Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, July 03, 1919, Night Extra Financial, Page 20, Image 20

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1 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILABELjaiA, ' THURSD'aJ, JULY 3, 1919
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THE WORLD FOR SALE
(Copirloht I9tl bv Harper ,t Rras.l
THIS STARTS Til 15 STORY
Fleda Druse, daughter of Gabriel
Druse, shoots in n canoe the wild
Cnrillon Ilnpids on the Sngalac river
.vherc it flows between the towns of
iHnnitou nnd Lebanon in the Cnnn
dlnn Northwest. She Is on the verge
of losing her life In the whirlpools
below when she Is rescued by lnx
Iligolby, n financier, (ontractor and
mannger of great interests, who has
come to Lebanon to amalgamate the
railroads, unite the two towns and
make them the renter of enminenc in
the western north. On shore slie is
insulted by I'elix Mniohnnil. sun .if
Hector Mnrrhniul. capitalist of Main
ton Ingolb.v attacks Maioliand. wn..
TOWS revenge Then arrives Jctim
Fawe, wlio claims that lie and l'leil.i
were married when tliililicn. ni.urd
lug to the gypsy custom. I'Joda n
jeets him and he is assaulted by In
father Mnrchand. who lues n
Manitnu. begins tn stn up tionl.
between the two towns in onlir t
foil Ingolby's plans.
AM) 1IKRK IT IIIM'IMKs
f(T ISTIIN to me." slie answeto
-- with auger tingling in cvci
nerve and liber. "I mine of mur rn. .
3 was what jou are. a child of t1
.hedge and the wood anil the road. I
that is all done Home win sa
Home- in a tent by the minNid
or '
' "As join mother lived where mi
were born well. well, but lieie s a
Roman lass that's foigot her cradle
"I lime forgotten nothing 1 hac
onij moved on. I hae nnlj seen tha'
fherc is n better load to walk tiian thai
where people nlwnjs looking behind lest
they be followed, and nlwajs looking
lh front to find lefuge. drop the patrin
in the dust or the grass or the btishe
l6e others to follow after alwavs go
iiig nu nnd on because they dare not go
flack."
S J. Suddenly he threw his cigarette on
" r the ground, and put bis heel upon It in
4 fury real or assumed "threat heaven
I nnd hell," he extlaimcd, "here's a
Romany has sold her blood to the
devil' And this is thp daughter of
Gabriel Druse, king and duke of all
the Homanvs, him with ancestor King
Panuel, Duke of Little Kgjpt. who had
Higismund. and Charles the tlreat. nnd
? nil the kings for friends Hv long nnd
4l by last, but this is a tale to tell to the
Romnnjs of the world !"
fr "Then go nnd tell it .T"tnro Fawe
I to nil the world Tell them I am the
y renegade daughter of Gabriel Druse
& ruler of them all Tell them there is no
ft fault in him, nnd that he will return to
his own people in his own time, but
that I, Klrdn Druse, will never return -never!
Now get you gone from here."
After Tleda's scornful words of re
lease and dismissal, Jethrn stood for a
moment confounded nnd dismay ed He
had not reckoned with this. During
their talk it had come to him how simple
it would be to overpower any cheik to
Ms exit, how leilishy easy to put
the girl nt a disadvantage: but lie droe i
the thought from him In the Hist I
place, he was hv no menus sure that
escape was what he wnnted not yet.
at any rate . in the second place. A
Gnbnel Druse passed the word along
(the subterranean wires of the Itomnin
' x-orld that Jethro Tnwe should vanish
he would not long cumber the giound
Yet it was not cowardice or fear of
consequences which had held him back7:
it wns a staggering admiration for this
efrl who had been given to him in mnr-
i.ukc f-o iiiiinj M'ars ago. tic mid iarcu
Jar and wide in his niheutures and
amours when he had gold in plenty : and
he had swung more than one Oorgio
woman in the wild dance of sentiment,
dazzling them by the splendor of his.
- .p. c . . i , i
passion The fire gleaming in bis dark
" . ii u, i t i-i iii
eves lurhted a face winch would have.
made memornble a picture by (iuidn.
He had fared far and wide, but he bad
never seen n woman who had seized his
imagination as this girl was doing; who
roused in him. not the old hot desire,
but the hungry will to have a tan of
his own, and go traveling down the
world with one who alone could atisf,
llim for all his days.
As lie sat in this improvised wood
land prison he hnd had visions of a
hundred glades and valleys through
"- which he had passed in days gone by in
England, in Spain, in ital;. . in Ru
mania, in Austria, in Australia, in In
dia where his camp fires had burned
In hi visions he hnd seen her Fleda
Fawe, not Fleda Druse laying the
cloth and bringing out the silver cups,
or stretching the Turkey rugs upon the
ground to make a couch for two bright -eye'd
lovers to whom the night was ns
' th'e day, radiant and full of joy. He
iiad shut his eyes and beheld hillsides
Where abandoned castlep stood, and the
' fox and the squirrel and the hawk gave
. Chade nnd welcome to the dusty pilgrims
pf the road or, w hen the w ild w inds
blew in winter, gave shelter and wood
for the fire, and a sense of homeliness
among the compnnionnblc trees.
