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Mountain I
Br
FRANK H. SPEARMAN
AotM f "WHISFUUNa SMITH
1k ?;.:,'a rw luto th orT.iv. IX.-
W.: hrso, :r!;trd ih riiie
frv:;i t-.-t iwlK'f, and Imrrifdiy rvpia
fcaviciMrg. !!(! ruiiaii'i ihtvu.-U
ttk- l .ru cJU-d sfcriily t-eva at.d rorta,
J Iv t '.-ia i riiuUn up U;e nuirs
lit t: r v u irmki.d what he ;uitl
f.v ins h-'rrVd tjht V h.ui dhl i
eWu '- tVuW vtt bis an.l t'. Inuf
1-u.Jy Jan wciv I'lkiii ri:,.1 j.-u tho
lv; A tuMo-tH-y !id fnmi .
r Iwi tn cue a I'ull J'uk
Inn th -!!;: ir.( .r frl tli :
vtl; (''-tl.-t r.iiu'u nt tii ciin Ik-,
hi!u- t LurruHi.y mM-i-d tin' !.
ef the i' 'v,-';. t:n.r. Is- S'uii;. hi
- h J i lK-VU:n' &: !Jt, itv--liii
his tirt.:i Injum HiMi'i, and Un :
bum 1 head k1kI d"n. a- 1 . '
rust furtlwly ca th iott: - vv- i
ItnUi OUtsld", h llstitili'i! ith i at- !
fciiiioa that rvonWd ln.WliUj i-ry I
uiUTvd syllaMv
Ouc only, ho luHTruttod: "lVnry, ;
yini'rv H'lia out Into thi thin tileao i
diOit do it.
"I ciin't help tt," nnvU l)o tuila
laiiiHtii-ntly.
"It's N '".IB kllliT. j
"1 'Vt h. !p tt." '
a S, ..it. if he w's hore, nt-riT
" V jou Uj iU 1"U rti'f f ye mjMlt
il Try. 1 workfd fir your father ;
"Vmi're tK ylJ uiau, Jiu " !
"lUnr.v "
"iv.n't :t me ! IV ai 1 tell jou !"
UiaKr-J IV Si ain.
H A'i !a t wed l.U head
"U. h yel'e.! IV se. hu-klln the
rl ' li Vi r U-. vlae. Stll! titlkinc Mli'l
Hi;1! iteA'r'n i-'HiJi). to ht flhiiw. IV
fl-.Ua Ta:t'l Into the s.-i'Mle. itttiKht
tl.j fr.'Tii I". nil's ti-iniN. ami
ncvl'-'i! the I.ti'ly n. "he siilrsiepinil
" mTV'"!';.' Jtr.!;in fi-llmvititf rlov
Mil dw'Lrir the !iin.1iiif hMf a lie
lv-';.'l r-n'.-'-i'y tip to m'eh t,e lnt
bit-1. lVr --.-, !i tii-.'h-! ttie lior-e Willi j
th.i 1: . U T".l tliro'i.h iloor-'
w, y i ! I- ! !.!m iI t.;i. ku nnl tmti'l j
to t';n. 1 ! in.J. Kuruiln oil!-., !e Hie
dir. t':v y.-!leil n ihonis of erle
fter ti e wift-niovliig horse'dim, mwl.
Clli.ttTi -.1 l-.i ;t ti eK-'lti'ii RToup, niitehej
Hie L;:-ly wiih a do'.-a Kfnt stri'lcs
piurrl t!i Ciihilnia trail and illsap
penr with her ridi Into the whirling
w low. i
She fell nt once Into an easy reach-
lnir step, nud Ie Spain, busy with lii
vn'.H"t!.mM, h-r!!y pive thought to
wliat 'ue il.lne, and little more to ,
l!;it p ins " nl ut him. I
No 7iiovl:;.! fiire re'!icn the lmpai
lve li.ore tlinii n horseman of the
jtR.uni.-ifiin, on a loin: rlile. Tlioiu'i
'W'T w wift-homo, the mil n. lookini: '
ni'lUnT to t!io rl-ht nor to the left,
tmlrs ercuiy mid stuiudlUe acainst ,
the f':y, n prt of tho wiry leat tinder
l.lci, j re-setils the very picture of la-:
i'lTetieo to tlie world nrouiicl him.
