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29, 1926, uicksands of Love ’ CROSSWORD PUZZLE ‘1 Adele Garrison’s New Phase of s : —Revelations of a Wife 'EIIIEIHHI%HHH LI R | 1 11U [ 11| Madge and Edith Engage in & ve duc Verbal Tilt t fved most e oeyes of ) women CHADPTE Tlicn she spat on a finger, touched |have coffee,” Bhe spread a damp, |friend to friend, let me glve you a What dlsguising things words arc Edith Fairfax said. “Am 1 right in my conjecture that you think 1 been too officious about this apart- ment?" What she rieant was o ar different thing. Put into word it would not have been a solicitou: uery, but a “Ah! I've licked you on the at last You're simply wi now that you've Dicky saw this api tically selected 1t 1p here." I, in torn, in my heart letlon ot w capabie when one was sure it wou never be transiatcd into audil speech. But again there carne ine the new, surprlsing that it was not jealousy Jot, Wild meuning of t I was feeling vhat my outraged vanity dubbed ter colossal fmpertinence was s ing me, but T reaiized—and with fear at the knowledg or the passing moment at (1d not care whether not usband and the toward me with suc 1de were in Jove There was one about wh red Not for untold do mit Edith Fairtax to betrayal of my wo with the marsl resources, I manig lorrified, “Oh! 1dit] you imagine lon't know vou for finding this simply Dicky Do you know I Jependent upon you times 1 taunting, ruw meat out and pr before you came T had sald what I cringed at the nve soul 1S was reve to word wiich irious anger d or woman l¢ apparent s th cach however, ici thing, tremendously uld Ty ny fur s me 8o many it 1 wing this maga ieh W you 1 il But imy on yo your spirit strength.' I was quite 56 u, fo fonig talent peeeh, and 'rom the Pittshuraihe Sun OPENING OF THI BAZAAR TOMORTOW Lverything s tomorrow hazaar that Pittsbur war, when the other hi tied her over there, on such a s tonore The that in the o'd | 1 upon me there was an in- , however elsc held no tota of he 18 a gentle- promptly scized the her sweel of you to * she eaid, her voice re £oft Sonthern drawl s “lut you and Dicky nate what I have done. t talk about his lmposing Don't you realize that In » opened the door upon He gave me the hns changed me from a little ‘ulso ran to & real worker with a real place world! I couldn’t repay him n a thousand years!" had thought her a And dor upon me, this thing for m which miserdble smooth, few minutey her face was tigure vibrant wus voleln, 1 told m, protested pol only You already liciping him eo tight places. is fairly well es- have Wwo! repatd terfully And now the Wi him In over thin| 't it?! Ve “but an ald how secure o none of us hor chalns 1 was furfous at myself for leav- %0 open an opportunity for her vebuff me. It was as if she had il to me: “Hands oft! Thi ne venture docs not conc s mine and Dicky's”" But T set th and answered sacharinely. ure ything will h you helping him. 1 could help, T t all is winter eve 1 t that isn't in I'm not going to however. T have £ my own which this apart- 5 going to help me to carry Aud 1'm going to k you to c around with Dicky a lot this . sort of fake him off my for I'm going to have very time to give him v months." during thy by Newspaper IFeatur Inc.) rvice, 1 are admitted to the © the price of admi Wil be allowed in th uring the making of Telophon Sally “Is t! Convers; Atherton ion Between tula Perier Did Mrs would Prescott come to and ems to think re seen taking hing more v we're not that after you picture and the h got through POMORIOW: Conversation con Gl rald you to wa old {5 in she oyed iy ont poor 1 he mad lith Falr- | eathered the worst of the | 1 you. ! say | Horizontal Pertalning to a systematic co pllation of facts. Cat's foot. Male cat. | Containing choruses 5, Garment. Upon, Gazed slyly. Gave portions of medeine. Obstructions in rivers, To change a setting A visible sign. Four note in scale Abrupt Idea Point of compass Letter printed In sloping ty Swift To dip in To labor for breath Correlative of either Second note in seale To goad Keg of a lo 3. To drum 5. lrony Varjant of “a Analyzes a sentence Rabbits Unit of stones. 1Like ne 1 |4 ight for Distinct section of a W all Humorists Portions of Consisting of Preposition |1, One in cards (pl) Ol of orange flowers To perish |64, To scatter hay ¢35 A hundred times g Vertid 1. Warning indicating a 000 pounds Par of the verb (o be hoats. 