GINGER ELLA v by Ethel Hueston Mlustrations by Irwin Myers Copyright, by Bobbs Merrill Ce, WNU Service STORY FROM THE START In the usually quiet home of 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. Over. 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 is 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. Ginger meets Alexander Murdock. CHAPTER IlI—Continued lB Ginger sat motionless. Her slim fingers froze about the handle of the fittle gold cup. Presently she set it down with a determination that spoke volumes to the accustomed ears of Marjory and Eddy Jackson, “Let's go for a drive now,” she sald coidiy. “Eddy, you've got to take Marjory in front with sou. | want Mr. Murdock to tell me all about the —the groceries. [ think they are so fascinating.” “But | was prepared for you,” ob- jected Eddy. *“I planned to give you a driving lesson.” It had long been Ginger's great de- sire to learn to drive, but now, with a sigh, she relinquished that beauti- ful dream to save her lovely Marjory from the machinations of this base pretender. Around the world—as a stoker, perhaps. Or working his way from port to port by tLe sale of vege tables. Marjory slid into the front seat with Eddy Jackson. Ginger triomphantly drew Alexander Murdock In by her side, and immediately set herself to snubbing him. When occasionally, In sheer youth and good spirits, she for. got her annoyance and yielded to the pleasure of the hour, she consoled herself with the thought that at least she had saved Marjory for the furure, and they parted at the parsonage two hours later merrily enough. Three days passed before they had news from Chicago. [t was not very encouraging. There was noo improve ment in Mr. Tolliver's condition. His eyes were still clouded In the misty fog. The doctors were pessimistic. By all means he should remain at hand for dally observation and treat. ment, for an operation if It came to that Bur in the meantime absolute rest was imperative. He must have entire freedom from nervous strain, entire lack of worry and responsibility Fresh alr, good food, mild exercise, these were the tonics that by feeding the body would strengthen his sight of any nature whatsoever might pre cipitate total and permanent blind. ness, In writing this sad news to her sis ters, Miriam begged them to face ft bravely, and to greet their father with their gsual light good cheer, “Be very cheerful,” she begged, “oh, very. He doesn’t say anything, but he looks so sad.” The girls at home went (nto Imme diate consultation. Ginger was first to give expression to her thoughts. Ginger was always first. “There's just one thing about fr,” she sald stoutly. “He's In for a good long siege of It, and we must have more money. You've got to let me go to work.” “What can you do, dear?” queried Helen mildly. It was Helen's mild ness that so maddened Ginger. How could one expect to pull gloriously out of a crisis without fire and flame and flash? Helen was the sort to ask what one could do, when obviously one must do something! “l don’t care what” cried Ginger, passionately. “Anything. I'll scrub, or take in washing, or go on the stage, or anything.” Helen considered gravely, Helen was the sort to consider gravely in such a moment, “The twins must go to normal Just As we have planned,” she decided at last. “We have the future to consider, as well as the present. 1 will simply postpone my marriage for a year, and apply for a school. Miss Jenkins will come and stay here with you, Ginger.” Ginger "flung herself upon her sis ter's. neck. “Don’t do that” she begged. “Oh, don't. It isn't fair. Helen, for you to do all the giving up.” Marjory, for her part, was ln favor of abandoning the normal course, \which required two years to nish, in could be crowded into six months {if necessary. But of that they knew thelr father would disapprove. Stenog- raphy-—private offices—male employers --lovely girihood-- Impossible! Mr. Tolliver had clung to his gentle old- fashioned ideas in spite of the chang- ing times, Ginger gazed at Marjory despalr- ingly. “Oh, Margle, 1 should think Jou could do something. The world Just overflowing with millionalres— praying every night for pretty wives --and you just wearing out bere in Red Thrush.” Marjory carefully inspected a pink forefinger, questioning the shape of a nail, “Well, I'm willing,” she gs- sented, generously. “Trot one out.” Later