The great, K-vli't wind spri'ii llni; over j
tll Oesert ct:ioifi on It snow-laden !
' ytft that u'uliie.l and wrapped a cloud
of tli. Sea nliont horse aiid rider In the !
symlad of a fr'.roiid. l'e Spain Kave
ItO lie'd to these sklrnlslilhK eddies, !
Vttt ho kaew wliat was hehind theui, j
Mid for (he wind, he only wished It ;
mlsh' hot p the snow In the ulr till he
Catl:;M k!lit of Nf.II. i
T!.e even reach of the horse hrnidit i
hliil to the point where Nan had j
cli.diged to the taire war'n. Without !
break In her Uiv.g Ktride, I.n'ly Jane i
took tJio hint of her Bwervlns rider,
jiut her nose Into the wind, and bended
north. le Spain, alive to the ilinjeuj-
Wes of his venture, set his bat lower j
and fier.t fonvard to follow tho wai; n '
Jor,i t'ae wind. With the first of the j
white Hurries pnpwd, he found himself j
la A snowies, pocket, BSjt were, of the j
ailvtmrirg fnoria. He hoped for r;oth- ;
tut; from ilie pre-ipect ahead; b'lt ev
ery root-nut of respite from tho hhnd
Ins whirl to n caln, and with his eyes
-lose na the trull that had carried Nan
Into danger, he urod the Lady on.
When the enow njruln closed down
'nbont bim he calculated from the
MiihneKS of the country that be
fhonld be within a mile of the roaJ
that Naa wns trying to reach, from the
(flip to Sleepy Cat. But the broken
(rround BtrHV'ht ahead would prevent
her from driving directly to It. He
knew nhe tntint hold to the right, and
Iter curvlnir track, now becoming diffi
cult to trail, confirmed hl conclusion.
A fcir-h drive of the wind buffeted
him as he tnrr.ed directly north. Only
t laUrvula could he see any trace of
trie wnifnn wheels. The driving mow
compellud hi in more than once to dis-
mount and stiireh for tho trull. Each
time he loot it the effort to regain it
was wore prolonged. At times he wni
compelled to ride the desert In wide
circles to find the tracks, and this cost
time when minute might mean life.
Ilut as long an he could he clung to
the f)tnig!e to track her exactly. He
aw almost where the monn had utruek
the two wayfarers. Neither, he knew,
mis Insensible to iti dangers. What
amazed him wns that a man like Duke
Morgan should be out In lf. He found
a spot where they had halted and, with
a start that checked the beating of his
heart, his eyes fell on her footprint
not yet obliterated, beside the wagon
track.
The flight of It wai an electric shock.
Throwing himself-from his horse, he
knelt over It In the storm, oblivious for
an Instant of everything but that this
tracery meant her presence, where he
. bow bent, hardly half an hour before.
Be swung, after moment's keen scra-
, tiny, Into his saddle, with fresh re
solve. Pressed by the rising fury of
- (be wind, the wayfarers had .become
from thbt point, De Spain saw too
plainly, hardly more than fugitives.
Cxi ground to the left, where their
f "t ft r-'r tar. fcd.Jtm orer
.-.t. it..-r !r:.. !.. ;-,i,-r. i sa ttie
1-u d.-H-!t X.kf tb.- ' I.wiuc oar-
he 'hi .r s'l';e It the oHiIUi"il
Mel l. iir ti ! Ill- ili.jn.i II- -ni.
And ih U.i imr.-.tiiii uiie-rtainty
la ta ir il.r-s i-..-n n -l..-t Iv Si;;in'
b,M h.-i-s ,,f tr-i. W ns tl.eiu. The in.t
i tl.e .hrt n.- s a barri.-sa
veeps (he .p.'U s-a. stiaTetut. the
falh u Mi. fr-:a the fac if tb rarth
as th s-a -tfa. Sartenms th face vt
th waters, ni-s the foam fi:a t
iriBtie mi to drive tt in !ld. sttid
d:ti fhiS!!H-its aer.s t hem.
