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5 A¥Woman's Cruclty Wounds Hugh Grantland, * 1 tgok the last diary of Hugh Gran@and's dead mother which le held Out to me, and ad t words from Sacross a grave which had wounfled him so sorely, *“1 A&m gricvoualy .. 1in Hugh—" the word st have a(rurz at Nim 1Ke livin 18— | “Alwgys 1 1 fou m, but he {s&epaying my devotion and sac rifice t 'wort of with {tAd base sratifhac. 1 that 1 ha cryclfy m 1 my I band the cBurse took toward the boy Thoufh my heart is breaking T must ackn@wledge that he has given Hugh only Justic 1 1foked up from Lonk at HughlGrantland's anguished face, CARG oW rheiteve your mother | wrote this;" 1 asked incredulously. “How can'T help it * 1 4 he sa hopeless! “It s her handwriting exactly. | The words which frrepressibly came from the lips of that iniml- table heroine, Flips Montague, as she regarded her Merton, almost ) eacaped. me, “You poor feckless heart, but | dub,” I murmured in m aloud T only said: 18 there anything ke this in any other part of her diary? | “I do not think 80" he answered. | “Make sure of t!" T snapped, for his maaculine obtruseness frritatéd me. | “May I look through this one?” “YWhy do you ask?" he said re- proachtully, as I went back to the book, comparing the rest of it care- fully with thosa 'last crue] eentences. The handwriting of both s appar- ently identical; but no woman with any intuition could have failed to that two souls as unlike as the | poles were sponsors respectively rm-k the main part of the diary and this | inecongruous last paragraph. ; “Wen?" I asked almost belliger- ently as he closed the last book of the plle. | " he slghed, It ts s0 strang ] “Bvery other book is fllled with reference to her love for me, her longing to see me. Do you sup-| pose she lost her mind before ‘she fe’s Confessional Adele Garrison's New Uhase of | REVELATIONS OF A WIFE | peratively. | this at once.” ; your mother's love a second, even thasd Can't you sec 18 a forgery? It is a clever I'll grant, as far as the work- Manship goes, but exceedingly stupld otherw! But a jealous woman always loses her perspective | when she starts out to do a deapic- | able piece of work like lous woman!” he in puzzied fashion, | “Of course,” | answored, “with that most horrible of all jealousies, that of t . N0t you see that your hated the memory of your mother that she be ing the person she loved bes lled when she told you tl room was as your r or Any woman could tell you th a carefully staged scene, Bha mea to lacerate your feclings in every way she couid.” | ‘But the handwriting!” he sald obstinately i Simply showg that ehe is an ex- tremely clever forger,” 1 retorted, “I'll undertake to prove it to you when we get out of here” “We Must Get Out.” 7 How near that proof was T had |14, no idea, but the sound eof my voice | 14 uttering the last words, sent a sud- | 17 den terri{ying idea into my brain.! g Unttl T saw that carefully arranged | : room of Hugh's dead mother, T had considered his stepmother's leaving of the keys as simply a clever ges- | op ture establishing, as Lilllan said, an | g5 alibl for herself, it anything should | happen to Hugh while he was in| Tyndan. But now I went back over | her conversation of that day. In|g loud tones, 8o that anyone in an-| other room could hear, she had set | forth a lure for Hugh to come to| this empty house, and by mentioning | 5 the letter which I had dropped, she | zg probably had thought I was given| 4o an incentive to accompany him.| .y 21 But why? bt 1 sprang to my feet in sudden | ; panic. 