rPPgWPWffl!WW ii wvjwrmmmmmmmammmmtmTmiriv'sr'TPJtT.mmmmmmmmr? !amBm$Bt frr-yT i. '"i L, .' wy ,j. ti. "T-r r "Mnz mmmGiy Mi 3amimawmimv& wvvamim m. mvm'hmM'i.'mmj yjm?Tnrrfsw,m .vrcv ww.'tXMiiimBm'X MFmFmmm&w w-w - l - v,,. EYENINGr PUBLIC, liEPffBIHPHILADELPHIA,, TIJESPAY, APBIL 25, 1922 XS , jfc Forces, frGirlte Sin The Yengewce of Henry Jarreman By ROY VICKERS Must the Weman Always Pay?' Itkrtf IM1V MllM tlA lAVAl 1 "Matr eniple)crs as Itawsen himself, ?.C received her visitor with a stately 7 .. i ....tiln. li altllaHnn. ili.. thein te the table. Iteddlng, tie mti " n0 rclen 'op rerrtn,n,n ,aTe kumin one that she did .net want te fiUs'the fan. )ji. ts it thnt moment entering the il'lenie wd Inquiring as te the where. :-"Kft-tr-i-MiM Jarreman, my lady, Is Isklfl ' 'n " housekeeper's room ".T-... .1. 1. ..l.....t. . f. t,v"WDV IDC neuccjjii e iuvui, ww fti.V "I er thought- Miss Jarrdman and ..r guert-mlght prefer it, milady." ...i Vuh barelr nercfDtlble feature liswsen Indicated the immaculate slips 1". t.. .1 ..1.1.1. ...nr.,,....! tk.t .L. fiuchei of Brenden had called. . "Excellent, llauaen, thank you." Kail Sees the Other Girl They made their way te a part of tb old heuks with which Nadla. was ntimlllar. A sunny sewing room pined en a tiny paved courtyard. Op- '0011 tnem wen uuuiucr reura wun a leflf window, open te the sunshine. Jin. Carfax's room," murmured Ltdv Deucester. "One of the nicest In the house. I shall have it for a read ing room when she's dead." "Who who nre the ether people?" Lady Deueester's gate followed No Ne na's. Mrs. Carfax, red faced and holding her sides, was absorbed in the noisy conversation or me man opposii epposii oppesii her: en her right, Balse and Iledding joined In the general mirth; en her Wt- Nell bad tinea eacic per cnair. a Mrtlen of her atnasin- coiffure had nine tumbling down and she was comb lng it out with the side comb des tined te neia ii in piace. as mcy witched she threw back her head and shrieked bcr appreciation of Ben's wit ticlsm. . ...... -"feneiepe jarreman, saw lauy Deuster quietly. "Come along, my tar, and tell her you're defrauding her V fifteen thousand a year." 25i '"Ne," said Nndla. "Please, Lady Deucester no. i uian t Knew, i never iuiglacd " Ladv Deucester gave her a shrewd tide glance and lea the way back te the drawing room. She rang for tea before she spoke of Nell again. "I told you en the way here that 'I wouldn't answer any questions about Itr till you'd awn her," she said then. "well, new jeu nave seen ner. is there anything you want te knew?" "Nelhlng.,r Nadla answered. "I'd Ilk te meet her when I've get mere wed te te the idea of her, but net statute I m curious about ber. She's rather ob ieus, Isn't she?" (' "In a way," said Lady Deucc-.rer thoughtfully. "In another vay she rather fine. Bhe'a beneet and she's 'AMlschy. Khe hates being here, but ahe'a Jrticklng it becnuse she thinks it her cOStety te her father te de se." 1 4 "Why did you ask her here?" n-ked ! Lady Deucester considered her reply 3SVirtfully. Hhe had two reasons. She t adla one of tuem. Fer much the same .reason I asked te come here and meet her." adia waited. "I calculated it would take a few Tfnkj for her te learn that fifteen euiand a year is no use te her. I leulated it would take about two min ts, for you te learn that fifteen tbou tbeu Ud a ear was no use te her." ('.Then I at least have disappointed 'e," raid Nndla. "I haven't seen or rd anything this afternoon which tests that I out-ht te be thn imlen hither I am te have her money or it.'' "Wblch of you would make the bct- rtiM of it?" '"Hat ia net the moral point." '!'