I Rough-Hewn Dorothy Canfield \ (Continued from Veuterdm'.l Norsis. Neale Crittenden, (epical American xminc man. has crown lip in I niontown. a village near New York city, has been it rad noted from Columbia untxersitv and * b»»* taken a position with a lumber firm. At college lie fell in love with Martha Wentworth, who declined III* proposal to wed. Martha Is spending a year in tier many with her father. Neale accepts hi* disappointment philosophically and bends his efforts toward success in busi ness In Frame. Marise Allen, about Neales age, lit cm with her American father who Is foreign agent for ail Amer ican firm. She is an accomplished lin nuist ami pianist. Marise and her father visit I’aris. where Marise meets an Amer ican girl. Eugenia Mille, from Arkansas. They go together to M. \andover. Eu genia's instructor in F’rench. A rather *tormy scene takes place when Eugenia expresses dissatisfaction xvith the instruc tion she is rcceixing. and M. Vandover tells her he will find another Instructor for her. Marise's piano teacher. Mme. de la Cnevt* urges her to spend a year studying in Koine with an old music mas ter. Neale is in Italv on a business and pleasure trip and plans to sail for Amer ica soon. In a Koman roof garden he meets Marise and Is struck bv her oeauty and grace of manner. Tliev learn that as riiiidren In America they had known many of the same scenes In the country near 1 niontown. Neale tells Marise that lie expects to lca\e for China soon after his return to America. They were standing now near a low wall, under some thick dark ilex trees, a fountain dripping musically before them. Mechanically they sat down, looking earnestly at each other. “You see,” began Neale, “I'm trying to find m.v wsCJ’. I was in business in the states, and getting along all right . . . 'getting on,’ I.mean, as they say. And then 1 got to wonder ing. It seemed as though, aa though ... I wasn’t sure it was what I wanted to do with my life, just to buy low and sell high, all my life long. Perhaps there was more to it than I could make it. It certainly seemed to suit a lot. of folks. Hnp. But. I couldn’t seem to see it. I was ail right. Nothing the matter. Only 1 couldn't . . . why, I tell you, I felt like a perfectly good torch that wouldn't catch on tire. I couldn’t seem to care enough about it to make it worth while to really tear in and do it. And I thoughf maybe if I got off a little way from it . . . sometimes you do see the sense of things better that way. So I went away. I took a year off. I'd saved a little money, enough for that. And I've been try ing to figure something -out. Of course, I've been enjoying the travel ing around, too. Perhaps that’s the real reason why I want to go to China, Just to keep going, see new things, get away, keep free. But I think about the other a good deal ... what can I do with my life . . that's sort of worth while, you know, if only In a very small way. I'm an ordinary man, no gifts, no talents, but I have lots of energy and health. It seems as though there ought to be something . . . doesn't it?” He had stumbled On. breathlessly, involuntarily, hardly aware that he was speaking at all, aware onljr that she was listening. With her head bent, her eyes fixed on the ground, the pure pale olive of. her fare like a pearl In the shadow of her hat, she was listening Intently. He knew, as he had never known anything else, that she was listening te what he really meant, not to what he was say ing in those poor, plain broken words. And yet, how could he go on? The sudden plunge he had made, deep Into aw element new to him, the utter strangeness of his having thus spoken out what he had before but shyly glanced at, the awfulness of having opened his heart to the day, i - r - - — —..i hi* shut, shut heart. . . , Good God, what was lie doing? At his silence, she raised her face towards him. To his amazement her eye* were shining wet. with tears. And yet there was no sadness In her face. She was smiling at him, a wavering, misty smile. She stood up, made a little flexible, eloquent