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P ea v -W *A"r a b ea j Iwk rI .*aw a populate of s5amO00. In )1 1 60eppltls*~I~h ~iUbW was 4,810,218, barel 50 per NeO of *htit pj W ie ya ~ ~i~ hs.e esW #h 90=p4t. ''TrHEi -'4 _ A Dram&atiStory His Wife is Bal waft wimp m e Mnd"ee a i pI he by nmapoev"8s gee40e. ea Albert (apeOlan ea d as , taimed as a Pavewmt Pwtuwe. By Gouverneur Morris atho. ." -I. D.gtE.. -Wh..e my ale osines mo vWbe ee Destinguxa and Othew Netable Vietlom. D IANA and her husband reached their apartment a few - min. tpa before the time at which Venn had promised to meet them there, and beeuse the place was anall and the partitions thin, 3ilda, Dthna's maid, was at once dispatched upon an interminable 'ound of errands. Diana had made out the list on the train. "How are ?re going to stage manage thls afairr' Manners asked. "Do we both see Penn at once, or do you see. him drat, or ido I?" He spoke laughingly, and Diana. keen and full of life at the Immediate prospect of *eeing her lover, and ifearing the sound of the voice that had grown so dear, laughingly answered: . "Oh,' she said, "I'll let him In and turn him over to you, and then I'll go In the front room and twiddle my thumbs'till I'm sent for. And then I suppose he'll want to see me alone. * * *" At this moment the doorbell rang. and Diana darted into the hall with an eagerness that stabbed her hus band like a knife. He heard the sound of the door opening and of their mingled voices. And then there was a' silence. And Manners knew as surely as If God had told him that during the silence his wife was giving her lips to another man. He had anticipated no such out FOR LOI r had succeeded, too, up to a point Philip had felt pretty sick with himself as he saw her fall from the shair. He had felt pretty sick, too as he lifted her In his arms ani earried her out of the room. For quite five minutes he had been con vinced that he had broken her heart and -half killed hor by his faithlessness. He had even been so utterly fool Ish as fo drop a remorseful kiss on her golden hair when he thought aobody was looking, and had stood by in an agony of fear till she opened her eyes and looked-with deliberate intent, so It seemed straight at him. And that look had sown the see of doubt In his mind. The more he thought of It. the more sure he was that the whole faint had been ,ut on, and young Wniterdlok hated shams and artificialIties. Was there nothing genuine In the rbole of her dainty composition he wondered. Had he just been an Smy fool, caught by her eyes and er smile and her pretty voice9 He thought of Eva in comparison with relief and gratitude: and dur ing the evening Calligan had un consciously fanned the flame of his feeling for ,her into something greater. Pygnw SBurne Broug) * It ha - T for a - VILD' afa Devoted Husba in Love With Anoti Iles to Keep Her L The story so Far Frank Manners. an artist of reputatio. lb doing eIi work for a rich womaA In California. He has always been devotedly attached to hig wift. Dina. 3. reads over her letters of the last few months and fols that 0s is negtecting their emall daughter. He deoides to go East without Jetting Diana know beterehand. On train he meets a beater who tells him a 'tale of a wdd goose. When Manners arrives home he meets Ogden renn, the- man with whom Diana is in love. He is keenly disappointed In piana's conduct' and in nor coldness to ward him, but finds rmuoh joy in the love of his daughter. Ta. He tries to find out what i troubling Diana, and she finally tells him she is in love with Ogden Fons. rageous breach of good manners and of common decency. And the imperlurbable calm of which he imagined himself to be possessed was darkly and almost violently ruffed. No Evidae of Embarrassment. During the next half hour Man ners found himself looking oftener at Fenn's mouth than at any other part of im. But he made no other outward manifestation of his real feelings. He seemed more like a rood friend of Diana's than her out taged husband. Manners began the interview with a smile and an offer of cigarettesa. At the same time he said: "I hope you are not as embar rassed as I am.' Fenn gave no evidence of embar rassment, though he felt himself to be in an exceedingly trying situa tion. He accepted a cigarette, gave thanks for it, and lighted It. He was a taller, better-proportioned and altogether a more significant TIE ByRuby M. rE "yAyre Then had followed that moment of jealousy when she had refused to aqswer his question in the car, and then he had kisse4 her, an, then . . . here he shied away from what he had thought then. Though he was alone and it was dark, he colored hotly at the memory of that moment. He felt that the night had myriads of inquistive eyes, all of which were looking at him. Ho drove the rest of the way at a terrifie pace. Calligan and Mr. Wipterdick and several other men who were stay ing in the house were waiting up for him when he got back. Appar ently there was still more cham p&s. to be consumed, and Philip was immediately presented with a glass of it. Across the room he mat his fath er's eyes. 