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HOME PAGE [SATURDAY SEPTEMBER The Heights of Life By the Rey, Thomas B. Gregory Copyrieht. 1910. by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Rvening World). SORROW-LADEN fellow townsman writes that he is In some need A of advice of a “helpful and encouraging sort” and trusts that it will be forthcoming “without delay.” After narrating the many ways in which he is—and long has been— “doing his full duty” toward those with whom he is associated, reaches the cause of his great grief in the fact that he is “not appreciate 1 am afraid that the mettle in this man is more or less base. It has uot the right ring. It looks very much as though he is less of a man than he thinks he is, In the first place it has been the lot of the best and greatest of the sons of men in all ages to be misunderstood and unappreciated. This is the rule rather than the exception. To be truly great and truly good is, inevitably, to be misunderstood and undervalued, Nothing else is to be looked for. But the misunderstood and undervalued servants of the Highest have not been in the habit of bemoaning the stupidity and indifference those for whom they toiled. wes be We are not here to be “appreciated.” We are here to do our PLAIN DUTY, appreciation or no appreciation, praise or no praise, gratitude or no gtatitude. ’ Socrates was not appreciated; Jesus of Nazareth was not appreciated the rank and file of the great ones whose genius and self-sacrifice made the world what it is were not appreciated. It is only the small man who measures his self-sacrifice by the amount of appreciation or praise that 1s forthcoming. The great man—great in body and soul—never bothers about s0 trifling a consideration, but keeps steadily on along the way of duty, loving, helping, giving himself, body and soul, as long as life endures, Still fresh in our minds is the story of that wtitch took place a few days ago in the little Illinois village on the Northwestern Railway, A man and his wife were crossing the tracks when the woman’s foot caught between one of the rails and a plank. Geeing that she could not be re leased in time to escape the onrushing express train, the wife begged her husband to step back out of danger, but the reply came: “I stay with you, Mary!” and, clasping her in his arms, they were a moment tater broken to pieces under the engine wheels, Could it have been possible that the heroic husband, in the brief moment at his disposal, turned over in his mind the question: “Will my wife appreciate my last full measure of devotion?” Perish the thought. Let no such insult be offered to the dead man’s memory. He thought nothing of the kind. He simply acted out of the inspira- tion of his great love for and devotion to the woman with whom he had lived and with whom he was ready and willing to die. “I stay with you, Mary!” That was all. . } = And it {6 ever so with every instance of self-sacrifice. “I must be about my father’s business,” exclaimed the great Galileean, Never mind about Gethsemane and Calvary. That is quite aside from the main busi- ness, which is to do my DUTY. Do your simple duty. If you are appreciated, well and good; if you ere not, no harm is done Falstaff’s Play Fellow HERE have been just a few/ Richard L (Coeur de Lion), John princes who have thought of|lackland and Henry V. The Plan- other things than eelf-gloritioa- | Aeenete bio Se asane from Geot- tiom at the expense of the laborer’s| knight who had & Baul or pentane split veins, John Plantagenet was ll) hen ied plante-a-génet, the one of these. To-day, Sept. 13, com- e br @ plant of the fields, Mmemorates his death in 1435. fethe: ouine Pato reas He was the brother of Henry V. of ips citatea ee its coming down the Wneiand, that merry Prince in his Centuries, in the veins of the Prince youth who rioted with Falstaff, and| $f, Wales, helr to the Paglish Crown, around,.whose life courtahip and|'s visit to Canada and “icy Om co bit valor Shakespeare wrote his States, runs the blood of the lee, tmmortal historical play, “Henry V.” | tagenets, i MY HUSBAND STI LOVES NE AG MUCH AS EVER, HE HAS BROUGNT A A HUGE Box oF 13, 1 € CANDY EVERY Day SINCE July First AH ICANDy ! Does * HE EAT AucH Don T RE Footed | IT S THE ALCOHOL PRodu ) BY THE CANDY IN THE J SYSTEM THATHE Loves \ John Plantagenet, Duke of Bedford and regent of France (for at that date England and France were at