Charles E W Bean, Diaries, AWM38 3DRL 606/270 PART 1/1 - 1918 - 1939 - Part 1

Conflict:
First World War, 1914–18
Subject:
  • Documents and letters
Status:
Awaiting approval
Accession number:
RCDIG1066668
Difficulty:
2

Page 1 / 10

AWM38 Official History, 1914-18 War: Records of CEW Bean, Official Historian. Diaries and Notebooks ltem number: 3DRL606/270 Part 1/1 Title: Folder, 1918 - 1939 Comprises maps, diagrams, notes, journal articles and correspondence relating to the death of Baron von Richthofen. AWM38-3DRLGO6/27OPARTI/1
April Aatnrntn Kagazine Chicago Sundar T Fribme. 1928 Section A.1S MIICITWATIUCIIIOTEN TDROWI Germany's greatest war bird, Baron Manfred von Richthofen, who shot doun eighty allied planes. Next day we met them for the first time, and for a month ou pathe were to crous and recroes ropeatedly until the climax eame. in which 1 wus to play a chance part that is historie. The man who shot doun Richthofen, Capt. A Re After a crash on my part a few days following the death ot Richthofen, one of his cireus, uho had beon brought dom Brotn, Canadian ace and author of this article. vounded and taken prisoner, was in a Beitisth hospital back e (Editor'a Note: This is the firat of a serire of articles b the lines. Roy Broun, Canadian var bird, uho killed the Ge On a visit from a pilot of our aquadron he asked about th vron Manfred von Richthofen. ke will tell of fiy ficht ol planes uith che ud noua. Ho uas told that their com on the wentem front in 1918, uden ehe Britiad da mander had gone to the hospital, amashed up, and that the red upper hand over the German airmen and Brovn'e stighe dad art nous as a unit had cesud eo enst. cral limes mot and deseatod auctions of tha samous Riehthose "That les very good." he mid. "To us a very great trouble cicun. Broun'e ancounter with tho Red Knight on Apn We did not like thom iohich he mill deacribe, vous his laut actual combat. Three Swcet wordal That Hun'e unsolicited testimonial meant more a intermitent sying and folling sor iie vor dero derminate to me thun a chest gurdle of decorations. ckortky astaruord in a lancting erundt in Kugland. kle van areckite ofloially with turle enomy planes, and his decorations induded HE day following our arrival at Teteghem we were detailod the diatinquiahed service cross with bar. Today the conquerar o) in unt D. J. A. pon a bymh droppihe maid oven Thou- (rug's grat ein sobege fires in Torprit wol. Wol mt abore dlom al lihe uy, a over chan valeo prard i bunnen. tbey luid their erua" and were still atting around when thoy arenked home without ceremony. INSTALLMENT I After this disappearance ve climbed and became a high offen How Richthofen Was Killed sive patrol scouting lor cnemy airemit, and over the forest Houthulst we had the good luck to bump into eeven ol the cireu NEVERaw Richthofen until ten minutes before I shot bin Hending back toward Diumude, right at the south ol the food donn ed Yaer canal arca, ve had about reached Zarren when ve sighted Even then ho was to mo merely a bogogeled unknow them south of us, fiying coutheast. Their altitude was about hunchod in the cockpit of his red triplane; jun another ciphe 12.000 feet. Oum vas 18000. With that advantage in height wo in the auccemion ol eucmy fiyers with whom I hnd tilted to could overhaul them. I gavo the signul to dive and follon. finish. The fight vhanged to che chane full out; fve nones doun, dve Living. I never really looked into his cycs in this strange fight enxines roaring, five planes singing, five pilots tense over their inx of the ckics that was quicker than the warfare ol chance-met controls, cyes atraicht abcad, hunds taut on their sticks, fingen tightening already on the triggors of their guns. Dead, this dread Red Knight of Germany was sinply a nude Fanter, faster, fanter! Doun a chute ol the aty. doun the curpee on the shelf of a front line morguo-stripped for the pos serraming vind-doun, doun, doun, with the wires thrumming! morteni vhich proved chat my machine gun bulet had killed him Minutest We were upon thom-vithin distance to atrike, Fi To my knowledee I nover auv his scarlet plane until the doy to soven, but the conditions were in our favor. We were abovo fight which sent him crashing to the ground. and behind. And they gave no hint of being aware of ua His ond. then, wus littie diflerent from the fnte of his founcon Clouer, clouer, clouer! Nou we could sec the pilote, make out victima. For a fon acconde in the vastnem of the upper air ou tho markings. Frayrvents of minbow floating throuxh the aky paths cromed. But in those few soconds he had the il fuck to At honr che chruas Naphe Richibolien denoellt My met un find himsel at tho wrong end of a machine gun spraying trace a violet and yellon Albatrom. 1 mooped richt ater him. bulrte. That finiched him. Por the grvatent at them-Boelke, Bal over him-flew straicht until his nose had almost dispp. beneath the lesding edge ol my plane. Than—dt! Cuynemer, MeCudden-died like the poorest cub vhea an enom Whip went the atick hard down. I dived atmighe at him. M, piloi epeurd s aimiahe buna al tho rieht moment. thund tichtened on the triager like a vine. From the tuo gum Until I lookod curiously at bim, dend. Richtholen was an unme chrough a propeller, tore a twin stream of bullete. A hit stranger; but his chadom had croand mine many times durag hit ! Ruddy tracers cauxht and held the Albatross. I had hin thr precnding month, uben the fight ol five rod noned Camel Less than 100 roundel Already in flames, he was plunging to vhich I commanded bud repeated tumtes with his famons cireus curth lite a enched comet. Duriga that month of battling the honors, 1 muy claim witl A mor half minutés battling and we had dravn blood. were entirely our. The fight did not sufler all mode 1 clanced around. The air uas filed vith vinging, dipping lere were aevorat chunges ol porsonnel in th camalty. fighting planes. The red nous vere mixing it in a lovely dos i e tne, but vone al our machimen faled to meum. Valonu ight. chrotties ful out, guns barking in vicions bursta. I souxht to pick out an enemy to dive on. I wondered nntely, thore is no record in my log book ol our total bag, but kaow that a number fel to the machine guns ol my comrades Richthofen'e red plane wamn't comewbere in the brawl. Ah, her Indeed, in tho mme dog fecht vhich ended Richthofen's kill vus oncl-en Albatrois ainglo meater like the othem, but muh nes three other cirous plance werr downed by pilots ol my ficht ink fuslage and pale groon wine My oun total for this month dt spaamodie encounten va I had had the luck to bring domn four of Richtholene became regular cnemics, he and 1. Three times altogethe did ve meet during che month. Thre dimes did I beat hun before fato sont one of my bullets into his oun sending him down in a spin. But 1 could not craah bim; coule It must have been fate that guvo aue the chance at Richtbolen nover whip him for kepa. 1 wonder vho he Maa. 1 never even for a lew daye provioualy I had boen shot donn mynosf, but hac leamed his name. livred, unhuri, to lake the air again nent duy and cury on unti When I firat sighted him I was above and bahind, and I tried got him. The cinou, as we of the Royul Air fore alvaye called he jard to get in on him. But he aaw me. He was too quick Flinging over in an Immelmann, he went up. over, and under staflel, vas a name neither ol contempt nor ave. 1l uas ono o noath me. I Immelmanned, too, and followod. Thon be started thone apt nicknames ot the war, given by some unknoun soldie to cirele. Again I followed muit. bis memonies of youth stirrd at tbo sixht of thees multicolort A 1 thought l'd get him. Our specds were about the mme. W piunen. held our cireling ae il spun by chort corde from an auie. But my For it wus an affectation of the cireus that euch plane ahould b inhter Camel outclimbed hie Albatross. painted according co the pilore whim. Richthofcn'es slone was al Soon 1 was cleariy over him. Suddenly, with a jerk on ehe red. The othors flaunted every innginable combination of gaud stick, 1 flattened to dive and finish him. markin But he was a good pilot. At that exct moment he flung bim¬ ht time—the spring of 1918—the cireus was, to our und An artist's conception of the air roid on Thourou, A group of two-seoter De Hariland 9s, at pictured seit out ol the cirele, noce dounward, into a ap atanding, compored di the vry cream ol the cuemy fiying fut I couldn'e follow him. There vas an Albatross on my tail. here, dropped bombs on the town. Capt. Broun's fight of gingle-zeater Camels stew above ihem al ing service. Only pilots who had won their spurs io combe burst from his guns whiffed unplensantiy elose. I had to run. A sclected for tho Red Knught'e command. The aim uas th escort anc protection. (DRAWINO »r CLATTon Kuour. ouple of quick Immeimanne throw him o corpe d'élite ahould control any front to which it uas amigned by Then 1 loked around. Except for the machine which had at- " What the devil d’you mean?" He shook my shoulder being able to whip anything in the aky. Dunes and the Franco-Belgian froutier, which in this arctior Why aren'e you upl Why the hell aren't you with you tacked me, nou heading back for his base, there was not a red nous Il is significant that Richthofen's victime wero almost without was a low ditch two fest wide. or a circus plane in sight. vico. He fouxht exception members of ehe Britiah fyin Put-dut, ondem, air— I glanced below. I took a bearing on Poperinghe and from tha ery than hem HE morning of the twenty-first dawned dud for flying. lonx, and at che last he aaked no mo Onderal Order be damnedi Can't you bear the Hun? by bind line back te Teteghem, wondering hou the others ot Alone be vas oredited with being worth a divinon to tche Hun vue stil dleping vhen an onderhy bunt in. "Onden to get un, Ar. and npon io ihe Aecht my flight had farod. Just then. vure enough, there mus anotbar ersxrumpl-and The circus nas worth at leust tuo divisions. Its presence over e gro eanidenes dan duo alibaunil droone balon On this occasion we were all beautifully bucked, because in ou oomed out al be noc." And he hoicked off before I was right awake. Cet to tho feld at once; get your light vadhy and jump to «The aainted son! Thoy can't kid me first bruch with the vaunted outfit we had baxged one axainst odde nas the morning of March 21. 1018, whon the ahadow ol I voled over lor a further mnone. Thar vus a bang outade Triechem, Sabe a ler des without a casualty. Richthofen and hie circus firt croused my path. There was no resting on our laurels. Since you're so damned ke tho collision of express trains. I nerded no furthor unging. Frou miles back tbe Hun u April 21, exctly a month later, 1 uns to kill him. I die good, you pupe, get out and get some me cheling u with nine-point-fives. not knon chat. 1 did not even noomnire bis chadon uhen eh Cripesl 1 bounced up. slousbing decy That alternoon ue vent on anotber odlanaive patrol, but dre The aquadron hoppod over to Tetegbem, southenst of Dun¬ Before I could gather my wits Norton and Courtnoy were i guns of tbe Hun began that March morning to thunder the offen blank. Later that aftemoon thore vus anotber patrol, but again aive thal vas to be his last great gusp ol the war, his last tre¬ on me lib a couple ol wild mon. Brase hate botht And erque, aix miles ba pajamasl Norton was squadron commander, and Courtn no Huns. Evidently their plancs hud been ernt south, where che e chells wer but an incidental epiaode in the masser mendoue effort to amaoh throuxh to the channel porta, the bus e purh was on in carnest. ity up and down the front with which the Germans began push that was to throu back the British Fütch army brokenly ir chicf ol the wing, no los, than wbom there were feu highen Next afternoon, on another cruise throuxh a Hunless aky, I had but Cod theinr preat opring drive al 1015. To my Bieht and myrell eben pirat. Old Bluebeard, as we called tbe latter, uns mad. Hie full had a more personal signifieance. They herldod the coming a litle enperience vhich went mio the irgedy and comedy ol We of the 109th squadtron, Royal Air force, were at that tim (Continucc on page four. at the middlo airdrome. This was about hulf way between Bn naval whiskers ntuck out stiffiy all around his face o Richthofon'e cireus
Chicago Sunday Tribune IOSIRING Presarndernss LEINE * Banana oil!" jecred Mr. Silver. a preparatory twinge, abe had growa sceptical ae to title that Theodore hrince was a rottor, a stuffod hande thrust into his pockets, and waited for the landing on that faultless chin with one befty sock the necessity of devoting quite all onc's life to the chirt. Dr. Prince scrubbed up, the patient was brought Romance, as Well as operator, his eyes bleakly on the tiled floor, lookins preparation of sterile dressings, and ahe returned te Becoming every scond les well disposed te in. and the surxeon received the ecalpel from th¬ backward, remembering. her duties feeling lonely and heartbroken as she had Prince, who, up to tien, had been merely a general efficient hande of that Shirley who was now nothing And, acroes tho table from him, stood Shirley never felt in all her life before. annoyance, he mentoned this passionately, an Wayne, also waiting, and with that vision a carth but a mechanical, capable nurse. Sickness, Can Stalk a "A gastrectomy, gentlemen," announced Watte Outside, in the beautiful worid, overvthing wa Evelyu replied that it was dreadful the jealousy spring still in her eyes Her shingled hair of b coming to life. Hibernating animals and hibernatins there was among detors, and Watte thought to iah red, like a heap of becch leaves, was ! and procceded to outlino the patient's cuse history under an oporating hood, and hor elim, boyish hearts were emerging from the winter'e aloth to take himselí how like Priroe it was to make pas to the clinio that was crowding behind tho operators Hospital's Corridors, the sun. Up and dowu the reviving streete hurdy¬ the «eason'e most pojtlar debutante, for obvi dhonlden was encased to the chin in a thick apron tha to make her look clu umsy. Her head ached turdies were answering each othor like citified that was what had bren happening. And sho s -but there was no musie in the operating roon ahe knew enough to nognise a real man and a n along with her heart, and she wondered what R. PRINCE looked down at the patient witl and When It Does Il those happy outer regions were carefree peop troubling the tall, silent interne, and was fillod with an air of pained recognition. He belongedt that amaller divinion of the surgical worid ths pairs. She could picture them all over town: an unreasonable hurt because it was not her plaoe te ing through the bespangled park in pairs; planning, had parted. comfort him. And ahe knew now that it was the foels all operations are performed in the intereste o Often Results in a Case to lunch at Voisin's in pairs; halting in front o fact that he would soon be leaving the surgical the surgcon. To his mind it was sheer insanity t ND here, this norning, was his discharg florists rejoicing windowe—in pairs. While here ahe t had rendered her future suddenly in¬ vork on à case that had only a bare chance of recov A official notioe tiat be was now on the fia tolend as, in this bleak, rigorous, frost bitten oporating ry. It was his habit to ship off such patiente1 omalone. With Complications. retired list. This letter. He felt it crinkling he spring went on without the And, outside, a Braylands, which was a municipal institution » Here thoy oc had to take whatever came along. As a result of ! Or, as good ae alone. Dr. Ampere was there, o " ahe said at last, in her cles in his linen pocket ciwly, as she herself was crisp He put his hand te lis side and tou course, attending strictly to the business of ignoring steady voice, addressing Watte with the professional N New York City it was spring. Down the can principle of living ho hud a mortality record that wu¬ her, it being his prudent practice to shut his cyes to otherwise might a nan finger a bullet that has abo yons of ite streets the light was golden; in the courtesy of a nurse who is used to being treated a¬ second to none. physical attractiveness whenover such appeared bo¬ a hole through the lalleon of his hopes. If she were a dangerous explosive and does't care a But it was the sort of thing that made his in¬ aquares and parks the trees were aerial, as- il thoy had been dipped in green gause. Frost was hind hospital walls. Mis Wuyne had rather annoyet So, like a correct, patient host, he stood with his hoot. Hearts were not being worn on the sleeve of ternes, after living in the same institution with it him from the first—why had abe come here to ve¬ Wayne’e uniform this season. for some months, long to tear up their diplomas and gone, cold was gone; not a sign of a fur cont was te The sounde of approsching feet vhich ahe the decent whiteness with her superfluous vivi¬ be seen. To all who lived on Manhattan island th leaving no address, go forth to take up good, hones Let her go to the Follies, where ahe belonged galvanised the place into life, and high 1 TABLE • CONTENTS ditch digging as a life w heard miracle had come. He was drastic, but then he was a man bowed So now Watte watched his superior with a critica ficiency now reached its climax. Watta n cred e Evan St. Martha's hospital sensed the magic, an MY FIGHT VITH down by corrow, to whom nothing remained but th moved his hands from his pockets, Mias Wayne did and unfriendly eye. The case was a neglected one, upon Shirley Wayne in common with the rest it river. This morning his fianoée had returned his rin¬ RICHTHOFEN ........ Page things to her instrument tray, sterilisers bubbled with only a fifty-fifty chance. But without opera¬ worked ite spell. refusing longer to wait whilo be completed an in The first instalane nurses appoared from nowhere, and stretchers lum¬ tive interference she had no chance whatever. Watt¬ of e Canodt Since her gradustion from the training school the terneship that ahe felt to be, in a man of hie back thrilling bered down the hall to the anaesthotising room. was, he prided himself, no quick fire emotionalist year before ahe had been in charge of the operatiny e kaiev pediente ground and prospects, foolish and unnecessary. Fo The steps came nearer, a hush descended, as though He knew that the doctor and the nurse cannot sen¬ room and had come in that timo to look upon the it was her opinion that he was ready to embark on a bell had rung for the raising of a theater curtain timentalise; that other people's pain should not LEAVE IT TO SPRING.....Page outside worid with the detached indulgence of ond his practico, and in vain did he argue that he hac and the operator appeared in the doorway and have the power to make professionals auffer as the A zhort ztory of vhat ko who has taken the veil. It was her idea that hardly broken the shell of medical knowledge. Lool halted a moment, as if to take his bow. One won- ayman says it makes him do. But this case had and a mo would continue to be head nurse there until volls oron at the londs of docton ra, che would reply, that had dered that applause did managed to get in among his nerve centers. not break forth from th never been internes! ea lgde Phi was an old, gray haired woman. When men outai udience of sheeted nur For the patient was a woman who had been " It im't as though you were an outeider, Watte assured hor that it would be felicity to be ill wen PERISHABLE (OODS ......Page ! Watte, the model of respectful interne, moved lively, smiling maid in the children's ward when ha ahe the nurse, che amiled politely, and felt immeasur He had been christened Richard, but, with the sur The pursuers clos in on their prey— began his interneship. A romance had sprung 1 « Good morning, air, mid he, well behaved and ably bored. And when women hinted at love affain name of Ampere, ho was obviously predestined to be ter in lornford Yotes atirs between her and the policeman on the beat whie with handsome young internes she looked upon it as knowu to Harvard, Southampton, and Park avenue modest. But he felt like an animal that bares its the whole hospital had watched with interest and an exhibition of bad taste and wondered pityingl as Watte. It was clour that she had his carcer had seen finally end in marriage. And now thi¬ TEMPTING MINUS .........Page( "Ah, there, my dear chapl" returned Dr. P. if they thought nurses and doctors had nothing better mapped out on her mind's fashion chart, and be thing had come like a bolt from the blue. Watte Food hints by Jan Eddington. to do than to make lov shuddered. A chap bor an Ampore, who, poo For Prince Charming it was, indeed. Evelyn looking down at her, remembered how Policemar So now she had boon in the operating room twelv FASHIONS ...! ....Page now. might, in some distant day, inherit n terion of woridly success. He advanced like a cour¬ Farrelly's face had gone white as he said good-by " Neu Sucoter Idas —By Corinne Lour months; and one day, all in a moment, in a breati need not bury himself in hospital warde.“ tier in a play, and turned upon them the expression his wife. you were more like Teddy Prince," she mus Well do our best for her," Whtts had told him ahe found that abe wae violently, irrotrievably tire¬ of husbed swectness that was so potent with th Nex Weck: in horror. " Prince Charming! of her job. Not that che did not love her He gaze od at her es."Glorious weather," he an¬ wives of millionaire quietly, ahaking his hand, the man in him supersed¬ "Holp cried. sion. But this day ahe had spent an hour The lhird Bout " gloriot To Watte that drawing room favorite, that bou¬ « the doctor. "Nice day, air. Watte was impenetrable. He roof, and spring was up there, too, in the unbeliev Dr. Prince, with the bored air of a man to whom ard Hess tels on enthralling tale o ably blue sky and the fragrant breese and the great, er veleran dan nager a comadard doir make, was something worse than the flu. Nor averted his eyes from a countenance that would, ho human lives are valued at a dollar ten a groes, looked lasy, white clouds drifting off to New Jersey selt, xo big at a fadeout of " And So Came te was he alone in this. It was unanimously agreed in with a vengeance down at the patient. There was nothing for an oper Without a word of warning, with not so much as modical circles that had given him his sourrilous Dawa." Oft in the stilly night did he dream o ator in this case—no flowers is he succecded, a bluck
April 8, 1928 mark if he failed. That oporntive interference was he could have sworn one could rely, even che had He moved toward her bed, putting on for the next minute. As he drew up in front of St. Martha's the weman's ouly hope, and that there was a com¬ auccumbed to the goneral insatuation. occusion that almont visible blandness that had car¬ basement door Watts remembered a scene that had d him before through just such occasions. pelling profesional tradition behind him meant And Shirley, unhappily trying to keep on the been enacted there last woek. Silver, that was the Out of the ether, all right, I sec." he began, thing in his life. He laid down his scalpel. proper sterilizing of scalpela a mind inebriated by “Gentlemen," he enid, smoothly, “ what Dr. Am¬ vegetable man's name, had come out from a April, found that sigh going through her as if in cordially, fishing around in his mind for help. longed conference with the housekeeper to dis wero something and injected with a hypodermic pere tells us of the patient'a history demonstrates a box of oranges knocked from his wagon and strew¬ that this is one of those occasions when it is t noedle. She discovered that aho could not belp no¬ AND then he met Mra. Farrelly's cycs. The eyes ing tha gutter. And what huppened aster that th¬ surgeon's duty to withhold the knise. To proce the way he stood in the doorway as though of that ward muid who hud served at St. Mar¬ crowd of children that had collected would never would be folly." He looked at Watts, as though ere giving, orders to a regiment of cavalry tha'a, who knew Dr. Prinoe's marvelous akill forget. Thoy wero accustomed to fliahts of sancy There was something angry about him that mado chould have had more sense than to admit au dwas also on to all his tricke. “He was afraid to operate on me." aaid Mn in their own sathere, but the langungo that Mr. aure. * We ahall proceed to the next aubject, her seel an urgent necemity to placate and soothe " This woman is inoperablo. ilver had used then awed them into silence. All The sort of thing that causus wives to run sor the Farrelly, quietly.“ He wouldn't give me a chance. ey could do was stand in breathless admiration. So that was that. Watte' faco hardened. Every¬ evening nowspaper and the old pipe. Afraid to operate; why, of course not, Watts an¬ But no one knew how the fruit came to be on the thing that had been esid and that be had suspected ind sho know that in a moment sha was going to sured her. And yet, even while he was stum ground. It was finally coneluded that some one, ose to him how thoroughly they were one ii about Prince was true. about inside himseli tryinae to sind some wi "You dont think we might take a driving a motor cur up to St. Martha's door. hac their estimate of Prince. Sho could feel her who cover up sor Prince Charming. ho selt like kissing backed into Mr. Silvers wagon and knocked ovet " ho found himself asking, agninst all ru soul bend to the luxury of telling him; the words this pale woman with the haunted eyes. She was the the crate. And Mr. Silver had then pointed out gulations. Hr felt rather sick; things like ero rushing to hor lipa. And yet she was filled second somule he had neon in this one morning who that il he ever discovered who hud done it there ide one doubt onc'e vocatit To Dr. Prince the implied criticiem was the last ith a panic at the prospect of breaking down th wus on to that bird wouldn't be enough left of him to sweep up. ier of hospital rules that kept them aasely, de But it was a bad quarter of an hour. Mrs. Far¬ Idly Watte vatched him carry a bushel baske? word in impudenco. Os all the young internes, ho ly apart. relly declined to believe in any doctor. She was of apples into St. Martha's, leaving a erato ked tllis cool, imperturbuble one the least. And then, without her own volition, against every "The cuse, 1 aaid, is inoperble, he rep through with doctors for liso. Watts, in his pleasant orungrs resting on the lowered tailboard of h one of her four year old St. Martha's instincta, her patrician master roprovin hs vaet paed goa voice, with that sincerity and that desire for her wagon. Ho did not return at once; evidently he recovery which showed in every word he spoke, mun Tho case was inoporable," she said, mocking the was going over with the housekoeper the list for the clinio, knowing his reputation, looked at Watte wit next day. persunde her to go to Braylands without in any way he warm oyes of brothers. liquid accenta of Prince Charming. holding the "Yes, air," said Watte, and made up his mind that seeming to criticise Princo Charming. Aster all. that While Wutte was still thinking about the accident hrase up before their eyes and surveying it as is it vas only one man's opinion, that she could not be to the oranges these vagrant musings were stiflec he would send the patient down to Braylands a a peculiarly loatheome type of poisonous perated on. Great Scott, any man was apt to be by the approuch of a toun car that wus sar too con¬ once and thoy would havo her opened up besore the vrong. In a cerious matter like this, sho would not scious of its owu magnificence and exclusiveness to day was over. There were men there, thank God, Sho could not have hoped for a better effeet. th to one person, would she? Finally, he ahine. And at the sight Watts solt rising within him voice scemed to operate like muscular compuls that know their duty when they saw it. hor. Mra. Farrelly could not but have a terriblo malignity. For the car was that of Prince Watte started ereet from tho de b in this grave youn un. She know him to bo Charming. DUT Shirley Wayne, glancing up at him quickl) his arma, and regardedh ronghold. He pro¬ d much the mame effect The latter drove up in front of the door, and then, met a pair of oyes so gray, so chill, in a sace s at, shadowless ghost of faith in St ears. concentrated, thut ahe almost cried out to hi on her, in fact, that he did on most people. 4a * justified her faith. artha'a, in womankind, rushed into his soul aguin not to look at her like that. She had never beso¬ The next mornins Polic he did not speak. Ho wait de mun scen the plensant, poised. polite Watte overstep t expoundad diim Nayno. us relly, like the ghost of him bounda of professional etiquette. The thins soping those words back since in¬ opped to thank the interne sor his eely, predleny every bone in a body that had beon trained and the miesus wanted hospital discipline to look upon tho attending Her very hair seemed to emit fil brimalone him to know thut aho hud come Whut!" cried Dr. Amper irgeon as royalty. To question his decisions, she Not often through the operation and was going knew, was lese majesty of the raukest sort huve mero internes these fic With a woman's instinet to cover up quickly eloquence ready to turn ke arid worid in time of co delicate situation botwoon males, she expedited t nal drought. removal of the patient and tho entry of thio appo Tbere was no ctopping Mis dicitis that was next on their list. It cheerod her a Wayne now. She was off to a good littso to do this small thingysor an interne who was ecarcely aware of her existence.. And, rven as she That e. Mnn realised how almost unconscious of her he was, a ahs oy faint wonder enme into her eyes. It had novor hap¬ hend nu uhed u room. h pened to hor besore that any young man had actec thus. Almost alwaya in that outaide worid there too beautiful to b one ought to take him out had been comebody trying to propose to her d xivo him a good, sound spank¬ These reflections carried bor through the rest ot the operations, while her hands handed out instru¬ She had not until now had any ments and her tongue counted sponges. Then the morning's work was over. The elinie Dpine beel.. melted away into the worid; Dr. Prince, chedding his operating robe like a ch xurdenia that strangely had not wilted, and was ot to Park avonue and environs, the finished produot of countless lnboring centuries. Watts accompanied him to the elevator. Shirley watched them go with a feeling of a child who has been left behind. She, understanding and enthusiastic of nurses. was filled with a curious and surely unpro¬ fresional desire to box both their cars. Especially the nice, close-to-the-head ones of Watte Ampere. She did seel thut some¬ thing ouuht to be done; that she should no allow horseli to be treated as il sho we nothinae but a clockwork woman wound up to pass instrumenta. Watts, eering his suporior into the lit bowed formilly. and mw the duns dunn dis aendue auenn un his loving pride in his proses ly. tho image of what he would nove¬ holp him God, allow himseli to becom¬ and what Evelyn down in ber heart wante him to be, drop ailently from sight and make its way to a worid that did him homage. Returning, he stopped in the doorway of the operating room, secking vaguely in man's immemoriul sashion for comfort from a woinun who. ho instinctively felt, had re¬ vources of comfort within hor. " Did you sre how ha pumed up thnt laparotomy? " he demanded of Shirloy, hie voico hursh with contempt sor Prince Charming. She raised her eyebrowa. The case was inoperablo," ahe said primly. 