% L 'CHAPTER XV—Continued — me Then Eloise and Edith came in, and presently the men, and Lucy and Del from a trip to the small porkers, and Adelaide going out with Del to dinner was uncomfortably aware that Jane had either artlessly or artfully refused to discuss with her the women who had been loved by Frederick Towne! The dinner was farm products,” Delafield boasted. Even the fish, it seemed, he had caught that morning, motoring over to the river and bringing them back to be split and broiled and served with little new potatoes. There was chicken and asparagus, small cream cheeses with the salad, heaped-up berries in a Royal Worcester bowl, roses from the garden. ‘All home- grown,” said the proud new hus- band. Jane ate with little appetite. She had refused to discuss with Adelaide the former heart affairs of her be- trothed, but the words rang in her ears, ‘“The women that Ricky has loved.” Jane was young. And to youth, love is for the eternities. The thought of herself as one of a suc- cession of Dulcinens was degrading. She was restless and unhappy. It was useless to assure herself that Towne had chosen her above all the rest. She was not sophisticated enough to assume that it is, per- haps, better to be a man's last love than his first. That Towne had made it possible for any woman to speak of him as Adelaide spoke, seemed to Jane to drag her own relation to him in the dust. The strength of the wind in- creased. The table was sheltered by the house, but at last Delafield decided, “We'd better go in. The rain is coming. We can have our coffee in the hall.” Their leaving had the effect of a stampede. Big drops splashed into the plates. The men servants and maids scurried to the rescue of china and linen. The draperies of the women streamed in the wind. Adelaide's tulle was a banner of green and blue. The peacock came swiftly up the walk, crying raucously, and found a sheltered spot beneath the steps. From the wide hall, they saw the rain in silver sheets. Then the doors were shut against the beating wind. They drank their coffee, and bridge tables were brought in. There were enough without Jane to form two tables. And she was glad. She wandered into the living-room and curled herself up in a window-seat. The window opened on the porch. Beyond the white pillars she could see the road, and the rain-drenched garden. After delicious. ‘Our a' time the rain stoppel, and the world showed clear as crys- tal against the opal brightness of the western sky. The peacock came out of his hiding-place, and dragged a long, heavy tail over the sodden lawn. It was cool and the air was sweet. Jane lay with her head against a cushion, looking out. She was lonely and wished that Towne would come. Perhaps in his presence her doubts would vanish. It grew dark and darker. Jane shut her eyes and at last she fell asleep. She was waked by Towne’s voice. He was on the porch. ‘Where is everybody?” It was Adelaide who answered him. “They have motored into Alex- andria to the movies. Eloise would have it. But I stayed—waiting for you, Ricky.” “Where's Jane?” “She went up-stairs early. Like a sleepy child.” Jane heard his laugh. child—a darling child.” Then in the darkness Adelaide said, “Don’t, Ricky." “Why not?” “Do you remember that once upon a time you called me—a dar- ling child?” “Did 1? Well, perhaps you were. You are certainly a very charming woman.” Jane, listening breathlessly, as- sured herself that of course he was polite. He had to be. Adelaide was speaking. ‘So you are going to make the announcement tomorrow?” YX “Who told you?” “Edith.” “Well, it seemed best, Adelaide. The wedding day isn’t far off-and the world will have to know it.” A hushed moment, theg, ‘Ch, Ricky, Ricky!” “Adelaide! that.” “I can’t help it. You are going out of my life. And you've always been so strong, and big, and brave. No other man will ever match you.” When he spoke, his voice had a new and softer note, ‘I didn’t dream it would hurt you.” “You might have known." The lightning flickering along the horizon showed Adelaide standing beside Towne's chair “Ricky” — the whispered words reached Jane--''kiss me once—to say ‘good-by.’ ” “She is a Don’t take it like CHAPTER XVI Young Baldwin Barnes, on Satur- day morning, ate breakfast alone in the little house. He read his paper and drank his coffee. But the savor of things was gone. He missed Jane. Her engaging chatter, the spirited challenge, even the small ir- ritations. ‘“‘She is such a darling- dear,” was his homesick meditation. Oh, a man needed a woman on the other side of the table. And when Jane was married, what then? Edith! Oh, if he might! If Philomel might sing for her! Toast and poached eggs! Nectar and ambrosia! His little house a castle! “But it isn’t mine own,” the young poet reminded himself; ‘‘there is still the mortgage.” He came down to earth, cleared the table, fed the pussy-cats. Then he went down to the post-box to get the mail. The Barnes’ mail was rarely vo- luminous, rarely interesting. A bill or two, a letter from Judy—some