SOUTHERN OREGON MINER. Ashland. Oregon RU I umetti IfUIR *i * The new steel helmet just adopt­ ed by the Army is no longer called a ‘‘tin hat.” It's a “head bucket” and when you see one you 11 know why. Our soldiers have changed much of their slang since the last war, but not their preference for Camel Cigarettes. Now—as then —Camels are the favorite. They're the favorite cigarette with men in the Navy, Marines and Coast Guard as well, according to actual sales records from service men’s stores. If you want to be sure of your gift to friends or relatives in the service being well received, stop in at your local dealer's and send a carton of Camels.—Adv. GROW THESE FERRY’S AU-AMERICA IN YOUR GARDEN Three recent Ferry’a AU America Award Winnert have proved their merit in thousands of bom« gardens. mars Gate» moxnins sioav—Pearly msrs ClIOMt —Oiant Pink Queen rcaars SWHT MAS-Spnn, Flowering rcaars MAXIOOtt> Melody A I'oj/eh/e through your local deallee FERRY’S SEEDS Sawy-Meree See» Ce. 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Pinkham's Compound has helped thousands upon thousands of wom­ en to relieve such annoying symp­ toms. Follow label directions. Pink­ ham'« Compound is worth, trying! With Patience Everything which is out of our power to amend becomes more supportable by patience.—Horace. ACHING-STIFF ■SORE MUSCLES 9 ■ 9 9 ■ I m H For PROMPT reliei—rub on Mus- terole! Massage with this wonderful " counter - irritant " adually brings freeh warm blood to aching muscles to help break up painful local con- gestion. Better than an old-fashioned mustard plaster! In 3 strengths. MUST erql F »COLD 666 Ill TABLETS, SALVE. NOSE DROPS, COUGH DROPS. Try "Kub-My-Tism"—• Wonderful Liniment WNU—13 ©Noams THE STORY SO FAR: An orphan since the az» ot «eve», Charlotte (Cherry) Rawlings knows almost nothing about her early history. J»dg» Jndson Marti» banks, her eo-guardlan with Emma H«i hell, arranges tor her to leave Saint Dorothea's, and Irlls her that Emma has obtained tor her a secretarial position with the wealthy Mrs. Porteous Porter, of San Francisco, where Emma Is house­ keeper. She is grst to go to the Marsh­ hanks mansion. When she arrives she dines alone with the judge as Fran, his young wife, and his niece, Amy. are din­ ing OSL KeUy Coates, an artist, drops In and Cherry feels 111 at ease In her convent clothes. Cherry becomes hitter when she overhears Fraa and Amy make laughing reference to her and her clothe«. Her snrroundlngs are Inxnrlous when she takes np her job with oM Mrs. Porter, hot after several weeks shs Bads Ute al­ most monotonous. • B/KATUI FFM NODUIC ’/KATHLEEN NORRIS • • 10—43 Na<^in<¿ Backache May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Modern life with Its burry and worry. Irregular habits, improper «sting and drinking—its risk of exposure and Infec­ tion—throw, heavy strain on tbs work of tbs kidneys. They are apt to become over-taxed »nd fail to Biter exeres acid and other impurities from th. life-giving blood. You may suffer nagging backaeha, headache, dlxxlnesa, getting up nights, leg pains, swelling—feel cnnatsntly tired, nervous, all worn out. Other signa of kidney or bladder disorder are tome- times burning, scanty or too frequent urination. Try Doon’s PiUa. Doan's hslp the kidneys to pass off harmful •«•••.**?£{ waste. They have had mors than half a century of public approval. Are mended by grateful users everywhere. Ask your neighbor! DOANS PILLS RABBITS AND SKINS FOR SALE !/« f ; Now continue with ths story. So Emma and Ferny propped her up comfortably and arranged the lights becomingly, and were barely finished as the clock struck the half- Couples were leaving the dining room to dance for a few minate«,' hour after seven, when Dorothy and her mother came in to preen them­ downstairs rooms were a scene of arrested her with a hand on her selves under the old lady's approv­ wild disorder. arm. ing eyes; to admire her and be During this busy, hurried time, "Sit down here a minute,** he praised themselves. And in another messages were constantly coming said, immediately seating himself half-hour three or four mothers downstairs from Mrs. Porter, up to on the landing's top step, •'How's were there, and quite a little re­ whose room Cherry ran a dozen it gone? Had any fun out of it? ception was going on in the up­ times. Her employer wanted bland­ I've seen you coming and going and stairs sitting room. At Cherry's ly to know if everything was going didn't know whether it was any fun suggestion the arriving guests were nicely, was enthusiastic as to her for you or not Get your candy?” to be sent upstairs In detachments; own share of the festivities and "Oh. it was wonderful. Mr. she went below at half-past eight would like another cup of that de- Coates.” to find sixty of them milling about licious madrilene. Ming Wo so rare- "Not your first box of candy, I enjoying a succession of cocktails, ly made madrilene and she had al­ suppose?" and was reminded of old days at ways been so fond of iti Cherry was too dizzy to know Saint Dorothea's and school theatri­ The dinner party had progressed what she said by the way of reply. cals as she sent them up in parties to the breast of milk-fed chicken She tried to make it grateful. But of six. with Virginia ham and mushrooms merely talking to him confused her. Unexpectedly. Cherry found Amy and