m ' ! m -HF AOZflSc? 0?! MOHUN By GEORGE GIBBS Aulher of "Youth Triumphant'' end bther Huectitti ' Copyright, lilt, D, 4ppUten 4 Ce. ,k. Til iTUOMli " ,', , . .. Mttrrv.t .tiiiaMer a mMV vfSjRr'i'i rmm AA A IVIIW1I ' T ' .iT.i. J.t ' a. JgflslViflBlllllllim.BllllllllV mm ninuiin Dirii .nui uitu- w hhhlmhhhhhbmhhhhhhhb r A. . ihk nuu h......... -,-v;; .. -- w jairt iv uie eh rwuiaiien, ur. t'Uff ttir(. e tresstf Amrrtess (Mi9l- B?f'r.:.tiu TrWHtd of A esaesM f'v,i",JUI.i i M rfum who loue .EiJ.ill 7riMte. Will. MrthjOMO JBKfi iTTSrV. t oevoiK.onJ . f k itAftM't IMO10 IT. 'ims tf4tmcit. Xh C0J- Peter bent eter the victim, who had new struggled te a sitting peiture and wait looking about blm In a bewildered way lid her$ibach rw. wr OUGHT te, be very grateful for 1 war interest," she ssid in mock itBllite "because It really eeraa.qultp fttetrt, But I'm afraid there's no fee ef 'enr d0,n( nthln t0 help JU, I'm a lest soul, you knew." ,i'"On, I ay '' , "Oi, ye. I n. Quite lest. I don't (Ml that I'm fit company for any re Mctable ethnologist. Yeu see, dad JjrtiW me' en yen. Hj thinks I'm nil Vuht. He doesn't imagine all tlie tor ter rftte things that I've confessed te you. Bat I de hPa yu can put up wlth me 2it least until we see the stables. " Datlil Sangree refused te smile. lie jid De mind te be' made ridiculous by tilt sstenlshlng young werldling. And iti he was quite sure that she had iitsdehlm se, and 'he only; blundered the ?r!i i.. ..... lmt vmi er have ". ''.c wn" aware of this mental ".I'l'm nulte mre that Jbu er e gnt) rliht te form er any habits that ee. - : : ... .. : ft . . . nne wei qutte certain that, in th game Hne wus plnMng, the professorial antlnulty that Had had "wished en her hud come out secend-lwat. But the end of her uffprnoenn enjoyment we net yet. In the back of her head a joyous plan was forming, ji delicious p an which still furthnr Involved the disillusionment of Dr. David Sangree. It was Dad's fault. His was the re sponsibility whatever happened new. The heads of hews protruded from the upper halves of the doers of several b. "'I', Cherry Mehun exhibited with pride her own hunter, "Bramble,'' and her brother Heb's marc, "Cen tipede." They were ' very restless, Miertlng nnd twitting abent in their narrow cenline. "It eeemn ,ns though they needed exerclRe," commented Sangree. "Oh, yes. I haven't ridden for n week. Peer old Bramble! Yeu knew, he wen a blue In tli clinlletige pIiihb nt 1'iplng lteek. Isn't he tee adorable:' "Yes, tee ndnrnble." mill SatiBree' soberly, ns though really nwnre of the fnte that nnaited him. ; "Yeu ay yen ride. Dr. Snngrec?", she asked, tmnliis te him, suddenlv. "X little." replied Sangree with a nod. She laughed. "Yeu knew." she said "I'm flmply perishing for a rlj. .- niMue. Our cnance qnceuuiw ui ikbt hs fi me er no license tither te comment pr te criticize. I veale remind you that I hate net dene ' "Ob, I'm se mtlch .obliged te you. Bnt you don't really approve of me, )r. Stngree. Please admit that." '"'I'm afraid you want people te think much worse than you are," be tlld coolly; ' "Ilsally. De you think that? That's cither nice of you, Dr. Sangree. But it im't true. I'm an awful creature. I'm actuslly se depraved that I don't the a damn what peeple think of BIS." Pangrre grinned. "Yeu nt least have ihe ronOctlens of your courage," he Tbey hid reached the Fteblc inclo incle iit snd she swaggered in nheud of him. In her mannhh clothing the looked like An overgrown boy, but her impudent irony Informed him that slm was quite tee clever at the game of verbal Kive imd'taKp for anything that he had te i'Ser. He wa stirred by tl thought that, mere than anything Isp, whnt Uti Chfrry Meuhn needed wjs n sound rssnltlng. "Please don't fat. me Inttrfefsjrwltb your plans," he said, hastily. ., ''But you hnve already Interfered with them," she went en coolly. "Mether wanted me te meet you and I stayed. I'm awfully obedient when I have te be. But you see I have met you new" "Don't bother about me. I'll, find my way back." ., "Oh, no. . That wouldn't de. But I'm hum Mether wouldn't mind my going in the least if you'll only go with me." "Me !" "Why net? Hiding nlene is beastly and I never take n groom'. Please, Dr. Sangree, won't