Shifting AN DS Copyright by The Penn Pub. Co. WNU Service SYNOPSIS The future of the still youthful and comely “Widder” Marcia Howe, recently released by death from her idling, selfish husband, is a conver- sational tit-bit among housewives of the little hamlet of Wilton. Eligible bachelors and widowers also are In- terested, CHAPTER II i" In the meantime, Marcia Howe, the heroine of this escapade, comfortably ensconced In her island homestead, paid scant heed to the fact that she and her affairs were continually on the tongues of the outlylng community. She was not Ignorant of it, for her intuitive sixth sense made her well aware her goings and comings were watched. This knowledge, however, far from nettling her, as It might have done had she béen a woman blessed with less sense of humor, afforded her infinite amusement. She valued her kindly, if inquisitive, neighbors at their true worth; and met the world with a smile singularly free from hard- ness or cynicism, Bitter though her experience had been, It had neither taken from, nor, miraculously, had it dimmed her faith in her particular star. On the con- trary there still glowed In her gray eyes that sparkle of anticipation one sees In the eyes of one who stands a-tiptoe on the threshold of adven- ture. Apparently she had In her na- ture an unquenchable spirit of hope that nothing could destroy. She was still young and the highway of life, alluring in rosy mists, beckoned her along its mysterious path with per suasive hand, Her start, she confessed, had been an ‘unpropitious. one. But starts sometimes were like that; and did not the old adage aflirm that a bad be ginning made for a fair ending? Furthermore, the error had been her own. She had been free to choose and she had chosen unwisely. Why whine about it? One must be a sport and play the game. She was older now and better fitted to look after her. self than she had been at seventeen. Only a fool made the same blunder twice, and If experience had been a pitiless teacher, it had also been 9 helpful and convincing one, The past with its griefs, its humilia- tions, its heartbreak, its failure lay be- hind—the future all before her. It was hers—hers! She would be wary what she did with It and pever again would she squander it for dross, If there lingered deep within her heart vague, unsatisfied yearnings, Marcia resolutely held over these filmy imaginings a tight rein. To be busy-— that was her gospel. She never al- lowed herself to remain Idle for any great length of time. Like an athlefe set to run a race, she gloried in her physical strength, Today, as she moved swiftly about the house and her deft hands made tidy the rooms, she had that sense of being in step with the world. The morning, crisp with an easterly breeze, had stirred the sea into a swell that rose rhythmically In measureless, breathing immensity far away to its clear-cut, sapphire horizon, The sands had never glistened more white; the surf never curled at her doorway In a prettier, more feathery line. From the Polnt, where her snowy domains dipped into more turbulent waters, she could hear the grating roar of pebbles mingle with the crash of heavier breakers It all spoke to her of home-—home as she had known It from childhood-- as her father and her father's father had known it. The salt of deep burled caverns was In her veins; the chant of the ocean echoed the beating of her own heart. Lonely? If she needed anything It was a com- panion to whom to ery: “Isnt it glorious to be alive? and she already had such a one. Never was there such a comrade as Prince Hal! Human beings often proved them selves Incapable of grasping one an- other's moods—but he? Never! She would never want for a weleome while he had strength to wag his white plume of tall; nor lack affec- tion so long as he was able to race up the beach and race back again to hur! himself upon her with his sharp. stac- eato yelp of joy. Oh, she was worlds better off with Prince Hal than if she were linked up with someone of her own gen who could not understand, : - Besides, she was not going alone. She had decided to try periment. Jason had had an orphaned out In the Middle West-—his sister's ehild—a girl In her early and Marcia had Invited her to the to an room at the head of the stairs, and why Its fireplace was heaped with driftwood ready for lighting. That was also the reason Marcia now stood eritieally surveying her preparations, She was especially desirous the old home should look its best today, for the outside world had contributed a richness of setting that left her much to live up to. Bylvia had never seen the ocean, She must love It. But would she? That was to be the test. There was room, money, affection enough for two beneath the Homestead roof and Sylvia was alone in the world. Moreover, Marcla felt an odd sense of obligation toward Jason. At the price of his life he had given her back her freedom. It was a royal gift and she owed him something in return. She was too honest to pretend she had loved him or mourned his loss, Soon after the beginning of thelr life together, she had discovered he was not at all the person she had supposed him. The gay recklessness which had so completely bewitched her and which she had thought to be manliness had been mere bombast and bravado, At bottom he was a braggart—small, cow- ardly, purposeless—a ship without a rudder. Endowed with good looks and a devil-may-care charm, he had called her his star and pleaded his need of her, and she had mistaken pity for love and believed that to help gulde his foundering craft into port was a heaven-sent mission, Alas, she had overestimated both her own power and his sincerity. Ja- son had no real desire to alter his conduct. Instead, day by day he slipped lower and lower and, unable to ald him or prevent disaster, she had been