Bellefonte, Pa., April 4, 1930. EEE EE THE PATH OF LIFE. There is many a rest on the path of life, If we would only stop to take it, And many a tone from the bitter land, If the querulous heart would make it, To the soul that is full of hope, And whose beautiful trust ne'er faileth, The grass is green and the flowers are bright, Though the winter storm prevaileth. Better hope when the clouds hang low, And to keep the eyes still lifted, For the sweet blue sky will soon peep through When the ominous clouds are drifted, There ne'er was a night without a day, Or an evening without a morning. And the darkest hour, as the proverb goes, Is the hour before the dawning. There is many a gem in the path of life, Which we pass in idle pleasure, That is richer far than the jeweled crown Or the miser’s hoard of treasure, may be the love of a little child, Or a mother’s prayer to heaven only a beggar’s grateful thanks For a cup of water given. It Or Better to weave in the web of life A bright and golden filling And to God's will bow with a ready heart, And hands that are swift and will- ing, Than to snap the delicate innate thread, Of our curious lives asunder, And then blame heaven for the ends, And sit and grive and wonder. tangled eee fee ee. ABSOLUTELY NO “IT.” Eyes and ears and nose, hair and lips and even toes. Such, described in glamorous detail, was the stuff heroines were once made of. But nowadays one word suffices. Either agirl has “It”—or she hasn't, And if she hasn't, the best she can hope for is to achieve a philosophy of sorts. As Ann Randolph, with aboslutely no “It,” had achieved her philosophy; this being, basically, that life was not going to hand her anything, even on a pewter plat- ter, and that what she got from life she'd have to work for. In brief, where other girls— such as Ann's younger sister Marge, for instance—used their eyes or dimples to subjugate the male, Ann used whatever substitute suggested itself to her as most productive of results. Even her elbows, if neces- sary. The way she used them this night in late December as she work- ed her way through the crowded street-car as it neared her stop. “Pardon!” she suggested to the bulky specimen of so-called man- hood who stood blocking her pro- gress. Her voice was not the voice of a siren. It was crisp, efficient. Ann was crisp, efficient. But it failed to penetrate as—well, as murmured coo would have. brought an elbow into play. “Whoof!” grunted the target its thrust. He glared at her. If Marge, Marge would have flirted an would have smiled. Ann, however, was not Marge. Exactly eighteen months He did not smile. “Ann,” was the way her mother | put it had made put it, “is so sensible. Men just in Ann’s life, even don’t sort.” interest her. She's To which Ann retorted—but only apout that was, curiously enough. ( Tommy Adams. to herself: “And that’s what —— i py y os 5 . ” 3 | ““ : 29 a "og jant announcement that Marge Samuel Benton was in Washington, “Really?” commented Ann, in a Atlantic City?” he asked in- oure not as bad as all that,” insouciant announc He would return the following tone that suggested he was being terestedly. he had assured her. : made at dinner. . 4 was she, as far as eyes and | ‘Oh, he came in for a manicure. ears and nose, hair and lips and Marge was explaining, as ‘Ann siip- Marge’s | ness gracious,” . Yet | answering her Ann was not without resource. She | that | thing for household of {way Ann did. even toes were concerned. Her eyes were clear and direct, matching in tone the not uncolorful brown of her hair. Her nose was straight, her lips not so bad. As for her toes, shod in trim pumps, they must have been .delectable, for at least they were the terminals loveliest legs imaginable. Even Marge conceded Ann that. “I wish I had your legs,” she had assured Ann, more than once, Nevertheless, it was Marge who got the men. She wasn’t so amaz- ingly pretty in some ways and she was definitely spoilt and selfish. Yet she got them just the same. “She just can’t help attracting men,” was the way her mother phrased it. Mothers will boast that way. Especially to mothers of less fortunate daughters. “Isn't it strange that Ann is so different ?” some of the latter would suggest, sweetly. But Mrs. Randolph was not to be squelched. “Oh, of course, Ann could have men too if she wanted them,” she would reply loftily. “But she’s all for business. And she has such a very important position—in charge of the office