4 “Throw those tilngs in the box and bring it with you,” T said im- | “Do not stop to burn|;, them here. We must get out o." R LS T Horizontal Rold, Custodian of a . To make poss Calm, . Born . To stuff, . Pastry. Sixth note In scale. . Net weights of containers. . Measures of area. Temale sheep. Quiet, . Silk worm. Point of compass . To be victor. . Social insect. . Part of verb to be. Halr dye. To command . Neuter pronoun. . Moose. . Reglon. Variant of *a . Metal in rock. . Wrenched. . To profte . Portion of a church . Fashions. . A pointed missile, To smear with resin NEW BRITAIN ° HEE 4 aEE L 1 BT 9] WII§= DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY BEGIN HERID TODAY Parbara Hawley, o5, jilts her fi- ance, Bruce Reyrold inl g a ob on the New Tritain Telegraph to seo lfe, Adventurc b roadhouse where @ prominent mas Kills Nimself. By a red scarf Bar ra conncets Lydia Stacy, wealthy widow, with the case Mrs, 8tacy likes Bruee. He gepols her ady cel L0 she s Andrew MeDrarmott, editor of the Tele graph, that Vale Mruce’ | realty firm, is crocked. As though to bear this out, Munners, Bruce's conds, ds Vieletta Cranby, tory girl. Barbara, who unknowing- partner, Iy helped the match through her “Jovelorn' eolumn, s Ieft just a Itfle bitter by this. She plunges {Into lier work. At a comvention she golf mound Upon. Reproves . Female horses . Friend. Lair. Reverential fear Tinsmiths. 4. Disfigured 5. Constellation 7. Tendon Finished. To remarry. Beverage Part of verh to b . Grain. Exchanges. Helpine. Elnders, Swayed. Kegs. Before, Lawyer's charg Toex (pl). Boggy land. | To snip. To fail to hit, | Granted facts, Self. Female of the fallow daer. 3ODIN 15, 1920 © 1925 by NEA § topher, ie writer, whose name was signed to the letter of. fering her the porltion, has his of- lce there, Tiob seldom sees th nost of his lacks or at NOW s her Christopher office, us he tuff o th P'alm Bea GO ON WITH THI CHAPTER XLVII wril o Adiron- STORY On Mon ruing, Rarbar first call at the maga- t was at the head of g of & an old brownstone Luilding, Barbara look- ed ubout her us she i 1 the stalr . The first room she entered was more reassuring, 11 mahogany 1 of typlsts, ¥ looked up as Tarbara en. sto0d near the door for d a thic desks and a carpet, s No one terod. S NoTERH FRVICE INC, St the end of his desk, Barbara sat| down | “Well, well, Misa Hawley, I'm ad ta meet you, How's Broudwa seen treating you?" “Vory well, ‘1 suppose, Tut 1'% [ carcely met it I'm to go to work today, am 1 not?" Miller ralsed his eyel s, what? Well, so mu yowll find your in your own offiec waiting 1t “Betsy PPurnicall will ey you | until you get the run of things| here. You'll find her a good scout, it yon don't mind old malde. | with us for ten years and in the| business for twenty, After o few days, Adesk you. you can bhegin with stage interviews, Of course, you've done enough of the to| know how to go about it. Never | any frouble them. mnatural- | to fizht off the ac- | tors that want te e them.” Barbara smiled. stage folk | getting y. Trouble is are never press T've learned.” | Miller interrupted. “Another | thing. Miss Ha T've read a good deal of theater stuft in vour heme town paper and liked | it. But T've also noticed a regretta- | ble tendency fn you to tell the fruth at all costs, Used to wonder | how the paper 16t some of your re- views get by, Pretty peppery, | i weren't you, sometimes?” “ Barbara answered hotly. “The ! Telegraph was rather an indepen- | Aent newepaper, Mr. Miller, That's | one reason 1 liked to work for it. Mr. MeDermott would print any- thing that was real news, no mat- | ter whom it hit.” The man smiled. “Must have | been in Ttopa.” | man sat laoking at her over ! his black eigar for some moments, | a gleam of amusement in his eyes. | Then he arose. “U'll take von to vour office and introduce you to | Miss Furnicall.” i They passed down a corridor fo | a row of small glass-enclosed ’ rooms. Miller led the way down | { the row until they came to one in | | which a woman was operating a | fypewriter at breakneck speed. ¥er | hands dropped