'Your health. my boy." said the old man. Philip hesitated: then he raised his glass. "To the best woman in the world?" he said. There was & sound of wheels on a gravel path and a little flut ter of excitement swept through the crowded church. Faces turned backward toward the open door. There was a perturbed rustle of silken skirts. (T.e c.ti..ue. ..m. w.) lion's r Fingers it You Beef ppened when oxen were used sacrifice- only. A bit fell from e altar. Pygmalloil picked up and returned it-then touched his, fingers to hisj lips. That was the begtla-i a ning - it makes you Stoday ask for ~t~SWINDELL'S Ii Y;CHIPPED / BEEF A food Ideal for S out-of-door sandwich -- fass Crackers, bread 'or rolls are enhanced by the rich beef flavor. The cleanly, invitingt pack ages, "4 and %-lb. size, 4ahi be tucked into picnic baskets for cold cut use or garnish for salads a ~. well. No fat, no bone, ,,"no wastewhich is why it is lb. Most Popular Ai Asch.mseer.., ~ee...s. .m.d u....a. uoOs nd Who Discovers ter Man and Dve man than Manners had thought He had a good noe and very fine teeth. Like most men who have been brought up in the West. he was a shade too well dressed. The shyness and lack of ease which he had showed at their inrt meeting seemed to have been of the mement. His voice and his whole manner were very easy now and very quiet. "I'm distressed by what has hap pened," said Manners. "But I should not be honest if I said that I was surprised. You are not my yrifd's first affair." Not Cpnsistent. "She has told me," said Fenn. "And that being the case. I am not a badly frightened as I might be. My wife will get over this," Fesn said nothing. "Before," said Manners, "having no prec.dent to go on. I insisted on a sudden and drastic separation. I said that they mustn't me , eaen other any more or communicate. Diana demanded one final interview (women always do. I imagine), and, of course, I had to give in to that I imagine, but I am not sure, that Diafna asked the man to run away with her, and that he, having some faint residue of common sense,'and some faint regard for the integrity of his skip. refused. Anyway, they said good-by. And three months later the love that Diana had had for that man was as dead as a door. nail. But she had tasted liberty, and since that time she has not been a very satisfactory wife. But ahe has been a good mother." "She hasn't been consistent in her loves or In her friendships. Those come and go. But she has been a mighty good mother, and a wise mother. That is the one HE RHYMING OPTIMIST .By Aline Miehaelis-. Summer Vacations. our house we're planning tours through many States. eagerly we're scanning all vacation rates. Wife wants Cali fornia. I would fish in Maine, daughter says: "I warn you, I'm no country Jane! I have not been sighing for the timbers tall, that'a not why I'm buying hats and hoe and all. Not for me in the places qui t as Pea Ridge; give me auto race. and some Jazz and bridge!" Scenery is wife's passion; she would sit and muse (when it's quite the fashion) on the proper views. So she wonders only: "Will our set all gb? Rockies would. be lonely, with just ice and snowi When you drive, it's tor rid: camping is passe; still it would he horrid not t' (r mway!" Sister's sewing madly, saying: "Goodness knows! Vii need vac t tion badly when I've made my clothes!" Stacked on chairs and tables everywhere I look, folders of Gray Gables or of Meadow Brook; lots of wild commotion, numberless disputes, talking of the ocean or of mountain routss, But our Billy only doesn't join in; soems he would be lonely far from closest kin. Yet, while we're de bating in a wordy storm: "Gee!" says sill. "rm waiting to go to Grandpa's farm! doon as school is oven that is where I'll be, I can have old Rover for my company. I will mock the robin in the wil low's bough, while I ride on Doh bin, driving home the cows. Where the water's brimming by the big oak's hole, I can go in swimming, at the swimming hole!" Though we doubt and dicker, choosing east or west, Bill's the champion picker, his yacation's best. JAdvice to the Lovelorn ,By Beatryle Falrfai LOOK FOR SOMEONE 31S.53 DEARt MISS FAIRFAXI There is a young man with whom I anm very