DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY. NEBRASKA. atMnivmansaamimaLmmm jwattwirsxE2XZEnxmsMxmiTja sjimuLU umi.m a i, i, mm i itMm.mmsrM2CBLUcmsiiat!iJiizcii . Mt E mmandment 4 Miss Kelly Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health. By RUPERT HUGHES Copyright by Harper A Brother m AKDOWN The Thirteenth DAPHNE AGAIN TURNS TO CLAY, BUT AS THEY PLAN FOR THE FUTURE A NEW BLOW FALLS. Synopsla Clny Wlmlitira, a young New Yorker on a visit to Gleve l'nnd, meets pretty Dnplmo Kip. whose brother Is In the same oOlco with Clny In Wall street. After n whirlwind courtship they hecomo engaged. Daphne rocs to New York with her mother to buy her trousseau. Daphne's brother. Bnynrd, hus Just married and left for Europe with tils bride, Leila. Dnplmo and her mother Install themselves In Bayard s flat. Daphne meets Tom Duano. mnn-nbout-town, who seems greatly at tracted to her. Daphne accidentally discovers that Clny Is penniless, except for his salary. Baynard and hla wife return to New York unex pectedly. The three women set out on n shopping excursion and the two younger women buy expensive gowns, having them charged to Bnynrd. Bnynrd is furious over the expense, seeing hard times ahead. Daphne, indignant, declares she will earn her own living nnd breaks her engage ment with Clay. Through an introduction by Dunne. Daphne Induces Itcben, a theatrical magnate, to give her a position In one of his com panies. Her first rehearsal Is u fiasco, but Itcben, at Duano's request, gives her another chance. Sudden illness of Miss Kemblc, the star, gives Daphno hor chance, but her acting Is a dismal failure. She 18 con soled by Tom Dunne. CHAPTER XII Continued. 9 Satan or Itnphacl had whispered to her nn Invitation to revisit tho Hccno of her late humiliation with Clny. With Duano's magic purse there would bo no danger of a Bnilb from tho waiters; with his own car there would bo no risk of footing it home. Then an Imp of mischief spoko for her and said, "All right 1" Dunne told the chauffeur and tho car shot like a Javelin from tho lighted street Into tho deep forest-night of Centrnl park. What would Clay say? But, after all, lie had failed her in a crlslB. Per haps he had turned his heart else whore. Men were Impatient, vindic tive, flcklo. When Clnrcmont was reached und Duano handed Miss Kip nut ho noted that her hamj was hotter than his own nnd a little quick to escape, her faco was Hushed and Jier lips parted as it with excitement. Ho assumed that the speed of tho rldo and tho tang of adventuro wero to blame. While tho waiters were serving tho supper und while he was attacking It with the frank appetltu of honest hun ger sho recounted tho evening's dis aster as calmly as If It were the story of homebody else. In fact, sho was standing off nnd regarding herself with -the eyes of an alien. Wo chango so fast that tho persons wo wero yester day nro already strangers, and thejr nets tho acts of distant relatives. Her calm was really tho numbness of 'Shock. Tho anguish would como to morrow. "I can't understand myself at all. Daphno said. "1 went through every one of tho motions, but I couldn't reach the audlcnco once. I was like singer with a bad cold singing in -foreign language you don't know what tho song Is all about, but you know thnt it nover quite gets on tho key." "You mustn't be discouraged." "Ob, yes, I mustl I couldn't bo as actress in a thousand years. Mr. But terson told mo so himself.' Duano felt tho truth of this, but It hurt him to havo her feel It. It of fended his chivalry to realize how Im pollto fate could bo to so pretty a glrL Ho hated to see her reduced to tho necessity of proving how plucky sho could be. Ho tried to find nn escape ' for her. He said: "You'ro far too good for tho stago." "I don't bellove thnt for n minute," sho protested. "But I'vo got to find .something I can do." "May I help you to decide?" "If you only would I But I'm getting io bo a nuisance." "You nro a a to me you uro a well, you'ro not u nuisance." He dared not tell her what sho wan, -especially as tho waiter had set tho bill at his elbow and was standing off in an attitude of lll-concenled impa tlcuco for tho tip, which ho know would bo large. Mr. Duano always .gavo tho normal ten per cent nnd a bit extra. Ho tipped wisely hut not too well, knowing that uu extravagant tip wins n waiter's contempt almost imoro than none at nil. The head waiter fairly cooed "Good night" und almost .gave them a blessing. Tho starter had Mr. Duano's car waiting for him at tho curb and lifted his hat with ono hand (is ho smuggled