In the afternoon as Eddy Jackson was passing in his small car, Ginger signaled him to stop and ran out to the curb. “Something terrible Is going on In this house,” she sald, gloomlly., “Fa. ther is ro better, and he is pretty dis- couraged. And Helen is golng to post. pone her wedding, and it will just make him sick.” Eddy turned the key in the car. stilling the engine. “That requires silent meditation,” he sald slowly “What do you think ubout it?” “l think it Is terrible. I think It will break his heart" They talked a while, and then he walked with ber slowly up the flag- stone path. “Helen?” he called into the open door, and when she came out, he mo- tioned her to Join them in the vine shadéd corner by the hammock, *] Lo lly “— Mev ul “Ginger Tells Me That You Think of Postponing Your Wedding, Helen” want to mix in other people's bus! ness, and put my fingers In other peo ples’ ple, and paddie other people's canoes and everything” be warned her. “Do you? sou, Eddy.” “l am changing. that you think of postponing your wedding, Helen. We talked it over. and she and | think" Ginger sat up In *Le hammock and tooked very Important. This was showing some deference to her opin fons. She tried to mirror In her small piquant face unutierable depths of wisdom, “She and | agree that It would be the worst thing that could happen.” “Eddy, do you not see how impos sible it is for me to leave home when father needs me? Horace will under stand. He will be glad to do his share in belping out.” “1 am not thinking of Horace. |} am thioking of your father. The doe tors say he must have complete mental rest. Do you think be can be happy and serenely quiet, when be knows that you are sacrificing your dearest aims and plans on his account? Will not every touch of your hand and sound of your voice be a reproach to him?” “Oh, Eddy, 1 couldnt bear to go away and be happy by myself, with father and the giris—" Quick tears flooded her quiet eyes. “Yes, 1 am sure, Helen, you would be happler to stay at home, and work, and sacrifice yourself. Bm you fa- ther's bappiness is the thing that counts right now. Look at It this way, Helen. 1 think—and Ginger agrees with me" “Indeed 1 do,” sald Ginger stoutly. “We think you should go ahead as if this little setback amounts to noth ing. Make light of it. Go on with your wedding. Helen, don’t you see, that if you teach school you will be awdy, out of town, tied up with your That is not quite lke Ginger tells me right here at hand, ready to help. Your time will be your own. You can help Ginger, help your father, and he will aot realize what you are doing for him, If necessary, ygu and Horace part of the time, But don't add to your father's burden the knowledge that he is stedling a year of his daugh- ter’'s happiness. I dare say he Is sick at heart, this very moment, dreading to come home and have you tell him, sweetly, that your happiness has been burned on the altar of daughterly duty.” Helen studied him seriously. “You are a wise, wise boy,” she sald gently. “And | think you are right. 1 could help more, that Is true, if | were here in Red Thrush, grieve him bitterly to have us change our plans. | could come every day and help them.” “And they could cull on me in a pinch" “But Ginger is a such a child. So much responsibility—" “Responsibility never hurt anybody. You had it when you were young, and it did you no harm. And Ginger Is oot a child. She Is growing up.” Ginger stood up with =a hauteur. “Ellen Is grown up now, if you ask me, me, | shall go upstairs. very important work to do.” On Friday afternoon, that smelled sweetly of wild roses, to three girls whose ight glad gave no hint of the paln with which they had watched nis approach, head lowered, shoulders suzging dispirited ly, his arm limp beneath hand. laughter, thelr caresses, thelr welcom ing delight, his shoulders straightened presently, the tired lines io his face gave way tu those of pleasure, and soon his laughter Juined thairs, “1 can’t take off the glasses just yet, you see,” be sald nuskily., “Still In the fog, as you might say.” “l rather thought It would tuke longer,” sald Helen sympathetically “It would be foolish tv rush things" “Dut it's really bad, father,” put in Ginger gaily, “because | just wish you could see the carryings-on in this old house. Do you know what Marjory bas on hand now?! A gro cery clerk, father. And aot regular