much infatuated, He sings tenor in a quartette of which I am a member, and at one timne he paid a great deal of at tention to me. r ecently a stranger has been attending the same church and the young man ha. turned his at tention to her. Tell me what can I do to win him back. . YOUR SUBSCRIBER. Just continue to be your dear, sweet self, and if he won't be won back. he just won't, and that's all there is to it. In which case look around for someone else. ~MBRRSSET Ptueenaty need me prevent pear benlag wye M~eture tati. ont the PAINE S'TUDIO Petee t. Pit The 3meM Pre. hm sp. sn. nr. wm se.. U. tem BYG( II Diana and Ogden Fenn Take Fi trait in Diana which we have any reason to believe permanent. She will get over caring for you, just as she got over caring for me. When a Gi AN ABSORBING SERIAL C By Ann Lisle Whese PreseUt Sertal Hae Won a Nfatloe-Wide suecess. Copyright. 1o1, King Feature Service. Inc. (6 E, dont know that any one actually shot your brother," said M iU a Rathbun uneasily in answer to my frightened plea for information concerning Neal's assailant and his motives. "He might just have been cleaning a gun when it went off. Those things do happen." It wouldn't be possible to live through the day without knowing how the dear lad was doing. But there was another anxiety gnawing at my heart. How had Neal come by his wound? Reif-inflicted it waan't. Neal would never handle firearms so carelessly that he'd get an accidental wound. Some person had shot Neal! But who?. And why? When Miss Rathbun came to tell me it was lunch time she suggested that it would be wise to have my luncheon In bed and to take the extra rest to make iup for my recklessness in snesking down stairs. I agreed with seeminn gullelese.ss. "I'm hungry, too," I announced. "Bring me a nice, hearty lunch ani I'll eat very crumb, so you can have the credit for that when your doctor man comet." Miss Rathbun preened a a d stretched like a cat rising from the heartrug to descend on a sencer of cream. Then, with an air of great cleverness, she asked: "And you'll promise not to*ge snooping downstaire if I leave you for a minuto?" she asked. "I won't do a single sly, under handed, despicable thing." I re pied, laughing gayly, So luncheon passed off plea. antly. Isaid nothing about Neal, and Miss Rathhbun seemed to take it for granted that 1 was enouigh of an invalid to be so absorbed in myself that I'd forgotten all about my brother. When we began to dress in preparation for the doo tor's com ing I shivered a hit. "Cold, dear?" asked the nurse anxiously, 'Maybe ynu'd better stay in bed." More Prize ( ANGElU P'fqD 'AKE. Whites of ten eggs. I 4h cups of sugar. 1 c'up of flous. '9 teaspoon of' 'iram of tartar. 1 teaspoon of vanilla. Bake in moderate oven, increas ing heat last fifteen minutes, for one hour. Alley ne Scheitlin, 1044 Blitmore street. REAL WRITE CARE. One-half I'p of butter One cup ot sugar Two cupa of flour Three te.'rpoonf,,'s of baking. powder Three egg whites Two-thirds cupful of milk One-half teaspoon rfi flavoring Bake in moderate even forty min utes.- Alleyne Scheitlin, 1040 Bilt more street OR Ig k-IZiAN (AKE. -' eggs I% 'rups sugar agranulated) ss'a't Sr up nut butter 2 'uP,. ri".r. stited. with, 2 level eas-- sofbkig-w )UVE Tam With Them on an Ou1 Im Drama, "The Wild Goos4 end just as she got over caring for the other fellow. This is not open to argument. If she stops seeing you, she will forget all rl. Maries F EARLY WEDDED LIFE. "Oh, no, that will never do; your doctor man would think that I wasn't better. And then he'd lose* taith in his nurse," said I. "But wouldn't it be a good idea to let me wear some warm underthings? I'm not anxious to look pale and interesting, you know. I -don't want to vamp another girl's man." Thus pleasantly flattered and re assured Miss Rathbun let me have all my undergarments. insteaJ of expecting me to sit up clad only in a nigh' - vn and a negligee. "Shoes, to, "4 stockings." I begged. "My it get so cold in my silly little mules. I'd love to try a dress, too-and look matter of fact and businesslike." "I'm game." said the nurse, smil Ing at my childishness. So when the doctor came I was dressed like any healthy, normal creature. And the very first thing I did after greeting him was to call his attention to it. "See, doctor, the patient is a big girl now-up and dressed like reg ular folks. And, oh, how she'd like a breath of air! But I suppose I can't have that, since Bertha tells me the car has gone up to the city." Miss Rathbun opened her lips to protest at my duplicity. Bertha hadn't tol'l me anything about the car. I'd figured it out from the facts in the ease. But how could the nurse tell the doctor she adored that she'd been careless enough to let me discover the very thing he was trying to keep from m4? 