IV Spiiio. urging his h.rso foraail,
rtut-kUst his rifle hoNter. thrvw ay
tliv w-at-fmrii. and holding the weas
lip ia .h- hand, tirtnt h.t after shot
at meaunst intervals tv attract the
iitteuti. ef the two tie s.mht. lie t-K-hauMtd
tn rile aiiimu:iium without
elieltiiig any answer. The wind drove
with a Pir n-!iiust hi& even a nrte
reirt iuld hanl'v eurry, and the
,rt iIoub the Kinks ia a tuaj
Mast. Hakes tern ty the fury of the
tsie wen- ii:Tei.i-d by the bitter wind
into pondered ice that slung horsv nud
rebr. -Kmg ajy the us-lt-M car
bine, and prissihg his h.vrs to th
lit ait of her strength ant dtirn.-
the unyielding ;nr.-r r.sV ia treat,
is.lliiig elreles into the st.irvi, to cut
In. U p" Ve. alnad f i's vietlms,
Krini; shot u on shet trout b!s revidver.
;
Hoping Agamit Hope for an Aniwar.
lie I putllng bis ear inieiitly agnllKt
the wind for (lie faint hope of uti an
swer. Smldi nly the I. ady .tumbled and,
he cruelly rein. .1 her. Mid he!) le-s i.nd
seratal'ln x nien- the face of h flat
reek, l'e Sp.la. leaping from :.er
bai k, sieail'ml her treiuhiii'g and
l.Mike.! uielerf-iet. T'.e mare huJ
strm k the roek of the tipper lava ' ed.
I 'rawing his reM.lver, be fired signal
hots fro'a where he st.s'd. It could
not be fur, lie knew, from the Junction
of the two utvi't d-sert trails the
Culnliasi'.s roiel and the gap run I. lie
felt sure Nan .ul 1 not have lot much
north of tl, is, for be had ri Men Pi des
ieriitbii to ret -.bruisi of nr leynid
her. al l if -he were south, where, he
asked, la 'lie name of liot, colli. I she
Let
He fllia'-e.l t-g: a into the Middle
the cold was grippi.-g Ins i;-l, mid,
wiitchltig the rocky lar.'lniarks :uirrow
ly. trie.! to cirele th,- dean waste of
the half-buried How. With chilled,
awkward th.ers be tilled tin- rev .er
again nn-t ro ! -ti. dlsi-harib.g it every
ininuti'. tifl llsteiyng-b -ping g:ii,it
hope fa' an answer. It was when he
bad al'i.ost co:M(iletel, a well as he
could c.'.iipute. the wide circuit he had
set out on, that a faint hot aiisuered
bis continaing signals.
With Ihe s.aitid of that sled and
those fiat followed It his curate all
cunie lack. Hut i.e bad yet to trace
through the confusion of the wind mid
tl.e I hading snow the direction of the
answering reports.
Hither and tt.lthcr he rode, this way
and thl't, toting out the location of
the slowly repeated shots, am! signal
ing at Intervals In return. Slowly and
dogeedly he kept on, shooting, listen
ing, wheeling and advancing until, as
he raised his revolver to lire It again,
a cry close at hand came out of the
ntori i. It v as a woman's voice borne
on th? ' iiid. lttiline swiftly to the
left, n horse's outline revealed Itseif
at mom. hts in the driving snow ahead.
De Spain cried out, and from behind
the furious curtain heard his name,
loudly called. He pushed his stum
bling horse on. The dim outline of a
second horse, (he background of a wag
on, a storiu-beaten man all this
passed his eyes unheeded. They were
bent on a girlish ligure running toward
him as he slid stlltiy from the saddle.
The next lustant Nan was in hi arms.
CHAPTER XXIX.
The Truth.
With the desperation of a Joy born
of despair she laid her burning cheek
hysterically against hla cheek. She
ruined kisses on his Ice-cnrst.-d brows
and snow-beaten eyes. Her arms held
him rigidly. He could not move nor
spcik till she would let l.hn. Trulls
formed, this mountain girl who gave
herself so shyly, forgot everything. Her
Wortls crowded on his ears. She re
peated his name in an ecstasy of wel
come, drew dow n his Hps, laughed, re
joiced, knew no shamefacedness and
no restraint she. was one freed from
the stroke of a descending knife. A
moment before she had faced death
alone; it was still -death she diced
she realized this but It was death, at
least, together, and her Joy and tears
ruse from her heart in one stream.
De Spain comforted her, quieted her,
cut away one of the couts from his
horse, slipped It over her shoulders. In
cased her In the heavy fur, and turned
his eyes to Duke.