gesture with her hands and arms and shoulders, ns it to explain to him that she could not trust her self to speak, and, still smiling at him, the tears still in her eyes, walked rapidly aw’ay. CHAPTER XI,IV. After dinner that evening Miss Allen came up to where Mr. Living stone and Air. Crittenden stood to gether n&ar the window and said to them. “Would it interest you at all to go to the soiree at Donna Anto-, nia's tomorrow? She has been kind enough to offer me some cards of invitation, and it occurred to me— if you haven't anythin*!: better to do that evening—?” Livingstone rarried one hand to his heart, the other to his brow, and professed inability to recover from the shock. “Aly dear young lady, It's inhuman to shatter my nerves with a bombshell like that without a word of warning! Vou know well enough I'd gladly givejone of my ears for an invitation to Donna Antonia's. Why then the false modesty, as who should say, ‘If you've nothing more interest ing on hand just step up and let me make you a duke, do!” Miss Allen acknowledged the face tious Intention of this with a suitable laugh and looked at Neale. He said, "Oh, of course, I shall be glad to go.’’ "That's good then. I shall hope to see both of you.” The soiree was horrible to Neale, a nightmare, a glittering wall through which he could by no means break to reach her, over which he could scarce ly see at an immense distance her slim figure, dressed in yellow, a thin gold fillet binding her pmooth dark head. She was talking?' smiling, animated, at ease; and after she had played, much acclaimed. There was nothing surprising about that, thought Neale, applauding with all his might. Heav ens, how beautifully she made music, how beautifully, how Intelligently, with such a clear, sure certainty of her pwn powers! Of course, every body' there admired her, paid court to her, made her the center of one group after another—always except the group where he stood! He felt heart sick to he so cut off from her. As a matter of fact he was not in the least literally cut off from her. She kept relentlessly introducing him to one person after another whom he did not wish to meet. She kept coming up to him every time he had succeeded In shaking off a tiresome companion and wt#s standing alone at last in a corner, looking everywhere over the curled, powdered, bobbing, restless, grinning crowd to catch a glimpse of her. There she would he at hla elbow, gliding up from nowhere. He restrained an Impulse to snatch at hpr and hold her there, beoause each time she melted away after she had said. "Won't you let me take you to Donna Antonia. Plerleonl," or “to Miss Mills," or "to Signor Amhrngi," or to somebody or other with whom it was necessary to talk and on whom it was necessary to try to keep those wandering, seeking eyes of his. Miss Mills—oh, yes, this must he the girl blvlngstone had been yarn ing about. Of course, after praise from Hivingstone it was to he ex pected that she’d look like a very high priced wax image in a hair dresser’s window; and yet Neale’s at tentlon was caught for a moment by her pronunciation of a French phrase. Her inflection reminded him of Marise Allen’s, neid he hung about her for some time In the hope of hearing It again. Kvery time she - ---- repeated it. which she often did, he smiled down broadly on her. She was a pretfy little thing. She was really quite an object of art. If that was what you called them. As Neale walked home with Liv ingstone at midnight he had made up his mind to take the first train to Naples the next morning. But he made no move whatever to do this, when the morning came. Dumb ifhd stupid as a aheep, he made his way doggedly to the dining room at the earliest hour, to see Miss Allen take her cafe-au-lait. As he wpnt in at tho door, he realized that his cal culations were all wrong, that she had heen up late the night before and would certainly sleep late that morn ing. But Livingstone had already seen him and hailed him. It was too late to go hack and wait. He sat down, gloomily stirred the sugar into