Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 38, Number 49, Decatur, Adams County, 26 February 1940 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published E»ery Evening Eli ept Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO In<urporated Entered al tbe Decatur, Ind , Poll Office ai Second Class Matter J. li Heller Prcsidetrt A II Holtbouse, Sr. y A Bui Mgr Dick D. Heller Vice President Subscription Rates Single Copic* I One week, by carrier 10 One year by arrter SOU One month by mall .. ... .. ,35 Th: ee months, by mail 1 00 Six nr->ntb«, by triad I 75 On- year, by mat. 300 One year at offi • 3 00 Prices qu-ted arc within a radiua of !0o miler Eire whtre *3 ’i'i one year Ad'er'iatng Ilat< • made kn- wu on Application National Adve- Uepreseututiva SCHEEREK A CO i> Lexington Avenue, N * 3 rk 16 East Wake. 11 w. Chibagi) Charti Memln rof The Indiana Lasgut f Home Pa .-.* L.is» ■ . , . . .., d" id’by ■ .i ... a li|- . n. -;i in till*' Till lay a’- a: you -wu isk And th'ie * a -I a- Usll 'il< *' - ■ ■» —<Z I' !>. I d nt<|u» a’ up '> J.ib . ■ .* .4 * ■ a h pili*: » V I* ■ ' 'h. .■ v* . ' ill *-i w ■ k - .il . H” **• - *O—Q p•in .** fur i Th* > mu »i *«i ilt 3 u hhl*J * lh» liv p* i lb fa Ju * * m m him > $ u. w w*urbu apt’* • 4 • wry ’ s uj • ln< that h* I|>h mok< E»«t and y-*u aj| ... ■ . ou — u ’IH 5 • * * ufl a* . !' •>’ r s’l.Hi u • , i *- .t k- * M 'tl i ‘ <>i; i .i y ■ 1.u;., hut pupllhi. * h -1. I -o u — Th* :»** •; bu>r,.fhall »>dn hHiior <i* .vi uiu* ui! • h ’ -i . •'• y . Hid f< t||. -p.< ’ f4| lh fg» W l!| ( ; . IIP Ih! ■ T1 to i !•.-nil I;’ At». ah • - lij; .*t d •X* JiU. .tfl 4 : -• ■ • idy • ■»d t hi* u -u —— u * * b -i d.»y of Mi h *i’h firing da- ’ hi thi* • wvfcks Mt. y wh b» - v ii old sigUH wtll Ih uahhhijj th* 1 4Pi<Hi. for vol ki> u >'>!!> • I iQ V a null .H ij th . I. J. u Muy • * hunt t » it hut old thiiisrf* ~ u u Th. allotinen' for bn .. . ,g t” ’ii- I'etiiia Suaai ...input)) will !>• I.,wn acres litis yeai and hen » liopm- in, farm, ,f t||| H i,., .|. I" y 111 lia vest bn b> li|U-.i t toi-s to (he aI re timii tin in Tint So'lld 111. an mil) h bi then and to every <»u< < !»<■ I.ting in ih. <<mn. win. h iiiak- up ih. Im .1 tern tory o o It I- kiviii mil that lie ti-deiai iraue eon,mission has ruled that thei> inust b< uh kidding or mlastat, im nls alioui the < ar you drive in by setting l.ai k th« speedomnlm or inlaai. prcseiillng tin .p. d per gallon It m||| b< mtereating to nob just how they ebe.k this thing T nigh for the old puddb Jumper" —o — Paul V M. Null will h<- l» year* old th.- Ifilli of July and his sup |s»rb r» arc predicting that on that dal. he will l»- uoiniiiat.d for president of the I'nltml Slate* What a birthday gift that would band stranger things hate occurred The National IH-inm rat|< convention will he in session In Chicago at Ibat time.