8ho hnd railed ofl all the hospital decorum, all the pro¬ sessional etiquette in the world for her own exclu¬ sive use. Watte stared at tho giri "Inoperable your hat!" he then groaned rudely. He was prosoundly indignant to find that this esti¬ mablo young nurae did me eye to cye with im on all such mattera. « Dr. Prince maid the cuse was inoperable," a He wos profoundly indignant to find that this estimable young nurse did not see cye to eye with him on all such matters. ropented, as if this settled the matter. There was be no owcepina her into sympathy. “ Well, T’Il be damned." bresthed Dr. Ampere to get well. And God bless him! He then allowed *1 sec." said Watta grimly, and. folding hie armi and looked at hor with something more than warm himseli to express his hones opinion of Dr. Prince. evidently remembering that some one else might ho leaned againet the door jamb and regarded he¬ pproval. Now their relationahip, ho felt, was ex¬ Watte listened for a sew noments to these senti¬ wunt to uso that space, backed his car curesully until Thuat speech hud reduced to the vanishing point his tly right. menta that were music to hiscara, and then he made it almost touched the rear of the vegetable wagon, estimation of her intelligence. If this girl, ho re¬ But it camo to Shirley, hot off the griddle, that his mind blank and, with a gave face, procoeded to his gears into neutral, shut off hie power, and fircted coldly, were put to the Binet-Simon test, they were exactly wrong. She had overstepped t defend Prince, und refused is the end to discuss the ended. At tho sight of his pink face Watis God belp her! bounds of professional decorum. She had aho¬ matter any further. He firnly closed the door on began to dream daydrenma. He sancied that he wan Above all things, when his illusions wero crash¬ this amiling. enguging young man that she was on h Patrolman Farrelly, regrettin in his heart th pounding that pretty countenance until it looked side. auninst Dr. Prince, agninat all comera, sorev ing about his cars, did he desire to retain one or two ficer'a cloring worde could nover bear fruit. "Il ever that party gets wue on my bent," mid t like a blotter. He drifted away from the dreary about St. Martha'a. He would like to fecl that ita She had made herself cheap, sho hud offored him worid of ponmbilities and flonted in a wondersul ora policeman. darkly,“ just watehino give him the air nuraes, ut least, were not morona. But there was er—her friendehip on a silver platter. "I must finich my work," she said with great di of huppineas. There he met Prince Charming, and no blinking the suet that this one guve him what Impartially examining thero threata and carefully curelem of hospital appointments and medieni dig¬ had been knoun in his school days as a sour puin. nity, and found herseli amiling unhappily with tes considering the likelihood of Prince Charming some nity and newapaper hoadlines, he told him what ho in her eyes. Really, ehe was getting to be the grea¬ Shirley, head in air, operating cup discarder time falling into tho toils of the law. Watts went to thought of his pink face and of his varnished hair est fool, che felt. Then, truo to the training that his quarters to drese sor his asternoon off. Then ho hegan to minister to the devastatod territor and of his ethics, private and professional. had molded her into a persect pattern of hospital about her with her customary air of unhurries ahook his head. andly. Ond could put all the trust discipline, ahe withdrew in good order to the sterilis¬ hasto like Pavlowa in purauit of a butterfly. He ono likod in Providenco, but something told him VE wondered if Prince had ever been up against ing room. recognised, almost bitterly, that serenity; in the thnt Prinoe and the law wers never to meot. anything dangerous or rouxh or unpleasant in crises of her dutios, major or minor, he had never his life, and thought of the contrast between Before him stretched a long, fres weck-end, 1 »UMFOUNDED, Watta looked after her. Hi¬ knoun it to fail. Let surgeons rave, pulses stor weck-end that be had beon in the habit of spendin him and the primitive Silver, and remembered the keen oyes that had spent bo much tim¬ junior nurses faint. Mise Wayne, with her flowerlik with Evelyn. And all he couid see in the immediat Evolyn flickered over the bronse hatred. latter's mage last week and thought how rotten it was gracu, the alow turninus os her head, the auro, defi¬ e was the prospect of jorishing of despair and that, in a worid harboring Prince Churming, all that explicable woman that had so suddenly turned fr nite movements of her hande, still rotained to the lom. He did not want to stay in; ho did not poisonous hatrod should have gona to wast nto a peraon. He folt that he knew thi operuting room its inratimable fceling of repose. want to go out. It was a unverse in which tho aleek In fairuees, it must bo called to mind that this w ry well. Walls had fallen as though tho and unguileless prospered. There was no balm in And now all at once this sorenity annoyed him pring. All up and down the lund the virus wa trumpete of Jericho had been sounded. And his Gilead—that is, hardly any. There was no justice. He felt, inconsistently, that il he wus not serene ahe nor any in sight. sorever g into the blood. And now, for a moment, should aot be either. He continued to survey ber. got thut he was a serious young interne with a and mortar that thoy hi His sister was coming late to motor him to Lon He selt, to0. that is it wore not for the way her putation to maintain on that effervescing Aj at his spiritual feet. Then he stood quite st Island. Last weck Evelyn. too, had been a gues shininu hair grew with curly edges behind ber ear y. All the inhibitions of a well brought up yoi straight in the middle of the doorway and sudden But this time thoro would le no fourth at bridgo. he would have likod to spank her. . . . But, ye sell from him like a garment. Suddenly, as one wh¬ he grinne has not a minute to lose, ho bounded from his sea He leaned from his windov like the Blesend Dam¬ he also found himself filled with a terrisic desire t¬ After that, with one more look at that other osel leaning from the gold lar of heaven, and above show her Prince Charming as he really was, yellow and jumped down the stairs three stepe at a timo door which remnined obstinately, cruelly empty, ho imte thin, transient clouis passed slowly in the to the bone. avoiding the elevator, though he saw it descending turnod and went down the iron atairs one ut a tim sty blue from the floor above. But all the while he knew that his dreams wer whistling softly us ho went, he who, an hour or tw¬ When the man who supplied St. Martha’s with hopeless. The attending surgeon was inviolably cod¬ Renching the ground floor, he passed hurrie before, had asconded with never a whistle. those fresh vegetables that nade ite menu the won¬ dled in the cotton of the worrhip that is accorded without being obeerved, through the out patient¬ Ho went into the women'e ward to see Policemar der of all institutions drive up, singing loudly, in a democratie worid, only to the royalty os a hos¬ department, into the street. A second later he re¬ Farrelly's wife. He had to tell her that they hac Watte wondered bitterly whit he found in this empty pital. He himaels, a mere interne, wus but a help¬ appeared and atole up tho stairs agnin and a not operated, which ahe must by this time knov worid to sing about. His beert acemed to contract less fly in the spiderweb of hospital etiquetto. proachod his window from the aide, as is he did no sor borels, and he had not yet propared the words and break out into domands, and yet it wasn't ex¬ wunt to bo sren. Then, as il eatisfied with what h Watts sighed. There was not enough horse se with which to approach her. How announce the actly Evelyn that it was shontiug for aaw, he ent down behind the eurtaine with the loo in this inatitution to no uround. In ali the w fact that, whereas St. Martha's found her inopera¬ He knew this vegctable nn well, as did all of trod was nothing but the night. This time ye¬ on his face that paintors give Jonn of Aro as sho ble, Braylande would not? How urge her to let Thirty-filth etreot, for he lad been a landmark bears the angel voices. his life had glamoured with tho thought of Evelyn. him send her thero at once without disclosing the there for years. He was a hute man with only two The sun went on shining brightly. The small Toduy aho wus but anothor girl. And now, even ahameful fact that an operator at St. Martha's vas moode—mnninres and fury. He was singing now breese blew the white net back and forth againet this nure, on whose intelligonce and understandling not lo be tritod? but he was quite as likely tobe black with ragr tho his blue sorer waistcont, and finally the vegetablo ian, singing happily, came out from the arcaway id turned toward his wagon. At that point in his song where in his arms he held her charms he atopped abruptly on a high note that might have omerged from a cage in tho 200. He stood incredulous, the blood rushing into his mas¬ sive face. " Holy Cow!" roared Mr. Silvor, and his voice fillod the street. The crate that he had left on the end of his wagor was lying sace down on the asphalt behind a black automobile that stood, aleek and wealthy, arrogantly suporior to more retail trado. Beneath ita pluto¬ bulk a gay trickle of oranges brightened the There could be no question ae to what had ha pened, and as the renlization came to him vogetable man looked as if he were about to have a stroke. Instinctively his hamlike bands went his hips and he gazod around, ready to annihil any living thing that showed itself. Then, with an air of terrible calmness, he folded his arme an turnod upon the blank sacade of St. Martha's a suc¬ so densely packed with pugnacity thut it seemed to "A very pleasant looking bird," was Watta' in¬ comment. " Some one's been feeding him FVE drew out a cigaret and lighted it joyfully.A sense of well being flooded him. His cares and troubles were mpidly disappearing dote on a blue horizon. The suture looked bright. But to Shirlcy Wayne, in the entrance hull below, there was no blue horison, only grayness. She was off to the pack alone, to sit there on her free aster¬ noon and wonder why sho had over become a nurse. why ahe had not accepted some one of those young men who, though they might not be all that some others were, still had their pointa. It was true that there was nothing preventing her from doing ao now. though ahe would not have admitted this. She was determined to be martyred. It was an annoyance to run into Dr. Prince a the door. Literally to run into him, for she had been going along looking down, noticing, even in the midst of her brave acceptance of adver¬ ly her gray silk logs matched hei sity, bow beauti violet gray frock. Gray, so soft and lovely aster all that horrid, starchy white! And then ahe had pod into him and he had gurgled. “ Ah. dear " in that silly way he had when you were off duty. And bere thoy were, going down the steps togother. And the day was too, too lovely, too seli-sufficient and touching and fleeting, one of those nebulous days that couldn’t possibly huppen anywhere except in Now York. And what was the good of such a day with no one there to—0. woll! What was the use! She realized that Dr. Prince was eaying eome¬ thing. and she amiled up at him automatically, anc it was this scene that Watts, blowing sorth a eloud of cigaret smoke, regarded now with happy oyes. He auw Prince Charming pul his charming laugh, and watcher Miss Wayne emile back at hin compocedly. On those stopa al was pence and correot behavior No ono but the happy unscen ob server could have foretold the cruption. And ho. engroseed as he wus in tho unfolding dramn still had time to notice, in a kind of awed wonder, that, unlike al other nurea this vivid, alim à Wuyne lookod, incretibly, as he tiful in strect clothes ae sho di in uniform. In fuct, il thut pomible, even more so. Thou what that had to do with a you man who hud just loat his lady love he did not pause to inquire Shirley and Dr. Prinoe continued down the steps, and as they rrached the bottom both halted in incredulous surpriee. For Mr. Silver, obeerving this exquisite specimen with the gurdenia rise his hat to tho pretty giri and move toward the motor, leapod forward, discarding his calm. He looked ferocious, and Shir¬ ley, taken completely by surpriso, stepped buck and cried " O!" in a amall. frightoned voice and stared at him with her hand to her mouth as il represeing a seream. She imngined he was orasy and thought despertely, "Now, if 1 only had learned how to deal with lunatics!" and tried to remember the correct procedure with delirious pa¬ tionta. Prince Charming, on the other band, moved by a primitive instinet to take cover, jumped behind Shirley, the only bit of protection at hand. He never quite understood how he came to do this, and in after months it troubled him. But ho saw Mis Wayne's clear eyes, as che turned to whore he had been at hor aide, suil to find him, and then, filled with the most amased contempt and abhorrence, mme round to where he stood. "O. you cadl" ahe said distinetly. " You miser¬ able cad! And those were the divine words that floated up to Watts like a benediction. Then there was no time for further action or re¬ flection, sor the madman, thrusting Shirloy aside as if she were a rose in his path, thrust his face within an inch of Prince Charming's and procoeded to bawi forth his ruge, The streot scemed to ocho and be¬ come one rour of invective. There the moment hung, perfect, complete. Prince Charming had appoared. And he was being cureed at and tireatened and reviled in phrases thut camo to Watts on the spring breezes and sottled about his raw and bleeding heart like dressinus on a burn And that cool Mies Wayne was present and he him¬ welf was on hand. And lise was all. all good. The noise down below was really terrifie, and it was whilo it was at its hoight that another motor purred to the curb and two lovely women, looking out, atared at Princo Charming as is they could not believe their eyes. Watte could hardly believe his own, in faet, for, while one of the womon was, ex¬ pectodly, his sister Ann, the other, incredibly, was Evelyn. He could not, howover, stop just now to ry to figure it out—her presence. * Good hoavens!" said Evelyn. " It'e Dr. Priùce!" The lattèr heard her above the tempest. There was a aituation! He looked up and saw the amusec ahocked, flushed saco of tho famous bonuty whor he had all winter made it a point to imprems. It was too obvious that ahe wus trying not to laugh. And here he was. . . . No, ho couldn't bear te think of it! It was too horrible! Standing help¬ lessly listening to these dreadful insults. And noth¬ x, ho reflected, looking at the bulk that towered ver him, nothing to be done. Above, Watte lookod down and felt that he would like to throw his arms about the vegetable man and kies him on both checks like a French general. No use to remain at the window auy longer; tho dramu (Continurd