to procure another cup of the The lost evening was suddenly Marshbanks in the center of an ad­ soup was like returning to some aglow with color and light. She miring circle, and bated herself for event of the dim past When that was to have her moment after all! In her agitation she said exactly the wretched little prick of jealousy was accomplished. Mrs. Porter was that rose even through her new­ delicately picking at some rich con­ what she would have wished not to found sense of ease and power. She coction of crab meat and allowed the say. Swallowing hard and with a nervous, quick laugh, she asked. looked for Fran and Kelly Coates, soup to cool untouched. Bridge and backgammon had been "Didn't . . . didn't Mrs. Marsh- but they were evidently coming lat­ er; they were not in sight When set out in one of the parlors now; banks look lovely tonight?" For a minute his expression was the time came for her to say to the orchestra concealed behind the Amy that if she would please— inevitable palms was playing pro­ so odd that she was terrified. He didn't like her saying that! Then he would any four of them—go up­ vocative dance music. said briefly, "Lovely.” Couples were leaving the din­ stairs and say good evening to Mrs. Blundering on, in spite of a half­ ing room to dance for a few min­ Porter. Amy stared at her amused­ defined feeling that he would not utes. ly. entirely without recognition, «nd said in an undertone to an adoring —were returning to play absently like to talk about her. Cherry said, with alligator-pear or frozen pud­ "I used to think she was almost— boy beside her: "What’s the big idea? Is Nursey ding. Cherry looked into the upstairs well, homely. But when you know telling us to say we had a nice bedroom to find Alma and Hatty her face you see that she's beauti­ ful!” deep in a muttered conversation. time?” He had folded his arms, in a fa­ "They're doin’ nothin’ but makin’ There was a small library knftwn as "the den" tucked away under fun of the old lady." said Hatty. vorite gesture of his, and was look­ the wide turn of the stairway. The "Her champagne's good enough for ing at her seriously. "Fran.” he said simply. But the door into the hall was open, but them, and her dinner's good enough when Cherry approached it to an­ for them, but *Oh, ain’t she a word brimmed with some secret swer the telephone in the hall near scream.* and ’Ain't this a queer old magic for him. and she felt its ech­ it she had no idea that anyone was vault!* and ’Lord, my dear, you let oes reach her, and was chilled. "The me into this; I never would have Randalls are taking her home.” he in the room. added. “Vve got to be on my way The voice on the telephone was come.’ ” "An’ they says, ’How early can back to Sausalito, But you—what that of an agitated gentleman who kind of time have you had?” he was bringing a lady up from Hill­ we get out and go somewhere and asked after a moment. dance? ’ ” added Alma. borough and had had the misfortune "Rotten." she said, suddenly hun­ Cherry was the more disturbed to break a spring while driving. to hear the maids* views because gry for his sympathy and under­ They had sent for a taxi. standing. It was unwise, it was im­ Cherry’s eyes moved absently to they confirmed an uneasy and pulsive, she knew it, even as the the open door of the den. and rested ashamed impression of her own. An ground slipped away from beneath incuriously upon a pair of satin slip­ impression that the flattery and her feet. "I hate that Amy!" she pers that in their turn were resting kisses that went on in Mr». Por- said. "That is, I don't hate her.” upon one of the tasseled taborets ter’s room were not sincere, that she amended it, "but she treats me behind the old lady's back there that stodd before the fire. were patiently resigned sighs and as if I wasn't there—didn't count.” The wearer of these slippers, who­ "I suppose so.” he conceded with shrugs, and a good deal of the rais­ ever she was, was sunk so deep in ing of amused and contemptuous a thoughtful look. "Give it time,” • great chair in the comfortable po­ eyebrows. Mrs. Porter's dinner he went on, with a little stress on sition she had assumed her heels dance for the debutantes would be the last words, "give it time. You'll were at least a3 high as her head. long remembered, but not with the leave Amy behind you some day. The firelight twinkled on the slip­ gratitude she imagined. The words and then this will all seem very pers and on the swirl of her ver­ "horror” and "awful" and “lousy” small-girl stuff. Patience, Cherry." milion velvet gown; she was evi­ and "just about the limit!” would His use of her name, his serious dently whispering, for Cherry heard be used more often than more com­ consideration for her ill-timed out­ no words distinctly. plimentary terms. Cherry felt a bursts destroyed the last shred of Cherry went upstairs with her sudden rush of resentment, of pity her reticence. She was tired, ex­ cited. jealous, lonely; she wanted message that Miss Trotter and Mr. for her employer. Buddy Brown would be a little late, Stepping back into the hall, and somehow to hold him, and blindly to find the detachments coming and going to look down at the lower floor, reached for whatever claim upon his going between the downstairs to see if the dinner was about over. interest she could find. "No matter what I did," she