. .1.. .11 I.!... .1 ,. . IIIU pritKUl'HI IUHIllOM, lllUUgll, Id Lsdy Deucester. "I am net creat moral philosophy, dear, but if you mi me moral aspect of it, can't you I thnt If teu brine wealth te Ilnek- tr's Rew all von de Ih in multlnlv Its feathers, Its beads, its gcwgftws, and ns garun Horrors, wbereas te "rs," challenged Nadla. "What I It mean te me and te Wilfred? We re our gewgaws that might appear 'less garish te a mere cultured people. hit real dlffrnr Ic tlier?" Lady Deucester gathered her forces. "There ll fhU HirTirnin " h knlil wphatlcally. "Te you and te him the Pplnrs and paraphernalia of a com table life arc net niuthina- in tbem- XtS. ThlV Hi Kilt- n ntaanu a Manni (" , itav wMt. m uivuua -a 11111110 . ridding England of its Huckster' , Its bends and Its feathers." I-don't understand." "ieu de. Nadla." The words snapped like wlrca. Na- Bucnuen was neia. IOU de undemtntid. Ynn tnlil me. the wuv here, about Cnrrendnle's !h ng with you and Wilfred today, w knew whnt that may mean. I Tatulate you most heartilv en that rSt RtlPrACfiCill aMnlalt In ..M lint. le. Riir If n. ... Mnt.. t tl 1f p --'.v .. ,.wi me HlilflU llf It'll .,41 . ureman, when you meet him, that im01 Intend te rcp.iy every penny he has -4Sn jeu, what geed will this around - OT be te Wilfrtal? Carrondule hnt it. IIQM $ ' be te Wilfrial? iSff for PnupersT' Oh, I'e worried nil IliBt nut till "nearly with It!" exclaimed Na- H I'm 'WKJl "ought that, though I net!' 'Wld tell WllfrnrI n,.H,lr,- T ,... M un1S J?n t0 conemlio net buy Hlllmead "S .i M .n 80 ftB te make restitution 3 K... An(1 Wilfred found out and coeH sought I was Vilnr ikmii eKnuf eh.. 7m Ijy. b?ca.UBQ " wns mJne or sup 11J. Jd te be I Then I gave that up and u.. V ""naing ana planning ut ns "Ollgb nOthlntr Imrl Imnnlnail nn, !,. "7J5 IS, 'T,9arremlale nnd nil he may '' in te, Wilfred I Today's lunch haH 'WW glVinfit tVMltlllni, linnl rv,,,l. rder." " " mrc -' ""uwBier maaKcxi ner emuen --1," an Impulslre caress. l'mii,Vent toilet that it was for my lille),..;0?..' e.xPrTeM ertHude very 4-wu ten,,, mere tfn,, ll T. ueucbtp,t I knew perfectly UVAt ?.i "v'u" wunt me, new I've seen ?,' , Bt"nmeii my principles." tf. AmJ t l, bSlleve ,n Principles," re Z? I''y euceter candidly. "I'v illfi t em et M U8 t nil In rea efWln. LWiai,t-.. yu mer'y te aee th ve real the PfJenem.n"' ;" wuiiiiu juie liuei- iu?" '"".e seen wnat the money ,pnl'iuu n Wilfred's hand, nnd veu'vr ; wra ... A.- Bk. . . ITEM."'" oreke Hlfred'a bands, and you've ir .. ,. 1 1. j Ih. w,i 1 uli I'"1' COCKBd HCr HfUB EMftre. .. "e"' . :N0(ln looked and saw I "V.yT.'fUles SW lliflnv ,lnwn ll. .lrlv.e "Nell, .iiK,.",: msEzSte. "i h,f,f -ergentleman friend, Lady Deucester. s man. nnd he HI tmwU 1.1 ..' " miii, nun iii- let. hv. l"i,ra,,e'fi P,r"ant te Nell In Wysh.M 11 enl? Per80 wJl08e em- inrrn,,y elJJey n mQy well be 5mb thn,1.1'0 r.ni, who will spend the r.b.cUk.tt7u, n, yenp- Nadla." aa4uat think it ever." said Nadla. "ii.,... ?mP oel I see the tuf- ,nvelTedsbut there; are fifing at me all the tlme-Lu." LwtmnneirT" t mmmM THE GUMPS the Heart Witt Break Yet, Breaking, Live, On By Sidney St say he had seen hla daughter te pre sumably, if he had agreed with you and thought the money could de her mera harm than geed, he would have made that clear. But he didn't; he just went awny and left ethers te tell me of the discovery. Don't you see that waa be cause ha hates me se much he felt he couldn't dlscuea anything with me? hadj Deucester, de you forget that he served twenty years for a crime my father committed?" Lady Deucester caught her' breath. Nadla was getting dangerously near the truth." Her next words, however, led her unwittingly Inte safety again. ' "When I say.Mr. Jnrreman hates me I don't mean anything morbid ; I don't think he's capable of bearing me a real grudge for a thing I couldn't help. I'm quite sure whtn I de see him again he'll be qutte'nlce te me. But that doesn't make the fact itself any better for me. It doesn't make my father anything but a murderer." "But, my dear1 child, was it ever proved te