FROM THE START — In the usually quiet home ol Rev Mr. Tolliver of Red Thrush, fowa, his motherless daughters Helen, Miriam and Ellen="Gin- ger Ella"—are busy “grooming” their sister Marjory for partici pation in the “beauty pageant” that evening With Eddy Jack- son, prosperous young farmer, her escort, Marjory leaves for the anticipated triumph. Overs work has affected Mr Tolliver's eyes to the point of threatened blindness Ginger has tried in many ways to add to the family's slender Income, but she i» not discouraged, Marjory wins the beauty prize, $50 00 She gives the money to her father as part of the expense necessary for the treatment of his eyes by Chicago specialists, Mr. Tolliver leaves for Chicago with Miriam. Gioger meets Alexander Murdock. Mr. Tolliver returns, the doctors giv. ing him little hope. STORY CHAPTER IV—Continued — “And everybody who buys one, will sell four more—" “And it all started from one. single, solitary, little one.” The girls taiked on and on. But Ginger drew herself away from them sat enwrapped in unpenetrable chought She remembered the old chaln let ters They had. come with some fre quency 8 few years ago, prayers for almost everything, for the sick. for foreign missions. for prohibition. for fundamentalism, for the second com ing of the Lord. for the reiease of anarchistic prisoners condemned to death— “And everybody sends it on to so many more, and every one of them sends It to so many more, and they send it" Ginger got up suddenly and went out of the room. She walked dizzily She went upstairs. got the short lad der from the linen closet, and bal anced it against the wall ander the trapdoor. She noticed that her hands trembled. But she climbed carefully ~—the ladder was old—pushed up the trapdoor, and pulied herself through the opening. From foree of habit, for she was not then thinking of trap doors. she locked It behind her, and made her way carefully over the beams to her sanctuary ander the dormer window. There she sat down heavily, to think She thought, and thought. and thought, antil Jer bright eyes were so wide, so bright, so blue. that of a sudden they seemed to hurt her. and she shut them hard Her two small hands were gripped so tightly with fingers Interlaced so closely, that suddenly she knew they were throb bing with pain. half paralyzed, so that she had to work thew apart. slowly a finger at a time. Dut she did oot stop thinking. “hain letter—on and on-all over the world—thousands snd thousands— and nohody dares to stop because no body would dare to break the chaln— for the bhlind—a home for the blind— on and on and on” Suddenly Ginger burst Into low nervous laughier, and laughed and cried and twisted ber little hands. and rocked back and forth on the stool in an ecstasy. “Oh, oh. how beavenly, how perfect ily heavenly! 1 oever could have thought of such a brilliant thing. Oh, as tather says, | see the hand of the Lord in this!” She pulled the stool to the low table which she used as a desk. and seated hersell with a professional briskness indicative of the oneness of purpose which prompted her Selecting three pencils from a large uumber In the drawer sle sharpened them briskly Then she drew her pad of paper toward her. and opened It, Then she studied intently, chewing her pencil. She wrote a nasty line and quickly scratched It out. Again she wrote, agnin she frowningly dis carded It Several times she re pented this painful process. but at inst, as so often happens, persistent effort brought inspiration, and she wrote fluently, without a pause for thought. “tur parsonage home for the bilnd is sadly io need of funds to carry on fts noble work. WIN you not con tribute Ten Cents to this very worthy couse? And complete the chain of good vibrations by sending copies of this letter to three of your friends in whom you have conbdence? In this way. this valuable institution will en large its circle of friends aad will be enabled to continue its enre of the un fortunate and needy blind, “We depend on you, “Do not break the chain, *B. Tolliver, treasurer, “Red Thrush, lowa” Ginger was greatly pleased with the formal tone of this letter. She knew very well that if she received such an appeal, she would contribute gladly— if she bad the money, She read It One. by Ethel Hueston Ilustrations by Irwin Myers - W.N.U. SERVICE over and over, adding a word, omit ting a word, substituting a word, until the final version seemed impossible of improvement. The question to whom the letter should be sent was subjected to deep thought. Indeed, It theuzht, so deep It was. Men, she knew, were more susceptible than women to personal appeal—partica tarly when the personal appeals came from not unattractive girls. But wom en were more superstitious and would he more reluctant to bring upon them selves the Implied curse that wonld result from a breaking of the chaln Women, then. As for location, she was not par ticular, except that it would be bes to start at some distance from Red Thrush. AMethodist interests are close iy allied in oeighboring towns, and she realized the Importance of pro tecting the family name. Now Ginger herself was deeply vnamored