© Ben Ames Willams, CHAPTER XI-—Continued a “Don’t come again, Phil,” Mr. Sentry said. Mr. Hare stepped away so that they might speak alone. Phil felt suddenly empty. ‘‘But father, mother will want to come!” Mr. Sentry smiled. “Of course! If she wishes. But not you children. I'd rather you didn’t; and certainly not the girls.” And he asked, “How are they?” “Fine.” “Mary—happy with Mr. Endle?” “Ves.” ‘““Barbara well again?” Yes’! Mr. Sentry nodded. Phil waited; and his father said at last: ‘“‘Phil—l1 don’t know that it matters now. But I want you to know a thing or twd."” Phil felt his cheek stiff with pain. “About my testimony, Phil.” The older man faced his son fairly. “All I said about that night was true. I didn't know Miss Wines was there. I shot her by accident. And—I had had nothing to do with her.” Phil's throat was full; but he man- aged to speak. “I believed you, fa- ther,” he said. ‘‘We all did. That it was—an accident!” Mr. Sentry cleared his throat. “About the woman last summer,” he said, ‘‘and the other, long ago. All that is between your mother and me. She knows they—didn't touch what she and I had together.” Phil could not speak; and the old- er man said: ‘“About the appeal. Ap- peals, delays, tricks wouldn’t help in the long run. 1 hope you—under- stood my decision.” Phil said slowly: “Yes sir! But you don't need to consider us. We're up to it.” He added: “Of course, Mr. Hare says perhaps the Gover- nor—Well, I mean if we can make him believe you—"' Sentry shook his head. ‘No, Phil. That's the jury’s province, to de- cide whether I told the truth or not. If they didn’t believe me, the Gov- ernor has no right to say they were wrong.” “Mr. Falkran says he could get a new trial" “I had a fair trial! Bob Flood let Falkran get away with a lot of things.” Mr. Sentry’'s lips set. ‘I won't put you all through that again, Phil!” And he said, almost curtly: “‘So--that's all, then. Good-by!"”’ Outside, Phil found himself trem- bling. He said apologetically to Mr. Hare, “I feel about ten years old, right now.” “So do all men, sometimes,” Mr. Hare assented. ‘‘But they never let anyone guess, except their wives.” April slipped away; and Phil missed Linda more and more. But on the first day of May, he reached the office at the usual hour, rang for a stenographer—and Linda came in. Phil stared at her. She seated herself at the end of his desk, opened a notebook, laid sharp pen- cils ready. He cried: “Linda! What are you doing here?” “Came to take your letters.” “But how did you get here?” “I persuaded Miss Randall to give me the job.” “But you can’t—"’ “Don’t you believe it,”” she retort- ed. ‘Nobody can get a job under Miss Randall unless they can prove they're good. Certainly not a girl like me. You know, one of the idle rich? We have to prove we've got everything.” “But you—"" “Shorthand, typing, business forms, everything,”” she assured him gaily. ‘If you don’t believe me, try me.” And she said then: “I ought to be good! I've been work- ing at it, studying twelve hours a day for six weeks, and practicing besides. Hence these dark shad- ows under my lovely eyes. Notice?” And when he could not speak, she demanded: ‘Mean to say you haven't missed me? Haven't you even noticed that I'd quit being un- derfoot around your house all the time?” “Gosh, I've missed you awfully. But Lin, what's the idea?” “The idea, young fellow-me-lad,” she said, speaking lightly lest her throat swell with tears, “the idea is that I have diagnosed your case, and written your prescription, and the prescription is me, taken regu- larly, in large doses. So when you go into business, into business go I. When you sit all day at a desk, I pull my chair up to the corner of the same desk. You'll be spending most of your time here for a while. Well, so will 1.” ar do your folks think about t ‘Highly approve,” she assured him." “Would you like me to get my father's consent?” “Oh, you can’t do this, Linda!” “Of course I can.” ‘““Be here all day with me?” She spoke huskily. “Be anywhere, always, Phil, with you.” “You'll marry somebody—"" “You, if you'll have me.” “You know I can’t, Lin!” “Then at least I can be your sec- ’ “You're so doggoned stubborn.” “But efficient!” He grinned. ‘All right,” he said. “You know it will be grand for me, having you around.” ‘“Me too, Phil.” “Take a letter!" , Her pencil poised; began to fly. CHAPTER XII Phil accepted Linda's presence in the office, but with misgivings. He reported the matter to Mrs. Sentry that night. “Do you think it's all right, moth- er?” he asked. ‘She's sure to be talked about.” And he said, think- ing aloud: “Linda's so darned fine. If things were different—But they're not, of course. Never can be. 1 never can marry, or have children. I realize that.” He added tenderly, almost lightly: ‘‘Besides, my job is to take care of you.” She said: ‘Yes, Linda's sweet; but she knows that I need you. I shan’'t always be selfish about you, Phil, but—I shall need you and Barbara, for a while.” He thought decubtfully of Dan, but marry her, and raise about nine children and keep her so busy she won't have time to think about all this. People think too much any- way!" Phil said: “I know; but he