Chicago Sunday Tribune WITH RICHTHOFEN ---- - - - - - - - - By A. Roy Brown MY FIGHI Aud out we ran, to find every one in motion. ef. But wo were too far gone to care. (Continued from paye one.) Orders to mova from Cappelle had come in the Stearne Edwards produced a box of sardines evening. That meant all night aluguing to be ready The commanding officer was mapping the aquadron those old fiying daye. We were over Roulers, some Some one else had a loaf of bread. The bread was x the shift at dawn. The flip to Bailleul was a twelve miles inside the enemy lines, when I had a "Leave your machines—you couldn’t fly them divided sufely and, as it happened, there was » rjump »through tho air. Wo got there a piston seise—stuck solid 10:30 a. m. out in this muck. Each flight commander havo a dino apiet Stalling to stop the usclees engine would Vo wolfed the morsels. We had séarcely strotchod man with a motorcycle stand by to burn then But at the,airdrome there was not a lorry; n cost valuable height. I would have to stretch e when the. Hun's in sight. Give him tins of gasoline ves to sleep when orders came to return to even a provost sergennt as reception committe inch of altitude to the limit il I wished to avoid ta single comfort of home. It was afterno to alash on them. Meantime, you pilots help load he Hun had not como through. The a Hun prison camp. lore the arrival of the first truck and a meal; rries. There's little chines had not been burned. We were to get n get out as fast you can for Marie mt da So 1 let the dead motor tur on. But every brend all streaked with green, which we had to cu was thrown out of balance by the break. Perhape we had two hours' slecp. It was short¬ larie Claire Nord! And where the hell was away before sopping the broken remains in tea vibration was fierce. The winge began to flap li and alushing the mess down! ly after 4 a. m. when we started by lorry a bird'e. The old bus threatened to shimmy into little bits. Fortunately I had a starting height of over 14.000 fect, and, with a strong following wind, I glidec over twenty miles. At. Bulscamp, about ten mile¬ ted out a nice green field pened to be slashed with mt twelve seet apart, leavina lo aecommodale i planc e vhecla il one judaed nice I managed it; but Boota Le Boutillier, an Ameri¬ can of our flight, who had stuck around me on the lons glide, was not so fortunate. YT was all mizhty white of him. Not content wit protecting me all the way on the alow motior slide over onemy territory, he had come down te sind out the trouble, so that ho might report tho wing and aave me from spendin »y sending help. Thus he came to sh The had a hump where the guns That made a nasty blin oe pot on t landine The wheele of his under¬ carriage went into tho ditch. His nose jerked down Over he pitched on his back. Poor Boots! He was not hurt. His beit beld him beneath the plane, his head a mere suspended inches above the mucl ky water in the ditch Aun I came up he was swonring fit to blist on his wings. He damned the field He damned el. He damned me most of al the places to You ruddy idiot Get me out of it— t me in. owio! This belt'e cutting tho—0, something, Bn der Ondla mte But 1 could not even speak for laughing. And when I tried, I could not do a thing. Finally he Richthofen with German flying ofsicers and mechanics on an dirdrome in Belgium. The baron had to slip the pin in his beit and flop head firs into the alime. is fourth from the right. He crept out from under the machine, spitting The March nixht was already closing in. It was back to Bail After that we worked, attending to tho unloading oze and oatha. leul. The of the lorries and setting up the airdrome. Ye raw and it wus raining. We soon learned that Mario That night we rustled a meal of black coffe rain had rods! We were low. No slcop for thirty-six hours. Claire Nord was forty miles west. black bread, and blacker dripping from a Bel No rest. No food. In the miserable gloom we started to reload the opped pensant and then slept in his miserable haymo¬ ylight lorries. About 7 p. m. ve got away. By that time By 3 p. m. we could carry on no longer. Fortu¬ When a detail of mechanics had helped us ge had com it wus pitch dark. We were soggy, sodden, chilled nately, I had a flask of brandy. We took a clear, the following afternoon, we flow to Cappelle to the marrow. wo ar¬ ;then flopped in our leather conts in ac south of D unkerque, to which the squadron had 1, and it been shifted A checrless bunch of chadowe settled on the loade a a h We sank into a aluggich dleep. At that moment for tho forty mile drive. was good Capt. Oliver C. Le Boutillier. His canc ius made of teood Patrols out of Cappelle yielded nothing. March 28 we were moved about twenty mil¬ es souti The way ccemed endless, Marie Claire Nord an ah for orderly rushed in, shoutir from the propeller of Richthofen s planc. "Line's broke! Boche cor inaccessible nothing in a nethermost pit. It wus ming through. Portu- to Bailleul, which was hard by the Ypres calient¬ um had turned up. Strong toddies stiffoned us Another sky battie with the ctrous! Hoie Capt guese strenming ac druma. Ondan da more 2 a. m. when we rrachod our destination. too hard by to be plessant, as it proved Broun once fought tho German in the pink an¬ for flight after some fifty hours with practically no Marie Claire Nord!So this was it t. Nover at at once—report to the( We wero only two days at Cappelle when we green machine—and hoto his oion plane tras ahot he front did I sec such appalling huts. sleep. Shortly aster 10 a. m. we got off the ground We came to our feet, grouching were sent to Bailleul. And there we had not even The floors were thick with all manner of filth and started back to Marie Claire Nord. dounare told in next wecke SUNDAY Why couldn’t tho ruddy Hun have picked an¬ learned the location of the nearest estaminet before From tho beams hung several jointe of decayer (Copytisht: 1028: By The Chicaro Trihune.! TRIBUNE. aiber dime we were shelled out. O SPRING .. By II Peresa Hyde Phillips LEAVE is identity to the avenging angel. 1 ar to mean that be bad better, after all, let bygones it ws just ho bimsell that had lost hie miad, or il that he was her. Anl thie seemod to hi Auloe (Continuod from page thres.) m. in ush, to be more a thrent than a promiso. they would all meet togetber later in the sa " he anid; rrest this man. Dr. Princ be bygone Dr. Pri had reached its height. Carclessly, lightly, a youth added cell, he and Ampere and the orange man " Wo can explain everything." mid Dr. Ampere. l." he waved a proprietary hus asked me to dine with you." Evelyn Watte looked at him of St. Martha'e hos who has boen anointed, he picked up his gloves and She had propared an attitude and a set eyes wide w agonab band at his kingdom and proceeded to explain completely nothing. But his soft hat and his stick and strolled happily to the "You kuow' who be is, of con feelings with which to meet him. She had. in some occult vny it penetrated to Policeman Watta, obaerving tho officer, noticed that h elevator. Naturally, Dr. Prince did not know who he was course, unfortunately written him, bresking Farrelly that his work for the day was finished. started at this piece of news us though he had bee He descended, a tailored and discreet young except that be owned oranges. Neither, could ho everything. But that, naturally, was atung. He suw that his suce grew red and that the¬ He looked regretfully at Dr. Prince. It would all over now on pleusuro bent, and strollod across the as had been the only bar botw veen them, but but guems it, did his senior interne. But small Finances was a strange mixture of expressions on it. warm his heart to take him to the police sation, tiled vestibule, the last word in correct behi taile like that meant but littlo i nthe latterslise. now they could hav ve their certain comforts a stared attontively at Prince Charming. with ha but thoro might be consequences for himself later "Surely," said Watts, simply. the nicest thing in young internes. Gravel *He's the hus securities and solidities, and Watts could in¬ and intorested eyes in which could be detected not unchecked his fantastie whim for medicine. " Doubtless," he aaid, magnificently, “ there is a emerged on to Thirty-fifth strect, where the late band of the gustrectomy you did not operate on. one trace of sympathy. satisfactory explanation os all this, afternoon sun was painting with a wash of rose the There was tho liglit, eusy atroke os genius! And Watts stared back, still without speaking. " And what," hundered the policeman, "have “ Doubtless.' said Watts, and drew a yellow prevailing asphalt and cement. Dr. Prince cleared his thront with difficulty. I YOU been up to? " And overy button on his cont, und hoped sor the hundredth time to sind in thut backed bill from his pocket and passed it to the wus obvious to him that this diazy untruth was the fuce something thut had alwaye been lacking—come It was not the beauties of nature, howover, th¬ ench separate wrinkle of his uniform, procluimed to ange man. halted him on the impeccable doorstep, but abe¬ posible explanation sor tho late lunatie loveliness underlying its flawless beauty. And, sor Perhape," he mid, looking the latter stmaighti the universe that whatever was going on here was It did not oecur to him to question it. the hundredth time, eaw that it was not thero. All amased delight to sind that he had been wrong about the sault of this doctor. he eye, “ perhaps you got off on the wrong foot. He looked around as if trying to adjust himseli affuirs out bere having reached their elimax. For his lise, up to this moment, ho hud felt that it was And at the sound of thoce dreadful words Prince Mr. Silver looked down at the bill, then up at to a new view. And at his regaining conscionnes the street was now completely full of the characten asking too much to expect that it should be. He Churming looked as if he were going to dio: as i tho windows and gtreets cleared themselves tact¬ had supposed that such loveliness was a thing to in the day's events, as if it were the last act Perhape I did,' he did, and grinned. He was a musical comedy. In other words, Policen over his grave. Paral some one were wa fully of all who bělonged to 8t. Martha’s. Watts dream os, not to find. There pressed on him Farrelly hud made his entrance, and the cast was on him for a sec his sunny self once observed rogretfully that Miss Wuyne was leavir the horrible realisation that for the firat time in his o, without so much as mying good-by. He look He looked at Dr. Prince and viaibly hemtated. r* IS eyes left hor and he glanced around. All complete. life he was being undervalued. He looked around fter her wistfully and with a certain desperation the crowd had melted away long before. bu " What's all this!" he was roughly demandin it was ne if he still saw some one that ha¬ the circle of suces sor help, met the delighted amuse¬ my wagon again," he suxgested, "un on't hit ler smilin g like that, no one should go off in and he looked as if he meant to know the answ den flighi menaf Evelyn, the disdain of Miss Wayne, t less you're found out by a patient and are tryir stood there. When that some one smiled, it sont blank façade of that detestable young Ampere,1 While he continuod to gase after her, Dr. Prine¬ to commit auicide," with which final thrust he buret warmth, in a way not to be explained, all througl YYITH no expression on his face but a cort of devouring hatred of that lunatic orange man, a entered his car. He had not stopped to speak to happily into his sonx nenin and rattled away. one. With her face illummated by thut enchantin grim assurance that would lator make his sor me back to the sure hatrod os Policem Evolyn, but appeured to be in a great hurry. His radiance, even an undecorated cold New York strec "The guy with the flower'e been pinchin tune as a doctor, Watte went down the ptes POLICEMAN FARRELLY looked after him with face was less pink than usual, his gurdonia had a soemod like home. He thouuht the aleek beauty and stood a little behind the group. Shirley turnec whispered ’the crowd. And they looked at him le look of one whom imkind fnte has cheated last faded, and his oyes scomed to peer into the Evelyn rather wonderful, but there was something und saw him, and, auddenly, awiftly, welcomingly ey. II there wen to be no charges lode with wise eyes which were still amazed at such a ture whore othor husty mutos might lio in w ubout that Mias Wuyne thut made you feel as if she ahe smiled in a way that seemed to him more re¬ "It has all been a terrible misunderstanding. portaca. against this guy, his own hands were tied. He studi had put her hund on your shoulder. In her presence - But I—but ho—" Dr. Prince began, and found markable, more vivid, and more sweet than any¬ with hopeless longing the crucifiod Dr. Prince andr xasped. And Watts, turning to him once u thing he had ever seen. She smiled as if she ha that he was choking. He could not digest the know that fewer patients woi uld be sent to Bray¬ volved in his mind the potsibilities of takin¬ been waiting sor him to come. And he was immed pas a disturber of the peaco. At that mome thought that the part of the vulgur vegetable lands henceforth. Politely aid good-by, hi rest. And he recalled those doliciot ately revisited by the sensation that he had tha¬ he pride of Park aven puld be taken agains (ted his eyos and enceuntered Watte' honest, ad- clation inged with the awe that comes to ana tor O. you cad," as though thoy had take Nas yon hungr demanded Mr. Farrelly morning—that they knew each other extremely well. rovidenco has especially intercede and respectful «use. root in the air and came now for a second time to “ He tried to hide behind me," she said in a m "Or was you to havo bees so much trouble to you. pus. amuanl poumel rallun lhem Mysteriously as it had appeared, the crowd now voice, as il she could not believe such a thing. demnn angua arvundi "My word! What doce he think ho secs now? *Watts said caraestly, smiling his disarmin faded. Only Ann and Evelyn were still there. In mile,“ but I think everything is cleared up now. ide behind me when that man attackes "But, 1 say, officer," gulped Dr. Prince, “ this is all her sharp, defined beauty she sat waiting for thought Evelyn impatiently, who had no time for Patrolman Farrelly, being quick-witted, under¬ "She raised wide oyes to a man whose stand¬ liculous. I haven't touched his oranges him. and only now when the excitement had died "Bannna oil!" jeered Mr. Silver. visions. ards were her own. od that ho was invited to seek pastures new. down did it occur to him how extremely odd it was But she nover discovered. For all of a sudden * Priceless,“ murmured Evelyn. I still think 1 smell a loug-tailed rat," he eaid And Watte looked down at her and they ex iat she should be present. Yesterday she had this unnecountable young man looked brightly at Shirley moved a half inch closer to Watte. roken with him forever and yet here she was. chunged a long, confiding look. All his life he wou her and softly laughed. "Well, don’t stand arguryin' with me," sappe remeniber her just as ahe was then. No, ho wou Febare vou do au Watu codialy, wel s eyes hardened This had been a day of revelutions, and the "C'm on an' tell it to the judge "Did you come to inquire for Princo?" he asked, the policeman. never forget how she looked. And he wondered last one had just broken upon him. In its lighi He took hold of Dr. Prince's elegunt sleeve to inti¬ A silence followed, is which Dr. Prince's fate nd looked at hor with a level, sustained glance as it wus clear that Evelyn had never come within under heaven he had missed noticing, in all1 he were bulancing a glase of ice water on il py, beauty of her eyes. How could ate to him that the time had come to move on. seemed to hang in the lalance. At last Policemai a thousand miles of filling the vacant place that months, th " Judgel" returned Prince Charming in a chill “ Don’t worry about him." he added. “I think any one ever look into tham and not be swept with Farrelly, with another puazled look at Watts, ind was in his heart. Sho was, he knew now be¬ an agony of tenderness as he was being swept now? desiccated voice.