He had seen himself nnd this beau
tiful Romany chi at some village fair,
9 while the lesser Romany folk told for
tunes or bought nnd sold horses nnd the
lesser still tinkered or worked in gold
or brnss; he hnd seen them both in a
great wagon with bright furnishings nnd
- fcmss trirt harness on their horses, lord
ing it over all, rich, dominant nnd ad
mired. In his visions he had even seen
a Romany babe carried in his arms to a
Christian church and there baptized in
grandeur as became the child of the
head of the people. His imagination had
nlso seen his owu tombstone in some
Christian churchyard near to the church
porch, where he would not be lonel,
when he was dead, but could hear the
gossip of the people as they went in
Ju,d out of church ; nnd on.the tombstone
' Some such inscription as he had seen
jjieF.ir'
h w. soul Cod be gracious nnd menu
re- '- .
.1 ... ,..- It wns n strange thing
'for a Romany' to be burled it. a f.orgio
churchyard; but it was what chanced
, .- to many grout w n ' """""'";
Vi. mcb as the higli-Dorn i.t... '"
tlf'Att ateinbrocU. and Feter of Kleinsch.ld
S Mil M.n.m-nU of whom had grea cm
blazoned monuments In I hristlaii
a bai-T'i it to show that in all-level-
.a. iiimiiii. . , ,i.,i ,,, i.ii. ,
f Ins death ttie) couui-.. .-.."
C csfate to mingle their ashes with the
.... of Hie (.nrgio.
lie had bought out his chieftain hcrc
In the new world in a spirit of ndun
ture. cupidity and desire. He had come j
liVe'cnc who betrajs, but he acknowl
edged to o higher force than his own
.,,l to superior rights when Oabriel,
m Druse's fctrong arm brought him low;,
Bf; nd, waking to life and consciousness!
" ' iKEin bp was uwnre mat uuuiuir iorce.
v 'H' IIUM icveieu mm i" ." (mm. luu .
' iVfifiwr "' ttpinan'n spirit which
1 1 jut' 9Y ' "4IHU so KorufulJy ; '
M Ay
,,.- 4
i-illll
'Tell them that I. Fleda
who bade hm,
begone and (ell their'
people eiei,uiiere that se was no
longer 11 lionuim. while she would go
110 iiouiit 11 thousand times without
uouui unless in. preentetl it -to the.
the,
swaggering lioreio who hn.l sa,ed her'
Oil Hie .-snglllllc.
She stood waiting fr him lo . as
though he could not refuse his f.eedom.
As n bone is tossed to a dog, she gne
it to him.
"You have i Kht to set me free."
I... I.I .... tl .. . .
ne sain coony now. --i am not jour
prisoner. ou tell me to take that
word to the Roman people that ,..u
leate them forenr. 1 .11 n,,t ,l i.
You am a Homain. nnd a IJoman, ,ou
must stn,. ou belong nowhere else,
If jou married a Coign.. ,ou would
still sigh for the (amp beneath the
stnr
dam
for the tambouriuo and the
"
v'"1 tlP fi tune telling," she in-
' j'- ..-u suiupiy, ami me Mian-soun.
and the diit, blanket under the hedge.
and the constable on the mad behind
always jut behind, wntdiing. waiting
and "
..'n, i,.i ,. i ., ,. .
"lc hedge i as clean as the dirtv
.,. ,, .,, . ,, , , ,, .
nouses where the low -( ass (Jorg os
, ... "'Mk(us
I sleep. In tnuh. vol. are n lonL' wnv
from the River Starzk.-:" he added.
"Hut ,0.1 are my mad wife, and I
must wait till jou've got sense again."
He sat down on the plank eoudi,
and began to roll a cigarette once moie.
"You come fitted out like a Oorgio
Inss now, nnd von look like a Oorgio
countess, nnd you have the manners of
nn archduchess ; hut thnt s nothing; it
will peel off like a blister when it's
pricked. I'lideriieath is the Romany.
It's there, and it will show red arid
angry when we've stripped off the f.or
gio. It's the way with a woman, al-
wajs acting always imagining herself
sometning else than what she is-if
sues a Beggar taucying herself a prin-
2 a a.'11rlD"i.'( fancying her -
-w. .. i.u .... -w "uwi, nut i
Know you uu . i
Kvery word he said went home. She!
