I, THE KING By WAYLAND WELLS WILLIAMS. (Copyright. 1(S«.) " -_:_J (Continued from Teetertar.) There was only one thin* to think, snd he thought It for two hours. But he had known, and he had no right to expect anything better. The day was not far off when she would see him for what he was, and cast him from her utterly. V. (But Mary was not asleep, not till long after he was, though she meas ured her breathing long after he was, though she measured her breathing to deceive him. Not much, with her heart pounding away as It was! Hope. Amid all the worry, distaste, fear, jealousy, at last, one solid hope. Ah, but the risk The hideousness of waiting, pretending, standing back. The heart-breaking aloofness that It was ruin to break! Still, there was hope now, and sne finally went to sleep In Its arms, a smile on her Ups. When she w'oke up she smiled again, remembering. •• \m I a fool?" she asked the morn ing. "Or am I really a rather clever person? I’ve always wondered. Iye never known, but I’m going to, soon!’’) vi At breakfast a letter from Eltse Newell: „ "The Elms, Dimchureh, Conn. r>?Tfeellti ought to write you about Esther Things have not gone well here this spring, and the Company has had a hard time meeting some of its*loans Any other concern would have shut down, flat, till It had time ?o recoup, but Father would go on as,1r. svas* '"nit Tuesday afternoon he had a slight stroke, coming home in the r He thought so little of it that we" didn’t1 call* the doctor till, arier dinner, hut that was Jhat lt *’ went straight to bed and has been there ever since, though he is to sit up tomorrow. The d-tor says he will recover completely from “"■He and Mama both send th*,r^ov^; When are we to see you and Mar> again?. Tour affectionate ecu si P 8. Papa is out of the Presidency. a .u. Bosrd of Directors have elected a chairman, Mr. Vlckars. for eiecieu ~ DUt Papa doesn t safes gorng^Te^n lower. " New York •-Day by Day J ■■■■■E" _a called ea< UP« to tur lady next to me went an upset dish of salad dressing. While I looked sillier than usual, she tried to be brave. All the at tention. if any, I had was centered upon her while X turned lobster red. And then some one tltterpd and that titter acted along like fire in a burning brush to a decided roar. So I sat down in confusion. That would seem enough for one day but it wasn't. I stepped into *. telephone booth of a cigar store. The door swung open easily as I entered but refused to budge when I started to leave. I knocked gently on the glass and smiled at the clerk. I don't know what hl3 idea was but he merely smiled and went back and went on selling cigars. I knocked louder and finally gave the door a first-rate kick. It still would not budge. It became necessary to call a carpenter to remove the hinges whije i g iping crow d stood about, no doubt making wise remarks. I know how it fe- is to be a goldfish. And I tlim ~ht the best thing I could do was to go home and to bed—which I did. It was one of those prize fights where the contestants reassembled two old ladles killing bees. One spectator who sat with an alchollc list was aroused by a fellow back of him yelling: Duffy finally hit him!” v He straightened up and said rather thickly: "Who hit who?" "Duffy hit Murphy,” was the re ply. "f don't blame him,” said the bored spectator and lapsed back In to his doze. An Indication of prosperity along Broadway is the closing recently of five dress suit renting parlor*. This seems to he the cussing sea son in the theater. The Dialogue in 15 play* on rl<*k pave ment behind him; It stopped, and a hand came down on his shoulder. "Well. Kit Newell! I'll he darned!" He turned and beheld a classmate, one Rip Maddox, a popular, loud mouthed rounder whom he had known In college and cared little for. Conventionality settled drearily down on him', and he plunged into one of those hectically cordial dialogues that occur between people united by cir cumstance rather than community of interest. "H»llo, Rip! Glad to see you. When did you hit th^ town?” “Six o'clock. Say, I haven't seen you since the war. Great stuff, that Island of yours, and all!" "Great stuff, yes. I.et’s see, what did you join?" "Infantry. Seventy-sixth division." "Got over, then." ".Sore dill some time! Only got nut last August.-—Say, what are you doing?" "Now? Nothing." "Come with me. There’s a bunch over in a place on York street—got some good Scotch going. Dick Hof flngton’s there, and a bunch of oth ers. How about It?” Kit hesitated; the sight of the empty Campus decided him. Any thing was better. "AH right," he said. It was like a sigh. X. It would be unprofitable to pursue him too closely through the next twenty-four hours. They were most ly waking hours, full and noisy: the class had not come to New Haven to sleep, and least of all of it that portion In which Rip Maddox moved. Kit’s original idea of sleeping through the morning proved to be absurd. He had two roommates, each of whom had a quart and plenty of Ideas of how to get more. At eleven he gave up trying to sleep, donned his cot ton costume and staggered out, blear eyed but ready. On just one thing he was determined; he was not going to resurn to the black sour loneliness of last night on the f’ampus. There was talk of a picnic by the shore, but he paid little attention till he found himself driving to It in somebody’s car. He found, on get ting out of tnls, a hot sun, a bathing beach, baseball and flasks. He played baseball; hadn’t he always played baseball'’ He dropped flies and roared with laughter. He bathed in his costume and changed Into a bathing suit while It dried. There was lots of good stuff for lunch. Around four o'clock h« found it necessary to climb a small tree. The tree was too small and broke: there ensued some Interesting conversation with the owner, from which people irritatingly kept trying to pull him away. Then he was somewhere els». | on the back seat of that earn* car. it was hot and sunny, and there was talk about a broken washer. It ha I nothing, he was repeatedly Informed, to do with the Irish washerwoman; also that he could shut up about now At six he was lying on his bed In Durfee, and Rip Maddox, ridicu lously sober, was trying to drag him off somewhere. They went In a ear to a place where Rip wantad him to have supper with a whols lot at peo ple. but he preferred to sit on the lawn and he sick. When he woke up it wu dark IJghts streamed from a row of win dows; also singing, the blare of a band and the rattle of crockery. "Why!" he said. "I’m sober. Gee, isn’t It weird! And I’m hungry. Go in. Hat. Talk about Reconstruc tion.” (To He Continued Tomorrow.) It must Irritate a man to discover that his arteries are hardening when a hardened conscience would be of more use to him.—Des Moines Regis ter. _ THE NEBBS "IT’S ALL JAKE.” Directed for ”r by 50 HeM /'■'good ^ /working,SEC _\ ^JWCNJ vou GET Bit^SO if-^S TX>0^‘BWUnO, J]^ l mOTWvmG INJ , RUDO ^VOUR LirC^J | NEB / | PRIVJ «- \S TH\S MV&S 6R0WKJ JG FOR me ? 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