$i'iP V EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1919 i i it F fl lift. If II? IR Ls4 f ?y I ft I A- 1 Ifi I'srr lc- K-A , P,r !i - t ' Tffi WORLD FOR SALE (Copvrtoht, 191$, bu Harper rf Bros.) THIS STAKTS TUB STOKY Klcda Druse, daughter of Gabriel Druse, of gypsy blood, slioots In u canoo tlie Cnrillon rapids on the Nng nlac river, where It flows between tlu towns of Mnnltou mid Lebanon, in tho Canadian Northwest. Slio is res cued from the whirlpools below by Mnx Ingolby, a manager of gnat interests, who has come to Lebanon to unite the two towns and make them the center of commerce in the western north. On the shore 'he is insultcd.by Felix Mnrrhnnd, a power ful but disreputnble character of Mnnltou. Ingolby nttaeks Mnrrhnnd. who vows revenge, l'ledn is claimed by one Jcthro Tnwe as his wife, under n gypsy custom which united them in mnrrlngo when the wcte children, l'ledn rejects him and a jealous quarrel ensues between l'nwe and Ingolby. Mnrohand stirs up u feud between the two towns in older to foil Ingolby's ambitions. His projects are to be wrecked and he, himself, thrown into the river, In golby, in disguise, mingles one night with his enemies in Manitou. l'nwe rcenls his deception and Ingnlby is rendered blind by n blow on the head. Flcda comes to him. AND HKRH IT rOXTINVKS he' Qlin held herself cry still a '"-' spoke. There w as, however, a strange lonely look in her ejes. The man 1 -lng asleep in the darkness uf body and mind yonder was not really her lover. for he had said no word diicct of hue to her, and she knew him so little, how could she lovo him? Yet there was something between them which hnd its authority over their lives, overcoming even that maiden modesty which was in contrast to the bold, phjsical thing she hnd done in running the Catillon ltapids thoe centuries ago when she was )oang and glad wistfully glad. So much had come since thnt clay, she had traveled s() fnr on the highwa.v of Fate, that hu looked back from peak to peak of happening to an almost in visible hniion. So much had occurred and she felt so old this morning; and yet there was in her heart the unde fined feeling that she must keep her I radinut spring of life for the blind Gorgio if he needed it if he needed it. Would he need it, robbed of sight1 and with his lifejvvork uiuidered? She shuddeied as she thought of what l it meant to hiin. If a man is to woik, i he must have ejes to see. Yet what had she to do with it, nfter all? She , had no right to go to him even ns 'he father's tan or gone to his tan and wns going. Yet had she not the rignt tended him as a man might tend a man? of common humnnit) ? This (luigio Iluinamt) would have been the mil) was her friend. Did not the woild . c onvention ; there would have been no know that he had saved her'life? sc, no false modest), no babble, no As they came to the Lebanon end of reproach. If it had been a man as obi the bridge, Tlcda turned to .low ett and, as the oldest or as .veiling as .letliio commenting on his description of the I'awe it would have made no difference'. scene at IJarbawin's. said: "He is a J As )oung as .lethro Tawe! Wh) great man, but he trusts too much and , was it'tliat now she could never think risks too much. That wns no place I f the. lost and abandoned Itoiuniiy life for him." j without thinking also of Jitlno I-'awe? "Uig men like him think they can Whv should she hate him, despise him, do anything," Jovvett replied, a little icvolt against him, nnd )i't fi el that, ironically, subtly tr)ing to fence a as it were b) invisible cords, he drew confession of her preference for In- her back to that which she had for golb). 'svvoin, to the pnst which eliaggtd at her He succeeded. Her eye lighted with feet. The ltoman) was not dead in indignation. She herself might dial- her : her leal stiuggle was .vet to come ; lenge him, but she would not allow and in a vague but piophctie way she another to do so. I i enlisted it. She was not .vet one with "It is not the truth," she rejoined the Nettled Western world, sharplv. "Ho does not measure him- As the) came close to Ingolby's house self against the world so. He is like ' "'" heard marching footsteps, and in the like- a child," she added. I "cur distance she saw fourscore or more "It- Kpeois to me nil 1ml' men nre ,;,.. .,...., t i. ....