knew that there was truth iu what he I
said, ami that ucneatl. all wns the Ro-
......... "". ' .r n.eunt to conquer
.. .,.,, .uu ....... ue ,UH mono in I a Uomnny and his wife were alone'0"". nd "lieu I marry. I shall marrv a ,0Vrcu lIle ," " " "' cn room. A ' i"; ;"""" " V.l i".i :
Cngland that t-hc loved, and she would together!" man of my own ehooMng a. 1 he win ! wl,,te enn,,,cl sink aml a p,lm" stoo'l "' ' AP?lP" a,c' .w,th, cnut on;
not change. Whatever .happened, she His eyes wer. non senrchinglv on not ben Homnin." she replied witl a om' rornCr f the ki"'1"'"- The barn rr VltH sakt'' IJctter ' ,1"n l .Ica
had tithed with Itomany life, and to her,, as though he would real th ef ' 'ok of resolutio, whicl 'r bea, g was built lnrg0r a"d ,nP ""MI..BS. th '' 'n,,e 5n,'"S Zll ' ." ""'"'
go back would only mean black tragedy feet of his words before he replied, heart belied. ."I'm not n nrdhr's paintC1 UtsiC- " "V l tn'rfTnnl W I ebn
iu the end. A month ago it was a nnd his TOice had a curious, ougl I basket." Pilars "Well." said Tom. "our buildings "olln? 'vlfe 1, shouljD ' bo " ',iIo'v
,,. .... ul-..c .,.,. niuuc ( note, as tnougn with uiuiculty lie "iveii: ivek : Ttiat plniu " he re-
her determined; today it was the vow rpielled the tempest within him. "I have, torted. "Hut the 'wolf is no lamb
and a man a Corgio whom she had ,, rights, nnd you had spat upon me," i either ! I said I would not go till ,m
but now left in the woods, gazing after le 8id with ferocious softnes. ,fnther set me fiee, sime wi lln,i
her with the look which a woman so1 she did not blench, but looked him right to do so, but a wife "should save
well interprets. steadily in the eyes. I'.er husband, and her husband should'set
"Vou mean you wont go free from "I knew what would be in jour'himself free for his wife's sake",js
here? Hecause I was a Romany, and mind," she answered, "but that did not , loice rose in tierce iioni "and so I
wish you no harm. I linie come here , keep me from mining. You would not will now go free. Hut I will not take
today to let you go where you will j bite the hand that set you fiee." ' the word to the Houiuni people thut ion
to go back to the place where the pa- "Vou called me a wolf a minute are no moie ot them. I urn a true Ko
trins show where jour people travel. lago." I many. I disobeyed, mi Itv in coming
t mi' nrwl nn innnp i noieu it liml ..,n.I..
DOROTHY DARNITHe
I PAPA I nnKiTmkiix i . . ., .. . I I .. . . ) 1 I " "" '- 1 C :
hSirjw i7k!3Sr kno'L-Jves !&. .
TrMATBUTT'. O - ' ..-? SrfY5 SoJfr IHfe-anf ' ' o'Jt. "Z '. YZ77-V Vzl
I oilwpi.i r ... WHY'. C-i BaaS )YV ' pu? H ZZSLMV c VA ur viu-wc., , , , H
r G) r if? -u3--6 ? ffZ'v--x-is - iW 1 "ttSA
vva jatr. vb& i tv , ai t . i jmrnr i i n . o mi, ,- i v aa wiv - n .
,. " i., i. k Y ' STOfyTT n 1 -. i k ' r , , u
Diuse. will neer retiini nrter! Now.
"I set ,iu free tin, I nn tm
what'
win think will hUit nml
on li.ue n ( mcl soul.
""" ""
y.11 would to,
-he iik, ou
lure an, woman till she ilitd.
shall not torture me l,n
shall no. torture me. ,n, a,e ns fa,
fiom ..... s .I... II ...., L I ,..
- taii'i . .1 I J.n . 1 I.IIUI
haC el Mill slid lieie for .nv fntl.ei-
to .in.. I I.,..' . ,.'..'. '..,:.
... tilt.....
I open the ,,',r for jou. though ,ou I o, in
nothing to me. and I am m. n.oie to
j, .1, than one of the women yoit have
, fooled nnd left to eat the ile b.ead
'.i . .
(t tne iiuinKeii. on liae been, m.u
men wolf a wolf:" ''
' He got to his feet again, and the
blood nwlie.l t,, i,.. i... ... .i
.seemed almost black A ton cut ( .f
mad mini- cntheieo in his th.o.tt. Im,
the, mokeil him. nml in the r.aus,. his
will asserted itself. He be. nine tool
and deliberate
""" ""' right, m, giil, I hae
sucktd the orange and tliiowu the skin
."... u.i.i . m- pitmen uoweis and cast
....... . ...i i -. . i .. i .1 . .
,,ie b, . but thai was befoie the liisf
da, 1 saw ton as ,ou now
n ....
i.e, stn,, I.. .!. s! ..... ..........
.lie ion
..... -..,.,. ,,n if, lliv OlIK. 11.(1- .....Kit LI
out to the wes, where the pmktiaius
were traveling into the sun over the
mountains and ,ou had jour hand on
he ne,k of , our pony was not ten
ett a. from ,.,. behind a junipu
bush. I looked at vou, and I wished
,,,,, , ' wis.u.i
I nt I nnd neer seen n im,i,i K. r.. n
thnt I had never seen a woman fkfoie
nnd could look at the world as jou
did then it was like water from a
spring, that look. You am light in
what Mill sa, Hy long and by last I
had a hard hand, and when I left what
I'd stru.k down I neier looked ba(k.
Rut I saw ,ou, and 1 wished I had
never seen n woman befoie. You have
been here alone with me witli that dom
shut. Have I said or done an, thing
that a Gorgio duke wouldn't do? Ah.
God's love, but jou were bold to come
, ..,,. .... V,. th. n- ,,
t loo, , ,. as mv .,f.: ,. . '
, ,. ino .;, . . ,..,, ..
j ,,,,, and i had been ,
rarapieu under-
. . .
foot by your father-
..n !.:..
w i., hv r eiiinf. 1 u.j
-rnn nnH T hn.l mv rilito o.l ....
.. , w -. . . v. ,.
' re mine by Ilomany ,aw. It was
...wun., ...... . ...... ...j ini'i- uut. ..oil I
......... I t.
for me here to claim you
. t.i .. .
