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V—. - .\ “Y V >*•*»#- . % . >; *••••*•••#- •♦••••#, - I • 1 ...• .ij kv*v*0*u«IV * By MARY it again • . ■ I . ;; . ;v.vij. ■ V- • -v» • H I I zm 3p.-i*w RECOGNIZE VALUE OF BEAUTY lime itl Pape’s Diapepsin ends all Stomach misery in five mirtutel ■*. ■*»* —— — J F A GfRC discovered on the day of *her wedding that the young man about to become her husband was a rake and that he had despoiled one girt and broken her heart, would shete wise if she refuse^ to nfarry him, no matter how deep her love? v V The Trend of the t , Mr. K. LeMnyne becomes a roomer’at the Pape homo, where Sid ney,, her mother, Anna, and' hor oM umidnunt, Harriet, a dressmaker, preside. Through the Influence of Dr. Max Wilson, a successful young’ surgeon, Sidney becomes a probationary nurse at the hospital. Aunt ’Harriet’opens u fashionable' shop dou ntowp and prospers. Christine Lorenz'and Palmer Howe are about to be married* and they are going to take rooms at the Pages’. Sidney is loved by K., by .loe Drummond, a beau attentive from high .-.school days, and hv Doctor Max, who fasci- nutes h**r. At the hospital she begins to- see the Underside of the 3* world. She meets Carlotto Harrison, who is very ‘‘thick” with Doctor Max. K. LeMoync is a mystery. He works at the gas office as a clerk, :imt- his past is bidden, and Doctor Max knot’s something about lilm which he keep.s secret. Sidney goes to Christine's home to prepare for the wedding :\nd finds the bride-to-be in p queer-mood.. her aside. By the end of her short va cation Cariotta Harrison was, wildly in .locker room, and shot ft quick glance furndH, oti her wiiy out of the f Los Angeles County Property Owners ■ - Wise in Planting Flowers on Borders of Roads. love with the younger Wilson. They continued to meet, not as Often as before, b(it once a week, .per-, haps." The meetings were full of'dftu- ger now; and If for the girl the^ lost toy this quality, they gained attraction for the man. She ^as shrewd enough to r^ulize her own situation.. The thing had gone wrong. A She cared, and 1 he did not. It was his gume now, not' hers. . All women are Intuitive; women in love are dungerously sd. 7 ,Aq well us she knew that hiifpussion for her tvaa Tjot the real thing, so also she realized |hgt there was growing up iu his heart "something akin to the real thing for aid 3 Tfo lie or your street the a A Sidney “I happen! other -night.” she sat.,". ‘‘you llveH across the street from Wilsons’, don’t you?" / ••Yes." Page* Suspicion became cer they htuFoveFTlfe hwaj association. "There is one broad "I thought so; I had heard you apes* j b<nilevard wh ,. n , for 18 Iulh , s oQP trav - of the house. Your—your brother was . Do some foods you eat hit back— . taste good. * but wofk badly; ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick,’ sour, garfsy stomach^ Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape’s Diapepsin • digests .everything, leaving. I<os- Apgeies eotrnty. Cattfornta? is nothing to sour and upset you. There the American Riviera, and iu no way is^ never was anything so ^fely quick, so the visitor more reminded of the beau-| c^rtglnly effective. No difference bou^— ty bf the famous Mediterranean ninr- j badly>gur stomach li.disordered you - — than in the treatment of Uu^vrlH get happy-relief in five minutes, roadsides,” says tin* American High- j but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your atom- standing on the steps.” Sidney laughed. “I have no brother. That’s a room er, a Mr. Le Moyne. .It isn’t really right to call him a rocuuer; he’s one ft the family now.” -j • • ,’ne *•» lie had even taken another It had lilt him hard, -for sure. nane. ; ach so you can ea t your favorite foods L els between continuous rose bowers without v fear. backed with pulms or firs. About fifty You feel different as soon as “Pape’s thousand rose bushes-of fifty varieties.; IMapepaln*' comes In contact with the j were used'ln this landscape gardening. : stomach—distress; Just