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i | | ANNE AUSTIN «sanr s swoce* THIS UAS HAPPENED ftly: a nother to vou Ward of the state orphanage since ' Sally C e my dug:, he was four, Sally Ford is “farm- but beca I already love you to Clem Carson the summer s David Nash, and m world «d ou and will lo she is 16. She n 1 Ity you more student working on the farm during | cver 1 b vacation, David hits Carson when he loved to ha nter, 1 makes remarks about David's could not have found one who is riendship for Sally. They run away | as swcet ¢ pretty and dear as nd join a carnival, David as cook's | you ar- proud of my daug clper and Sally as “Princess Lalla,” | ter, and 1 shall hope to mzke her ystal gazer, proud of m In Capital City, location of the or- | “Then—I'll go with Sally ‘hanag lly is discovercd by onc capitulated, but she quick- f the little orphans, who are chap- | ly, “If David will promisc net to roned by a beautiful “Lady Bounti- | love any other girl until 1'm old (" Quick action on the part of ' enough to marry him.” G barker, saves Sally, She| Over Sally's ad, cradied arns from Arthur Van Horne, st her mother's breast id ndsome casterner who annoys her r and David Nash exchan vith his attentions that the beauti- a long look, as measuring cach tul ehaperone is Enid Barr, wife of | other’s strength. David knew « wealthy New Yorker. then, and nid meant him to In another state Sally and David | know, that Sally’s mother had far lieve dauger of detection is over | different plans for her daughter they go about freely, He gives!than any t could possibly in- sapphire engagement ring. | clude David Nash, VMirs, Stone, matron of the orphan-! “I'll always love you, Sally,” . follows Sally and confronts her ' David said gravely, as he rose in the sideshow. Again Gus, the|from the sofa harker, comes to her rescue and | Sally struggled out of her Sly manages to get av She and | mother’s clasp and spra to the David flee and plan to marry. They | boy's side just as he was reaching find a “marrying parson” and he is [to the little center table for his it heginning he service when | hat. “Where are you BOINK, Mrs, Stone and Enid Barr rush inDavid? Don't leave me yet! Oh, and stop them, Enid tells them she | David, T can't hear to let you go! is 1y's mother, and how only re-| How can I write vou — where? ¢ ontly she learned the trath, Sally [ Tell me, David! Oh, T Jove vou (lings to Datid and insists she|go 1 feel like 11l die if you leavc nts only to marry him. Enid, | m. Defiant 1o has different plans for her new- | of the tight-lipped dis- I:-found daughter, tells her she can- approval of Mrs. Stone and of the 10t marry 1| Nash anxious signal which Enid's blus NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY |cyes were flashing him, David CHAPTER XLI | put his arms about Sally and held Very gently David unclasped Sal- | her close, while he bent his head Iy's hands, that locked convulsively to kiss her. bout his neck. His eyes were dark | “You can write me he zen- ith pain as Sally, hurt and resent- cral delivery. il stay here for ful, shrank from him. while, T think, until I can mak ‘You'rc glad to gzet out of it!” she accused him. “You were only | hushand is in Capital City marrying me because you werc now, David,” nid interrupted sorry for me. You won't fight for | cagerly. “I am going to have him me now, because you're glad to be | intercede with the authoritics for e |you. You can return to Capital “Sally! You don’t know what ity as soon as you like. There'll vou're saying!” David interrupted |be no trouble, I promise you. Tt her #ternly. “You know [ love is the only thing we can do to vou, that I've thought of nothing | repay your for your great kindness lut you since we met on Carson’s | toward--our daughtor farm. Of course I want to marry| “Then vou can go back fo col- you, and will be prond and happy |lege, David Sally rejoiced to do so, if your mother will con- | eyes shining through tears sent.” {when you've graduated and Sally's face bloomed again, She ' goften your start, we can be mar- scized her mother's hands and ried, can't we?” lield them hard against her breast | “If you still want me, Sally dar- as she pleaded: “You see, Moth- |ling* David answered gravely. ¢r? Oh, please let us go on