hts rnffee and listened to Livingstone ttzz all over the place about the even ing's entertainment which had uplift ed him to exaltation. "You don't real ize, Crittenden, what an opportunity that was to see exclusive Roman so ciety. the kind that foreigners like us never meet, not the flashy, big hotel, off-color crowd. Why, I was introduced to name after name that sounded like a page out of Roman history." Neale thought with a passing grim irony that Livingstone's phrase was accurately turned—'introduced to names"—yea, verily. Well, names were what Livingstone was after. "Oh. you up already. Miss AII$n,” said Livingstone, springing to seat her with an agility for which Neale hated him. He himself sat like a lump. Incapable because of the sudden rush of blood to his head, of any thing hut a silent answej- to her greeting. Livingstone needed no helfi In keep ing up the conversation. He flowed on, delightedly passing in review ev ery detail of the evening of which he had net missed a single one, ap parently, from the way Donna An tonias maid did her hair to the dand ruff on the coat collar of the old Visconti. "Of course I know he's a great musician arid all that, but really if you will let your hair grow so long, you ought t» have a pocket clothes brush, and use It, oughtn’t you? Why don't you do It for him, Miss Allen? Everyone 'says he is absolutely gone on you, lhat you could do anything w^tli him!" He passed from this with out transition to Miss Mills’ toilette which had been, so It seemed, a veri table triumph, "Yes, yes, wasn’t it beautiful! Eu genia's clothes are simply wonderful.” Miss Allen broke In to say enthusi astically, “She has the most never falling taste.” “A never falling pocketbook,” cor rented Livingstone. "You don't get far with mere taste dans ce bas monde.” Miss Allen finished her coffee, and, setting down her cup, remarked, "You two Americans seem to have a most agreeable impression last evening. Donna Antonia called me back to say that Signor Ambrogi would he glad to see more of you. She wished me EAT IN COMFORT | At the Henahaw Cafeteria It la tha Cooles^ CafeteHa in Omaha BEATTY’S Henshaw Cafeteria Hotel Hanshaw L) to ask you both if you couldn't come to have tea with her and with SlKnor YOU can get a tire that’s called a pneu matic—probably has air in it, too—and maybe buy it pretty cheap. But you shouldn’t expect from it the long eco nomical, trouble - free mileage you are sure to get from a Goodyear Cord Truck Tire. It is one of the complete line of Goodyear All - H'eather Tread truck Tires we sell Rusch Tire Service 220S-7 Farnam Street AT 1 antic 0629 GOODYEAR I; Amhrogi thin afternoon at 5." (To If* Continu*dn*»dny.) Bifocal Lenses as fitted by our system are a joy to wear. (Lenses only) 57.00 Sheltex Spectacle* or Eye glaaaea for near work only 56.00 Same service in our South Side store. 24th and N Sts. MA rjcet 0784. Flitton Optical Co. 13th Floor l»t Nat’I Bank * JA ckson 1953 New Cameo Records 39c "Louiville Lou," sung by Martha Pryor. "Dirty Hands—Dirty Face," Walter Leslie. "Oh, Harold," Fox Trot. “Long Lost Mamma." Bargain Basement Burgess-Nash Company " EYERYBODYS STORE” Cafeteria Special Dinner 35c Boiled Spare Riba Cabbage Boiled Potato Roll Butter iced Tea or Coffee. Bargain Basement -IN THE BARGAIN BASEMENT ^■STARBRAND SHOES X ARE BETTER” \ — We Announce the Opening of Our New Fall Line of Roberts, Johnson & Rand’s Famous “Star Brand” Solid Leather Shoes I In order that we might supply our pa I irons with the finest shoes at the very lowest ’ price, we have spent much time and thought and after careful comparison have decided that “Star Brand” Solid Leather Shoes are the best values obtainable. A certificate guaranteeing these shoes to be solid leather is packed in each box. Shoes for Women $3.45 to $4.95 Black satin one-strap pumps. Brown and black kid and calf oxfords with either military or low heels. Patent leather or brown kid one-strap pumps with cream colored kid inlay. i for the Entire Family—Mother, Father, Son and Daughter " W E w 11_ I_ PAY *»5S§ CASH REWARD and replace"FREE OFCHARGE to the Wearer.