i Ml m m I m !:: K WmgW i: w.Bhti PMHi.l- i5MT RHHaMBKfSOTlWWJMlH w -: ; V P.teu' W IV T iwf iinuimi " ! "i " . i 'llL -''J'" 1 -' N JWJ107,V,5I ' BVBNINQ PUBIiTO liEDGBRP: WHMm MiMfwe efl M aits' Ml e an intrinn mnd it Cemeback THE HOUSE OF MOHUN By GEORGE GIBBS Auther of "Youth Triumphant" and Other Xitcctssts Cepuright, 1011, D. Appleton A Ce. Are Flapper an Bad an Thcifre Painted? Are Jazt-tteye All Limbs of Satan? SYNOPSIS MtXMftV J0P.V. rffltfehfrr nf n fitflnpv RtJVSi wine athcr ami finctallu nuilrlnu mother. 6 . ft ejuvteat eirl of th vrrlml n flai'iier In sr jfivr wtveafl vui niif an nrrwnic win, nor nue PisS4 (finer spoiled bu wealth anil aitutatlen. Dr. BKWiX B' u''10 M astlu surwrtKil of fir cicniuf ii . " country mi il rtliim front n loin; aPr!c Ml'cnUli'iii til"-!"! lnr tlirniinh w !' lft. mi .clderlu t'tlleuulur. EJfrrv i. Oe'crt f(i? Milrtnf, ami Zip ii frarffrrf nl her unit Jirr ipt. vhcrru (1 Jyjyjr' 2!tt ' melicr tiitcrlfllit let n ciib- 1 1 mriuiii waitiinaruimed. Apparently V then Wfis nntliliiff for It lint n rlilp c a ipln in the runabout, nnrt both' ' ef these altpninthn imlpil bwlric tin1 gorgeous fligbt Hint, Ac li.id iiiIjwM. Ititt vahe hnri nlmet decided en tln horseback rtdp when lirr tnetbiT peIi. "I hail n nole from C"!eirji I.ycrtt. darling, lie's eeminjj nut this nftpr nftpr nftpr oen " "Really," fald Cherry ll-tlcely. "And he's bringing his friend. Dr. David SatiRree." "Geed Lord! That settles It. I'm ff," said thf (tlrl. rlslnc "But my dear " began Mr. Mehnn, calmly. "That freak! Oh. Muzzy." "What de you mean? Ilnve you t this T)r. SangreeV" She nodded. "At the C.eir fluu. anked him, I don't Istuiw h unless thought he wouldn't come.' "Hut he h eeinlni:. my dear. And e's one of the Sanurenx. 1 looked him n In the 'Scvinl ltelter ' ,uite nil light. Ver, tine old family and vnine money. I)Ntingulkhed. tee. Harvard Foundation Keseareh man and one of the next known ethnegra " "Ethnolegi-f-." siiid Cherry. n he remembered. "He leeks the part. Muz ay clear thin, with gettc'ie.s." And then, M an after thought "He annoys me." "In what way?" "Oh. 1 don't knew. said Cherry With a frown. "He iulnted out of his glares sldewa.i" n though 1 were a (specimen and he talked like a book. I hate stedgv people. They make me furious. I want te shock them. I alwns fej like saying emething Inde- "I've no doubt ou did. my dear." Cherry llahted a ci.-ai-ette and ihrugged the topic out et existence as hex mother went en : ... "Hut a Snngree: I de wiMi you d tay. It does help me out uch a let. Bcnidee. Cherry, jeu knew. Mr. l.yci-tt la In some of your father" rempanle and t think be'd wnnt ou te be pe- "Oh. ye. of course. The girl, who had paused en her way te the deer. ew turned toward her mother. "Uy the way. Muzzj," she nked. i Vhnt's the matter with Tad latelj?" "I'm sure I don't knew. What de you mean. Cherry?" "De veu menu that you haven t no ticed?"" "Noticed what?" "Hew worried he leeks." ' Alicia Mehun shrugged. "Thu abstraction of business, my dear. He has looked that, way for twenty -five year. It cost? some worry te be wealthy in New Yerk." "Yes, I understand," Mild Cherry quietly, "but I can't remember ever eecing him i-e gray and tired looking. X don't think any of us consider Dad tneugh. Muzzy." "He dee-n't give us a chance te con sider him " "But would we consider him even If he gave us the chance?" she insisted. "He hasn't a very important part in your life or in mine. I feel sorry for Dad. He ought te take a day off new and then." "When he does he's bored te death, Bay dear." Alicia Mehan's slender fin gers wove daintily in and out among the flowers that "he was rearranging. "Yeu needn't wn-te jour sympathy en your father. He would rather be in hl office, with his lingers at the pulse of business, than doing anything else in the world. Itulness i.s a part of him. Its his lifeblood." "Then all I've get te eav is that it lan't nourishing him much," said Cherry. "Are eii sure that everything is all right, Muzzy?" "Of course, you foolish child. Teu Vm't knew your father as 1 de. What put Mich a notion as that into your head?" "Oh, nothing and it Dad doesn't teniplain, why should we worry? But J, Sometimes I wonder if we're really as lien as we think we are." , "We have enough. Cherry. Of eeurse, we should have mere. Don't bother about that, lour father seldom peaks of his affairs te me. te any one. But I have a wonderful faith in him. ' X always have- had. I belWe in my I faith. I flatter myself that without it we shouldn't have come as far as wc have." "But what's the end of It nil? Haven't we get nil that