she from the turned to face machine ! and them as| k) " v h dled? T could almost hope— |%.Y fairly ran to the door, and| gl oy 2. To damage. Jealouty's’ Rovengs turried the Knob, ~But b would notlge mg yiete, 4. Bone. Barbara perched herself on the corner of the desk in front of Miss Furnhvall. She noted the worn faceof | “Fiddiesticks!" I exclaimed rude- | open. “"' was locked upon the|zc" afinute organic unit 67, § Ainote ikcale the older woman. “Haven't yv cnjo sed living here,” she asked. Jy: and T took a maliclous pleasure | other stde. 58 eagle in seeing his astonished look. “I| (Copyright, 1 by Newspaper | g ,rn"m‘fw seex Manners and has him arrest- a moment, nervously twisting could shake yqu," I went on, “for Feptiraigeryloe, Inc.) {91, Mechanlcal drawing ed He implicatcs Bruce. By con-| button on ieor coat. Then he went | . b3 Hen fruit. i . fronting Mrs. tacy with the red quickly forward and spoke to the| | g4 5 searf Darbara persuades her to! woman at the neares e sy testify for Bruce and this wins his' T shouid like to s to the | 66. Compartment in a stabi peshingen a s AL R L e D shey ! S e rant fcDermott's daughter, Faney, lex.”” She did not ask for Harvey| Yert'cal who shares Barbara’s apartment, Christoy \ ’ 1. Inteetion of nouns, weds Jerome Ball, man abont town, The young woman nodded to al | 2. Halt an em § and goes to Chicago. Larbara, lonc- seat and left the room. Soon s An intimate story of innermost| First, T knew that you still loved | 3. Ventllating machine 1y, s further dipressed when a retnrned an le Barbara fnfo an in- | me, for no onc would have put her-| 4 Wild goat. child is' born to Violeita and Bruce. ner ofice. Here the carpet was still emotiona revealed in private letters) caif yn a position where there were| 5 Boer. 8he aceep a job on “Foot- thicker and the mahogany still rich- " e N Pt AL-{1eN:chances to one that she was ¢ Point of compass. gl a w York theatrical | er than in the outer room. HETE e WRITTE M EA AL [&oing straight to death, would have| g Yoy and me. magazine, and on arriving in New “Mr. Miller,” sald the stenog- DEN PRESCOTT 70 PAULA | done what you did for me, unless she | g corded cloth. | York calls up Tab Jeifrics, former | raphor. She went out, e | thought the world would be a howl- | police reporter of the Telegraph. Miller A heavy-jowled PERIER, BUT NEVER M'.\"T |ing wiledrness without the one she | —— e and Boh go to a show bright-eyed man, He m-_l not Hsrln H wos trying to save. o el e a valls|pets s, furhit = in wssing the Iootlights o Barbara approached, but nodded am going to write you a letter, A e A o being rich in vitamins . a valu- | pets urniture, and other rub. | o\ = a 2 2, et et . it at : '.d,,”s,,mfh e it 'L‘T]"‘;; ’hy“["f"" 50 ‘;"" rAther €80 ahin agset to the breakfast menu of bish. Sween fha cobwebs from the Barbara asks if Harvey C cheerily and pointe to a chalr E " Sell | tistical, but it is not s0 muc 0, & 0 el qas U g en arfant coward. 1 expect You 10 [ dear. when I tell you that at the|® Child Who must carry luncheon to dark corners and from the dust- = s — have known this for many years but | same instant T knew you wera the | 20000 e Iiiclieptramen i o } it 1s ‘only witfiin the last weck OF | one woman who had stayed in my | Sponge cake n'”l'im-"v s up stale e pen the :vnmm and let in the ! two that I really knew myself to be | hoart, while othersyes all others | "POPEe c3ke to advantage. inshine, — Sunshine |5 the best & caieal —have come and gone, | Sponge Cake Pudding germieide that naty aiies One goes on sometimes for all| pauln, T did not intend to write! T7OI¥E th narrow slices of 1."'.