__ ■■ —Sonnet Set ial 7iction ■ ■ MAID N Ef DCDT AUTHOR OF By SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS 'it happened ONE NIGHT1 9 SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS WNU SERVICE ■ .. CHAPTER VI—Continued “10— His leisure moments Glunk devoted to staring at the sky with an expres sion of doubt and apprehension. Once Marne caught him perform ing what seemed to be some sort of propitiatory rite to unseen gods, presumably of the weather. Be tween observations he would retire | to a small work-shed attached to the mansion, to tinker with an ancient and decrepit flat-boat which he had dragged up, derelict, from the lake. There was plenty of weather for his observations. All the Finger Lakes region had for a month cow ered under a pall of weepy, gray clouds. The normally peaceful lit tle creek which crooked a protec tive elbow around Holmesholm be fore emptying into the lake, was a brawling torrent, and the dry ra vine on the other side of the house now hardly controlled a boisterous stream. Marne repeated Moby Dickstein’s despairing query to Glunk. “Doesn’t it ever clear up? I’m getting bored with it.” With Marne the monster occasion ally became quite loquacious. He now burst into consecutive speech. “Rain,” he chattered. “Plenty rain. Mo’ rain. Tomorrow, meb be sun. Mebbeatwo day. Mebbe free. Rain again.” He swept a long, anxious look around the dull horizon and drew his head in be • tween his shoulders like a threat ened turtle. “Too much rain. Bad place,” he announced. "I think it’s a lovely place. If it weren’t so wet.” Glunk produced his week'* check. “You get mon’?” he requested con fidently. She nodded. Nobody else would the creature trust in his financial dealings, and each time that Marne produced cash for his bit of paper, he gazed upon her with the worship ful awe due to a worker of miracles. "What do you do with all your money, Glunk?” "Whusshh.” He pressed his hairy, gnat hand over his lips, then re moved it to exhibit his three-fanged smile. "You come," he invited, aft er spying about to assure himself that there was no one within watch ing distance. Roundabout, threading between barns and outhouses, stopping to stare and mumble at the brawling creek, he led her by a devious route back to a vine-swathed, wooden structure behind the house, shelter ing a long disused well. Darting to his work-shed, he reappeared with a flashlight which he directed into the well-mouth. "You keep it down there?" "Urgck.” "That’s very clever of you.” Grinning, he indicated a cavity, some eight feet down, formed by the displacement of a stone. This, she was given to understand, was his bank. He seemed enormously pleased with it. "Well, I wouldn’t want to go down there,” the girl decided. “I don’t believe it’s safe. Those walls look bulgy to me.” Again the hoarder hunched his shoulders. "Too much rain,” he growled uneasily. True to his prophecy, however, the sun blazed forth on the follow ing morning and chased all the loi tering clouds from the sky. It was the perfect opportunity for the ca noe test. To be sure, A. Leon Sny dacker was away for the day, but Moby Dickstein did not dare wait further upon the capricious weather. The first step was to get his leading man to the low bluff overlooking the lake. To one of Moby’s diplomat ic attainments, this was easy. The pretense was that he needed expert advice in working out some detail of topography. Kelsey made no de mur. Everything, the director fondly decided, was perfect. Below the cliff the waters went off very sheer to a depth of several feet. For a skilled swimmer in a hurry, as Moby anticipated that the hero would be, a dive from the summit into safe water would be quite feasi ble. Or he might elect to slide down the little precipice and plunge from the thin edge of shore. Either way would suit Moby. All that was now needed was Miss Van Stratten. Prompt to the assigned minute, she appeared around the bend, clad in a most becoming bathing suit and propelling the small canoe with strong, easy strokes. As an added feature, not figured in the directori al calculations, the faithful Glunk floundered along the beach, now in, now out of the water, and keeping as nearly abreast as possible. How ever, that did not matter at the mo ment All was set Exactly opposite the spot where Moby Dickstein and his leading