The old man's set, square face sur
rendered nothing of implacability to
the dangers confronting hiin. De
Spain looked for none of (hut. lie had
known the Morgan record too long, and
faced the Morgan men too often, to
fancy they would flinch at the drum
beat of death.
The two men, In the deadly, driving
now, eyed each other, QjiLat the old
c?-;'. -' r, .- i
lean's deep-set bitllo-d the leTVf
iove of a huu.bvd storms tcvd In fon-.
1 i he s caught k Uke a wolf ia
a tr:,p. fct.d h- tueW he bad Uui ta
le.pf for. little tn fear. As Iv Spaia
r kiirik-J Lii i. win. thing like pi'y tu
hive Doled wuil his hatr.sl The ud
i,.iiaw was tbeuly ciai His op
tnr-at was t-t-e wits . and,
.a.uJ;ag U-muV th wagi h held the
ttaia rem in a bar band. IV Spain
cut the tHhs-r usit frvsw his saddle and
held it put. Imke prvtetaVd ( t
see, and. whea aot kougrr evjoal to
ktsiug np Um pretense, alnuk hi
h..L
"Take It." id De Spata curtly. I
-N.v.-
-Tak It. I say. Te and I will settle
our a3aira wha we get Na mt of
this.' he Insisted.
"IV Sixain t" lake's Tc4ce, as was
iia wvsut, cracked like plst.4. "I rm ,
say all I gvst tu say tit vm right
herv."
-No,-
-Vea,' cried the old Biaa.
"U-lea, Henry plewd-d Naa, aeek
tng khelter frta the furious blast
wittaa his arm, Juat fur a tu.aneut,
listen r
-N.sl now, I lell yor cried 1
Sis-uu.
"He was coming. Ibiiry, all the way
mid he 1 aick Just to aay it to you.
Let bun say it here, now."
! on:" cried IV Sisjln nnighly. -
"Say it
"1 in not afraid of you, IV Spain V
shouled the old insn. hi 0s k Imrvd to
the Hying l.v. ivu t think tt ! Vou're
a better iiwu than I am. better than I
ever was d.xi't think I dou't kuow
that Put I'm not afraid of e'er n ;
man 1 face-d, IV Sisilu; they'll tell
yon that when I'm dead. All the
trouble that ever come 'tween yon and
me come by an atvldeut cowe Iwfore
y ou was Uta, aud come through Wve
Sassoon, aud he's held it over me ever i
simv you roiue up Into this country.
I w a a young fellow, Snsauoa worked
for my father. The cattle and sheep
v ar was on, north of Medicine llend.
The lYace river thevpniea rald.sl our
place your father was with them. He
never (lid us Co barm, but my brother,
l'-ay Morgan, was shot In that raid by
a man name of Jennings. I started
out to get the man that shot hitu. Sua
soon trailed hi in to the Itur M, the old
Iv Spain ranch, woklug for your fa
ther." The word fell fast and In a fury, i
They came as if they had been choked
haek till they strangled. "Sassoou
took me over there. Toward night we
got In sight of the ranchhouse. We
saw a man down at the corral. That's
Jennings,' Sassoon says. I never laid
eyes ou him before I never laid eyes
on your father before. Itoth of us
tired. Xet day we heard your futher
was killed, nod Jennings had left the
country. Sass.n or 1, oue of us, killed
your father. Iv Spain. If It was I,
1 did It never knowing who lie was,
never meaning to touch bliu. I was
after the nmn that killed my brother, j
Sass.n.ii didn't rare which It was, novel)
lid. then nor never. Hut he held It
over me to make trouble sometime!
tvvlxt you and me. I was a young fel
low. I thought I was revenging my
brother. And If your father wai
billed by a patched bullet, his blood It
not on me. IV Spain, und never was !
Sussoon always shot a patched bullet
I never shot one In my life. And I'd
never told you this of my own self
Nan said It was the whole truth from
me to you. or her HJe. She's as muct
mine as she Is yours. I nursed her
I took care of her when there weren't
no other living soul to do it. She got
me and herself out Into this, this
morning. I'd never been caught 11 Ice
this if I'd had my way. I told hei
fore we'd been out an hour w-e'd nevet
see the end of It. She snid she'd rathe)
the lu it than you'd think she quit you
I told her I'd go on with her and d(
as r.t o -.jild -that's why we're here
and Hint's the whole truth, so help mi
(Jid I
1 ain't afraid of yon, Ie Spain. ITI
give you whatever you think s coming
to you with a rifle or a gun any time,'
anywhere you're a better man than 1 j
am or ever was, I know that and that
ought to satisfy you. Or, I'll standi
uiy triul. If you say so, and tell the!
truth." j
Tho lee-liulen wind, as De Spnln
stood still, swept past the little group
with a sinister roar. Insensible alike to
its emotions and its deadly peril.