vanishes—your . i "Iu many places the roads., wind 1 stomach gets swest, no gases, no belch- tnrough orange, lemon and * walnut , ing, no eructations of undigested food, groves Separated from the roadway Go now, make the best investment. by masses of rose bushes four to six i. you ever made, by getting a large fifty-.. feet high, which charm the eye and cent case of PapeV Dfapepsin from any CHAPTER X—Continued. ^ . t ;•$* —9— V She got up quickly, and. trailing her satin- train across the floor, bolted tor. Then from inside her cor age she-'brought out ami held to Sid ney a lettetv "Special delivery. Read it." \ • It was very short; Sidney read it at a glance; —_ — ABk your future husband \( he knows a snrl at 213 .avenue.. . ' , . V Three months before, the Avmue 'would have-meant nothing to. Shine, Now she knew, Christine, more phlstieiited, "had ’ aiwuys EPftirn. — ‘‘You see,” she said. “That's wtyat I -m up against-* f ■Quite suddenly Sidney knew who •he girl at 213 — Aventie was. The paper she held in ht*r hand was hospi tal paper with the. heading toyc off. The whole sordid story lay before her: To K., sitting in "the back of the church between Harriet and Anna, the wedding was Sidney—Sidney only. Afterward he could not remember the wedding party at all. The service for him was Sidney, rather awed and very serious, beside the altffrT'Tj ney who came down the aisle to the triumphant strains of the wedding march, Sidney with'Max beside her!' On his right sat Harriet, having reached the first pinnacle of her new career. The wedding gowns were suc cessful. They were more than that— they were triumphant. Sitting there, she cast coiqprehensive eyes over the -church, filled with potential brides. tainty after a supper tuble at -a country roadhouse the day after Christine’s wedding, "How.,was the wedding—tiresome?” "Thrilling! There's always ‘some thing thrilling to me- in a maffrtyi D K •himself up for hie to one woman. It's—it’s so reckless]” ^ Her eyes narrowed. "That’s not ex actly the Law and the Prophets', is-lt?" "It’s the truth. To thittk T of select ing out of all the world one woman, ' and electing to spend the rest of one’s wick-dter ! -Although— 11 -——••—j- His eyes looked past Cariotta, into distance,. "Sidney Page was one of the brides- maids,” he said irrelevantly. "She was lovelier than the bride.” "Pretty, but stupid," said Cariotta. "I like her. T’ve really tried to teach her things, but—you know—” She shrugged her shoulders.- Doctor Max was learning wisdom. K.’s name haiJL s;ttjuck an always re- n 'Vtiln girls went toward the nil itm nil .1 ‘itnil fmrrnince .even irti nore. you realize tn five mlDUtWI how December. needle— tt ia To auffer drom ladlg—^ elevator^ la- \ . ' "The work was done by individuals; 7 bul it was so successful that about t^ 0 tlon, dyapepala or bad 4tomach. Adv. rr* ■ iJrace' Irving, irnirberthttr fuce and cropped huir, and the newspaper on the floor of the ward beside her! She picked up her veil and sel the • •oronet on her head; Sidney stood with the tetter ift tfer hands^ One of K.’s answers to her hot question had been this:“There is no sense In dook- ng- hack unless it helps us to look head. \Vha.t your little girl of the ward lias been is ^nt sb important as what sjie Is going to be." Rut to Anna, watching the ceremony vvich blurred eyes and ineffectual blHISh Ups, was coming her hour. Sit ting back in the pew,, with' her hands folded over her. prayerbook. she said a little prayer' for her straight young daughter, facing out from the altur Mnur, UhufraUi eyesT •Innocent Recreation. If there was a twinkle in his eye, he veiled it discreetly. But, once again In the machine, he bent over and put his cheek against heifs. "You little cat! You’re jeaIous,’ 1 -be 1 said exultantly. - " 4 Nevertheless, although he might 1 SMilll' The inmge of Sidney lay very **As Sidney and Max drew near the door, Joe Drummond, who' had been standing at the back of the church, turned quickly and went out. He stumbled, rather, as