May Not Know Oil Wells,
By SIR GILBERT PARKER
Author of "The Seats of Hip Mighty,"
"The .Money Master," etc.
get
jou gnne from heie"
"Hut a wolf would mil bile the
"""! in. 11 llt-cil I' 1II1UI IMC trail. I el
if mi. I, shame .....1.1 be I still would
hlle had no le.li. lor -I,,,,,!, I !,,
shut .... as ,,he .,.,,, "".
I ,.. ,i. ,...,..
l 111 1111 lll.
.1, f......... .. I 1. 1
lie lnl....l
.1 ',;.', '.. ' "' '."fc,V """
Pm-poim. - , ,., ' ,",, ' ' . ,,
J on aic aimed''" 1 ,tioned ''0',,'1 mfan " lo' nf "PPnse,"
"Am I the ,,,,h woman that Ins ""' T,n'
nrme.l herself against ,,, nml su.-l. iis U" (nr0 ''"'' Wr-iuM with frowns and
.... mi t l,,"1It!-l,cml..I.titt i .
Jou' Ho ou not se,.'-"
"Mi Dmel. but I do see now with a
thousand eves . said ho-irseh '
H,c .-,. .:.. ,.'.'.
ue.ith cm rjtlniig had been the thought
thnt. ns he lm.i i.,..ii.i ...... .........
Dow n be-
- - - i i I'. . Ml III II 1 1 I I I I 1 I M l1-
women. hctoiiM ,,,-,.i-,,i ..i, i
... i
she would .ome t.. ; .i, .i it..
hnd felt, but lie had di dined to see, the
significance of her liein-ii. ..r i .i'
of her speed., of her ur.'senf ...n,l,. i
. . . ".
.!,. ,.f .t ..,,, ,,.,.,;. .. ,.
social distinction of n kind which lift 1
.
.( r Ilhot e even tin (I, ....... I.. .. 1 . .. .
V. '"-'. iwldl.lsue
lino ii.pi.nii ....... I
A tat.io.is belief in
himself and , his e,.a powers ha
,,,, ,,,, He had told the tr t
,,,, Ilp ,nj(1 (hat ,, ' "h
,,,, , Ml1 , M that"l"
llll(1 blottcll ollt ,, onl,ntfr
.. i i e i ""im.. noiu
,p )00j. ()f j aivcntumus and dis-
... ' ((.!(( (lis-
solute life; and he had
,t ,
dreamed n
. r .
dream of conquest of I
dream ot conquest of her whe foitunel' , """ '" "" P'nns. lne - ; -
should hand out to him the kev f the'''1"1'1"'1' "re W 0n""Kl1 to 1,e,p if l'yHo"r'
situation. Did not the beautiful Rus- . nr0 "ot Permiu1 to work too hard,"' "I like that name. 'The Golden
sian countess on the Y,,l-a tlee from ' Mli1 To,n' Hour,' " 1 commented. "Those two
llpr liocro Inrd nml dmni 1.. .. .'
....
he phned his fiddle t the A ,,.,..;.
princess, did she not give lun a lev to
the warden where .i,. .i'..i '; .'
Mr n
nt t.i.tw.n'i tn.l !.;.. ..... - l
""mil, nir..,,
dntiifliter of his eliieftnin nu i, .
.tuau. .in,. ,111 , ii h ;i , ..in, n,i .. in...
" " ,n ,1,- 1US hU ,
lanvrhief- nnd ," !
ie be that ihn Vim i i I
d i 1 , ,
UU nilf, Sllfllllll he con-
ot n great toman
marvel could the:
, been made his child
imiered ns others had been!
'i; ute i... t ot t . i
... -"'"; '"" J ne repeated
lnnnusKvne rcen nee ''.nH. ,
........... ... ' urn .Mini- nus-
hnnd hut inn ivn.,1,1 t,o tin... ..
I had taken n kiss from ..... i
. t. 11 11
Ca td to me hv n Ollr t.-iho. ...I . .
- -- . ...uvo .iim it i
voile tnthAi- nn, n.i.,n "
your father and mine
r ....
but He Is an Authority on
!,... ..I, . V lins are mv nen .,. I.e. .. ... inu uvjuts .ww... mwu.
..cir nui-ir --- -;-. .- ".. uic is niv ' .,.. ...n. r ,. '.! ;,,! (a TIi.I,-,. n-lio 11 ,1
' s. J (Copjiuhi. 1919. bt kr R.tl SJ,.,. In, sj f
fc. .... ... v. ...., ....,
here because my wife was here, nnd 1
wanted her I am a true Romany hus
band who will not betiny his wife to
her people; hut 1 wijl have mj wny, and '
no (iorglo shall take her to his liotuci
'She belongs to my tent, nnd t will take I
'her there."
Her gesture of contempt, nnger nnd
negation infurlntrd him. "If 1 do not
take you lo my tan. It will be becnuse
1 I'm dead," he said, nnd his white teeth
i showed fiercely.
"I have set you free. You had belter
go," she rejoined quietly.