According t () Rogct Babaon. and io IM geneially acivpted a all authority basin**- gained -onttini ally 'loin 1633 to 1937 broke oven n ' and gullied luaily 'Winty |M cent ill 39 If that doesti t I ali«w.-i- most of th. a guiioilts that ■io p- —i - -I mm p mi h.<- ’..ii • d Io make good we wouldn't ' ki a•• -' ' - -ft as | t —o—u—— I » ill - .on 1..- Um 'o ~)..di , idai. r to fib and -t number are -ii ; : .- civ Y -’I Pu l' wubl Io v-de ind slloiild If > j you Im.. . It.iiu.u ymii iiaine. in -' , --I folie.l t-> V'-' th) :,)•■ is I ... 1 • v n'. 1 . ■ io -i • th ■ so you - ..:i not b- ‘lali.-n.--d ' ‘ Vol, .. . . . . t.) ’> i.,i \ ,ii have noth . ■ w v t ) it .Hid in • -I .. .. .. itt. nt r m —o I ».) < UH i El, ; i .in <i make - -II- . In Italy I O m '1 u,i <1 - ai. i h w *,p- .a*li 1 . a A- .in In. ! Aiu< ti. ape who indtlis' m « / • »k. ; ,j i». . -in y m ' iiiti k' atl'mif > . in. | • halj * ’J'* . .a by l‘ - -id Ih ■ ii*» ’ .» .ii l! »i . of si .ii ■ J »l |H ill *• .id*’ • v• ■ ii’ . ~hv . .> j’hviHb tilt .ii <• It Up’ -I U ha > Hi' 'l4** • hi ' * - <J* ■ • I > UHIIIK . bull Mi. 11l 17i Hr is.v. Inning • p. • few I , mail' and tin ■an : i- ton.- 1 >1 :h. o-nt in ’I.. -,,t:v The! . • y . v rpir- * v. i iiitnb*-, of .' . da) the b M Eiank i ,ii !» . I. -i- I' w.il lx u ■a Ity.Mtiid.ii--.Q- U ——— A lew *■ > ) l Wil 11 Pl- kH> 1- *’** ’“ y ‘S’”-r- --> iioi Towns nd T). a . rm mu* |ly • onsid. -mg •< i ■ pi i>oj si’i’hi and am.d hi I sign - <;< >l’ ■ limn, uia’-iy . de. o ■<i lx w .- ■>. mg for. eij out , by s . io. .ii Hay Wh.n In < !• d > remain, the .ry *' n’ ip ha’ h» had m iddled Im ‘ him ) Th< t.- . m. emu,') I.* i ■ n >li. ’a . m o ..ml app.. nt - ui'-ir s .. . m.>on,g <m ~, -ii meml.ii .on ■ I -1 Hi..- Look as - 111 A*p.)|M men in li.ivb ► ~ 1.,. d time ’r> I • . > find u.m. thing to < i.,it< a division In tin li. ui'H iati inks 1 They will . taitily hav i Imu smm'hiliK I.* Aid- 1 th. silly <li.:"> ; ih- > liav b. <-u putting out. — o o Alon tit. llm ng.. Yi-ulmimi I of t'omiip • htiisb' d ’ahuhtiug I old l plai i 0 dm ii -- tin p.is! f. w , w.eks by IS.OOO yildn i» who a’ tended the- city s tw.uiyodd annual trad, shows, >dtu lais an iimmied >heerfully ili.il busliM-ss had Jumped by 15 percent ovei that of th. preceding year Brisk Imiiday trade generally a< < ounled for tin- enthusiasm with which buyer* from all over tin I'nlteU i Stales and < anada Wert- liliniiig ill orders Emoumged by the business turuove. ground t’hiisliuas retailers lures..- runiinuallon of favinable coilditlous duilug lip y«Si rather than a lei down It is ■ healthy Indication The last per- ' son In the world to be 1.-d too easily along paths of false optlin I

_ COUNTRY BOY MAKES GOOD IN CITY ‘ 7 x X //■ k >S c-L i / 1 /“/ z Wxy v A , >■ y■ i *H* ’ 1-jbU- L < 'tk *1 4 k i K r a. » X *> . M, 'A.! i 1> | ■ is 1 ——

