——— Bright Star By Mary Schumann Copyright by Macrae Smith Ce. WNU Bervice CHAPTER X-—Continued aL ann “Oh, Mother,” he sighed. His eyes were tearless, but the aching pain was released. Her arms folded around him; her cheek lay against his hair; they were close in that mystic bond of mother and son. “It’s hard, Hugh.” “I'm glad you know.” He groped to his feet, stood by the mantel. “Don't grieve too much. I have to get myself together—meet it. It has happened to quite a few others . « « they've lived through it.” “It isn't hopeless? Tell me about it, for while I saw you getting haggard and silent, it wasn't until Dorrie came this week that I realized—"’ “Did she speak of it?” She shook her head. “I only knew something is very wrong. I met Lizzie Pendleton this week in a department store. She said, "Too bad about Hugh and Dorrie.” I asked her what she meant, and she gave me an odd look, and said she supposed I knew—and swept away. 1 pieced it together.” He began to pace the room. Then he told her the story, or as little as he could, minimizing, suppress- ing, scanting details. “1 suppose you have to know—I hoped you wouldn't. But situations like this never stand still. To go back to where we were'—he shook his head—*‘is impossible. Something is killed—destroyed.” His mother's eyes were filled with tears: she looked suddenly old and white, her vitality borne away by her deep suffering for him. The telephone rang in the closet under the stairs and they heard Kezia scramble to answer it. Her oment by, “You won't be home? . « « Yes, cars have a way of get- ting out of commission at times! . . . I'll tell your husband not to expect you . . Here? Of course he's here—got in an hour ago.” She appeared at the library door then. ‘‘Hugh, the telephone.” She lingered a moment, caught by the gravity of their faces. “It's Dor- rie,” she whispered. Hugh took up the receiver. ‘‘Hel- lo, Hugh,” she began with hesita- tion. *‘I didn’t think yeu'd be home until tomorrow. “You didn’t?” “No, I didn't,” her voice strength- ened and had a whip of defiance in it. “Anyhow I'm at the Lawrences, and they find they have a flat tire, wanted me to stay all night . But if you're home I'll send for a taxicab.” “Shall I come for you?" “No need of it. It's way across - town. I'll be along in half an hour.” “Very well,” said Hugh grimly, “but don’t come here. Go to our own house.” He began to gather up his things. “I'll take your car, Mother, if you don’t mind.” Kezia hovered over him in ex- cited solicitude. “I'll drive you over, Hughie. Come, Jerry, help me get the car out.” She paid no attention to his protestations that he drive himself, but hurried away with Jerry following. Soon Kezia sounded a summon- ing horn from the driveway. Hugh put down his burdens in a corner of the hall. “I'm going . . . but I'll be back in a little while. I'm only going to talk to her.” He strode out the door. He waved to Kezia in dismissal. “Thanks but I want to walk.” CHAPTER XI The walks were littered with leaves that scuffed under Hugh's feet. His shadow lengthened as he passed under one arc light, shortened as he approached the light at the next corner. He walked slowly, took the long way round, that he might give Dorrie time to get home; for Cun to get away; time for her to rehearse her story for the last time. And he must be cool, as he was now, viewing the whole thing with bal- ance. The turmoil which had mounted in him the last hour, and which had increased when he heard Dor- rie's voice on the wire, ebbed away. Dorrie had taken off her hat and coat. They were thrown on the davenport. A plaid scarf with rus- set tinges was still around her neck. “Hello, Hugh,” she said briefly. “Hello, Dorrie.” She leaned over and tied the lace of her shoe. “Have a nice trip?” she inquired as she raised her head. In spite of himself the sight of her flusned cheeks, her strange shining eyes, sent a tremor through his blood. He rested his arm on the mantel. “I had a profitable one.” She cogitated this. ‘‘Meaning — “What I said.” “Very well—if you wish 30 be enigmatic!” Cruel pin-points danced in her eyes. ‘Are you go- ing to ask me if I had a profitable time while you were away?” “I took it for granted.” She shrugged. Then said: “The house is cold; you'd better build a fire if we're going to stay here.” Under his steady gaze her eyes dropped. “I must have a talk with you,” he said slowly. They went into the sun room with its wicker furniture. Forme ally Hugh drew up a chair for her, brought her coat and laid it around her shoulders. He touched a match to the asbestos-backed grate, adjusted the flame. Then stood in silence. Dorrie looked in- to the fire; her white hands were clasped around her knee. She lift- ed her creamy eyelids. “Going to tell me you're through?’ she asked. “Yes, Dorrie, I'm through.” He thought she trembled a little, and the discernment that she was in need of pity, even as he, battled with his resolution. He stood watch- ing her eyelashes flicker over her cheeks as she looked down. me?" “Certainly.” She relaxed in her chair a trifle. “It's one of those things which can’t be helped. At first I was dis- out. in his way then.” “Except me.” audible. lovely face, he must, look his last upon them. bidden. The hate which surged as great as his “Yes, Dorrie, I'm Through.” Something rose in his throat which made it difficult to speak. He swallowed. “No need there?” She started. “You won't alone tonight?” She gave a gesture of dissent. “I'll be at Mother's. After you apply you'd better go away a bit not far ."” It was on his tongue to say ‘‘near enough for him to prolong this, “You're going?” be afraid to stay from other entanglements,” but he checked it. the room. evenings at his club, playing cards, others reading in the company of his mother, or in long sively sympathetic when he “What a relief! sage in our chicken dressing now Dorrie had difliked sage. Kezia saw Hugh's annoyed look when the radio moaned out a love song, she usually shut it off and dialed a different station. She made an effort to be more thoughtful of her mother in his presence, evi- dently wishing his approval. Once or twice she tried to discuss Jerry with him. “Why do you give Jerry a mere nod when you come in? You could be civil—say a few sentences now and then. I tell him that it's just your way-—one of those big, silent business men with the reconstruc tion of the nation on your shoulders —but I wish you'd be decent.” “It's no go, sis. I don't like him.” “How can you say that? You don’t know him.” She was ag- grieved. He rattled his paper as a signal that he wanted her to take herself from the arm of his chair so that he might read. “I think I do.” Their eyes met and a thwarted look crossed her face. She flounced off his® chair with: “You'll all drive me to something one of these days! . . . No one takes me seriously!” A few nights later he was sitting by the dying fire in the living-room, leaning forward, staring at the em- bers, when she came in a little after twelve. (TO BE CONTINUED) i “Hurtling Death” By FLOYD GIBBONS RNIE SMITH claims he’s the only man that has ever done it. Way back in 1895 Ernie took a ride and he doesn’t think it has ever been duplicated. Since that day people have learned to cruise around in automobiles, and airplanes, and subma- | rines and whatnot, but Ernie professes to be the only man in | the world who ever took a ride on—a rock! Ernie lives in Waltham. He's reached the age of discretion now, and he doesn’t go whooping around in the country on rocks anymore, but when he was sixteen years old—well—it seems he didn't much care what he traveled on. In those days he lived in the little town of Vinalhaven, Maine, and had a job working for a fellow named Coombs who ran a small boat building establishment down by the water front, Blasting Solid Rock to Make a Cellar. Coombs was just building his shop at the time this all happened. He had the foundation laid and was nailing down the floor. Just across the too. Carnes was digging a cellar—blasting it out of solid rock. And Ernie and Coombs, plugging away on their own carpenter job, worked to the tune of intermittent thunder as Carnes set off one blast after Carnes set off several blasts without giving them a word of fore- warning, but one fine summer day he yelled across the street: "Hey, I've got a little more powder in here this time.” So Ernie and Coombs lay down their tools and began looking around for a place where they would be under cover. The water front at Vinalhaven started with a high sandbank, Below that was a narrow beach, and beyond the beach, mud flats stretched far out into the water. Took Shelter in a Little Shack. t was low tide and the mud flats were almost bare. At the