futile advertising stuff. This morning, however, there was a long envelope. In one corner was the name of the magazine to which, nearly six months before, Baldy had sent his prize cover design. The Towne, riding like mad along the Virginia roads. thoughts. He had long ceased to hope. Money did not miraculously fall into one's lap. He tore open the envelope. With- in was a closely typed letter and a pale pink check. The check was for two thousand dollars. He had won the prize! Breathless with the thought of it, deprived of strength, he sat down on the terrace steps. Merrymaid and the kitten came down and an- gled for attention, but Baldy over- looked them utterly. The letter was astounding. The magazine had not only given him the prize but they wanted more of his work. They would pay well for it—and if he would come to New York at their expense, the art editor would like to talk it over! Baldy, looking up from the preg- nant phrases and catching Merry- maid's eye upon him, demanded, “Now, what do you think of that? Shall I resign from the office? I'll tell the world, I will.” Oh, the thing might even make it possible for him to marry Edith. He could at least pay for the honey- moon—-preserve some sense of per- sonal independence while he worked towards fame. If she would only see it. That he must ask her to live for a time—in the little house. He'd make things easy for her—oh, well, the thing could be done-—it could be done, He flew up the steps on the wings of his delight. He would ride like the wind to Virginia--find Edith in a rose-garden, fling himself at her feet Declare his good fortune! And he would see her eyes! Packing his bag, he decided to stop in Washington, and perpetrate a few extravagances. Something for Edith. Something for Jane. Some- thing for himself. There would be no harm in looking his best , He arrived at Grass Hills in time for lunch. His little flivver came up the drive as proudly as a limou- sine. And Baldy descending was a gay and gallant figure. There was no one in sight but the servants who took his bag, and drove his car around to the garage. A maid in rose linen said that Mr. and Mrs. Simms were at the stables. Miss Towne was on the links with the other guests, and would return from the Country Club in time for lunch at two o'clock. Miss Barnes was up-stairs. Her head had ached, and she had had her breakfast in bed. “Will you let her know that I am here?" The maid went up and came down to say that Miss Barnes was in the second gallery—and would he go right up. The second gallery looked out over the river. Jane lay in a long chair. She was pale, and there were shadows under her eyes. “Oh, look here, Janey,” Baldy blurted out, “is it as bad as this?” “I'm just—lazy."”” She sat up and kissed him. Then buried her face in his coat and wept silently. “For heaven's sake, Jane,’”’ he pat- ted her shoulder, ‘‘what’s the mat- ter?" “I want to go home.” He looked blank. “Home?” “Yes.” She stopped crying. “Baldy, something has happened— and I've got to tell you." Tensely, with her hands clasped about her knees, she rehearsed for him the scene between Adelaide and Fred- erick Towne. And when she finished she said, ‘I can't marry him.” “Of course not. A girl like you. You’d be miserable. And that's the end of it.” “Utterly miserable.” She stared before her. Then presently she went on. ‘I stayed up-stairs all the morn- ing. Lucy and Edith have been perfect dears. I think Edith lays it to the announcement of my engage- ment tonight. That I was dread- ing it. Of course it mustn't be an- nounced, Baldy.” He stood up, sternly renouncing | his dreams. ‘Get your things on, Jane, and I'll take you home. You can't stay here, of course. We can decide later what it is best to do.” “I don’t see how I can break it off, He's done so much for us. I can’t ever—pay him-—"' i In Baldy's pocket was the pink | slip. He took it out and handed it | to his sister. ‘Jane, 1 got the prize. Two thousand dollars.” ‘*“Baldy!" Her tone was incredu- lous. He had no joy in the announce- ment. The thing had ceased to mean | freedom—it had ceased to mean— Edith. It meant only one thing at the moment, to free Jane from bond- | age. He gave Jane the letter and she | read it. “It is your great oppor- | tunity.” “Yes."” He refused to discuss that aspect of it. “And it comes in the | nick of time for you, old dear.” Their flight was a hurried one. A | note for Lucy and one for Towne. A note for Edith! Jane was not well was the reason given their hostess. The note to | Towne said more than that. And the note left for Edith was-—renun- ciation. Edith coming home to luncheon the note in her room. All! the morning she had been filled with glorious anticipation. Baldy would arrive in a few hours. Together | they would walk down that trellised coping. She would trail her hand through the water. | Further than that she would not let her imagination carry her. It was | enough that she would see him in | that magic place with his air of golden youth. But she was not to see him, for the note said: “Beloved—I make no excuse for calling you that because I say it| always in my heart-—Jane has made up her mind that she cannot marry your uncle. So we are leaving at once. “I can’t tell you what the thought of these two days with you meant to me. And now I must give them up. Perhaps I must give you up, I don’t know. I came with high hopes. 