With|“Thank you, Mrs. Barr. You'll our marriage! David and 1 will |youw'll try to make Sally happy, love you alyays, be 8o grateful [won't you?" 1o you -— Listen, Mother! Youw'll| I promise you she’ll b happy, have & son as well as a daugh- [David,” Enid answered, giving him her hand. “May 1 speak with you “Don’t be abrud. Sally Enid |alone a monient 2" she added im- commanded brusquely “When | pulsively, and linking her arm in you were indeed a girl alone, with|his drew him toward the door that no family. no prospects, nothing, [opencd into the little foyer hall A marriage with David would un- david! Youre not going? oubtedly have been the best | Without telling me goodby?" Sally thing for you. But now — it's ri- |cried, stumbling blindly after diculons! Thig boy has nothing. {them. You would he a burden upon him, | “Goodby, my darling.” He put 1 yoke about his young neck that | his arm ahout her shoulders and ek against her hair as should not be howed down by re-|laid his ch sponsibility for several years |he murmured in a low, shaken You're hoth under a clond. I un-|veice: *I'll he loving you —- al- derstand that he cannot return | waya o eollege or zo hack to his grand-| When tha door had closed upon father until this trouble is cleared [her mother and her almost-hus- up. What did yon two children |band, Sally did a surprising thing: +apect to do, once you were she went stumbling toward Mrs. vied 2" Stone, and dropped upon her knees mar- “I expeeted to work anything ' before that majestic, rigid figure 1 couid t to do” David an- |which she had fearcd for 12 years swered with hurt young dignity.| When Enid Barr returned a few “I have brain two years of col- | minutes later, two round spots of irge education, a strong body, and |color burning in her cheeks, she 1 love Sally.” found her daughter in the orphan- Sally [age matron’s lap, enddled there like fist | a small child, trustfully sobbing out her grief, ed across id's clenched tips of her fi nid Barr ) nd touched ith the care wers, “You're a good hoy, David and Sally, the orphan, the girl| knid Barr left with her daughter lone, would have heen lucky to | for Kansas City that night, after warey you you understand, | r hushand, Courtney lon't you i daughter who was still awaiting word i bt 1 h- in Capital City, For two ol A il Courtney 4 Enid shopped for a Giarr. A York could Irobe for Sally. went il yon means wil ther, explored the city, vave euer it money many hours talkir van off fir g school t question of Sally's college, to 8o to col- | spoke only in lege; travel, clothes, a ading all direct ques- place in S0 and | tout Sally's childhood ather who her, a girl- irthood in the orp hood sich pleasures the Carson farm, that every Craves, wout her experiences with the ielp me to ings, | Dival, Jnid was insatiably curi David, things wonld give her | and invariably sympathetic. it you could | sensed X “This all nonsense® Ars, | 10USlY ay Courtney Barr's ar- Stone spoke up sharpl Yon | rival definite now perfectly ary plans, and Ny the girl grew that these two ildren | can't get marri consent, I, ANOTHER CLASSIFIED AD asting yo! your foot do jaughter hon Sty fsh ; CONTEST B ol Read About it on Our per, " darting o Classified Ad Page. You i one 1 sou with her to you for all Why Is 925 the Best Known o make up misse ] poAn onls e pebeition Telephone Number A R in New Britain? St e Read Classified Ad Page. all these years? She'll never have | o pother . s o 2o I8 Your Tenement needs you For Rent? Wihen Sally mouth ¥ o ver w p tear I s Advertise It In Herald Classified Ads Just Phone 925 Tes nuded the elear - NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 1, 1 to dread the ordcal of meeting her | mother's husband, the man would become her father by adop- tion. And when at last he came she knew that her troubled intuition had been correct. However “won- | derful” he had been to Enid when | had not been born dead but was alive somewhere in the world, Sally {felt instantly that his kindness and generosity to 1 Enid would i not extend to herself. Courtney Barr was a meticulously groomed, meticulously courteous | yman who had, in slipping into mid- E itor's Note: On the 30th ann ) dle-age, lost all traces of the hoy versary of his historic feat in “car- and youth he raust have heen rving a message to Garcia,” Licut Sally's terrified eyes, this rather Col. Andrew S. Rowan, U. 8. 