all the time Mr. Ben- ton is away, you see. He simply adores her. Why, he gave her a hundred dollars for Christmas. And well Samuel Benton might. Ann not only attended to the office routine but picked out presents for his grandchildren, registered swift if not always sincere admiration for his follies in first editions, and saw to it that he went to the barbers when he should. At such times she felt like a mother to him, The hundred dollars had been a complete surprise to her. The first Christmas he had given her a book, the second two books. “This year, Ann had thought, “it will be three books. If we stick together long enough I may work up to a Christmas where I'll get a full set of Dickens or something like that.” On the other hand, he might close his one-man office and retire any time. Ann knew that, but it was no use worrying. She would get anoth- er job presumably, and © she hoped it would be as good as the one she now had. She was not so sure of that, however. Samuel Benton was a liberal man, as employers went; he had started her at twen- ty-five a week when she was twen- ty two; now, at twenty-five, he was paying her forty. This Ann never told anybody at home. There was a reason. Andrew Randolph, her father, gray and near- ing fifty, was a sublimated head broker who reecived eighteen hun- dred a year. A pathetic, almost tragic figure in a way. “He wouldn't say . a word—but he'd feel like more of a total loss than ever if he knew I was getting more than he is,” Ann thought. The only thing to do, of course, was to pretend that thirty dollars a week could contrive all the miracles forty can be stretched to. Some girls are that way, even these days. Marge worked too, but: she had protested, mother's suggestion she might contribute some- expenses, “I've got to have | clothes and lunches and some spend- it had been | jng money, ls 3 ‘ ; {I want to help and the incorrigible eyelid at him and he; get a decent salary—” haven't I? Of course minute I But then, Marge was younger, younger {than Ann. Not so much in time a big difference if she never not that nad realized that. The first person ever to think Curiously, because call a kind and considerate way of at first glance, he was pretty much putting it. Anybody else say I'm not the sort that men.” Yet it was true that men didn’t interest her a whole lot. At least not such men as Marge was forever bringing home. Marge was all “It.” "A flame for masculine moths, Marge. But not Ann. Ann had her health, a sense of humor and a darned good job. She was private secretary to Samuel Benton, a patent lawyer who spent half his time in Boston and the rest in Washington. He had two sets of grandchildren, a full and hair in his ears. T would interest “L” he had told Ann testily, when | toward the front door. she applied for the position, “can’t with her latch-key and she was secre- ; the hall. : just taking the’ be forever breaking taries. If you're position as a stop-gap until get married—" “IL” Ann had broken in new in, good to my mother.” He had stared at her all but open-mouthed. “Nice teeth—good to your mother?” he had echoed un- certainly. grin. She had wanted the position awfully. They'd get along er, she knew, Some men made Ann feel way. They warmed to her Street-car conductors with six children, fat old policemen. Such men, in short, as Pascale, the boot- black, who .came to the office and who told her that Tony, his oldest boy, was winning prizes at Boston Latin and would go to college and be a great lawyer some day. They interested her, her interest. Oh yes, she ,had felt she was going to get the job. “Exactly the sort of girl,” she had explained coolly to Samuel Ben- ton, “that any sensible man would know would make a much better wife than some fluffy little thing that coos and makes eyes at him. But then—a man is never sensible when he falls in love.” He had, chuckled at that. He was over seventy and he looked like a moth-eaten Jove. In his dim, incredible past, .as.she was. tolearn, he had. stroked a college crew; now his. predominating interest was in the first editions he collected. that . parked ; ! proached home, this night the sort of youngster that Marge might be expected to bring home. A lean, lithe male of twenty-eight perhaps, with a swift grin and a perfect peach of a car. The peach of a car was standing at the curb as Ann ap- in late December when she had used her elbows to get out of a street-car. “Marge,” she thought, as she