groceries, either. Canned ones, The Orange and Black. Maybe he will give us a discount.” Light laughter, light talk, which hid the sadness beneath, but did not hide the i1enderness, the pervading sym pathy, the great gladness that thes were five together, even (In thelr SOrTow. too In the living room Ginger found her three sisters. ilelen was mend ing a frayed cuff for her fatber as prosalcally as though In two weeks she would not be a bride trembling at the altar of her marriage Miriam was straightening ap the desk with an air of great distaste Marjory was delicately powdering her pose, watch ing the operation in the mirror of a small metal case. “Marjory, where did you vanity 7" Ginger demanded Marjory closed it bastily and put It in her pocket. Dut Ginger was In sistent, “Marjory let me see that That's brand-new, Where get ity" Marjory, thus driven, produced the article and confessed to an extrav- agance. She bad bought it. It had cost her twenty-five cents. She had bought it from Alice Ideman. And af inst, thoroughly committed, she ex plained in detall. “It's really a very cute idea, Helen, she sald volubly, boping by many words to distract attention from the money phase of the transaction, You see, the compact costs a quarter. Alice had to sell each one of the four who bought, had to promise to sell four more. Then get that vanity did you send her a solid sliver one. lovely.” “Did you promise to sell four?” “Yea. | had to. And when | sell them, | send my dollar to the com silver one. Isn't &t u cute idea? “It Is like the oid chair letter iden" “Exactly, Where you had to copy the prayer" “Or break the chain" “And it goes on and on" “All over the world.” “Why, they'll sell thousands and thousands of them.” (TO BE CONTINUED) fessosfontionnteclioiioniditodontodod atta oad ad ad, TERT TTATTATTOTTITT TT I™ Long before the Irish taught us that March 17 was St. Patrick's day, this date was celebrated In England for a very curious reason. In the Middle nges it was regarded as the snniver sary of the day upon which Noah entered the ark. Noah's Ark day was specially made the occasion for the performance of the mystery play that dramatized with considerable freedom the Biblical record of the flood. In this Noah's wife was always the prin. cipal comic character, being depicted as the typleal shrew, The querrels between Noah and his helpmate created great amusement for the spectators, When the ark is ready the lady stoutly refuses to go In un less she may take some of her friends along. The patriarch, however, will not stand much nonsense, and when ol I 3 i PY v Le Ld v Th Rr Ld —————————— D yy" the time for embarkation comes he dispaches his three sons to bring their mother aboard, They find her with her gossips in a tavern, and after much rough by-play and broad com edy they seize her and drag her to the ark, Arrived there, she breaks out 68 an worse termagant than ever: shrieking with rage, she sets about beating her husband, much to the diversion of the spectators of merry England.~Manchester Guardian, 2 Beal. Beadlandad , Ter TERT wis Cm ——— a Io a Nutshell People never will get over being surprised that chestnut burrs are not as rough on the Inside as they are on the outside, The greatest burden in the world is superstition, —22iiton., Late Paris Hats Reveal Forehead Brim Appears Only at Sides and Does Not Interfere With Large Collar. With the high collars in vogue for winter, there will be little opportu- nity for Paris milliners to exploit the brimmed hat this season, observes a Paris fashion correspondent in the New York World. Camille Roget is making her autumn and winter models with close, snug-fitting crowns, with the back of the neck well covered but the fore- head showing. If a brim appears at all it is only on the sides, a soft and craftily shaped affair that does not war with a huge fur collar. Plain panne velvet as well as em- broidered panne I8 being much used. Velvet and felt in one color are com- bined, and kid and felt in lattice work strips. In colors, millinery repeats the street tones,” with much brown, beige and black being shown. Jane is showing a lovely brimless feathers lying perfectly flat. Another black panne with a single long ostrich plume falling from the back and half Several Important houses are reviv- Ing Interest in the turned-up, front brim. Suzanne Talbot shows several this mode, usually