if he could not close to his heart those autumn days, i And Cariotta knew it. ' * • • • • • • . see. CHAPTER XL The supper at the White Springs ho tel had not been the last supper Car iotta Harrison anil‘Max Wilson had taken together. Cariotta ,had selected ;“Even greeting this to lie true," she vaidvto ChrLstine slowly—"and it may • >nly be malicious, after all. Chris- , ‘ no— it’s surely-over and done with, “nsy it’s not Palmer's past that concerns and two or three times during her two you now—if’sbis future with von isn’t,, weeksjgff duty Wilson had..gone out jo. He liked Leing wTth her. She fit her vacation a small town, within ’motoring distance of the city, adjusted her" it?” Christine l ad finally veil j^he rose and put, her hands on Sidney s -siartiide^^— ’ ’ i ’ n e si tn j ■: •> T-dti i s," whe said q uT- see her. stimulated him! For once that he could* see Sidney, he saw Cariotta twice. —She had kept thonffair well hi han+K TTitA ttlaying fi*r higlTsffikes; Mm b as playing for high ^fake's. She know quite well the ^ind of man with whom she was (leafing—that he would pay iis little as possible. *But she knew, too, that,-let him want a tiling eimugh. he woujd pay any price for it, even marriage. -- She was very skillful. 'The very ar dor in her face'was In hot .favor. Be hind her eyes lurked cold calculation. Slie would put the thing through, and show those puling nurses, with their pious eyes -and evening prayers, q thing or two: ' , During that entire vacation he never srtvy her in- anything more elaborate than the simplest of white dresses modestly open- n-t the throat, sleeves rolled up to show her satiny* arms. There were no.dther hoarders at the little farmhouse. She sat for hours In the summer evenings in the square yard filled with apple trees that bor- 'dered ' the Sidney came off night duty the mid dle of November. The night duty, had been a time of comparative peace to Cariotta. There were no evenings when Doctor Max could bring Sidney hack to. the hospital.In his car. Shlney’s half-days at home were 'oc casions for agonies of jealousy on Car- lotta’s part. On such an occasion, a month after the wedding; she could not contain herself. She pleaded her old excuse of headache, and took the trol ley to a point near the end of the Street.. After twilight fell, she slowly wnikeiHlte length of the Street. Chris- 1 * "L admit It,” the son acknowledged, j "hut only for small stakes. years ago a committee was organised to carry on Such Boadslde treatment Falher bad demanded a heart-to on a larger scale and in ’accordance* t heart talk with his- oniy sou. '• with comprehensive plans. Funils 1 wereJ *‘1 am told that von are given to raised by a direct tax, and the county | gambling,’’ hr said sternly. • forestry department was placed in (barge of. the execution of the project. "Abodr two hundfeil miles (if road "Oh, as long as it is for something now have 90 road trellises to the mile j-to rat I don’t mind." fhe father said, of highway.— Kach trellis is 20, feet - ------ ’ . long, five .f££t_high..;and supports flve__^ DELICIOUS DINNER bushes. Fifty varieties of roses are * r ^— used, and give an attractive comhina- ! Break a quarter package jof Skin- tion of colors. In addition; 1 poppies. ' HiBria Macaroni Into boiling water, boll petunias* anti geranluin.s r which grow [ 1^0~ or twelve drain' and luxuriantly in that climate, have also blanch. Take equal parts of cold V been used along, the boulevards, anil palms and eucalyptus trees have been set out where uecessuryTo break flat -dish and cover with buttered crumbcL < , monotony or furnish a background. ’ i- -HAVE-HQUSE PROPERLY BUILT chicken, boiled: Mlfcifont and tomato sauce; put In layers in # a shallow Bake until brown. Just try tfila once. 8kinhers Macaroni can be secured wt any good grocery store.