-:., , , ...... I IlivU lilUl, UOWL'LL It'JOlIlC!, , UI1C1 U'S the biggest man the AYest has seen. He knows about every man's business as though it was his own. I can gel n mnrgin off 'most any man in the AVest on a horse-trade, but I'd look shy nbout doing a trade with him. "You can't dope a horse so he won't know. He's on to it, sees it sees it like as if it was in gliss. Sees any thing and everything, and " Ho stopped short. The Master Gorgio could no longer see and bis henchmnn flushed like a girl nt his "break"; though, ns n horse dealer, he had in his time listened without shnme to wilder, angrier reproaches than most men living. She glanced nt him. saw his confu sion, forgave nnd understood him. "It was not the horseshoe, it was not the gypsy," she returned. "Thev did not set it going. It would not have happened but for one man." "Yes, it's Mnrdiand, right enough," answered Jovvett, "but we'll get him yet. We'll get him with the branding iron hot." "Thnt will not put things right if" sho paused, then vvitli n great effort she added: "Does the doctor think he will get it back and that" She stopped suddenly in nn agitation he did not care to see and he turned nway his head. "Doctor doesn't know," he answered. "There's got to be nn expert. It'll take time before he gets here, but " he could not help but say it, seeing how great her distress xvas "but it's going to come back. I've seen cases I saw one down on the bolder" how easily he lied! "just like his. It was blnst ing that done it tjie shock, but the sight come back all right, and quick, too like ns I've seen a paralizite get up nil nt once and wulk as though he'd never been locoed. YS'hy, God A'mighty dou't let men like Ingolby be done like that by reptiles same's Marchand." "You believe in God Almighty?" she sold half-wonderingly, yet with grati tude in her tone. "You understand nbout fiod?" "I've seen too many things not to try nnd deal fair with Him and not try to cheat Hjm," he answered. "I see things lots of times that wnsu't ever born on the prairie or iu any house. I've seen I've seen enough," he said abruptly, nnd stopped. "What hnvo you seen?" bhe nsked engcrly. "Was it good or bad?" "Both," ho nuswered quickly. "I was stalked once stalked I was by night and often in the open day, by some sickly loathsome thing, that even made me fight it with my hands a thing I couldn't see. I used to fire biickshot nt it, enough to kill an army, till I near went mad. I was really nnd truly getting loony. Then I took to prayin' to tho best woman I ever kuovved. J. never uau a moiucr, out sue looked after me my istcr, Sara, it i ..watt She brought mo up nnd then died A..- lafc, -via nrttlimit flnvtMnV to bane n't', J Udu'J know nil I'd lost tU thM -v ime. But I gUessi she knW MTMijC, A .VBUUSUl, Ul uteri uue. due, v back after I'd prnjed till 1 couldn't see She come bnck into my room one night when the cursed 'haunt' was prowling round me. nnd ns plain ns 1 tee ou, I saw lier. lie at peace, she said, and I spoke to her, and said. 'Sara why. Sara!' and she smiled nml , went nway into nothing like a bit o' cloud In the sun." He stopped, and was looking straight before him ns though lie saw n vision, "It went?" she nsked lirrnlhli"""lj . "It went like that " lie made a I swift, outward gesture, "it went mid lit never enme back: and she didn't . either not ever. Mj Idee is, he niHKMI, IIIIU IIHTi 1' 11 III1NK tinn I I . l.l ...... .1... ..1 t . 1... ... .,f lit inr 1 I iiivuiH ii n" i lit; kii.ii mi"-' " """hi mini flint it tint 1i it. i iw Iitlrtll tllflll"!). J 111' li unit Illllll. to H" !- --'--r---iiiiii-ei 111111111,1 1 , 111 l lie -cillljl llll" 1 I l I niebbe, too, thej'ie the ghost-shapes of 'he hnd clone, the c ai eer he bad made. men that's dead, but that can't get on 'he thought of her. spoke her name. (her Then'. So the) tij to get back What could she do to prevent his1 to us lieie: and thej can niako lite ruin? She must do something, else hell while the 'it stalking us." she had no right to think of him. I "I am sine Jim nie light," she said. Am though her thoughts hnd sum 1 She was thinking of the loathsome nimied him. she came suddenly upon I , thing which haunted her room lust j IYIK Mnrrhnnfi at a point where her night. Was it the embodied second -'If ' pnlli resohed itself Into two. one lend-I of .letliio I'awe, cluing the cul that , jug to Mnnitou, the other to her own lethro l'nwe, the visihl iponiil mini, hmne. wished to do? She shuilcleied. then bent , There was a mnlicious glint in the her head mid hcd her mind on lngeil- gieeiiisli eves of the dissolute elcmn hj. whose house; was not far uvv.iy. She gnguo ns he saw her. His hat made n felt stiaiigclv niiseinbly alone this morning. She wns in that tlutte'i ing , state which follows a gnl' clisi'overv that she. is a woman, and the feeling dawns that she must complete neixeu i h joining her own life with the lifii, of anothei. j She show eil no agitation, lint her , repression gne an almost sMtucscpic chunicicr to her face and tiguto. The solvent urous nature of her catly life i li.i.l i, i li.ti t, tmiinr (,i nioi't liiiil. . ,mil (1m:il. wjll l.OSSi I111(1 though tlic ini of Ingolb.v's t raged) had seemed to ficee the vital fence's ill her, and all the world became blank for a "You have picked no unite an edu liioment, she had contiollccl herself ention since von left the rond and the nnd had set forth to go to Mm. come Ian." he said with the look of one who what might. Idelivcis a smashing blow. As she entereel the street v here I "I am not ) et eilucntcil enough to Ili.'olbv lived, she' suddenly realized the I know how vou get olhei people to eom elitheiilt) befoie he i. She might gei to I mil vour crimes for von." she rctoited. linn, but b) only one light coiild she "Who cnmmits niv ci line's for me?" stnv nnd muse him, ami