looks at it just the other way. He says we have to face it, live it down.” And he confessed, half-angrily, ‘“To hear him talk, you'd think he wanted her to wear a placard telling the world who she is.” Dan said scornfully: “That stuffed shirt! He's—like a woman. He wants to be a martyr. You know, the old line: ‘I could not love thee, dear, so much, loved I not honor more.” "’ “I don’t blame him for testifying. Do you?” ‘““Hell, no! I'd have done the same. But why should he rub it in now? I'll go see him tonight and tell him so.” But Dan's arguments were una- vailing too. Professor Brace chose a Sunday afternoon in May for his confession. There had been tennis. Linda was there. When it was time one awaiting judgment; said honestly: “He wasn’t to blame, Barb. tell or lie. “Of course,” she assented. “I don’t blame him for testifying. But Mac, I do blame you for telling me."’ “Oh, Barbara, you can’t fool your- self, pretend to ignore what has happened!” then suddenly without a word she turned, turned and ran, ran into the house and away. He called her name, but he did not pursue her. Dan said disgustedly, “You may be a professor, but you're the darnedest fool I ever saw!” ‘She will see I'm right, in the end!’ Brace insisted. But he was wrong in this predic- tion. Barbara thereafter avoided him, and when he came to the house she was quick to disappear. Yet Barbara began to wish to know all that had happened at the trial. She asked her first questions on the Sunday following. Dan came, he promised: “Sure, Linda knows. We'll be here, mother. Don’t be afraid!” It was the first day of May when | Linda came into the office; and dur- | ing that month, July seemed far | away. Business problems arose to worry Phil. Once he sought Mr. Loran’s advice; but the Loran home was closed. Mr. and Mrs. Loran, he heard, had gone to Europe for the summer. So Phil turned to his mother, and every evening he con- | sulted with her, asking her counsel, by his demands upon her forcing her to find strength to meet them. Also, Barbara was better every day, the flood of spring which flowed across the city surging through her too. But Barbara never mentioned her father. It was as though she had de- liberately put him out of her mind. The others, recognizing this, did not speak of him in her presence: and they sought for her sake to protect her in every way, to find a routine, to live as near normally as possible. Dan was often at the house: and sometimes Phil wondered how his mother could be blind to the bright devotion between Dan and Barbara that was so plain to his informed eyes. Once Dan wished to speak to Mrs. Sentry, to tell her their secret: but Phil's persuasions restrained him. Yet Dan came often, and Pro- fessor Brace too; and the tennis court had use again. If Sundays were fair they might all be there, Linda and Barbara, the Professor and Dan and Phil. Sometimes Mrs. Dane, or Mrs. Urban or other friends of Mrs. Sentry dropped in, and after tennis there was tea . was Professor Brace who in the end shattered the insulation of si- lence with which they had conspired to protect Barbara. He insisted on confessing to her his damning testi- mony against Mr. Sentry at the tri- al: He warned Phil in advance of what he meant to do; and Phil, un- able to dissuade him, told Dan what Brace intended. “I tried to talk him out of it,” he explained. ‘Probably Barb can stand it now, though. She's a lot better. I'm more worried about mother. . She doesn’t show things on the surface much, but she's aw- fully shaky inside. Every once in a while, she shivers.” “1 know." “And lately her left eyelid keeps twitching.” “Sure, she’s pretty weil worn out.” Dan reverted to Barbara. “But Phil, Professor Brace is a darned fool! What Barb needs is to forget bujiniess} never speak of it i singles, Barbara looking on; when the set ended-—Professor Brace won—Barbara said warmly: “You're good, Mac. We'll teach Dan some tennis yet, get through.” Dan retorted cheerfully, “Maybe I'm not so good, but Linda and I can give you two a lesson, time." up,” Barbara confessed. “But it wouldn't take us long to learn.” The professor said suddenly: “We teamed up once, Barbara. The first night I met you. The night we fol- lowed your father home.” Barbara's color drained away. Dan said furiously, “You darned fool!” But Barbara said: “Hush, Dan. Mac didn't say that just to make me unhappy, did you, Mac? What are you trying to tell me?” “I just want you to know, Barba- ra, that I testified against your fa- ther, told the jury about our seeing him that night, helped to convict him.” She was white as ivory; and he said: "You had to know some- time. I wanted it to come from me." i after dinner; and Barbara, ready for tennis, met him with a bright watch the game. Dan and Barbara had played together before, and at first Dan had been able to win at will; but as Barbara's strength re- their matches, opposing her grace- ful swiftness and disciplined strokes to Dan's furious energy and awk- ward force. This day Dan, running back for a perfect lob, piled headlong into the backstop and rebounded and sat down hard; licitude : “Hurt, Dan?" “No, not a bit!” he retorted, and scrambled to his