man were engaged in topographical con ference and the masked camera’ waited below for its prey, the canoe paused and drifted, some thirty yards offshore. The occupant lifted her head. “Yoo-hoo! Moby!” She waved her paddle. “Steady, there," warned Moby as per agreement “I’m getting aU cramped," she complained, and stood up. “Siddown!" yelled the director in well simulated alarm, as the craft wobbled and canted. "I’m all right,” she called gayly, and to prove It waved the paddle above her head. “Migawd! She’ll be over in a min ute." She was. For an uncertain mo ment she struggled for balance. Then, with a shriek which com manded Moby’s professional admi ration, she plunged. The canoe swerved aside. The waters boiled. A face rose, dripping and gasping. “Help! Help!” The appeal rent the air. She sank again and again appeared, burbling. Moby Dickstein beat his breast. “Get her, somebody,” he wailed. "1 can’t swim.” "All right,” snapped Kelsey. In one movement he had shucked his coat and measured the distance for a dive. With a covert grin of satisfaction the director marked the progress of the strategy devised by his boss. The grin disappeared as the progress halted inexplicably. He sputtering. "I’ve been thinking you over. Would you like to know what 1 think of you?” “Get it off your mind if you feel you must.” "1 think you're a coward.” I've tried to be decent to you. but now I’m through. I’ve known all the time that you were a big bluff. But you’re so much worse than I ever dreamed that—that—” "Don’t try to finish it. You’ll only spoil the effect.” "Nothing could have an effect upon your sort.” “There you misjudge me. I’m really a sensitive soul. Some day,” he finished sadly, “you will realize how you have wounded me. But it may then be too late.” “You don't mean It's likely to prove fatal?” she asked hopefully. “It might. You don’t realize your own power. I’m going home now to weep on my pillow.” Before she could think of the an swer to that one he had disap peared in the brush. The tramp steamer, Andreas A. Onderdonk. bound for Central Amer “Don’t get sore just because he outsmarted you." who had been cast for the role of gallant rescuer seemed to have un dergone a change of spirit. Instead of taking a photographable header, he stood, peering toward the spot where the water was still in tur moil with an expression which, at first observant, became suspicious, and finally cynical. “Help! Hel-l-l-lp!" To Moby’s attuned ear, a note of exasperation had crept into the ap peal. And the supposed hero of the crisis? To his director’s unutterable indignation, he sat down comforta bly and dangled his legs over the edge of the void through which his devoted body should have been hur tling. "Whatsa matter?" yelped Moby. “Nothing.” “Ain’t you goin’ after her?” “Not today,” answered the placid hero. “What in hell’s bitin’ you?" “Don’t want to get my feet wet,” explained Kelsey. Out in the lake Marne was doing a very creditable job of drowning, but getting a little bored with it. Coming up for the third (and she hoped it would be the last) time, she heard a roar of terror and dismay in a voice strangely unlike that of Templeton Sayles, Esq. Glunk to the rescueI A fountain of foam marked his heroic progress. He covered the distance at a speed which even the expert Kelsey could hardly have bet tered. Arriving at the spot, he fixed a mighty grip upon the first portion of Marne’s anatomy to present it self. Unfortunately this chanced to be an ankle. Consequently her pas sage to the safety of the beach was mainly sub-surface. She arrived in a mood for murder. Beaming and fawning, Glunk set her on her feet and aided her, as best he could to recover herself. After an interval of strangling she lifted her eyes and beheld the sup positious hero of the recent scene. Nobody else was in sight. The cam eraman had lost interest in the event from the moment when the apparition of the impromptu life saver impinged upon the sensitive lens. As a stooge for the leading man, Glunk, full-face, lacked plausi bility. With his unerring sense of expediency, Moby Dickstein had also decided to fade away. In all the smiling landscape, the only foil for Marne’s righteous resentment was the young man now swinging nonchalant legs above her. To make matters worse, he was lighting a cigarette. “All right now?” he