in brim faced with as The softness of the fur is enough to neutralize the exposure of the face which the flattering ruthless attractive are of Several hats for restau rant wear unlined net, with four-inch deep plaiting about the face Off-the.Face Hat; Trimming Extends Out at the Side. ‘ and neck. Some fabric, cleverly cut on the worn with a tiny-—and, ing—eye veil made of metal and oh so flatter are edges, the half football shape, with straight tops. One has a side closing of a kid clover leaf trimmed with tiny nal heads. Another smart bag has a line of nail heads slong the edges and decorating the stiff handle. A prac tical bag for the shopper, and a hand some one, too, Is of black leather with tiny pencil passing through the clasp On the side of this bag Is a pocket in- to which fits a small memo pad Worth is showing a striking eminently practical bag and of alligator on the outside for holding rouge, pow- der, lipstick, comb and a mirror of Carrying these necessities on the outside of the bag makes (ts Interior especially roomy. This house is also showing some smart new umbrellas, short and heavy, with shepherd crook ous skins, One crook Is pointed with lapis lazull delicately Unusual Treatment for New Autumn Umbrellas Umbrellas this season show close the use of colors and borders. More resulting. One consists of wide strips of varying widths, in plain or fancy effects, covering the center to about six Inches from the edge of the um- brella, where the selvage repeats in miniature some part of the center pat- tern. In some, also, the selvage is left plain. Colors for the fall models give the lead to navy blue, then brown and black with white or gray to go with the new gray tweeds. Purple, red and green follow, and a new combination is being made of two shades of gray. Most of the new umbrellas are about 20 inches in length; they are considered more graceful, easier to carry, and more serviceable when made this size, Lightweight Woolens on Fashion Card for Fall Nothing seems likely to outshine the lightweight, loosely woven wool. ens for fall sports wear. The skirts are straight but have ample fullness provided Ly gores or plaits stitched down for part of thelr length, The Jackets are of the double-breasted type and the belts, collars and cuffs receive special attention, for the orna mentation of the costume Is largely confined to those accessories, Mothers will be relieved to know that “flapper” fashions are passe! It is now chie to be girdled, to wear stockings and to affect skirts for the street that reach half way between the knee and the calf of the leg. “We can't hope to have our house really attractive,” sald the charming young mother of three delightful and well-mannered youngsters, “until the children grow up. Then, John says, we can refurnish and I can indulge my love of coles.” It Is a familiar excuse, offered to offset the disappointment one feels on entering the obviously uninteresting home of 8 woman whose ny and charm would lead one fo expect a house that would reflect these qualities, And It is an excuse which fs offered with the assurance that there is no questioning Its validity. Yet 1 do. Without hesitation 1 am frank to say that the belief that one's desires for aftractive interiors must he curbed nntil the children are falr- ly grown up Is a fallacy. Training your child to rectly has more to do with his devel- opment than most parents realize. It seems a very simple matter, but when one stops to consider that bow legs, knock knees and other serious phys. {eal defects are often caused by faulty walking, one becomes aware of the importance of walking correctly. walk cor Mothers used to sing: “Hush, he quiet as a mouse, There's a haby in the house.” Nowadays these lines are seldom heard Parents have not out- the premises and to converse In whis- pers, but they belleve Infants selves to This is a to life. But why and girls to react necessary noise? Most do It graciously. expect young adults { made a nursery-rhyme quilt on which {ined in various colors. This 1s brought love to match jingles to pictures” Here are some questions you want to ask yourself with sour adolescent daughter: Is weight for helght and Just below normal? Are her heart and any sugar or albumin? Is the red col oring matter hemoglobin) in blood above 85 per cent? When or thelr point, n RUSRSIDE REame noisy danger children too quarrels