odds, Wolul odds), was the most ac- complished Prince in Europe, In 1809 @ statue was erected to him in Rus: touris AE FURTHER eel uare, London, The will recal) that Rus ell | sheet (hy FRANK L AC. AIR De = on the British Museum, Fitting, tae castes “be adeeb ove RDO MBCATITOHG. for the. aah saw She) Hany [SFTP toned his vest. Ho reached around lounging chair close to the table. Plantagenst should be under the |} i. i |] months, It came to a showdown to- — “Larry the Bat—th Seal! So under the back of his yest, drew out Another “call to arms!” An appeal Sei Sues tor, the wearily, days. of L for a Woman Prompts Jimmie Dale, a@ \) nisht, ana the man that won played plant, ts 1 mnet a fat package, and lid It on the table. fo, some one else—never for herself! ences; for, in the early days ; h in luck—he's killed two birds with of yours handed it to me He began to untle the cord CePA. thé fiftcenth century John Plantage- one stone, I guess, It looks damned good over the ‘phone! Melghan’s — "Wait a minute!" said Larry the Bat He shook his head, nok Purchaand and, transported to | Rich New York Clubman, to Masquerade in I] Binge for vou boson rim desi” fi ghtent ty EA het Viratpeanantis"t'uintn tarnien ath moped that th Hammons, atead Mae called. himsctt, be. It : ; They're—they're gone? faltered —did you kill him, too?” hurry now dat I got me lamps ! would prove to be the one thing bi fe Sacnaat peice mbm mant ll the Underworld as Larry the Bat, as the Gray | nleigh. ee ; Jiminte Dale’ Youse count ‘em out after—half aguas poet *iived for—to take. his with modest pride, “John ane . Memeaniirarikdepech queen Meld. cereion theme m out after half tagenet.” Pause and consider the | Seal, and as Smarlinghue, the Poor Artist. || ..'¥07 4s for Wwone, 1 ques said an Ty through the det : anked. and ved. for—t0, aks he St exceedingly humble and amp —— a oomenen — ———e _ mitthlessly, “You can turn the light and a palr of handouffs to his ewn first timo, Virat one of these letters had he ever Of exceedingly humble and simple on now; we'd wait a long time here pockets ved, though still little nervously, opened without the hope that, in origin. was this proud patronymic, : applied to 4 dynasty of Engl! e Co . . the angry expression on sre sree kings from Henry IL, 1154, to the SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, CHAPTER VILL kad, ; kong to pinch them all. I'll tell you. 8 hope was futile, it would prove ion of the House of ‘Tudor,| | ‘Claicy uf Memlquariera” burst into the squaa quarters of buadlingbue, the toot ani Under k sia aaa i n tat at lant the ‘ball to bin OF Serene the snore iHlustrions | {Breatgot, showing bik wp to Ake vote, the Ovufeaaut AML & prouiee Horm Sulaslinghie Ko aid hue ARRY THE BAT closed the . “I'm ex jectin’ eompany, He was easy. 1 piped the Maple 0 ; cca hie ohe Plahtagenet kines were Henry IL,| wudersond, exis Jisme (sales sete wasane’ Buus not to go to hisiey srka'y weet ee ine Goemee at door nolselessly behind bim, f Uiliycusst atin’ ae the hance wen ihe Nin foams ik y unfolding ee 2 | sucht thers ty Hirtie Lee aud Siiniuy Jacks dat evivased tow Ming Ming iut Jiuunie secretes yap closed till y i, the up there in his root from the aes santas nce and’ cars ® ey (urued tb tho lock” “Birdie wille Stiuuay” whe they slipped through the vestibule savvy? Dat's all! If youse play falr, an apartment house, 1 couldn't crack < vl PP y nef Miario taline Lins’ ef fowels im’ the Manne ‘tpnetines —nand, an instant later, mabbe youse'll get a look-in on de Kenleigh's safe myself, but was reap dian was slouching along Fifth Avenue, it LA sd joa owe ie porn nuts for the Magpie He tlon to ber. ete Cok Milford, who Coutessea. he 100k. Ue to heeding peck toward Waalington 110 Ort ae er down wehind dav conned, the aate, Was with him * Dear Philanterogle ‘ita by’ Thorold,” "He explains, tha? ‘Thora Sealing 4 tarde UM Square, His handy in his ragged Go on now, get do ar and T copped that near-diamond pin joanod back in his chair, as his eyes hah ants’ tienes Na hie dene’ tints taperrere toes tee onto of Manisa om ines pockets clenched, It had heen well chair—quick!" of his and left it’ there the travelled hurriedly over the opening | hs ‘bean robbed of $100,000 Im bonds, “Meighan, of headquarters, picks up & oat pin at worked out—with @ devil's ingenuity, “Look here!” Meighan burst out. wouldn't be any guessing as to who paragraphs, a keen sense of di