you ride with meV" Hhe had faced him and her blue eyes were ns innocent of guile ns these of n cat which has just swallowed the canary. ''Please Dr. Sangree," she insisted. "Brnmble nnd Centipede have been eat ing their heads off for a week. It will be awfully jelly, and the country is sim ply gorgeous thlj afternoon." "If you'll exeusm me I think " "You're going tr refuse? Oh, Dr. Sangree I" "1 haven't ridden for n year. I rldt very badly,." he eald stiffly. "I m sure you're tee modest." , "Ne, " he replied coolly. "But I have no desire te be threwji off " 8he turned half uway from him, bit ing her lip. "I thought that you'd ridden in the East." She shrugged it shoulder. "I'm beginning te believe thut you were never In the Last, that yeu've never ridden n horse or even seen an airplane." She turned toward him, smiling te tnke the sting from the inference. "I'm "BR mire yetl eugkt te brfittuta by us asking you "I am. But I hare no wish te make myself ridiculous." . . "Yeu refuse then?" the aafd with an other shrng, this time a trifle contemp tuous. "Are you really frightened, Dr. Hnngree?" David Sangree straightened and stared at her for a moment through his lee. Then his brews drew tog etner. rlihtcned Well er nerhaee a little, nut I'll ride with you, if you Insist, -Mies Mehun." "I don't insist," she said demurely. "But I couldn't bejicve after all I've heard that you were really afraid." "I nm nfrnld of raettlcsome horses. But I'll ride with you." Their glances flashed together for the briefest moment nnd Cherry laughed f:nly nt the sudden resolve that she isd found in him, which was at ence a tribute te her finesse and her power. "Oh, thanks," she said with n gay laugh. "(H course I knew that you weren't really frightened." . , Sungree didn't reply nnd merely steed awkwardly, his fingers twiddling nt the seams of IiIh treuncrs, while the stable rami put the saddle en the horses. This seemed rather n difficult task, produc tive of unpleasant nnd sinister motions from the mine, Centipede, which wns te be. as hu new understood, the ani mal allotted te him. Frem time te time he phw the eye of the stoblcbey glance askance in his direction, but M1m Cherry Mehun, occupied with the tee adorable Bramble, already seemed te have forgotten him. "The mare Is pretty fresh, Mis," he heard the groom say. "If the gentle man " "It's all right. Peter." she lauihed. "But you needn't say anything te Mr. Uncommon Sense By JOHN BLiAKK Helding On IN Mil. LONGFELLOW'S poem about "St. Augustlne's Ladder" Is found one word which ought te be Italicized for the benefit of the grout, the nenr-grcat and the net-great-nt-all. Se we shall italicise it. "The heights by great men reached and kept Were net attained by sudden flight, But they, while their companions slept. Were telling upward, in the night." IT MAY be that the poet used the word kept because he needed a rhyme for slept. But inasmuch as he mulntninrd his reputation net only ns n poet but as a learned nnd kindly man te the end of his days there is reason te believe that he employed it because of Us significance. Fer grant men net only reach the helir its. but thev keen them nn,l tint keeping U often harder than the reaching. Any rentier of this newspaper, if he rniixiicks his memerv. ran reniemlinr de.eus of names of men who were prominent, twenty, ten 0r even five jenrs age. and who are new forgotten. These men, by achievements that looked important nt the time. get into the llmelluht. But tlier tliiln't ktnv there. They had in them the ability for en or perhaps two important achieve ments. Then, either because they had ex pended all the Ability they had or be cause conceit ever their exploits tiilned them, they stepped producing and were forgotten. KEEPING in this world is harder than getting, nnd getting, as any man who uses Tils mind will tell you, is sufficiently hard te tax the powers of the ordinary brain. . ..w. Cflnne.t all be great. We cannot all be nearly great. But these who desire to'cemmand any sort of success must be mere careful about keeping than they are about getting. Industry and ability combined ought te bring the average being into a posi tion well nbove his fellows, for the average person is lazy, and these two qualities arc usually productive of pro motion. But when one gets Inte an important position he finds thst somebody else wants It nnd is willing te work te get it. And if the eccupsnt of the position wants te held en. he must work Just a Ilttle harder thnn his com petitors te de se. TIIKItE are mere men who have been prominent In the Inst ten yenrs thnn there nre mm who are prominent new. And the reason is that the acquiring of prominence or prosperity or even a geed steady paying job is easier than the retaining of it. Cotvrleht. 