.sin. - i oilaj... d wh. • th. y , . d .g< Uli cut Hiv 'H i ■O . ,*.-s And- . -0 \ • I tian.. IU u <1 - - I I- M V-. - lability to »■ ■ ■» -.’l ev.urtiv. A iiiiinilsi of n«w »■ and wer. < u.i. -.-d • uak i th.- iisuraiu-. -. • ip li l-dii , j the i<|ual of uli) •-.it. HiI'nimi Os pl> a*in. p. amal-t) .*. wa) • -i the bi > 1 i■ • : in. ss and poli’i l * h< h.-ld tin r. • of all sir ► w lllltl 11. tot in. ily *• v>- ~ - t ■ ~*ur> of Ilia d to niv Is di,, l- u ' hl* up; -" ’■< - j«a'- -ffi-i had I- .ir. . .| ' '• Ii Un < Hi/, it* b .- J; ■> Hurt nd City. r Aniwers To Tert Questions | Below are the anawera to th* Taat Queatlona prlutad on Pag* Two I lull. .Hl 3 Horatio N.-leoi. | Potugal I I No f‘ A metb)-I s .Sixty 7 Cnited Mill.- Woikei* • If. .i.tual Valu< 9 The Hunt Wall of Cblua l<> Frame I film Ii ! Horton. Ma** .3 < on’ia< Hoti ot lhe pupil ol the. iy.I I nd- i f> No. they ar. arachnid* f. I'alty Berg 7 Chairman of lhe NatMlal I-. Ikh Itelallon* lloaid h k'lflli louslli 9 A inter lb Helstngfurs la Swedish Helsinki Finnish. — — - -O Household Scrapbook* By Roberta Lee Flower Holders Frog* or flower holders for bowl tuft Im- made at home by |m***i HtK melted paraffin info lhe deseed container and iiiukina holes with large nail* or pencils IM-lora the , was has set Oi*t.r>au>*b Steel Frem Iron (* Uteri rail Im dl*lllig*C»l|. d from non by the following procs*>, Tak.i

DLCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MoXDAY. IT.BIU \HY 2<i. 1910.

fl ail' . t U’l i* '’’ ■ *■- • U ’ '' • !»Uf till Hid *ia* ki ; k ai. ’ • . * (•*’ * !a* kh Squeaky S ’ue» To i • 1150 • diilifi’t ii,*. if ,tb <»lh ’h* <a>« . * H ■ *»} m > ■ ’ hik’ht I’.. ‘hi .|J* rt 4 W.ilv u w Un»J> *hou>ili to It. Modern Etiquette Br ROBERTA LEE (J Anal bond . p. .. -,.y when snotli* > say* Gu* - ho-s old I Mill \ Alany people w.ll gn.-- * t< w , y.a youltgel than til.) '.aliyl think but till lu st ) .Mil •• to *a> I .nt: . idulii < o .<1 ii Vi. •slug .is- - You might say flit) to a a "ll.al. who is tint) and |hi|l , .'.illtlful fIK-’idslHp tj Abai would l>. a .*'4 m< i 10l .< to. ti.u! lum broil ' 3 Fi Ulf < oup * 1,1. * •-a' o fowl -wind vg.tabb and d,l tj A hat i tp. .oi ..' way b i. inn • man i. a gill in iii'.udui. .. t -..-nd to l;i» <»i In mot! ■ ■ 3 Mothet till* Is I la • l,< • 3Vil -oi. Os, • Moth- : tin* i AnnMorgan «» Trade In a Good Town — Deca.ur

School Officials Preaenl Safety Study QK] t In ■ \ 3 ■ ■■my (I) Dr, Henn It 15*55. efea.rfnaa ol th* V*r Hook <.umtwioioa of lb* American A.*m-iat.on of Sekenl kdmieWtraiwn wkieb ha* .pent two year* prr|«ring lhe Var B*e-k on Safec kaluralwm. Ut Dr. B*n <J. Grabam. Su|*rrimeadenl •< P.iidturgh S. h.a.l. and preudenl of the thbnol Admim.iralor*. who will tecehe tb* kear Boek it Ft. Izmir February I?, fl) Dr *r»ak 1' lluhl-ard. editor of th* Year H -ok and eoordinatm nf th* < --mm •♦me'* »t»d.e. <« P.ol C lloflinan. l-reodeal «f lhe hl-suMm *« , etv inundation who will e*ptr.r publK *pj>reci*lK>a ol ibe warb doe< b) the L'-meuwioa.