Within the shelter of his arm be felt
Ihe yielding forjn of the Indomitable1
girl w ho, by the power of love, had .
wrung from the outlaw his reluctant!
story the story of the murder that i
had stained with Its red strands the
relations of each of their lives to both
the others. He felt against bis heart
the faint trembling of her frail body.
So, when a boy, he had held In his
hand a fluttering bird and felt the
whirring beat of its frightened heart
against his strong, cruel lingers.
A sndden aversion to more blood
shed, a sickening of vengeance, swept
over him as her heart mutely beat for
mercy against his heart She bad
done more than any man could do.
Now she waited on him. Both his
arms wrapped round her. In the breath
less embrace that drew her closer she
read her answer from him. She looked
tip Into his eyes and waited. "There's
more than what's between yon and me,
I Hike, facing ui now," said IV Spain
sternly, when he turned. "We've got
to get Nan out of this even If we
don't get out ourselves. Where do yon
figure we are?" he cried.
"I figure we're two miles north of
the lava beds, De Spain," shouted Mor
gan. IV Spain shook his head In dissent
"Then where are wet" demanded the
older man rudely.
"I ought not to say, against yon.
Ilut If I've got to guess, I say two
miles east Either way, we must try
for Sleepy Cat li your team all
rightr
"Team Is all right We tore a wheel
near off getting oat of the lava. The
wagon's done for."
De Spain threw the for coat at him.
Tut it on," he said. "We'll look nt
the wheel."
The Inside.
Nature students, quick now whlcn
side of a pacifist oom the
PARIS DESIGNERS
DOOM OLD GOWNS:
Changes Shewn in New Models
Even Mere Drastic Than
' Prophets Expected.
1 gotil looking nt to match ea.h -
ikmv fnsk. It Is a ilinfii fna
WILL FOLLOW FRENCH STYLE the winter ct. hi. ft.- j
: tnrile-d ,wt t be n troublesome I -rote
lem. although as a gnnuom i l well- i
Hewstver Patriotic Tnty May Be, Amer
ican Wtmn Will Adept
the Fashlessa Originating
Acreea the tea.
New Tort There are quite enough
change ia the new clothes arriving
fn isrt to nuike every woman
shake h.-r head In despair and nay that
she must hate n nrw gown, whether or
not her dress allowance ran be
Stretched to cover It
There are women who bold out that
the (owu of autumn can be renovated
to meet the demands of spring, sad
the forehanded psre has already
been at work in the sewing room hav
ing her skirt reshaped and her bod
ice built up or down U meet the re
quirements of the hour.
The dressmakers are divided Into
tw classes ut oiiuiu; th.sx who ar
w.wrt.-d over the seeming similarity
between the spring gown and those of
last autumn, and other who ar blow
ing the trumpet l.wdly to proclaim
that th modern (Jlhonette compels
every womaa to discard w hatever she
ha and buy things that are new,
arts has epokea. however, and no
matter how lutei.se our patriotism, w
listen and hearken to the words that
come from the ctty by the Selue. That
la the phrase one hear on every side
among the coii.tneretiillsts. V know
what we should wear. The gowns
have been shown eiir buyers, aud aa
many as osihle hat been ahlpped to
this country. YV may talk all we
please aN'Ut our own fashion follow
ing our own flag, but all fashions be
come ours after they have had their
source in l'uns. In a limited district of
the city.
The Drastl Change.
A mere cursory glimpse at a fore-
gatherlug of French gown may con-'
vine the casual onhmker that noth-
lug I to be fearil from the new styles.
Old gown will do; old suit will serve:
old wraps are not thrown In the
This Gown of bark Blue Gaberdine
Shows the Type ef Barrel Skirt
.Which the Americana Have Accept
ed. Ita Trimming Consists ef Row
of Machine Stitching With Gray Silk
Thread, and the Neck I Filled In
With a Tiny Vest of Gray Tulle.
shadow; and last summer's hat can
be revived to meet this spring's need.