we need? The only thins: we Inn en t get i. a jneht. and you knew ou ger frightfully sen aick." "But I de want the Wetherbys place at Newport, di-ar The pricu is ridiculous. They're really giving it away." ".Muzzy, dear, I'm afraid you're spoiled. We've all of u. get Inte the way of thinking thwt Dad can de won ders, like n n .isici.i' .iking a rabbit out of n hni ISur ir in't go en forever. i ".Tack Spem er siri there tnuv be nn awfulslMinp in eviri thins seen." , "Well, 1 m g icl we're well beyond being affcde.l l that," nid the pretty , lady reuni'ing out the discussion, con fidently, "But I de wMi you'd stay thU afternoon, cherrj. Mr. l.ycctr. Is se fend nf jeu." "De eij rcnllv want nie te. Muzzy?" ' "There's n dear. Yeu can be se ' BfTeenble when you like te be," "Oh, all right." sighed Cherry. "I'll , ' ECt into riding togs ami go Inter But de put n little 'hooch' en the tea table and 'sle' Lyd'a Brampton en te the ethnologist person. lie gives me a pain." "Cherry, you're incorrigible." I t If one snld that the actuating motive f David Kaugree's visit te Oyster Bay was curiosity, one would cmue some where near the truth. As Ocerge Ly eett had said, some water had run under the bridge- since he had been home a Statement which applied as correctly te David Kangree ns it did te most of the people that he had known. But wbile Sangree. had been sobered by the tragedies that he had witnessed during the war, .oine of his younger friends, it eemed, had taken the war aa a kind of pmiihing ndventure which they re linquished with regret. His own part In It had been tee horrible an experience te be easily forgotten, for he had lived through three typhus epidemics and fcadteen mere than his shnie of death ad starvation. He was wirprlsed at at signs of Indifference which greeted at en every ride. Even in England. whsal be reached there, the pendulum III already swung wildly and a frenxy ad gaytty was tbe order of the hour assnff the people that he knew, This '.upialned away as tee beginning a1 holiday , the breaking of the dis- it or war, an interim or seu-in- mm wit!!, w,M nil 1hh. Y4nt If y-C OTWVWWV M,v r.ui ,,v ,., u VJ( W atreaey iBBieu nrany two yean ana '-, '', fBtFt was no sign ei a swinging ei iua QAtVlaWanuum back te normal. f.wv mm iw w.w w, mv. w..v 1 '.'Mmmmm eonditlen of affairs. jstWSSMmwK, ii?rv- BsaBSiaaaiikBisBaaasBSBBBBBW7 ammmmy yy MmKZMmmmte MM&Z& 'mF Kfw . -ilV I rich Ind.v ill, l he retim ft, ' tieli of -, tTjm- ,. -. ?ss "Yeu needn't waste our sympathy en jnur father. Business is it part of him. It's his lifeblood" classes of society. The eentlal ma leiiality of the army phllo-eph had led te a diminution. If net in a destruction. et e Id i en H. tn an unconcern ter ui' Milne of human life and a ta-te for i th rcckles-liP's and crime, offered ln evi dence every dav In the pases of the newspapers. The study of ancient civ ilizations had given him a historical perspective which he applied te the present Munitien for his own interest and amusement. Every way the re patriated traveler looked he saw signs of decadence which amazed hitn. Te Ueerge I.ycett, who acted for the pres- , mt as his mentor and guide (as lcelt expressed it. "like Virgil conducting' Dante through the nethermost depths of the iiiferii.il regions"), it seemed that David Sangree was taking the mnnnern and customs of the d.iy tee seriously. After all, they merely reflieted a pass ing phase in the natiennl life. Sturdy optimist thai he wa. he believed that the Innate geed In the great majority of people must ultimately gain the as cendancy. But David Sangree wagged his head and blinked through his glassc. 11 is reading had made him believe that lu ury and vice were the legacj of lc lc lc lofleu.s peoples. Of one thing lie was certain, tlmt his own people were living tee fast especially the young people who were burning up their. spiritual po tential!. ies in ii mad pursuit ei pleas- ure. 1.. which their elder, were net far behind them. At every hotel, every cafe, rh"re were sounds of ja;:. music and people hopping or whirling perpetu al! in antics which suggested the prancing of the Denlsh or the sinuous motions of the Oeled Nail, the one of which is fanatic and the ether sexual. Particular Instances of recklessness In members of the nunger set had been Indicated te him, nnd, though he had never been Inclined te listen te gossip evidence was tee delinlle in be Iithtly regarded. The habits of Miss Cherry Mehun. who had seemed In him a ver splendid sort of a creultire, were net beyond criticism, for Mrs. l.cett, who did net shurc the blithe optimism