“ er. he was through. nd me, for you do not led that, as one friend to anothe only one of his w ounde will prove fatal yond question, too formal an ornament to perform cdun Pruer. Watch your step net t " wae his lyn smiled. “ How silly ho looked ine and nderstand. I am “ Did he frighten you?" he asked in a voice tha that office. Her mission had been to keop the hol¬ "You should ’a' remembered that before yuh counsel to Prince Charmng. “ or itIl be thir ty daya and Dr. Prince as a topic was throwu into the dia she had never heard before. Not his interne voic open, to prevent its healing by firet intention until at Blackwell's for yuh, and, touching his cap ard. She and Ann took tho unconventional scon¬ got so free about playin' with them orunges," ro¬ ite rightsul occupant, molded to a shape that would ng like it. And he began a gestur¬ at all. No. nothir hey had just witnessed without any auswering arkod the officer Watts as though thoy lad accopted each othe which he was forced immediatel ly to restrain. This fill that cavity, had come along. "But you can't arrest me on such a charge!" excitoment on their own part. They simply accop plane of musculine equality, he directed one And, with a kind of iciness crecping up his was not the timo nor place for that. cathing look at Dr. Priaco, turned on his heel and ed the fuct that such thinas happoned in this que¬ cried Prince Charming. still sure that he was a per¬ at the closencss of his escape, he realized th “ Frightened.“ She repeated the word that had eparted. part of town. It was as il Princo hud put on a of value he had not, in a moment's madness, knocked thi fallen from him as if it had no meaning except tha Can't 1? " growled the policeman, rememberin ahow in a polite, pleasant effort to entertain them. lhey all watched hin as he retreated up tho orange crate off tho wagon he would never havo it came from him. Thoy wero standing quite stil and they, politely and pleasantly, were entertainod. the white face down at Braylands. He bent over Then, " Better get, aut hero, air," mid Watts found this ou on the pavement looking into each other's faco. It wns part os a general attitudo towarde lise that Dr. Princa with a terrible countenance. He stood for a second longer without spenking off from all the rest by the misty ey were shu Dr. Richard Ampore seemed to come back from setly, for the crowd vas still staring. It inter¬ Watte had nover boen able to understand. ceumed to him then that ho heard birds ses that April threw around them unting lovel a distant land where he had been wandering durins ed him to observe hat over and above Dr Evelyn now leaned toward him, conscionsly « and troes budding in the park. But now Polic Farrelly broke the spe this discussion. He stepped forward now like at Prince'a mortification ani tortured vanity rode his With a start he came to. “ l'm sorry that I can' What's going on here ?" he once more domande dine with you " he suid in his polite way, and it our uncle died this morning." che mid, and idult appearing in the presence of naughty chil¬ tupendous amazement. " But the creature atticked me absolutely with¬ Behind and above them in St. Martha's windo turned possessive cyes upon him. Ownership wa¬ iren, whose afluirs, however, were no personal con occurred to Evelyn that his voico sounded like had opened, heade were looking out. All the woric mu of his. in the very curvo of ber eyelashes, victory in her baritone aaxo phone, " but the fact is, 1 have another of the hospital, nurses, internes, ward maida, proba¬ 1 4 aunugement. ik there has been a slight misunderstand¬ tionera, up-patients, supervisors, was listening in, to ag hera. " he said, mellifluously, and, back Watta, without sponking. looked back at her. Hi thinking tho fach that the Attending still lived His sister leaned across the whecl. " Nonsense, hear the vegetable man broadoast his troubles. uncle's death could pain him little, for they wero ua proof that ho bore à charmed lise Watta,” she said, “ we need you for a fourth." 'rince Charming, he fuced the belligerent polico¬ But, though Dr. Prince sensed that a hundred y winked. "A man like that takes things hard." he mused practically strungers. It had alwnys been knowi and defi But too late. Watta wus gone. Mis-what? "askod Mr. Farrelly, and melted oyes were on him, he suddenly did not care, for he that ha would some day be that distant : in his best interne voioe, impenetrable and sathom¬ He had scen a small, familiar, and yet thrillingly less as when making rounds. had seen this figure that was demanding to be told hoir, but his relation had been one of those somewhat. This young pill thrower was a good e cou de strange fiuuro standing at the corner as if waiting what wont on, and it wus, thank God. a policeman invalide that live indefinitely. No one, he least ot for a taxi. Perhaps, thought Watts, if he got there y. ho'd say that for him Ol coun All his courage returned, all his customary sens thont underata all, had expected this to happen for yeurs. e it is preposterous to imagine." Watis Dr. Prince stared at hin in time ucross those shining. spring-touched pavo¬ "I tried to persunde him " Watts went on, thing very spocial. A policeman. mid evenly. "that Dr. Prince had And yet, though he felt little sorrow for his uncle that ho was som unpdung da do ments whero ber feet had been, that alight person ith the accidont to those oranges. there wus a kind of shadow of despair playing on Now he was aave you wero quite within vour rights. I had no iden with the heart chaped face would smile at him senue dale “Ah, officer," he said, “ you are very welcome." Mr. Farrelly winked back at him. There wa it he would the street, a shadow, he suddenly realized, cast by Yon nhat? "The Attonding wondered whether Evelyn's unquestioning, unconscious assumption (Copyrirbs: 1028: By Toreea Hyde Phlllipe.) And now, with full confidenco in his salvation, he more here, he feit, than met the cye. It scemed
April 8. 1928 DORNFORL OOD PERISHABLE TATES I thought," be said, " you'd finiahed with me THE STORY IN RESUME: Jute started violently. Then he glared at Mansel its filthy rulcs." He held up the blouse. " He i wore attuched three floats weigbted with lead. Witl th a workina sace. trying to win by taking Mra Pleydell's clothes from AN MANSEI. finds the safe in h these in my hand, I thrust my arm under the gratina 8o 1 hud, mid Mansel, bringing a match to his That's one lie," said Mansel. robbed of a package ol lettera. H her buck and advertisina that outrage to make me us sur ue I could. Then I releaned them und Carson Chandos, J. Cieorge Hani¬ throw in my hund. I do not think that a man who Looks like it, docant it?" UTE let himself go. Out of a foum of impre¬ does that is fit to live. that their common enem ble, le the hem the le I don’t cure what it looks liko," said Manse Mansel cution odd sentences thrust, like timbers plung¬ His eyes bulgins out of his head, Jute fell upon s not, the flonta would leap with the water and * But I think you mny as well know that l'm presse¬ ain, Capt. ing in a flood. his knees. ry the rope down the eliff. With a hand on the a. but goes to. 11 ace you, you one legged— for time; and, if you clect to be hanged, 1 shall Mansel turned to Hanbury and me. theie vi¬ sliding rope, I waited for the check. But non¬ Pleydell aud C have less still, bocause it ll take two hours to dix over, you movie king. . .. When next I mec lo vil retun to the eue and vait there untl ua grave came; ly a sudden pull told us that the floa md de Rake it out," said Jute sharply. "I know you l. There were eight hundred feet of cor had lea —, wr'il mako you sweat de soods, and, ot de le le We did ae he said. Manuel ctontes dhe channel and danles lo and when we had puid them all out we roturned Cut flow shape. You can wear a xun on your back aide, bus pou o Two houre later Rowley brought us back to the for more. Six hundred feet more we lowered, an¬ tor. Cant. Pleydell, in bed wi a it'Il never fit. You're out of your depth, Mansel Mansal's that ihe seare that was as much as we had. The end we made sast and is you take my advice you'il kick for the shore Mansel wus sitting amnoking with a distant look nsel put his pipe in his pocket and rose to his snaiteren to the grating below tho water line. Then we weni Your job's to pay and be damned. We've got your hie name as the Rev. in his eyes; as he worked, jacketing a crowbar. Car¬ You refuno to ansmer?" back to the rope doun which we had eome, und at a Man doss theie loot son was whistling to himself; Bell was wiping signal the others pulled us up. "Carson," said Mansel, " get a rope on that A beastly light slid into Jute's bloodshot eyos. pade with a handful of grass. . "My answer's here," ho mid, glancing doun at The contentod mien of the cervants, if nothing Whatover the night might brinx forth, we had bough. Timber hitch on the wood, slip knot the other end are arted ln de cate d dar taken at least one trick, for, though this time we oe his coat. * You were to have had it tonight, but clse, ahowed that the worid was the clenner. might fnil to release Adéle, wo hud now a way up od fortress aiti ountain top. With For a moment the servants spoke together. if you're not too preseed for time, perhapa you'll unn ook at it now. to the terrace which the onemy would not dream lase Mansel discovers Ade nuntentes with her by neans Bell was on Rowiey's shoulders and up in th Y half past one the next morning all of u of and a desperate man might take and Camon was down in a gully with a knise in To thie dny I cannot tell what possessed the man D except Bell wero standing upon the roof ol the We were now bencath the shadow of the tower his hand. The next minute he reappoared with I suppose he could not forgive Mansel for beatine Custle of Guth. to the right of the guteway as you camo from the coil of rope on his arm. . him at his oun gamo: tho thought that all the INSTALLMENT VI. The night was starlit, but the moon hud set. wood; the southwest tower, from which Adèle had I knew that Mansél was bluffing, for he was not antics of Hannibal Rouse had been gravely ac¬ Each of us carried a knife us well as a pistol and gignaled, lay the length of the cnstie away. Inside the Castle. So far as we knew, thore woro two waya inte OTH cars left Lass the next morning at cight that tower from the open air-one by the roof an o’clock. We were bound for the dell, where . another by tlie steps from the terrace upon whic there was work to be done. Hitherto, or a roaching tho croes roade, ihe curs had gone wo had seen Adèle. The windowa which lightec tho tower were not to be reached, and the conical different ways. but today both took the road out roof of the tower gave us no hope. And, sinco tho of which ran the drivo which served Gath, so that way by the roof was plainly the first to try, we if some onc was watching. he should be able sor once bogan to steal over the pavement, ono by one. to account sor us all. Mansel was lending, and I was . Mansol went first; the rest of us followed at onc sitting with Hanbury, who was driving the cecond minute intervals. Only Rowloy stood fust, with a signal cord in each hand. No doubt our ways were known, but, be that as I had goue most of the way wben I felt a hand it may, when Mansel had swopt pust tho ve on my arm. man rose out of the bushes, stepped to the ods of the road, and stood watobing the car out of At onco I stopped, and Hanbury, who was before sight. o, spoke in my car. "I do not think "Therc’s an alarm cord, knee high, two paca To ignoro him was out of the question: we we less than a hundred ynrds off. II ho ran wo we a man who om where you stand. Toll Carson and then como does that is fit to live. bound to give chase; and we were three to on¬ We might contrive to lose him. but you cannot rui Ho left me to wait for Carson and disappeared through a wood without declaring your line, and I was desperately afraid of fouling the cord, so unless he had a fuir start, such a failure would h I went on my stomach until the dangor was past. instantly suspected, if not by the spy, by Rose I afterwarde found that the othors had donc the Noble, the moment he made his report. same. “Take him aboard," maid Goorge. “ It's the only Mansel and Hunbury were waiting when I came tower. And, us we had expected, there was That this was so became increasingly clear, for we mado no manner of oound, und the man w The door wus ol wood, very mascive and studded absorbed in his view of Mansel'a car. Indeed, with iron. It wus ahut and locked or bolted upon had no time to think and burely onough to net. The the other side. Whether we could have forced it, I man hud no timo to do cither. do not know; but Jack Sheppard himself could not As wo passed I took him by the neck and Bel have had it open without making noise enough to lenned out behind me and drasged hie legs into awaken the dead. And there, of course, wus our principal handicap Not until then did I are that it wus Jute. Tha door of Adèle's apartment was sure to b He did not attempt to struxgle, but 1 held him locked; but that wo wore rendy to forco, no matte na I hnd seised him. till Bell had strapped together what noise we made; until. however, we were stand his ankles and wrista. Then we took a pistol frot ing without her door we dared make no manner his pockot and put him on the floor of tha sound, for the instant tho alarm was raised Nol And so we hud mennt to leave him. but such wus certain to fly to his prisoner's side and, is he his criticiem of our conduet that aster a little we was there besor us, to put her lise in the balance axued him with a handful of cotton waste net mur lurihor aibranen. There was nothing to bo done but to try the Undermtand thie " mid Matrel. — 1e5 ontin terrace stopa. your fault that youre here. Chandos would ignored you, but you didn't give him a chance. N ailence we paseed to the battlemente and served your turn very well, but I finished wit from there looked down upon the torraco and vou at Lams. A man of your parts should have the slidin bbon of wate eut it in two kuown thut and huve tuken the greatest care te re than in the courtyard. wher It wus keep out of my way. the four walls guve buck sound; the ste e ade Juto mude no answer and presently Mansel rent on. " I bave no time for a prisoner, for prisoners mu In a moment a rope was dangling and Mansel und Ceorge went dow be watered and fed. So l'm going to do ono of two That the stepe wouk offer an entrance we hud things. Which I do will depend upon you. Either great hopo, for the bookseller's guide had said noth¬ I return you to Row Noble or else I hang you ing of any door but only that the stepe led out of the gullery of stone. Murder? " auid Jure, and laughed. Carson and I stood liko statues, he holding the "Murder." said Mansel, beginning to fill a pipe. 1 ignul cord und I with the rope in my hand. I glanced round the dell. Two gentle pulls from below told us to take the The spot was poaceful: a gurgling brook. a little min and a moment later Hanbury wus by our side. lawn. und the ahade of apreading trees made it seem He put his lips to my ear "There's a door at the top of the stope-locked fit for a shepherd's piping mate due ind allat u Mansel's reconnoitering the terruco and then com¬ ing up. Perhaje because of this I hud a strange sec thut 1 should presently awake and sind that I consess thut my spirits sank. been dreaming, and to this day, recalling th¬ To enter by some window scemed now the onl ponings of that sunchiny morning. I scem to be re¬ way. and we had alrendy decided that if wa were membering some vision rather than a dowurigh put to such a shift, we must esny some windon 1 business of lifo and desth. that looked upon the terrice below. What window Mansel wus spoaking. looked into the courtyard we neither knew no Now. il 1 return you to Rose Noble, I a cared, for ahy one at