mT == Bellefonte, Pa.,, November 27, 1981. AT THE TOP OF THE ROAD. “But, lord,” she said, ‘my shoulders still are strong— I have been used to bear the long; load so “And see, the hill is passed, and smooth the road—" “Yet,” said the Stranger, “yield me now thy load.” Gently he took it from her, and she stood Straight-limbed and lithe, in new-found maidenhood. Amid long, sunlit flelds; around them sprang A tender breeze, and birds and rivers sang. “My lord,” she said, ‘this land is very fair!" Smiling, he answered: ‘Was it not so there?” “There?” In her voice a wondering question lay: “Was I not always here, then, as to- day?" He turned to her with strange deep eyes aflame; “Knowest thou not this my name?’ kingdom, nor “Nay,” she replied: “but this I under- stand— That thou art Lord of Life in this dear land” “Yea, child,” he murmured, scarce above his breath “Lord of the land! ed me Death.” but men have nam- THE ETERNAL MICROBE Love, according to some French scientist, is a disease, and a contag- jous disease at that. If this is so, the germ that waylaid Patterson Noyes certainly worked fast. For at eight o'clock of an August twi- light, when Pat sat down to a semi- | formal dinner, he was perfectly nor- mal. Before nine he was some- | thing else again. For that Nancy Pray was respons- ible. East is East and West is— where Nancy came from. So she had informed Pat. He took a deep breath. “The West is a wonderful place,” he assured her. Pat was thinking of the Grand Canyon and Yellowstone National Park. He had never seen them but he had now seen Nancy. She made them comprehensible. Marvel- ous! He had had only part of one cock- tail, so it couldn't have been that. Nancy smiled. “I doubt if you'd find Slogan City very wonderful,” she commented. “Slogan City?” he echoed. “That's where I came from. I know the name doesn’t sound prob- able.” Pat swung back into his stride. “It sounds ever so right,” he as- sured her. And added, audaciously, “It's the place where the slogans come from, of course. I can under- stand that. “The skin you love to touch’ and—" “And ‘Often a bridesmaid but nev- er a bride,” offered Nancy helpfully. Pat was visibly shocked. But Nancy was not impressed. She had been warned to look out for Pat. The semi-formal dinner was given by the Taylors at Montauk. Nancy was the guest of the daughter of the house, Estelle, whom she had known at college. She had arrived that afternoon with overnight bag, one hatbox and just one evening frock. She had mentioned that one frock to Estelle at once. “You should have warned me!" she protested. “I never dreamt you dwelt in marble halls.” To her the Taylor summer place was overwhelming. The sort of house she had read about in books, seen pictured in magazines and movies. But Estelle merely shrugged. “Don't worry; I can lend you any- thing you need” And added, “You'll do, anyway.” By that she meant that if Nancy had only one evening frock she had other things. A ripple in her cop- pery hair, for instance. And two ripples in her golden-brown eyes. “Besides, you're a novelty—that always helps,” she told Nancy. Nancy grimaced. “A novelty? Something from the Five and Ten?” “Don’t be ridiculous. Just make yourself at home.” TL: room assigned to Nancy rep- resented the ultimate perfection that unlimited money intelligently spent could achieve. And she had been simple enough to think she would share a room with Estelle! “TI wish IT could feel at home,” she confessed. “But at the moment I feel more like a fresh-air funder who—"" “I tell you what I'll do,” Estelle broke in. “I'll hand you to Pat Noyes. He'll make you feel at home.” “Pat Noyes? Is he the tennis player?” Estelle nodded. “Nothing else but He's playing at Southampion; every- thing is tennis this weel."” “I'm an awful dub about tennis,” Nancy warned her. “Oh, Pat doesn’t talk shop; always finds much better things to talk about,” Estelle assured her. “You'll adore him. Only don't fall in love with him. on it. Everybody who knows him knows that.” Pat; 'Swiftly, but with cool she did not realize it. /to know everything about her. That while.” And so Nancy was prepared for she was the product of a small mid- for the line that was so en- western city he al gaging but never led to an engage- her father was the owner of its lead- ter college, : - CTT a _—r oY - ETT Tam TTT a swift, whimsical smile and charm- received this bid to visit her, and ing manners. He had, naturally, met quite a few pretty girls, flirted with most of them and kissed a reasonable number. In the modern manner, that is. His intentions had never been matrimonial. The reasons for that were basical-. ‘ly financial. “I've got enough to keep me in the Spartan style to which I have been accustomed, but it can't be stretched to keep two in any style