KT 0itX,-. ,. p r.t: i - f i. .j' &,wLjMii!i s-wi ' ;a y ' mm R?jrjr.,;vV. !?.'"' 'W l 5"W . ' EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHIIADELPHlA, SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 19?1 19 tPSWj J7te WWs of fie World .' t.. nrtnv 1 ASTfVC uy mum. ux. ,xj.aim H! , i.rfc Phantom Lover," "The Master Man," "The Second tfhor "' Honey mo Honeymoon," Etc. CofVTioM, mi. btf Bell Syndicate, no. . "TTrreTllE STOBV It lB,91Si A.. w.iJ taUcare ' Jfll f10 V'X hrothcr. Kathu PK:i Stored a 'VU ,"." n". .-mint i -. . . jm "inrii Bi P?.?rSrnta,irfi rte. 5?n, W' Wf. oul" utile faith "- TaVtaturt ?'! hvcr firtt icceki ,tMeictm,tl'nt thU acquaintance jff! tiranocy XB0Uld "Chbbb it continues nH routed herself from her drcam SSaslgh.tonndMr.Sturgesa 'hot the spring Bunshine Affile Hack of her frock accent n? ?.' --.11- nml tho shadows bo- ".heVeVc h mouth hnd drooped tt ? ?. ?:,i. mlMn curve into fcm dpndcncy' She a Ifoddenly Mr, usually smiling curve llttlo startled cry when Hturecss leaned towaird THE GUMPS A New Idea in Scenic Gardening By Sidney Smith r. J. ,y li. l,nnrl on hcW. I1B l4 """":"-. 1.1-1 Hesmiiea n"11""' his kind eyes liko to Henry was all at Tho ordi i.i lip fnre. "?. not afraid of me arc .you? tun is nothing to be afraid of. ITii her head; she tried to Ji. but ber heart was beating fnst with a'namelcss apprehension. r n.r hOW SOU WOUld .. n old man," said Sturjess suddenly. HU Toiee was very grave now. and the kind hand on hers tightened Its never moved; she thought she . ha dreaming; sho looked away flhkn t the hand resting on her ?; aTtrong hand-a broad, generous TOy-why what do you mean?!' asked In a whisper. m Sturgcss rose to his feet; ho .td with hi-, back to the empty fire S, Ms bands deep thrust into his "mean that I should very much lib to marry you it you couiu vy btoijpnneii -. ,, --u-,7 jiU naa lurncu " "": ".... .v. nnM not bellCVO mui " meiklag seriously; he seemed '.. in.. ntnl Rtrnneer. Ill Sry, rather stout employee whom sho Ud seen and talked with every day of her life for wccks past uu b"w " la his place was a man who looked nt her with rawer wisum "" ho was asking her to be his wife. w .n ..i i- .-. I.n.. fnof Rlin knnt jm rose piuwij1 " " ., -- ---. -v. nn thn rlmlrback to steady her- ulf-she asked blm a breathless aucs- ,tion . , ,, youyou aro not in carucau He smiled a little. "Whv not? The thought has been la my mind almost ever since you enme here, I am not a young man, but I am very fond of you ; I will give you a jood nome ana ihqku yuu uuvw. admire you i Know wuuv, juu iiuic done for your brother and sister in tho pist-and 1 know, too" he hesitated. nd his voice hardened a little. "I know, too, how jour sibtcr has treated you," he added. Jill ulnccu. "You know who told you?" "Tallentyre." A faint flush crcnt into Jill's face ; ttallentire had told him Tal- totjre bad talked to him of her nud per iKilrs. Mr. Bturgess went on, unconscious of per emotion. "lie is u strmigo man mt he has his good points, and ho is xceedlngly kind-hearted, lie would be lad to know that you were linppily itttled down and provided for; of :ourse. vou know that he himself is portly to be married?" inere was a long silence. "Vn T J!J MAI- 1. I nl.1 Till nechanlcalfy, then "Who who is he rolng to marry?" sho nsked. tie told tier unhesitatingly. "Lady Elrica Hewlni: it's n practically settled for some time, believe. She has money nnd he "at to put the case in a nutshell, nd its his onlv hnno nf o.vor rppnv. ring himself. They've nlwnys been a pendthrift lot tho Tallcntyres " ho la her expression. "But we don't want i aiscuss his affairs I wnnt to dih cussmy own." Ho camo over to where Mn8i00d")Ve11-" hJ nbkcd eet'y- "' you think vou could pvkp hrlm. yonnelf to caro for an old man llku HIS TOIPA Ti-no l.l.l . I.I.I .L.i mid.J i a niuu hi) Hlllll, lliui I i.nv V8."1 ?" into Jill's eyes. ! r?? Ueserve that you should o good," the bald brokenly. "1 nj 1 ddn't know wlmt t. ulr " "DoPa,ttted h.cr sll0,ll(h-'r- WanM .f.i.""' ""l""B "W . laiiiiT Tint fiii.,i. it. If you couli you and rom- nrn . romlse you that if you think letm.i-r i .' l,l,nK u ovcr est "t . " voice wns very en . ' i nromkp vnn i,..f : .... .i 1? 