13tt Rebert. Just give me a aanfa will you?" ' . Hhe was in the saddle with boyish ease, Bramble prancing and curveting gracefully around the.stableyard, while Centipede, awake te the opportunities of the open spaces, struggled with the actlve stablebey, who held her head down and led her te the unwilling vic tim. ,, ., ,. But David Sangree wae "ff?e'. !' Cherry had counted en ridicule te aehleve her pleasure the ruse bad been entirely successful. He mounted and get hii feet into the stirrups, when the boy released the herse's head. Cher ry, en Bramble, un amused twinkle in her eyes, wns already, headed for the gute, which Peter had run to te open for her, when Centipede, one of whefe ancestors nema generations back had been bred en the western range, began weaving intricate posterior cir cles, ending in a series of playful bnck jumps in the general direction of the outer wall. The first of these buck jumps lext Sangree his right stirrup, the second ene his left, and the third seut him llylng ever Centipede's head, m thut he feu rather heavily en one arm and cheulder, and lay for a moment inotienlchs. Peter the groom nnd the stablebey came running. The boy caught the horse and Peter bent ever the victim, who had new stniggled te a sitting posture and was looking about him in a bewildered way. His fitce hnd gene very white, but he get te his feet watching the stable boy capture the refractory horse. This accomplished, he wns nware of Cherry Mehun'B voice somewhere in the air above him "You're net badly hurt, Dr. Ban rrM'l" ulip ekel. "Ne no. Net et all," he replied. "It er nil happened rather er suddenly." Glancing un. he enuaht a glimpse of the smile thnt hovered at the corners of her lips nnd heard whut seemed like a bert of low gurgle in the tones which she gulllttly tried te mnke sympathetic. She was laughing at htm, openly, bra zenly. "I don't think he'd better be ridln the mnre, M!,s " "Bring Iter here." Rangree'e rasping voice cut in. His face was whiter than ever, and Peter glanced at Miss Mo Me hun. "Give me n hand up, please." 'De you think you'd better?" "Yes. Ye,. I'U stick en new." He get Inte the saddle somehow, but his right arm hung awkwardly. Just use the snaffle unless she gets te pulling. Mr." said Peter dubiously. "I don't Intend that she shall get nwny from me." said David Sangree as they went out of the gate into the read, but whether he referred te Cen tipede or te Mini Mehun, no one will ever knew, for nt that moment. Bram ble shook his bend and away they went with a Midden noisy clatter and n rattle of pebble i against the fence rails. After the tin,t sprint Cherry Mehun Junked oer her shoulder. The "professorial mitliiulty" wns still up riglt; net far behind her and his face were a rather ghostly smite. New somewhat rrasuured as te Ms horsemanship, she let Bramble have his head for a few hundred ynrds, re joicing in the swift rush of keen nir the joy of motion nnd the predicament of her companion. Perhaps some admiration for his REMOVE THE FILM WITHOUT GRITTY SCOTONO ANDTOURMOUTH IS CLEAN IP you are one of the hundreds of thousands who have used the KOLYNOS METHOD of removing the viscous teeth film, compare your teeth with one who has been USING GRIT! All OVer America. wifWnmarl in. jjury is being done bv scratching and sceurine the teeth with GRIT in order te make them LOOK WHTTP. anr! in AN ATTEMPT TO GET RID OF THE TOOTH FILM. t It has been demonstrated many times that harsh mineral abrasives wear away the enamel, of the teeth, just as emery wears away hard metals. There is ONLY ONE SAFE WAY IN WHICH A DENTIFRICE CAN REMOVE THIS FILM IT MUST DISSOLVE IT. Fer Ladies of the Court After continued