163 ation in a top m- precious Acted as a model I'o Instigate To marry Substance bows ftation Bosom Brings up To sccure Yellow pond lily Orb Portrayed Jumbled type Preposition of possession More rancid Cattle pen Circling around a center To corrode To picce with a knife Challenges To subsist Txclamation of Trousers Tar Boxed TFence stalrs Gait Promise Related Door rug Moor To be sick used to rub viol surprise To accomplish ANSWER TO ¥ TERDAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZL r cake with butfe sugar, stacki Cut *p hot rously with maple baked sprinkie cukes ns they are | fashion” and serve very | (Copyright, 1926, NE Spread each |follow vour ex ind ng pie | A Serviee, Ine.) \ (r— | Yeur Heal I i How to Keep It— (auses of Illness (| S | By DR HUGH S, CUMMING surgeon General, e viee, st and in the ¢ disease on man communicahle methods of preventi of most cifeetive ir sprond is the rigid enforceme rantine, Burcau of the The Public Hea i ged by law with ment of quarantine at entry of the Usited Stat home s based principle and the an ports of Quarantine the {hat ner cping infeeted with a snspects Kknowt municable disease trom ingii with others here i no of spreadi A few practice quarantine an y it is more comni t in his owi s of t will in contact v will depend me me and do not come 1o ¢ go at s they his fami during this p d to ser tl 1 you ppens that a h th nd happens, also, rs Jdo not 1y hreak these rules w s ng nt 1th | ample and members of your own fami to a dangerous discase. somg U. S Public Health | on | namely com- ng danger | nd is: it per- germs of & ¥ ich or il s like 1t your neighbor may |Refuse any Imitatio! Pame folks like don't comes to som does to sardit their oil kno bec they ntil afier they've forYea 'am 1N The Standard Your Grocer ‘ | Know | Child's Harmless Laxative is “California Fig Syrup” Mother! Fig clean rry A teaspoonful ifor now 1in playful feveris a few h child bilious, children a we constipated or fu ove its pleasa g Syruy babies an all ages printed on bott vou must Califor ch has directions iren of Mother, say n. expose | Callfornia.” | The man's words, though lwere unintelligible, Barbara heard a battering of lists on a door and a |sharp response in o feminine volee Barbara went through the hall ind paused at the entrance to the Qining room. She could see the room, with the sunlight pouring [ through it. The table was bare and {coated with dust, and one of the oak dining chairs was overturned by the {window. 1 sidehonrd was cover- ed with nondeseript articles, scraps in lged close to her body away. of gingham, spools, slips of paper that looked like bills and a battered vollir skate There was no sign o1 the lady of the house. Barbara's faintness increasing. She 4 the gerly, for traces of coffee brewing vwhere in the house, But the only odors were of dust and bygone ouions sh s | plucked up courage and went into the dining room. Krom the | kitehen beyond, there were sounds ot someone moving about. She pushed open the (100" e in | Mrs. Crumpett looked up from an {ir iing board set on two chairs by |the stove. She scowled at Barbiara. swinging door and | loud, |1t (o the iron and went on sweeping Barbara saw a woman come out with a bundle of wet laundry hug- + + . She looked straight at Barbara and turned | |'The woman at |quickly {the iron necross the board with vi- clous force, Barbara went in ran glve “I've come to me u cup of she said. Her tone was meek in spite of herselt. “I don't think there fs any kind of a restau- rant in Berlin and 1 am threatened with a rather Lad headache. Mrs. npeft - uve friendly glanee, "1 ! she snapped. dop't un- serve Barbara for a chair s head swam. She groped and sat down heavily. the ironing board looked at her curionsly, but went on with her work sile “I know you don't,” said Barbara, “but 1 thought you might be willing fo make me a cup of coffee. It's ally rather urgent that 1 get some Nothing else will vard off | this hendache.” She sat with her hand over her eyes. while the uni- verse wheeled about her. Mrs. Crumpett spat on her finger gain and the iron hissed. “Well.” < id. “I'm dreadful busy. This is ironing day and T can't stop a minute. You can try the little lunch counter at the bus stop. They'll ly | Danny Meadow Mouse Fixed Is Well Thornton W. by Burgess Of what you the best trust —Danmn; have pray make to fortune for the rest. Meadow Mouse. And Meadow Mouse Llucky. He didn't know it the {time, but it didn't take him long i to find it out. When he had darted om under Farmer Brown's | back poreh it was just luck { he happened to be headed toward the henvard. It was luck, or good fortune, or whatever you please tu call it, that Bowser happened get botween Danny and Black | Pussy. But just how fortunate was he hadn't realized until he it | had chance to lo around W | Ll henhouse. This he Danny had been to had n Danny | pecked out with his bright | eyes | and he didn’t miss a thing W recovered from his greac boxes in it. That find just build him- not hid in were with he place he nest and make at home. At first what else to do, he nesting boxes. He highest up and in There he crept d waited to sce nesting hay in could conld that if rig a table quite ving ot the larkest nder the I wonld it afternoon when reached tha henhouse. It nly a little while after he had thos one yrner of in. One by one they flew roosts. Farmer Brown's and closed the little slide 1 keep any one else 10 that henhouse throv which the hens used the daytime. In a short time it rk. For a while there considerable moving came the came an nt Bo: 1y 1 the opening bec; ! was ne in {1t that | e | did as soon | | those | for | Brown's n in that nesting box that the | | | | | | | among the hens as they