that light she His voice was slmtp and even nnxious. did not possess. lie would, she knew , "The man who told von 1 wns once uiidcrst.ind her, no matter how the ; a cv ps - ,Ic thro I'.ivve" vvoi Id babbled. Wh) should the wen Id Her instinct hail told her this was n. lialilile.' What woman mum nave He- , signs upon a blind iiianV Was not humaiiit) alone siiflic lent wairant for staving bv his side? Yet would he vvih it'' Siidelc nb her heait 'mik; but again slie reim uibei eel their last pmt mg. and once mine she was sure he would be (.kid to have lier with him. It Hashed upon her how different it would have hum if he and she hnd been Itoiiian.vs, and this thing had hap pened over there in the far lands she' knew so well. Who would have hinted t shame, if she had taken linn to lier men tramping in militar) order. 'Who nie thev .' she asked of low ett. Men that nre going to see law nnd order kept in Lebanon," he answered. Such Things May Not He Vl'W hours later Tlcda slowly made -TV her way homeward through the woods on the Manitou side of the Saga lnc. Leaving Iiigolb)'s house, she hnd seen men fjom the ranches and farms ami mines he) mid Lebanon dnviug or riding into the town, as though to a fair or fc te da) . Word of auticipnted troubles had sped through the country side, nml the iunate curiosity of n rncc who greatly loves a row brought in sensation lovers. Some were sklm . ,. -. . . i . ...ii tiling along in one-no. se k'Ks, u ih.hi 1..... ,i, ,.!, (I.1IIP1II1U UCUUUIO Mil, 111'' ,.. ,; 1. ......,!. 1!1 ,1... "' '" '' n- , lienillllllll ill of a great clocli. utners were in double or triple-seated light wagons .l..nincr:lts" t ll'V were CailCU Women had u bit of color iu their hats or at their throats, and the men had on i lean, white collars and suits of "store clothes" a sign of being o,i pleasure bent. Young men nnd girls on rough but serviceable mounts cantered past, I iaHKi',ig and joking, anil the'r loud tnlklnjl grated on the ear of the girl I ,M llU(1 bl,cn a Napoleon in the streets ot his- Moscow. I'reseutlv there crossed her pntli a cruesomely ugly hearse, with glass sines and cheap imitation ostrich plumes, ,irn,.n lii frorcod niv ens of horses with! ncreoioiislv long tnils, and driven by nn I undertaker's assistant who, with a . . . ..i .1: ..1 1 natural gajety oi benn, iiispiu.ii-u uu ouuiu. innii, . nan- unu eiicpioncii idiotic solemnity by dragging down the able affaire. He had never had one; corners of the mouth. She turned away in loathing. If he had died the man she had just DOROTHY DARNITThe Kaiser's Ambitious Again, But Still a Poor Matchmaker f PAPA. HEARS A 1 ' AhImM ft WHERE S IT . ITS FROM t CABLEGRAM I ( j Ml FROM? J KID HoKErsl-ZOLLERN left behind in thnt torpid sleep which opiates bring his body Mould hnvc been carried to his Inst home in just such n hideous ecpiipage as this hearse. A shiver of rcvedt went through her frame, nnd her mind went to him as she hud 'pen him bine between the white sheets of his bed, his hands, ns thej had lain upon the ceucrlet, compact of power .and grace, knit and muscular and vital not the hand for a violin, but the hand for a sword. As she hml laid her hand upon his hot forehead and oer his c.ves, he hnd uiiconsciouslj spoken her name. That had told her more of whnt renlly wnsu,. IK'U rt'H IIUMII 1111111 M1P IIJMl PVOr KIKIWU. 1 .. 1 I !. .... .i i . it .i hi nil- ii rvin r ui i in- ii hiii up Ml inni Iilllul nmltiium if tint iliutfi.t tl.n 1 I half ritele before it found his head again, "You pay cat lv visits, mademoiselle," h0 said, his teeth showing rat-like. "And Mm lute meaningly. she nsked ' , I "Nut so lute that T can't get up earb to s, ,. what's going on," he rejoined in a sour nieo "Is it that those who beat Jon have to get up e.irlj "'" she asked ironicnllv. An one li:l. t'nt ill, rnctln,. Clin. ..... latelv." he seei.d. "All the davs nie not begun," she liemniked calmlv I'.nt h.n .lethio told all'' Sh inouc l not It would need some catastrophe! toda.v : and theie is nil the rest vou which I hiew him oiT his hnlnnce to know s,, well " make him speak to a Corgio of the "What is the resi I know s well?" inner things of Ke.tnanv life, nnd child. He looked elo-clv at her, bis long, mon u.aiii.ige was on.- of them. Rlcl ,,J(.S half -i I,.siK with covett lie sclTed. "time a gv psy always Uerutiii). ii Kc-J Hace is race, aixl )on can't "Whatever it is, it is all bad and it put it olT and on like .vour stocking. ' js Jlims He was going to mi chemise, bull "Xoi all." he letorted coollv . "You race was race, and vestiges of native f,get .,, gv ps, fiieml. He did his Iremh e-hivalr.v staved the gross simile ,,rt lnst night, and he's still flee. on the lips of the elegenei.lte. Kledn's Thev Ion! enl,.,.,l the tn-f strl..l, f however, took on a elaik and blooding look, which, mine than nny- icimik c,-.