'Suppose I take you for a drive in my little sedan?" suggested the doctor, gallantly. "Oh. no. you mustn't do that, Roger!' cried Miss Rathbun. Her cheeks flushed and her eyes grew wide and dark. The wistful beauty I'd noticed Once or twice before evpt across her face for a moment. The doctor stood staring at her with an expression I could not read. Then in a voice unmi. taksibienin its coldness he said: "Indeed! Aince when do you di rect my treatment of patients, Miss Rathbun? Please get a warm coat and a hast for Mrs. Harrison. I'm going to take her out for an air ing." I TO Be continue Thereay.) 'aececpes 1 teaspoon of vanilla % cup milk. 'ream butter and eugar, add yolks of eggs well beaten, then milk and flour alternately-last, fold in beat en whites--bake about twenty min utee in moderate oven. CREAM FOR FilING~P. Juice of one orange, also grated rind. tahlespoon of lemon juIce, fill up cup with water; % cup sugar. i teaspoon of flour, 1 egg beat light. Cok in double boiler till thick. Mrs E. T. McCarthy, 322 A street southeast. PHILLIPS Around the Corner From Hgh Prices 812 H Street N.W. Dresses and Suits $3.49 RNEI ing. Scene From the New about you. I havle been in love with her twenty years. ever since she was a little girl. I have lived with her for ten years. and ANECDOTES OF FAMOUS LTHOUGH the love of Dante for Beatrice often is quoted aa type of earthly attachment, both fine and rare; both Dante and Beatrice married others. Dante having four children by his wife. Beatrice died when she was twenty-four. In all the poet saw her but three or four times in his life, the first time when she was eight. He never wooed her or dreamed of marrying her. She w~e to him merely a symbol for everything that was good and beautiful, and this symbolising began when the two were children and the grave youth was taken to her father's house by his own parents on a visit. That she cared anything for him beyond a careless friendship or the careless regard one has for a seldom-met acquaintance I doubt ful. Her full name was Beatrice Per tinari. and she died in 1290, Dante taking a wife two years later. Tn speaking of her, Dante said* "I saw her at about the end of my ninth- year. Her drews on that day was of a most noble color, a sub dued and goodly crimson, girdled and adorned in such sort as beat suited with her tender age. At that moment I saw most truly that the spirit of life which hath its dwelling in the secretest chamber of the heart began to tremble Po violently that the leat pulses of my body began to shake therewith Eppy Cure a to thelv LOFFLEI A new specia dry-emed, Every S~lee umihrm. N. BACON Ia (a you' N~eatw M~ JR MC Motion Picturei Serial Will Be S At the Leadii I knew what I as talking about." "I hope." said Pean very quietly, "that you are not sping to tell me that I mustalt se her any more. She is very unhappy and her nerves are in very -I.d shape. It Isn't easy for her to hurt you." "I am not going to tell any body to do anything. I want this afitr to die, of oourse. ad the sooner the better. But I am not ge .Ing to kill it. I made that m take the other time. There is no need of repeating that mis take. Diana's feeling for you Is too violent. It will die Of Ox haustion." Penn made no comment. but he looked a little skepticaL "If it doesn't." said Manners, "if it doesn't die of its own a cord. why you, of ,oourse. are the person who must kill it. I take it for granted that you are not thinking of myself. and that what we want Is Diaa's happiness." "I have said right along that I thought Diana's beat chance of happiness was to stick by you and Tam." The man was so obviously sin cere that a real weight was lifted from Manner's spirits, but he couldn't help saying: "It's a great pity that you allowed a situation to develop in which so obvious a thing as that ever had to be dis cussed at all. But I don't blame you too much. You don't took to me in the least like a man who deliberately wrecks another man's happiness. And I am Convinced that you would not have made love to my wife if she hadn't wanted you to." "I hope 'you believe that I do love Diana." Cause of B NEARLY ALWAYS DO By Brice BeidM LD. ' PEOPLE who are more or less chronically tired usually have an idea that their condition is due to overwork. People who suffer from what toey call over work are practically always the victims, not of work, but of bad air, improper diet, poisoning, or worry. By poisoning we. of course. mean the effect of tea. coffee, to bacco, or alcohol abuse. or auto