(TO I!K f'ONTINl'ED)
DAILY NOVELETTE
MAR) 'S GARDEN
lly Canle L. I. Curtis
T , " uuiet they tried to be, each one putting
III, farm had looked hopeless to the ,,mil ),(, f(,pt nR tinlB, 1P rr0 walk
entire neighborhood for many ears ing on eggs. Thump, thump, thump:
I he house wns painted an ugly orange,
the barn wns hnrdlj latge enough to
shelter a horse ami the dilapidated cow
shed, roiered with red pnint, would
ero better as fuel supply for the
kitchen range. To this forsaken fnim
mine Tom and Mniy Austin, with Iheii
two childien. Alary had lots of cour
age, but Tom's hopes w
it Tom's hopes were few. Tom
en a sfhnnl teacher. His eyes
wajs tumbled him, but he hnd
had l.
had al
oeen tot innate to secure a positio
11 II
....... ;nni f ,. ,, .,
iinipai ot the lorter (.rninmar
.scIkioI. Things seemed prosperous to
I Otll 1111(1 ttin Til.... ......... .1. .1
till '."in- (((( iioiiii louowing swittij, tor .nidge Uwl came
wln.h dnikojied tl hopes. The troll- down as quickly as he had glMic up. nnd
,"'"' l,,ms ?'" "1,, Ki-ing worse ), he ,nme down he wns on -the big
.i llfl hit limol fruit tn. I.!.. .. lit .(..... "
enchin,, s ,,, ,,,.,
teaming. Ni t.o the country they
,.,.,,..
The, didn't t l, !
l..'f.n,
Mary, and Mm, pitied Tom, but" each
Hoped tor the liest.
"Wc'mi a hind task before us to im
Piovc this place. Mary," said Tom one
weiiing us the, sat on the doorsteps.
"Willi implements nnd stock to ,u,
and tepnirs to be mnde on the build
nigs. I don't see how we can manage,"
ontiniteil he
"Nonsense. laughed Mar,
won t take near 11s mm h hioik
will (oiiiinoii sense anil work "
"It
as it
"Whnt ;in ,0111 suggestions?" he
asked.
"In the fiist place I want a cistern.
..,.., is ,,, , ,,h ,, ,, ,,, AMp
" " '- ' """ "' 101111, iiiiii
looms seen a irer am ninw.- otll.
heated. We could paper the living -oot.
nnim tl.i.s ,,,ll., !. !..(. ..
: -r . ' . " .." ?. """"', "'"H "" nr-
'.' .' ...."... ... neat designs
nt ten nun twelve cents n roll 'I'l.n..
.. .
'"?. ".':s ""Provement would be a
( -.kus ..-. m-sum, . av dreaming Is erv
"P"' '"' nhorf' ie "p money coming
from''"
i 'fuming: AVhv. If Mnn, t
' rin ' ''." r-v -Mnrys's garden." she replied.
"Whew!" ejaculated Tom.
.. " -
lou ma, iniign it jou please, hut
just watch my step In gardening." She
look a Sin bill in her hand. "Sec, I've
smed this from the egg money this
winter, nnd every cent of it is to he
spent for gnrden seeds."
unere mm now will ion dispose of
jour products?" he nsked of her.
"Oh. that's all planned. I was wise
enough not to mention it to ,ou be
fore 1 had. I'm going to sell them to the
social elect at Riveiside." she said,'
glancing nt him. "Of course," she con-
tinned. "1 will have tegular days to
deliver to regular customers
"Good idea. I'm almost positive that
. wuim null, i in anno!
... ,
Mi wi" succeed iu ,ou
plans. The
..,,, .. h"" " nils .KI(HCI1, ni.U It
lini'i c nn.ilnn np 1.1......I , ..
RrPW successful!. Her list of sales
. r.. ....
f'r0''' ah "bl'S 'to hiie a
girl to help with the household duties.
. t."'--!. -1.... Aln. I. 1. . .
r-uru uu, .'im,i iuur mi1 Iinil Spring
wQEon nnd (leliored tho vrpornh!Q
.
wagou nnd
Her customers were so plenod wi;h the
product that they decided to buy rhirk-
Pns of hpr n,- So p1' May
L . ., t ,.,., . .. - " i
'snent in dressinc chickens for 1. st . !
nriinv morini
morning delivery.
- . "1 "
,,.' .. , " 'n ..., .
ui- (mini koi iini-iv tlMTP for inn nir it p1i f Tl.n HrJ,. Ham.' ,a , ... 1, ,. . V .". .. ;" ." ""h- "'-
;;Very we,,,' si(, Tm. ...hnf .V f "-f ZXZt '3 the beginning SVc!
.,'., . , , ,. . pi epnre a series of small advertisements an,i r noti(e, tint tiIP vn,.jPtv as far
mat door in the living room could which we will run every day for a few irrentm- 1I.1,,. I,, ,n.i ..i ...! 1 !
be taken out. That woin." mnko l...ti, ilm Kneli nli-..rMm.tif shnii fentn.e .... , ...., .,, , ' TODAY'S lU'SINKSS OL'
mes. One evening Tom I met "cttcrjy
seated at the reading' "How-do, friends!'
i.iM,..,.M...w...., vuu iir ic mm
... , -.,.: ...... . .. -----
anu .liury were scuicu nc llie rfn.ni'
table computing from Mary's delherv
OTOCrS Ulf 1..CU.I.I: rcce
pceired from her '
potitres hung at
-. Uaintv naner1
.
UttrUC..
Dark creen
' the living room door,
nrc in first-class condition and S200 In '
the bank besides. 1 alwnjs thought I
that women knew how to plan better
than men."