lying in fromt of the safe, Through the byways, lanes and “This is a hell of a note! What - pulled off the job, and then we beat pointment upon him, despite the ¥i alleys of the underworld Jimmie Dale \Youse shut, yer facet” dimmie it back to his place to divide—and 1 Tuition, that. had. bade. him expe " ; once more threaded his way, and Dale's voice had grown suddenly c veaned him. wasn't looking into nothing else—and then suddenly, ANBYLERS To VESTRRDAY'S :QUIh CHAPTER VIL ‘Then Meighan spoke again, |. finally, mounting the dark stairway and menacing-—the stairs were creak- any gun aihen, and handing over ptartied, tense, he sat upright, de Olver. Wennel rete pie (Continued) Ie ta Son dd ou eye te bring leading upward from the side en- again, this time under ‘tty thousand-—and besides, with the «trained forward in his seat, He aed S20 Bullion Win one DE tae ew 66 JF SURROSE you mean that you ee te eee cate eon OE trance of a small house just off tread. “ileten! Say, you Husie out of the way, I had, Kome could not read fast enough. iis eyes ngland group ol bale Lad recognize it?” he ventured. @ hunarec ousand do ase, Yo sity Chatham, Square, he let himself have ter wait long fer de curt a Virat laughed rtly. “That's Jeaped over words and sentences, flourished in the ate cen’ Mey. ane “Recognise it!” Meighan sae home with LAs A i ay steulthtly into a room on the first yo up on de act, Don't you'se make w ro you come In, Everybody knew ++. They are playing their last finest poem is said to ie ! ; f eple. wet ont @ ay od in landing, It was Virat now, and this a sound!” you had it in for him. All Thad to card to-night David Archman boi ts rahe ok ech aa eo AUET® low, and Beppe ith ane ams Unleds he stood in Wag where Virat lived—a locality "The doorknob turned, Jimmie > was—well, what you ald Taid, COPdfmKnt yf Jimmie lett 2 Ker evar] ky if ROS Baer ae quietly past Kenleigh to the desk, that the opie wat Hie aeden I onuld where a stranger took his Iife in his Dale whipped his flashlight into his Ie you haan’ tumbled ty) it, and I'n yigned J. Barca. ‘Sixth Avenue tfeltcnnings who disregard, to some| Picked up the telephone, and called * paar ss § hand any time! pocket—and in a flash, as aman en- damned if I can nee how ‘you did, mitlcner Martin Moore Headquarters. “Recognize it!” With the receiver to his ear, waiting for his connection, he turned toward Kenleigh. "Why, say, walk over to the Bowery and show it to the first person you meet, and he'd call the turn, Pretty, isn't it? When he's dolled up, he's som—hello!” He swung around to the telephone. 6. A homeopath is a physician who! “Headquarters? . .. Meighan spoak- delieves in the minimum quantity of|ing from Kenleigh's apartment... Medicine in treating disease. | Get a drag » Magpie on the 1. The initials “LL. D.” 6 a+ Yes! ... Left bis the dogree of Doctor of Laws ting card... What?,.. Yes honorary degree conferred by univer-| wound a mattress around the box and sities upon distinguished laymen in| souped it; his scarf pin must have extent, the conventions of modern Ute, & The Golden Gate is a name ap- pilea to the harbor of San Francisco. « The Golden Horn is a name ap- plied to the harbor of Sebastopol and Constantinople, in Turkey 6. The complete expression ts sound as a dollar.” Mas any walk of life.” aught in the ticking aad pulled out, §, “Hocus pocus” 1s an ancient term}... Sure, that’s the one—the horse- shoe-found it on the floor... What? indicating to defraud, to cheat, or to deceive. | . Yes, the chances are ten to one ® Mary Johnston, a distinguished ho will, it’s his only play... All woman novelist, American, wrote, right, I'll get Mr. Kenleigh's story “To Have and to'Hold.” meanwhile... I'll be here till you 10, Ducks, geese, swans, and all ‘phone... Yes... All right other water-fowl have wobbed feet, "Stcighan hung up the receiver, sat for the purpose of locomotion through | gown in a chair, and motioned toward tho water. another that was close alongside the NEW QUESTIONS. ak, rare naa » ‘ e continen- | It was quite dark now, (1 shaun? pd mbal le Ue centinen | Dale leaned forward a little to catch 2. What is the meaning of the ex-|the words. Both men were speaking Pression, “The fireat Divide"? jin guarded undertone B.Which of the ancient philoso-| “About 6 o'clock,” Kenleigh an- phers lived in a tub? swered. “I came straight from the 4. Who was Murillo? office, I put the bonds in that sate 