Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, April 15, 1922, Night Extra, Image 23

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    - . iAC MM
The Vengeance of
Henry Jarreman
By ROY VICKERS
ifercii
Vr -. -
winmte
Miwft''
fe'si!Li
feTrHIS BEOINS TIIE STOBY ,
UJhVwif 'fenced Ucrnlv vtar$
A tM'?Jlht murder of Oharltt Kddu,
WW ftf. Jd;7 1 Camden. . 9;(lm
itw '"Si minit Ma iclrt, Kiiien bmh,
i&JXTclritih " hatred e) Camden
) AVime l"i I" pre'. and new hl
,-fn IW ','' ,'turi Ud him make Caw
"'A'nMir " Wcflm.M place 0 her
""I.t. lit DW' "I?" "'..'
' the
Weman
Always
Pay?
THE GUMPS The Wound Is Invisible Thai love's Keen Arrew Makes
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mtW&RVJVvfitti
v f r-y w Tf
By Sidney St
I J.. fnl
" nenii
era i""-e'i
Afrattacfc'ft
:
MH i. ifnrri u"' '' recoenttet a
'iijricrliJ JarreUan and their
""init li laWlhmetl. , Thttd,
Itirri irtr mm w ".
Sl'.-J.unl.CI'.
tfJIWi'i eWuii' for meinivr, intra
32If .V"n a"d Jarreman teaether.
Vff :";. i.itari r'amifrn' ruin.
ii net lilt rfaueMcr but
SiMics ft";
lie relelet (hat the I'fcflm
dfHl'frei llu m Hunun.
I'tfJSiMerrlM afi-anacte. Jarreman mak.
I?liiii tfJII'mcm e the bride,
"wKroeuJ
'ttilJrtlw trtrt hfm Mi own itauehtrr
lHrS a crutlelv typical coeknev alrl.
ISjL 7ii the Beuerr a me reverts.
ffir)"p)i'r(hlrii thcni and wrecktne
1JfLSck!i carter, heart from Ala df
FSE?ilMif Camden a mneeenf.
I KiterilKif Camden a fnneeenf. He
KOAl 7m re h world (n C'laydlHe'.
I'M" VV.- ifie trulna te oeln de-
i Jorreman'e meiifl, and Ladu
riuir win irte i(ut v
fortune, bring the ill
tiOt HEBE IT CONTINUES
Hg te ay?" he questioned. "I
Laaldn't ft at Mr. Theed's real mean-
L nieHtiides t But if no Is mcrelv
MmUm te persuade me te take advantage
uSmt of Mr. Jarreman's generosity,
ELti out of the question. Everything
CiTiTTthing must be restored te that
C drl whom I bare been defraud -
hit tju flowing- deeply violet, ap-
illsfi Jt steadfast were upon her
(tiwln'law. .
"Sorely you agree?"
Udy Deucester did net answer for a
MBtnt, and isadia, leaning lerward,
d a bind upon hers.
F7ea don't think that I knew all
Lute who I was and defrauded that
btddlberately, de you?" she asked.
H9 UDBAtJCi:vcuuca ul iud iiucbiiuu
ftid Lady Deucester into complete
Kaetty for a moment.
rI certainly don't; I never did."
Uad thMU collecting himself : "What
Bmr atkes you suppose such a thing,
Wadfa had drawn back, a faint line
J bewilderment en her brew. She
umrtd the question almost pcrfunc-
linr manner J a little strange. Yen
-forgive me I feel as If you haven't
rtt Mid the thing you came te my."
Irithtn, harking back a little: "What
ld tee mean just new by 'never
JkVl"
'Itly Deucester was master of her
lf iftin. She chose the truth de
tttnttly new. It was one of her mux
h that a part of the truth was mere
Uludlng than a whole lie. She put
Kt finger and touched the strange
I ring that still graced Nadia's right
'"Of course!" breathed Nadla. "1
wmber new. Lord Deucester wan
limited In it when I first met him.