-. s,eo ,,. iiomany m lier. I felt that she had been unwise in dial With a mink) Hood of resentment ri- 1, ging him; that she ought to trv tier ing in her veins. s,e strove to light bade sMcntiv to win him over. It wns te the l,..lf-savage instincts f a hvgo.ie pKnnt to her. still it must be done life. She felt as though she could will- even jet. She, mastered herself for ing v sentence this mnn to death as her Ingnlhj's sake mid changed her tactics, father had done .lethro Tnwe that very "As vou glorv in what vou have, lone, morning. Another thought, however, vou won't miiiil being lespoiisible for all was winking mid fighting in her that that's happened." she replied iu a more Mnrehand wns better ns a friend than fiiendl.v tone. an enemy nnd that while Ingolby's f.itel She 'made nn impulsive gesture to wns in the balance, while jet the Orange ward him. Mineral nail not taken place and the strikes had not jet come, it might be that he could be won over to Introlbv. Her mind was thus involtintaiily ic lirndticing Insulin's policy, as he had dee-hired it to Jovvett and ISockwell. 1' wns to find Tcli Marchand's price and to luiv off his enmity not by money. for Man-hand did not need that, but nv those other coins of value which nre Individual to each man's desires, passions nnd needs. "Once a Ticnehninn isn't nlvvnvs a Tri-in hman." she replied coollv. elisre gnnliiig the oour.c insolence of his hist utterance. "Vou jourself do not now swear faith to the tricolor or the Hear- de-lis." . He Hushed. She had touched a ten- eler neive. T am a Trenchninn nlvvnvs." he rejoined angrily. "1 hnte the l'liglish, I spit on the I'nglisli ling." "Yes. I've heard you are an an archist." she rejoined. "A mnn vvitli no country nnd with a Hag tint he- longs to no country quelle amino et quelle drolerie!" She laughed. Taken aback in spite! of his anger, he stared at her. How j good hei French accent was! If she' would only speak altogether iu that be - V I o- v ... . , , . ., eon-ii uhkuuki-, nu i-mihm soiocuer iiiiicn malice, ,-mic was neauiiiui am! -well. who could tell? Ingnlby wns vfounded and blind, majbe for ever, ami women mo nlw.ijs-witli the top clog; that was his theorj. Perhups her nppnreut clis- like of him was only a mood. Mnuyi women thnt he had lonqucied hnd been ! just like that. They had begun bv dis liking li I in from Lit Sninia down and had ended by being his. This girl would never be his in the way that the others had been, but who could 'ten: peruups ne wouiei iiiuik enough i oi ner m inuir.v hit .viijwa.v. it wiis.ifnu nun naie aim nie iiivieung line ne- i worth while making such a beauty larctween these is so small that often she for him. The other kind of women were easy , euough to get, and it would be a ..:.....,.. l.l.,n .. 1.... : I. he was not sure that any girl or wo- ninn he had ever known had ever loved him, and he was certain that By SIR GILBERT PARKER Author of "The Srali of the Mighty," "The .Money Master," rtc. hi' hnd never loved any girl or wo ninii. To be In love would be a new and picpinut experience for him. lie did not know love, but he knew what passion was. He had ever been the hunter. This tmil might be ilniiKcrnus, too, but he would tnke his chances, lie hnd si'cn her dislike of him' whenever the) hud met In the pnst, nnd he had never tiieel to soften her attitude toward him, lie hud certainly whistled, but she hud not come. Well, he would whistle ngnin -n different tune. "You speii It Kieneh much?" he nkcd almost engerb, the Insolence gone from . Why didn't I know thnt?" "I spenk Trench in Miinitnu." she i- i ' hut nearly nil the Trench speak I'nglish theie. and so I speak moie Hnglish than Tiench." "Yes, that's it." he icjolned almost nngiilv ngnin. "The Hnglish will not li'iiin Tiench, will not spenk TiciicIk Thev make us le-nrn I'ugllsli. ami " "If .von don't like the Hag and the I'ouutiv, wh) don't .von leave it?" she Intel riipted. hni ili'iiiug. though she hnd meant to ti.v mid win him over to Ingolli) 's side. His eves bln.ed. There was some thing almost real in the man after all. "The lmglih can kill us, llie.v inn giind us to the cliM." he rejoined ill Trench, "but we will not leave the lainl which has nhva.vs liei-n outs. We settled it ; our fathers guvc their lives f"1' ' '" " thousand places. The Indians killed t In-ill the riveis and the storms, the plague and the tile, the sickness and the c-olil wipi'd tliein out. The) welc burned alive at the stake, the) wi'ie fill) eel; their hemes were broken to pieies b) stoni- but the) blaeil trials with their blood in the vv ilileruess from New I lib an., to Hudson's T,a) . They paid for theilainl with their lives. Then the Knglish c.ime and took it. and since that time one hundred and lift) .veais we have In eu skives " "You do not look like a slave," she answered, ",ind jim have not acted like a slave If vou were- to do the things in l'l.mci that vou've clinic hcic, j mi wouldn't be fni' as )iiu are' todnv." "What have1 I ilonc?" he asked dnrklv. "You were the cause cU what hai peneel at Itm li.iou's Inst night" lie smiled evill.v- ".vou are e'gging on the mi iris lo mink on lie incentre loiiernl unod 'in i,i, I, I,..,- I,,.,,,.. i, . .i, slackened her footsteps slightly. She' "Vim have shown what hnvc isn't thnt enough V" "Yon have much- ll