intoxication. The young people who thtnk that they have injured their health through study and middle-aged people who imagine that their breakdowns have been brought about by overwork are common examples of the popular delusion under discussion. The trouble with such persons is that their working sapacity has been enor mously rodued by such factors as lack of exercise, overeating. in testinal sluggIshness, or %ome drug, or worry. When people live hygienically their working capacity is multi plied many times. so-called breakdowns are nearly always due to bad hygiene, the system hav ing to exert itself s greatly in order to resist the evil influences which we have mentioned that any work seems toq great an addi tional burden. It is this error which causes one person to give up tobacco annk ng, and another coffee. when nd Appy Tite 1 BACON led, flavr -lade. hac. meat waste-So salt taste. stctive V Pecked rund lack. nea RRIS i of This Splendid hown Here Soon 1g Theaters "That is why I count on YOU to do what is beat for her, without considering yourself." "I am very grateful to you for taking all this so sensibly and clmly. Your position "isn't at all pleasant." 'The first time I was in this positids, I thought almost entirely in terms of pistols. out; the other fellow, you see, had taken Diana's love from me. You haven't done that. I had already lost it when you came along. Still, you have taken a good deal. I think she never stopped being fond of me * * *" "She is fond of you, and she admires you more than anyone." I Terms of Pistols. "That ought to be enough, after ten years. for a wife whose hus band in still in love with her, and who has always been faithfuj to her in word and deed. But it doesn't seem to be. I may count on you, then?" "I will do anything in my power to make Diana happy." "So will I. But at the moment I'm not in the running., There Is nothing that I can do. I have to go back to California to finish some work. I shall have to be off-stage for some time; but I shall try to be tolerant and kind. You will have to be the real god out of the ma chine. I sh'n't make any rules about your seeing each other. I couldn't if I wanted to. You must use your own judgment about that. But since you agree that Diana's best chance of ultimate happiness is with Tam and me. you'll arrange to see less and less of her. and even if you don't cool toward her, you'll pretend to. Is that right?" Coeightl 119. International Maaasine Ce. (se Centimned Tomorrew.) reakdowns E TO BAD HYGIENE what is really needed is an a:) round, well-balanced reformation of one's personal hygiene. Merely to turn vegetarian. or teetotaler, or golfer, or outdoor sleeper. may be to make onlys one correction in tne daily order of life. when quite a number of changes are ca:led for. All that has been said applies with eqtat force to the resisting of colds and other Infections as well as to the prevention of hrenic downs from so-called overwork. Delicious ke Cream IN PVUR FWIT FLAVORS PROMPTLY DELIVERED DAILy AND SUNDAY 10EaPS AMREINS Wm N. T. Ave. Ihome Maim 2235 ADMTISEMENT. Beautiful Hair With Miller's Cocoanut Oil WET the hair thoroughly with cleat, warm water; next apply two or three teaspoonfuls of Mhillsr's Cocoantt Shampoo Oil. Now rub briskly all over the scalp and as the rich lather eeones frothing forth, collect ALL of the hair to the top of the head and continue working the creamy lather Sate every part of the hair. flub briskly a-nd thoroughly, using the tips yf the Angers- on the scalp to loosen landruff and particles of dirt that mv stick 'close to the roots of the Rinse Thoroughly in warm water. This is very impor tant. Three changes of warm water will not be too much. After every bit of the lather has been rinsed, wring the hair and rub briskly with a heavy Turkish towel, After the hair as thereughty dry brush It until it fluffs and snape. MILLER'S COCOANJUT RHAMPOO te a product made by the Miller labora tories after years of experlmenting and practical application and expe rience in the Miller Barber Shops. where it is nnw used extenively.It( is just rich enough in cocoanut oil te make it very beneficial to thi scalp and hair. Use Miller's ('ocoanut Shampoo Oil for a month and notice how it tr. proves the beauty of your hair. It comes in 8-ounce bottles--twice as much as the ordinary shampoo og offers, and sells for only 75c. So fro'm the standpoint of value it is also ap pealing Bear in mind that Miller's Cocoanut iShampoo Oil is the kind used in AI.l. Miller Barber Shops; it is the BICST that money can make% n aurally Get a bottle today at any store of THE P'i1)~l'ENRL' i4 TORgg e any MLLER DARRER UMOF.