a quarter away with tho other. Ho stepped In to lay tho linen luprobo 'over their knees with reverence, closed tho door exquisitely und murmured, "Good night 1" Tho car was nn aristocrat; It float ed from tho cuib with a swanllko -sweep. Daphne thought of Clay nnd herself plodding homeward. Sho seemed to tee them or their wraiths staggering disconsolately along. Sho felt very sorry for them. Hero was u chance to mto one of them both of them, in fact; for in taking her financial bur den from Clay's shouldera sho would be twice strengthening him. If she were to accept Dunne us her husband then her problems would bo solved nd Clay would bo free of hor. To he Mrs. Tom Duano; to step into .fce society of society; to lift her father anM nmtl.i" from a position of week ncss in Cleveland to n post of distinc tion In New York ; to solve at onco all tho hateful, loathsome, belittling rid dles of money; to be the bejcwcled nnd feted nnd idollstid wife nnd mistress of this young American grand duke; to buy that Impossible trousseau, or bet ter; to live in n New York palace In stead of a flat; to go about In her own limousine Instead of nn occasional tax Icab; to bo fortune's darling Instead of a member of tho working classes, struggling along with bent neck under m yoke beside a discouraged laboring man! When the car reached her building sho was resolved to see Duano no more. Sho could not tell him so. After nil, ho had been everything thnt wns courtesy nnd chnrlty. It would hardly She Stared at Her Image in the Mirror. havo been pollto to treat him with ab soluto indifference. Duano got down and helped her out nnd took her to the door, which was luetccd at this lato hour. Whllo they wnltcd for tho door man to answer tho bell she was pay ing him his wages: "You nro wonderfully kind. I had a gorgeous evening. You saved my life." Sho had said more than sho intend ed if not more than ho had earned. "Then may I cull noon?" "Of course." Tomorrow?" "I well, I'll let you know." "Kino I Telephone mo nt Til write It out for you. I'm not often nt tho club whero you found me, und my number Isn't in tho book." Ho wrote on his card Ids telephono address and gavo It to her as tho doormuu up turn red. He murmured, "Don't forget." She murmured, "I won't." Both said "flood night." Then the doorman gath ered ber in nnd hoisted her to her lowly eyrie. It wus very different from where she would have gone us Mrs. Dunne. But when sho wns In her room sho tore Ids card to pieces after sho had looked nt it. Sho stared at her Imago In the mirror. Sho hated what sho saw there. Sho vowed to break her promlso to Tom Dunne. Sho vowed to forget his telephono number. But it danced about In the dark long after she hud closed her eyes. Tho next morning sho overslept even beyond tho extra hour tho Chlvvlacs permitted themselves und tho Htrunger within their gates on Sundays. When Daphno appeared nt break fast, trying not to yawn. Mrs. Chiv vls greeted her with n volco us cold and dry as the toast, nnd ns brittle: -You wero rather lato getting In last night or this morning, rather." Daphne's answer was not an expla nation, but It was better: "Oh, I know It, Mrs. Chivvls, but I lost my portion last night. Yea I I played tho principal part and killed It, and now I'm not going ou tho uluge any more." Mrs. Chivvls was touched. "You poor child I It renlly Is just too bad I" Sho pondered, then sho brightened: "I'm sorry you'ro disappointed, but I'm glad you'ro not to be in the theater. It must be very wicked." "It's mighty difficult," said Daphne. Mrs. Chivvls thought a moment more, then sho said : "Did I tell you? No, I don't be Hevo I did you were awny but Mr. Chivvls gets his vacation next week. He's got to take it when his turn comes. The man who was going now couldn't be spared, so we have to leave Tucsduy. I'm going, of course, so I enn't give you your meals. You can get your breakfasts In the kitchenette. Of course I'll allow off whatever Is right." "Oil," Daphne said. "I'll bo all right, I guess." Daphne hnd not realized how much she depended on Mrs. Chivvls till now. Sho wns to be left alono at tho very time when she was most in need of society. The whole world was forsak ing her. CHAPTER XIII. When the Chlvvlses had gone Daph ne nssalled tho tusk of composing her letter of resignation from Iteben's em ploy. It was not easy to resign with dignity and the necessary haste. Sho sent it off by messenger. It was nono too prompt, for Reben had al rendy dictated a very polite request for Daphno s head. When he received her letter ho readied his stenographer