of the chain letter idea, to her It smacked ahsolutely of the hand of Providence But one could pever know just how fathers and older sisters would react to things. hence she realized it would be the part of discretion to avoid questions whose answers conld not be evaded. Ginger's unfailing resource in an emergency was the dally press She got the Inst issue of the Burling ton Hawkeye, and studied its col amns. Now, theoretically, @ chain should start from a» single link, but she was not willing to trust the foundation of her fortunes to one small dime which might pot be forth coming. She decided upon three ns a falr start. “Three links are better than one.” she sald thoughtfully. “And if it starts three chains, so much the better.” When ever she came to the name of a woman mentioned prominently, she put her finger on the place, closed her eyes, and tried to get a vibration about it. Finally the three letters were written, enclogsec in envelopes addressed, and Ginger took them at once to the corner mull box. and put them in “Ah” she breathed ecstatically, as she turned back toward the parsonage Her heart was as light as the wings of a butterfly. It seemed to arry her home. Aiready the old house looked a new place to her, a rosy place, bright with flowers, fresh paint, acew furni ture. Thousands napon thonsands Helen herself had sald it. Thousands upon thousands “Oh. | wish | had asked .or quar ters,” she thought. “Such a very good cause, nobody could begrudge 1t™ » - * *® ® ® . Had It not been for the pleasurable excitement attendant upon Helen's wedding, Ginger felt she could not possihly have endured the strain of the days that followed. Her confi dence in the outcome of her chain let ter home-for-the-blind was sahsolute Winters might eome, with thelr con sequent coal and coat bills daugh ters might go, with thelr petty love affairs. but Ginger Ells and the chalp letter would go on for ever. Plans for the wedding took prece dence over everything else, for Helen yielding to the argnment that for her in this case the way of genuine sacri fice lay In gracious acquiescence to plans already made. preceeded calmly with her arrangements She knew ip her heart that she would have pre ferred a more apparent display of her uonselfishness. She wonld have enjoyed 4 real martyrdom. She wonid have been proud to stand glorfousls forth. to her father. her sisters. and Red Thrush, giving up her marriage for a year, for ten years. for ever. if need be. But she was honest enough to realize that the course of true denial followed another channel Mental rest. the doctors” tnd pre scribed, and that could never be hud in the sacrifice of his daughter's plang The wedding was to be héld In the day school class, the Ruotheans, serv ing a buffet luncheon In the Sunday school ! wssembly room, the room that was used for church dinners, soclals and the like. This luncheon was to take the place of a home reception. The detalls of the ceremony had been carefully practiced. Horace Langley, with Eddy Jackson as his best man, was to walt in the small room at the left side of the pulpit. The brides- maids were to gather in the primary room, just inside the main entrance. Helen decided that when all invited guests sat silently walting within the church, she, with ber fa- ther, would walk quietly across the intervening space from parsonage to church—such a very little way— and while Ellen took tim on around to the pulpit room on the right of the altar, she would join her attendants in the primary department. For fully a week, although but ten days had elapsed since the forging of the tirst link thas was to grow Into an endless chain of silver dimes, Gin- ger had dogged the steps of the post. man. “Letter for me? There's not? That's funny.” But on the very day before the wedding, as though to fill ber cup to utter overflowing, the postman deliv. ered three letters addressed to E. Tolliver, all in strange bandwriting. “Well, that's funny,” stammered Ginger, and beld out a trembling hand, and with the gullty consclousness of the evildoer, sure the very postman must he suspicious of such a sudden burst of correspondence, she added, junch of ads, 1 suppose.” She was 80 excited that she fell off the ladder three times before she finally got her self—and the three letters—Iinto the attic studio under the dormer window, She was trembling nervously. Her chilly fingers tore uselessiy at the stiff paper, she had it open ar last, a dime rolled out upon the floor. She seized and kissed It “You're my nest egg” she whis pered, “you're my lucky plece. you're what some dumb farmer would eall pay dire.” She opened the other letters. three dimes resulting A sort of stiliness came over her. She sat, huddled into a small hunch on the old and read the letters—pleasant letiers, sympathetic, “It is a joy to help In such good work” “God bless cause,” “Pleasure to add my mite” “The darlings.” sald Ginger. “The dear, sweet, generous, souls” of judging one's (Christianity. not by devout Christians Very still she sat in a sweet and grateful gladness mind leaped swiftly on, 10 expensive curative treatments for her new rich furniture to