glimpsed it, “must have a new man on the string.” Which was why she didn’t pause beard | to give the roadster even a second | of the | “Good- | the ! ped _ into her place’ at the table. “He's something or other to do | with a big shoe company and he’s |on for the shoe show that opens ' next week.” This was addressed to her moth- ‘er. It was Mrs. Randolph and her younger daughter who provided much of the table-talk. Something was forever happening to Marge, She had started out, as kad Ann, tobe a stenographer. She never had been particularly good at it; when her notes proved obscure she extemporized and a misspelled word was nothing in her life. Nev- ertheless, she had no difficulty in securing positions. The trouble was that she never held them long. “Oh, he got too darned fresh,” might be her explanation. Or, “He certainly thought he was gift to women—and I told him where he got off.” ’ Of course an attractive gir Marge would be persecuted that way. But even in the beauty shop to which she had gravitated she had troubles. “I hate women!” she had an- nounced passionately, when that position had gone the way of all Marge’s jobs. “Especially women who think that they own the earth like husbands who have money.” Marge’s mother had not liked her present job. “But—manicuring in a barber shop doesn’t seem— quite nice,” she had protested. “It’s a swell shop—and so are : the tips,” Marge had replied serene- | And of course Marge had her own way. She always did. And it was, naturally, in the barber shop that she had met Tommy Adams. “I guess he’s a lot older than he looks,” she went on, at the supper table, this December night. was in the war, anyway.” “Why didn’t you ask him to din- ner?” suggested mother, moved as much by curiousity as hospitality. ht “Good Lord—in this dump!” ex- claimed Marge scornfully. Her father gave her a curious glance but she never even saw it. “Besides,” she added, “he only came to see Ann anyway.” Ann and her mother both at her, a bit open-mouthed. “Or perhaps”—Marge paused and grinned—*“I should say Ann's legs.” “Marge!” protested her mother. “I don’t think that’s nice.” “Why not?” asked Marge, too in- nocently. “Ann has got legs—any- body can see them. And they are awfully nice. And he said that Boston girls have the worst legs he ever saw. And I knew that mine wouldn't change his opinion and so I said, “You ought to see my sis- ter's.” “Marjorie Randolph—you didn’t!” gasped Ann. . “Don’t be mid-Vie!” counseled Marge, “I've always told you you have the loveliest legs ever.” Andrew Randolph gave a snort of disgust. “Nice table-talk!” he be- gan, Te?? “And I dared him to bet a pair lof silk stockings that I couldn’t | prove it,” Marge went on, i turbed. “And he took me up an—" | “Is that the way you talk with | men who come in to get manicur- ed?” demanded her mother. | “Why not? There's something in a manicure with a man that works | just the way a shampoo does with a stared woman. They both tell you their i life histories and—" “But to—to discuss your sister's | —your sister’s—""The word stuck iin Mrs. Randolph’s throat. | “Limbs?” suggested Marge sweet- ily. “Oh, Mother—he was just tell- ling what an awful time he was i having to get manikins to display a new line of shoes the’s horribly in- | terested in. And you see legs—I {mean limbs, Mother dear—are so | important.” - “Did you think,” interrupted .Ann | coldly, “that I'd be interested in be- | coming a manikin?” “No, but he did—until he saw | you,” explained Marge serenely. “He {knew in a second’ then that he | might just as well try to get Queen (Mary. But he was a good sport | just the same. He admitted I'd won | my bet and—" “I should think,” said her mother, i “you’d be ashamed of yourself.” Naturally Marge wasn’t. And | glance. Instead she ran up the steps . when the fruits of the bets she had i 1 | 1 A moment in The room to the right of the you hall, known in Ann’s youth as the parlor, but now less definite and stood Marge. “Well,” she announced, “I thought you'd never get here!” This was surprising. But before won appeared—as they did, prompt- ily, the next day-—she brought them | home and exhibited them trium- i phantly. : | “The man has taste,” i contentedly. she purred “Not an inch of any- “have | much more livable in character, was | thing but silk. Even the toes.” She nice regular teeth and am awfully | lighted and in the doorway | swiftly slipped out of the stocking | that * sheathed her right