WILLSHIRE NEWS M .- -I ■-! > !. Uy. *. .. • m I I Inti *u yot Mi and M - ' a Kill,:, and la.u.iy For' 33 ..) i>. M Mi li.< Hub. w.-t. d-,. r inlay *v. itm„ .-; ,3h nd 31 l|. mail My, ■; I It. dm I - Wa m lioin-i ot d My. i - J bit’ll .innivi < *,. ) M - I .3 iM-tl- - aim -on Frank nit wet. Fui ’ 33a)m vtsitu. - 3 ue* ' day Ml* Hal. o' full. I eliteitaimd >- ilmm i Sunday Mt and M - L I. Brandt nod - hildivn UH. Uni. ! out and Matilynti. of Vl apakob* 'a -Mi and Mi- Hetman M>< > • ..ltd ot, Gi.-m and Di E II All-i-auglt 3!i and Mt D< iinisun Tmk lam of Maiioti. Indiana twnt lhe »-«kelid at thelt liotm Inn Mr I inkliain i- employ, d in Marlon Ml and Mis 33 E Spitler. Mi and Mi-. Mil*-* Ko*- and daughhei Nrllyiii. of Ghiimoi. wet.- din i.* i guest* Sunday ot Mr uud Mr* Cluik Spitler and daughter south of town 3lr and Mt- lin.it Chalfant ot Ulufftoti Indiana w-i. guest* Sun d,.v Os Mt and Ml Hugh If. >uold* M Ji-H.in. Mom-on entertain•l Ik U't.Jg- Coil. Tuesday i i.-ii Ilu I' i/« going to Ml lie kha

tei several gsmet a dainty lunch of George Washington appoint iihiil was -erved by candle light The "Van W ert Order Eastern Stat Chapter ’ entertained th< Wlllsldi' ci e s Monday eienlng «' » '"I onlal party in theti club im.uil. autlfully decorated tn th- patno ti. color* which was al«<> rattled out in the faille d*. >h uliolls 1 * • s-u.-sl- found their places at •mall tables by mate lung name* of f"i met president * wiles with ..oil lim-b" di. ssed in a .olm.lal to* tiimt- Yftei the guests were- seated Mi Albert Wistiu i atic a rrtnif of southern songs A delniouhin.li wu •med tarrying *”i* fltmige Wii«hfngtoii appotti’ni'n’ ’ Miss ViiKinta Htrlpe then fi.vmml th. coup »i'h t-ieral i.adlnr wl.iihweri wi ll re. rived Eight.-. t. m. in - ol the lot al • liap’e *• m alteiidaio .- Vfi M I II" am entertained dmnei Sunday ,le«..- Ilrani <»f I - A. P -Hid Mi \ era Flshi iolEm '

.'SELF uSIS&J

< HAPTEK XIII Dora wa* the most irreaponaibl* ' of al!. She left all of the tearoom I management to Gladys, and seemed j to have no proprietary interest, though it was eupposed to belong to her’With the highly paid position* she frequently held, ahe could have lived nicely in a hotel or apartment < f her own, but preferred to . Latch it with Gladys. She bought l beautiful, co-tly clothes, wore them a time or two, then left them hanging, spotted, in need < f cleaning, in the makeshift c'o-et. The two boys. King and Johnny, were ambitious, too. King boasted that he had a routine job in a railroad office, so that he'd have lua mind to himself. Senoua, rag. r, spectacled, hr came every night when hi* work was over, had nis dinner, then sat by the fire and read until the girls were ready to go upstair* to t*ed. Then he bundled him«elf into his overc-at. wrapped a woolen *carf around his neck and went out into the cold, to begin the i long ride home to Brooklyn. Johnny liv-d in Hoboken, a 1 1 : followed a similar procedure He was a furniture salesman in one of the lug departtnert stores, tame t I Tanya'* for dinner, then went t > night »choo!, or studied by the fire for sn hour or two. He studied Sanscrit, Japanese fiowxr arrange- ' m. nt, and bookbinding. He never spnge of hi« w-ork. or hi* parents in i Hoboken Nobody knew much ab> i him He just came, with his b< oks I and hi* portfolios, and sat thrasionally they elublied to I getjier, bought gallery ticket* for an opera or a baliet. (iften they went to lectures about art, or book*, or politics. Linda er.vn-d th<m their knowledge of all these things that were new and foreign, and often boring to her. She wanted to 1m» able to chatter about art eihibit* and mu*ic and book* the way they did She wished a'ne knew the rowdy aongs they sang, the Jingles they chanted together, the vents they quoted so glibly. She began picking up a book here or there, reading, forcing herte'.f to com-entra'e In ba k of her head wa* the growing idea that what they could teach her would help soma day It wa* Gladys, the only one wl, had any personal ambition, who retented Linda'* wide-eyed listen ing, her growing habit of reading She found more and more for her to do, and waited for the protest* that didn’t rams Linda didn't care She «a* used to work. She began making a few suggestion* about the cooking, too. "Grandma wa* French, you know, and I remember some of the things she used to do—" “Swell! Go ahead!” Gladys would say heartily. But she didn't like it. I'. .pie came to Tanya’* night after night to get her good cabbage soup, her baked pork chops, her hot bread, and ahe didn't ne<d any help from a youngster she'd only taken in out of the goodness of her heart. Some of this Linda sensed, some -of it was discreetly whi*percd by N'ola. Linda Iwgan to feel uncomfortable She'd thought ahe more than earned her living Now, maybe Gladys didn't want her Maybe nobody would ever want her. Maybe there was s- me'.!. iigßbovt her the’ made pe>’Plt dislike her after awhile Gn* day, Dora, breeaii.g in early, aurprised her crying upstairs "Don't you know nothing'* worth crying about, infant?" "I'm not crying!** Don't be aillv, I'm not blind Tell grandma all about it Oh. I'm not fooling, Linda, honey. Tel! me. Maybe it's something I can help about. Please tell me.”* "Oh Dora, you wouldn't underaland You have a job and money and every At-g And when I came here, I thought I'd have them And I do thank you and Gladys for help, mg me, but I try ae hard ami still Ibn not getting anywhere, and sometimes | think I'm not pleating Gladys—” "Whet do you stay for? There's nothing in it! Never will be.” “But Dora, now that I'm here, and I see how hard it i* tn get work, and I realize how httl* J know—and how little money I have, I get scared. I—“ “You ought to go back home. han«. Go on—there's a good kid." No. No, I really cgg'L It isn't possible.” “Well, that * my Lest idea!" That night Linda talked to Gladys. “Gladys, could I earn enough, just working mornings and • * th# dihfwr hour to ray for ti»y ■teals, ami living here?" Gladys flushed "Hi.y d.dn t y.,u say you wanted to dtaw aame money?*’ “I dual! That Im'l it. What I iu*aa n.mu-d 1 ca,u enough to pay for loom and boaid, and tbci, have the real of my tune to go to uigbt