your satisfaction', or Mr. Jar. remau'M, that Jehn Camden did kill Eddls?" Lady Deucester had flung the ques tion merely ns an evasien of the real subject, but Nadla looked startled and impressed. "Mr. Segreve, the detective, hadn't succeeded in proving it up te the time we stepped working en the rase," ane admitted. "Ne, I suppose there is no conclusive proof; it is only that Mr. .Tarreman's conviction was se strong that one felt he must be richt. I wen der" nhe hesitated, then continued viith an effort "de you think I could get Mr. Scgrove te continue his in vestigations, Lady Deucester? lie dropped them when Mr. Jarreman gave up bis idea of a retrial, or se I believe." "Tell him te start them again," said Lady Deucester briskly. "Personally, I don't believe Jehn Camden would have hurt a fly." Nadla Hears Geed News Theed arrived at Deucester Heuse half an hour after Nadla had left it. "I I am in need of your advice, dear Lady Deucester," he began. "Again?" asked Lady Deucester Ironically. "I should hue thought you had enough of it last time." "It was precisely your generosity and your success," returned Thced re proachfully, "that urged me te ap proach you again. "My anxiety is etlll for Mrs. Stra. nack. It occurs te ine her act of re maining in complete possession of a fortune te which alie knows perfectly wen sne is nei cniuiea may de a er source of danger te cr all parties, if I may Bay se." "What de you propose?" she asked. "I propose that I become trustee for the entlre fortune." replied Tbed coolly. "I propose thnt the title deeds of the house, the stock nnd any partic ular vniuable articles of jewelry be de posited with me until Jarreman's er return from the Continent. It would make no outward difference at all te Mrs. Stranack and her husband." Lady Deucester eat motionless, ga.lng at Thecd with something ap proaching awe. "I shall pay te Mrs. Stranack." con tinued Theed, "the revenue of the es tate. Tli n transfer te mv guardian ship will be a mere formality. Put It win enable her te fare Jarreman with ah clean hands, as It were." At that moment Kawaen entered. "The telephone, milady." Lady Deucester murmured an excuse and went into the library. She took up the receiver nnd heard at the ether end of the wire Nadla's voice. "Lndy Deucester, I'm speaking from Mr. Segreve's office. I went straight te him, and he's given me some nmnz lng news. He did conclude his inves tigations, after all. and he sent the re sult of them te Mr. Jarreman en the day after the wedding. And that re sult Is thnt my father, Jehn Camden, was innocent, ns innocent rs Mr. Jar Jar eoman. I'm se glad ! It makes such a difference." Jfadia wai saying. "Whatever Mr. Jarreman Is thinking about the queer muddle we've get Inte, he isn't thinking of me harshly he Isn't connecting ,ne with hii -.ears of Imprisonment. Mutn't It have been a iheck te him te find that the man he thought had dene It was innocent after all?" Lady Deucester agreed. She was still agreeing when she hung up the receiver and retraced ber steps te-the drawing room. "It was such a shock that it brought en a paralytic seiture," ran her ex cited thoughts. "It destroyed whnt had been the guiding principle of his life hate. He doesn't hate Nadla new. He doesn't hate me mure than most poo peo poe plo de; at any rate, I don't liellrve he would rake up the old Camden affair." She laid her hand en the drawing room deer and her heart cried te Itself in a penn of exultation : "I've get you, Mr. Soapy Sam. I've ab-sO'lutely get you." In spite of the tumult in heart nnd brain, Lady Deucester re-entrre-l the drawing room quletlv. As -lie rcsumul her sent she flashed a leek down the drive, and. for n moment, n H'jht danced In her ejes. "Mnv I venture," purred Theed "may I venture, dear Lndy Deutenter, tn Innuire your opinion as te my little plan?1' "I should