leg and | drew on one of the new ones. “Gosh!” she breathed, enchanted. She held her leg outstretched be- ' Ann could assimilate it, Marge had | fore her. The stockings—the thought togeth- | and, | | 1 | | Ann had disciplined an impulse to | seized her. “Wait a minute,” she commanded cocking Ann’s hat on at a different angle, she added, “Why don’t you learn to wear your hatat quickly. : the right tilt?” Ann simply stared her amazement. “And,” added Marge, “you might powder your nose now and then. Hold still, dearest—" She produced her compact and powdered Ann's nose. “Well, for heaven's sake!” ex- ploded Ann, “What do you think responded to | — This Marge ignored. “Now,” ‘she commanded, “come in and meet the Prince of Wales.” Of course it wasn't the Prince of Wales. It was just Tommy. “This,” announced Marge to him, “is my sister. I'm sorry she has wool -stockings = on—but she's the sort that would, you know. But— look for yourself.” To Ann this was all as unintelli- gible as Greek. “How do you do?” said she, very coldly, to Tommy Adams. Ann disliked him. Just why could not have said. This had nothing to do with the she | was Ann’s —might have been made ‘by gathering up fairy cobwebs from | the grasss ‘them the color of dead leaves in the | fall. “They must,” was Marge's reac- tion, “have cost him plenty.” “It doesn’t seem to me,” her mother protested, “that any man “Unless his intentions able—or the reverse?” suggested Marge. “Well, I'll ask him which the next time I see him.” “You expect to see him again then?” asked her mother quickly. “Well, he’s to be in town and he may need a manicure,” replied Marge. And added, cryptically, “Men do, you know.” . Evidently she quite expected he woud. Well, so did Ann. Surely Tommy Adams would not have paid his bet so prodigally if his interests had not been caught. Nothing that Marge might - have confided about Tommy Adams’ future activities would have surprised her. What did surprise her was Tom- nmy's appearance at her office the | next morning. At the are honor- God's just because they happen to have | “He | unper- at dawn and dyeing : would give a girl stockings unless | moment i Tuesday—January third. “And then,” he had told her when, at Christmas, he had given her. the surprising gift of a hundred dollars, “I want you to go away, for a week. A real spree—Atlantic City or something like that.” Ann had no intention of going away. For various reasons, mostly financial. This, however, was yet to be divulged to him. In the mean- time there was the office routine to occupy her. It was not heavy. Entering, Tommy Adams discov- ered her with a man on his knees before her. A swarthy male who, however romantic his position, was engaged in commerce none the less. Nevertheless, Pascale, who plan- ned to send his son to college on the proceeds of his daily rounds of office-buildings with his little shoe- polishing box, had just paid her a compliment. “You have,” he had announced, almost reverently, “the lovelies’ legs. No like this”—his expressive hands, holding the implements of his trade, widened broadly -—‘or”—his hands came almost together—‘like this!” He lifted his brown, dramatic eyes | to her, smiling at her expansively, ‘ radiating all the swift charm of the Latin. Ann smiled back—Pascale was not just a bootblack. He was an old friend. | “Isn't it too bad that the rest of me doesn’t match?” she had sug- t gested. | He had looked up at her, puz- zles. “The rest of you—doesn’t { match?” he had echoed. | “Ever hear of It?’ she had ask- ed, amused. | «It? Sure I go to da movies too. Great big pictures of girls, They say girl has ‘It.’ No ‘It’ at all. Maka da. smile, or make da . weep. But just the same—" i had gestured widely, disgustedly. { “What do you mean?” Ann _ had asked. It was queer what could tell you. Street car conduc- tors, policemen—almost anybody when you got them talking. | “They all so American,” he had explained “Not like Italy. In Italy | people look—alive. In America peo- ple hide everything. You go into ian office and see people with dead faces everywhere. As if they afraid | to look alive and—” He had paused a bit lost. Then surprisingly: “You not-a that way,” he had said. “Your eyes, your face—alive!” Ann had stared at him, open- mouthed. Then: “You're a nice man, Pascale,” she had said, “but you're an awful liar. Do you—" The door opened and Ann glanced around, still smiling. She thought it was the postman, But it wasn't the