—Adv. Duty Man Owes to His Neighbors and to the City in Which He Plana to Reside. Any -rooms' house, txVenty, whether have three or t\Venty, Ts a fascinating study. It is as full of possibilities as j- the owner himself, aud like him its ! character is sometimes fully devel- j oped, sometimes not. Rut.even an old, j a stuffy house, one that 'his been as long "for let" as a man’s conscience, I may be improved! * Here' a. Window may be thrown out to admit light or “Pretty, but Stupid, 1 “t Sard 1 to include a view, there a wing, may toe added and a dull dwelling transformed gether. With a very little eti’iToqrjnp*- Into one full of delightful .surprises., A ment, Sidney talked of K. . She way, properly built house adds greatly to pleased Rate More Learned Tn Ohio. . Rats destroy on aft average of $300. worth of catalogues each year at Ohio •tate university, according to Lester E. Wolfe, secretary of the entrance board. Tito rodents, which infest the basement’ of University hall, where the catalogues are kept, nibble the binding of the books In order to get the paste .which' holds the leaves together. ^The common methods used to get rid of rats, such as poison and traps, have long since been given up as useless, for the rats, probably because of thetf environment, are too ^’lse to be tempt- ed by either. at Miss Harrison’s friendlj tone, glad that tilings were all right between them again. At her floor she put a timid hand on the girl's urim ‘I was afraid I lipd‘offended-you or displeased, you.” she ^uid. “I’m so tine and Palmer had wot- returned pbul it lsatlt so. from their wedding journey.’ The No- Cariotta shivered under her hand, vetuber evening was not cold. ‘Sidney tin* appearance of the street onwrhich it is bul.lt.. “Tlie most fascinating house I ever knew,” said tin architect recently, “tiad originally but four rooms, to which ev ery fiveior six year’s /i added, the net pew wlpg was result beijig a long. FALLING HAIR MEANS DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE L-, ..M-as nil* -In sight nr wikm. Hof ^Things wm*>-noUgoing~any too woU standing on the wooden doorstep .of the house was Le Moyne. The ailnw- tlius trees were bare at that time. .throwing gaunt arms upwai^L-ta-thg, JAhh* t0 A° several things. ^Mrs. Rosen highway, care tuny over a book, but with her keen eves always on the road. She read Brawn-. November sky, The r street lamp, Which in the summer I*h‘t lT)i irT Tloor.step in/tju; shadow, now shone tfifoughTlie lyranches and threw into strong relief Le Moyne’s ’ tall figure and set face. CarloUa ;sa\v him too late to retreat. But -he did not see her. -She went'on, startled, her bunj” brain’ scheming anew. Another "element bail entered into her plotting. It was tlii^tirst time she lmd known that K. lived in the Page house. It gave her a sense of uncertainty and deadly fear. . Slie made her first friendly over ture of many (lays to Sidney the fol lowing, day. They met in the locker room In the basement where the street clothing for the ward patients was kept. Hqt.<L. rolled in bundles anil side by side lay ‘the hetero- ticketed s 4a- which the r pa- r lema to- Le *Mt»yne. found lier with a book that she has tily concealed.Ho insisted*on seeing it. and secured it. ft was a' book on brain surgery. Confronted 4 wlth it, she ness, lay almost touching. Far away on the other side of the whitewashed basement, men were un loading gleaining cans of milk. Floods l-l of sunlight came dow n'the cellarw ay; .. r ... .touching their white coats and turn- iukous of compliments, as she had iu- - . . -V ,, , , - > ub m-g the- cati.*l_to silver. Everywhere was the religioh.pf the hospital, which is order. . Save Your Hair! 6et a 25 Cent Bottla of Danderine Rlflht Now -Alao rambling,, bow-windowed structure. I whidh one never left'without regrvd. ^ — Stops Itching 8cktp aud -o w liielt-f-rlends came homing es > ' w ith, K. True, he had received tola to a dovecote, promotion at the-offlce, and wlthMhti present affluence of $22 a week he waa feld now washed and Uoned one day a weetf* at the little house, so that Katie Concealed Will in Book. ~ A remarkable story concerning the discovery-of-a will was recently made known. Dr. Peter Quin Keegan, ..an Thin*, .brittle, colorless and scraggy hair Is mute evidence of a neglected scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf. •There Is nothing so .destructive to t _ „ . . th e L a ^ r as dandruff. 