work in tho courtyard would WEt take you up to the castle and watch you go be working in a sour walled trap and could be ob¬ That is, if it's dark. li it's during the duy, I shal terved and commanded from any side. Now, the windows that looked upor h from the wood. You sec, I don't want to be wore those of the royal rooms. Thoy were no barred, because. I suppose, with guarda upon the lutes face was a study. roof and in tho gallories, no one could have come upon the king. you reported, aftor —l saw Jute start—* I imagine your next meeting Agnin, that tbe royal apartments would be occu¬ will be even leses cordial—unless you return precisel) pied was moet unlikely. The caretakers might have when you are expected and say nothing of having been bribed, but they would certainly stipulate mot me. I menn he might easily argue that you thnt the staterooms were not to be used. The last had led me to Gath. thing we wanted do wus to force an entrance His eyes upon Mansel's face, Jute wus plainly into an occupied a hurd man. He would have killed Rose Noble worc a coil of rope like a sash. Bell was at the cepted at exactly their proper vorth, tho memory o ng extremely Finally the windows of the royal apartmente had he was the hoad of the corner and with his d foot of the ladders with a signal cord in his hand the trap into which he had so rendily rushed and asel continued slowly, presing his tobacco tho conspiracy would have gone. He would have the worid to themselves, for the towers which and Tester was back in the wood guurding the car the bitter reception which he lud met at Gath hac eath would materially hely killed any one w The castle was built four square, as college buil¬ flunked the terraco were presenting two empty walla 1 think, inspired a hatred whicl knew no law. Anc "1 can't return you today, because l've too much him to reach Adèle. But a spy that, when taken Of no other aide of the custle could tho same thing ings, about a great courtyurd. Ito roos was fi¬ now to be again consounded, cutwittod, and scorn¬ do. In faai¬ refused to open his mouth was us safe in Mansel's and paved and so made a spucious rampart whi¬ ly reducrd had sent the bloxd to his head. "Sco here," maid Jute, “ vou can make it tomor hands as a priest on his altar stops. I know ho ow which of the sevon windows might be the What do you menn? * said Mansel. the battlements fenced upo ne hand and à mas Try my inside pocket," mid Jute. rou night. Do that, and I huvon't acen you since would novor hang Jute, though God knowe he hud sive balustrade upon the other. best to essay we could not tell, but reason suggested u went by in tho ca just cause. Munsel wus bluffing. and I was greatly Indeed, standing there in the starlight we seen that the one which was nearest Adèle should be the At a nod from Mansel I stepped to the fellow's "Don’t try to bluff." said Mansel. " It's only to be upon some ectype of the walls of Baby) afraid that the fellow would call his bluff. firat to be tried. This we supposed to be serving de und took a bulgina envelope out os his cont. "That's my answer," said Jute, “ to all you wasting my time. You haven't a card. You ha upon which, is I rightly remember, six chariots the antechamber which admitted directly into the gullery of stone quite a good one about sive ceconda ago, but l'v. NSEL. returned to Jute. uld be driven abreast. back chat today. And, botwem you and me, Big " As 1 caid, l'Il give you onc lie. A refus just drawn that. You see, I wanted to knon Peering botweon the balusters, I could sce th It was our belief that if we could reach the gal Willie, I guess it'e pretty complete." counts as a lie. Amume you're on the mm whether Rose Noble would worry if you didn't come lery we ahould have the control we sought, for, u Mansel ripped open the juer and took out a ipple of the water of which the bookseller had writ¬ in tonight. en and could hear it fall out of the basin on its parts above tho gateway. How would you xo from white silk far us we could determine, no one could enter the here to where Mra. Pleydell lies? tower without puesing throuxh the gallery, uniess h I wutched the blood come into the others face. I thouxht he would never move. ny to the terrace and the cli Hter a long silence: Now the basin was our first objective, and, eince Mansel continued in the same even tone. came down from the roof by the door which we had ter a long timo vory alowy he lifted his head Which way am 1 facing? " mid Jute sullenty. "I tell you this to ahow you that it's no good Call the servante," he mait.“ and put the gag, rope provides the most ailent path, we let ono fall ind shut. This belief we found to be juat; ti in his mouth. “You are facing the wood. playing with me. Bear that in mind. And now to lory was the kcy to the tower, and whoever he the courtyard and Carson and I went down. businees We gained the basin and pursed to the channel it Jute shut his eyes. Ho spoke so low that 1 scncely heard what ho the gallery held Adèle. But one thing we did not I turn to the right," ho sid, " and go as far as I caunot describe the coldness with which Manse auspoct—namely; that there was a way into the fed. This was ten inches deep, and ite floor war said, but with bis worde I kmw that Jute's hour spoke; there wus no insolence in his speech, onl the towor. Then I turn aunin and walk along by the as smooth as glam. I followed the channel along gallery of which the bookseller's guide said nothing was come. an iron contempt, which must. I think, have en¬- wall. At tho end of that I come to another tower. For a moment the glade sœmed misty and my till 1 came to the arch. This was shut by. a gat at all. red into the other'e soul. eres a doort knecs loose. Then my head cleard. bencath which the water flowed. The gate was A quarter of an hour wont by before Mansel gave "l'm going to ask you some questions, and 1'Il de vone us tho aignal to hoist him up. I mw Jute’s eycs follow Hmbury as he stepped iron and exnetly fitted the arch: a man might hu allow you ono lic. If you tell two lies I shall hany lain in the chunnel and crawled underneath, but, As he alighted I percoived that he wus drenchod to the onk: then his guae flashed to me as I pickes 1 * Go on. pu from a branch of that onh no doubt to soil such cunning, the channel was to the skin. up the cotton wusto. When I approached he re¬ And von tal about blun, n eed bute “You go throuxh that and down stepa till you barred with a grating, through which tho wate At once he drew us together and spoke very lou coiled. "At the head of each flight of steps there's 1 come to a hull. Crome this to the door in front. Sharply be looked at Mansil and caught his fussed. I tested the bars and sound them firm as That leads you into a room out of which runs right off. Two lies and you're for the high jumy rock. massive door; both doors are last. The door a You-you'd novar darc, " he mid haaraely as sure as l'm sitting still. Aud now we'll bogin flight of I made my way back to Carson and together w the mouth of the archway is ahut and locked. vos- Assume you’re on the ramparte above the gateway. managed to pass benenth it by lying down ih tho At lust we had the gua in his mouth.. sought the rope down which we hadcome. "Thie man," mid Mansel, “ is engaged in one o “Go down them, and they ll bring you into her How would you go from thero to whore Mra. Pley¬ channel and working my way along. In the aide this Carson pulled twice, when a hundredweight o dell lies voom? of the archwny I found a flight of stops-a very the vilest crimes. Iu his lust fer money he is not fino rope was lowered into our arma. We carried "Or the chupel? " said Mansel quietly. (Contonued Jute gave a short laugh. cuntent to play oven that filthy gumo accordina to this to the grating und laid it down. To its end
Chicago Sunday Tribune 9 knaöddinglon TEMPTING MENUS FOR WEE THE to be eaten raw. Such near dirt Savorings TUESDAY THURSDAY SATURDAY as it may carry is of a risky sort T is in the St. Matthew recore cabfast Sage Flavored Ham Slice Breakfast (5:13) that we have, " li the ra n ved Fru Delicious Ap auneal Pora. salt have lost its savor Put one slice of ham, after the Fruited Cere e Aa Aunus wherewith shall it be salt¬ edges have been slashed to pre d Honey e ed? " and we must visualize, as vent curling, into a shallow glas baking dish. Spread over it one we see the words, the salt of the Brotne pie Sulad Rles Balia » Baues tablespoon of unsalted butter earth and the sea. But there are Prute Salad vich Cheese Garnlan Whipped Hot Oi oun . salts we cannot sce, though the and three tablespoons of brown are in every food substance that sugar, one tablespoon of home Deveraen Toasted Spor Caa, Nnippad springs from the earth. They grown leaves of sage. Use also Rellahes one cup of cold water and one are named mineral salts, and their savors are as diverse as ar¬ large apple sliced without par¬ Ment Lout Pouon plants in all other ways. And ing. Some of the sugar may b Bolled . spread on the slices of apple they are fragile, too, as are the Arilehe landalne Bolled ead annes Bake for one-half hour in a 350 Potato Mumne alloped Salaity aromas of the plants which they onate sande Waler degree oven. Pleasant varia contribute to. Mayle Mon Gue tions of this may be worked out Cup Custards Cones Every herb of the gardens SUNDAY that may be, and many of the PRIDAY WEDNESDAV fields which have received but a MONDAY random sowing, may lend us de¬ . Breakfast Breokfost a trunes light by the tragile savor they lliced Bananas and Crea White Cornmeal M Florida Orar may add to our salads, our Bariey poridee d Wheat C Toast soups, and our herb teas. W u Ealury Ruan Radlane Pancakes and Maple Sirup Coffes Contes Cones get a lemon flavor from the gen rendert tle balm, or from its young Potted Chieke aumber Darnlal nconia Potntos leaves, while when the plant e Her ei s sue. in Bread and Butter Sandwiches nie Ru a hardens much of its savor is lost Cake Claned Hot rn Baked Baidwin Apple Anun Basil gives a clovelike flavor il Whipped it is deftly used. Aurur Cooaes The home grown and peren¬ . Cran et aber Soup n Brollad Bpanta mat Loat nial caraway is aromatic and duaral. Metad Poeata e Pot Cre Raked valuable for flavoring a favorite cups of milk, and a tablespoon for the pot. Even for cooking it otato Salad ue Fane we und Dinnen Cben rye bread, the seed cake, the or more of butter. Wash the must be prepared with care, but quava Jol Boveraee ream Cheese Wafors a e . Wafers bome made cheese. And even cress and lift it out of the rinsing not with as much care as whe Oranas N the catnip (cat mint)—a full water into a small flat bottomed fledged member of the mint aluminum kettle. Cover the family, and formerly used as a kettle closely and set it over a substitute for mint—has other small amount of fire. uses than what its name sug Cook until tender, then chop gests. A young plant of it we and add to the potato and onion. o other salad dressing may find growing wild—it loves which have been cooked and ruins of houses especially—is mashed and have had the milk more refreshing to my nostrils added to them. Cook for a few than any artificial smelling salt. minutes, press through a strain¬ Dill has other condimental er, add butter and salt, and heat uses than for the fat pickle. up the soup and serve. A little Young leaves of it are used for cream improves this soup. like it—because no other flavoring salads, and the Norwe Cress as a Meat Garnish gians, or maybe any of the Cress is never outmoded as a Scandinavian peoples, are said to use it extensively in boiling garnish for meat—if it is clear shellfish. They are the people and perfect, without yellowec HERE'S a "trick" in leaves or snail suggestions. It is who know their fish food. If space permitted we might, even fashionable to use it to gar¬ making the remark- go right through the list of nish roast fowl and game— recipe is like this one able New Mazola Salad herbs alphabetically and quote sort of eternal fashion—and in things about Greck practices, general with birds large anc Dressing—yet no “knack and also about the knowledge of small it is almost indispensable culinary herbs the American In- It is equally in place with a fine at cooking is required. The dians of the southwest once pos- beefsteak or roast beef. “trick” is in the recipe Discard all heavy stems and sessed, instead of skipping t tarragon—the fresh herb—with bruised leaves, also yellowec discovered by an expert cook. its somewhat ésoteric uses in ones. Wash the rest in rather seasoning egg dishes and salads. heavily salted water, but do nof Follow the recipe below One authority says of it: leave in the water or allow any and discover for yourself how “This plant has been for over salt to rest upon it. The heavily 300 years the greatest of all salted water is needed, however easy it is to make the most salad herbs. Without it, or to separate it from any snail of delicious Salad Dressing you chervil, a Frenchman will tell other live stock. It is a gooc you a salad is imperfect. plan to inspect the cress sprig by ever tasted- The warmth of peppermint sprig, and also to dip it in th has a Greek myth to explain its salt water sprig by sprig. after Made in a few minutes character, and the ancients were that into fresh water immediate¬ “beating" requires but 30 of the opinion that those who ly, and then put it into a wir¬ ate cresses became firm and de¬ drainer. When it is to be used seconds—perfect results are cided, and for that reason these raw for salad or relish or gar¬ were much sought after. Of nish it must be well drained, or certain—and so economical- these was the especially pungent not in the least sloppy. a pound costs about 20 cents. It can be washed in the morn- peppergrass of colonial and earl American gardens. We would ing, drained, and put in a salac And you énow it's fresh and like to talk about its classic as- bag for dinner. When the stems pect, and of the sage, too, which are coarse it is best to pinch of pure—because you prepare it. French have called “ tout about three inches of the tips of "because they once es- the sprigs and pick off the per¬ Join the thousands of other teemed it as the most salutary of fect leaves below this for use women who enjoy both the but when it is to be cooked the aromatic plants. stems need not be rejected. making and the serving of Cress and Potato Souß In some sections of our coun¬ this wonderful Salad Dressing For each bunch of cress allow try, where cress is used for two or three medium sized pota¬ greens, it can be treated much as by following the simple toes, one or two onions, two'the dandelion is in preparing i recipe to the right. 1 teaspoon paprika 2 tatlepoons auga. ½ cup vinegar 1½ teaspoons salt % cup Mazole 2 teaspoons dry mustard. 1 cup water 4 tablespoons Argo Cornitarch (All measurements should de level) DUTegg, sugar, seasoning, vin¬ egar and Mazola in mixing bowl, but DO NOTSTIR. Make When yon taste chis now Maxola-made Salad a paste by mixing the Argo Corn- Dressing you will inderstand why Maxola is preferred by diserimnatiag women evorywhoro. starch with 14 cup water, add additional 1 cup of water and cook over slow fire, stirring con¬ Send for this book today! "The Modern Method of Preparing Delight stantly until it boils and clears up. ful Foods” is » remarkable book by Add hot cornstarch mixture Ida Bailey Allen. It contains nearly to ingredients in mixing bowl 300 new and unusual recipes. Every and beat briskly with Dover egg progressive womnan should have acopy beater. Cool before serving. Send 10 cents (itamps or coin) to Corn Tourists on Mount Stanton, Glacier National park, survey awesomo Produots Refining Company, P. O. Box heights and depths. 171, Trinity Sution, New York City (Photograph copyrisht by Mlleman.!
