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]9-)-’ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, less in sudden surge of in congress.’” She s the and Morgan county but intoxieation, {you ugree, Sabre? owner most passionate desive Lo take her in [ “If that's his name,” Sahre his arms; and her lips to crush | Mr glanced to fragmentd the harriers of conduct [him and compressed his 1ips he had in damnable sophistries ereet sadd shortly, He left the ed; and In her cars to breathe, “You beloved to me! Honor, virtue, rectitude--wards, words, words, words the foundations of the ning, so we have He called self, and hi shaken by that most sl thickly, “I'Il have it grows too hard for tell me.” And suddenly, from its - Aik For : par’i Horlicks The ORIGINAL Malted Milk . ot sald hoy of a 1,600 at | farm, where and coffee” are grown The Morgun county I.'h" had demonstrated on Tsue), | that rural dife could b |vnm|d: and attractive, well | profitable and that proposed to| | g0 to congress in the hope that more [substantial recognition might he SR Tl | corded fellow ruralists Hms but [ Alhany Momber OF The Fair Sex 1 dom't want lo atay long | aat | gress,” she said, “but 1 It over| Weeks In To Seck |80 to Washington at this when T P fthe farmer is so much in need of s | sistance" everything Spring Time Advice For Tired Mothers Mothers who are tired and run down by tho strain of family car bufld strength and regain normal health by taking Pather John's Medi. cine which i all pure, wholesome i nourishment. The food elements which this old fashioned preseription containd are so prepared that they are quickly faken up by a system weakened and run down, There I8 no false stimulation in Father John's Medicine, It is pure, on 1fartine sharply sugnr are [ ne sl farm room woman her el (Contiy WOMAN FARER honesty, in Our Neat darling, Heloved, et world go spin | are us as 4 enn v . she love terribly selt answered e most | The “Food-Drink" for All Ages. Quick Lunch at Home, Office,and | Fountains, Ask for HORLICK'S. | #er-Avoid Imitations & Substitutes B con FrY fieree o thig vou, he do want to Heat Congr time Justice, WEGIN HERE TODAY in one week life Albany, Ala, April © A wonian Mea, ovars that he has rut mpathy, s MARK & himucl? of Prosi MAD hin ponio tompuranie the nrm of Foroane Yiast and 5 hy Jenlousy and a partnarship, promised to im, 16 luter promived (o an associate, TWYNING, Budidenly one wha underatands Nin returna to his life, This is - NONA, an old sweethenrt, now the wife Sho admita she Is y and says sho cho wrong ght to have married GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER VII, 1. Whose life was Nona living? He had asked her, “Tell me you and Tybar." “Marke, 1 think wonderful person t docs everything | And e does ecerything best.' And every hody admires him and everybody likes him. You've no idea. You've no idea how he wins everybody he meets, I’eople will do anything for him. They love him. Well, you've only got to look at him, haven't you? Or hear him talk? I think there's never been any one so utterly captivating as Tony is to look at and to hear.” Most engagingly, with such words, she had presented him: one that passed through life airily, exquisite- ly; much fairy-gifted at his cradle about Tony's the ever was, most He simply and until the next one takes his faney, and he does it quite openly before me, in my house, and tells me what 1 ean't see hefore my own eyes just for the love of seeing the suffering it EIves me You saw that Mrs, Win- fred. He's done with her now. And he's as shameless about me with them as he s about them with me And what he loves above all is the way 1 take it; 1 1 can take it in no other way, You sce 1 wonit, 1 will not, Marko, let these women of his see-—or let anyone in the world suspect-—that I-—that I suf- fer. So when we are together Lefore people 1 keep up the gay way we always show together. He loves it; it's deliclous to him, because it's a game played over the torture under- neath, And I won't do any other way, Marko. I will keep my face to the world—I won't have anyone pity me." “T pity you,” he had “Ah, you . . 'y PART THREE. 