have thought that ten thousand would have been enough for you!" "I would feel easier If I were com plete trustee," he said gently. "I bad hoped that you would agree u!th me in that. Lady Deucester. , "Oh, I agree with you in that right enough," said Lady Deucester. nnd laughed like a child. Theed allowed hlmielf te leek a little hurt. "I don't quite " "Have you paid that ten thousand ever te Jarreman's daughter yet, Mr. Theed?" "I am holding myself In readiness te de se, dear Lady." "When you find the girl, I sup pose?" Thced bowed. His expression said that he could net but he aware of Lndy Deucester's base suspicions, but that they wrung hla heart. He was straight ening himself from his hew when lie caught sight of three people straggling up the drive. He stared. He rose te his feet and stared ngaln. "Yes." said Lady Deucentcr cheer fully, "that Is Miss Penelope Jnrro Jnrre man, late of Huckster's Rew. She tins been my guest new for some time. The rather sheepish -looking gentleman try ing te catch uu with her is mv hus band's valet n great admirer of hera. The ether gentleman, who, as you can hear, feels Impelled te put his opinion of his rival into words, is er Ben." These who serve Mnnunen de net te w holly unrewarded. The gods whom Thced had served valiantly for twenty twenty tive years had rewarded him with an Iren nerve 11 ml an unshakable self-control, He turned toward Lady Douces Deuces ter nnd bent his head, ns if acknowl edging a score against himself. "My congratulations, dear lady." he murmured. "Well, well! A brilliant move of yours- brllllaut, though I must "enfess I de net see, yet, the motive . . 1 ,' ceNTiNu kd TOftonnem - - - ....-. JI. I I "'. Bf iirw vt wne MX-a,- mac p , k " A.iSI iXEPL m J w tfct- w ceuC a -aeffSM M It V CAftUft- MT ft VOOKO & 4fc z' f ?5 ' ' I WH TVWVe MCK tMWW SIM I 39SLBBBagK m UKC WtH HDWftrTWai M9 NO 0M K 5?7 AUU ,- V J 4t VIM SOUtt A6MN TO rUMR V vl -SglBgflgB ; JVXXs. TiS-0 , S wLKJEff n'LOVf y Pi ItOOM- IT m HOK6 Htlt HtMtT IT Z. iRssssBIMPPI " .!f VgfB ' Wt - tt HgPJsBgT r sfl 2BT pm 1 V"RHn2JMflMF M (y SkiF ..gtgttfgtflgflPjggllllvfl ML- 1m L4vL . K9 . . .. -.......... -- ,- - . , . w T . . . -mmmrwr saMggiagwgasaBgTagtiBMg-TTTarwTiWTT nwnalsTnaiiiBi i iir i 11 iaa.aai m i i a SOMEBODY'S STENOGSelf Portraiture ' f iSsi I t55?z Z. 1 1 igllf S'SyA "SM '' !; , y , . " mm W""rsry,ys Mill mjiwniiiimii NiBip -w HI TFs 4 vA 1 .(HflnlUsUfiUnrTt. 'Zv HELUO DEARIE, I'VE ROLLOWED 3U TteR TWO- BLOCKS -I dicWtkakw SOU VAE.RE AiTEREST&Ck 14 PAIA4TIA16, nculRtrre'I U. S. Talent Office " By Hamcari 3$ 9 1 S OH tlOST A LITTLE - BUT 1 DOAi'T USE. MUCH. x haveai't Get Toe much i HAVE I ? Jar I & M JTV-. "hi i" ii n I ' I 1 i5 ?LKs A liJU. vi A6H The Yeung Lady Acreaa the Way t ltUtx" The young lady uciess the way says she supposes Mr. Haya is practicing, but she hasn't seen him In any of the new plays yet. THE TOON ERV1 LIE TROLLEY Hit FONTAINE FOX f J U,S Uf te Ju. UJt v - MiK wrkuw tkaX atwu9v uia. T 7 "s tMt. ft Jump rnt. Tkac k ? A fff V2tJM ih.iif TC. &X .j?-$r ", z xwret i? 0N,r.- .atK ?8JP - -5 SCHOOL DAYS izsec op "TFT BuDWIG JIV' r!fewMg?yT3aMB8PIWRgMalBBBl !&-. e. .v I . TKU!V,VXV. EifKHIIflfVH BBtaB? 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Yeu oent fl vVAS JUST a fiVeLDm I 'S? ? RAidHr) th bill uNeee e0 Rptupms. bicl! p Seem Te Be coemkc- up. SeFfS VsSSEkSv1 'TS' I MOPE CM AS V YeuR -THIS. F0 IS TL. i iHiVfrmi j. L jifi ! f T 3 (&f V MM PIKlMI-'At J Yjjfrjf I 1 Vrjrpp Rllttti UALT y rjBM i mi iii iii iiinwiiiiav17FQ4K-,,gHf , r rW ByKing IT UAS A mPAne pact 'Ve Mae ualt A BfUY I its Been Fme IVALT BUT WOO SMOOLPNT HAVatl Tjppee CHAT uAireR. OVER. 40 CENTS!, 5 flfl : i.. UV& fcSSISE ?7tlhJrTBffi1v .r r, JAr . . juimiiivkbyAu )MMk ' J, . .: "i,j MbTbI I I i ''iTiliTlMByagMBgiBliBilftBlBM ' ' liJMI fM tm ( 'Sft "?'! fc t.r?a L' .i l a j l