5, What is an octoroon? there, and I should say it was @ | What famous expression has quarter to seven by the time I had deen credited to Gen. W. T, Sherman dressed and gone out again.” of Civil War fame? | “And, say half-past eleven when 7. Which of the Psalms, in the you got back. So some time between Bé-le, is most celebrated? seven o'clock and half-past eleven, The Battle Hymn of Mr. Magpie got into the courtyard, put a jimmy at work on the bath- room window beyond the bedrom 1s there, and got busy.” \ ‘There wae ailence for » moment. £ Who wrote the Republic” Whore is Puget Sound’? Vhat individual {n history “The Eagiet'? (Copyright, 1918, by George M. Doran Company.) —for the Gray Seal! coount for 1%” aid Kenleigh husk. hand any time: ve nolselessly tered, around the room—a rather ornately i ye “Don't talk so loud!" cautioned furnished combination sitting and dividual, wearing tortoise-rimmed Pinched the @wag, and Meighan, Ho whistied low under his fodtoom, “Keep away, if danxerous,” glasses’ with, black ‘mustache. und croaked him and beat it breath, "You're certainly up against haa been tho Tocain’a caution. He Contes, was staring Into the muzale bonds ; it Mr. Kenleigh, but you buck up! smiled grimly. What danger could of Jimmie Dale's automatic. ny” sald We'll get And, anyway, bonds there be? He had only to face one ~ “Hello, Frenchy!" obser ingly, “youxe're some can be trace i ata time; the Tocsin could absolutely the Bat muavely. Feelin’ youse But how did you “These are payable to bearer,” 811d he depended upon to see to that, and y Ko: dat guy Kenleigh tb switched on th slammed shut the door, Yes, Much Nore THAN 100 _ THE SWEET THiIncy HAS A Sweet Toate By Maurice K saan +. etten The Evening World’s Kiddie Klub Kornew- | | Conducted by Eleanor Schoree ine Or9U se Copyright, 1019, by The Prese Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), him went Romp and Rufit. while the latter perohed on his pace at which he could travel and the less perilous position, got glimpses o} sign was there of her own home. All of a sudden Romp heard a tit pened. Rufit had fallen off. She could been hurt, In | time th to the top of the quaint boy's pocket boy was almost out of Prints behind. Romp ai ight. But he was more important just then to find for the night. They ate a tow winte: and felt quite refreshed. A t were seated. At tho foot of this hill and Rufit had often heard that fairies next to the opening. over the edge. “Do you desire seemed to be spokesman. “We do,” answered Ruft. They wero admitted. Cousin Eleanor My defr Cou: When sending contributions to the Kiddie Klub Korner you ought to be quite as careful about stating cor- rectly your NAME, AGE, ADDRESS and CERTIFIC/TH NUMBER as when you are sending to the contest. It Is also as important to have the algnature of @ parent or teacher at- tached to testify to the originality of the work. It is necessary for me to have this irformation and I will tell you why, Tt ‘# exsential for me to know: Your name because the name of the author or artist is published along with each contribution. Your age because what would be a clever piece of work if done by @ younger member might have little in- terest or merit if done by one several years older. Your address in case I should wish to write you concefning the con- tribution =, Your certificate number to prove |that you are a Klub member because jonly th. writings and drawings by onrolied members are published in the Korner. + 1 lastly @ cortification by your pares’ or teacher In needed because so many children do not seem quite certain about what is original on . The rule must be Soarevs) ania by thoes who do and « jo not know. ies ‘Joo now. do you not, how and Meighan, a puzzled look replacing his face, light, and A dapper in- u\ that's square,” ¢ ed intuition which told him wits afraid you were ®Pite of the there wasn't anything to it at all, was open and shut that the Magpie you the It Gentlen Larry the Rat admir- slick ga jan Laroque, the gangster Nicolo Sonnino sment Jimmie Dale did not he finished reading the let- | Romp and Rufit Visit a voiate aa | N and on ran the lad, who had been changed from a goose, and The first was safely hidden in his poset round h try their luck at these boing hospitable fairy folk and hat, Rufit thought the lad | looking in those queer clothes, but he had a boy’s sincere respect for way he kept it ®. Romp, from her f fying