postman. was—Tommy Adams! “I hope Im not being a nui- sance,” he began directly. “I looked up your business address in the di- rectory. I wonder if you could help me out of a hole.” Instantly her face settled into the American mask Pascale had refer- red to. that she could possibly model shoes for him? Or would, if she could? Before, however, she could answer Tommy, Pascale with a final flourish of his polishing cloth had the tools of his trade in the little ; brass-bound box and, arising, was | favoring her with one of his prodi- gal smiles. She must, of course, warm to him, glow swiftly if un- consciously before turning back to Tommy. “People interest you a lot, don’t they?” he remarked surprisingly, as the door closed behind Pascale. “Some people,” amended Ann. He grinned, unexpectedly, charm- ingly. tle,” he remarked. And went quickly with, “I don’t know wheth- er your sister told you that I was on for the shoes show next week and looking for a manikin.” He some people It cants,” he assured her. He paused a second. Then, “Is there a chance in the world I could persuade you to ly for three days, next week.” “Me—model shoes?” gasped Ann, “Why not?” he demanded. “Well, one of us is crazy,” re- plied Ann, “and it must be you, because I'd be a perfect flop at that sort of thing. Marge would love it, but—" “I can get fifty persons of Marge'’s type,” he informed her. “It's you who are precisely the type I want—"’ “And when,” she demanded, “did swift flash of intution—*“certainly didn’t think so the other night, did you?” . “No,” he confessed candidly. “And mind somehow. And I had an idea that if—" He hesitated there as if not quite sure of his ground. “Oh, I understand,” Ann assured him coolly. “An idea that I was like one of those girls you read about. Girls who don’t know how to make i the most of their good points. Then somebody comes along and changes their way of doing their hair or something like that and they dis- {cover that they are really pretty {and begin to radiate charm and ev- erything. That was your idea, wasn’t it?” “Something like that,” he con- fessed as coolly. “But not just—" “Well, it wouldn't work,” she as- sured him definitely. And added | flippantly, “It’s not a matter of clothes at all. Either you have ‘It’ —or you haven't, and—" They were interrupted there. The postman came in, depositing a sheaf of letters on Ann's desk. Tommy, {eyes intent, watched the | between them. “Have you any “It the postman withdrew. ‘ “Have you?” she retorted, idea just what need is not new clothes—or a dif- ferent way of doing ‘your hair— but a proper perspective on -your- self.” very amusing but not at all con-| She almost let him think that. vincing. “Well, how does it happen Then, feeling herself flush absurdly, that Marge has the proper perspec- she confessed: If he had looked in- ‘Did he—could he—believe | replaced ! “I wonder if I could—a lit-! on , “I should think,” commented Ann aloofly, “you’d have no trouble find- ing one!” “Oh, there are plenty of appli- : help me out?” he plunged. “It’s on- you decide that? You”—she had a‘ yet I couldn't get you out of my byplay | stretoned hand—to say nothing | At first she hesitated about “I have a hunch that what - you |ing her employer. jo course, assumed that she intend- : gested. tive and I haven't?” “That,” said he, “is easy. She's the younger. You both grew up to- gether but she developed in one way, you in another. She diverted attention from you while you were still a baby; got the idea the world revolved around her and that she could have anything she wanted.” “Nonsense,” interrupted Ann. “It's just that she is naturally more charming.” “That,” replied Tommy Adams coolly, “is a matter of taste.” (To be Concluded next week.) No woman who ever lived could take offense at that. But Ann chose to disbelieve him. Did he think she was silly enough to let herself be flattered into becoming a mani- kin? But he was going on: “Your sis- ter is a supreme little egotist. Life has made her so. I'm not criticizing egotism is not a bad thing. She knows she’s pretty, she expects at- tention and—she gets it. She'll meet a man half-way —at least— while you—" “While 1?” hesitated. “While you,” he plunged deliber- ately, “are so darned afraid that any man will think you're chasing him that you freeze up. You wouldn’t lift a finger to attract his attention.” “I wouldn’t—not any man that ever lived!” blazed Ann. “And,” he commented imperturb- ably, “you