1 go away without any hope | at all. But I love you.” | SAN JOSE, CALIF.—If you see your neighbor lock his wife in a trunk and walk nonchalantly away, don’t call the police. Even if the neighbor returns with an armful of swords and begins stabbing the trunk in murderous frenzy, think twice before scream- ing. The chances are your neighbor is merely one of the growing legion of Americans who fancies himself as a magician and that--Jike nine- tenths of them-—he uses his wife as an assistant, The job is a bit hard on the little woman. Owing partly to the influ- ence of the late Harry Houdini, the escape artist, magic nowadays involves being handcuffed, sewn up in a sack, locked into a medieval pillory, nailed up in a packing box or having one's head apparently lopped off by a guillotine. A slender and good-looking girl may even look forward to being sawed in half, Magic has had its followers as far back as history goes, but it has taken modern industrial methods to put it in reach of everybody. The butcher or baker who wants to astound his friends at a Saturday night party can buy an illusion, paraphernalia and instructions, as casually as he buys a package of cigarets, From a playing card that changes its spots to a big frame from which Edith read the note twice, then put it to her lips. She hardly dared admit to herself the keenness of her disappointment. She stood for a long time at the window looking out. Why had Jane decided not to mariy Uncle Fred- erick? What had happened since yesterday afternoon? From Edith's window she could see the south lawn. The servants were arranging a buffet luncheon. Little tables were set around-—and wicker chairs. Adelaide, tall and fair, in her favorite blue and a broad black hat stood by one of the little tables. She was feeding the pea- cock with bits of bread. She made a picture, and’ Towne's window faced that way. “l wonder—'" Edith said, and stopped. She remembered coming in from the movies the night be- fore and finding Adelaide and Towne out on the porch. And where was Jane? Towne did not eat lunch. He pleaded important business, and had his car brought around. But every- body knew that he was following Jane. Mystery was in the air. Ade- laide was restless. Only Edith knew the truth. After lunch, she told Lucy. “Jane isn't going to marry Uncle Fred. 1 don't know why. But I am afraid that it is breaking up ycur house party.” “1 hope it is,” said Lucy, calmly. “Delafield bored to He wants to get back to his roses. 1 speaking you because I know yot t I want our lives to be bigger and broader than they would have been i as for you" ‘you'll goddess bless- is death. am n't met, Ar shook a ¢ a if we ha —her voice always be a sort ing our hearth.” Edith bent and kissed her tion gripping her, blessed without me, I'll always be glad to come.’ Towne, riding like mad along the Virginia roads, behind the tent Briggs, pondered over Jane's little—* emo- rth is “but ' HY rine Sains Iour nea she said, ’ OM DE compe *“l was not up-stairs when you came. I was last night asleep in just off the porch. And your voice and 1 heard what you and Mrs. Laramore. And 1 marry you. I know how much you've done for me—and 1 shall said, " Enclosed was a pink check. Towne blamed Adelaide furious- y. Of course it was her fault, Such oolishness. And sentimentality. Yet, as he cooled a bit, he was glad that Jane had showed her re- It was in keeping with Her innocence too, be a hint Women were like that. There might, tion. Jealous. As they whirled through Washing- meet a cop it will be all up with us, Mr. Towne.” “Take a chance, her more gas. er Briggs. Give We've got to get With all their speed, however, it was four o'clock when they reached Sherwood. Towne was still in the clothes he had worn on the links. He had not eaten since breakfast. He felt the strain. He stormed up the terrace, where once he had climbed in the snow. He rang the bell. It whirred and whirred again in the silence. The house was empty. (TO BE CONTINUED) Fad in the U. S. a live horse disappears into thin air ~everything’'s available. His pock- etbook is the only limit. It's a rare city that hasn't one or more clubs where magicians meet “The Name Is Familiar— BY FELIX B. STREYCKMANS and ELMO SCOTT WATSON Pullman Cars N 1858, man spent $2,000 making over two latest tricks. cians attracted 300 persons. Dele- inventions. the general public. since the government has not writ- ten it into the criminal code the worst penalty that can be inflicted is ostracism by one’s fellow per- formers, Mexicans Like Cockfights Next to bullfighting, the most ex- citing sport in Mexico is cockfight ing. Because of the intense excite. ment that