Wayne. Mra L E Brandt and son Tom and daughter Marilynne <,r Wapu koneta me the guest* of .Mi< Harriet Colter a f* » day* this week The Dona* Clas* was delight fully eutertaiued iu the home ol Mr* John Byei Tuesday i-velun. After the regulat routine of bust ties* a proyiaiii ot inuale and read mgs were given A Bible contest wa» won by 'li lairin 11. u... k V delicious pot link Sttppet was si-i v fd Io the eighteen lu.-tnli.-i» pi> sent o B-t of Jaoan to Bloom Maiy-Vllli- Cal <cpi Ih> fa mon* .lapane*' flitwerlnv cherry ti.-. that have a’t.a.t.-d uillllon<d tourist* to W,i»hlngton are • ...Hi to liav. ilval- here on. bund id of tin- tie. * have be. n pi.-»i-nl < d to Hu- . Ity by th< Japiun-.- Am .:h an ( itu.-n* l.<-,ii:i|i <d the tout uirounding countries win. impoit nl tiii-iii timil Japan

I school and study?” “Os course If you want to. But .if you ’hint its a joke to pike out to some damn night school, after standing on your feet all day! And what do you want to learn, Sanscrit like Tommy ?’’» "Stenography.” "STENOGRAPHY!” Gladys sat down and laughed till »he cried. '"Merciful heaven,” she wheezed. “What an ambition. WHY?” "Becau-e it seema to be the •hing you have to know to get a job. I've been ail over town. To every store! And there isn't a chance." The fir«t thing they ask you at the agencies is, ‘Can you type ?'—>o I'm gqing to learn." "May heaver, protect you," Glad)* *aid piousiy.

n 9 erf M /•TV^i i v ft.' ’ ■■.<'■ .fl MJ f ■' • .zA>Vita J JMM \ 14jmaOaM|wa*l I * I I 1 / ’ iB M Gladyt ul down and laughed till aha cried "Me.’. i-.es eri'fl eaclaimed. "What an ambition' ■