replace their and chickens She kissed the letiers, one after the other. and erumpled them In her hand, to be burned “Little white angels,’ derly. she called ten this incipient fortune. Three dimes, of themselves, did not require much treasoring, but the highly Imaginative eyex of Ellen Tolil ver looked already upon the thousands and thousands. In neat litle stacks, that were tc come. [nn another part of the attic she ferreted out an old doll's trunk. very dasty, very shahby, but stout, hinged top, and best of all old lock still intact and dangling from a siring. Within it, side by side. she aid the three dimes, ceptable for lock. Then she moved eversthing else off her desk, and directly in the middle of it she placed the trunk, royally alone. The key she thrus: un. concernedly into the table drawer. She was not afraid of thieves. Her sigh was a great and glad one, “At last fortune smiles upon the par. sonage. and all the Tollivers in 11,” she whispered joyously. “Perhaps not much of a smile so far—just a little giggle, but a nice little giggle. The poor little church mice are going to surprise folks one of these days ™ She wished greatly to tell her sis ters of this sudden turn in the tide of the family fortune, but that {little inner monitor, which Ginger most an. scripturanlly called a bunch, warned her against this confidence. and she buried herself and ber seething emo- ions as well as she could In plans for the following day. Long before the high hour of noon on Helen's wedding day, she was daintily arranged in her blue organdie, pirouetting ap and down the hall from room to ftoom. hurrying everybody, criticizing the general appearance of ber sisters, ofiering endless pert sug. gestions, and always Inciting them to greater haste, (TO BE CONTINUED) It is a long way from present-day floods along the Mississippi river back to the great Ice age, but happenings of the Iatter period have considerable bearing on the trials and tribulations of the valley dwellers, Before the great fields of Ice worked thelr way down from the north, at least two rivers, the upper Missour and the Yellowstone, flowed northeast and emptied into Hudson bay. With the advent of the sheets of ice, how. ever, these two rivers were forced to run to the south, and their combined waters cut the gorge now followed by the Missouri through the Dakotas. At the same time the Red river be came a huge pond called glacial Lake Agassiz, with an outlet to the Minne sota river valley Part of the water shed of the Red river became a per manent source of water for a river flowing to the south and the original head of the Missouri river. This river is now known as the James river. With the melting of the great ice dam, the Red river resumed its normal flow to the north, but the others con- tinued to the south.-Exchange, In the Rear to Stay fle on time in iife In both small and targe things. Keep up to date. Don't timp tuto line after everybody else bas drrived. American Magazine, Dame Fashion Smiles By Grace Jewett Austin It Is certainly possible to have style, and correct style, about everything in the crented uni- verse, Something brought to Dame Fashion's mind the other day the mem- ory of Mrs. Brew- er's fried potatoes. Probably there are people scattered all over the United States who remem- ber those fried po- tatoes for she “kept summer boarders,” as the phrase used to be, in a picturesque little New England town, where peo- ple from many states used to gather, and in those leisurely days before the restless, road-devouring automo- blles, remained for an entire summer, At Mrs. Brewer's each was served with three slices of potato, and no more were offered—but such slices! Each was of what we should now term “golden bhelge” in hue, and pre cisely of the right crispness, cut leng from large potatoes. It was their secret that each slice was fried individually, like a griddle eake. Dame Fashion would not like to have to guess how many hundreds of thou ands of women in the United States will be frying potatoes tomorrow morning. Perhaps many are as fa mous to their families and friends as Mrs. Brewer was to her cirele, but {if #0 there is a reason. It is careful- ness and precision, As the years go by more and more this care and precision Is being given by American women to their costum ing. Even five years ago the idea of matching purses and shoes, for in stance, was Just at its dawning and this Idea of producing harmony in costume Is making sure but steady headway. There is a subtiety about Grace J. Austin, rthwise old to match.” easy plan of “everything That still may produce an but has to be watched of the look of too giving The girl who matches with tweed hat which bids fair to be an increasing custom, should make a def. inite plan for a contrasting effect— or woinan firm of lea designs a slender ther, with brilliant color across its and gloves with the same stripes In the gauntiets, nat a purse scarf ends, During fashion the warm weather every writer had a happy time de “cotton Is king.” and indeed had not since “away back Bat jovial warm-hearted wool, in the shape of tweeds and broad cloth is now firmly seated