forced to look on, Her love/for him was dead, and her self-concelit was dealt a humiliating blow. Sometimes she reproached herself for the tragedy and, scrutinizing the past, wondered whether she might not have prevented it. Had she done her full part; been as patient, sympa- thetic, understanding as she ought to have been? Did his defeat lle at her door? With the honesty characteristic of her, she could not see that it did. She might, no doubt, have played her role She Had Thought of Sylvia Hayden as Farm-Bred, the Product of an inland, Country Town. better. One always could if given a second chance. Nevertheless she had tried, tried with every ounce of strength in her—tried and falled! Well, it was too late for regrets now, Such reflections belonged to the past and she must put them behind her as useless, morbid abstractions. Her back was set against the twilight; she was facing the dawn-—the dawn with its promise of happler things. She had paid for her folly—if In deed folly it had been. Now with optimism and courage she looked fear. lessly forward, That was why, as she Sangin up her hat, a smile curled her ps. The house did look pretty, the day was glorious. She was a-tingle with eagerness to see what it might bring. Calling Prince Hal, she stood before him. “Take good care of the house, old man,” she admonished, as she patted his silky head. “I'll be home soon” Obeying her he lay down with paws extended, the keeper of the Home stead. While she paced the platform at Sawyer Falls, the nearest station, Mar cia fidgeted. She had never seen any of Jason's family. At first a desultory correspondence had taken place be tween “him and his sister, Margaret; then gradually it had died a natural devth-the result, no doubt, of his In dolence and neglect. When the let. ters ceased coming, Marcela had let matters take thelr course. sustained acting, Little by little, more- over, the pricking of her consclence had been forgotten. years of silence separated her from | Jason's relatives and it had been easy to allow the deceit, if deceit it had | been, to stand. But now those barriers were to be broken down and she suddenly realized that to keep up the fraud so artlessly | begun was going to be exceedingly | difficult, sembler, If she had followed her usual cus- | fom and been open with Jason's sister, the dilemma In which she now found | herself would never have arisen. Granted that her motive had been a worthy one had it not been audacious to make of herself a god and withhold | from Margaret Hayden facts she had | had every right to know, facts that be- longed to her? Such burdens were glven human beings to bear, hot to es- cape from. But If with mistaken kind- | ness she had been gulded by a pygmy, short-sighted philosophy, it was too Inte, reflected Marcia, for her to rem- edy her error In judgment. But Sylvia—Jason's niece? With her coming, all the arguments Marela had worn threadbare for and against the exposure of Jason's true character presented themselves afresh, Should she decelve the girl as she had her mother? Oh should she tell her the truth? She was still pondering the question when the traln, with Its single car, came to a stop beside the platform. Three passengers descended. The first was a young Portuguese woman, dark of face, and carrying a bulging bag from which protruded gay bits of embroidery. Behind her came a slender, blue. eyed girl, burdened not only with her own suit-case but with a basket ap- parently belonging to a wee, wizened old lady who followed her. “Now we must find Henry,” the girl was saying In a clear but gentle voice, “Of course he'll be here. Look! Isn't that he—the man just driving up In a ear? 1 guessed as much from your description. You need not have wor- ried, you see, Goodby, Mrs. Doane, I hope you'll have a lovely visit with your son.” The little old lady smiled up at her, “Good-by, my dear, You've taken care of me lke as If you'd been my own daughter, I ain't much used to jauntin' about, and it frets me. Are your folks here? If not, I'm sure Henry wouldn't mind—" “Oh, somebody’ll turn up to meet me, Mrs. Doane. I'll be all right. Good. by." Then as Marcia watched, she saw the lithe young creature stoop snd denly and kiss the withered cheek, The next instant she was swinging up the platform. The slim figure In its well-tallored blue suit; the trimly shod feet; the small hat so provokingly tilted over the bright eyes, the wealth of golden curls that escaped from beneath it all shat. tered Marcia’s calculations, She had thought of Sylvia Hayden as farm- bred-—the product of an inland, coun try town—a creature starved for breath of outlook and social oppor tunity. It was disconcerting to dis cover that she was none of these things, Well, If she was chagrined, there was consolation in seeing that the girl was equally discomfited. As she approached Marcia, she ae costed her uncertainly with the words: “Pardon me. I am looking for a reiative—a Mrs, Howe. You don't hap- pen to know, do you" *I'm Marcia” *But I thought—1I expected" gasped the girl “And 1 thought—I expected" Mar. cla mimicked gaily. For a moment they looked searchingly into one another's face, then laughed. “Fancy having an aunt like youl" exclaimed the incredulous Sylvia, “And fancy having a nlece like you!" “Well, all I can say Is I'm glad 1 came,” was the girl's retort. “I wasn't altogether sure I should be when 1 started east. I sald to myself: "Sylvia you are taking a big chance. You may just be wasting your money.” “You may still find it's been wasted.” “No, I shan't. I know already It has been well spent,” announced the girl “Walt until you see where you're going.” “I am going to Paradise—I'm cer tain of it. The glimpses I've had of the ocean from the train have con vigeed me of that. Do you live where you can see it, Aunt Marcia? WII it be