80 f" 1'onor me, you shall B$r have cause to rPnnt'it I he IT.;:.1"""0 to repent it not Rive hrr tlmn tr. .,r, M noved hnni, . 1 1 i . u l "nswor Jkh theM t ' tsk- "w "" tt.r"."' iciiera on ! "0t k,ccP her thouRlita taakCmll0"": ''? found herself rresenfe o, W u" nke ; t he vm , "uu and,, i "-' vuuiiiM-u jipp Sun aul 0"lte ""Intentional holiday vJne;, think you want a 'ru " a hoih nv ii '.low wu d "ver noon Vi, " . '"" ' "in. "You vo . I A?uldbh2aa'I J Mp,o.?lUa" itoTto'"!110"1' J' a, i (T, '"T ,for l'r nnd bowed ffSWlthy cHcntL"!1, Li00". 0,lp of l'" "d,th.iet1?,ik on,e from him Iclu,u went i,n,; 7 .' ". "lid not Tin"?" '10 In n dream. " ui what "vthing but KESSAse Henry V.B' :ht'awj!eUrrs8tinS ,wnR, ne of the It! .!. ilr? m Loin nn . il. i .... labn..; ,,v "'l henr.l tW',"Y """V (,,,- ins nmgnfiPP;; ,"'" cierKa talk ?ef manv h,... "CCDt house. hnH br. IWgrwjt-a: ,A,nJ nlht li . .?!l t''ose, nil th .1.1 She l ' "iiiisa ieMtrtef'i"8 1,cr.?clf nwrrle.1 to "uiil incan tn i; i l . rwlzo what it vWJ' one?5nl,,fter1!',?oiwo to V.. -""." A llt.i. . . . KSfflLhw. anil". " H"f SlBBlo .unduly familiar with him, even In her thoughts. Sho could cat no tea; the long eve ning stretched before her unlnvltlngly. Sho felt strangely excited: sho tidied tho room nnd snt down on Don's empty cbuch by tho window. What would Don think If ho knew? sho wondered. Mr. Sturgcss would have been a kind friend to Don, sho knew thnt; ho would not Iinvo been ashamed of hnvlng n orlnnlcd brother-in'lnw: not impatient with his irritable temper nnd sharp tongue; ho would have done nit nc could to make the boy's bard lite more happy. Tcnrs welled to her eyes; oh, if only sho could hnvo Don back again I It seemed so hard thnt now, when riches nnd nil tho good things of life were lying within her reach, the one for whom sho hnd most desired them was no longer with hcr.v If it hnd comrvn month sooner Don's life might have been saved; they might hnvo tried all the wonderful cures of which sho had longingly heard and read; Don might have been rondo suf ficiently well to enjoy tho life that had so often been only a torment to him. Then sho thought of Tallentyre, and the, tears dried as if by magic on her checks. Ho had never told her that ho was engaged to Lady Elrica Hewing; she remembered thnt they had spoken of her thnt first day when ho took her out to tea, but ho hnd never even allowed her to guess that thcro was anything but the most ordinary friendship bo tween them. And nil tho time they had been en gaged a burning blush stung her checks. In his heart Tallcntyro, too, looked upon her ns Illllyard did ; sho was outside the magic circle of tho lives of both men: It was no business of hers what tiicy did no interest to them to tell her. Slio rose and began pacing up and down tho room ; it was a warm eve nine, very still and breathless; the house seemed to stillc her, and she put on her lint and went out acain. When she reached tho corner of the street beyond the green railings, n taxi camo slowly along tho road toward her ; the man glanced nt her interrogatively ; Jill grew reeklcss , Soon if she married Mr. Sturgcss she could ride in u taxlcab all day long if she chose. Sho hailed the driver; she got in nnd told him to drive her to llcgent's