power jou she asked. ' ivvd shout, Vive Man hand!' Ycfu can make 111 111 V t llllll Ilk. t 11 tJl fitflll HL. it Iw Illllf 1111. set. If jou don't do mi, there will be i much miserv. If peace must lie got In ' force, then the foiee of government will , get it in the end. You have the gift of getting hold of the worst men here, am! )ou have done it: but won't jou I now mnster them ngnin iu the other vvn.v? You have money and brains ; why not use them to become a lender of those who will win at last, no matter what the game nun be?" i He cume close to her. She shrank I inwniilly, but she did not move. His greenish c.ves wcie wide open in the I fullness of eloipieiic e and desire. to hi: contintki) All About Women "Woman, in spile of herself, still re- ..,,,;,. n.o laWnst mitten in life" "A woman would sooner wear a Paris hat than a hnlo any da.v." "To kiss a woman is sometimes a mistake, but not to kiss her is alvvajs a crime." , "Girls who go about looking like (;oves muse epeei to meet serpents. . Hetw-pen ourselves thej wnnt to." "The girl with 'No' on her litis,, nnd ( 'Yes' in her ejes, unci the cherrj -stones on her iilnte that's the sort of girl the nverage man likes. '' "To expect u woman to be iu time for an) tiling except hei own funeral is literally to expect the impossible. The most ardent lover knows from sail ex perience that it is fatal to hope to catch both a train and a woman at the same tunc1 "Woinun Knows nnij two emotions, crosses iroin me one emotion into tne other without knowing it. (die thing is certain she must cither love or be loved, hate or be hated. Theie me no half-nieasures for modern Lve, and ever) thing goes to show that ancient bve was just the same. Ileilgers in London' Opinion. Louise DAILY NOVELETTE JOSHUA FINDS A WAY Hy Adelaide It. Kemp rplIH little clock on the mantel struck sevc'i. Martha, with her hands Idly folded in her Inp, sat by the kitchen window nnd wntched the wonderful sunset. She was startled from her rev erie by n knock at the door nnd the lifting of the Intch. (Hi, come right in, Joshua," slnJ cM'laimed as she recognized her neigh bor, who lived in the white farmhouse on the hill. "I'm in n peck of tioublc, Marthy," laughed the man, "and I've come to see if )oii'el help me out." He seated his long figure in one of Marthn's slight wooden chairs and tilted it Jo a dangerous nngle. She watched him Hither neiyoiisly, expecting a sudden collapse of her furniture under such a strain. "You see, it's like this," ho con tinued. "I've just been to the post oflicc anil fniiuel a letter from my sister Nell. Trobably jou remember her, al though she has bceji out West n good ninny .veins. Well, she and her hus band are coining on lieie mid wuiit to make me a visit. t)f course, 1 am glad, but since mother left me last )ear" u shadow dossed his plensunt fnce "things luui' sort of gone ' nt sixes and sevens. 1 like my own work out of doois, but I just hnte dishes nnd dusters, I suppose there aie plent) down in the village who would come up unci clean, hut I ciuTt bear to think of tliein poking nnd pr.ving mnoiig mother's things, nnd I wondered" he hesitated and then stopped .short. "Of ccuiise, Joshua, I'll be gl,ul to help unci I'll be right up iu the morn ing." said .Maltha. With n sigh of re- lief unci after ll few- unnli iilimit fwxtc. nnd the weather the big farmer said good -night. Ihnl) the next morning Martha, true' to her word, i cached the furmlmusi'. j lb or) thing about the gi emails nnd the, buildings looked immaculate, but oh, ! woe! when she entered the kitchen.l The look on her face was too Hindi fni Joshua's good nature. He laughed heart il,. "Don't look so desperate, Martha. They won't be here for a week nt least. "And the kitchen is the worst loom. J'll drive down to the stole this after noon ami get some wallpaper and paint ! ami linoleum for the tloor. v e can work weiinh'is here." The week that lollowed was n busy one to siij the least. Martha, with all the zest nnd enthusiasm (r a competent housekeeper, let in the sweet nlr and sunshine vvhidi had been excluded a .voar or more fiom the gient looms up '!' stun She shook rugs nnd beddinir until .lo'.liuii was fnirlv di7v . Tim lile.'isnnt kitchen was the creates! sue- cess with its flesh cri'ani-coloied paint I and clean new wallpaper. The Hour i wns coveied with linoleum in soft shinies1 of brown. Martha hung fresh white sash c tirtaiiis in the w iudovvs and even t brought over a few of her best plants to give it a last lioni) touch. The daj the' guests were expected she filled the pant!' shi'lves with daintiest pics nnd cukes. With a glance uf satisfac tion nt the wonderful change she hnd effected she was about to stmt for home w hen die snvv Joshua, drive slow!) into the Mini alone. "Win . Joshua !" she exclaimed, bur .. ll... .1 .. )! iMii't !,,. .-...,. 