“. ¥our rugs, carpet and matting one's ‘lite, not knowing what one lyou. this when 1 commenced this|SPONS2 cake, '3 cup peach or apri.)out and clean them thoroughly. | really is. But them, to some of us, |jetter, but, having written ft, 1 am cot jam, 2 cups hoiled custard | Scrub t Vv‘ floors and woodwork, | an inktant comes when one really | going to let it atand, * 2 | Cut the sponge cake in picces the Soap and hot water and a little | tagss{htarnily and then ha fndslout|| S do nat feel that T.am wronging |57 o cnaps of ) lady CASsertiRusiax Sodn are the jencmics of ! that all his years have been a UVINg | Leslie, for T have always known tha Spread each piece with jam and put dirt. Pl p the rat holes and | | lie. she was too good for T | Into a deep dish. ~Pour over boiled the mice holes. Putty and paint the | ! p 19N good 1 me. She W g hree | erack: eep vers b | This that T have just Written 18 should have married a man hk" ard and let stand two or three cracks to keep vermin from breed- the ezcuse 1 must give for Writing | Karl Whitney, and I—well, my dear | 00T OF Unil the cake absorbe the jing el you at all. T want to a a it vou woud mave raq T dear| custard. Serve with or without| A fresh coat of wWhitowash appitea | ‘ Freat favor . I'want you, Pau should have marricd you g [Eh npEil arcam S fo the cellar walls will add to the | ¢ qpp qrasnt WATCHER |1t isn't often T have a chaneo to see | persutde your producers 1o give Up 1 love Leslie In quite a different | Dolled Cunard Appeatance of your cellar and| (py THORNTON W. BURGESS) |him in broad daylight. 1 don't that sequence from “Hot Steel” that | way than the love T have for you. |, oo, bs Milk. volk freshen ft up. Tnapect the plumb-| o o on™ Gienco scorets oft are| think he saw me. lle aidn't act| they are going to take at the mill i : T YOU. sauspoon salt, 13 cup s ing and keep the pipes free from! 08 1 I will personally reimburse them for all they have paid out and all the loss they have & ned in the pie- ture, In fact, I am willing to pay almost anything if they will just drop the whole matter. Please, Paula, do not think T am sily, but I've had a long time to think since that accident occurred at the mill just two weeks ago. 1 have died a hundred deaths since them, for I saw so many things in that | atant when you pulled me bhack a certaln and horrible death, from T know she is one of God's good women and she has made sacrifices for unworthy me that I belicye D oon vanilia. Scald milk in double hoi! egg yolks sligh ith tha other woman on earth would have 5 > Slowl Ada i heeiing made for any man, much 1-8s a dis- | . 3 7 § 4 b 3 1283 = | eoi rn to double hotler | reputable being like me, She con given to any other swoman, to you Gogd God, wiat cannot send a (Copyright, 192 am T writing? 1 ter like this-- NEA Service, Ine.) TOMORROW: Night Letter from John Alden Preseott to Paula Perler, | = = CULOB CUT-QUT§ e The Three Lemons THE SLAVE'S DECEPTION This is on . has lost his Ry cutting out saving the paper dolls, boyw s will sovn have| a whole set t0 act out the story. l Your Health ot water until mix- spoon. Stir constant- cnoking to make the cus- from heat het over ghi, 1026, NEA Service, Tne.) | e g | How to Keep It— Causes of Iliness (BY DR, HUGH §. CUMMING) Surgeon General U, §. Public Health Service In considering sanitation, the T.‘:".fi'fi,“: Wfo thia terrible dleguise. | |y iproom s one of the most impor- fg.s o TEanEed NEn Rud SheCBORTE ) e Bathecern mvould et Tiansilons the ®ays he kept in a eloan and sanitary A i condition, 1¢ vou tive in a district | The most beautifyl jewels in the | (1, rq toitets are outside the house, Flom were brought to ornament | h wiaces should be kept screened | Ma Y:" &la krinkled fingers againet flies | nest sitks were sought for 74 g ponjeve batter sanitary con- AIL the court bustled {0 0ng wo will provide plenty of PuL WAkl ADOnR d PAac for sleeping quarters. It |!; g unhealthful for more than two per dress s brown and ) one 4o gecupy a bedroom 10 feet 1 girdle and band 18 {0, 4q oot wide, and 10 feet high. | P | A bedroom that does not possess . 