the throne, and will there until spring. Not only are the rough tex tured goods in excellent style, but the knitted wool fabrics, so light flo weight that they do not tire, and In most cases so becoming, show no les sening in value. How well they lend themselves to those delightful pin. tucks! Dame as It on stay Fashion, through preference, is glad are winter much red, her own that indications for the in shades all the violet-red to brick. Just and there will be red coats for men, one of these days-—and not for fox-hunting, either! (& 1929, Western Newspaper Union.) Snug Waistline, Flaring Hemlines Are Prominent The fur coats this season show the snug waistline and flaring hemlines, while the sleeves are fashioned in a way to emphasize the three-quarter glove. The model shown is fashioned of baby caracul with a trimming at the top of the flaring cuff of Baum Marten, Dress Designed to Wear Under Winter Fur Coat The peplum, one of the new features of the fall and winter dresses, is shown here. The mode! is a youthful creation of printed crepe In which a neat design of black, yellow and orange is worked on a beige back. ground. The circular motif is carried out in the frill about the neck, the peplum and the skirt. It is an ideal dress to wear under the heavy winter coat. Wedding Gowns Will Be Winter wedding gowns will trimmed with snowy furs if the Amer- ican bride follows the the Paris dressmakers, notes a fash- fon correspondent in the New Herald Tribune, One of the beautiful bridal gowns shown at recent openings in white satin with flowing panels carry- ing wide Borders of white fox. train, too, was edged with fox. Fox In all trimming this year. with the softest door wear and makes when they are uscd for coats, most the harsher pelts alone could be. Fur hats are another bygone days. Pa these In Persian caps he called them, tremely becoming appearance. lamb. Bt They are ex season, Lace and fur and cl fur often one another and it Is how appropriate appear. The fur used fabrics usually is fox one of softness and lightness, Satins Promise to Be with printed chiffon, Crepe satin, and plain chiffon have been preferred, says a Paris fashion writer In New York Times. At style in fall, Its sheen Is and pinks and in ivory to pure. satin will come in In full glory for fall, And from black satin to black trans parent velvet Is a short and agreeable step. is nssured. promised. «ibly colored broadcloth and zibeline, The combination makes the choicest winter coats that the Paris dressmak. ers can conceive of. Velvet, Satin Ribbon : Used for New Fall Hats The ribbon toques are of great im portance in the fall millinery outlook, These are of both velvet and satin ribbon and are so woven as (0 cover the head tightly, come low over the puffs of short feathers. Others achieve the broad side effect by huge bows of velvet or satin, Currant Red The new red for autumn after noons is currant red, deeper and rud- dier than lipstick, lighter than crim son. A fiat crepe frock In this tone has a detachable cape that buttons across both shoulders with buttons of the material, Velvet Tailleur New Velvet tallored suits promise to be a feature of the fall season because the material lends itself so wonderful. ly to cxpert talloring and falls so gracefully and maintains its uncreased freshness so long. Too much to eat—too rich a diet— or too much smoking. Lots of things cause sour stomach, but one thing can correct it quickly. Phillips Milk of Magnesia will alkalinize the acid. Take a spoonful of this pleasant preparation, and the system is soon sweetened, Phillips Is always ready to relieve distress from overeating: to check all acidity; or neutralize nicotine, le- member this for your own comfort; for the sake of those around you. Endorsed by physicians, but they al- ways say Phillips. Don’t buy some thing else and expect the same re sults! MY BEGINNER'S BOOK WiLL d read. 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The wonderful desert resort of the Wess Write Cree & Chaffey alm Spring C AL IPORNIA Worms cause much distress to children and anxiety to parents, Dr. Peery's “Dead Sos removes the cause with a single dose. brbeery’s C 0eod Shot for Lu Vermifug At drugg:sis or 72 Pearl Street. New Chicago's Business District A floating population of more than 1,000,000 persons enter the Chicags loop district every 24 hours, accord ing to figures compiled by the Chi. cago Association of Commerce, Each day also more than 10,0 street cars and 152,000 motordriven and horse. drawn vehicles come into rhe down town trading zone, To make the traf. fic situation just a trifie more acute, practically 90 per cent of this activity occurs between 7:30 a m. and 0 p. m. dally. First Norwegian Book i Elling Eielsen, in 1841, walked from LaSalle county, Ill, to New York city to get the Lutheran catechism printed in English, the first book to be pub- lished by a Norwegian In America American Magazine, ASTHMA DR.LD.KELLOGG'S ASTHMA REMEDY for the prompt relief of Asthma end Mey Fever, Ask your drug Eint for it. 28 cents and one dole tar. Write for FREE SAMPLE, Northrop &Lyman Co. Inc. Buftalo N.Y. Pr. J. 0. pGG S EME