ask me what ‘It’ is. Isn't it merely to make yourself at- gibed Ann, as he tractive—naturally if you can, prov- ocatively if you must? Your sister does—but you just won't.” “Never!” Ann assured him em- phatically. “Except,” he grinned, “to Italian bootblacks and gray-headed letter carriers. They find you attractive enough and like you.” “Oh, they're old and married,” explained Ann. “They like me be- cause I'm interested in them and their problems.” “I know what they like you for,” he informed her. “I—have eyes. You know your interest won't be misconstrued and so you let your- self be natural and—darned attrac- tive.” His eyes sought hers and his nice grin flashed again. “I'm not ; 01d,” he told her, “but 1 am mar- ried and Lord knows I have prob- | lems. If I could persuade you to take the same interest in them—" { A curious thing happened then. Ann had never dreamed, somehow, that he might be married. She ; certainly had no idea of his mar- rying her. And yet she felt—well, suddenly and subtly defrauded, | “Won't you?” he pleaded beguil- ingly. | Ann wavered. ‘“I—don’t see what +I could do.” | “Could you possibly get three days off next week?” he asked eagerly. . Ann hesitated. He was nice. And | married too. As he had said, that | made a difference. He couldn’t ' misconstrue her interest and—she 'was interested. i “I could get the days off,” shead- mitted, “but—oh, if it’s a question ‘of being a manikin, I simply couldn't. I'm not the type.” i “I don’t want the ordinary type,” he persisted. “The styles I'm show- ing are new and, I hope, both dis- | tinctive and a bit revolutionary. I ‘want the same type of manikin.” { “I'd be revolutionary enough, any- way.” | “And that’s the point,” he pressed jon. “I couldn't get you out of my -mind—and neither could the buyers. : You'd stand out.” ! “I,” Ann maintained. | carried out, you mean. There would be lots of people there, and Id “simply shrivel up and die.” Nevertheless, she was weakening in spite of herself. He saw that. “Let me tell you a bit more,” he begged. “I'm well, I'm running a shoe factory on a shoe-string. It's .an old established concern that has been going behind for years. - A town syndicate has been carrying it {along and there was talk of closing it down. That's where I in.” He paused, produced a catalog 'and showed it to her. “Specially . stuff,” he explained. “I sold the idea to the syndicate, now I've got to | sell it to the world at large. And | —it’s neck or nothing.” { Already he had caught her inter- .est. A clever young man, Tommy Adams. For: i | “It's not my own neck that’s ! worrying me,” he assured her. “1 shan’t sink without a trace even if the thing does prove a flop. But— 1do you realize what it means to others. What a shoe factory isto a town?” Ann didn't exactly. But he made her see it. Not as an ugly pile of | brick and mortar, equipped with machinery and smelling of leather. But as the heart of a little town. | “We employ a hundred and fifty men and women in good times,” he enlarged. “Some old, some young. Some married, some thinking of getting married. Each with his or “her separate existence and problems —automobiles and babies, radios and homes. It's —rather a pretty little town. And if it goes as I hope— iand this show will be a test—it ' means more automobiles and babies, . more radios and homes. That's why ‘I'm so darned crazy to put it across.” He paused, eyed her ex- pectantly. | “If—if I could help I—I would,” she said. “If you will, you can,” he told her { positively. He held out his hand. { “Won't you-—shake on it?” Ann still hesitated. But his out- of ' something in his eyes—was compel- is?” he broke in abruptly as | ling. So she let him have her hand | -—impulsively. Pp tell- When she said she was taking three days off he, ed-taking the ‘vacation he had sug- “would be stepped | ' credulous! Or laughed at her! | But he didn’t. He merely chuckled .