7Tt robs the hair t have more time to look after elderly Irishnian. and an Li>.u. or liuh-j of its luster, Itsntrengtlr and its very . . He had increased hlso tlw ' l|n uiijverSitye^vas^ke^uly Interested life; eventually producing a feverish-., ness and Itching of the scalp, vhicb might Anna amount of money that he periodically sent east, ’ 77 . SorfJrJAwrll ,eii<»ugh. The thing that ntnkl&i-timd filled liitn with *a sense of' firilurp %yas Mqx Wllsjin’s attitude. It was not unfriendly; It w'ftS,‘ indeed! consistently respectful, almost rever- icntial. But -he' clearly considered Le 1ft botany. A' short time. before his death iie met Mr. Rnuald EIDvood, trav eler for a Penrith firm, and a friend- shij) .sprang,up, based on their botani cal stmites; Doctor Keegan gave him ^ ... ft . . book on the subject, but Mr. Elt--ton'ght-now-any time-will Moyne's position absurd. There was no true-comradeship be tween the two men *, but there was he* wood had no occasion to refer to It until a few days ago. He then foufld that two of the pages .were fastened •together,'and outside one of them was qn instruction in Doctor Keegan’s pe- giuning to be constant association, and ^ u ** ar ^ riting that thU pogesw ere not •mount of .frldlflo. i }“• '*• ****** until; of lor his douty Thoy thought diffffontly about nlmort I,oc,or , Kw « ,,n alre0<1 » ^ Ell wood opened the pages and found lately, a certain They tbout; everything. .Wilson began to firing ail his.prob- - between them the. utd genUeman’S WlUr: consultations in I mMgatrmBbmMmmam VrTitj,ps mor*^ tong that simUl upper mnoneman or • Will Build Russian Canal. if not remedied causes the hair roots to shrink, loosen and die—then the hair falls Out fast. A little Danderine. surely save your hair. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine from any store, and after the first application your hair will take on That life, luster and luxuriance which Is so beautiful. It will become wavy ;and fluffy and have the appear ance of abundance; an Incomparable gloss and softness, but what will blushed and dropped her eyes, llis ile- ■ lighted vanity found in it the most in- S tended. suclrnn idiot when I am with woman who Tlid.not know of Kffji exist- .•■nee owed his life to him that fall. Under K.’s direction 1 . Max did mar vels. Cases Jiegaiw tO'cimie in to him from ,t!m* KurroiHi'Hng^towns. To his own (hiring was milled tf ftew and re markable technique. -But Le Moyne, who hud found resignation it not con- die said. "I wanted to know Jilt ij*.j.a<‘ny ;ij»«»m tiie things Sidney Read It at a Glance. -JET* ••tly. "that I might hold Palmer if I eared—terribly. I donT. Anil Tm sfrtiid he knows it. It’s my pride tlmfs diurt. nothing else. . Anil thiLS did Cl^iristine Lorenz go down to her wedding. - Sidney stood for a moment, her eyes ■>n the . letter she held., Already, in. her new phiiosoidiyrTtiT 4 had learned many strange things. One of "them That put their relationship‘on a le w and advanced basis. Thereafter he occasionally talked-surgery instead of from recent ‘-convi'rsate tent, whs orioe again in touch with the ^ (>Ej£ he luved. There were Jimtgi equipment of aT-Volga-Don canal, as designed by the Riissiun ininlster of 1 Ways-qjud communications, .has been > approved Ry the government. The prm • jected canal will play an ''important ■part in the economic development Of j ..southeastern Russia and of the'Volga i and' "Don basins. Grain fmm TsaHt- -riti and Viial»ei» -aHd ore fri*m the Ur-o-l*> please you mdSr ^ iIF be after Just a few weeks’ use, wbem$pu will actual- duwiur. hair—growing all over the scalp. Adv. — Extreme Caution. • Jenks’ fad Is insisting that every* T tiling in life must have flavor.” J Yes. a table .'OtieiT." he will. not- even sit down to- unless sure^the^wood is sea- will thereby obtaima'direct outlet, to*| r duty, smiled at Cariotta 'gether and outlined' the -next day’s „ .... ^ . work for Mux. to* woittedk M HuaiuT** 1 " <N""'e»i'yijn«CT to «W- . ■ -- ” *- ‘uef cities and in- 11 I Iis tound, her respnnsive. work, a sealed book was this—that women like Grace Ir- r vfttg did not betray their lovers; that* , the edde of the underworld was “death to the squealer ;” that oije Tflayed the game, and won or lost, and if he lost, toolc his tnedJcine.’ If not Grace, then who? -Somebody elso in'the hospital who knew her story, of course. But who? And pgftin—why? - Before ^olng downstairs, Sidney placed the letter In a saucer and art' —Are to it with s watch. Some of the had put aside dlfed of hcr ' eym siTiTTnieut. inteiligent. to his women ls-*J'«#o. lay open to her. j^mi how wc thoug Now and (hull.tlnaL J'lofessiofiql dis- it’S4^Tlli'‘r a triumj CUssi"iis end' d in sonietlUng different. Tlie two lines of their interest eoln- verged. - “GaiF” he said one (lay. “I look forward to these evenings’. J enn of Jier night chei-ffuHy. “ ‘‘A iuiraCle is h;ipp“( i: og ( ” she- s.iid. inTS"the' nTiht ouL4>vi r the hills, fight- shop with yim without either shock in; or nauseating you. You are the most intelligent woman. I know—and one of the prettiest.” .. .'~~ The one element- Cariotta had left she’s probably going back to—” out of her calculations was herself.’ Shft, had Jcuown the man. had ta^en the situation at its proper Value/ Into her calculating ambition had. come a. new and destroying element. She who. thereof, found that /*. v> Would pet pot •.* • "Groce-.Irving is going out today: When line remeyiher.s how iH she wns lit she-could not live, umph. isrVt it?" “Ari^ tlu>s« her clothes?" Sidney examined with some df.>luujf f the ,via bora te^pegUgee garments in~h'i hand. x --. ■ - il Slu* rim't' go ont'^u ihnsr ing his- lmt.thv< The longing him to he in tin* thick of thiru Tiie. tWiglit of the gns office d< mby: round siekeneij him, wa«-oD s again! and Its f Volga and sur- ply coal to all the cl dii^trial centers of tin rounding country from the„rH*h district of tlie Doneiz ha^iu. coal LAX-FOS Is an improved Cascara A DIGESTIVE LAXATIVE-Pleasant to Ml I shell i have to lend her .sonietfilng.” A little I of the light died opt of her ffqce. “She’8~; had a hard fight, and she lifts won, she said,- "But when I think of Avbati He Is a ■ Carlotta^shrugged her shoulders. *It’s all in the^ay 1 ^ work,” she ob served Indifferently. "You can 'take them f up Into the'kitchen and gfvto .. , . them 1 steady work paring potatoes, or , -—_ like K. in hisjlittle'Toqjm on thef Street, put them in jthe- laundry ironing. In. - IeelhM j* enjoying & prosperity lire tbe btme thln^. an muter go !<•«•* ,77 * What more do youthinft Chris tine has learned about her new nusDanar Utd she do wrong to. go through tht| marriage? Planting Trees, in Streets. . j. II. Ile^it says; of street planting: ‘Troceed w^Ttr eiiution. * huf proceed. It is too^1Htie appreciated- that results nrn'.iii..iiiii.tl-,.rt |,1 lit i n i.r .its indefinitely, j <TOJfejpNTiNl*l.i*r> Man’s Greatness. - great man wfio hgs a great plan;to bis Iif«*— r tI»*> greatest, who hiu the J>l;;n and keep's 1^.— Drnmmgn'J.^ V -ever Of Its wur I Oil —— , w I— neglect, ace to continue In tlie,generations to come tree-lovers will be praising H e giKtd taste ,afid good Judgment of tlie planters and caretakers before them, or will be criti cizing tne Injudicious work, or'me en tire* absence ot what Should then have been done.” — In LAX-FOS the Cascari u improved by addition of certain .-harttiless chemicals which increase the efficinuty of the Cas cara, making it better than ordinary Cas cara. LAX-FOS aids digestion; pleasant to take; does not gripe or disturb stomach. "Adapted fo children and aflOHSl' ^ aflffyr bottle for coostipaiion or. indigestion. 50c. Southern Combination Planter \ ~ m im -4 * Agents iff- ! V; Riant Vines. _ Home grounds whether In' the coun try or city,, -aw, incomplete witboot wSm "X-