edge of the bank was a fish house—a flimsy little shack ten feet long by eight feet wide—and a few feet away from that was a big, solid wood pile Coombs and Ernie elected to stand in the shelter of the fish house. and bits of rubble that Carnes’ blast might kick up. They gave Coombs was sitting behind the little shed, but Ernie, who wanted Carnes lit the fuse and ducked for cover For a minute they waited. Then, suddenly, the air was shat- “1 was watching it with both eyes,” says Ernie, “and I thought the heavens had fallen in. The very air itself seemed to rock back and forth. The sky was filled with stones—millions of them, of all sizes and shapes. But what struck terror into my heart was a great boulder that had shot up out of that pit and was coming straight for our shelter! Carried on a Huge Boulder. That rock was a monster. When they measured it later they found it was four feet long two feet wide and more than two feet thick. But Ernie didn't necd any measurements to see it was big—didn't need any- one to tell him that if it ever struck that flimsy shed behind which he and Coombs were standing it would splinter it to matchwood and knock the very tar out of the man and the boy behind it. Ernie let out a cry and started to move. A few steps away was the “Bat I never made it,” he says. “Instead, the rock made me, It landed on a stone ledge beside our half completed boat shop, bounced off at an angle and came rocketing straight at me.” The next thing Ernie knew the rock was landing for its second bounce RIGHT AT HIS FEET. Ernie had presence of mind enough to jump, but the jump did him no good. Suddenly he felt the rock come up under him and he was being carried through the air. After that, Ernie couldn't tell you exactly what happened. And small blame to Ernie for that. Coombs was standing behind the fish shed watching the whole business. He had his eyes glued on Ernie all the time, and he couldn't tell you exactly what happened either. All he knows is that he saw Ernie carried for THIRTY-TWO FEET out into the went on over the flats leaving Ernie behind flat on his back in the muck. When Ernie got his bearings again he was in the mud. The rock was still rolling, twenty or thirty feet farther out. He saw it stop, and then se heard somebody on the bank cry out, “Carnes has killed the Smith boy" Not Dead “By a Darn Sight.” “But I lay there in the mud,” says Ernie, “saying, ‘Not by a darn sight be hasn't.’ [It took me a few moments to work my feet and hands clear of the mud, and then, to the surprise of a dozen people I got up and walked over the flats toward the sand bank, “Not a man offered me a hand as I started to climb the bank. They just stood there petrified, looking as if a ghost was coming at them. But when I did get up they asked me what happened. No one seemed any too sure himself.} Two doctors had just landed from a boat at a wharf close by, and they looked Ernie over. Except that his clothes were practically torn to ribbons and his right side had a few black and blue spots, they couldn’t find anything the matter at all. The next day Ernie went back to work again, and his first job was juggling ROCKS-—clearing away about two tons of them that had come out of Carnes’ excavation and showered all over Coombs’ half-laid boat-shop floor. ©-WNU Service, Hands Reveal Character Anyone who sits with hands loosely clasped in the lap is of a quiet, well-balanced mind, while the nervous person tries to control nerv- ousness by tightly gripping the hands together, states a writer in Pearson's London Weekly. One who has a habit of clasping hands with fingers entwined is not keeping strictly to the truth, while one who partially covers the mouth with a hand while talking has certain knowl- edge, but is trying desperately not to reveal it. A person who remains seated while conversing with an- other who is standing finds it very difficult to tell an untruth and any attempt to do so is easily detected by the person standing. Lavender Favorite Perfume Lavender is one of the favorite perfumes the world over and enor- mous quantities of the dried flowers are used annually to make the per- fume and other lavender products. The yield of oil varies from year to year depending on the weather and the age of the bushes. The plants are very tender to The oil has to be Saint Bernard of Mastiff Family Unlike many other