—which, of course, was quite differ- ent. “Youll be the hit of the show,” he prophesied. | The surprising thing was that he ‘actually thought so. But then he, like other men, always had seemed ,to hold a higher opinion of her ,than—well, than she did of herself. “It’s because I'm sort of an old- | f98njoned girl, I suppose,’ she decid- ed. Yet that certainly, could not be Tommy Adams’ impression of her. Aside from such attributes asa suc- cessful young manufacturer of spe- cialty shoes should possess, Tommy was, obviously, well informed as to what the modern girl wears. “You'll need,” he told Ann, “some sort of ensemble, an evening dress, of course, and something that suggests sport and Palm Beach too. And hats and stockings to match each costume. And pete,” Ann demanded, aghast, “do you expect me to them ?” y R get He grinned at her. “I'm just thinking out loud—I expect to pro- vide them, of course.” “Good gracious!” Ann protested. “If you are running a shoe factory on a shoe-string, as you say, I don't see—" “It’s all charged upto advertising he informed her serenly. “And this is no time to pinch pennies.” Nor did he. He not only took | Ann’s breath away, he even took .Marge’s. As for Mrs. Randolph, she had been breathless from the | start. | Of course there had been no keeping it from the family. If she yhad tried to, the first evidence of ; Tommy Adams’ prodigality when it came to advertising would have giv- en her away. This was the arrival, |not of a single pair of stockings, but a dozen pairs! { And that was only the first bomb ‘to explode in Mrs. Randolph's pres- (ence. The next package to arrive , contained accessories even more in- | timate. Ann wished she had open- !ed that package in her room. { “Say,” demanded Marge, ‘what | does he think he’s doing? Furnish- ing your hope chest?” Ann hastily placed the silky, slinky frivolities back in their wrappings. “I don’t wonder you blush,” add- ‘ed Marge mercilessly. “A girl is i certainly stepping out when she | gets step-ins. That—" “I don't,” exploded her mother, { “see any necessity of his sending | things like that. I—I don’t think it’s nice,” “Oh, he just knew Ann was the | sort who didn't wear them,” con- . tributed Marge. “And of course in demonstrating shoes you demon- | strate so much else, too!” | “He's one of the nicest men I Sver meh flamed Ann, goaded to iit. “And he’s married—very happily ! married.” Vimy | “And isn’t that | gested Marge. | “And it's all strictly business,” { Ann persisted, “He's as impersonal ; as! § ! too bad!” sug- “As any other married man is at {the start,” Marge put in helpfully. | ‘Well, he'll tell you that his wife | doesn’t understand him yet.” { This Ann ignored. Tommy Adams | wasn’t the least bit like that. He | was delightfully casual and he was | terribly in love with his wife. If i she had doubted that, a letter he let her read would have proved it. | He let her read the letter because , at the very moment she had stage fright. This was on Wednesday, January i the fourth, The show was beginning. The fourth, the fifth and the sixth | floors of the hotel were given over to ~ the display of sample shoes. | They—Ann and Tommy— were ina {room on the fourth floor where his , products —the shoes Ann was to | model—were displayed. Footgear ; that, coming from a little New Eng- {land village, was fit for a queen. ; Slippers such as Cinderalla might | have worn. -. . : Ann felt absurdly like Cinderella herself. Because downstairs in the main ballroom was a runway. And ta million people, more or less, wait- | ing to see her walk down that run- | way. Well, she couldn’'t—just . Souldn't! : : { *“I—told you I'd be a flop,” she { reminded him, almost tearfully. | She was all dressed up and the place she was to go was plainly i designated. But all she wanted to ,do was to find a hole to crawl into! Or to bury her nose in a masculine | shoulder and weep. Yes—Tommy | Adams’ shoulder. Married or not, i she felt that way. And married or not, Tommy Adams darn near gave her the chance to. But that she did not . guess. Because instead he abruptly (drew a letter from his pocket. “Read the first page of that,” he suggested. { The first page was in the swift | firm writing that looked so like him. It ran: Dearest: This will be only a short letter today to tell you how much I love you and miss you and how I wish you could be here. I hope you ; are taking every precaution—this is bad weather for colds, you ! know—and that Doctor Crossman | will sit on your chest if neces- | sary to keep you in bed. ! Don’t worry about me. It's going to mean big things for us. I've got exactly the girl I want, { you know. She hasn't the slight- est idea how charming she is and she’s not the type that would do this normally. And that’s just the reason she's going to strike precisely the note I want. She'll make the others look like rhine- stones. As you can't be here I'm going to describe her abit. I persuaded her yesterday to go to the: best (Continued on page 7, Col. 1.)