prevails at cockfights, the sport is forbidden in the federal district, making it necessary for en- thusiasts to go to outlying towns. As soon as the birds are in the ring bettors arrange their wagers orally. But the doors are not opened after the fight until all bets are paid, by wood-burning stoves and lighted by candles—but they had the ar- rangement of upper and berths characteristic of Pullman cars today. Those two were the first sleeping cars in the histo- ry of railroading and they were a success. Then, George Pullman (by the is that why they call Pullman porters “*George’’?) anyway, George Pullman then spent $20,000 to build a sleeping car entirely from his own specifications. It was ex- pensively decorated and luxurious besides being longer, higher, wider and heavier than any other railroad car. But just like the young man who built a in his basement and then couldn't get it out a door or window, Pullman discovered that his big luxury car was wide for station platforms and too high for bridges. For way, boat too several vears the hen Abra assinated, re ass Pdi als decided Pullman's Mercerized W HEN you buy a shirt and the sales clerk tells you it is mer- cerized naturally, you pressed. 3ut do you what it means? Mercerized clo been treated by ime know are really ess the the cloth takes dyes more bril- liantly and has a greater luster. There seems to be some mis understanding among the ex- peris to what brings about this luster. The 1928-32 edition of the Encyclopedia Brittani- ca says, ‘Considerable change in the appearance of the cross section of the cotton fiber is effected by mercerizing it. It is especially no- ticeable that the fibers appear more rounded.” And here is what the 1919 edition of The Americana says: “_ . . mercerizing gives a luster to the cotton cloth because its fibers are drawn closer and flattened, pre- senting a smooth surface that re- flects the light.” John Mercer as being that far apart, we are not go- ing into the matter further. Flat or round, John Mercer of Lancashire invented the process almost years ago. * * . Booze ago it was a Booz bottle. man they were named for. hip flask, selling his whiskey in flat, main home on a shelf. Then, to distin- guish his own brand of liquor, he made all his bottles in unusual ghapes and they became famous and were known by his name-— Booz bottles. After he died his type of bottle was not continued but the phrase Booz bottle was kept up and gradu- ally came to mean any whiskey bot- tle and the contents soon was known as “Booz,” then as ‘‘booze.” There are several original Booz bottles still in existence in America today, mainly in the hands of col Jectors. All of them, however, are empty. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) | Our Old-Time Couch Is Made Streamline By RUTH WYETH SPEARS AS there a couch like the pic- | ture at the top of this sketch, | in the family ‘‘sitting room’’ when | you were a child? Let's get it | down from the attic, for just see what can be done with it! Proper- | ly streamlined it will look like the | middle picture. | First paint the front of frame; | then cover well up onto the head { portion with cotton batting; next | use bright cotton upholstery ma- Remove stuffing at high TS MAKE BOX TABLES 10 COVER | (Ls » PHN greg gm men, ENDS CP AFA RE vl enndiamdimsilmenmsnntmsnib ome 7 PADDING La [7 ml (A) ve, hn FABRIC OVER £7: Few + lcotTon BATTING, | Jr rn de “r end. Now bles y vy dotted lines |i ate how couch fits under these box tables and how a partition and shelves are put in the one at the lower end. Paint tables to harmonize with fabric. The final is the back and end cushions cov- ered with the upholstery material. NOTE: Full directions for changing an old iron bed into the latest style, are, given Mrs. Spears’ Book No. 3; also step-by- step directions for n Rug That Grew Up Witl 1 #5 TY ; touch in Wise and Otherwise THROAT Has 8 cold made it hurt even to talk? Throat rough and scratchy? Get a box of Luden’s. You'll ind Loden's j #8 special ingredients, with, cooling menthol, a great aid in helping soothe that “sandpeper throat!" LUDEN’S 5¢ Menthol Cough Drops Hollow Glory The paths of glory lead but to the grave. One way to treat constipation is to endure it first and “cure” it afterward. The other way is to avoid having it by getting at its cause. So why not save yourself those dull headachy days, pins the inevitable trips to the medi- cine chest, if you can do it by a simple common-sense “ounce of prevention”? If your trouble, like that of millions, is due to lack of “bulk” in the diet, “the better way” is to eat Kellogg's All-Bran. This crunchy, toasted, ready-to-eat cereal has just the “bulk™ you need. If you eat it regulariy—and drink plenty of water—you can not only pet regular but keep regular, day after day and month after month! All-Bran is made by Kellogg's in Battle Creek. If your condition is chronic, it is \= to consult a physician. wv 3—40 WNU-—-4 Strength From Cause A good cause maketh a strong arm. TEE UE with backache ?