4., re- | Feavy, ponderous man, on whom lired has written for the Herald and dignity rested like a voyal cloak. NEA Service “A New Message 1o looked as if he had been born old Garcia” Col. Rowan stresses the and wise and cold. She wondered Beed for adequate national prcy how her exquisite. arrogant littl. edness in the Caribbean in his ar- mother could love him &0 devotedly. ticle, appearing below, immediately after the introduction — *“This is By Licut. Col. Andrew S. Rowan U. 8. Army, Retircd our s Court!” — the tirce of T ; : | ihem 1 dinner together, a | Hightce Rt el S0 silent meal, so far as Bally was con- | 200 time and the hour have I oorned, She hed felt that the Euiq | tRFOUER a generation, In 1598, t lwith whom she had talked ana | BAN. @s it were, now, time 1711 | With Lindbergh, shall we say {laughed and wept these two davs 1184 siingen suss aving. this| A new cpoch—that of expansion | —was ushered in by the Spanish- phisticated, strange woman in her | ce, a woman ho was in nowien | AMierican War. A new cra—that of fretlen (o ime s flying—has evolved from the World woman who was ¢ | War. From the wreckage left in the | merely Mrs. arr. DEAN Cauriney Bary of Mars, mankind assembles | They left her alone for an Eour | tha hest and . advances—haltingl rodinner, an o hour which —she yyuvyup —with Janus-faced banners (spent in her own room in Writing & |ijecribed with age-worn platitudes; long, frightoned, appealing letter pacific, but with suspicion at heart. to David. At nine o'clock Enid| gelf-preservation is the first law knocked on her door and invited | of pations, The lowest microbe and her to join them in the parlor of the finished product, mankind, and [ the luxurious suite which had heen such a delight to orphanage-bred sally. She found Courtney in a large arm chair, perched on the arm of it, one tiny all that lie hetween have that desirc born in them, and it is but natu that what they produce should re- <embled the creators. Like master, like man. Leaving out the accepted causes of Barr seatcd her mother sTEBRINS] bl L] Himny = N w: New Message to Garcia by Man | Who Carried First One In 189! she had discovercd that her child | Today Is 30th Anniversary of Deed, the Writing of | Which by Elbert Hubbard Made Lieutenant | Rowan Famous—He Now L in San Francisco. Mas for Ar rving prace m Washington, = I'ranc 1.—Thi v 20 to an outstandit Anierican her ter immortalized Hubbard, was made that dat on hi He c [ es Quietly | it never e necessary ncrica, in the advent of war, 1 it necessary to dispatch an rough cnemy lines to ob- | formation that should be on | to be p 1 to the com- | neral at a minute’s no- 1 order to enable him to act rompt The winds avs Wlow from the right n as they did thirty years decisio he prepared for wi ost effect r s onc » e — May 1, 1598 — a cutenant in the U. my, s own” in a momentous mis- his government, accomplish- t that heconic phrase for initiative and wation. arried “A Message to has sin Gar- Her San Franetseo toda t former licutenant, now a tired coloncl, modestly shuns the lime- lives the quiet life of a student and booklover. He insists that did nothing ore than LIEUT ROVANS ROUTE ' KNOW WHO You TO SEE THE ARE ~VOURE THE NEU BOV WHAT u';:té—’- LITTLE B8OV WHAT MOVED INTO > JES' MOVED INTO THE SMITHS' THIS HOUSE — MY HOUSE ;— NAME 1S MUSH f ITHATS P45 1923 CACKLEHACK JOUT THERE AT THE CLRB, AND WERE TRYING TO SHAME Him i NTO BUYING A NEW ONE ! | v soldier would do. cou T am proud of my foot in a silver alipper swinging the Spanish-American War, let us achiovemer clares Licut, Col hese and similar o+ matters | )it ia Will S | et rapidity. The man consider the results. (‘uba won com- | Andr.w wan as he gazes | Lieut. ur.»u‘.ZH) ‘:,A,‘\',:_:},lr S Dirigible Halia Will Soon smiled bleakly, a smile that did | plete freedom after centuries of op- | from his comfortable home on | Garein. . Information obaied, | Start for Spitzbergen | not reach his cold gray eves, as| pression. Rtussian Hill, across the vista of | Rowan started s roturn trip | s i LR Sally took the nearby chair that he| America won Cuba's grafitude, San Ifrancisco bay, “I'm o ;‘,M,,’:;Wf "f]‘.