reach mother can often which lieves the situation. the got the invariably re with C." “eup,™ * " pp Ing.” “cap.” For example, ete. Then the guesses be chooses the new word to be guessed Even the tiny tots will try to join In the game and quarrels are forgotten. Beret Is Prominent in Fall Millinery Modes not lost sight of the beret as one of the most aliuring types of hats to complete costumes of the new mode These tiny chapeaux masquerading as berets have a feiching drape to the manner. Berets of a dressy mien are belting ribbon, in soleil and in chenille Shawl Collar and Wide Sleeves Are Featured One of the popular models in fall coats. It is of cocoadyed squirrel, showing the skins worked in a diag onal style and featuring the large shaw! collar and widecuffed sleeves The Right Way to Redye Fine Silks Textile makers al ways use special dyes for silk or wool, They know that is the best way. The makers of Diamond Dyes are the first to + enable home dyers to follow this plan. ’ . of your more valuable articles of , silk or wool, try the special Dia mond Dyes in the Blue Package. They will give these materials clearer, more brilliant colors than any “all-purpose” dye. And they | are just as easy to use as ordinary dyes. Like the white package Dia- mond Dyes, these dyes contain an abundance of the highest quality anilines. The blue package dyes silk or wool only; the white pack- age dyes, or tints, any material. Either package; 15¢, drugstores. This Fast Age Dr, ‘Ell Moschowitz, an New York scientist, Journal of the American Medical As- sociation, declares that most of us live two lives now as compared with those of an earlier generation. “A man who attains the of fifty today,” he says, “has In reality lived one hundred years, as years were for- merly reckoned; and judging by the deluge of Inventions aimed at swifter methods of accomplishments, the prospect of the Individual of the future is that he will be an old man in experience before adolescence bas begun” eminent writing in the age even his Classifies 256,000 Stars About 32000 observations of varl- able siars were sent to the Harvard observatory in a single year by 100 One of the monumental of work there, Nature g& been Miss Annie J. Can- 256.000 according to their various types, lines. This expert ability of the and Miss Cannon has lent of many honors. ohservers, BAVE sification of over neans of thelr spectral juires the recip Some Fine Forest Land The outstanding forest in New Eng- White Mountain National During 17 since 1011, the federal government has purchased land in the White mountains, It has acquired now 514.000 acres, or 503 Much of it is in Magazine, land is the Years, forest square miles, forest, says Nature was never used, No Brains “She means well, but she doesn't use very much judgment.” “No, she wanted the blind we passed a flashlight better to around at Enquirer. to buy #0 he S00 get could Two new Diesel rall cars have beea placed in service on a Swiss railway line which hag many curves and rises 1.204 feet in ¢ ance of 16 miles, Without Poison A New Exterminator that Wont Kill Livestock, Poultry, Dogs, Cats, cr even Baby Chicks K-R-0 can be used about the home barn or poultry yard with abwolutesafety as it contains po deadly K-R-O is made of Squill, as recom mended by U, 8 Dept. of Agriculture, under strength. Two cans killed 578 rats st Arkansas Guarantee. Insist upon K-.-R.-O, the original Squill exter. minstor. All drupgists, se: Largesise (four times os much) $2.00. Direct if dealer cannot supply vou. K-R-O Co., Springlield, O. K-R= KILLS-RATS-ONLY HAD TO WORK “700 HARD Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable (3a E Fiala Her Strength Mt. Carmel, Pa—"After my second baby was born I had to work too hard and be on my feet too socn because my husband was fll. After his death I was in such a weakened and run- down condition that nothing seemed to help me. I am starting the fourth bottle of } Lydia BE. Pinkham's ; i Vegetable Com- pound and feel a great deal , 1 am much stronger and don't get so tired out when I wash or work hard. 1 do housekeeping and dressmaking and I highly recommend the Vegetable Compound as a tone. I am willing to answer any letters I re. ceive asking about it."—Mns. Grrravon Burrs, 414 8, Market, Mt. Carmel, Pa _ A Household Remedy * For Exteroal Use Only Hanford's Balsam of AN devtors. W. N. Ul gis sgn pics