nearby? “I shall not tell you one thing,” Mar cla replied. “At least only one, and that is that I flatly refuse to be Aunt Marcia to you! It makes me feel like Methuselah. I really haven't that amount of dignity.” “Ah, now my last weak, wavering doubt 1s vanished. Not only am I glad I came but I wish I'd come before.” * She saw a shadow flit across her aunt's face, “You weren't asked until pow,” ob- served Marcia with cryptic brevity. i “That wouldn't have mattered. Had | 1 known what you were like, I should | have come without an invitation.” In spite of herself, Marcia smiled “Here's the car,” she answered “What about your trunk?” “1 didn't bring one.” She was not a clever dis- | Murriage vs, carcer—what's the ‘woman? Lucy Jenkins Franklin, dean of Heves to be a solution. Her con “If a couple Is working for =a definite goal which wlil further their a married woman should work if she 80 desires, “But she should not keep a job and just drift along without any plans.” She continued: “From the economic point of view, the woman Is not gaining much by working unless her salary is large enough to enable her to hire the work done which she would do If she were home. Unless things go with order and precision, and the atmos phere is kept homelike It does not pay her economlienlly or psycholog ically, to leave the home. It Is very easy for a woman to destroy this home psychology by working outside, “The professional woman who is not Interested In her home i8 an hazard te the development of a suc cessful home life, worse than to come home to a phice which Is definitely ‘mald-made. a home which lacks personality, vital ity, and real home Interest, every phase of her home, “The woman who works outside the home should protect her life so Ler husband and dren will always have the that It bel that gE to them. terests, - believe strong! program. As soon as possible, people should what I eali a ‘third loyaliy'—some gonl that thes want than anything else, pick out to reach and not more Just looking at each other. It may be a child, or the opportunity for the man to continue studying, or bullding a home, but whatever it Is it must bring thelr lives more closely together. With a definite end in view, I approve of married women working. “The married woman who wants a career has two jobs, and she must have a methodical and executive mind In order to do them success fully. She must also have the physi- cal strength necessary for such an undertaking.” When Jelly “Sheets Off” I's Time to Stop Cooking When fruit juice and sugar are cooked rapidly together In a broad, flat-bottomed saucepan, a point is reached where pectin and acid of the frult eombine with sugar to make Jelly, Boome Jelly makers use a thermometer to discover this point They say it Is reached when the thermometer reads 219 degrees or 221 degrees F, ut bureau home economics specialists find temperature tests for jellies not as dependable as the “two drop” or sheeting-off test. The tem perature when the jelly “sheets off” with the kind of fruit or of This test Is simple. When in a steady stream, but sep together—it is time to cooking. Farmers Must Keep Busy A new Spain to keep all farm units in pro law compels farmers uitural lessen Import requirements, Agric unemployment and NEW SCHEME FOR BIG NAVAL FORCE With statem :nts and denials flying back and forth in London about the new navy Britain will bulld when the present sea power limitation treaties lapse, one clear fact emerged : King George Intends to have s navy second to none. Surrendering before Immovable Japanese objections to continuing limitations under a system of ratios, the British are now negotiating with the principal powers for an exchange of building programs beyond which the powers concerned would agree not to build. Thus, the United States would agree to lay down only five battle. ships In a stated time, Britaln would agree to build only five and Japan five, But even If such naval programs are declared In advance, they will not be binding oo the powers, Lord Londonderry, the cabinet's spokes. man In the house of lords, now re- veals, Any power changing Its mind would promise to give a year's notice, he stated, Chief Initial difficulty about this system Is that no government wants to declare what It Is going to do until it learns what the other nations will build. 80 Britaln has taken the bull by the horns and submitted its tentative in the next few years to United States, Japan, France and Italy. Germany already is tied to of the British program the 39 per cent But the British cabinet refuses to which will have the money, let alone the pub- have to foot the bill So a8 sensation was caused to when British lan was published pugports be the seven-year naval and the cost of the vast armada put traction ever known. wear. Grip Tires.” $.40/4.50/4.75-21 4.75/5.00-19 ...... 4.50/4.75/5.00-20 5.25/5.50-17...... 5.25/550-18....../10.68 6.00.16. . . . 11.95 Sra Raan OTHER SIZES PRICED PROPORTIONATELY LOW guaran have to stop to tighten vu) bolts.” SOUTH DAKOTA . . . Chris S. Anderson, Badger, 8S. D., says: “1 like Firestone Tires because the tractor runs easier, uscs less fuel, travels faster and hauls larger loads.” NEBR / ASK A - rn Dr. C. E. Larsen of Tilden, Nebraska, writes: “1 purchased a set of your new Ground Grip Tires a t two months ago for my coupe « + « 1 have not been able to stick this car in mud since they were t on and they have al y saved me thres sets of chains and I would not be without them if they cost double what you charge.” IOWA . eo» Mr. H. Elsbury of Sutherland, lowa, writes: “With Firestone Tires on my McCormick Deering: Tractor and Separator | have taken in over $100 from farmers | could not reach Tire and let him show you how the new line of Ground Tires save time = money on your farm. I, At is also a line of Firestone