April 8. 1928 Csunntewe IDEAS SWEATER E For example, just regard another Worth model YEW YORK—(Special Correspondence.)— on our pago, that ensemble second from the right. When you have done so you will have to admit that friend of mine who chanced to meet the last season no skirt in the world would have ex¬ Marquine de Polignac neveral months ago a NNN St. Morits has just supplied me with a goo pressed itself just in that way. For it comes u enclose the jumper ai lead. She tells me that the mar se. who as evel the calyx of a flow body knows, is a luminary of international socie addition to that, it incorporates the skirt detail one day threw open the door of her closet to revea found so frequently in other types of apparel, to perhaps a dosen swenter. All of them were des¬ wit, the yoke. tined to go with a pair of those long trousere of rick of the skirt coming up over our b Vionnet inspiration which all the smart worid wore ly the same way it used to do whe this ycar for their winter sports. the worid was copying Gibson drawings is ch acteristic of several famous French ateliers, notal This harem of sweaters belonging to that sultan the sporta wardrobe, the skiing and akating those of Lanvin and Worth. It is identified with usera, is indicative of the technique many faeh¬ all that feminine inflection of clothes so apparent for looking amart upon a in formal avenues of attire and that it does away ionable women e oanguraivnby um penditure. By changir ith much of the monotony of our sports silhouette knitted garment frequently we contrive to evident at a single glance. the other garment, be that akirt or trouser, look ab¬ In color this ensemble is destined to throw sti solutely different. We get a reputation for good the invasion of the militar more illumination u dresaing when, as a matter of fact, all we have in¬ istic. For the wool nposing the akirt is of brick a good sweater-ing. red and so, too, is the jersoy of the cardigan. Thi¬ re is an infinite number of new spor niaid with beige jerscy and a similar touch ensembles which have just been created for sun occurs on the skirt in the sorm of angora or by the Paris couturiers. Many of these are so id binding the top. To give the beige climax. oman nhoes atrong vely that they tempt eve the jumper is of angora knitted wool entiroly in this orv. Yet they un est interest is the at tone. ity—such costly outfits—an really not Unless jersey has a taste for expansion even mor many a fashionable woman proves to us that on ouid be satiefie insatiable than Alexander's the foundation of several separate skirte and a sep¬ with the present situation. ay more jersey is arate sporta coat we may rear a stately edifice by used in sports wear than ever before and undoubt¬ way of a sports wardrobe. Provided only that we edly, too, there are more kinds of jersey. Both the take to collecting sweatere printed and metallie varieties are stressed and in ing with the subjoct of spring sporte clothes both of these new and beautiful effects are obtained. in general, one may may that thore is little chang¬ At the extreme right of our page we indicat in the silhouette. There is nothing surprising abe this statio condition. In this province the exub printed jersey in beige and brown tones as the b sor a charming ensemble from Yteb. A frock o¬ ance of detail—the fullness of akirt, the amplifie¬ posed of this fabrie is banded in beige crêpe de tion of ruffles and panele and draperies—that mal chine ropeated in alanting lines on the sleeves of : uther types of clothes so strikingly feminine would beige kasba cont. This coat, interesting bocause of be very much out of place. Several seasons ago w stitched treatment, is cufsed and collared in the evolved the lovely aimplicity of lino that repro In the center Patou docs his new crepe- coming up over the jumper is a fashion now We play our trump cardigan this year when wey of the frock sente the ideal of sporte clothes behavior and tre round off the jacket corners as in this de¬trimmed swcater in his nech tone of" Lion'sold enough to be very new. Here is but one of the many delightful sporte en¬ rould be foolish to try to put in any new patent lightful sports ensemble from Worth, shotn Red" and allies it with a novy crope de chine Last, Yteb tops a printed and crepe¬ sembles of the seuson. Attractive are these if we But, though silhouette and fabrie choice remn at the extreme left. much the enme, there is alwaya a detail or two to rd 'em, but if not-well, there is the Second, Martial et Armand add a novel banded jersey with a kasha coat collared and date the sporte costume. In sweaters, especially, Fourth, Worth shows you that a skirt cuffed in the jersey. crepe jumper to a plaided crepe skirt. (Copvrieht: 1928: By The Chleage Tribune.) this fact impreseive. II, indeed, your own lar hobby is sweaters, what a bobby (cloth¬ Now this model we havo just chowa is oue of the jersey, while both jumper and cardigan are of and bands of that are placed on the slceves and is rendy for you! For there are coveral absoluto beige silk angora. These two fabrics are fre¬ outstanding novelties of the spring sporte worid. new types in this garment and in saying eo we can sweater. These bands aro crossed by those of white quently united in the most luxurious Still another is a sweater we have not pictured, but crêpe de chine especially effective in the diamon do nothing better than point to the central sketch Freuch sporta ensembles, and often they a which will undoubtedly have ite meed of influenet formation at the waistline. As for tho very individ our page. urther infected by such delicate gradatione pon smart international society. This sccond Now perhaps, after all, you can’t tell very much ual finish of the neckline, this is done in white odel is designed by Schiaperelli and its special tone us we observe here. Considerina from just the mere line, but there is enough novel crêpe de chine. contribution of interest centers in the fact that a these gradations one by one, let us remark Now, what is it which marks this oweater as beins about this Patou sweater to mako the most ind handkerchief scarf design is interwoven into the that the jacket is bound with a frill of dull of the very latest vintage? It is the bands of crêpe ferent sweater collector cry, “ Aha, this has got to go in my album!" Now to be concrete. gold utilised further in the smart curving fabrie itself. A white handkerchief scarf effect de éhine with which the tricot is ornamented. In¬ urther the Midas knitted into the fabrio-yes, here is somethinge pocket. Then, to carry o First of all, the sweater (or, il you prefer to cal troducod by Patou at his midseason openings touch, the jumper is inte ven at tho waist trimming has been developed mightily in his sori which our swenter collector is bound to take notio it so. the knitted jumper) is in that new tone lino and border in yellow, bronse, and brown. Not only has the swenter taken on some manner¬ spring collection and today this fabrie trim¬ Lion's Red which Patou is pushing this spring. Take these two garments in conjunction with tama, this apring. Its companion, the cardigan, has weater is high on the list of the sweater gentr tone is that pronouncod red of the English flag and We might, if we sunk so low in the field of wit ulso gotten on to some new curves. Witnems to this old jersey and yor the skirt of beige an this suct, in conjunction with the companion( an idea of the chart (the whole effeet is supplied by our left hand sketch, one showin¬ of navy blue and white that go to make the call this giri arrayed in her colors of red. white an And have sporta skirts been able to resist a cardigan ensemble from the house of Wortl blue, the flag mip. We'll resist this temptation costume, direet one to an inevitable observation the wave of unrest which has resulted in now Now, if you look at this model clocely you will sce bowever, in favor of a few last sober words anent It is the emphasis upon military combinations os nd cardigans? Not en¬ the curdigan in ite latest and most aristocratie mood. types of owea color evident in many of the spring collections of the crôpe de chine trimmod knitted jumper. By no ely. Although many of t arta modele This means to say that, instead of having any a the military one means alwaya is the color sche sports wear a dera der me tamilias cornors, thie new hind of jacket is aii rounded It is an old axiom that érade followe tho fi indicated. On the contra andt plaits, tucks, encrustations, and what not o and we find logically enoush in this case that the Dismissing this consideration, let us bay that this more favored media of color and some ol the previous scasons, there are others which have noteworthy because of ite a ensemble is considerable trading going on between skil creations 'atou occur in black al fabrie akirt is in beige and nol eh enen vueauer. For lhe siin ia di navy sièye de fuatations tried froeh fields and pastt Other vienue of today's models. Dornjord Yates GOODS -- PERISHABLE Using the car- from the dining room. It was now as dark as pitch. fairy tales 1 read as a child had sot in my heart (Continued from page fivo.) pet as a sledge. I could not even see Mansel two feet from where I rere in a twinkling supplanted by what I saw. steep spiral staircase that comes to a sudden end we drew the slab stood. The ceiling w of black onk. picked out with l'm certain it serves a trapdoor. II the bookseller into the bed¬ Something swayrd at the window. gold. The walls were paneled hend high; betweo guide is sound, that trapdoor should be in the Then we had Goorge in our arms and Mansel chamber and the panels stood pilasters picked out with gold. closet. That would be natural enough. he king's be was unfastening the rope which was holding him up le and pilasters was ve "We can't go that way tonight, because the trap¬ The carving of the pa e we trans¬ Axain I heard a board creak—somewhere at hand With the greatest care we lowered George to h ng hung tapestries, ve deep. Above the par door is fast. At lenst. I imagine it is, because ferred it to my rich in color, presenting hunting scencs. The bed¬ can't move the slab I found at the top of the stait coat and, lifting feet. As we did so the dais upon which we we atead was four posted; cach of the posts was carved but, if we ean enter the closet by some other wa the crimeon val¬ standing tilted suddonly forward and, with nothin, into the life aise cemblance of a man-at-arms; cov¬ tonight, we can unbar tho trapdoor and then, when ance, thrust to cave us, the three of us crashed to the ground erlet, canopy, and bencath the be we come by the terruce, we shall have our way i As we fell the massive step resumed its proper posi¬ tains wero ol w Don't think l've no hope of tonight, because stead and out of tion with a deafening clap. seemed to bo a ori have; but if we fail this time we shall certainl, son sacod oloth. fail the next-unless we can turn this failure into HERE had been nothing to show that the step To restore ! neyping done fine to look a was not fixed, and, indeed, it was so colid that carpet to With that ho told Carson to let him have bis clearly of a I do not think it would have moved under weight; all the ahocs, because they were dry, and then to stan ordinary use; but the weight of three men happening and hangin fast where he was, with the signal cord in his o fall upon ite edge had, I suppose, been too much the wedne in which the Goorge and I were to follow the way he went. or di countorpore the door tor was done we We moved as before, one by one, and, when me dignit ut a moment. For a moment we lay as we had fallen, straining Then Manse I found him, he was standing above the arc our eara; then Mansel got to his feet and lighted the or nas ol polab ough which the water flow gave me a cloth Ton tno an knew that below us wes a window of three long he?" he said. and bade me Ve told him We stole acrom to ishthe w. lighte. Then quick," saye he, " for, by thunder, we'vo the door in the far work where we N instant later Mansel was descending the rung the bell ther wal had stepped, e Thie time we und tuo ropes one las This admitted us to With that he set Hanbury to watch tho dining lly about aent which the royal dining room. room door and hold the torch, while I took the about him and the other down which he alid. had used. When stoutest chisel and laid its edge where the lock met he jerked the one about him we were to make this bled the wood of the door. had done so he over¬ fast, and if he should pull it five times Geo You strike," said Mansel, taking it out of my and was of looked all with the »go sor Carson and thoy were to let me dow mme sise. hand. Wet to the skin, clinging like a fly to the wal come table stood Thon we stole ou o I picked up and swung a hammer with all my with only one hand to help him, without the midet of the floo of light, Mansel worked upon that windo might. the room and closed the door. I cannot attempt to tell the noise we mado. e minutes later we stoo We wasted no time, ur. I was kneeling directly above him. but I Perhaps our reluctance to make any noise at gain in the antechamber, an¬ but passed on. never heard a sound. Indeed I could not believe and the infinite care we had taken to amother hen we had opened a casement A moment later we that he was at work, but supposed that ho and found the rope there was notl cound magnified sor us this sudden breach of silenoe seen some one within the room and was conten stood in the ante¬ certainly the hour, the emptiness of the apartments to ahow, much less to watch them from where he hung. Yot all the e had soen the inside yle and proportions of the building made he was drawing the wrought iron latch—a Thia was amall but sounding boards. Be that as it may, had other voom. which, had he not done it, I would have put be¬ notable. The walls "And now the toola," said Mansel, " and the castle been full of troops and there been sud¬ yond the power of man. were not paneled, but denly summoned by trumpet and tuck of drum, I then Hanbury. Carson to stay w At last the ropes trembled and then swung slack covered with tapestry. is. We shall make the dovil's own noise, an do not think the uproar could have won to our car. my hands. An instant later he signaled that ho to shoot at sight. Two ma t took us, I cuppose, two minutes to reduce that backed chaire ras within the room. I elimbed up and gave the mesaage as fast as I When I came down he swung me in like a baby he furniture. could. Ae Mansel wrenched it hway an iron fillet, inte The door we now indasked for my tor The toom was stately and full of the amell The time was now half past three ; tho stars we which its tongues were protruding, came also. This found before us was not at al uge. The floor was of polished oak; the walls w no more to be seen, and rain had begun to sa fillet was a fulse jamb that ran the whole like those through which of the door and was laid upon stone. N. This to our liking, for now any footprinta we paneled head high and tapestried above. The f had come. It adm made above or below would be wiped out; but it was displaced, we could see that the door was niture was rich and massive, but very stiff, and course, to the gallery which wet was agninet our foothold, and as I came back bolted, top and bottom, upon the opposite side. The had been ranged in order againet the walla. A led to the tower; and it was dipped on the window aill. bolts were ahot into the stone, but, the fillet gone. like a church door-that is to say, iron studdod