““;" Lot ""y‘l‘_ : -""‘l'g‘vl '}“"rd"j‘*»:;(n’;rjl‘fln)v May indicated. |acauired military control of a strafe- | was chosen for the mission—Im | crals and two sailors accompanicd |imandod no eee i bre Ttatia, com- | “Mrs. Barr and T have been din- | gical fulerum and avenged an insult |ziad 1 succceded—but it all in| Lim. In a emal hoat with - gunns- | el P Goneral Umberto Nobile, your immediate future, |10 the flag in the blowing up of the | the 1t of a soldier, von hnow. ack sails and with scant rations, |Spktspercen. oy oy, of 4 & m. for he began ponderously, in Maine. Immortalized by Hubbard the party cluded the Spanish guns | pola. exmedition. & wentiry coonth that Do evidently thought| Tn 1518, when the United States tired colonel, now gray-|and patrol launches and Joft the tions are. favorable it e dooiiad | were kind. acquirred Florida through the per- in was “the fellow Dby the | harbor in the tecth of a menacing yoda: 5 R ol | Institutional timidity closed down nicious activity of General Andrew name of ltowan” whose storm, e (a0t aniivod.s Jisve maveral upon Sally; under those cold eyes | Jackson, Cuba became a trategic deed gave Elbert Hubhard th dre’ ‘was a/Innding. o' s meske ageatte s i she lost that cphemeral beauty of | point. Its western end commands the spiration for his famous -jCurly Keys, transfer to another|yian. o° SRR o hers which depended so largely | entrance-exit of the Gulf of Mexico “A Message to G 10| vessel, capture and incarceration | Yesterday it had been safd the upon her cmotions, It was her in- | and closes the mouth of the Missis- | Iattor has heen cirent mil-las yellow fover suspects at HOg |Goneral Mopiie ©anin on, 2ald that stitutional voice — meekness hiding | $ippi. 1t lies athwart the sea lancs | lions and translated into transfer to another vessel, |Spitabergen uniil the. canto orn oo fear and rebellion — which an- | from New York to the Panama Ca- | cvery Langua at Key W Finaliy |ta T Milano, swhich . swered: “Yes, sir |nal and the proposed Nicaraguan | Cuba was occupicd by tic wen aud ls pariy renched |p bare eb wstalins sy o “Oh. let me talk to her, Court:” | route. You cannot reach these ar-| Spaniards. Alone, Licuf. Rowan | Washington on May 14 and ro-|Kings Baw. e wonipeiived at Enid begged. “You're scaring my | ferics of trade without kowtowing to [entered the hostile 0 car-| ported to Sccrotary of War Alger |the ship in Norsav. | oS Kept baby to death, He fancies himself | Cuba. Iry an urzent messa Presi- | ay A. Mile (e ey as an old ogre, Sally darling, but| Tt was Lord Salisbury, who as dent MeKinley to General Garcie, | 1o had “earricd (1 to | R he's really a dear inside. You ser, | PHIMe ministsr of Great Britain, nding the Cuban insurgents Garcia." ‘ Herald classified ads are stones in Sally, 1 was so cager to find my | said that if a great nation should d to Spanish rule | Presideat MeKinley thanked Ta- | the period of suceess. baby that I made no plans at all.” | acquire the moon, it would not be | Elbert Hubbard — wrote, 'an for carrying out lis orders in Courtney Barr said, “I think 1'd | long before some army strategist | Rowan “fook the lefter, sealed if |cuch a satisfaciory manner. Nearly | — Detter do the talking after all, my | Would show the necessity of occupy- | up in an oilskin pouch, strapped | 20 years Later the War Department .'\d\'ertising Headings | dear. Your sentimentality—natu- [ INg Mars to protect the moon. it over his heart, in four da made belated award of a Disting- Bl ral, of course, under the circum- | Hence, to Florida, Cuba was necca | fanded hy nighi off the const of | uiched Seryios (rons ' ANNOUNCEMENTS stances—wonld make it impossible | Sary. tba, from an open boat, disay Sinee M petirement from the 1 e A for you fto state case P.-|.~:.r ¢! The Panama Canal—protected | peared into the mgle and in|army in 1010, Col. Rowan DRATIE Mo e and convineingly.” | somewhat by Cuba—has shown us tirce wecks came out on the oflier | sl here with his wife, devoting | I—FLORISTS Sally's cold hands clasped each | the necessity of the Virgin Isles. Gide of the is<land, having ! his time fo swriti md studying, AL DIRECTORS other tightly in her lap as she With a completion of the Nicaragi- |versed a hostile conntrs on foo! 1. no praies for Mis his:| ARl EOLND stared with wide, frightened cyes|an Canal—the best inter-ocean [and delivered his iotter to Gar- | foric feat and incists {hat any NNOUNCEMENTS at the man who was about to ar. | route—it will be necessary to add to ! ejn.” soldier would done the anme AUTOMOTIVE range her whole future for her, |Cuba, the Pearl of the Antilles. 