nnd dictated n substitute for bis first letter. In this he expressed his regret nt learning Daphne's decision to re sign ; tho former understudy had come back from tho road, he said, and would resume her work. Ho begged Dnphne to nccept tho Inclosed check for two weeks' salnry In lieu of the usual no tice, nnd hoped that she would believe him faithfully hers. Daphne felt a proud Impulse to re turn the fifty dollars. She wrote a letter to go with it. She looked ugaln, and saw It was the first money sho had ever enrned. Sho hated to let it go. Sho decided to framo It und keep it to point to In after years us the begin ning of her great fortune. Lato In tho afternoon, when tho western sky was turning into a loom for crimson tapestries almost as rich ns her own dreams, sho went to her brother's upurtment. There tho New Girl found the Old Woman in tho throes of finance. Letla had brought her check book and her bunk book to her husbund. Her af fairs were' in a knot. no laughingly offered to help her. She wus hurt by his laughter, but not hn'f so deeply as ho was by his dis covery of her monetary condition. Ho had' established her bank account in a mood of adoration, a precious sacri fice on tho altar of love. She had not cherished it, but scattered it heed lessly. And money wns peculiarly precious now in the final ngontes of tho hard times, when only the fittest of the fittest could survive the last tests Credit wus the wuter cask, und dollars wero tho hard biscuits of a boatload of survivors from a wreck. Land might bo reached if they held out, but sclf-denlul wns vital. Buyurd gazed at Leila with wonder ing lovo and terror. She was both divinity nnd devil in his eyes. Ho groaned : "Aro you trying to wreck me? You know how hard I'm working and how much I need money In my business nnd how much It menus to your future, but you won't stop buying und charg ing and burning my poor little earn lugs. Wo discharged a stenographer yesterday bocauso wo wanted to save her salary of fifteen dollars and here's a check for a pair of shoes for you that cost sixteen. "But tell mu ono thing moro before I'm curtcd off to Bloomlugdalo In a strultjacket. Why, In heaven's name, why udmlttlug you just hnd to havo that pitiful llttlo pair of shoes why, when you wroto tho check, didn't you subtract It from your balance instead of adding It? I ask you I" "Oh, did I do that?" sho asked, look lug over his shoulder. "So I did I" nnd sho put her cheek closo to his und giggled. He shook his bend In Imbccllo Infat uation, and drew her around Into his amis. Thut wus what Dnplmo overheard when tho mnld let her in. She found Lelln resting In Bayard's lap. Bayard did not tell Daphno what his conference with Lelln had been. Ho simply closed tho check book and tho hank book and said to Leila : "I'll send tho bunk my check for thirty-eight cents und usk 'em to close their uc count. They'll bo mighty glad to do It." "And bo will I," said Leila. "It was uwfully hard work keeping track of every llttlo penny. I'd much rather- have a regular allowanco lu cash ev ery week." "All right l" said Bayard. "Wo'll try that next week." Daphno was not told what nil this talk was about, but she mado u fair guess, though sho pretended not to. She told about her failure nnd her .future and Lelln praised her courage and her optimism. They dined cheer fully und Bayard decided that the best preparation for therhard work ahead of him would be an evening of gayety. He Invited his wife and bis sister to go with hlra to tho Winter Garden, where the typical "Sunday concert" of New York wns given. CHAPTER XIV. "" "" Then tho Chlvvlses came back from their vocntion unexpectedly early. They hud found the hotels expensive nnd Mr. Chivvls wns afraid that his job would be snatched from him If ho were not there to hold It down. Clny called on Daphne that evening nnd the Chlvvlses retrented to their own room. But ns they could be over heard It wns evident that they could overhear, nnd the lovers found no chance to say any of the things that frightened their souls. One evening Daphne said to Clay In as low a voice ns he could hear: "Mrs. Chivvls Is growing uneasy, honey, about our being together every eve ning. I told her we were engaged, hut slie didn't seem convinced. Perhaps you would let me wear that beautiful engagement ring again. I was n fool to give It back to ypu. May I have it or" Clay blenched in misery. "I I'm afraid I You see, I hadn't paid much on it; and Inst week I hnd nn In sulting letter from the jeweler. He threatened to sue mo und notify my firm, and I well, I hnd