made themselves comfortable and talked low voices. When it was quite | dark all was still. | Danny explored that henhouse | from end to end. He made up his | mind that he was going to like it there. He found some stray graing of corn which the hens had missed. was warm and there was every- thing to r it. comfortable, The only thing was he was alone, He missed Nanny. He ered what | had become of h was quite sure that Black adn't | canght her Black Pussy had chased him, I do hope she is as well off m." sald Danny to himself. sir, T hope she is as well fixed I am. If T can get enough to cat— | 4 T rather think 1 this will just as good a pl to sp the ~ winter as Farmer | Brown's barn. 1 wonder which one of those places will be best for my bed. T wonder what they are yway." Of course, Danny meant nesting boxes. He decided to stay for a while in that one gh- est up in the darkest corner. In th end stayed there altogether. You see, he soon discovered what | thoss hoxes Bue | that had | Brown's to look in that 1e hens becanse as o L a nesting osen. So, when Farm came around each day eges, he never looked particular box, He knew t were not using it The first morning Boy were for. no one he Boy that came there commotion among the Danny was frightened. Farmer Rrown's Boy had brought breakfast for the hens, it s this that excited them. Danny peeked out with his bright and he didn't miss a thing. | 1s 1s Farmer Brown's Boy had gone Danny climbed down | and, watching his chance, darted out and got enough corn for break- fast. The hens didn't pay any at- tention to him. So Danny got some food to take back to his n He found that Farmer Brown's Farmer | was hens You a| t and cyes Tust soon |A isoiled white apron and a chef's ¢ \breathed more {lator broke in upon the for |1 | tin grimy sheet on the board and slup- ped the fron down on it Barbara rose und tottered the kitchen, The stalrs secmed steep and narrow, but she isped the bannisters and pulled herself up, step by lugging step. The sounds upstairs hud ceased. Barbara went Into her room and put oa her hat and coat. As she started down the ste| sounds of splashing began again in the bathroom. Mrs, Crumpett was just coming out of the dining room, wiping her hands on her apron. hat good-for-nothing Mrs. Biggs has spllled the water again,” she whined. “It's dripping down through the kitchen ceiling. I told her not to do any more laundry!” She made a lunge for the steps and clambered from to the landing, as Barbara went out | the front door. Tha street was more lively thar had been the night before. looked about with languid Her head was throbbing violently, She passed the brick house with its weedy lawn, und the bungalow that was once the home of Wiln lins. The washing had down, but the red-eyed on the step as though moved all night. A few children were to be seen on the porches, but most of the houses were dismally silent, with windows staring blankly uncurtained. Barbara met one or two working men. They carried tin lunch pails and shouted cheerily at one another, flashily dressed woman brushed past, usurping the entire sidewalk. A vacant lot where Barbara had played many games of {ennis in her high school days was now grown five feet deep with weeds. 'n the posts where the net had been spread were overgrown with the rank stalks of jimpsen and glant dog fennel. Barbara turned and walked v pidly toward the bus station. A f doors beyond it, she found the lunch counter that Mrs. Crumpett had spoken of. It was merely a wooden shed, with a glass front and two or three broken steps. A man with a » Barl 1 interest. been taken poodle sat he hadn't | jauntily over one car stopped wiping oft the counter with a dirty she entered. “Hello, sister.” he said. Barbara did not respond to the greeting. She took her place at a high stool by the counter and asked for coffee. “Nothin’ he in- quired sourly. 8he shook her head. He brought her a cup of porcelain a half inch thick. spilled in the saucer. Barbara lifted the cup to her lips and tle cof dripped fam the bottom of it on her coat She set it down again. ‘ ve you any napkins?'" she asked the man. He shook his head taff; he said. Waldorf-Astoria."” Barbara swallowed a few mouth- fuls of the brew. It was not bad coffee, but the edges of the cup were greasy. She set it down half full and paid the waiter. He glanced at the cup. the matter with the coffee rug as else “Cut out the s ain't the “What's " he ex- lclaimed belligerently. “Nothing," said Barbara, and hur- vied to the door. Once oulside, she easi FEven the small quantity of coffee had helped {thie throbbing of her head. She was furning toward Mrs. Crumpett's house, when she heard her name called excitedly, behind her. Looking around her, she saw a very prefty young woman hurrying toward her, a baby carriage thump- ing after her. “Burbara, when did you get back? My, I'm glad to see you!" “Wwell, Wilma!” answered Bar- bara. “I hadn't any idea you still lived here. Everything's so changed since the old days. I just came in 1 night.” Wilma bent over and put the brake on