asked kindly. “You!” She tried for an effect of blighting scorn, but impaired it by ica with a deckload of Martin Holmes’ nervous troubles, was beat en far off her course into a Texas port, on the same day as Marne’s maritime misadventure. While the boat was laid up for minor replace ments, her lone passenger went to the town library to catch up with the news, he being, at the time, some weeks in arrears. In a New York newspaper of past date he saw again the features of Miss Mar ion Norman Van Stratten. “Our old friend Miss Adelina Ash can, the back-door debutante,” he murmured, and read the accompa nying letter-press. From this he learned that Miss Van Stratten’s prize-winning face was then being rehearsed in A. Leon Snydacker’s production of ‘Maiden Effort.” Naturally the title meant nothing to him. But he was mildly interested in the result of the com petition wherein his entry had so signally flopped. He appealed to the lady librarian. “Have you anything else about this?” The official, a faded and roguish spinster of fifty, chanced to be a motion picture fan, and therefore a compendium of information. “Miss Van Stratten? Oh. yes. In deed I She's the new star. A New York society girL You don’t hap pen to know her, do you?” “No. I’m not interested in her. It’s the picture I'd like to know about.” "You might find something In one of these.” Several trade papers, having to do with the Hollywood industry were put into his hands. He seated himself at a table and looked them over with a languid eye, which was suddenly fixed in a fishy stare. Hold ing up one of the publications, he rose and advanced upon his inform ant, his finger glued to a paragraph, his face contorted into an expres sion which alarmed the librarian equally for his mental state and her physical safety. He thrust the publication at her. "You read this. I’m not sure I got it right. This. Right here. Read it to me.” "Please sit down," she said in what she hoped were soothing ac cents. "Is this it? Very well.” She began: " ‘The new Purity Pictures production, Maiden Effort, from the prize-winning novel by Templeton Sayles, will be under the personal supervision of A. Leon Sny—” "Wait a minute, please. Who did it say it was by?” “Templeton Sayles. Do you know him?” "I am Templeton Sayles.” "You!” ejaculated the lady libra rian. “Oh. gosh!” "Exactly,” said Martin Holmes Sayles. “It says here that Templeton Sayles is cast to play leading man opposite Miss Van Stratten.” “Malden Featherston?” "That’s it” “Then it’s my story, all right" She frowned. “But they’re tak ing the picture now, so this says. How can that be if you’re Mr. Tem pleton Sayles?” "That’s what I’m going to find out,” said he grimly. “By the next train north. Good-by, and thank you.” CHAPTER VII Small satisfaction did Marne get out of her ally. Miss Glamour, when she sought sympathy in her griev ance against Templeton Sayles, Esq. Gloria’s opinion was definite but not soothing. “You would take his side.” “Don’t get sore just because he outsmarted you.” “I believe you like him,” accused the disgusted Marne. “Sure, I like him. Probably not as much as you do.” “You can have him. With my blessing.” "On the level, kid, why have you got such a down on Tempy?” “I can’t stand the lady-killer type.” “Where do you get your slant on him?" “From that awful stuff he wrote about himself.” "You know darn well that’s all fake.” "Of course it is. But it shows his character. That’s the sort he’d like to be if he could. I’ll bet,” she concluded viciously, “he boasts about women to other men in smok ing rooms.” “You’ve got him different from what I have,” commented the beau ty girl thoughtfully. “I wouldn’t hold up the Sayles Saga stuff against him.” ‘Because you don’t understand,” was the impatient response. “You never studied psychology, did you?” To Marne's surprise the other an swered readily, “Sure. Sophomore year, when I was Miss University of East Idaho.” (TO BE CONTINUED) Few Household Chores Worry Japanese Women; Little Time Spent in Cooking A minimum of time and labor is required to get the Japanese family started every morning. Bed quilts are rolled up and put away in a closet. Chopsticks and bowls are rinsed out in either hot or cold water and left to dry, says the Na tional Geographic magazine. Even the daily cooking takes little time. Fish and rice are