He reached his hand across the table
and took her soft, tnniird band in his
large, work-hardened one and said.
".Mary's garden was bomo garden. All
wiies aren't helpmates like jou, little
girl."
Tho next complete novelette
and I-'ircvvorlis,
-Love
Foolishness
DREAMLAND AD VENTURES-By Daddy
"THE JEALOUS ELEPHANT"
(luilpc Owl. prmen into Ihr hin
gut 6irf in the irnitd, joint llir tur-
riM. Major, Ihr elephant, i) jealous
aiul Inuh Uic other elephants against
htm.J
Jiidge Owl AYnlirs l'p
MA.IOU, the elephntit, thought .lodge
Owl was fust nsleen. Iecir ninl
liilljj however, knew he was only pre
I tending and they wondered what sort of
a trick lie was up to.
"Snor-r-r-r ! Snor-r-r-r!" went
ludge Owl. The elephants, winking
wisely nt enrh other, crept forward
step by step. It wns funnj to see how
went their big hoofs and they thought
they were not making n . sound.
When within n few ar(ls of .tiirlcrp '
Owl. .Maior raised his trunk as a slpiinl.
lie trumpeted loudly nnd lurched nt
.ludge Owl. Kvery other elephant fol-
lowed. :
This is whnt Judge Owl was waiting
for. Quick as a flnsh he sprang into'
llio nir nml tho nti.nl.ni.lo fnn,l .1,. ,
Miv chnrging across an empty plat
form.
Major wns a most astonished ele-
phnnt when Judge Owl bounded out of
I.!., ....nl. Tl l.-.l 1.A..1.A .!. !..,
'"' ('-ion. ue iiiiii MivniKiiL me judge
n(l)pPI, ,! had forgotten that he could
llj . And Major had more astonishment
i j. i, . ... . ...
,'",',ll"m " nn,'K-
llim f .ImW nd' mtcdrfiil M.
" ' 1 s.ii s 1. -
d'tched1,Mnjor'.staiI. the other clutched
Major's Var. T'p .'lew the elephnnt's
'
BRUNO DUKE, Solver of Business Problems
By HAROLD WHITEHEAD, Author of "The Business Career of Peter Flint," etc.
' CopyrllM
IK
ROIU.KM OK TIIK
RKSTAL'RANT
MOW
Aihertise and Cut the Menu
..,..,., .
"M I I'tsr suggestion. s,d ltn.no
XTX Duke, ns he continued wauning
fi rr(cn mlvrtiMPlnpntH ,hp ,wo
prietois ior should I
nun uin. n limeli nurl nne cnn..;.,l .1 ..
ser."
..(.. !.-.. i (.c.... -i..,
mi. .."" " vk...s,s : w
... ". in. .
Let us necleet. them for n feu rinvs
. . "
and concentrate on thnt which will bring
s quick returns.
As J""" s. Mr- r)llk'- Miss
How nith agreed. "Here's the telephone
lf '" ''V611 to Ket lr' I'ct,c!'1 lo '"
fit ni riitbr mi ni "
. "h"1 "'"' r
. 'kp and I spent the intervening time
in admiration at her prompt nction and '
failed up Metterly s office. 1 ortunntely,
J1' " '" n1"' Promised to be with us
that afternoon.
l.W'l. lllll lli'lll 1.11 ...ll.l.'l'
. "une nnu i spent hip intervening time
in stud,ing the other restaurants in
tllP towu- T "ns vcr.T surprised to find
s" few of any mei.t. When 1 sug.
RP8";d that we look up the hotels Duke
laughed
"You wouldn't expect to find many
hotels here, would ,ou?" i
"Whynot? Newark is a whacking '
big city."
i.ui, uuiortiuiaieiy ior ine note, ousi-
, ness, it's too near New Y'ork, nnd peo
pie hnving business here would untur-
n"-v Prpfor to go there lather than stay
here but people have to eat here, and
from "A'int we've seen there should be
a K00(' mls'ncss future for 'The Golden
..li.l,. tlflla tnilinc lifi, ,. mtn ti.n nfrml t ..
fn . unit im.i.vt mi,,, tun uifc n-?i-( llj
that name. Couldn't we work up n
. ..... r. ... ...
slogan nDout it: nomeiiiing i.Ke Spend
golden hour at "The Golden
lIoilH
"
"That niny roino Inter, hut I believe
a orqu should be tho oiitrome of a
reputation and not the forerunner of it.
Still, weranputltuptoBettcrb."
W t,n.l rrn(.efw1 fin lltHp rnrnt
had crossed the little corner to
.. . .... i . r .....
'ne station anu, uuer u iew minutes
In,et Rettcrly.
,,,....,. .:.! i. ... .i
limviiu. iiicuuii. nii.iiiifiii'cunc,
""l"d to sec you in the ouly snfe
P'n(,? if we cvcr nnvo nnothcr """d
's Newark -'the New Ark, see?"
"No-ah," I said, whereon we
this
o both
yet
' told Hetterly in a few words
what we had to do nnd whnt he was
wanted for
"I suggested that a slogan might be
a good thing," T said.
I'llum," Hetterly said, "I don't think
they need one not till they are estab
lished, at any rntc.