the baby carriage. “I don't live here. We moved out a year ago. Hated to give up the bungalow but the neighborhood got so bad we couldn't stand it any longer. We were losing money every minute we'l held the place. You were lucky to that {get rid of that big house of yours | when you did. Property here fsn't bringing anything now., Do you know, I've used your madelra lunch- con eet more than anything else I have A conversa- tion. Wilma rushed around to the |front of the carriage and lifted the covers anxiously. Barbara followed nd looked over her shoulder. A round piuk face in a fluft ot white wool bonnet smiled at them. Ap- parently the wail had been only a bid for notice, “Did you ever sec anything him?” asked Wilma. Barbara stammered. “I suppose every baby is more wonderful than overy other baby,” she sald. “But this one really is exceptionally retty. Wilma smiled at her son. “Of course he is. There was never an- other like him.” She put out a finger and the bahy grasped it in hoth his pink hands, and gurgled, wrinkling his nose. Wilma turned to Barbara. “You've no idya what a baby is like, Babs. you have one of your own. T used to scoff at fond p: nis just as loudly as anybody. but herc like heavens, and not caring who thinks 1 am & darn fool. T feel so superior to anybody that's never ad one.” 3arbara could find nothing 1o say. You're looking well, Wilma," she remarked a little later, as they started back down the street. “I am well. And I'm Tappy. That's 30y brought a variety of good | things. Sometimes the food was | spread in the hen vould watch until he was sure no on# was about, then he would dart out of that little doorway. get what |t he wanted and “Oh, dear!” than once, f only } Mouse were here to share things | with me I would be perfectly hap- | py. T hope she ir as well fixed as | I am.” | (Copyright. Burgess) dart ighed back again. Danny more 1926, w T. W. | The next story: “What Happened | about | to Nanny Meadow Mous ard. Then Danny |her plump pink and anny Meadow |° 'nm for long.” what makes me look like this." Wi.ma fairly radiated content from white face. Rarbara noticed that her hands were scarred and rough. as she arran e blankets around the baby. Sur- reptitiously, Barbara looked at her own hands. They white and smooth, with delicately polished were very {nails.” Well, T must leave vou here sald Wilma, when they reached a cross street, “You're not ing down there at the old house long are you, Babs?" Barbara dropped her eyes. “No. Wilma spoke hesitatingly evident embarrassment. “Just with ns the | it | Col- | The coffece was | loud voice from the perambu- ! T am, | inging the pralses of my son to the ¢ Itip. The woman who has the place lisn't much good, Barbar | Barbara flushed. “I'm leaving to- day. 1 simply had to have a glimpse of the place, the homesickness for it |wus so strong. But 1'll nev homesick again, 1 haven't any place homesick for, after this" | Wilma turned to look after Bar- {bara as she walked away. Her eyee full of pity bara walked down street, past the submerged court, past the bungalow with the | poodle, past the brick house with i | weedy lawn, The yapping of the doj {tollowed her drearily down the street, She walked very slowly, breathing eply and trying not to think, She [eaught licr breath as she came oppo- site her old home. Its squalor in © morning light was more estreme v shie had yet realized. She glanced at the room upsts {tn which she had slept. The rents lin the blind were clearly visible from the street. The window in the sewing room suddenly flew up and a curtain straggled out into the air, Ba v d in through the {gate and went up the porch steps, When she entered the ball, there was no sizn of Mrs, Crumpett. The dining room door still stood open, revealing the dust-laden table and he overturned chair. The door of e living room was closed. Barbara aw « card tacked on if, but she did not trouble to read the ne, She looked about her. The bulh overhead which had shone hlood-red last night, wes richly wine-red this morning. The mirror on the hat- stand was no paol of bloody light, ‘MH only with shad- nd canght in ita to ho were the tennis back th, tirr aull surf ows lls {depths i gray | Barbara walked toward the stairs. The of house had begin 1 the steps slowly upper hall, the open. Barbi out with a bu nmus S the ma ad in. She As she throom {saw a wom dle of her hody. ed laver bohbed 1 s she had She r: locks of 1 were to ache res the door flew wet laundry Imgged close to ed in a fod- a her her faco pick up irment from the pil 1 and flung the 1 ehildish blue pools of black ler dre floy ng gown ir ped over stoo fallen n in ow. &he looked 1, turned |breathing. “Damn you, Violetta!” came man’s voice from the open door of the sewing room. “Come in and shut the window!"” (To Be Contin stralght Barl at Barbara away. 1 stopped n ed) Neck Pracelet Here 1s a really new something. | This necklace has heen called the neck-bracelet, since it resembles a. magnified copy of the plain gold band bracelet. 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