ITHlt "
"les. it was Jehn Cnmden. My
Mbtnd recognized it at once, but he
puxziea, because we we did net
teit Jenn nad married. Per
you noticed afterward1 when
rn hid tea with us that afternoon
Bat've listened eagerly te what you
HUbi of your life? We were, se anx
Iw te find out if you really were a
Men. We determined te make In
Mj befere we announced that you
Henry Jarreman's daughter.' Te
km pushed en with our investigation!
rite that would have been an lmperti-
met, we came te the conclusion that
ihOmden ring was net unique, after
ii. lad that we had been misled bv a
btHci."
Deucester'a Counsel
'Ths rlnir ean't lie nnlniip." Vnrlln
mi theushtfullv. "for when I first met
pr, Jirreman I asked him whether Jie
ensure I was his dauzhtcr. I think
h something must hare warned me
'twere both being thrust into a false
Mdtlen! I showed him the ring, which
H Aunt Hannah Quest had told me
u my father's once, and asked him
f It hid belonged te him. He said
lt positively that It had. That
ei that both he and Jehn Camden
K a ring like this."
"Of course." Lady Deucester ctreve
"peik casually, but she was thrill
W aware of the danger of the mo me
Mat. Anether step forward and Na
lUnuitdraw the conclusion that Jar
win had recognized Cnmden'a ring
mi Otmden's daughter and then, with
jMintindlng of the campaign of ha
iMi would come an Iren determtna
'n te repay the uttermost farthing,
rertanitely, Nadla did net pursue the
pwt. She returned te the contcm centcm contcm
Mtlen of her own position.
"I Hill don't see why you don't 6us
t me i of tricking Mr. Jarreman from
He flrst,"
iJ'TA.raet M many adventuresses,
."i1' ret,urned Lady Deucester. al
W linguldly. "Teu simply weren't
t.!2?es'" he "Wed, "if you had
Jn you were Nadla Camden, would
Uve been helping Mr. Jarreman te
JJS", dnca against your own
tter7 Would you have urged a re re
OBtrengly that I myself, becnucc
W kinship with the Camden branch,
w te come and beg yen te nbanden the
Z T.l 4 ou nMd har8 no doubts at all
3J?Vi.B5ore' II no mera crossed my
SVbaAyeu could' a"r all, be n
jMen than thnn it did Mr. Jnrre-
mJ.i!' been the center of a web of
ceincidtnce and and general tepsy-tur-
SuSLaind Lde dete8t " ' ' Nd'n
u Tt.."1, 4 II w,u be n rel,e' t0 1V
in. .V 0Ut ,r!t0 tbe encn flBaln. wbt
"r tee cost."
JjJjrpeuccstcr gatberwl her forces
"I.-j '. lue cost, - sne repeated.
Ium der1,,J0.'!.rcallre exactly wbut
-"""vcr the cost," she repeated.
" COIt mill K'J'i
nim. A. .iiw
thiii r.' ' ,; sllc',u n Uttle: but she
fin.... old weuPe of nilence. Lady
SSSS" V?U.C(1 moment, then
lJ a' unalded-
dLvU1i 011- It was net u con-
tad I T vrMe- meant it. Yeu
we liv'.y dear Ul' l" lBue, whether
d I J, l'nr V01, A,J, tl,e wlvcs ' t1"'
a. i8 ln lp'iBe."
la lh!nJl T,1Br! was n celdnem
t gifisiii velce tbut tbe B,d woman
"v. r .
U a
e, net
against our husbands. Tlmt '
41 A ma.1,1. --"-"-i. wm (lunutiiiiin. xuill
frnftSDl1"."!.: "bl fallU(:y- t ninhttt
tindi.' " un'' our uus
li .n.'t. 2ulte understand."
.'""' tlUIMM
-th; ;? ,u ..
ln..l .""-f Ulllles IVItnii nrmv.llne Imi
"wa riAM -.i .: ---..- .w.i...a u-
SO nA.f.i , lmn Rbe mC,,"t t0
jNidu"? "cctly I'ttppy. '
i,tfli.aJ!nrf,ieft htt and "endered
i'Aaaa?.n',.,lne' rhcr was n hint
H'lal.""..10 ie movement. "I
rS.f -i,r.?,n w wP-mfn.
i ;' ' nn " " r"ii
started slightly. "He regards her with
n goeti deal of suspicion, for one thing.