the staples. Fish is often eaten raw, and rice may be cooked at any time and set aside in a wooden tub to be served cold. Vegetables are few. Peas are cooked in the pod, and the big white carrots and cabbages are pickled. Other household duties are quick ly done. Except among the well-to do, the general custom of going to public baths and buying ready-made clothing frees the women from many hours of housework. The cot ton kimonos are washed out and hung to dry on poles run through the sleeves. Stretching on the pole is the only ironing necessary. The country woman, after giving the family a quick breakfast of rice, pickles and hot tea, ties the baby on her back and makes for the fields. With kimono tucked up, she engages in any kind of farm labor. Sometimes she works alone, more often side by side with husband or son. In the spring she hoes or weeds, transplants the young rice, or cuts the winter wheat In au tumn she moves with bent back down the field with a sickle, help ing menfolk cut and thresh the rice —the major crop of Japan. Two farm jobs seem exclusively hers— the picking of tea leaves and the tending of silkworms. Was Soldier of Three Wars Winfield Scott was born in Vir ginia, June 13, 1780. As a lieutenant colonel during the War of 1812 he was taken prisoner in the battle of Queenstown Heights; in a few months he was exchanged. In 1814, a brigadier general, he defeated the British in the battles of Chippewa and Lundy’s Lane. He commanded the army which invaded Mexico in 1847 and fought its way into. the capital. Though a Southerner by birth, he remained at the head of the United States army as com mander in chief at the outbreak of the Civil war, serving until Novem ber 1, 1861, when he retired at tha age of seventy-flva. WHO’S NEWS THIS WEEK I — 1 By LEMUEL F. PARTON NEW YORK. — Once, at an al ley’s end in Guayaquil, this re porter then young and indiscreet, became involved in an argument with certain of Medic« K. O. the native citi /// Will and zenry, who in Fever in S. A. ®isted that North Americans ate only dog meat. Your correspond ent knew only enough Spanish to get him into trouble, and was using it diligently to that end when Dr. Robert Entwistle, once of Philadel phia, later a student and practition er of tropical medicine along the west coast fever ports, appeared. He calmed the excitement and saved his countryman much em barrassment and possibly a broken head. It was Idee magic, the way he piped everybody down. They loved and trusted him and he was their authority on everything from international relations to beri-beri. So, today, It seemed almost like old news to read In a dis patch from Lima that it was an American doctor and not a statesman, who, possibly more than any other one man, has In duced respect and good will for this country, down around and below the equator. With a num ber of other American doctors, Dr. John D. Long, of the United States Public Health service, has been carrying on a fight against the bubonic plague, malaria, chagres fever and other tropical curses in Ecuador, Bra zil, Peru, Chile and other coun tries. He holds decorations from half a dozen South American countries. He and bis col leagues have served only in re sponse to specific requests for their services, and the sum of their efforts has been to allay ill will, dispel prejudice and misunderstanding and promote friendly relations. Doctor Long, 64 years old, quiet, precise, unassuming, is a typical American professional man, whose home town was Mt. Pleasant, Pa. After his graduation from the med ical school of the University of Pennsylvania, he entered the nation al public health service, became its assistant surgeon, and, assigned to the Philippines, won eminence in his profession in his work In sani tation and in fighting disease. In 1926, he was loaned to the Chilean government for a similar encounter there. In this writer’s observation of South American countries, par ticularized instances of civilized behavior, fair dealing and re gard for native traditions and amenities, once the fear of pred atory designs had been over come, were effective where all else failed, including our most eloquent offerings of official friendship. THE New York aquarium gets three African flsh which have high foreheads and bigger brains in proportion to their size than any other creatures