feet. my reach, you big bully! on!" Phil thought their words, happy voices, were eloquent. He looked at his mother a little anx- were curiously serene “Did you hear her tone when she asked Dan whether he was hurt?” she asked softly. He pretended tone? No. Why?" “She's growing fond of him.” (TO BE CONTINUED) surprise. Highway travel is predominately a short-distance movemerf® and less than two out of every 100 vehicles observed on main highways are traveling more than 100 miles to reach their destinations. Eight out of ten are traveling less than 20 miles. These are averages of pre- liminary figures obtained in 11 states in planning surveys being conducted by the bureau of public roads in co-operation with 43 state highway departments. The main highways and their ex- tensions through cities carry 58.9 per cent of the total motor-vehicle traffic; 30.8 per cent ig on the large milegge of other city streets and scarcely more than 10 per cent of the total occurs on all secondary and local rural roads which, in mile- age, have eight times the extent of the main highways. Preliminary data from 17 states show traffic on the main highways and transcity connections to be 58 per cent urban in origin and 42 per cent rural. These are approximate- ly the percentages of urban and rural population in the states where the counts were made. Ninety-three per cent of the use of city streets, other than through routes, is by urban vehicles, while 84 per cent of the traffic on minor rural roads is by rural vehicles. Data being accumulated in the planning surveys, says the bureau, will give definite indications as to what should be accomplished in fur- ther road building; as-te- the rela tive transportation service that may be afforded by improving this or that class of road; as to who will benefit if either is done and who, being benefited, should pay the cost and in what The states are still at work collect. highways and preparing the first complete maps of all rural high ways. Each of the 43 states will publish its own results. How to Tell Mule's Age One way %o tell a mule’'s age is by his teeth. LOW TRICKERY A fisherman was accusing his | foul play. “We | agreed,” he explained, ‘““that the one | who caught the first fish would treat the others to supper. [I'll be dog- goned if those two fellows didn’t de- in their lines, even when they had bites, just so I'd be stuck.” “That was pretty mean,” agreed his listeners. “Oh, well,” the fisherman relent- ed, “I didn't have any bait on my hook.” Plenty Right at Home A woman entered a butcher's shop with her little daughter. Some tripe was displayed on the counter, and the little girl asked what it was, ‘“Tripe,” replied the mother. “That's funny,” said the child, ‘““daddy says that's what we get over the radio.””—Stray Stories. THE SAME IDEA Wifie—~My, what a large bill for a small bird! Hubby-—That's when I paid it. what 1 Do They Go Together? Little Molly was visiting on the farm of her grandfather. She went with him to feed the sheep. A little lamb came up to her and started wiggling its tail. “Grandpa, why tails?" she asked. bother them.” EE ————————— No Trip? “See here, Tommy,” said the teacher, “You mustn't say, ‘I ain't going." You must say, ‘I am not going; he is not going; they are not going; we are not going.” “Gee,” said Tommy, “ain't no- body going?” Strictly Honest Judge—So you broke into the to- bacconist’s shop just to get a 10- cent cigar? What were you doing in the safe? Prisoner—I was putting in the dime.—Stray Stories. do lambs have “The flies don't Ability Tested Employer—Yes, I advertised for a good strong boy. Think you can fill the bill? Applicant—Well, I just finished licking 19 other applicants outside. Stray Stories. Too Soon take it out for another 12 minutes. No Profit Teacher—Can you give me an ex- ample of wasted energy, Bertram? Bertram-—Yes, sir. Telling a hair- Who Won? that in one battle Brooklyn was hit | 17 times. Father—Who was pitching? SOUND ENOUGH CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT BRED FOR FRODUCTION: RAISED FOR PROFIT: BOLD BY QUALITY: BTARTED CHICKS: MILFORD HATCHERY Rockdale, Md. Ducks Chicks Turkeys Puliets In Blouse or Bolero Pattern 6285 Angora is all the rage and you, too, can be right in style with the help of your knitting needles. If it's glamor you after, make the bolero, so lovely for evening wear at any season; use white, black or a pastel shade. The blouse, with its smart ribbed ef- fect, is just the thing for wear t. Pattern 6285 con- ons for making blouse and bolero in sizes 12 to 14 and 16 to 18; illustrations of it and of stitches; materials needed. To obtain this pattern send 15 cents in coins to The Sewing Cir- cle, Household Arts Dept., 259 West 14th Street, New York, N. Y. Please write your name, ad- dress and pattern number plainly. are re ii Conciliating Manner It is difficult to tell how much men's minds are conciliated by a kind manner and gentle speech.— Cicero. * * CHOOSE FERRY'S ji Sok you know they'll grow Disarrorvrine stands of vege- tables and flowers may be caused by seeds that have be. come too old to produce first. class crops. 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