I-or 'another, admiration of her meant
n passing disloyalty te his wife, whose
nntltheMs she Is. Yet I believe Mrs.
trayne b salon Is crowded night after
niRlit. She offers them just enough ex
citement te make them forget the lack
of excitement nt home."
"Kxcitement!" echoed Nadla, rest
Vly. "Dear Lady Deucester, I don't
mean te he rude, but renlly, people who
euro for each ether don't have te
full back en excltcincnt nowadays te
keen each ether interested. Heme life
Isn t ob dull as it used te be ; there's
companionship- "
"I have spent n let of money in my
lime," interrupted Lady Deucester.
"and I have every intention of spend
ing n let mere. And most of it, my
dear, hat gene in being a companion
te my husband. I run sec you don't
quite believe me. Yeu think I've
bought recklessly, you think you can
de It mere chenply. Well, I don't think
you can. Mny I tell you why?"
Nadla made a little movement of pro pre
test, but Lndy Deucester appeared net
te notice it. i
"Yeu understand Wilfred thoroughly,
dear child. Yeu have been n worker
eurseif, and you icspend te the work
forces ln him and respect them. Prob
ably you hope te work with him. net
ill the old way, hut en a hundred new
points, any one of which will mnke
typing his reports and letters seem
mere drudgery. And yet, if you per
sist ln tcnrlng your wuy out into the
open, as you nave put it, you will find
the avenues of real co-operation 'closed
t you, and only the drudgeries will In
left. "My dear, have you pictured te your
self exactly what your lives would be
without all the hopes und plans you
novo built upon money? Oh, I knew ii
sounds crude, but after nil, you knew
what poverty is. Yeu haven't nlwnys
thought in terms of cars and ceuntrv
houses. Loek nt this place leek nt
yourself and admit that it's money
that has made them possible."
Meney Is Necessary
In spite of herself Nadla looked. The
room in which they sat was beautiful
with the mellow beauty of carved oak
and lustrous velvets and leather stamped
with geld. Opposite her n Jeng Vene
tian mirror gleamed and she saw her
self sitting gracefully, ensily, ln a won wen
derful old chair that six months age
would have atrucsjier dumb with nd nd
miratien. Her eyes followed the lines
of her summer frock, ft miracle of cestlv
simplicity. She drew n deep breath anil
felt her silken garments caress her ns
if all her life she had worn nothing of
a coarser texture.
"When I married." Lndy Deucester
went en steadily, "I was Immensely
ambitious for my husband. He was
clever ; I, tee, had brains, and It seemed
te me that together we could carve a
splendjd destiny out of life. I won't
describe the first yearn te you the bit
ter disillusionment of them. My hus
band was all I had thought and mere ;
I was ready te help hlra till I dropped ;
but we simply never had a chance. 't
were wretchedly peer, Nadia. The
Deucesters hed always been peer ; there
was no money in the family ; and I saw
that without it we could de nothing."
An unwilling interest had crept into
Nadia's eyes.
"But somehow you get your chance,"
she said.
"Only because somehow never mind
hew we get money."
There was a breeding watchfulncs in
the low spoken words. Nadla listened
mere closely.
"It is of these first lcim years that
I am thinking. Yeu say that you In
tend te rcnay every nennv that Mr.
Jarreman has given you. De you real- I
ir.e what that will mean? Mellcntrave I
and I were peer Wilfred, if he is te
mnke full restitution en your behalf,
will be bankrupt. Mellentrave and I
practiced n thousand dreary little econ
omies in order te reach our goal you
two will economize uselessly, for the
eal will hnve vanished. Ne member of
Parliament may be a bankrupt. Yeu
knew that, surely? I hme no doubt
that Wilfred would work his wny back
te solvency, but his courage would have
gene. The struggle te provide n small
mnrgln beyond the bare necessities
would absorb him; in a sense I think
it would break him."
