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~m, .m 1 n.m m“w :mi i i mm mm mm m mwmww mmwm 13 T unm i mmmw 1 < DM mmum«mm muu m - b 4 is for your good—a young fellow must chance—his future—but can’t you stay , darling—and work toward it—quiet- < it here, ly—just us. I haven't wanted you to know if, dearest, but it is breaking my heart to move it i mmm m m mflm«mm in her life shed and all in a volley, & reve- Jation out of the blue. “Oh, John—must we—must we—of course, TP'HERE were more tears than she had ever Gladys was so unconsciously keyed to attract all who came within her orb— know have his back hecdcmngu:hcpcud—cyoungv husband had to watch his p’'s and ¢’s. she made the flight in an air- plane; and she established herself as N in a four-mile race. —By Fannie Hurst xmnmm:w 2 mnm »»n mau WomenAlways Young pinned all over her blouse; American woian’s record long champion woman swimmer i mmemmN It gt ¢ _mm MW % i 138 i ; and if the sufficient return for his labor. Christmas-tree cutting may bring the farmer n 1 mmmmmm 5 [ PR e s S 4 .mfim " ahapden ] it mmuw mwm mw. sif m m“m IR i e wmmm sl 11 12 o1 muammW mmm mmw mmm u.u-mm m T mumm%gm mm,mmw Mm_udu“mm mm,mMmumwm i crooked Christmas Tree Cutting to Aid Woodlot. antastic WM MM“M There are two or three points in favor of local trees. They are generally fresher and re- tain their leaves better than earlier- g £ g : J [} m. w L} G > < : E ders taken. If the trees are cut from crowded stands as a thinning operation, farmer can get trees had to be of glutted markets. mum» w“mm T . N.mum F Wm mmumw t mm ,mmmmmwn A First-Run Story of Persistent Love by the HE fact that he was married to Gladys Cowper was to remain a phenomenon to John Bayley. That the lovely Gladys should ever have found in him sufficient attributes to claim not only It gave him pause and e that Gladys complained. Of course, they past years talked and planned for a future, but there was of course, the unfore- Highest Paid Short-Story Writer in the World. having won a wife u. MAN had to justif bition. A e mmmmmmmm It S k Gladys, before her marriage, iad been the center of a group of youths eager to provide her with more than John could. She had lived It gave a man pause to have come into the vast inheritance of a creature of this irre- First of all, Gladys, above everything, was sistible love-of-life. so alive. She radiated a vitality that seemed even in the second and third year following their marriage was to remain a miracle in the eyes of John. to demand so much more than the ‘sedentary life in a cottage which the young clerk in a for sn increase of from fifty to seventy-five .oodtmnaenudha,theremnotmw attitude either rancor or bitierness. Just a wistfulness, and it was that wistfulness which, somehow, broke John’s heart, and at the same dollars a month. Unless her girlhood so recklessly in the spirit of dance, more than that, it gave him the urge of am- something frighteningly indeterminate about large wholesale floral and tree nursery was able frivolity, and adorable nonsense! her interest but her love was something that to provide her.