"Of course," Hetterly gave a sly
glance at Duke. "We might sny 'The
(ioldeu Hour' restaurant just the place
to rest jour aunt ! ouch !" he ex-
Copjrlsht. 1010, by the Hell Sj ndlntts. lne
NO .
JUDGE
i !ii- . ' '", ' vitill?,! i 'l ' I
I -W i.'Rv.. , " IS. 'I I I ' ' ..
MMt falft
ftmmBBZ. '
When lie rnme down he was on (lie
big elephant's back
Then there wns excitement lots of
't- Major let out a senrrd squeal and
'"""Pi'd up his bnck and bucked like a
"il'1 "stern broncho, trying to throw'
Judge Owl off! And the more he
"Tnlod and jumped and bucked, the
"Bltcr Judge Owl clung to his tail, his
CB1' ft 11(1 his t lllllk.
- 1 Never befoie had anything like thnt
happened to the giant elephant. He
didn't know what to do. When buck-
ing didn't rid him of Judge Owl, he
.:-.! ! 11 ! !!.. 1 (.
(((((( niijMiMK. lien ruuillllK Hilled lie
tried walking on his hind legs. When
wnlking on his hind legs biought no
lelief, he stood on his bead.
The other elephants were as much
astonished as Major, but when they saw
t'mt their leader had been nipped by
1...1.. n,.i .1. u.i- .1 1.1..1 .' 1 .
iiiiii' ii iiicj nt'vn lift iilt'll iij Ri'l'll i . ,"
out of the row. The animals, roused '"J !Crm"" T ',,P MM ,,ml sn,l,te'1
, from their nap by the bellowing ofWi"' ,,"",r trl'"'
saw ,l"' bnt"'' bot"r''11 ,hp Knnt owl I ",c Major nctl piinishc-l.)
claimed, ns Duke gave him a vicious
pinch..
I!y U,U '"'V p w"e 1,Jrk nt ,ho
lestaiirant and Hetterly instantly o-
,,Prp( ,, ,, (n,,Pr ,,n fnlks vlbr ,,
or ilmni'i nml i,P,.n,nn Jl.n l.-ee,i V...II.
linnl minded aihertising specialist.
At; 11, ....
'' That is' so 'but we wanted to do
. ' . M' "ut " wnnieo to (10
morcthnn the other restnurnnts-so we
did.'-
"tr.. ......... i t .. i.ii. ....i
...... ........... H.UIUU1SII1.
sold nnd which didn't sell?"
, "Only in n general way. until a week
ago, but last week- I kept track ot the
number of orders for each itm on the
ol" of fnrf-
i
tn x' ni'oneiniiu1 i r - .. ..... t . . . r .. 1 .1 1
-...1 "... . h' rn ( itict i irnr v n i in twn i amnn .in.
ORIGINAL VACATION HINTS
-rs-,R HAYK received on a printed1
, yy Iulti0!lrj ,. tu tusHtnto for
ii,ij(. Service. 'Willinui II. Allen di-
1PPtor, suggestions thnt are at least
'seasonable, for thev relate to -vacations.
A it is WP ;n0NVn tint thousnnds of
; Americans spend fifty weeks of the year
I worrjine over the manner in which
they shall spend the odd fortnight, nnv
helpful program for the annual summer
holidays is welcome. Mr. Allen sets .
down a schedule for morning, afternoon .
and evening.
Lct us take them in or-
der :
Morning No book but nature, peo
ple, hand work nnd rowing, swimming
or tennis and the like.
After the idler hns risen nnd wnited
for somebody else to go to breakfast,
has gone to the hotel office or village
store for the mail and has pipeclayed
his shoes, about twenty-eight minutes
nf the morning remain for the contem
plation of nature. As for people, must
'a vacationer meet them? A mnn who
hns just been released from work in tho
romplaint bureau of n railroad station,
for instance, might object to having
people drngged into hjs holidays. After
luncheon :
Afternoon A nap, nonshop novel or
poetry, conversation about internntional
nnd national nffairs, including art and
literature, swimming, etc.
Naps are fattening, destroy the
night's sleep nnd cut into the precious
hours of the free person. What is a
nnnshop novel? Perhaps Mr. Allen
means that the young foreman of con
struction when on his vncation should
not refill "PnneretA Pnrl nt- llwlittn
the Grout Trust." The' young lady
whoso principal object iu life is getting
married should lay aside the Chambers
novels. The resting bartender should
nvoid "The Demoniac. Jnmes K. Vnr
daman should not read "Uncle Tom's I
Cabin." Mr. Chaplin should let
Shakcsprarc's works alone.
"Conversation nbout international
and national affairs, including art nnd
iiieiiiture, swimming, etc. ut tiicsc
we think swimming is the safest. We
do not remember thnt Mr. Wells or Mr.
Wilson or Hcrr Nietzsche ever said
(1. . 1 ,... ... t. .-, .,
u.ijiu.KK euii.uuiii: on my suujrci. .hibs
Kelleriuniiu is the only quotable author. '
By Chas. McManus
BUT HE5 A qood
01 FOOLlSHrslESS.
CKAfi.MCMAfJOS.
and the giant elephant that Is all
howled nnd screamed except tho monk
eys and hyenas. They laughed and
laughed nnd laughed.
Peggy and Billy would hare laughed,
too, but they saw a new danger arising.