take hold; when we do that they will come and ta heavy carpet much amaller than the room la We had received the tools and were awaitii we could reach them and, with the alightest manipu¬ up the ropes which are hanging outside this roo¬ and Gothic in shupe. A wrought iron lock of great in the midst of the floor, but all the furniture stoo When I returned Mansel was down on his kn some door within the castle was lation, could draw them clear of their sockete and Hanbury sise wus fixed upon the inside, and, above ih clear upon the oak. The two doors were conspicu¬ arply ek pen the door. by a hole in the floor. On the carpet, now ous, for their frames rose above the puneling and, simplo latch which had only to be lifted to be fi It was come door behind us—not very far away I put up a hand, but Mansel caught my arm. to one sido, lay a square of polished wood. II hope could but open gates I think this door cach of them was fitted with a box lock of polished Called upon to say which, I would have named Some one was pounding upon the other side of the soeas which he had disciosed was floored by a would have crumbled before our eyes, but hopo With oue consent we turned to the door upon our tone alab; this had a ring in its midet and the door of the closet. The clash of a heavy spring nnot open gates, and—the door was sust. Together we stared at the onk. lock was unmistakable. a pair of haspe and rudely locked into place Mansel stood very still. Then came Adèle's clear voice staples, the pins of which Mansel had withdrawn. Mansel put out the light and we stood as still At length be gave a short sigh and touched me le this you, Jonah! Very alowiy, with infinite care, Mansel drew ae death, straining our cars for footstepe. Gently I lifted the alab, to disclose the winding upon the arm. A moment later we were moving spring latch. At once the door yielded and Mai air which led to the archway below Yes, dear," said Mansel. "One moment A rustle without the window told us that Han¬ e way we had come. set it wide. Not until he had wodged it with a mor¬ "Can you hold it? " breathed Mansel. bury had begun to descend the rope. When we were again in the closet he put his " No, no," criod Adèle. " Stop. Stay where you sel of rubber did we pass on. We could not stop him, for we had no signal cord uth to my ear. 1 nodded. So we entored the king's bedchamber. Take a meange to Hanbury. He and Carsor are. Rose Noble’s here by my cide. And b and together we stood to the window to take him At once he replaced the square of polished wood Not even the unjust light of the torch could deny lose your n in without sound. il vou open that will bring every tool we have to the southwes then he laid the carpet, face downward, botween my Doroiord Tat the majesty of that room. As we did so came the creak of a floor board tower; then they will let fall a rope to the windon I have nover beheld a chamber so fit to lodge faint yet distinct. I would have enid that it came (To be continued.) I lowered the alab. of the antechamber, moving it to and fro until we king, and all the standards of grestness which the
66 t's ger Ie, Padal woulani give you anithing but Baye Thefe is nobody who does not knowr by this time that Bayer Aspirin is the one sure means of ending pain. But it is just as important to know that there is only one genuine Bayer Aspirin! Bayer means genuine Aspirin. In many drugstores, of course, you will find only the genuine Bayer product. But no one can fool the buyer who looks for the Bayer cross, or the word genuine in red letters. The law does not permit anyone but Bayer to use the Bayer nâme or the word genuine. A Bayer Aspirin tablet will break a cold in a hurry Or stop a sick headache. Bayer Aspirin's action is swift and certain in neuralgic or neuritic pains, too. And re¬ lieves even rheumatism! Physicians endorse Bayer Aspirin for it does not affect the heart. Get it at any drugstore, with proven directions. Le Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid 99
Rotogravure Magazine Settion When the Flichty Ettarre Started the Game of Romance It Proved to Be a Hectic Gamble for Her Entire Family. ND I was really your vision of Europa?" breathed Ettarre Patterson, ocstatically Ato the poct. “ Aud you were the gres white bull? He nodtied assont. Ambrose Knight nover spoke while he could remnin ailent; a sew simple gesturos sufliced bim; a smile, a shrug, an emphatic down¬ ward sweep of tho hand. What noed for more, is yor are a famous poct, renowned for the eloquent pas sion of vour versea? For he had been awarded th¬ Gruntham prise sor the finest love poem of the yen “ Eurojm" wus his aubject; and on hearing froin hi ed him Mra. Pattersot own lipu how ahe had i sighed a littie and mid to his propocal, over though in that ono syllable she forfeited a lordi income. Hor lute husband, George Patterson, lust her four thousund pounds a year; is ahe marrio axnin she was to have sour hundred a year and ti rret was to puns from ono widow to another; to hi nistér. Mre. Sophia Matrow. For cight years Ettarre, as she loved to be calle coquetted with the ides of combining love and pov erty as osten as an ofler presented itsels, thouxl prienlu anouuli aba novar violded to it: but. thun until now no mnn had exalted her as the heroino ot a worid famous poem. .. Europa! * Furcka!" cried the ambitious soul of Ettarn as ahe lay in thy urmis of Ambrose Knight, hor Jupi ter, her great whito conquerina bull. And, indeec he was an enormous, burly porson, with thick whit- hatr, and something of a bull's strength in his limba and a bull’s lack of social chattines in bis reti¬ cence. Ho was sincere in his love sor the pretty brown cyed. brown haired little creature whose tali bubbled like a silvory stream ovor a bod of hard. und littio pebbles: "What docs moncy matter?" laughed Ettarn now fecling very trunscendental indeed. “I mean what can moncy buy? What ean monc Whut can money hold that is of an It had bought, brought, and held for her hitherte a most luxurious flat in Regent's Park; an arrogan¬ littie coupé, a staff of well trained cervanta, and duily expenditure on her person, her clothes, and her comfort which would easily have kept three fuir sixed sumilies for a month. Ettarre could not enduro any crenses in the sleck sutin ol hor exist¬ ence, yot without even a qualm or a chudder ahe contemplated murrying Ambrose Knight, who curnod only an uncertain two hundred a your, to add to tho four hundred which would be all her hus band's posthumous jealousy would leave bor. Ambrose Knight had nothing to sny on tho sub¬ ject of moncy; he nover noticed it ; ho was a ren He kined Ettarre's pormanent wavo and then kined hor very alowly up and down her plump white forearm with tho innocent enjoyment of a boy play¬ ag a mouth organ. "How strango and marvelous" from Ettarre "that you should only have known me from a dis¬ tunre when you created? Europa?! And that all the while this dream of yours was sbaping itsoli into— into a Grecian ur to hold immortal fio and I wun noing about doing just my ordinary thinua, pouring out tea, and buying silk stockinus und trying to make other people happy, and the at last you came storming and charging into m life, out of the sea—no, into the sea. ahe was carried away on his back. und nobody eve mav them aguin.... I think it's one of the most romantio legenda; it appeals to every woman'a longing for just that to happen to her Ambrose raised his cyebrowe incredulously. But ho did not mind Ettarre's pretty foolishness. He loved pretty soola; they nibbled at the edgus of his mansivo hrain and thouaht thoy disturbed the mid¬ lle of it. "And now," murmured Ettarre, "you mut write another great ponm, oven greater than 'Europa, called * Europa Afterwards —No, wait a minute; just Afterwards' alone, I think!telling wha happuned to Europa and her Great White Bull aftor they eloped together from her father's king¬ "Tvo often wondered ..." quoth Ambross (night. "And meanwhilo," she finished, blissfully snus gling dowa chock by cheek with sacrifios. “ mean while 1’Il learn fron. Sophia—she's my sistor-in-law you know. such a nice, practical woman and ter¬ ribly plain!—how to be a poor man’s wifo. Am¬ brose, darling. l've nover, nevor, never felt eo rich before! The sonsational news of Ettarre Patterson's en¬ gagement acuttled round the cirelo of those t whom it most vitally mattered, like the little roulotte ball darting from one runnel tor an¬ other, and never sottling while the disc epins From Sophia Marrow, that blunt and thrifty womun April hra Tribune. 22, 1928 S.DOC EE "Victorian old ladies like your mother would much rather sec their sons rich and happy than be rich and happy themselves." ILLUSTAMTED SY GARART PaICH. d black, whose duty porforce had alway perhape the grestest gladness of all of them. Sh divine, Dorothy told her fiancé the excellent new¬ housekeoper. This was Sophis on the surface. 8he and he said quietly, " Good!" but his own look conomy and whose watchword, " We can' had hated tho possibility of that inheritance from usually wore black, occasionally dark green, strong. was brooding; his look maid "Damn!" Only afford it, and there's no moro to be said!"—frou Ettarre, which so long had kept Harry spellbound durable materials in a style whereof you sensed a and unambitious in Ettarre's service. ("O, bul Sophia, yet without any of the'visible flutteringe ol Dorothy was too tremendously happy to notice it sewing machine and a little dressmaker in the that one might have expected, the newa went we're not in the very least like aunt and nephew. And over their six o'clock cocktails they made ous eigronnd. «1 haven't time for fashions! " mid Sophia severe Nevillo, her son, who dashed around with it to Nothing eo stodgv. I udore going about with their rough list of the equipment they would need Bobbie Seymour, a hard boarted, red lipped child Harry und dancing with him. Hele just the right on their African adventure. ly—or had she nover said it? Was it only from hor who might have ant sor the very portrait of that heiht sor me, and his Yale blues are divine. Now¬ Then Harry, with a grent sheaf of flame colorec moder girl about whom thé newspapers argue a adays, you know, there'a no such thins asalens and one puro white amlea among them, dimapprovingly. And ahe, aster swistly calculatin But no hope now for Harry Blan went to Ettarre, went to his Aunt Ettarre, and con¬ lanine, as it ver, i a vont ol balon from ber just how much of the three thousand six hundred Ettarre's fortune surrendered to the Marrowa, gratulated her and gave her the flowers, rich mouth? the Patterson side of the family. Harry. reles a year of Ettarre's renunciation would remain wi the facile expression of goodness knows wha And, of course, her hair was drawn away frou And ae mid coftly: "Of all things, Harry, from expectation, would be forced to carve his own Sophis, and how much would be Neville'e propert forehend, and with uncompromising fortitude " We mixht give laughed and accepted him. . way. as other young men have done. Harry'e hope¬ that I do most appreciate, it is the subtlo beau tightly bundled at the back of her head. it a fling." abe eaid, “ on threo thousand. So see te geste. It's quito wondorsul of you to take my new¬ were lost, but his valor was saved. But now... like thie it, Neville, old thing. Victorian old ladies like your Dorothy remembered thut offer of a job i Sophia Marrow, aged forty-eight, for she was mother would much rather see their sons rich and Kenya. Dorothy was glad; she had long been in The little ivory ball had rattled once around the aetually a year younger than pretty Ettarre, sat i happy thun be rich and happy themselves! secret revolt against Ettarre's invisible rule. She front of the fire, dreaming. The fire was blaair And these sentimente ahe repeated to her brother lived with Ettarre, in a sort of undefined capacity gloriously. Sbe had collected all the cushions in OPHIA MARROW was sitting in front ol Dan, who scowled and called his sister a mercenar which was not cor housekeeper, secretary the room to render voluptuous tho deep old arm¬ firo, idly dreaming. Until ber sistor-in-la little rat—but what did sho care?—and then, follow¬ nor prospective nie Scornfully, but only chair. Sho was making plans; her lips eurved into the sweep of the cirelo up agnin and round anc to Dan-one could talk to Danl—she called her onangement to Ambrose Knight, three weeks appy emiles; her thoughte wero luxurious, for they sell Ettarre's “ girl friend." Ettarre's age was seven ck to Ettarre, went und lost his tomper about it ago. Sophia had not allowed hersell to dream; for ing at the rate of sour thousand a year. to his friend, Dorothy Greenwood, who was ei times seven, and Dorothy's was seven times three¬ seven years sho had had an invalid huaband, twe Prosently a bell rang. and Ettarre Patterson was gaged to Ettarre's nephew, Harry Blair, her on too young sor bitter mockery at the situation. Bu¬ sons—Roland had been killed in the war-and shown in. At sight of her sister-in-law, Ettarre this was an up to date rendering of tho elderly ludicrously insufficient means, oven for everyda living rolative on ber own, not the Patterson, side. ed a littio cry of astonishment: " Sophia! And so back to where the nows started. lady and her patient companion. affaira. Dreaming was expensive. Moreover, Bophia glaneed lanly up at der witdout moring And if Sophia wus glad of the nowa, and Neville So, head held high, gray eyes alight under th plo would have mid of Sophia that she had hy not? Who else would it be? aa xiad, and Bobbie was glad, and Dan was sorry broad brim of her cowboy hat. looking. in fact, a got it in her. bocause he liked young Novillo and hated the * repeated Ettarre, as though some miracle ugh she had already sighted Kenya on the She was one of those whom it is apparently casy ixon: hard riding. hard work. open spaces, thouaht that this moncy would deliver him sor life to mum up: brisk, dowuright practical, onergetic, and of transformation had taken place; she simply could into Bobbie'e clutches-yet Dorothy was moved to no time for the blues, however Yale, how intolerant, an excollent mother and a satissactor) not believe that the strongminded woman whom

AWM38
Official History
1914-18 War: Records of CEW Bean,
Official Historian.
Diaries and Notebooks
Item number: 3DRL606/270 Part 1/1
Title: Folder, 1918-1939
Comprises maps, diagrams, notes, journal
articles and correspondence relating to the
death of Baron von Richthofen.
 

 

Chicago Sunday Tribune
April 8 1928
MY FIGHT WITH RICHTHOFEN By A. ROY BROWN
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Chicago Sunday Tribune
LEAVE IT TO SPRING by Teresa Hyde Phillips
Short Story
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April 8, 1928
Short Story Cont.
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Chicago Sunday Tribune
MY FIGHT WITH RICHTHOFEN By A. Roy Brown
(Continued from page one.)
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April 8, 1928
PERISHABLE GOODS by DORNFORD YATES
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Chicago Sunday Tribune
TEMPTING MENUS FOR THE WEEK by Jane Eddington
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April 8 1928
NEW SWEATER IDEAS by Corrine Lowe
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Chicago Sunday Tribune
Advertisement
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Chicago Sunday Tribune 
April 22 1928
ROULETTE by G.B. STERN
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