said, rooms and Mrs. Porter’s apart- Cherry was shocked suddenly to meats, and any serious considers- hear the sound of sobbing. Who looking down shyly and fingering the ornamental end of one of the brass tion of dinner as far removed as was crying? • ever. It came from Dorothy’s room. rods that held the stair carpet in Emma said with her usual air of Cherry went softly toward it, and as place, “no matter what I did I would stem but repressed annoyance that the door stood open a crack, she never matter to you, I know that! this would never do, and just as the pushed it further open and went in. You’d never think of me as any- delayed couple arrived from Hills­ Dorothy, her party frock crushed thing but a girl from Saint Doro- borough, at twenty-two minutes past into stringy limpness, was lying thea’s who didn’t count—you’d go nine, the eight-o’clock dinner began across the bed crying bitterly. She on falling in love with Mrs. Marsh­ to take shape and form, guests had a chiffon handkerchief pounded banks — of course,” Cherry floun­ straggled toward the tables and into a wet ball in her hand, and was dered on wretchedly. "I know I'll looked for name cards, and wait­ digging at her eyes with it. and never be like that—dressed that way ers began to serve smoking cups of snuffling and sobbing like a heart­ and playing bridge and all; she's been in Europe—but if I had clothes madrilene. broken child of three. It was at this moment that the The endless evening dragged its and money—if my husband was as couple whose privacy she .had ob­ way to midnight, and the guests be­ wonderful as Judge Marshbanks—I served sauntered from the den. gan to disperse. Mrs. Porter, when couldn’t—I know I couldn't ...” She stopped in a terrifying si­ Cherry, halfway up the stairs to they came in to say their good-byes, find Keno and ask the little Japa­ protested kindly. It was early yet! lence. She could not raise her eyes. nese maid to keep an eye open for Why. when she was a girl they had As Kelly got to his feet she rose too, but still she could not look at a lost evening bag of silver and often danced right into the morning! amethysts, happened to see them But the pretty girls and the hoarse, him. "I’m sorry,” she said thickly, come out. She paused on the stairs polite young men were firm. Some to watch them make their leisurely of the boys were working, they ex­ when she could not bear it an in­ way toward the dining room. They plained; they had to keep early of­ stant longer. "Well!" the man said dryly, on a stopped once in the lower hall, the fice hours. By twos and fours they surprised breath, as she came to a man speaking earnestly, the woman dwindled away. listening with a bent head, giving Cherry knew that they were all horrified and frightened pause. And him only an occasional swift upward going off somewhere else to dance. forcing herself at last to meet his glance. She heard them promise one another eyes. Cherry saw that he was smil­ Kelly and Fran. Kelly and Fran. to meet later. She heard them laugh­ ing, in a sort of annoyed indulgence, The sight made Cherry feel first a ing at their evening’» entertainment, as one might smile at a forward At the look her soul died little weak, and then heartsick. and their “Whews!" of relief as they child. They had come supposedly to keep disappeared into the darkness out­ within her. Those eyes could never an eye on the younger crowd, to side the front door. The whole again hold anything but contempt help with the party. They had real­ thing had been ridiculous and a fail­ and dislike for her. Presently with ly come to seize an opportunity of ure, she decided, going downstairs a nod and a quiet "Good night' he being alone and unobserved togeth­ for the twentieth time that evening left her, descended the stairs. Then er. Of course! Of course! to see if the bridge players were the front door closed and he was All her bright, vague hopes for still at their game, gone. For the first time in her life, Cher­ what this evening might bring were Fran was playing hard. Two oth- destroyed instantly. Everything was er tables were deserted, littered with ry spent an entirely wakeful night. • dull and dreary blank now; Cher­ cigarette ashes and chocolate frills, Her wearied mind thrashed over ry hated every detail of the party, scribbled scores and torn paper. She and over again the last episode of dragged herself through the next was returning upstairs again for the the ill-starred party; her weary hour or two by sheer force of will, purpose of asking Emma if she body twisted and struggled in a There was plenty for her to do, could stay up to put out lights, when physical misery that matched the for the cocktail hour had been a Kelly Coates came down stairs, tortme in her soul. time of great confusion, and the met her halfway, smiled at her and (TO HE CONTINUED) BsMavsd I« 8 manetos ST dm** •••"*» Wh.« ...—i .1.....-H. s.1,1 r.o— p»>"«»•■ -("(«-»■ DEPARTMENT roi'I.TItY. Rabbits. Hide» I'elta Wool tloOd white frier rabbit »kin. 40c lb. Shlii or writ» post card for iirlcea. Bubv k Co.. «38 W front. Portland. Oregon. CHAPTER V WINNERS — k i^inflRfHBflnKS CLASSIFIED Gas on Stomach BI.UKIIKHHIKM—Lowest prlcsn. stur­ dy plants, fre» plant» given with order Folder on re<|U< st Bbor- hnrdt Blasbsrry Bursary. Olyuipla. 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