Plan l. Q. Rating below the Pri Rare Fish With mates. This Out-Size Brain makes them skittish and doesn’t seem to get them anything, although they manage to keep out of aquaria and frying pans. These are the first ever brought to this country. Dr. Charles M. Breder Jr. plans to go to Africa as soon as possible to check up on their 1. Q. The ancient Egyptians re vered and protected them, in the belief that their huge brain cav ities were inhabited by the souls of departed men. Doctor Breder thinks a study of their intelli gence, if any, in relation to their out-size brain, might be enlight ening. Doctor Breder was a boy icthyol ogist at Newark, where the family was apt to find the bathtub full of killies and sticklebacks. In his ex amination for a biologist’s job in the fisheries bureau, he confounded his elders and beat out Ph. D. en trants in the competition. He was assistant director of the Aquarium for 14 years and became director a year ago. Doctor Breder is said to rank all other scientists. He is 40 years old, a fragile, clerical looking man, with blue eyes and yellow hair. But his appearance is deceptive. On the Richard Oglesby Marsh expedition, to the Chucunaquc river country in southern Panama, in 1924, in which Dr. J. L. Baer of the Smithsonian institution lost his life. Doctor Breder came through swimmingly, with no chagres fever or beri-beri and a brand new fish. Its name, Rivulus Chucunaque Breder, is In 8-pt. body type, five-sixteenths of an inch longer than the fish. (£> Consolidated News Features. WN1I Ser"*"* Indoor and Outdoor Ideas /~\NE of these designs gives you ^ four gay little extras to fresh en up your dark dresses and suits —an accessory set comprising a fitted jacket, a soft, roomy bag, a tailored ascot scarf and a pair of those new boxy-figured gloves. The other is a practical house dress, so comfortable and so good looking that you’ll want it for shopping and runabout as well as for home work. Make the frivo lous accessory set—make the use ful house dress! Both are easy, and you’ll enjoy them both! Four Matching Accessories. It will make your clothes seem like lots more, if you vary them with bright accessories in just the colors you want. Don’t be afraid to tackle the gloves. They’re easy, with the detailed sew chart in cluded in your pattern and so smart! Lots of women who haven’t sewed any more than you have are making their own, with this design. Choose flannel, jer sey, or suede. Slenderizing House Dress. This is such a trim, tailored style, with darts at the waistline for slimness, and a gathered bod ice to give fullness over the bust. The skirt has an action pleat for greater comfort. The plain V neckline, finished with edging, is Everchanging Crowd The failures are the everchang ing crowd. The flukes are the flit terers and the quitters.—Van Am burgh. very becoming. All in all, this dress fits so well and looks so well that you should have it in flat crepe or polka dot print as well as in tubfast cottons like calico, per cale, gingham and linen. The Patterns. No. 1652 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. With long sleeves, size 38 requires 4% yards of 35-inch material; with short sleeves, 4% yards, 2y« yards of edging. No. 1643 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 40 and 42. Size 16 re quires 1% yards of 54-inch fabric for the jacket; % yard for ths gloves, with % yard contrast; 1% yards for the scarf and % yard for the bag. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1020, 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chioago, 111. Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each. UESHON You never seem to have a cold, EtheL liglli/gp 8 vB Je wW 88C n Perhaps I’m just lucky. But I always use Luden’s at the first sign. They contain an alkaline factor, you know. LUDEN'S 5 MINTHOLCOUOH DROPS Rich and Poor He is rich whose income is moro than his expenses; and he is poor whose expenses exceed his in come.—Bruyere. Can’t Eat, Can’t Sleep, Awful Gas PRESSES HEART *Ou on my stomach vu so bad I oould not cat or altsp. It avail pressed oa my heart. A friend suggested Adlerika. The first dose brought me relief. Now I eat aa 1 wish, sleep fine, and never fait better.”— Mrs. Ju. Filler. Adlerika acta on BOTH upper and lower bowels. 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