"All the elephants are looso and
excited," whispered Hilly to Peggy. "If
they should run nwny through the town
they might kill n lot of persons."
Peggy had thought of the same thing.
She wns afraid, too, thnt Major, in
his efforts to escape from Judee Owl.
'might go on n mad rampage, as she had
heard of elephants doing when angry
or manned.
Hut Judge Owl wns n wise old hlrrl
'and he knew whnt to do nt the proper
I moment. Major, when he stood on
I his head, swayed n bit too far nnd over
I lie crashed upon the peanut stnnd, scat
( tering peanuts in all directions. Judge
Owl let go of him quicker than seat.
nnd while Major wns picking himself
up, Judge Owl wns hooting n message
to the other elephnnts.
"I'm the biggest bird in the world
nnd ruler of this menagerie." he hooted
"I appoint nil of Milt rood olntilinnls
"Pwhl policemen to keep order here,
(ft w,RJr nml arrest this disturber,
''"'"'" J'011 r" pb'k up these peanuts
"p '"" scattered.
TilOt tooL" flirt nt n il. n . . ., 1, ... ...!,...
-" riM.ni i.. cm ,i isr.
Tl,r-V H'fdrthe idea. It would be fun to
'", Pnllmen, nnd particular fun to
arrest .Major, who wns somewhat of n
""y, ..ll Wn"''1 1,c ''?"' mor" fn"
? ,1,k'k "1P ,1,1.'; V"""'- ido Judge
jm ium- iiku ii uoss wiio expected
"Let's sec thnt last week's record,
then."
It showed that some items had not
been ordered nt nil and man, had only
one or two orders.
"Too long nnd too tedious for the
I suggest we cut it down
dies
few
KSTION
irmf is a "Foiled Sale'
Answer trill appear Saturday.
ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S
nCSINESS (Jl KSTION
"Xegoliable Paper" in notes, hills
and drafts uhieh man he transferred
with all their rights by indorsement
or assignment.
It is economical to converse about
swimniinir. Tin- i v, inii- n. i...
c- - ...-.r.t, i,it 1.1 1U lilt; ICDG
, ou get your bnthingtostume wet. Din-
I ner is over :
I Evening Early to bed nfternon-
shop conversation, and then write a
question, a suggestion nnd a criticism
which will express the day's growth bv
acquisition and expansion.
Early to bed, indeed, nnd particu-
"aiT nftcr next Monday. Retiring from
t'10 nonshop conversation, you avoid the
nonstop conversationalists. Hut how to
write in bed in a summer hotel is not
explained. The fixture is alwa'js just
where it will not light the pillows of the
intellectual. And there are so many
varieties' of questions, suggestions nnd
criticisms. Mr. Marquis's Ilermione
might sny. as n question, "Ilnve I been
restful today, or have I?"; ns a sug
gestion, "Cosmos, jou should turn tur
tle," and as n criticism, "Kverj thing
necessary is so needless." Such," how
ever, is not the normal mood of the per
son serving fourteen days on the Island
of Vncation. On the night of his ar
rival, nt least, his natural bedtime ques
tion is, "What is .the last minute for
breakfast?" His suggestion is thnt the
boy might hurry with the ice water.
His criticism often implies the gonernl
unfitness of his surroundings. As for
"acquisition nnd expansion." he leaves
those to the hotelkeeper. New York
Sun.
JAP BOY TELLS OF AMBITION
Few time ago forcicn bnv Tolocin ..i.
to know what for ambition. Japanese
Rt'1(cnt from close by desires to answer
how.
Ambition is disease of mind .mi.
makes hard work desirable, because top
of ladder is not at bottom, and too
much people are at bottom to sav
"What use to go to ton?" All vi.sV'
All right.
Stay there.
Japanese student will nsk why infant
do not remain on ntonmeh n i:i...-
...., ... . .Sl.,,.1-
instead ot walk? Ambition disease
'make early climb start, nnd fall down
lurts only infnnt, not ambition All
man what say ambition not desired are
mi., on stomncli and will never get fast
speed for pocketbook, nnd nmbltlon will
never get nose Dump.
But why do man on stomach holler
nt top ladder man and say, "Get red
flac " cut down support of arabi
tion? No can do because of policeman
who have disease of ambition for good"
work. When life start ambition be
comes nt once active and is very re
questnble except for persons with sick
ness of sleeping or artistic temperature,
like ingredients of village of Greenwich
and park of battery.
Also, why is so much talk of girl of
beauty face and head of inside bald
ness? It is better bo, for if she grow
brains and hair on face she soon find
most men desire to he 'absent for fear
she will say something which requires
an answer, and he no can do himstlf.
The' man which claim. greatest smart
ness is earliest to meet wnmnn .. i
nothing quality, so she may not dis
cover now mucn is missing, and commit
matrimony to secure financial con-,
trolling.
If he have long sight he sidetrack
beauty face nnd capture good cook of
undecorated appearance with experience
on sock darqs, and finish with children
nnd bank mouey. Otherwise he remslnn '
source pf supplv for motor wagon, dog V
Ifood and upside down pocketbook.- ""
Thank you. Omura Yogi, In New "ork , .
Hun, . "
-vt i- .1 -lixi rj.s
!-, -fat -j
'Vi
I ... ',- . . f II D 7 ft
o ir.-.lTV'v.7
!.
(5V
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iStiik" '.' .i