'j .Ism left the old mnre to g.nel ,in( enti'ied the kitchen, lie looked at wl. w,imnlj. "The) sent a telegram -Thej 're not coming for threo weeks," he said, Martha looked nbout her. "Wh) she said slovvl), "You'll never be able to keep it clean nil that time. U will look as bad ns ever when thej do come.' The big niiiii shook his bend. "I knew it. Maltha." He looked at the little woman in front of Inm while a verj tender expiession crept into his liniict fne i'. "I've thought of a waj, though." he continued. "If jou'll only ride down to Minister Allen's with me this evening jou could stay here all the time and then we'd alwn.vs be icady for compaii). Will jou, Mnithj?" Martha looked nround the pleasant room she had made so horncTl'iic mid then up to the gray c.ves shilling lov ingly down on her. With a happy smile she held out her hand. Joshua had found n way. The next complete novelette Choice -ills There Are Others In one of the big base hospitals not long ago a new librarian was set to work. She was n (harming .voting woman, unci very nnxioiis to please all of her "customers." In her loiiuds she approached one of the patients nml he declined to be interested in her wares. At the next cot she stopped and offered its ociupunt u book. "What's it about?" the patient nsKeci. i wo, m is is 'Hiiuibi,' " said the i lilmrmn It's about u girl who mar ried a man without his having unj thing to say about it." "Hold on there," shouted the man who had declined all books. He raised himself up on his elbow and reached out his hand. "(Jive me that book. It's my utltobiography.' London Opinion. HE WAMTSTO I WHAT S HE WANT FIQHT WITH vou r OF THE DEIPSE-Y-WlLLARD BATTLE J. rifl C7B U JvN XSS &L & DREAMLAND AD VENTURES -By Daddy . "CLOUD LAND" ' The Hubbies Hurst (I'rggu nnd tlilly tail to t'louil Land in snap huhWc halloom. Pcagii nml I'rlnccss llainbow nrc raptured hy Storm King. In a battle Ictireen Storm King and King Sun, Hilly helps the Sun to icin.) KtKiY nnd I'rlnccss Itninbow, held x i King's castle, eagerly watched the bat tle between Storm King ami King Sun. When the fighting turned in favor of King Sun, thanks to billy's nttnek on Storm King with tightly packed clogd balls, 1'eggy saw a chance to escape. She whispered her plan to the prin cess nml the two made many bard cloud balls. Then they ciept toward the guards, nnd when the latter turned about, bin", bang, blng! hard cloud balls hit them in the c.ves, blinding tliein. They roared In pain nnd the guard at the gate came rushing up, leaving the gate swinging open behind him. Slam, whang! lie was greeted b) u ball in each cje. lie was hit so haul be snvv stars, before he could recover from the shock, l'egg) nnd the princess darted through the gate, dodged the icti eating Storm nrinv nml rushed cm toward the rain bow. There they were joyfully greeted b) the Uainbow -dancers, who nt once began a frolic of rejoicing, with the testilt that the rainbow mch btitst out into v o'lelniiis beauty. Storm King's soldiers, seeing this, and knowing that it was a sign of their utter eh feat, surrendered to the hosts of King Sun "M.v, vviisn't King Sun glorious in battle'." whispered Princess llainbow to Pegg). "I couldn't watch him long, because' I was blinded by Ids dazzling hifchtiicss, but what I saw made nie lovi' him mci'ethaii ever." BRUNO DUKE,Solver of Business Problems By HAROLD WHITEHEAD, Author of "The Business Career of Peter Flint," etc. TI1K PltOHI.K.M OK THK XKW KKST.U'HANT Here Kndoth TWO weeks after we began our theatre ticket service nt "The (loldeii Hour" lestnurant. Kruno Duke paid a l'1" l"lv' IMt '" ""' lestnuiniit. Miss Khun mid Miss llowuith, of course, never expected him, and were n little puizled nt his sudden appear ance, although they welcomed him cor dially. I hike sui prised thAn further when he said : I ve none mi l enn lor jou now. nii'rely n waste of money for jou I .. . '" hllVc me continue as jour business 'counselor. I III' lestlltlUltlt Is on its Ice! ""'I making good mone.v . It has taken lo"K,,r "'"" "" l'hinned to solve the piciblem of tilling the lestuiiiunt, bill we've succeeded, and so my wink is liliished. tint. gasped .Miss llowarth we eiin't let j mi go; we nre quite willing to pu) jou if jou'll oul) continue, helping us. Won't we, Judith?" she turned to Miss Klnui. "Yes, indeed," that lad) answered. "Ill fact, we we were going to suggest a kind of of partnership plan just to to keep jou Jou helping ll ." Duke smiled kindl) nnd n wee bit ...II. f I... ., 1 .. r. i C.... . .11.1 linen ln closes out a case.' , "It e-annot be, dear ladies. I'm not! I in business to mnke mone.v . but to help1 1 people like .vourselves, who neeel some advice ill getting started em the lond to M1CC '!, ll Jill nujii'wim. . -m,, , .. ,..,,,, , ,, just that much of in v time would I jP taken from people who need me more than jou do. 