at all,” was the whi fo disposed of any suggestion that he marry. ing ancestor had made it possible for Pat to enjoy a scant ten thousand a year, which was practically poverty among the peo- ple he played with. “You might try working for a living,” a privileged friend had sug- gested bitingly. “And became a captain of indus- try? You know darned well I'd be more apt to find myself a high private in the rear rank.” And that was the trouble with Pat. He never took anything ser- jously. Bonds or advertising—at both of which he had tried his hand—or even tennis, which he play- ed very well. This Nancy was to discover pres- ently. In the meantime: “Tell me all about yourself,” he begged. He did it well, thought Nancy, almost as if he meant it. But, be- ing forewarned, she merely widened her eyes maliciously. “Oh, but you are supposed to tell me all about myself,” she countered. “Estelle promised you would. She said you were—" “Don't you believe a word she said,” he protested. “very nice,” continued Nancy wickedly, “but that you rushed every girl you met,” she finished demure- ly. YDon't you believe it!” began Pat. But he had the grace to pause and consider. “Not that I don't know what she means,” he confessed. “And I'm waiting to be rushed,” mumured Nancy. “Rushed!” breathed Pat. His eyes met hers and for a mo- ment she was taken. She almost believed something; almost wanted to believe it. Then she remembered. “You do it very well,” she commented. “And who was it said practice made per- fect ?" Pat swallowed something. A de- sire to wring Estelle's pretty neck, to begin with. And a second later, the impulse to assure Nancy that Estelle was all wrong. He couldn't yield to that, because Estelle wasn't. So he merely grinned a bit crook- edly. “How long are you staying here?” he asked. “A week.” “Are you going to let me see something of you-—despite my repu- tation?" “I have not the power of making myself invisible.” “You know what I mean,” he per- sisted. Nancy did. And again it took all the power at her” command to remember that he was good at this. He seemed so-—something or other. “But aren't you playing tennis this week?” she temporized. Pat grinned. “Part of this week,” he corrected. “I survived the first round today and I may survive the second tomorrow. But I won't get past the champion, of course. I'm really not”"—he still grinned but there was a curious tinge of bitter- ness in his voice—"a world-beater, even at tennis.” Somehow, that touched Nancy. “Few of us are awfully good at anything,” she reminded him. “I'm not myself.” The dinner, surprisingly enough, was nearing an end. Pat had no idea what had been served and, for that matter, neither had Nancy. It isn't every day that a girl from a place like Slogan City meets a man like Pat. He did his stuff so well, even if it didn't mean anything. In brief, Nancy was sorry dinner was over so soon. Pat did not know that. For a second he struggled with what to him seemed breathless temerity. Then: “Can't we duck off somewhere?” he pleaded. “I've got a car.” Nancy ‘hesitated. “I'm just a simple little girl from Slogan City,” she remarked lightly, yet meaning- ly. “I don't really care to—-well, to flirt or—" “I should hope not!” he assured been overwhelmed. “1 still feel like Cinderella,” she confessed. “Think of how Cinderella cleaned them up,” he suggested. This was the sort of stuff he had drawn from her. Hardly enough to give basis for any belief that Nancy was a girl in a million. Yet that was Pat's idea of it as he drove back to Southampton after midnight. It was late when he arrived there, later still when he finally got to bed. Even then, he did not go to sleep at once. He was thinking of Nancy. She was so sweet, so simple, so unspoiled. And so forth and so on. The lover's litany. The clock struck two before he finished with it. It may have been that which caused his elimination in the sec- ond round, although Estelle diag- nosed it differently. She and Nancy had gone with others to Southamp- ton and seen him vanquished. Nancy had found herself wanting 'Pat to win terribly. When she saw him congratulate his conqueror she wondered if, under his bonhomie, he minded awfully. Apparently he didn't. When he joined them he was cheerful enough. “I'm sc sorry,” she murmured. “I'm not,” he retorted I can play tennis any time, and I'll get him next time.’ He did not say, “when you're not here to play with,” but that was in the air. She felt it as one feels unsaid things. “Are you awfully keen on seeing the rest of the matches?” he asked. At any other time she would have been. What was old to him was new to her, and it was very colorful. Besides, the champion was yet to play. They did not see him, how- | ever, for, “Oh, not terribly,” replied Nancy. So they slipped away, followed by a satirical glance from Estelle. The latter offered no protest then, but four days later she did speak her mind. “I've hardly seen you at all,” she said. “What are you doing to Pat, anyway? I never saw him rush one girl so steadily; his idea usually seems to be that there is safety in numbers.” “Oh, I'm young and naive and so I probably amuse him,” suggested Nancy. “And he's good company.” But she could not help blushing when Estelle gave her a searching glance. “Well, I warned you,” Estelle re- minded her. As if anybody could be warned about such things! Not that Nancy admitted any- thing, even to herself. It was just that it was pleasant to be with Pat. He was so different from most men she knew. If it was all a line it was a good one. Mostly a nice! warmth and a flattering interest in her. Besides, he knew Long Island, and because she liked Long Island he had been showing her the best of it. Stretches of road flanked by great estates. Little huddles of build- ings that should have been ugly and yet were incredibly picturesque, per- haps because they bespoke the sea which hovered as a background. Bays and inlets and ships, from fast-flying outboards to princely yachts and weather-beaten coasters at anchor. At first Nancy had felt she really ought to appear at Montauk for meal time, anyway, but Pat had laughed at that. “No one expects you to do any- thing except what you please,” he had assured her. And in the end she had succumbed. He had a way with him. And there were so many places he wanted to show her. They came to one at dusk of the fifth day of Nancy's stay. It was perfect. A table for two had been set on a terrace overlookng the sea. Another memory to take back to Slogan City, Nancy might have said. The rest of the summer was going to be dull, she realized. Ww : This was all so different. It was like a play. Or almost like being | in'a novel. Even Pat. He didn't work at anything, just played tennis. He had a line, but he didn’t marry. The first man of that sort, certain- ly, she had ever met outside the pages of a novel. “It's all so lovely,” she murmured. “It makes my part of the United State look insipid. The West may | be golden but - Slogan City Tsn't— ' | her, as shocked as Sir Galahad him- Very self would have been. thought that night" This was indisputable. And so Nancy went for a wrap and met “T just it's such a nice Estelle. “Fools rush in!" remark- ed Estelle, guessing where Nancy was I'm a perfect angel,” her. “Then he'll try to pick your wings off,” Estelle replied cynically. ‘Men are like that—the way children are with flies.” This did not deter Nancy. Pat's car was a roadster, a pow- erful one. He had bought it from one of his rich friends. “It eats up the miles, but it also eats up gas,” he remarked. Nancy liked the way he drove. competence. And he made no effort to pluck her wings. He was just sweet. They talked as they drove. Estelle | derided that afterwards, when Nan- he cy told her, but it was true “Anybody would think you were ‘going to write my biography,” | Nancy had protested to Pat at one He's got a won- derful line, but there isn't any hook | stage of the conversation. Another symptom, that, though He wanted knew; that ment. Estelle had made that clear. ing furniture store came out as Fair enough! To Nancy and, on his past record, to Pat. Pat was twenty-eight, deeply tanned face, very white teeth, | they drove. “Not that that means much—in going. , but he's been assured that Nancy told “You are coming back East for college this fall?" he asked. Narncy nodded. : “What are you going to do after college?” he added. “I ‘wish I knew,” she answered. “It isn't the easiest thing for a girl to get sométhing. A man—" “Can pick and choose,” filled in Pat. His lips twisted wryly. “Or can he?” | “But you don't have to work, ‘anyway,’ ventured Nancy. “I live not' by the sweat of my brow but the sweat of my paternal grandfather's,” he acknowledged. | “Who, I suppose, turns over in his grave at the thought of me. He) believed in the gospel of hard work.” “Fortunately for you,” said Nancy. “Do you really think so?” i Nancy didn't, of course. Slogan | City standards again But she was ‘saved the embarrassment of saying SO i “The trouble with me, I suppose, | lis that I can theoretically pick and choose a job,” Pat was saying. never had to hustle for one. into bonds, although in a way I did. T tried “What happened?” | “Nothing much. seemed to be selling bonds. When {do just that. matter how much money he ' might “I've | 4! ‘had inherited a business I would | ‘have stepped into it. But I inherit- | ed bonds. And one doesn't step selling them for a It was just ati] and everybody I knew | bonds to live. ned ruefully. “And so I didn't sell many.” aw it there are other things