Park. Dnffodils and primroses were there in full bloom, she knew; tho gray brcathlcRsness of the spring evening made her think of them with sudden longing. , Hlm lenned back with a senso of de limit- Inriirv. Thern wns nobody to care how she spent her money, so what did it mntter If she threw away ono of her few half-crowns on a ten minutes iilpnsiir? Soon ado would do ns ncn us ivatny soon sho would bo able to show Kathy and her husband that theirs was not thu monopoly of tho good things of life. A llttlo bitter laugh escaped her. At last she would meet Tallentyre on his own level ; ns Henry Sturgcss' wife ho would have to treat her as he treated all the other women of his set; it would no longer bo u condescension for him to take her out to tea; she would bo able to invite hlm to her house to en tertain his wife the thought was n stab. Sho hit her lip as she thought of I.ndy Elrica Hewing, her beauty, her clothes no wonder Tallentyre wnnted to marry her; sho was a woman of whom such n man ns he would be proud ; sho was n woman who would be a litting ornament for his house. Sho glanced down nt her own hands in their cheup gloves; she remembered the lirst tiny he hnd taken her out to teu, and tho hole in her glove that had euiibed her such ngonics; of course, ho had been it, even though he had pre tended not to ; of course, he hnd always thought of her as some ono infinitely beneath him. Tears of rago and morti fication roso to her eyes and were brushed angrily away. When sho was married to Mr. Sturgcss she would show Talluntyro what sho could bo and do: sho would let him see that sho could dress as well as Lady Elrica ; her eager mind leaped ahead into n future when ut Inst sho would have left tho harbor of llfu for the bea, and tho winds of thn world that blow there. Already she seemed to feel' them stinging her face nlready she seemed to bo drawing tne freedom of luxury nnd riches deep, deep intn her luncs. Henry Sturgesa was only a menns to an end ; ho mndo u sub stantial toundation lor tuo miiiuiiig oi her dream castle nothing more; she forgot that to reach that castle sho had first to exchange ono form of bondage for another. . . . Poverty nnd duty had bound ana xet terixl her nil hnr life r in the joy that at last sho was casting her fetters aside sho forgot that sho was about to rivet fresh chains on her wrists. Sho paid tho driver of the taxi gen crouslv before she dismissed him; she went on untl into the park. The sun was setting boliinci tne trees ; birds were twittering confidentially to one nnother in their nests under tho new green leaves j a bed of nodding daf fodils looked like n pool of purest gold in the sunset light. Jill walked on. dreaming still; the ono four lii her heart was that sllO might wake up and find thnt nothing of all this day's wonder mid reaiiy iinpiieucu. one longed for tomorrow, when she could go to the office nnd meet Mr. Sturgesj nmt ,.,.Un,. iwin.lf nil over ncnin that he hnd really usked her to marry him, J really nbkcd to bo allowed to mm mo key in tho door of the world and let her through. ,...,. Some ono was coming along the pnth toward her, and she glanced up with vaguely disinterested eyes; then she stood suddenly still, nearly choked by her own tempestuous henrtocnts, for the man Into whoio face she looked was Cyrus Tallentj re. CHAPTER XIII neloMTl. nre th ter I "hed for thta I.nmi tlmn whllo rosea lliruwn for ' niJMty That ihiiH you tramplo them beneath your feot?" Jill's wonderful dream castle faded away into nothingness as she looked into Tnllcntyro's eyes ; the feverish sort of happiness the thought of it had given her n moment beforo was but a rush light now in comparison with tho wild jov that suddenly thrilled her being. She