to send It back." ne was so downenst that sho an swered with mock cheer: "Oh, that's all right, honey; it doesn't mntter. After all, It's only a ring. And we have each other." "But we haven't each other. This way of living Is driving me crazy. I'll be all right as soon as these hard times are over and I can make some commissions. But It's so dismal to wnlt. Couldn't we get married and live on my salnry?" "I could If you could." He caught her In his arms so vio lently that she squealed. Tho next day Clay telephoned to her his firm had just offered him the choice of accepting half his salary or turning in his resignation. It wns really impossible for two to live on half of what was hardly enough for one. Daphno cried a long while In her room. She got out her list of ways to enrn fifty thousand dollars again and cried over that. There is much foolish nnd futile pro test ngninst the nowadays woman who goes Into business outside her home. But the fact Is that it Is her business thnt began It. Her business left tho home first and sho Is merely following it to tho places whero new conditions nnd Inventions have centralized and mechanized It. New conditions have taken her distaff and her washtub and her cook ery nnd gossip Into the woolen mills and .steam laundries und restaurants nnd telephone exchanges. She hns hnd to go thither to do her necessary work. Even tho entertnlners, the singers, dancers, tellers of stories, who used to stir the seraglios and the castle halls have been gathered Into opera houses and theaters and Into vaude ville and moving picture palaces. Daphne, having no gifts for spin ning, cooking, or laundry, tried the theater. Her old-fashioned lover pro- Did I Do That?" 8ho Aked, Looking Over Hln Shoulder. tested, and sho went, anyway. But sho was not suited to tho theater, und sho retreated with nothing to show for her expedition except her shattered prldo and tho fifty-dollar check for two weeks' salary. Daphno began anew to hunt for work; work, tho thrice blessing that kllU time und nukes money nnd t?tuR9 mm. f i 1 1 jtf. IWWM7, M S J-0".S "Oh, passlon. But the world seemed to be full of every other trouble except work. Even had she been skilled, na she was not, It would have availed her little, since skilled luborers wero be ing turned off by the thousands. And unskilled laborers were being turned off by the tens of thousands. (Jlay had saved nothing against the rnlny season. He had found his salary too small for his courtship requisites; now that his sulury wus halved his courtship hnd to be reduced to the minimum of expense. Bayard nnd Leila hud more money to spend, and they made nmbltlous. voyages. But Daphno nnd Clny must swelter with tho other stny-at-homa millions. Clay denied himself even tho two weeks' vacation allotted to him, Bayard took his, however, and carried Leila Had Decided That It Was Better for Her Health to Stay at Newport Till the Cooler Weather Came and Her Summer Wardrobe Had Been Worn Out. Leila off to Newport, where they boarded humbly, if expensively. While they wero gone, nt their sug gestion, Dnphne moved down Into their apartment. It was large and beautiful, und, ns Clay said, it was "not infested with Chlvvlses." Now and then Clay qunrreled wltn Dnphne because of her obstinate de termination to havo a trade of her own. Then they made up. And quar reled anew lovers' quarrels, summer storms that break the sultry tension of the air and make peace endurable. Bayard came back alone. Leila had Cp.dded that it was better for her health to stay at Newnort till the cooler weather came and her summer wnrdrobo had been worn out So Bayard joined the army of town-tied husbands, the summer wid owers. He went back onco a week on furlough to spend a Newport Snb bath with his wife. He became ono of the Friday-nlght-to-Monday-morn-Ing excursionists. There was leisure enough in bis office. He Insisted on Daphne's keeping her room In his npnrtment, nnd of evenings he affixed himself to her and Clay and made their company a crowd. But they welcomed him as a chaperon of a sort Also, he paid his way with liberality, except for occa sional spasms of retrenchment, when ho economized ntroclously. He pre dicted thnt good times would never como again. The whole world had gone to pot nnd would never come out. Suddenly he changed his tune; sud denly the whisper went about that hard times were ending. In his bachelor days, when Bayard was growing in commercial staturo like a young giant, ho had regarded his business with all tho w-armth of a poet His office building was hla Acropolis and his