scenery, but not a sight or tle thud, and guessed what had not leave him now. Perhaps he it takes to tell it she had pulled herself and Jumped out. She travelled back @ bit and found Rufit whole and hale and mighty glad to see her. had left a long trail of heavy Rufit decided to follow them and find out, just why It was that he had been turned into a goose in the first place. But | something to eat and a lodging rereen berries and drunk some dew, rone to one side of where they? wan a very neatly made hole. q lived in little hills, so they dectd . tapped on the ground Immediately eight brown hesds and twice ax many brown eyes popped! to see Queen Emmet? asked one who en (To Be Continued.) Klub Kolumn «« tae injonenten to carefully send + all the information requested? Lfeqki certain thet you do. Your loya! Kiubmate, COUSIN Hinanoit™* GEN. PeRsHiNG, =" Somebody bas come from acroed iter oar Once more to his native Home, af sd He has come now that his work te through ~ Lue For our glorious Red, White and Blue. He led our armies in the fleld | * nd did not to the Germans yt This was a great undertaking, eid att And it was of our brave Generate. making. Ho has seen all of France 1 Where our noble boys lie, Pershing worked to help those «whey did remain And gave to them lots of fame, *> 4! So here's to brave Pershing, Our leader brave and true, May he always be blessed By the Red, White and Blue, By PAULINE BURSTEIN, tqurteen, Brooklyn, N.Y, THE ROBIN, Which bird do you like the best? I like the robin for he has a red breast And besides he sings #0 sweet ‘The people look at him from ‘thé? street, I aged But when winter comes 17 He will fly away sind Like the other birds to a differemh > , home Away down South there's where he}, By BLANCHE BYESSO, aged Brooklyn, N. Y. sai sonoot in ner8HOOL visd chool is here once more Come from country, mountafiie” and seashore, ; Your vacation is over, hark to tie” cal Not one or two, but three, four aaa a ther your books, stop your q ‘© Is school to go to, early to-day, your teachers, tend to your books; ¥o rons are happy, I see by I hope you enjoyed your vacation P* ears, You'll have another one in the om ing year. Ry | DOROTHPA. © years, New York Ci ANGUST DRAWING CONTEST?” AWARD WINNER, te “How | Spent My Vacation.” By MAUDE DOWNING, aged elevery Conn, rye SEPTEMBER WRITING CONTEST.. PRIZE of four Thrift Stamps A (the equivalent of $1) wil Be awarded each of the eleven Kiddie Klub members, aged five fifteen inclusive, who writes the , and truest account of a dream in his or her age class, . Bach will write a true and full @oe¢ cvunt of the last dream that they gan! emember, and those who dre too ‘dite to write their dreams may tell them to their mammas, be own litt who will certainly them out for thetr= dies. A certification from the parent or guard of the contestant say : that the composition is to the of their knowledge original Must g@, pany each composition, * Kenleigh numbly, “There were tl the advantage of surprise was with . ily Virat pick strips over and over again into tiny | classes of bonds in this issue— those him, He was pulling out the drawer ay though seeking some avenue of and besar en fragments, payable to bearer, those registered as of a bu u now—and now his hands escape, mie Dale's slipped his He read the article slowly, It was| to principal and those fully regis- wore ching swiftly under the ~ «ston Diet pocket, And then, quick as the but the ne of the case that had | tored, ‘that is where the intere Mattress of tho bed. It was vitally ge Bat! It is ue ny of an eve, a Virat's hands caine en under investigation for the past paid by governm necessury to secur bonds. Bar- jyv— er over a kn uinte Dale few weeks, the sensation it had cre the bonds having coupons. Naturally, ring that little matter of the AUM> "way out out dat pariay-voo dope!” d ueross the table, there was @ ated the greater since the publicity | under tho circumstances, it was the hers, they were as good as cash—and ye Gee SUS Aer Rencee iat eens, Cl and the steel handcuffs were so far given to it had but hinted ‘payable-to-bearer’ bonds that my the ‘matter of numbers would not Larry the | la Mull dat cag locked on the other's wrist darkly at the scope of the ox ‘ client wanted.” trouble Virat, He knew Virat, and he )YQUse Galt. Bent Mew Yorke seey? There Was a soream of fury, an . while as yet no nam | The minutes dragged by, ten, fif- had known Virat very well—but not eee tened bis lips with the Cath from Virat ntioned The Private Club teen of them, And now Jimmie Dale, so well by far as he knew him now! Virat mois! yy P Dat's yer cue, Meighan,” called set forth in the cramped though he was, dared not ‘There came & faint creaking noise tp of the tongue, | tarry the fat calmly. "Come ant ain of what shift his position; the movement of —some one was cautiously mount- hat do you wa ere?” he asl take a look at him!" t and very @ foot, the slightest stir would be ing the stairs, Jimmie Dale snatched buskily. 