of her husband, made the definite state rncnt thnt she smoked, drank, gambled, kept late hours, refused te submit te the conventions nml wnx. in short, ns careless of public opinion as a chipping 1 sparrow. And. without seeking It, David San gree had stumbled upon evidence thnt at least a part of Mrs. I.ycett's charges were true, for one night, returning te the l.ycetts' from a meter I rip te l'ert .Jeffersen, where he had consulted rather late with n fellow scientist, he had come upon n car In trouble upon the read. There was a broken fence and a damaged fender together with in ternal injuries te the machine tee s,.. i .els for immediate diagnosis. Sangree had succeeded In towing the damage! tar and its occupants te u garage a few miles awny. where the derelicts, a man and a girl, declining his further assistance, obtained another cur and followed him toward town at two in the morning. The girl of the joy ride was Cherr Mehun. the wan, one of the parly San gree had seen at the CJelf Club: but as the darkness had made excusable bel ief usal te recognize him he made no attempt te remind her of their ac quaintance. That her companion was ver slightly diiink might have escaped his notice had net the causes of the Hill i accident provoked a Justllahle curiosity. Of this chance meeting Sangree had said nothing in (leerge Lycctt, nor te any one ebe, but he hud n feeling that by Ids silence Miss Cherry Mehun was being laid tinder a very dellullu obliga tion. A stronger motive impelling bis wish te meet the ether members of the Mo Me hun family was the knowledge, Intelj ceullded. thnt a considerable part et his private fortune, administered in his nb nb sence by tlrerge Lycett, had been In vested in some of .Tim Mehun's com panics. (leerge t.jcett, te whom had been In trusted the management of Snngrce's business r.tTnlrs during his absence In the East, was n firm believer in the star nf .lamrs K. Mehun, nml had invested most. If net nil, of David Sangree's fortune with n great deal of his own. In the Mehun enterprises, ' I'eihnps the Investments bad net been niilte conservative, but they had been successful, and mi the end justified the means. The talks that David Sangree mm nml wnn .urn .Aienun since his re turn had been unite satisfactory nnd In a few months, it seemed, there would be enough of a return nn his holdings te iniike him a very wealthy man se ceil Unit he could nlrnrd In spend mm r or ins lire III the ciilli va- the scientific projects which vvete iieai est Ms hearl. The time te sell was net et, lie was told. Cen dltlens were .still a little uncertain. But the assurances of growing value in his shares gave Siingrcc n pleasant sene of financial security, nnd he had left t he uMeIiun ellices in n Rolls. factory state of mind which wus shared bv hii optimistic adviser. These pleasant business relations gave D.ivld Sangree n feeling of tier senal interest in thu Mehun family. se that the visit which he and (Jeorge I,.vcett were paying nad n gencrel as well as n purely social sigtillienilce. If the daughter hud created a rather 3i2J JT7T, U forbidding InpresalM'wpMiila consciousness, tbe mother was eetlipr ehnrniln. Her nerfectlen be wlldercd him, And he wondered hew such n charming creature could be the mother of the joy-riding hoyden; Alicia alvvnys affected strangers thnt way. If there were deficiencies In the Mehun faiullr no one ever carried them te her tfoer. She always created the 11 luslen of being incapable of mistake. If her children were rather wild, the age and net their mother was respon sible. Te He Continued Tomorrow rzzzm uaa l' K&vj tfiMv alto- I.KSS THAN A MONTR nVMATNA A few short weki. njitn football war rier will cinn nn armor rer netner nfen, Rut whim tie is stui wnn ui. ni e nlett will b fslthtiiltv chrenlrf-rt every i- 6101t win de rniiniiinr vnruniria en mm perti pm. of. the Pnsue (immisb. "llafee tt a Hitblt." -Adv. n - i 110,000 Lbs. SUN SWEET California Prunes 3040 SIZE We hate lift rceclveil dlreet ihlp ment fmm rnllfemti of a new crop of Sun Rnnrt Prunes. This tlie U out tn the tnricest kIik grown. Will k"l In iierfiet rondltlen throtitlieut Ihs Inter.. I'aekitl Hvrnty.flTe g.t) pounds te ttie (mt. Price tier pound It twenty-tlirr.- (i) rents, nelil vnlr bjr the bni. 1'liU l the rletti, sensible snd sinl tari wy le buy prune, 'l'hene of mill vrdera glrcn prompt attentlea. Felix Spdtela & Sens WIIOI.F.HAM? OROCEBV DKPT. 1222-24 Filbert Street Bice 6133 rilturt MM Spatela Pare Vtrgia OHye Oil Per Qnnrt Sl.00 1'er Gallen SS.&O V '" "Wje-WW gli mrm. 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