1026, Aesociated | ingow space to the extent of at Aorsiang) Inast one-fourth the floor epace s ur ca Menus for the Family :: summer and { | hours is not he (BY SI reakfast ], thin ER MARY) | wed dried peaches |se Am, mbled ere and of themselves. ematoes to Tomatoes al pep tart mup a bit ees of cggs | will bear watehing, ham | ahould satisfactory. A bedroom so lo- ted as not to permit the keeping bedroom windows open both in winter during slecping | thiul 1f you have & back yard, it de- rves attention, The garbage pail | A garbage pail | be of metal, it should be| | watertigi 1 it should always be | kept covered Remember, it is the open garbage can that attracts man's | enemine rat the gy. Waste onee | paper end o bbish “hould not baked | b 1te ulate In the back whole | yard, Rut should be kept g & proper container, so that it be frequently and easlly remove the a complete survey belng a Clean {t from cellar to roof ris. repatr all you of | useless and dust collecting car- | learned, And knowledge thus is often earned. -—-0ld Mother Nature. rubbish, i old tin cans, broken A ot Ao ook ¥aTd | parmor Brown's boy knows the not throw the collected waste fntg( (FUth of 1 Long ago he learnad {18 alry or on {16 vacant lot. pos (1% through expericnce; 8o when he he Green Forest he has a way son: ne ani o is in the Green Forest he has a way Vil el homes are the bullding material ont | 0 §landing or sittlng quietly for e o e e i periods Things come ch a healtny world may be | d ISHE BRI ) you that you cannol go (o, savs s I T ) e, and in this he fs right. He knows that often when you canmot New Oxford see br hear any of the little people of the Green Iores or the Green Meadows some of them may be ver, near. If they haven't seen you the eurest way of secing them is to 3 | 1'») & | “I believe that was Yowler the Bob 2 'ofl‘" thought Farmer Brown's Boy. | keep perfectly still. Then unles { they happen to get your scent, to | An oxford that is graceful and|smell you, they are almost sure to | decorative as well as practical {8 this | snow themselves. Even when they one with a few cut-out sections the fastening to break the monot The oxford is belng worn with ored and sport clothes in preference At know you are about they often wiil forget or think you have moved on | providing you keep perfeetly still. - All this Farmer Brown's boy |18 e esamer oD, | knows. 1t 1A one reason he knows so much about Lis furrcd and [time he has been a silent wateher. Many children arecom= | He has found that it pays. So it| He was still standing there when | Vall. Before they left, she had laining of Headache, |was that after leaving the Deer| Yowler returned and enarled at him. | \\'r|Hr,\|3 [3 ?'hnck for the first everishness, Stomach | “yarg” whers Lightféot and his| Reddy waited only long enough to| MONth's rent. Troubles and Irregular | tamily were doing nicely despite the | make sure that Yowler meant what| “My own apartment is not far }::;" I"'“;’mw;( ‘:n';; | crust on the snow. he siopped every |he said. Then With a grin Reddy | from here” said Miss Furnivall, as little way and stood motionless sllent while he and waited and tened knew what MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POW- DERS would do for their children no family looked d 1 e he witbouy | At last he reached a clump of them for use when need- | YOUNE hemlock trecs, and as he TAADE BARR o4 8o pleasant to take | Peered out from the midst of thes PONT ACCEPT and 30 effective that | he saw, or thought he saw, a brown- ANYSUBSTITUTE mothers who once use | igh form sneak out of sight them alware tell others abont them, “I believe that was Yowler the Atall Dru Triai Pa. PRER. { ooy Oat™ ¢ &ddress Mother Gray Co., Le Koy N ¥ {00 hought Yarmer Brown's “Yes, #ir, 1 do believe it was. that way. Tl watch here a while and sce what happens.’ Nothing happened for a long time. { they entered. Barbara saw heavy tortoise that &he tore ! spectacles and ber | In fact, Farmer Brown's boy had 1ips were thin, about decided that wuiting thera| Miller introduced them and Miss | was wasting time and that he woulj | Furnivall gave Barbara a smile mote ¢ But before he moved | that lit up her face surprisingly. he looked carcfully as far as he “fhow Miss Hawley the ropes, could see hetween the trees, There | Dlease, Betsy,” said Miller. “She was Yowler returning. Brown's boy chuckled silent notcd how Yowler sneaked along when there was no ono about to see him so far as he knew. “He is a natural born sneak,” thought ‘armer Rrown's boy. I wonder {what he is up to here?” | Yowler came sneaking along un- til a little way in front of where Farmer Brown's boy was standing. Then lie stopped and crouched, his oyes fixed on a certain spot. His stub of a t which is hardly enongh of a tail to be called a t twiteched. Once in a while he would turn his head to glare all around. Then he would fix his eyes on that artieular £p very soffly, began to in Finally forward and ch the crust at that point. But lie didn't scratch long. Then he resumed his watching. “That s queer,” thoukht Farmer Brown's boy. “Why ia he eo inter- ested in that particular place?” Presently he saw Reddy Fox com- ¢ along through the Green Forest. Very handsome Reddy looked, for his coat never was finer and his tail never bigger, Yowler had dls- appeared just before Reddy came In | sight. As Reddy drew near the place Yowler had been watching he stopped so suddenly that one black paw was held up in the air. He cocked his head to one side and lis- tened, his black ears pricked for- {ward. It was plain that he heard something, and as he was | stredght at the spot where Yowler | had been scratching it was a safe! | guess that whatever he heard was under the snow right there. | started on stralght toward Farmer Brown'’s boy Just before he reached those hemlock trees a Merry 1 Breeze happened along and carried the scent of Farmer Brown's boy straight to Reddy's little black Without seeming to hurry Reddy appeared to melt away, so quickly did he disappear, and he was still grinning. (Copyright, 1926, by T. W. Burgese) « < ——— looking | has come to learn Broadway as is. She's going to do the ‘Tea for Two' | column and some futerviews.” | Miss Furnivall smiled again at| | Barbara, as Miller left. the room. | “Are you all alone in New York, | | Miss Hawley? Have you found a | place to 1ive | “No. 1 really haven't looked yet. | T'm at the Carimore, but T meant | to look for a small apartment this | afternoon."” | “The Carlmore! You ean't tay ! thers very long, 1@less you wish | il | to spend a fortune. T know a girl | who is forced fo sublet her apart- | ment in Fiffy-firet street. furnished, | at a very low price. Would you | like to look at {t? Tt's a two-room | kitchenette. I don't think you'd | want to live in a boarding house, | would you?” | “Oh, no, if T can afford anythinz olse. I've never lived in a board- ing house, except st college, and | that was not so bad. T should think it would be awful in New York." Miss Furnivall nodded. “At noon Tl run over with you to look at it, it you Nk began to explain the me- chanism of the Footlights staft to ‘Barbara, o0 The apartment proved to be sin- gularly attractive, TIts tenant, a pretty girl playing in a Broadway hit, had been drafted to travel with a roand company, shortly after she signed the lease. | " Barbara made some quick com- | putations. “I think it will do ad- | mirably,”” she sald to Miss, Furni- | they were on their way back to the office. “T hope you will come to see me sometimes. You should itry to get acquainted with as many peo- ple