The neit day Linda rented a type writer, arid the neat night she wa* on her way to tchool. It was a winter of annw and sleet, and rain that blew tn blinding, drenching sheets. To leave the warm, stnoky tearoom with it* sputtering candle*, it* giowing wood fire, and the laughter arid good natured bantering of the "regular*” who made great aport of her • tenographie ambition*, and to struggle out into the night to a c!a»a, took every bit of will power that Linda had. I just can't keep It up, shed think d- »pondently. It's too much, ft'* too hard. Anyway I'm tired tonight, and it'a wet and cold outside. . . . And then, before *be could weaken, she'd run upstair*, tear out of her fui! skirted |M>asant dre- .and into her street-clothe*, and go—for another night, anyway. She wa* always tired, nearly always discourag.-1. Her mind didn't work properly. Iler finger* would fall on the wrong key* of her tyjw- • nter. How do other girl* learn the*o thing*? It look* so EASYI They do it—why e»n't I? What's the matter with ma? If other* can. then I MUST - So *he got through the winter, and the slushy spring and the be ginning of a summer that began to be hot liefora apnng was dc. ently ’ in. Now it wa* imperative that she earn something at once. Her original 5 !5 had long since gone for carfare and such stem necessities as thoe repairing and stockings. T.p* were p-actically unheard of at lanya's, and when »he was fortunate enough to And a little job of addressing envelopes or filling in form letters, it was night work to he done downstair* in the tearoom, 1 after (iladya and |)nra had up , to bed, for the partitions upstair* were thin and Gladys objected if *he . was kept awake. . 8 7 w * ,ime » • !>•» rrby rattled the . knob of the door, or tapped at the window, end Linda’s blood would go •old with fear There wa* no way ' to go through the house to their i room* up*tauI She had to come I out of th* basement tearoom, lock the door, unlock the house door, and then go up th* dark stairs to i 'heir room* at Hie Lack of the ' dim hall on the third floor. It be- - am* a nightmare, a nightly eudur- ! am-etesc (•be didn l know why ~,e wuikad ! .*• ' r, hj ' ,h * •• nl l» • ‘la* >O» i to the public library to study, every

r\\E.\n n A 1 --I'* u h.mu ■ ii- ‘ I 1 J M .ill. I j a li||

'■ A' l ’• H ' ‘ '* '' jBhI •he .{ -It ? *• mmS .ihe l.r.isi. s‘" C1..11 la . with h< r i. ' H-h - r- , Why . . n 'JHH st 1.-.m,-? A- ■ •w.-r (l-ni. * S’.d ul.) rench * • her’ ■■ *’ d »| ' . • ‘ to. ■ . . •r- n,d her .

Itoothlesa smile, •'• ■ afl ( hear the w r. <fl i member a neai'y ' -. • s 'Rtfl And then she'd ! • fl Grandma a-i.-i - ■ -fl tired and w rn. vI » »■ fl of »elf pity wo i i '« t 'fl Sometime ssi » ' 'tfl homesickness. » t » Something safe a !'.. v»n derly upon wh r. • r « I Johnny and Kina ' • and bora . . . wnat ■ to her really’ Amean to them ? S ■ ■ aa fur getting on studying, and ».>■ ■ ' ‘ '' do it in spite of th. i help. They didn '■ • • •’ ting ahead. They a . ’ ’ ah.ad it hurt that n b . even Blanche. an . own sisters. To do them ju.‘ anuw. Linda’s f> * ' delphia were mar .■ They aaw h<r as s to mo her, part of a s •* •• life. They • orr rd. ’ • i’. I worked too hard. I played too hard, that ■ were too gay. It I Blanrhe or Cla idinr brothers who a«ked a ’ r’s caaionally, tha’ she " V money. Ar dba : • it never oc urred to h< ’ t<i ayFood and she.ter "he I* l •ometimes King wou'd t"*' couple of cheap th»i' ' > • they'd climb up t . really ace one of 'h« | s • read about and talked aH long. But clothing * problem. Stm king’ I''" things m a I<> ' - powder,or a li| ■' ' '*' , unattainable g a'.s f struggled With all her worn — '*• ture, and the heavy l> ■ present work and »' • ternalely dreamed art about tiienn M< till'’.' out of her loneliness s wrote long, impa >i telling of her love, begg t ’’ say hose he felt '■> •» • yea or no—to let h< ■kn « • , to go on hoping, or to try rt ” | i Hut tome imp or angel " ■* ' ■ always bade her wa.' In” - '" ing ehe'd re-iead what a-'o ten, blush at last eight < burn the letter in Tany* * * I »lore. (To bo continued aaestlOM. HM.waue !•«'• •'•***