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Show BEAVER PRESS J, ffi W J17 have to good thing yoa don't "It s on me." entirely depend Linda was enveloped In a blaze of married me swift Indignation. "You I" she accused, had money I believing and writhed In shame and "It's Just that old Joke about the biter ff. self-disgus- bit- -" A U "... . But he shook his head, "ino, umun, I looked you I knew all about you. too tragic You're taking course. up of a 'view of It all. It doesn't require actual money to get along. There's want. ways of getting everything you worth that's something You possess more than money, and I've a little of the same thing. It got over with yon and your people, which proves It. We A don't need money, you and L We can it." have everything without She was struggling with a sensation WNUServIc of utter collapse. Certain phrases he (Copyright by Evelyn Campbell.) used humiliated as facts appalled her. His "1 looked you up, of course," filled her with loathing for him apd for herself. He had looked her up. but THE STORY she had been a fool and taken him, ( on trust Worse than a rooi- -a failLinda Haverhill's father, sevenure. dies when she ts the "Why, you are Just an adventurer!" teen, leaving her to face cried scornfully. world with little money or prosshe are he shrugged, "but not pects. Her sole possessions "Perhaps," some worthless stock certificates I am afraid, my dear, yon Senbourgeois. friend. which her father's have more to learn than I thought. ator Converse, agrees to dispose of. She Instinctively dislikes the Yo.u haven't found out that it's not senator. Linda becomes engaged wliat you are but what people think to Courtney Roth. you are that counts. AH cfever perSir Walter ipeaW. WW sons know that, or they're not fit to fi, ITS world." meet the Raleigh? The same. Continued II CHAPTER This was all oddly familiar. Talk Some monthi ago lie offered pipe Wen I had heard before; talk In a dream, she a freejbooklet oa"How to take care of "Pearls like these ate a passport sat still, pressing her fingertips jW anywhere," Amy Ralston said. Then She pipe." And the poor chap't been lurid of her thinking lips pale against she made a curious remark, slightly under requesti ever since. what she should do. Of course, she humorous, slightly vulgar, and inHowever, we've succeeded in but she rejected this engapnj tensely prophetic If she had known. could leave Roth, was She her. It to of Queen Elizabeth 1 came two as "With your looks and those pearls no thought was. he and If to help the old boy out with hii mail n one would ever dare hand you a bill. not an adventuress Linda." don't hesitate to send for your copy. Itttlli Bills! They both smiled. It was you how to break in a new pipe low to so unlikely that Linda would ever it sweet and mellow low to mit keep again be troubled with bills I old pipe smoke smoother and better as The wedding was the smallest, the proper way to dean t pipe and t Linda's affair Imaginable. lot of worth-whi- le Lints on pipe hygiene. face looks made it unique. Her proud seen on the society page of the right If you're a pipe smoker, youU want to paper said that small sudden weddings read this booklet. It's free. Just write to were the only sort to have. tie Brown & Williamson Tobacco Cor The bridegroom was a proud and Louisville, Ky. poration, happy man. He was a true product of the fevered times, and there were TUNB IN on "The Eileigh B.CTue"nr features to this wedding which nobody Fridir, 10:00 to lt:00 p. m. ( New Yo Timet, knew about and which gave him new ever thtWEAFcoiM-tonetwork of N.&C thrills of irresponsibility. Twenty-fou- r hours have made changes In many a love affair. Linda was married on Tuesday, and by Wednesday night she was wondering why she had never noticed that Roth's manners were not all that they should be and that he was more than bad Smoking Tobacco Meals should have been tempered. served by a genie, and no service ever pleased. Really, if it was going to be like this Linda shrugged her beautiful it'smildif It's and white shoulders. They were in Boston and she was surprised to find herself at a hotel whose name meant nuthin to her, and she had been iu Boston Salesmen New electric chanae letter "No, Linda, I Know All About You. I many times. Fast Si llor. Get started now making money. Looked You of Course." Up, Investment 17.60. Cook SpwIa'tJ' Co.', VM "I thought anything would do (or E. Oranxe drove Ave.. Pasadena. Ctilf. the few hours we will be here," her aside from that It was Impossible to new husband said hurriedly. "The admit to her friends and Skeptical Publie to Cousin big places are always full at this sea Brian Jewett, grand exalted goof fool that In she had been a Amy spite son and we don't want a fus . do we?" n Goof club, couldnt of his of her attitude of cleverness. She "You could have telegraphed for sell $5 gold pieces In Congress street, thought of Senator Converse and the rooms," she protested, puzzled. Portland, Maine, for $4 each. About sureuess of what be would say, and Roth began to pace the floor nervfive o'clock he emerged from a bank this thought made her