1l CHAPTER 1. I. But life goes on without the small- est regard for individual preoccupa- tions. ou may take up what atti- tude you like towards it or, with the majority, you may take up no atti- safd. wholesome nourishment. Guaranteed free 1 alcoha! or dangerous drugs FOR COUGHS AND COLDS go back one you've done, Tt may take only a min- or in the saying, but it's done, d, for all your life, perhaps for the whole of someone else's life as well. That's terrific, Non on. You second done, the doi or to go single you've ute in wrong, Nona, No com- round were's right and Nothing else in between promise. No wauy of getting them or over them You must be either one thing or the other. Once we took a step towards wrong, there it is forever, and all its horrible things with it—deceit, concealment, false- hood, subterfuge, pretence: vile and beastly things like that. I couldn't endure them; and I much less could endure thinking T had caused you to suffer them. And then on through armory discharged events upon him. In next wpon the waorld CHAPTER 1 the week one I On Sab he glanced fo- wards it, 5 A letter from Nona He turned it over in his hands - the small neat seript. She never he fore had written to him at the office It bore the London postmark. Hhe would be writing from their town house. It wonld he to say she was coming back . .. But she wrote on the occ ons of her return; they just met . . . And she had never before written to the ofliec Mr. Fortune came into the room With him was a young man, a youth whose face was vaguely familiar Sabre; Twyning behind, “Ah, Sabre,” sald Mr. Fortune, *I am bringing in to you a new memher of our staff.” He indicated the young man beside him. “A new member but bearing an old name. A chip of the old block—the old Twyning black.” He smiled, stroking his whale-like front rathe though this pleasantry had proceeded from its depths and he was congratulating it The young man smiled. Twyning, cdging forward from the background also smiled, Al the smiles were ra- ther nervous. Sa immediate thought had been that it was an odd never re's two | farmer of Lress s lin u seat are up against Seton Fdmund in the lowe cighth Alabama distriet Mrs. Tmundson, ment declared that for maore tive nee = ). (TR | ) ; X == % 35 (S Z<F & wit = = bili ST, Lo Albany seeks a seat in con ‘to show lawmakers what farm ity sqnare voleanoes anid i v 18 Mrs candidate r honuse Le for the son, from James Fenimore | boaks in 80 in her annonnes } year “there is impera s real dirt A good reader will furmers| 13 letters at one glan wles, Hawalt has a luke of hot FOX —Thurs., Fri,, Sat, “GIRL FROM TOYLAND” A Beautiful Act Free Toys For Children take e LS CDR 5 ) 90N HIE critical stage of a woman's life usually comes between the years of 45and 55,and is often beset h annnoying symptoms such as nervousness irrita- ty, melancholia, heat Yoo At the Matinees D00 (T e = S= Zd 56 ©9; =5 NS R = flashes which producehead- ache and dizziness, and a sense of suffocation. Guard our health carefully, for if this period be passed over safely,many years of perfect health may be enjoyed. = == with gifts of beauty, charm, pre-emi- nence in all he touched; knowing no care, knowing no difficulty, knowing no obstacle, or danger, or fear, or ill- ness, or fatigue, or anything in life but gay and singing things, which touching, he made more bright, more tuneful yet; meeting no one, of whatever age or degree, but his charm was to that age or degree exactly touchad; captivating all, leading all, by all desired in leadership. Ior- tune's darling! “And, Marko,” s come to. “And word —- graceless. graceless. Without heart, Marko, without conscience, without mora without the smallest scrap of an ap- proach ‘to any moral principle. Mar- ko, that's an awful, a wicked, an abominable thing for a wife to say of her hushand. But he wouldn't mind a bit my telling you. Not a bit. He'd love it. He'd laugh. He'd utterly Jove to know he had stung me so much. And he'd utterly love to know he'd driven me to tell you. He'd think—he’d love like anything to drive me to do awful things. He's tried—especially these two years. He'd love to be able to point a finger at me and laugh and say, ‘Ah! Ha ha! Ah!" You know, he hasn't got any feelings at all—love or hate or anything else; and it simply amuses him beyond anything to arouse feel- ing in anybody else. There have been women all the time we've heen mar- ried and he simply amuses himself that mire of dishonor.