be- ‘sides bonds,” Nancy suggested. “I know. I've tried several. Ad- vertising, for instance; writing copy.” “My sense of humor,” he replied. “It seemed to me a farce they were all playing with deadly seriousness. I don't mean adver- tising itself, but the way they went at it. It seemed to my untutored mind that all that was necessary was to find out how good an article was, and then tell the world about it. But, believe me, that’s only the beginning. There's psychology and atmosphere and a whole lot of stuff that seemed like bunk to me. “I tried to play the game their way, though, until I was put tc work on some copy for a mouth wash. ‘The stuff was all right and I thought the copy was. But it wasn't. It lacked something. Guess what.” Nancy couldn't. “Sex appeal,” he told her grimly. “You've got to have that in every- thing nowadays. No matter what you're advertising, the thing to do is to work in a girl who looks like Miss America. You must have no- ticed it.” Nancy had. “Still, they are ex- perts and they've studied it.” “They certainly have. They can tell you just what the average con- sumer is, and how he reacts. Well, maybe I'm not an average consumer. But I do buy things. And so far as advertising is concerned, if some- body should advertise an automobile, for instance, and say, ‘This isn't a fi v e-thousand-dollar car. for one thousand but it's as good a car as we can build for one thousand and stay in business. Com~ around and look it over,’ I'd be tempted to It would at least sound like sense to me.” Nancy saw his point and did not disagree with it. Yet there was something in her mind that could not be put into words. Slogan City stuff. Suppose she should return home and announce that she was engaged to a man like Pat who just played tennis. “Father would have apoplexy,” she realized. In Slogan City men worked. Her father would have been ashamed not to work when he was Pat's age, no had. This was in her mind, when: “Isn't there anything you'd like to do—except tennis?” she asked. “I should like very much to feel that I was doing something that you approved of,” he said deliberately. Nancy blushed beautifully. But he saved her from even a momentary awkwardness by signaling the wait- er. He glanced at the check and placed some bills with it. Then he turned to Nancy, smilingly. “Shall we move on?" She acquiesced. As they drove ‘he talked casually of many things Then all the way to the Taylors’. he brought his car to a standstill. “Aren't you coming in?" asked Nancy. “Not tonight,” he said. He did not explain. But Nancy did not stir. She had the feeling that they had come closer tonight than they ever would again unless— “Is—is this part of your usual line?" she heard herself asking ina voice that sounded odd even to her. “What do you mean?” manded. “Oh, love them and leave them,” said Nancy recklessly. It was the sort of thing that be said lightly, flippantly. That had been her toationy Pe % came out it sounded horribly flat. She felt her cheeks burn. “I'd better go,” she announced. “I-—-good night.” She would have slipped out of the car but he caught her. “It's not been a line at all, not from the start,” he was saying, al- most savagely. “Well, what was it, then?" asked. “I wish I had the right to tell you,” he said. “If I were in any way worthy of you!" “Don’t be silly! It's no question of being worthy of me. I'm not any- thing much. But I do think you could do something better than just play tennis.” “T feel that way myself,” he ad- mitted. “Some before I met you— terribly since. Because I knew you wouldn't be satisfied with" “You must be awfully gone think I'm anything special,” protested. This time his arm went swiftly around her. on his shoulder. he de- she to And just in’ time. Presently he spoke. “That wasn't | I haven't the right to—yet.' fair. But I couldn't help it.” “Neither could I,” said Nancy. “You darling!” he breathed. Then, his eyes adoring her, he went on, “I thing to say is that I'd Sweep streets or something believe the usual like that for you. And I would, but perhaps I can get something better than that.” “I know you will,” she prophesied. | | “Something you'll like, foo.” It was after midnight when Nancy finally went in. She hoped would not meet Estelle. | she must look like an angel whose wings had been all torn off. angel, in fact, whose hat was a bit off-side and whose hair was rumpled. A very rosy angel, she might have added, could she have seen herself stealing in. Estelle did. But she was not satiric. She had a telegram for Nancy. “It came for you just be- fore dinner,” she said. Nancy took it. Tt must be from home and she felt foreboding. Your father has just had a stroke. We hope for best but doctor advised wiring you. “Not bad news, I hope,” said T went after a prospect