'I lieie lire scenes ot people what is that vou suj "! '.''a!'" the pleas cven now asking for my help. 1 fcrm ()' lmlrtu,imy That shows "I can do moie good in tlie world Jim i1lv0 u()t heniel m.v epeiienre. bj saving business, and saving the hope ' ()M SatUKln). when 1 leturued home, and ambition and self-iotiliclence of peo- j lh ai,i0 t' tell Mar) that I had pie who are beginning to lose faith in ,ade fifty. I tried to give the news themselves, thau by mere!) limning one tlc ,.0rrect tone of nonchalance, but or two profitable enterprises." ours is not the class of cricket iu which Hoth ladies looked might) sad they j(10 js nonchalant about a lift). The had uncotisciousl.v got into the- habit of , rPst embroidered on tlie pocket of our reljing on the quiet power of that won-1 blazers has for motto the simple words, derful man, and the thought of losing t "Ten's a lot." the strength and the remarkable person- j Murj. as befits a tactful wife, found alitj of bruno Duke wus us upsetting us, it wus sudden. They finally arranged to hnve betterly! handle their advertising nn.il to prolitiPiensaiii ieeiing oi ueing at nun peace bv the good ideas that clever .veiling ad vi'itising man si abundantly lonceivcd, MONDAY! The Problem of the Smuggled Jewels A Ilruno Dulie adventure of thrilling interest nnd excitement, mixevfT vvitli horse-sense business ideas. Don't fab to get Monda.v's Rvknimi I'tnir.lf Lr.ixil.u and be gin tlii.sremurkublc business mjstery story by HAROLD WHITFMEAD Created; of "IVter l'liiit." "Daw sou Black, " "Hruuo Duke." Three characters that ate nuik' ing a name for themselves all over the country. Tute, right, lain, b tho Hell Sjncliiute, lnc THE WINNER a -l Suppose , I'CBBJ- and the princess through the gate ilafted v "If vou loie him, why don't )ou marry him?" nsked Peggy. "Why, then I'd have to wear dark glasses nil the tinii. and he couldn't en jo) in) beauty. ' "As it is now, jou can't look at him. and can't enjoy his beauty," argued IVgjy;. 'And I tell jou, if jou have i chance to marry him now, jou'd better tnke it, for he is so handsome that an) other lady would wear dark glasses to look at him. and jou may lose him." "Mj stars! I never thought of thnt," exclaimed Princess Itninbow. "I'll get n pair of daik glasses this ery minute." When King Sun coiieiuered Storm King he was very sorrowful, for he did not liiul Princess Itninbow in Storm's castle as 1 e had e-pectcd. With Hilly lie wns li'tip-niiig sadly to the rainbow inch, when the snug of the rainbow dancers cume to them : "Itninbow fairies, one and nil, Come nnd dunce nt King Sun's call. (Copyright) f "lie's good, of course," grumbled Miss T.lum, "but he isn't jou, Mr. Duke." They insisteel that he stay and have just one more meal vvitli them, and busy mnn though he is, be stn.ved there while those two churmiug Indies pre pared something "etia special" for him. And then 'he left them with mutual expression of good will, and with his leave taking ended the problem of the new restaurant. I was wotking on some special re ports for n lnrge export house when Ilniiio Duke returned from his hist visit to "Tlie Golden Hour" lestnurant. He entered bis apartment iu Seven tj -seventh street, threw hi coat, huj and walking stick on a chair and then lemovi'd his boots nnd put on the old mocensius. Then, on went his dowered velvet diessiiig gown. Willi n sigh, half wear iness and half content, he sank into his big, easy chair, his right hand au tomatically feeling for his hookah, pipe. With the little spirit lamp he lit" his When the Better I shall hnvc to give up cricket. I '" ,"""' b,,t "" otlu r l""'M """, possible. It is kind of jou to remind me that tlio Im-k will turn; thnt not even under , , lllll.i. i,... .i..,!.. Ilili iniu ' iiiiiii v '' .... eggs an me jcar loinni but that is not m) tumble 1 am a inaitjr to success. the right thing to snj at once, "Oh, I wish I had been there to see jou." was her lemaik, and I sat deivvn with that with all the world which getting more inns than ustinl brings. Alas! that one's I purest feelings should be shuiuclesslj exploited ! i:actly how Mar) introduced the subject I cannot lecnll, but almost be fore I knew it I was mending punctures I in both the wheels of her blcjcle. No i tioublc, of course. A pleasure; cspe clallj when I reflected that she might I hnvc ridden a tiicjcle, and had three j wheels to puncture. It was not until mucii inter mat I toiinii sue luui Ueen hontding these punctures until I wus Iu what she called a sweet temper (as if 1 were ever in an.vtliing else); mid by that time I wns iu tlie middle of the cleaning of the sewing machine. The number of oddments left over when I put this niuchine together ngain reminded nie irresistibly of m.v dajs of Lewis guniicrj, and I live iu hourly dread of Mary discovering tlie hole iu tlie garden where I hid them. Some du), too, she might even want to sew vvitli this ljtindsome piece of furniture, which By Chas. McManus WANTS TO MARE ENOUGH MONEY TO PAY GERMANY'S WAR DEBT ; ,', ,cwjf - H'CAWt)t Come to dance nnd merrily sing, For ho hns whipped the bold Storm King, Our princess fair rules us once more, AVe sing nnd dance ns In days of yore." King Sun and Hilly raised their eyes,, and saw the arch ngaln glowing with color. And they raw oil the throno nt the toji Princess itninbow nnd Peggy seated side by side. King Sun gave a great shout of joy, for Princess Itnin bow wore it pnlr of tiny dark glasses nnd her two nrms were stretched out In welcome toward his:. "Hello, King Sun," cried