” A11 druggists.
ition: reduces swelling; lessens
tension; quickly heals. Relieve these
painful, unsightly conditions with pow¬
erfully medicated CARBOIL. Results
guaranteed. At your druggist, or writ#
Spuriock-Neal Co., Nashville, Tenn.
WNU—7 35—35
FEEL TIRED, ACHV
“ALL WORN OUT?”
Get Rid of Poisons That
Make You 111
TS a constant backache keeping
-•■you miserable? Do you suffer
burning, scanty or too frequent
urination; attacks of dizziness,
rheumatic pains, swollen feet and
ankles? Do you feel tired, nervous
—all unstrung?
Then give some thought to your
kidneys. Be sure they function
properly, for functional kidney dis¬
order permits poisons to stay in
the blood and upset the whole sys¬
tem.
Use Doan’s Pills. Doan’s are for
the kidneys only-. They help the
kidneys cleanse the blood of health
destroying poisonous waste. recommended Doan’s
Pills are used and
the world over. Get them from any
druggist.
DOAN’S PILLS
a little way down stream, looked fa¬
miliar. She would wade to that.
Zowie, the water was Icy. She
slipped on slimy, concealed rocks,
splashed through pebbly shallows,
plunged into a good pool.
“I’ll bet I gave the trout the thrill
of their lives,” she said aloud, as she
pulled herself up by shrubs to the
bank. A fresh blaze! She had seen
Jim Armstrong slash It. She was on
the home trail now! Better rest for a
moment.
“Hullo—o—o!”
The call set her nerves vibrating. It
didn’t frighten her, but she didn’t like
it. It was too near. The woods seemed
to be closing in on her. She hated the
feeling. She couldn't be mistaken about
this trail. She was sure that she had
been on It before. She must get into
the open. She was freezing.
She ran as swiftly as clutching
bushes and treacherous tree roots per¬
mitted. Her cold, wet skirts lashed
her knees; her teeth chattered. How
long could she keep this pace? Darn!
What fiend had looped that root across
the trail? She picked herself up.
Oocb! What a lump! Lucky she had
struck in the middle of her forehead,
not under her eyes.
What was that? Was she just see¬
ing things, or was it—it was a log
cabin! She had been following the
freshly blazed trail to her cabin In¬
stead of one to the clearing! What
difference did It make? There was a
chimney. She could get warm.
She stumbled toward it. Threw
herself against the door. It opened!
The breaks were with her! She plunged
in. Lost her balance. Some one
caught her.
She stared unbelievingly. Closed
her eyes. Opened them. She was
awake. Every hard-drawn breath had
been wasted; every step she had run,
every fall had been futile. Callo¬
way’s down at furious, her. triumphant eyes blazed J
CHAPTER IX
Sudden, uncontrollable panic shook
Prudence. In the tense silence she
stared up Into Calloway's Inscrutable
face.
“Thought you’d double-cross me,
didn’t you? There are several trails
to this cabin.”
At his harsh voice her mind and
courage sprang to arms.
“My cabin, Isn't It? I had no idea It
was so—so luxurious."
She forced her eyes to move slowly,
as If appraisingly from the antlers
over the fireplace to the water bucket
on the bench hy the door, on to the
wood pile near the hearth with an
ax leaning again it. That ax—she
looked away quickly. Calloway must
not suspect that It had seemed like
meeting an unexpected friend.
“Rather nice. I came here the other
day with Jim Armstrong, but we didn't
come in.”
She was talking against time. Sure¬
ly Jean must have reached the red
brick house by this time. Must have
told someone where she Was.
“Better sit down.” Calloway sug¬
gested with sickening suavity. Ha
pushed forward a wooden chair.
“Thank you. I prefer to stand
here.” Prudence caught hold of the
great shelf of rock, which served as
a mantel, with a grip which turned
her nails white.
“Suit yourself. When you beat It,
I figured that any path you’d take
would lead here. I took a short cut
and started the fire. There were red
coals; someone’s been using the place.
Sorry 1 can’t provide a lamp, 't’s get¬
ting dark outside.”
If Prudence had distrusted the tue-n
back on the trail, she hated him now
hated his mocking smile to which the
flickering light gave a Satanic twist
She took a step forward.
“Then vve had better start home at
once. I’m wet and e-cold."
In one move he was between he*
and the door.
TO BE CONTINUED.
Dutch Guiana Once Was
Closely Related to U. S.
Surinam, or Dutch Guiana as It i»
usually called, was very closely relat¬
ed to the United States in one period
of the latter’s history, says a writer
in the Chicago Tribune. At the Treaty
of Breda. 1667, the British ceded Sari
nam to the government of the Nether¬
lands as a partial payment for having
seized New Netherland from the Dutch
a few years before. Had this exchange
not been made, and had the Dutch
been confirmed by treaty In their pos¬
session of what is now New York, the
United States might never have exist¬
ed, since the most active agitators for
a separation from England would have
been divided by a foreign territory.
New England would have been
quickly subdued, and the other col
inies intimidatnd. The map of Amer¬
ica might still show the Spanish col
onies of Florida, Mexico, Texas, anc
California; the French in possessior
of the Mississippi valley, and the Brit¬
ish as far south as the Columbia rivei
on the Pacific coast. Perhaps, there
■■ore, the United States may be grate¬
ful that there was an English claim to
territory in Guiana, which could b«
traded to the Dutch for her ckilsa at
New York.