That Is the opinion of a most casual
observer. The truth Is that the
changes tire more drastic than even
the reporters and prophets felt they
would be. Paris has been Insidious
In Introducing a silhouette that will
grow as the days lengthen and that
will soon make the gowns of yesterday
look t.Mi old-fashioned for even trivial
nses, unless they are altered by a
skillful hand.
What la known as the American
uniform was conspicuously lacking
during the first openings In Paris,
but line, Paquln, Doeulllet and Dre
coll came out with tailored suits that
met the expectations of the American
buyers.
The Paquln ones were particularly
good, but no one style was emphasised.
Mme. Paqnln hat always liked the
three-quarter coat and she was the
first person to revive It a few years
ago. It was then regarded as too old
, fashioned for any American woman to
take up. and yet, a year after, It was
universal In this country.
' rvt. , t ... J-.... ... - ,1. - . au
J ne sner-ieiiaiu ineneia mat luv
house of Paquln showed have the bar -
rel effect between th waist and knee
ann are worn over an ricreuuiKiy me
row skirt that is rrom two to rour i
Inches longer' than what the women
have worn over here for two yeara.
Paquln also revives the redingott
with a narrow hem and slender waist
line, bnt the barrel effect Is given It,
;the middle. This bouse also Insists
upon the short coat It Is made some
what like an old-fashioned basque,
with a short peplum that clings to
the body, although It Is cut circular,
Paquln introduced coat like this last
Sutumn which was excessively liked
by the women who bad turned away
from the long coat, and It Is probable
That with Its revival for this spring It
will gain headway before June.
Paquln, like Jenny and Premet, nses
(be unusually wide, loose girdle oa
ifell gowns. She dot not touch the
empire waistline, which nearly an the
jr POTsoi ir la two or threw
.x-&x--ssN s-vT j i I JV ss;
wsw fc WsB
mm $ ip
-5?.?.vV I ..ft r K- Sv
i M, ... ...;r.;-r....fe; -
! . .
ft trie lst towns of th.lr fJ!eciiii.J
and i-he v)ies nit eo in f.r the tu-spe-vul
grd'e. whnh has itot L.s-n ret. a.
uishesl ty every ether .leijrivr l.it
bhst to the In it over ihe Birtcl
aistltn.
Revant' N Coat.
Tt.i heu- of iloyKiit. wbi. h Is not
as we'l known to the public as tt
should be, but suffieitniiy ; known
to our buyers to hive the fashions
hrmght to this owintry every f
months, has sent out an ri.-epti.wiiiltj
High liidisjeusable. ,
This new coat I like a car that ;
has tittle fullness and hang limplv j
agunt the body. It is slashed at ;
men aid fna the hem up to above
the knees, and the .sleeves tv b-ssa i
and bell-shttptsl The only trimming
sed. ne nuittee what the rhr of the
wt u , ,.,,,,, ,Rted design of
machine stitching. This Hitching 1
by ito menus commonplace; it Is easily
done In America, but It l very el
rsnstve. It Is a bse ehalnstit. h thai
must be perf.stly .bi fn tsh-r t
carry out the sharp. Interlacing out
line of the .b-slgn. Ib-lge. strtng e.d..r
and dsrk blue are ussl f.r tio-se iistts,
end tlw material I a sn of eoft ld
eloth. TU ma.hlue Witchery 1 lu
bla -k.
Itoystit has Itia.le treat name In
Europe f.sr ooe-plece fns-ks. or irt
eulta. which ran he orn mi the street
with dignity. The best g'n eetit
over fr.su this hmse I such a d.s-ided
contrast to everything we have been
wearing, that It was eagerly accepted
by th American who saw It.
The skirt Is exceedingly lyiiww. It
laid In machine knife plaits and hangs
, g ,,miin lne tnm waist t atikbe.
Tbe b.-lllsy Jacket la in a stralgst
line from shoulder to blps, cut on
Slim measurements In opler to make
on look youthful, and It surface la
covered with this machine cluiinstltch
In oyster white. The sleeve are plum,
small and quite long, finished wlih a
liarre band of white satin that flares
over the hand, and a row of earl but
tons that keeps It tight at the wrls.