shudder. In ously. His color was high and the Im some indefinable way she seemed to with ten new gold pieces. He started In with a sales talk something like patience she was beginning to know be closer to him now than before her came Into his eyes. this: "I say, here Is a $3 gold piece was so close that she marriage, lie "Now look here, Linda. They've could touch his hand. I need some ready money. WW and Something withof In cotton wool too long. I in her warned that one mistake kept you you purchase It for $47" Most now, I na's! ha wanted you because you're different one were he the got replies morerror, and she would not esfrom other women. You've got an air One man, however, a foreigner, took cape from bin as she had In the pasL bit that makes everything you do seem Of course she had not been blinded to a look at one of the gold pieces, $4 over second-ratEven this hotel the fact that he admired right. on It sharply and passed her, that he would seem smart If you made a habit would one other And no with hesitation. have paid any price for her. of coming here." was In on the purchase; but Jewett Cousin Amy's world had not left her Linda was bewildered. She knew In Ignorance of not sell the other eight, though could that. he was trying to tell her something hundreds of passershy stopped to Roth felt sorry for her, though he without committing himself, hut she was far from listen. Indianapolis News. reading her thoughts. could not guess what It was. She felt She was so and childish lovely with annoyed and a little cheated. that to her lips. He took her "But when there Is no reason for In hisdroop arms and kissed her tenderly. second-rat- e hotels?" she murmured. "Don't fret, dear. When you worry lie flushed a deeper crimson and you let people behind the and screwed up his eyes In a way 'she par you've got to watch out forscenes, that It's disliked. tlcularly a wonderful game, once you learn how Here is a never-failin-g "Reason? There's Jolly well ren to play, and you'll find a lot of clever, form of relief from sons enough" He clapped his hands amusing people It with us.' playing sciatic pain: on his pockets with an odd boyish Let the duds with the hank accounts gesture that touched her through hei pay the bills while we amuse em, eh? bewilderment and dawning fear. It It's a profession In Itself, making the reminded her of Jim Haverhill. Then other fellow pny and teaching him he grinned at her sheepishly. to like It." "Fact Is, dearest. I'm stony, oh, I Her tears dropped upon the pearls know you're shocked, but you'll on her brenst. get Take Bayer Aspirin tablets ani wJ used to shocks. It's rather a lark. ' needless 0TO BE CONTINUED.) fullering from at,rt": If you look at It from the right angle! similar excruciating Pharm. bago-a- nd any do don't Married to a beautiful, luxurious creaSubjection of Wives They do relieve; they is ture and hardly a bean In your pinket. it make Just sure Soma genuine. rules for handling Gad, It makes a fellow sit up. Linda! wives have been published In London don't look like that !" In connection with the new book on Rabelais. "Why did yon marry me? Why didn't you tell me?" The rules were drawn up by "Why do ynu think I'm a cad? friend of Rabelais, who bad Leave you silting on the church toop? considerable experience with wives. I'd say not. Besides. I didn't plan It First of all, he sets funh the dicta Liquid Meaiur. constitn I cabled for-- money and are the Professor-W- hat expected that "woman ls man's Inferior." plenty, but the old wire came' back ents of Having established his quartz? like a knock behind your ear. tin Tirnnuenn goes on to say. "Shepremise, Bright Is not more money. I'd spent It ail." to be struck or mistreated In zette. any Linda s head whirled. "How could way. you have spent all your money with-ou- t "The wife Is to be educated The "world's oldest electric by about knowing It?" slib mnnaged to say and by caresses mingled with way," which was startedMburl She had never known until rhnt mobetween two Berlin severity. She may be threatened when ment how mucl. she had counted tin necessary," been replaced by a bus H"pRoth's fortune, lie had seemed secure s a stone wall. She felt him A Simpler Way stnrlng at her. and suddenly she saw behind lie rounded the the hlgl- - lights of his dominant gray forty. A sudden bend at close on skid, and the car eyes merely a boyish boastful some-thin- ? overturned. They found themselves that brought contempt stronger sitting mm m "VjoT W together unhurt, alongside the than fear Into her being. completely smashed car. He pul his TROUBLE All my money?" Roth hurst and LIVER out arm lovingly about her ntiD3ll1'b waist, but she . u -Coated. Innghlng. "So thnt'g It and she felt pulled It away, Dream, tongue, baa shamed. mtYf Indigestion. nausea. "It s nil Get "I never had very much." he went wonldri t very nice," she sighed, "hut nia result from acid omcn. It have been easier B1B,rt,-- at illness by taking Aufrust r!w lo run out on Indifferently. "Unl love you of petrol?"