office the pecullnr temple of bis muse; and her name was Profit. He thrilled like u poet to tho epic inspiration of n big sale, and ho knew a Joy akin to tho poet's revision of his scansion if ho devised a scheme for reducing overhead charge or wastage. Bayard, led on by the visions of riches to be won In Wall street, draws all his savings from the bank and begins spec ulating in stocks. Then at far off Sarajevo rang out the shot that plunged the world Into the frightful nightmare of war. Bayard was among the first casualties. Read about It In the next Installment (TO BE CONTINUED.) Raining "Cats and Dogs." In England tho mnlo blossoms of the willows aro called "cats nnd dogs" nnfi a rainstorm would shake them off nnd strew them on the ground. Henco nrose J u0 expression "raiuing cats and dogs." wW 7 I'll w Newark, N. J. "For nbout three years suffered from nervous break down and got so weak I could hardly stand, and hnd head aches every day. I tried everything" I could think of nnd was under a phy sician's care for two years. A girl friend had used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and sho told mo about it From tho first day I took it I began to icel cotter and now 1 nm well nnd able to do most anv kind of work. I havo been rocom mendintr the Com pound eversinco and give you my per mission to publish 'thi3 letter." Miss Flo Kelly, 476 So. 14th St., Newark, N.J. The reason this famous root nnd herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, was so successful in Miss Kelly's case was because it went to the root of her trouble, restored her to a normal healthy condition and as a result ber nervousness disappeared. Calf Enemies WHITE SCOURS BLACKLEG Your Veterinarian can stamp them out with Cutter's Anti-Calf Scour Serum and Cutter's Germ Free Blackleg Filtrate and Aggressin, or Cutter's Blackleg Pills. Ask him about them. If ho hasn't our literature, write to us for information on these products. The Cutter Laboratory Berkeley, Cal., or Chicago, 111. "The Laboratory That Know How" Her Occupation. "What kind of a woman is his wife, Amnndn?" "I think she is what you call n mnudntory." GRANDMA USED SAGE TEA. TO DARKEN HAIR Sho mixed Sulphur with it to Re store Color, Gloss, Youth fulness. Common garden sage brewed into n heavy tea with sulphur added, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dnrk and luxuriant. Just n few applications will prove a revem tlon If your hair Is fading, streaked or gray. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sul phur recipe at home, though, is trou blesome. An easier way Is to get a bottle of Wyeth's Sago and Sulphur Compound nt nny drug store all ready for use. This Is the old-tlmo reclpo Improved by tho addition of other In gredients. Whllo wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, wo all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractive ness.. By darkening your hnlr with Wyeth's Sago and Sulphur Compound, no one can tell, because It does It so naturally, so evenly. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with It and draw this through your hair, taking one smoll strand nt a time; by morning all grny hairs havo disappeared, and, after another nppllcntlon or two, your hnlr becomes beautifully dark, glossy( soft and luxuriant. Adv. Any man who does you an lit turn will never forgive you for it. Busy men nro seldom uflllcted with fits of melancholy. "Blue" and Worried? "Blue," worried, half-sick people should find out the cause of their trou bles. Often it is merely faulty kidney action, which allows the blood to cot loaded up with poisons that irritate the nerves. Backache, headaches, dizziness and annoying bladder troubles are add ed proofs that the kidneys need help. Ueo Doan'8 Kidney Pills. Thousands thank them for relief from just such troubles. An Iowa Case Airs. Ella M. Gor don. HH N. Prospect Bt. Webstor City. Iowa, says: "I was completely down with kidney and bladder trouble. My kidneys didn't act right and caused me much suffering. I had terrible pains over my kidneys. I tried different medi cines but got only temporary relief. Finally I began using nnnn'n Klrinnv Pllln and the awful pains in my bladder and kidneys let up. When I had finished five boxes, I was permanently cured of kidney and bladder trouble." Ct Dean's at Any Store, 60c Bos DOAN'SiiSS FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y. I , rw ,rL -A. K ff'N.-s S Colds Grow Better snrprUlngly soon, throat Inflammation dlsap- Sean, lrnutlon is relieved and throat tick ag t?, when you uso reliable, time-tested PISGS i x -u