Fcggy. "Your problem is solved. Your loving princess awaits you, Our work is dono and we must be going home." "Can't you wait for the wedding!" cried Princess Itninbow. "I'm sorry, but it's supper time, nnd I'm hungry," nnswercd Peggy, "And here arc our soap bubble balloons ready to carry us home." True enough, there were the balloons. waiting like tnxicabs to bear them away. They stepped in, nnd slowly flouted downwnrd. "(iood-by!" cried King Sun nnd Princess Itninbow. As they dropped through the misty clouds into the clcur nlr below, Peggy! nnd Hilly looked bnck. Tho rainbow wns glowing with a fresh benuty as this Itaiubovv Dancers danced for the wed ding of their princess to King Sun. Down, down floated the bubbles, un til that bearing Peggy touched the roof of the house. Instantly it burst, and bump! Peggy landed on the porch, but she wasn't hurt and waving her hand gn.vly at the .shimmering rainbow in the eastern sky she rnn iu to supper. (In the next installment tcttl ftd ' told the story of a jolly race in Bird' land.) hookah, leaned back in his chair nnd, with c.ves closed, puffed long and deep at his oldjiookah. lie looked tired, worn nnd frail, and as I gazed at him with mingled admira tion and affection, I couldn't help won dering how a man of such apparent lack of strength and vigor could have stood the strain he had recently gone through in connection with "the prob lem of the stolen jewels." Little did "he or I think, that day ho saved Mamie Cleff's life, that she was to be tlie causey of such nu astonishing adventure. TODAY'S Hl'SINKSS QUESTION What is an "open nccoiint" .4 (Mirer iriH appear Monday. ANSWKK TO YKSTKKIIAY'S Itl'KIXKSS QUESTION 77ce "nietrir system" it a decimal system of weights and measures, first ritnliliihed in France, now in genet al use in Kirope and to a minor rdtettt in lhtglish speaking countries. Half Profiteers I in its losevvood case makes so comforts ble a hassock. One never knows. brother victims of schemers like Mary will be familiar with thnt mystic time known us "while jour hands are diitj." While my hands were dirty, I ic turned to tlie blcjcle (led thereto by a tactful question ns to how many fours there were in 'that fifty), removed and cleaned the gear case, rethreaded the dress guard, mid made it unnec essary to alight nnd kick off the brake after each application thereof. Judging from its state thnt blcjcle must have got aw full) tired of waiting for me to be in n sweet temper. Need I labor the point about the pen alties of success? Today is Tuesday. Since Saturdaj I hnve watered the gar den (thrice ) with the sweat of my brow, and enameled the bath with a superan nuated .shaving brush ; I have made two shelves grow where but one grew before, re-covered tluee deck chairs, nnd nl- st committed mjself to the erection of n summer house. For number nnd variety of jobs on offer, Mary has the average labor bureau down and out. There is only one way to describe '"i" luct rnnk profiteering in the milk of human kindness vvitli which I was overflowing lis the result of that tifty. (juite a good fifty, too. Tnat on drive was verj effective. I must culti vate that. but what am I talk ing about? I am giving up cricket.-i" ihcta, iu London Opinion. ' NUMBERED OFF "Hy the merciful expression of misery that is doing its best to hide vour al leged fuce, Charlie boy," I comment ed, "I should say that jou wero fated to huve one thoroughly bad hour in your life, and that the said bad hour ex pired about five minutes ngo." "You'ie quite right," sighed Charlie, n n bottomless. pit-ull-is-lost voice. "I suppose there's a woman in Hi case?" I ventured, after I had whistled, a few bars of 'O Dry Those Tears.' ' mere was," he snapped. "HuMt's nil over now. Tf you had your army doom on i ci tine you to kick me hard. Jfs nil my fault." Iheu Charlie got it off his chest. "I was sitting' iu the Cosy Nook Tea booms just now," he explained, "when if perfectly topping girl came in nnd sat down at my table. 8he placed her gioves on nie cloth in front of her, nnd studied the menu. I ilhl ll.n ,,!, ii,i., - ..... .... uu. lIU, ' nnsst I clw.i'.til It,.. U..... .,. ,.-.... . ...u,. fc,lt- fc(uri uu io inu tioor, nnd then picked them up for A her; you know the stunt. Well, to cut""" n long story short, we clicked. Over her first cup of ten she was smiling, ' Hy the time she had finished her third 'J meringue she fnlrly rippled. Such stun- vf uing eyes! I found out that she was 'fl down ut Havre wheu I wan there. Her peonle arc top -liners ou the social 1 stage." "Well, I suppose you've fixed another i glad meeting?" "? Charlie gave n horrible groan. "That's just tlie beastly trouble. I nsked her if she would ring me up and ,: lix n theatre together.' "And she refused?" "Not likely!" "Then," I queried, "what in the ' name of Jerry aro you peeved about?! " "I'eeved! I should think so. She ': asked me for my nhoue number, and I guvp her my confounded reglmpntl;jifj uumber," II. J3. Cbaut ' lu IiOwJeiMI OtMUiOH. 'HI i' ' I i . .',-' V .-.-1 l tr A. "tin m 3- A S h .... . , t.fl K.3.