Vrum the bottom of th Jacket comes
a sash that goes straight around the
8gnre at the hips and Is looped over
Into two end at the back.
Drlscel and th Rtdlnoot.
Jenny Is not the only Important de-
signer In 1'arls who put out the rd
! Ingote for the spring. Her house has
1 never relinquished the redlngote Idea,
but has played upon the one them In
different ways.
lHquln and Drlscoll come back to
the actual redlngote In the form of a
slim coat with a slight curve below
the hips t show that the oval sil
houette, as the French call It l ap
proved. Drlscoll has always had a high repu
tation for coat suits and for whatever
Is tailored, and he make the straight
redlngote which opens In front over a
narrow skirt of satin or crejie de chine,
as opposed to the worsted fabric of
the coat. He also combine foulard
and serge and ere and serge.
The house of Drlscoll Is one of the
few that makes afternoon gowns with
full skirts. It Is true that this full
ness Is not displayed a much at the
hem as It was last autumn, but there
Is not the straight, pull-down line that
the buyers feel Is eutlrely new and
will be accepted.
(Copyright, WIT, by th MoClur Newspa
per gy-ndlcat.
COSTS $653 TO DRESS WELL
This Is Dictum ef Executive board et
Fashion Art League ef AmerUa 1
Doesn't Include the "Kxtraa." j
To be well dressed In 1017 a woman j
must spend (W3 plus. The CM !
doesn't Include house dresses or lonng- j
lng robes or any of the little trinkets !
so dear to the heart of a woman. I
The amount to be spent Is the flic- j
turn of the eiecutlve board of the
Fashion Art League of America.
This la the way the bill for a well
dressed woman will appear to the fond
husband: - I
One tailored gown ITS
On top coat, tailored 10
On afternoon gown In)
Two waist for suit
On evening gown. Ui
Two pair of shoo and ona pair of
slippers '
Two hat i
On corset 1
Thrre pairs of gloves I
Underclothing to
Alocklni ,
TMal
,.MU
A Curtain Hint'
The hot sun shining through the
glass always rots the bottom of the
I curtain before the upper half Is near
' worn out. So this spring, whatever new
; curtains yon get, make them with
hems of equal site at both ends. Each
time before they are taken down to
wash, mark the bottom with a thread.
Then when they are put up again,
put that end on the pole.
This Is a very little trouble and
lengthens the life of a curtain con
siderably. WOMEN
1 Ask your drupeist for
! Person's Remedy.
Mrs. Joe
Known as
, , . .
i,he for over iny-nve yeats
Safest, best, most reliable for ailments
; peculiar to women. Ask your drug
gist or write Person Remedy Com
pany, Charlotte, N, C. Send for testi
monials. Price $1.00 or 3 bottles for
$2.75, or 6 for $5.00 prepaid.
Classified Ads
SERVICE, PRICE, TERMS
These are three important
points to consider when buying
a typewriter. The Rex gives
you the best typewriter, the
lowest price, the easiest terms,
the longest guarantee, and a
free trial off er.
J. M. Underwood
ROSE'S
5, 10 & 25c Store, Inc.
ROSEMARY, N. C.
Opens for Business
To-Day, 4:00 P.M.
Many Big Specials
One of which being a lot of Gray
Enamel Ware 75c to $1 values at
25
c
i Watch this Space
1
Take Her to the Pharmacy
either before or after the
show - it is always as cool as
electric fans can make it and
we are always glad to have
you come
Montauk Cream and the best Fountain Service
Fresh Candies in Refrigerator Storage
Roanoke Pharmacy Co.
We are Exclusive Agents 5
for
Fern and Fernmore
$1.00 and $2.00 Waists
New Ones Received Weekly
We also carry a nice line
of Silks, Crepe de Chine
and Georgette Waists
J. H. Harrison, Jr.
We Sell Satisfaction
The L. G. Shell Co., Inc.
THE STORL OF QUALITY
in Merchandise and Service
Groceries
Dry Goods
Furniture
Farm Scplies
Roanoke Avenue - Rosemary
CICO
- The beat Library and Office Paste on the maiket
I
Three Sizes, 10c Tubes, 35c and 50c jars.
THE HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY fcc
r.
!
i
EACH
for Weekly Specials
max
Roanoke Ave. Rosemary I
F4
n
i
.-1
1