felt ns if sho bail been walking in u grny, sunless btreot and hud come out with sudden unexpectedness into biillinnt sunrfiino. Tallentyru was holding her hand. "I only criino back to London today. I was on my way to sco you How aro you?" Jill tried to answer, but no words would come. Sho wuntctl to cry, wanted to cr.v desperntely, badly. She had to blto her lip hard to control herself sho could npt look at him. Presently they -wcro walking on to gether; sho did not know whether be suggested it, or if they had just moved by mutual consent. She had never felt so happy in her life, or so miserable; sho had forgot ten nil about the future and Henry Sturgcss sho could only think of Lndy Elrica Hewing. She found herself wondering if Tallentyre hnd seen her binco his return If he had kissed her If oh, n thousand llttlo "ifs" that tore her heart with a thousand jcal' ouulvs. MY QW.C10US- I VJlJ To mHK T Y4KS VORK tt WSH AKOUHP A CARPET "SWtWefe 6K WCOUK CLCANEH- Brt AIL I'VE. PotfE "SINCE , 30UQHT Wtfc H6mE te cot Grass Affl CACCH TWAINS- ' I r. .. . s Sim t ' .. ' aK ' wm 4ifH m ,.)! MWtj VOU MM QET WW TO THIS THlMCf- BUT Vle iOY T& tTART IN PWR infancy- MO 6VJX OYER dvuriuu.cor Grass OR H0UL1 X0 AHvfTHlNa BMT LEC? And eat AHt PlAX 40 UP- ' VM A r LOWER. ?lCKfc. I'M HO 3RA3 COTTEri- I'M S01N6 TO COVER. TrlE YMOUE tAWH VnYH CEMEHT AMO ?A1NT IT GREXM- h r m c&? '& ,&tAA vV sS n r-r "Mii rnfi I'LL PARE OME fcANDEUoK TO COME THROUGH THAT CEMENT- EVER SPRIH6 I'LL GET OME 6REEH PAMT PAINT THE LAWN WTH THE Hou JUST "SPVUHKUE IT OM- ' ff tM e??&ss ESgs&i ISsis? .; t r a $ 1 DONV RHOW VWAT TriET pot A porch on nvnv PLACE T0R- ANJEfSjT chai- m.vefe have A CHANCE TO tT W EM- WWEVJ NOU GET AinJ XMO iOLUNG OP THE HOfcE OV WAVE TO VJORK PAST TO GET N AKT 1 " 7 -rr I OUT OV CP, BEFORE. VRAIrJTlME:! SOMEBODY'S STENOGBack to the Woods 1021, by Public Ledr Co. By Han ward OHTLI Die! T rAAiTSrrrt ..,r,.- , , , , ,, RID Of KEGIWALD , VAM STUPE -OUT THERE AiOH- WAAIT5, iO MARRY Wrimr& i-jfsjs& FER ThATORDEfe Vl HIM BECAUSE HE dl)ST GAVE A 6 ORDER lb THE. boss : J - """T Mijn r?n i - LISEAJ " You GO AM' FIND OUT IF I I t . ComTlcht. D- , Tfe-S-TVie. BOSS ATS , f HEY Too rfl H V HE GOT THE CASH J " "1 (ux r kTl l i FASTTHy ffl . 1T-1 THIS XA0RA1 IA1C ! . i Bl I W LD CAT5 V s ,, Wr m 'a'- Jsf Jm J lL' JlAL ( 'aiuff : kM . . .&& -. -J. f --PS, A-E-HV.Yw.RO Tho Young Lady Across tho Way gtr Vw-,rV fijeaeyir THE ADVANTAGE OF HAVING A VERY SMALL CADDY By FONTAINE FOX The young lady across tho way says tho governor of North Dakota must be very popular, as she sees a movement has been started to ro call him long beforo his present terra Is out. ... a. SCHOOL DAYS By DWIG N TfcmT tiexTAea', TSierrs Tvi wMbTj y-Aa RiCrtT up iwi"11 Aw ..j ftH ysci-G. VOl -5 . nijrn fii--. nun w- on,",w' -.:... lin& TS RWmun ",,-ft. ..... -nie FDGtt O- IHU. "i. -, Witt irM- -'-- - -rt . . .! -WtZ. (lUII '' 6 it am- ira n.iir lb Tr won twe. Ma- "4 rrr . vJnv In ca's IN CASE YbU WISH to HETKEV. A 8KAMD MEW GOLF 0ALL AT THE WATR HoLEL. ffS.'S Hfi VxHMi p Kan j.sr ot- "- mg&mmzzpzz lCftU , . rE& P'rt& it WZ2PZ?ii&zz& SUkMCHiBH. houj'. xatiyjz ..M PnacKi' " &?ZZi'Fi3x&&Z- 2ZA Fi- MiE. 1 Va HiX'igftToRS PETEYWhaVs the Reason? By C. A. Voight crrA.Vd.VJn B IDEMTICAU.V CAViJ, go? L - - ?p , v vitoo lirl& r The same VajhaT Do Vod l Wwxi r m ' i fTI f v v- cheapfothisitme. J " '" J? w mm ' m r"Mil of near ouw j THE CLANCY KIDSYa Can't Fool Buddy By Percy L. Crosby HEY.riMMie S-. YA FORGOT TO COVeR) UP MV MANin . fnow YouRZ au7- I r HE Y,l"MMie 7 il SMOComrA) $ i YA FORGOT TO CO V6R J 1 MiHiiiBMl "-- .aiLJ 1 j i . r. , ( M mi i iilMMi , - ,J: . .. ,kH A- ),V M I v !? I I I uvy 3 If she were JiPln, "ho were being CONTINUED',, t?NDAY m.