4 A ghastly pallor spreading over his which in heard. It would have been better if his automatic from his pocket, and |, "Ob, nothin’ much,” sald Larry the ruco, staring like a demented man, a4 garsbling traps of the he had gone before they had ceased without a sound etole forward across Bat airly. “I thought mabbe youse veignan, rising from behind ‘the deseription—and the field talking, He had heard enough long the room to @ position by the door, might figure dere was some of dem jyynging chair, advanced toward tho operations was very wide and exceed. before then, and yet—-- The footsteps were on the landing bonds comin’ ter me,” table, Girat huddied back in his scat, ingly lucrative. Suddenly, startling, like the clash now. The doorknob was tri ‘Bonds! I don'tw'now anything “chow him?’ inquired Larry the A face crowned with its gray hair of an alarm bell through tho silence, door began to open slowly, inch Ly about any bonds,” said Virat, in a py. rose before him, a kindly face, grave the telephone rang. Jimmie Dale inch, wider; a dark form slipped low voice, “I don't know what you orward, and strong and fine, the face of a man heard Meighan fumble for the receiv- through into the room; the door was @re talking about.’ Us—no, of sterling honesty and unimpea er; and then, as the other spoke, closed again—and Jimmie Dale, | “You don't—-eb?" inquired Larry the able integrity--the face of Day selzing the opportunity, he began to reaching forward, clapped the muzzle Bat ominously. ‘Weil den, I'll help » Bat, Archman, the assistant district at. | retreat stealthily back across the of his automatic against the other's ter put youse wise. But mabbe I'd he torney, who had both instituted and hallway toward the vestibule door, head. But it was Larry the Bat better get yer gun first, ch?" As he sii Gotted up.” He swept the glaisey Was in “charge of the investigation “Hello!” Meighan's voice wa who spoke—in @ hoarse, guttural had done to Meighan, he removed \ trom Virat's nose, and wrenched away that now threatened New York with guarded. “Yes—yes . . . whisper, volver from Virat’ pocket ihe black m 1 goatee, an upheaval that promised to shake His voice rose suddenly in a ri “Youse let a peep outer youse, an’ ‘“T’anks!" he sald. He pushed Virat nieigh Meighan, many @ social structure to its foun- cry. ‘What's that! Dead! youse goes bye-bye for keeps! Bee? with his revolver muzzle toward the . i . h dations, Yes, they would play their dered! Wait a minute! Kenleigh, Put yer hands over yer head, an’ table, and forced the other into a CHAPTER IX. last card, a vile, despicable and hell- | they've found the Magpie murdered, do it—quick chair, He sat down opposite Virat, 5 ‘urged hig 192 card—but how little they knew in his rod * Jimmie Dale's left hand reached out and smiled unpleasantly, “Now den, TMMIN = DALB shrugged Dayid Archman! aennat He itt, What do they say? and switched on the Mght. Tt (TAs come across! | Youse croaked de Mag- shoulders, a for of whimsical “Their last card! The sate swung lemanded Kenleigh feverishly, Meighan, hands elevated, startled, pie ter-night!" fatalistic philosophy upon open. ‘Their last card was—Clarie “Mr, Kenlelgh,” said Meighan so- angry, wha. stood blinking in, the » "You're dippy!" sneered Virat. him, and, as he tore the en- Archman, the son! @ little feud on im glare—end then e low ory came from = Virat's trembled as be unbyt- velope apen, eat down tp the (Te Be Continued Monday.) a ee ssays must not exceed 150 wordat ntestants muat state N, and CERTIFICATE . Cousin Eleanor, Eventnig’ Klub, No, 63 Park Bigwy” AGE, NUM Addresy World Kid New York C now T ° O JOIN THE KLUB AND BTAIN YO R PIN. 4 64 ‘ ‘ +, City, Metta |S "ote eich “you, maak “Klub Pint Site “AG e" AND RB ar cutee co © ston sear ot ame ll Ded ch meoker wihes silver ery Klub in and Carineate, COUPON NO,