5| It was just 30 years ago i he had the s D T oG e “I have made Mrs. Barr under. Whole string of pearls, all of the [ihat LRowan completed the the | A—AUTOS AND TRUCKS FOR SALE stand how impossible it will be for, West Indies—and so give us the Jalf of a mission that sl inspire war and ALTOMOR! ua to take you into our home at | Whole of the Caribbean Sea. With |ihe nation, After hardships i« all that the R once, as our adopted daughter,” his closed sca, the demise of the | dangers on sea and land and &lip- | 13—AUT Courtney Barr went on in his, Moribund feudalities that once con- ping through the Spanish hnes, he | HZGARAG heavy, judicial voice. stituted the old Spanish Main will | galloped into the headquarters of [~ % e R MOTORCTC Sally Bprang to her feet, her eyes|be hastened and on their graves General Garcia at Bayamo, His! BENJAMIN BELMAN Dlazing in her white face. “I didn't | %ill rise garden paradises that canappearanc tirred the conrs of | MAGGIE GRABOWSKL. of als o ¥ ask to be found, to be adopted!” | SUPPIY the world with tropic food the harried rebel Cubans who had | it e Britain, May ‘,i‘mfl" :5,',‘?,’,{55 lf,‘:'LE she cried. “If you don't want me, and exotic beauty. Self-preservation, 'lLeen hving the lives of lLunted ! : 19=BUILDING AND CONT cay so, and let me go back to " AAY. leasts as the Spaniards searched "“"L'"’“A‘:”"“H“" = NESS SERVICE RENDERED Pavia! | The Spaniards called Havana “the | platean and i for those favor- g n : 1 it e et Bl & (TO BE CONTINUED) key to the new world.” But a key ing “Cuban lilre."” ence of M PR DL GTH N A SMAKING & ,\xf:,u,\zm Sally finds that plans have been | 1St have a bridge, a atem and a | alks With Garcia efendanta in the above eniitied actio G e made to keep David from writing | "oW. In the cass of Cuba, the stem | “It was a matter-of-fact soldier | /"W 10 the Fit daurt of the o4ty T _ATTORNE o hok! consists of the Greater Antilles [talk we had that day.” Col linwan .r and thereafter by order |51 pAYNTING. BAPED fAsaiS (Leeward Islands) and the bow is|says. “The United States had de- of court (he =i action has bean St no HEAT'G, METAL WORK Lesser Antilles (Windward Island.) |clarcd war cgainst Spain. What the second Mondav of Mav. a9 _pr AND TATLORING | With this key in the admitted as could be done fo ma this short | 1155 ama ofihe plalqtiitierata jap pr OBB'G. STATIONERY [ well as the physical possession of land decisive, with least casual- | ORDERED, that natice of the insitu- |1 nkok PesIONAL SERVICES Uncle Sam, all that would be re- |t How could a joint campaign and pendengy of kaid - complaint | 320 prANG 1) |avired to insure the safety and wel- | e carried on by Cuban and 2l be ghen t sbe defendant 3 NTED TO RENDER SERVICES | tare of the Western World would be | American forces? What supplica | fans T, o, PaVishine m the | Xe | universal training of our youth in|would the Cubans need and where A, this order, once a weelk | | physical as well as mental develop- |delivercd? Wihere were fhe | for in utive wosks commencing 3 e | ment: a very great price for a very Spanish positions, what were their| = A LOCAL & PRIVATE INSTRUGTORS | smail vice, | forces and their morale?" { EMIL J. DANBERG, Clerk. WANTED—INSTRUCTORS THE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Alphabetically Arranged for Quick and Ready Reference LINE RATES for CONSECUTIVE INSBERTIONS Yearly Order Rates Upom Application Charge Prepald 1 line 13 - 1 line 1 line 14 lines to am tnch. Minimum Space 3 lines. Minimum Book charge, 33 cents. Closing time 1 P. M. daily; 10 A. M Saturday. Telephone 825 rate. Notity the I at once if your ad 1s incorrect. Not respousible for errors after the first insertion. Ask for six time USED CARS e ————— [Your Car Is Here! All Good Used Cars 3 Advanced Nash Six Coach 26 Chevrolet {oach 1926 Chevrolet Runabout. 1326 Ford Coach 1926 1ord Touring Ford Runabout All cars are clean—good tires. 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