it was like a | Estelle. | college reunion. The picking wasn't wi | Slogan City,” she told him frankly. so awfully good for anybody, and Ar college Vine had met Estelle and | well, ‘Some of the others had to sell ‘ i Nancy handed her the wire. “Could somebody drive me to New | York?” | I didn't.” He grin- | she Somehow her head was | She ' shut her! eyes—and her mouth. Quickly. she She knew An Somebody did. In New York she Nor was he in any mood to had to wait for a train and she had been his first experience with a hastily wrote Pat, enclosing the furniture store. And he felt that telegram. it was not to be wondered at thata In Chicago there was a wait be- man who had spent his life in one tween trains and she got her moth- should end up with a stroke. Fur- er on the long-distance. niture in a home might be cheerful “He's resting comfortably but his but in the mass it had struck him whole right side is paralyzed,” her as curiously mother's voice said. “He's con- “A cross between a scious, but he's worrying about the an orphan asylum,” August sale.” first impression. The August sale! Nancy could re- The man temporarily in charge member that annual event from might have been the first gravedig- earliest childhood. It was a yearly ger in “Hamlet.” “Business has Rubicon to be crossed. Her father been very poor for several years always wrote the ads himself, toil- now,” he assured Pat. ing over them incessantly. “What's the maiter? Aren't peo- Yet they never varied much from ple still buying furniture?” year to year. Not even the head- “They're buying automobiles more,” ing: replied the manager dolefully. “Well, the majority aren't living in them yet. They must buy some furniture. How did the sale go last August?” OUR ANNUAL AUGUST SALE And then something about “Great- est in Our Histol. Prices Slashed. Unsurpassed Values. The Opportu- «poorly, ve rly.” nity of a Lifetime.” Pat could understand that, any- Tr.n a page of such items as W2&Y- He felt that a furniture store “$275 Three-piece Mohair Living- Was not the place anybody would room Suite—a bargain at $169. Odd Visit unless he definitely wanted lots of Dinner Sets at 1; Price. $75 furniture. As for an August sale— Solid-mahogany Poster Beds at well, Pat could not blame the citi- $39.50,” and so on. The beating of 2éns of Slogan City for not feeling a feeble drum to arouse Slogan City i gam on such dog lo action. “And try to give this stuff And now her father was worrying be ull sex ap- about that! peal,” he mused. “Even a flock of “I could almost write them my- Miss Americas wouldn't help. Peo- self if he'd let me,” thought Nancy, he might come but they'd look at as the train took her on toward her girls, and the big idea is to destination. have them look at the furniture.” Slogan city! The train came to a oF ile, he himself was doom- pause at the familiar station. The The O Jooh 2 on Piece » piece. \ rom poste: assisted her from the car floor to another. one “Pat 1" “These were offered last " Pat!” she gasped. year,” he Her eyes were at their widest. Snuounced Sismally, stopping before It was like seeing a ghost. Why, 3 jai 0 vencal oak dressers. Pat—Pat was back on Long Island. In e Beyer sell them. I don't She had been reckoning that she dit y Mr. Pray ever bought couldn't hope for an answer to her letter for a day or two unless he wired. Yet here he was. sy did you get here?” ae wag the sort of stuff he was “Chartered a plane and flew,” he or for. After (Boiss ro explained, taking her bag and hail- himself to that Herculean task. "en To thought of that.” SO I A ot 2. * - O But it was sweet to have him brought to him. i Jats ad Kan here! i In the taxi her fingers clung aside, There Waa no inspiration in 0 , m, No reco - “That was my idea of it,” he com- cesses. He I eae t wae mented. ‘One of the times when a Henry Pray and Son—the ori ello needs § Hed the 4 ov Pray being long dead and orginal Pat ve aed “Last night ‘and RICHRE From # stivke Weed was again this morning. Your father is acles in stock at the moa’ wi. better. xu he needs now is a com- “I wonder if it would be any Pte reanal in (he one thing heilheow to Wile an ud foran Acgost won't take, ever,” mourned ney hE estos, Je murmured, “Mother Sid he was worrying about people in—make them Fito ne the Augus e, even now." (the gravestones. Of course, he Pat hesitated a moment. “Idon't meant the furni ’ think he is so much-—mow. I told that— ture. ‘Something bang. idea, him I was an advertising man and He came to his feet with a " : An idea had hit him. A mad “You didn't!” gasped Nancy. but at six o'clock his ad was writ- “But I was," Pat reminded her. ten. He had worked harder over “You mean that Father is going it than he had ever worked over to let you write the advertising? anything before in