breeds, the origin of the Saint Bernard is a the Mastiff family. The ancient rec- diers used large dogs to guide sheep Pass, no more than a pack mule path. A hostile tribe destroyed this path and cut off travel over the mountains around 950 A. D. Fen Eagles Fen eagles were famous in the Eighteenth century for the quanti- ties of fish they devoured off the Norfolk coast. One of them, shot down in Suffolk in 1810, measured nine feet across the wings. The high rewards given for their cap- ture played a great part in their extermination. Une hundred years ago, says the Montreal Herald, any- body who destroyed en eagle in the Orkneys was entitled to the gift of a hen from every in the nearest village. H GRACE, before you go— you're in a hurry, are you—notice Mabel's slip Isn't that 4 nos | A inch material plus % yard con- trasting. Pattern 1970 is available Size 38 in requires Or-Bi club last week, Mabel? Yes, it's my Sew-Your-Own and fits so smoothly. There's bunchiness at the waistline or | i i terial plus 3 yard con ing. Pattern 1988 is ailable in Size 36 requires and shoulder 1 yard of ribbon for there's lots of bottom. long it took me to make it—no room by the clock. the pattern's instruction .chart— new dessert. Tie, Buttons, Hat to Match. t would be grand for a tailored dress like mine, wouldn't it, bel? Just the th the Civic League luncheon at the New Pattern Book. for the Barbara Bell and Summer Pattern Make yourself attractive, clothes, Send Spring | i tifully in that Grace. I'm crazy about it. yoke-and-sleeves-in-one idea is swell and the black tie and but- tons to match your hat make you look like Mrs. Merriweather her- self. Now, now, cut the rave. You krow that neat-but-not-gaudy is ny motto. Bye, I'll see you in print. So long . Anne, since you like my slip so much, I'll be glad to help you make one like it, if you want me to. That's lovely of you, Mabel, but would that sort of thing be right for a "Stylish Stout” like me? You should hear George when I call myself a “Stylish He says 1 flatter my- he self. That Slenderizing Effect. Leave it to the men! This slip would be especially good for you, Anne, because it's fitted and, George or no George, you look stylish in that dress you're wear- ing—but you DON'T look stout. in front breaks the skirt line, and the jabot and col- lar do wonders for the “Buz- zum.” It would be grand made up in a flowered print for Spring, Anne. That very idea occurred to me. afternoon and sew-—are you game? Come to my house. I baked a batch of oatmeal cook- ies today. It's a date, Anne, I'll be over in the morning as soon as the kids are off to school. The Patterns. Pattern 1200 is available in sizes 14 to 20 (32 to 42 bust). Size 16 requires 4% yards of 39 Foreign Words ® and Phrases Mirabile dietu. (L.) Wonderful to relate. Oui dire. (F.) Hearsay. Parvenu. (F.) A person of low origin; an upstart. Qui vivra, verra. (F.) Who lives will see. Regnant populi. (L.) The people reign. (Motto of Arkansas.) Sanctum sanctorum. (L.) The holy of holies. Trink-geld. (Ger.) A gratuity. Usque ad aras. (L.) To the very altars; to the last . Ventre-a-terre. (F.) At full gal lop; at breakneck speed. Wanderjahr, (Ger.) A wander- year; a year of travel make patterns. Interesting and exclusive fashions for little chil- dren and the difficult junior slenderizing, well-cut patterns for figure; the most age; a 4 aie dresses for other patterns for special occa- sions are all to be found in the Barbara Bell Pattern Book. Send 15 cents today for your copy Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept, 247 W. Forty - third street, New York, N. Y. Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each. © Bell Syndicate —WNU Bervice., * * Still Coughing? No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can got relief now with Creomulsion, trouble may be brewing and with anything less than sion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble to ald nature to soothe and heal the inflamed meme branes as the germ-laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Cet Creomulsion right now. (Adv) True Charities Our true acquisitions lie only in our charities. We gain only as we give. There is no beggar so des- titute as he who can afford noth- ing to his neighbor.—Simms. Here's the iron that will “smooth your on froning . It will save your you do ironing easiec and