as you can. New York'is a very lonely eity.” Barbara glanced at the worn face of the older woman. hen they| Everyone is going wild over O- reached the office, she followed | Joys. Broadway was everjoyed; Miss Furnivall into her ofice and rnwl} be, tos. Six O-Joy Waters | perched herself on the eorper of for & dime at druggists, . T — - Lang | Barbara, | Every thing the desk. Miss Furnivali cout and sl her hat opposite removed dowp “Haven't hare, Mi seems a0 you enfoyed 1irin Furnivall? New York i a glorious place to me, a person coull wish for Is hieve, just walting to be grasped plays, hoeks, musle, interesting friends, contaets with people of | many nations, I s#hould think the variety would never fafly Miss Furnivall loeked rulght “1 knov. It ue:d to secm it way to me, twenty yeurs ngo. Nut now it's just a wilderners, The more people hero, the more strange ays and musie and all the glitter pall on one after a time 1t's a sad thing that human nature 1s ay fekle in its pleasuren as in ds loves, But few of us can enjoy the hooof ame time Barbara frownad hope it won't b I'm going to hs things for any ten “Oh, bt 1 that way with me, interest g onto my as long as 1 can,” Miss Furnivall nedded. “YVes. an long as vou can, That's all anyone {can do sarbara rose nervously. The of- flee was beeom lieayy gloom. Miss Furnivall frask of her uncxpected smiles girl. “Don’t mind me. 1 don't mean to croak. You'rs young and have everything alicad of you Barbara smiled and g ed Migs Furni hand. “You've been very good to take an inierest in me and my apartment. 1 hope Wu shall be very good “'Of course, we 8 friends.” The second and third day at t} Footlights ofice passed much as the first. Barbara read the ex- change papers that came 1o the of- fiee, learned the type style baok of the plant by heart and began (o feel that her feet were on firm ground again. Miller had paid no further atten- eye tion to Irer. Miss J'urniva'l kindness itself, cxplaining tem to Barbara and doinz n {small favors with a half-thnid air. Barbara bhegan to feel genuine fond of her. On the cvening of the third day bara made ready fo le 1 Carimore. Her lug ahead to the new ment. T she came down into ti nine o'clock to ch aid and her turne hara went to the telephone swi board, “If you have a cail for m will you pieasc glve this number She handed the girl a card with the new number and address, had heen ey Bob had nof ood his promise to telephone her. ' Sorbara unlocked the door “° the kitehen te and switehed lights. The place was very atira tive by lamplight, with fts It grand plano, its rich rugs and panel of gay tapestry against one wall. The fable sugaested tete a-tetes and the armechair hespoke long, comfortable conversations. In the tiny kitchen the cquip [ ment was vomplete, Barbara ran to ! and called the Leader-1lcrald, “Bob,” she sald a moment later “l have a home of my own and I'm dying to entertain body. Will you come to dinner with s telephone ome ure thing, PRabe. 2nd sinc vou're dying to entertain, 1 have a friend you'd like to meet. all we both come “Indeed, s, One man's good, but two are hetter,” Bob chuckled. “Well, it'l) be a little surprise for you. We'll be there at seven o'clock. (To Be Continued) & ' FANNY says | 01838 ot mes sevice e | When a wife mends a hole in her hushand's pocket, he's usvally appre- clative enough to wonder how she knew it was there. CORNS CURED FOR 10 GENTS Why Suffer With Corns—Pay Dime—Pain Stops And Out Comes Corn. RESULTS GUARANTEED NEWEST, BEST REMEDY No bulky doughnut pads or burning acide—get an envelope of 0-Joy Corn Wafers for a dime. Thin as paper, press one on the corn with lh?-r and it _sticks there. Shoes don’t hurt. Pain is gone immediately. Dance if you wish, no bother, fuss or danger. Later, in the bath, sut comes corn, callous, roots and all. Like magic.