*any* pair A" of "STAR BRAND Shoes bearing ' this Star^'^jM^^'on Heel or Lining, 'containing leather boa rd7SjS§k paper or fibre-board ‘(substitutes for leather) J£»Z?vn the Outsoles. Insoles. ? 'Heels or Counters. Stab Brand Shoes Are Bptter Roberts. Johnson $iUnd MANUFACTURERS- a* mnwhh W*Ca ST LOU IA A Gift Will Be Given to Every Child Visiting We recommend Poll Parrot shoes for. real service, style and fit for boys and girls of all ages. These shoes are offered at astonish ingly low prices. Visit our Bargain Basement and see the display of “Star Brand” Shoes. Shoes for Men $4.95 to $5.50 Black vici kid straight last dress shoes Brown calf straight last shoes. Soft toe, vici kid bunion shoes. Brown kid straight last dress sho£s. Round toe brown calf blucher shoes. Round toed black vici kid blucher shoes. . Black calf blucher shoes. Shoes for Boys and Young Men p oizes 14 10 4 ana to o*/a $2.95 to $4.45 Black and brown calf shoes with French toe and blueher last. j«» Double welt soles and rubber heels, v Smoked elk shoes for dress and school wear. Our Bargain Basement Shoe Dept. Tuesday Shoes for Infants, $1.25 to $2.45 Smoked elk shoes with stitehed double welt soles. Black and brown kid buttoned shoes with turn soles Complete Line of Children s School Shoes As. Shoes for Girls and Misses Sizes 8Va to 11 and ll1 i to 2 L $1.95 to $3.95 Laced or buttoned shoes of smoked elk, made with double welt soles In blucher style. Misses' brown and black calf school shoes. Laced style with rubber heels. Eta* brand SHOES BETTE Hr -k-fii I "STAR brand I SHOES | BETTER Genuine Jean Lonsdale Middies 98c Made of good quality jean in all white, red and navy blue, or white with collar, cuffs and emblems of red and navy blue. Included, also, are pongee colored middies with Peter Pan collars of Paisley or gihgham. Sizes 8 to 44. Regularly priced $1.25 and $1.69. W. B. Corsets $3.25 Long bark and front model corset, well made of brocaded silk material. The elastic top and side gores Insure an ex cellent fit. All are guaranteed rustproof. Sizes according to waist measure 21 ro 34. W.B. Girdles i $3.00 Pretty satin striped routll made with elastic top and side gores. Is cut slightly longer In the back and finished with four hose supporters. [especially adapted to slender figures. Sizes 24 to 32. Silk Bandeaux wb. $1.00 Front fastening models made of silk brocade wlih elasilc ribbing around the waist. T’laln or trimmed with lace and finished with silk shoulder straps. Sizes 32 to 46. An unusual value at this low price. —An Introductory Sale of— f New Fall ( Dresses $1675 Fall dresses arc arriving daily and, as a spe cial inducement for early shopping, we have grbuped together a number of our newest styles and marked them at an astonishingly lov^ price. Cantons Flat Crepes Wool Crepes Charmeuses Trico Knit Poiret Twills Made iu straight line, flaring and wrap-around models with short, medium and long sleeves. Trimmed with Lacs Pleated Ruffles Ribbons Buttons Apron Effects Embroidery Hand Work Beads All Sizes 10 to .VJ. Bargain Basement Extra Special Quinbaugh Pillow Tubing, Yd. 33c 4! and 45inch width bleached linen finished tubing in a fine close weave warranted to give satisfaction. A very popu lar tubing for embroider lng. Regularly 49o. Bargain Basemant SILKS Plain and fancy silk in a large varie| of attractive designs as well as pla| colors. Included are 3$ nch, satin. taff* tas, fancy wash silks and srhite sportj skirtings, all specially priced, ^ | on yard . 1 ,0*7 Romper Krinkle Cloth A very serviceable material for children's wear in a variety of neat 'Id/ stupes and colors. 1 O /2C 36-Inch Percale Standard quality percale In both light and dark colored designs, a yard . New Silk j | Blouses ’5.00 Attractive new overblousea for wear with fall shirts are fashioned o( Canton crepe. Navy Blue White Paisley Tan Gray Tuxedo, plain and Veter Van collars, some trimmed with real filet lace. Sites 34 to 48. Others beautifully embroidered ^ r* and headed, ate priced . / t)