Nadia stumbled te her feet, and mak
ing her wny te the long window, steed
gazing out. Lndy Deuccster's voice
pursued her remorselessly.
"Wilfred Is as clever as his father,
in some ways cleverer; you arc mere
beautiful than I was ln my youth, and
your generation is kinder te you than
mine was te me, for It gives you a free
dom, a vividness, as it were, that Is In
Itself an enormous weapon. I agree
with nil my heart that things have
chnnged since my day, and every time I
invest in a new complexion I de It ln
homage te the new age. I ngrce that
nowadays people can struggle back te
prosperity from the bottom of the lad
der. I ngree that often the really bril
liant man Is discovered nnd pitchferked
out of obscurity ilnte the full glare of
public recognition. Hut all this Is net
what you nnd Wilfred planned all this
Is net companionship."
Nadla curved a bare arm against the
window frame and bent her head against
it.
Lady Deucester rose. She made no
movement te approach, but n force that
was nkln te cruelty leaped from her
mind te that of the girl who listened.
"These strokes of fortune, coming te
the man alone, brine no companion
ship. They mny take the woman's
breath away, but they leave her lonely.
If Wilfred, plunged Inte bankruptcy ns
he must be, were helped te free him
self, helped, I menu, through the in
fluence and the money of ether people,
he might still make geed, lint it would
net have been threuch you ; it weulil
have been In spite of you."
"But I nin net building our happi
ness mi WllfredV EiHtitmle te me! I
admit I slmll spoil everything for a bit. ,
I nuiiituiii tliiil. I cmiimt de other
wise. If Wilfred afterward is helped te
make geed, us you call It. by some
third person, that won't destroy our
levt for cadi ether. It lie Ims te jse
without second chance anil lie just
one of it crowd, that won't desuey lee,
cither."
A Confession te Nadii
I.udy Deucester it ruck ngnln.
"Leve! Wits I iittiickiug love? I i
knew you love each ether. Yeu mny
love each ether te the last breath of
miffciins and beyond It. Yeu may die
in u garret ruid Imve retained Wilfred's
love, ieu mny uetlt grew old en tnc
millions he hits made through nodding
te a stock broker at the right moment
and still love each ether. Hut )nu
spoke of companionship,"
"IMcnse "
frV lip n rnmnnnfnn ti nm lnlR- i
nire.
have
ry
erry
uses
the i
Impression you make en people who
matter. Yeu must put your whole
soul into this companionship if it is
in he what veu have planned : nnd
souls nre net te be freed for nothing."
"What, exactly, de you want me te
de?"
SO TVV( B CAH EXPLAIN CVEfcXYHlNQ
TO TVtErvw
femce'fc iwe Mtcrrt
xmctf? v0t Loek
lON(9,J
A
71
W
TUt KW BEFORE TrlE'VteTOlW
VOVJtO "W6 VJKNW'S 0 M TW
C ni h nr SV4E MMfc SOMe
Tefcie ReveRtMce te m -
AW ft NOrr enE nue0 Of LOVE -
VMKS-B0KeNEMe.TE,O - 0NT
SUEE AU. NGH T - t &
tNCIW VtPAfcKTOM Y-OfcTWE
VE.TOWC- EVE.H Vr.TE OR.
THt CHiVi -
i '.UllflJ
T586
;
BUT tHl CKST MrrttrtE HM
I MV MJkN tRJE ME OVTt INTO
TVe COVrt.Y- t tV$ NOT E"WRM
tW IMt rlOltU V"ttU UU"U .rv-
MlOMivlHT- WfcvEN't WAX K
VsMNK OF SUEt? 0 A. rVIOWHPVU.
OT fOOT SiNCE- I A
fctlOKEN vEAKte.t-
rr
MOW tON"T-CRS VNCIEM-
fcVe.VT4lr4G VJU.COME OUT ALL
RIGHT- ITS AtL FOR THE ET
SME WASH'X TME K Cff A
WOMfcH SOU SMOAN HANt
MMUlEX AHNWfc- l ALWAV
Hhevghx $e-,aMt. even.n e.
