NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder iy 9 
“My name is Anderson McKay,” he began, “and I’m 
a lawyer. About a year and a half ago, a man entered 
my office and introduced himself as Mortimer Cleaves, 
though that is not his name. He offered me a vast sum 
of money if I wonld undertake to find his wife and 
daughter, whom he had left some years ago. I suggested 
a detective agency, but he refused. As my practice was 
not so enormous as to warrant a refusal of so generous 
an offer, I consented.” 
He paused, the girl was staring straight in front of 
her, a puzzled light in her sapphire eyes. "McKay shrug- 
ged his shoulders and continued. 
“Well,” I began my search, but before 
a trace of them, he died.” 
The girl sighed and rested her eyes on his sober 
face for a second. “Do go on,” she urged. 
“If I don’t find them in a year, his vast fortune 1s 
to revert to me. Now the year is up next week, and I 
haven't found them. He came from ‘Maine and I’ve been 
haunting the state for two months now, but I haven’t 
found them. Maybe they are poor, in want, I don’t know 
what to do.” He rose and walked slowly up and down 
the shore. The girl gathered up her traps. 
“Then,” she smiled sweetly, “next week you'll be a 
rich man and it seems to trouble you.” 
McKay sighed, “Poor things. Er—, may I ac- 
company you home, Miss—’ 
“Patricia—”’ 
“Patricia,” he gasped, 
“Knox, why?” 
“That was the daughter’s name, Patricia McGowan.” 
The fish slipped from the girl’s nerveless fingers, 
and she swayed dizzily. McKay sprang to her side. 
IT could find 
iPathicia swiatrt © 
“That’s my real name, mother changed it to Knox, after, 
after—” 
She leaned weakly against his shoulder, and smiled 
up at him though her eyes were full of unshed tears, 
“And she didn’t live to know—” 
McKay knew she spoke of her mother. 
Heaven I have found you before it’s too late.” 
Gently releasing herself, she stood opposite him, her 
eyes flashing and her breath coming in short gasps, “No, 
no, no! I don’t want his money. He left us, when she 
needed him. Take it, it’s yours. I don’t want it,’ she 
repeated, pressing her hand to her head, “I- I—’” 
“But I can’t take—’ he began, then saw it was use- 
less to argue with Patricia, in the mood she was in, and 
felt instinctively that the girl was of the calibre which 
sticks to its resolutions. ‘Very well,” he conceded, “but 
on one condition.” 
She raised her tearful eyes to his smiling ones, “That 
you will promise to share it with me some day,” tenderly 
gazing into the swimming pools of blue as he held out 
his hand. 
Silently she laid her little lean brown paw in his 
big brown paw, and whispered with a happy little sigh, 
elepromise., 
“Thank 
The regatta committee of the Manchester Yacht 
club, of which Henry §. Grew is chairman, and Norton 
Wigglesworth, Charles E. Hodges, Charles K. Cum- 
mings and Roger L. Putnam are the other members, an- 
nounce the schedule of races for the summer for the 
championship on Sat., June 20, July 11, 18 and 25, Aug. 15 
and Sept. 12. The opening race was sailed last Saturday, 
the 13th. The start will be off House Island at 2.30. 
The racing rules will be those adopted by the Manchester 
.. “McGowan,” she whispered eta white ue Yacht Club. 
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MAIN 
TELEPHONES: 
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ESSEX COUNTY REALTY 
FOR SALE 
AND 
TO RENT 
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO 
NORTH SHORE HOUSES and ESTATES 
NEAR THE MYOPIA HUNT CLUB 
T. DENNIE BOARDMAN 
REGINALD BOARDMAN 
R. deB. BOARDMAN 
1792 
MAIN 1800 
REAL ESTATE AND MORTGAGES 
BRANCH OFFICE, MANCHESTER, MASS. 
TELEPHONE 144-W 
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