work of several years, two eminent American dental scientists in Europe developed the for mula of KOLYNOS DENTAL CREAM, It was in tended, primarily, for the ladies and functionaries of THEIR COURT PRACTICE. ' One of these two men who developed the KOLY NOS formula a formula which recognizes that GRIT IS VERY HARMFUL TO THE TEETH, was a leader among bacteriologists the first scientist te discover nd study bacteria of the mouth. Bacteria Must Be Eliminated In order te RENDER POWERLESS the bacteria ledged in colonies under the teeth film, THAT FILM MUST BE DISSOLVED AND THE GERMS ELIMINATED, h,efiln! IS READILY DIS SOLVED IN KOLYNOS, as you brush your teeth, and by the same Precess THE GERMS ARE ELIM . .s debris is washed away, along With Darticles nt (nn nu ...:.... i.r. Jl decay, or ferment, in h itiM,t.;n --. perature of the mouth. We have en file in our New Haven laboratories perieral applications from EELi7'0?0 Amecan Dentists and 74,000 American Phyiicians for Kolynet Dental Cream, te distribute among their patients. uie Keynor Cbntpatyr JNewHareen Conn. Scientific and nrtistiV rinf ;.. ..u .l. .. of the court ladies xn the BEST POSSIBLE SHAPE SS ihT.CJSLLING OF HUNDREDS T OF MILLIONS OF GERMS, and the sweetening of the entire mouth by hygienic methods, was shown te be the ONLY WAY beautiful teeth could be kept beautiful. S)K?KP DENTAL CREAM WAS DEVEL OPED AS THE ONLY DENTAL PREPARATION It remains the only dentifrice which will de them. wiiiffrptSSh JrUS1ROUS and BEAUTIFUL 3SS?SLS rtFSSnS0 wrld'8 BEST INSUR ANCE against the DEATH or DISABILITY of your USE KOLYNOS, pleck In ihmtfa afttr'W fall bid caused her te keep Bramble ln check for the first few minutes. But she couldn't forget that he had dared te bellere the very worst of -her and te let her see thnt he believed It. Google Goegle eyes! She smiled exultantly erer her neuldgr. Ne was still in the saddle, close te Bramble's heels. Ills gate was straight before him along the read and he was riding with a loose rein which speedily sent Ontipede Inte the lend. Foel 1 He meant rave. Hhe let Uramble baye his head and rdie led the way. Beth horses were breadline" hard new, for the read had a slijrht up grade. But at the top of the hill. where prudence comprlled her te pull In, he passed her in full stride, down mmmmmm. mmLmmmlgmm imimm iMi a slight declivity,-' twvlnf back la bit sadATe but, 'by seme miracle, keeping his seat. Bue followed, rather alarmed at his desperateness, for n fall here at this speed meant dangerous injury. At the top of the next rise she caught him nt the crossroads, both hones breathing heavily. "Are you trying te kill yourself?" (?h shouted. He merely shook his head, and took a new grip of the reins, "Which way?" he gusped. "Heme If you're bent en committing suicide." "Lend en!" he muttered with a ges ture of his bend. xwsmmm v$ji mamt,uv .?, (V. you- s$2M! "' B7rV'i4rW'i Did 4? Welf er " fc n.llMI.' T. .1111 I.. "I don't want te see you kill yi seir." "Don't you? I thought you dld.", "xeu needn't ne nn inier, iete i .. . uacu. . v ".e. ' wiUMWi uniting ler Her ft-ft i1 l, .! Ilia 1,u.t.. Inf.. Ik loaaiaei in. .it; i.i.m ..." .1' n j.v i .in ..cavH i Hanks of IiIn li'TH' nnd she followed!5 I Hew he retnnlncMj upright with such 1 sent wns n nivs'Ty. ,for h" swayed da"- I jteretiHly in bis saddle nnd she net lead for the fli ft- tlmn thnt bis' right ara hung motionless nt his slde. Foel I He had been hurt, tee. , Te He Continued Tomorrow Latere Economy srmmmm Special for Philadelphia and Vicinity Fancy Winter POTATOES 150 lb Sack Suitable for Winter Storage FANCY SELECTED Dez. A&P FLOUR U-Lb. Bag PEACHES 29c APJELLY Pkg UNEEDA BISCUIT 9Jc Butter aAC I VanOla ,, aj, d Thins lb 0 wafers m 5 Chocolate Ccceanut lb ruffs tan Can fORiM Brannad TOMATOES I PEAS . . . Enameled Bread Bexes IN OS- WTH GOLD lTEI.s"A,;!i;rn.,..,.. . VAUIr lASff PUMPKIN Evaporated 1Y1 1 L IV I A A lie Ei J-fle -.-.,' Can Tail Everyday," Berden's or Carnation w l0 TLi. T ' inr",'ax KED CIRCL COFFEE Yeu I enjoy it full-bodied trength-.tte delightful aroma Z taJi3f'i ft If a the eiggest coffee value in town at lb 1 M m m m " f: fcf! l 4 A ii r i U.S.A. 1 . IV irf&''.jifcflaft sw... .. . . .. ; i sui)v;u::.l..iiu...V'