—It's easy, it sounds rather fine, to say the world well lost for love; but honor, honor's not well lost for anything. You can't replace it. T couldn't—" The austere asylum of their pains. He looked back upon it as he had unfolded it. He looked forward across it as, most stern and bleak, it await- ed them. He cried with a sudden loudness, as though he protested, not before her, but before arbitrament in the high court of destiny, “But I cannot help you upward; I can only lcad you downward.” She said, “Upward, help me upward." Her gentle acquicscence! There swept upon him, as one reck- thing to have taken on young T | ing without mentioning it 4 ually to him. It was significant of his estrangement in the oflice. Mr. Fortune ceased to stroke the e-like front. “In point of fact, Subre, this very natural and pleasing desire of Twyning to have his son in the office, a desire which I am most ratified to support, is his first—what feeling of his feet in What was T ping is now in Yes. Good.” He paused before young Twyning. “Well, young man, now you've made your bow bhefore our literary adviser. T think we decided to call him Harold, eh, Twyning? Avoid confusion, don't cven RES = =TS A =R D% DOV ing? Ah, at partnership, § last had this is the Utterly, utterly Marko. You Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is especially adapted to help women through this crisis. It exercises a restorative in- fluence, tones and strengthens the system, and assists nature in the long weeks and months covering this period. It is prepared from medicinal roots and herbs, and contains no harmful drugs or narcotics. Its value is proven by many such letters as these: Dvn\-vr. Colo.—“T have taken Lydia M E. Pinkham's Vegetable (‘ompound L. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and it is all it claims to be and has and 1 can not tell you the good 1t has done me. It is good for young and old benefited me wonderfully. 1 had been and 1 always keep a bottle of it in the sick for eight months with a trouble which confined me to my bed and was house, for T am at that time of life when it calls for it. My hushand saw your — only able to he up part of the time, when ad. in the papers and said, *Yon have viend, Mrs. Smith, taken everything you can think of, now [ Pinkham's Vegetable want you {o take Lydia E. Pinkham's Compound and Wiver Pills. T was so 1 much henefited by the use of these medi- Vegetahle Compound!” So T let him get it, and I soon felt better, ‘Itook about six cines that T was able to be up and about in two weeks, T was at the Change of bottles.” T keep house and do all my own work and work out by the day and Life when I hegan taking the medicines feel fine now. 1 tell everyone about the and T passed over that time without any Vegetable Compound, for s0 many- of my trouble, Now T am hale and hearty and friends thought T would not get well.”— do all my housework.”—Mrs. Eywa Mrs. R. J. LINTON, 1850 West 33rd Ave, Curver, 705 E. 7th St,, Metropolis, IlL Denver, Colo. Mprs. L. writes: “l am convinced there is a difference in baking powder. I have been using any old powder for ten years but my cakes are 100 per cent better since | bought a can of Royal Baking Powder. I recom- mend it to any housewife who thinks she knows all about cake making with any kind of powder.” ROYAL BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure Contains No Alum “I THINK WE DECIDED TO CALL, HIM HAROLD; EH, TWYN- ING? etropolis, T11.—T have taken Lydia tude towards it but immerse yourself in the stupendous importance of your own affairs and disclaim any conneg- tion with life. 1t doesn't matter tup- pence to life. The year 1913 was magnificent, Tt was a deliciously thrilling and emo- tional year. A terrific and stupendous year. Many well-known people died It was naturally a year of strong partisanship. A year of violent feel- ings violently expressed; and amidst them, and becanse of them, Sabre found with new certainty that he had no violent feelings. It much affected his relations with those nearest to him-—with Mabel, with Mr. Fortune, and with Twyning. In those monthg, and in the months following, the year changing and ad- vancing in equal excitements and strong opinions through winter into spring, he found himself increasingly out of favor at The Precincts and in- creasingly estranged in his home. Like two Iliving in two empty houses: empty this end; empty that end. More frequently, for these es- trangements, appealed to him the places of his refuge: the room of his mind, that private chamber wherein, retired, he assembled the parts of his puzzles; that familiar garment in which, invested, he among the fraternity of his thoughts; the ecve- nings with Young Perch and old Mrs, Perch; the evenings with Mr. Far- ‘ s DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Most strongly of all called another Bk e e . . refuge; and this, because it called so strongly, he kept locked. Nona iCAN NYou BEAT THAT? 1T | 'VE ANSWERED THAT He said one day, “You see, there's PHONE TWICE NOW AND this, Nona. Life’s got one. We're in . the thing. 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