his life. But Why, he never in his life let any- he did not care to discuss that ad ved It Elo sow rpeisuuaivel SH Naucy yet. And he had a bad "A | mom when N wist. I can be-—sometimes,” put in Pat. fully: QuyTemaried Nancy blushed. “I suspect I do,” “Perhaps if the August sale should she retorted. “But were'nt they come out well Father would go to surprised to see you? How did you California. The doctor doesn't say explain?" Da AE “I didn't have too—much,” Pat shock.” he fears a second grinned. “Your mother seemed to It struck P think it wasn't so unnatural that, Pray might os eT oc ry having met you, I should fly half soon unless he bestirred himself. “I across the country to offer assist- suppose your father will want te ance. And why not?" know what the ad is like," he sug- Nancy blushed again, then realiz- gested. ' ed she was home. “You're so “If you knew Father as well as 1 sweet!” she murmured,.with a rush do you wouldn't ask,” she replied. of Teuling And as Pat did not “What have you up your sleeve, dismiss driver, she added quick- anyway?" ly: “Aren't you coming in?" “You talk as if I were a magi He shook his head.’ “I'm going cian,” he protested. “I need to be back to the store. I've got theads at that, but it's not up my sleeve to write. The sale starts Monday, It's being put into type. And I'll you know." come around in the mo and gc And this was Saturday. over the ad with your father 3 my- “But I'll see you soon?" self.” Before she could oo hrnk, Be “Try to escape me!” he suggest- added swiftly: ‘Please let “forget . : ' business now." xAat paw They did. But it was not after midnight when . y returnec home. Not'in Slogan City. | There was but ohe utijay 1 published in Slogan City " body read It. ‘It was the Pray home before breakfast anc Tears again filled her mother's eyes. “He won't be able to see | Nancy saw it without even a cup o! you,” she warned Nancy. “He's not Coffee to prepare her for what me blind, but something has happened Der eyes. She blinked and hastily to his eyes. It's only temporary, Sat on the paper. Her mother wa: the doctor says, but—" coming. "Her father was in bed. He had Your father seems much bette) always seemed old to Nancy; the this morning,” her mother announc that €5is And now— ed BOpPIY. re they fmishe: Yea ” ; - 4 . ey Ite Nancy, fluttered her moth breakfast. Nancy saw his roadste: His expression hardly changed. sop sd slipped from her seat tc Ran But as Nam me tothe | “Oh, Pat!" she protested. “I wisi bed’ his left hand moved a little, As YOU hadn't written it! That way she took it in hers and impulsively I mean.” kissed it she was surprised at the hy not?” asked Pat. ‘vigor with which he held on to her.| “Wh, it's enough to give Fathe She realized a great deal in that another shock. He'll hate it! hat makes it unanimous,” said Pat—but to himself. she Nancy's mother was at the door. “Oh, Nancy!" she sobbed. “It's ‘just that it's been such a terrible strain,” she explained presently, wip- ing her eyes. “I know. Can I see Father?" asked Nancy. er second. Tt sent her to her knees _ Then, let's not say anything abou i his it to him,” suggested Pat. ‘I've Foi the bed, her cheek against his | - re ye & i k with Special benefit. I'll read it to hin Ine, Sie hag another ta) th ana he'll never know the differ | “The doctor wants us to go to ence.” | California for the winter,” her But of course he will! Why ‘mother announced worriedly. “But everybody will be talking about it! I'm so afraid your father won't. Pat eyed her quizzically. An Business hasn't been doing so well is that such a bad thing? of late years—" “But you practically tell then “And yet you sent me to college, that—" ; gave me everything,” broke in Nan. Her mother interrupted. ‘Mr y. Pray heard the car; he wanted t “Your father was set on that, I know it it was yon,” she said t don't think anything could have Pat. “And he wanted to see you. changed him.” Pat gave Nancy's hand a littl | It was after seven when Pat ar- Squeeze. “Don’t worry! he whis ‘rived. “T've rented a car and I'm pered. ‘taking you out for a little ride,” he | As if she could help it! : | announced. | They went up to her father | “Have you written the ad?” ask- | room. And there Pat read hir led Nancy, as they drove off. something not at all like the cop: | “Tt will be in tomorrow's paper,” Nancy had seen. If was somethin; he assured her. | Boney Pray might have written him |= ight bring self. In fact: Le OR opt YOR WIE g “Sounds like my last year's ad, Pat grinned. “Like a proud par- jhe murmur, almost as if he wer exhibi ring?” he disappointed. i Bc a tonint. © Tm a| Nancy's mother had left the room tired business man and T didn't to help the maid clar up, probably | bring you out to talk shop.” (Continued on page 8, Col. 3.) | | C