HOWSP FOR A VMtLE - VJt'RE OMLN
rene PFjepue.- we mame nothing te
GIVE MOU RUT OUR HOME A"P LOVE-
Ifitnew- ivs'Wt
uve stcpvmns
10FF A HOCK
s.tTORE THf
0U OVOUT TO
BE XtVPPM
flSTEM? O
ictrytNO-
zxzn
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SOMEBODY'S STENOGThe End of an Imperfect Week
l.iel t H. Patent OSli.e
By Hayward
AAA "DARN
THt LUCK I GOT
f DATE WITH ft fVM
AT JO O'CLOCK
I CAN MtVER
MAKE IT IT'S
AWAY UP TOWN.
5-
WHT "BOSS. ITS A PlPEl
MY CAR'S OUTSIDE -I'LL
TWEgrS
Vrvtt iini .O'. w,
jj j r ;
,
0,
5tRGtAVT O'NOL
TALKAA,-WMAT5,
EIGHT LAMP POSTS
BUSIED ON NAN
.ST.' HOW
COM
KL
HOSPITAL zr
0
SMTHER5
AND CO.
0Uu2
6
FO
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A t r-iAYVAAT? r . ty
Cuiifei TjbcLdT Cm
The Yeung Lady Acress the Way
ll e
$ri
NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS
Bv FONTAINE FOX
SCHOOL DAYS
By DWIG
The young lady across the way
says there nre two kinds of elec
tricity, dynastic and statistics, but
the names arc all she can remember
about them.
M
WkiJfcu cvwU-cj dC A kits
-tla ftjjUUvJvUs WAAtMJUxt who
PETEYThe Great Crime Wave
I 1
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I VAHT A
POUCEMAW
Te E5C0RT
ME HOM&
)
7"
AH '' 100 At?E
CARRMIHG A
lARCE SUM OF
MOHEV AWO 00
VISH ?T?07ECTieK
FROM 'ROBBEWs!.,
r
-yr
GASOLINE ALLEY A New Roadster
pna j ' 'ffA
jh w Bj-a Al vB HvMtt 0KD9INIBH
By C. A. Voight
. s:.Sc
WAS CarpNiuc a
LARGE SUM OF HeMEV
Akin WOW I WAWT
PRoIecTiew FRem my
ViiFEf While TrvTe
EVPIAIU HOW I LOTU
9
''
7;
. ..-. ,i - ... .. -,.. .rr-r ', '... 7".,- -rjiiij.,...,j..'
L.j .v t"ic evnu t.rti..- ..n.iAur..ii..
uriht mi - - vie numiL'Li iiiv
. "lt 'I I1AW ..! 1. 1 -.
'? the min.h. R" .Vnay ,1J0Uce?- band, Nadla. you must huv M
" surfKn,.'1.".9 ."".?e "'"t Sleems in Leisure means money. Yeu must
"It la i,,,Ji;,K , v ic'MPcred steel. ,eiierly trained servants, a secretn
"irrlaie is iV, ,i' ,i , B,l"-tc,HH ' ' or two. Yeu must net have te w
ui i ti. : i'.,,",."".u nanus, auu ,out your clothes, nDeut tlie expe
neuth i.",'.,B..B niiH ure net strong f entcrtninlni! and truvMliiK. about
diic lesci grin, nni i
i" v.M ehoest
By King
LSkeevx, tme old bus is (fcTTfNO lets Ce Down The row and tfUe uis Taeuncr ih a Lirrte fe'THesie'S TrwoeefH
mWSO&X OP TACHM AND OUT OF OKte J mJ-O'CM 0V(. - UHAT OO VOU SAV? I OLD LAST YGAC'S UACON F , ' H U$ SfceEZlXJ WE'LL SEE fe
J ObM'T YOU THINK? tVE'VE MAD A J WfYMM ' TV MT75 W jHlJ . SOMETHlMq NEW J "1 WHAT WB CAH De OH A -J "
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OONTINTJBD MONDAY
r.iu-t,.i ir;? '
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