-Lon- don c"e anjr Rood druggut Answers id, dttestioo child, you cnn'l run about as I've done sweetens stomach, liven jnythlfl fine. wt feel You without spending a pile. .TharAfrl. cleara out poisons. Sahara's Oaiea ran expedition, wltn lie other fel-,- . Five of the great o.ses of the low dldnt pay op, pul !ie final crimp de.r, were k(tllwli nM Mr Id i.w." And then he added blithely by the Egyptians as early as 1000 O to 5 Evelyn Campbell thah rftA Till"1" ne'er-do-we- ' By ELMO SCOTT WATSON T HAS become almost HPf ' 55". "!.r axlomutlc that genius Q does not transmit Itself m . and that the sons of TO T??X " ' Pl H, great men rarely, If ever, 4 SI) turn out to be great. : Certainly that has been 7 8 true in Americans In it , other nations, although A'H 7 we have had a K famkT J L tiles which, over JWiocl I or years, liave contributed several in .diviiiuals of distinction. Two of these which come readiest to iulrfrl are the Lees, who during the Revolution produced a statesman and a soldier, both or more thnn ordinary ability, and during the Civil war a really treat mil AMBASSADOR &ARi? itary leader; and the Harrisons, who produced a Revolutionary war statesman and two Presidents. Hut If it is necessary to find an exception to prove the rule it may be ifound, perhaps, In the statement made by some one that "American history Is till cluttered up with Adamses." For "in America there Is one family, and only one, that generation after generation has consistently and without interruption, made contributions of the Adamses began when John Adams was highest order to our history and civisent to France as one of the American lization." Those are the words of commissioners! his son, John Qulncy James Truslow Adams (who, by the Adams, going with him to begin his Way, Is a Virginia Adams and not reeducation In European schools, and lated to the Massachusetts family of after a brief stay there and a brief whom he writes) In the prologue to return to this country he went back Ms book, "The Adams Family," pubto England as one of the commission lished recently by Little, Urown and ers to arrange the terms of the treaty tompany of Boston. of peace and later to become Ameri i The Adams family was established In can minister at the Court of St. Jnmes. Ills career as vice president and final America about IGoO when a certain Henry Adams, probably because of a ly as President completes the pattern combination of religious and economic of the life of this first great Adams. In John Qulncy Adams, the second reasons, decided to leave England and try his luck In the New world. By generation kept up the standard set chance he settled at a place called by the first and even advanced It Be fcralntree n Massachusetts. He mar-fle- d fore he was seventeen years of age he was private secretary to the minister and had children, who In turn harried and handed down the family to Russia and to his own father In nnme. This went on for four generParis and In London. On his twenty ations without producing any man of seventh birthday, after his graduation distinction until we come to John from Harvard, President Washington Adams, a farmer and shoemaker In sent him as minister to The Hague Xiralntree married Susanna Boylston, and later to Portugal, Prussia and daughter of a family prominent In the Russia. Then followed a term of teaching at Harvard but he was soon piedical history of the colony. "With the fifth generation. In the called back to public service on the peace commission of 1S15. Next he person of John Adams, historian, pubemulated his father by becoming min licist, diplomat, President of the Unit Ister to Englnnd and came home In ed States, the family not only sudden1817 to serve President Monroe as sec ly achieves national and International of state. retary in maintains it successive position, but John Quincy Adams was a master generations for two ceuturies. Was It due to some mysterious result from diplomat, having learned his lessons In the European school of Interna the combination of Adams and Boylstional relations. He brought Spain t ton blood far beyond the ken of sciterms In Florida and his conciliatory ence even today ; or to some unfathomactions offset the rash deeds of Jack able synchronism between the peculiar son without blunting the force of the Adamses of and the the qualities whole social atmosphere of the next American policy. To him, according few generations, a subtle Interplay of to Historian Adams, belongs most of unknown forces; or to mere chance In the credit for the Monroe doctrine. a universe In which atoms rush and though It has co:ne down In history collide chaotically? Fascinating as Is hearing the name of the Virginia Pres the problem, It Is Insoluble. All we dient. Like his father he failed of re shall see Is that without warning, like election to the Presidency, but his a 'fault' In the geologic record, there great years came during his service as congressman from the Plymouth disIs a sudden and Immense rise recorded when he stood almost alone In trict in the psychical energy of the family." defense of constitutional government The stage was set for the first great during the period of the slavery disAdams, John, to play Ids part In pute. Finally he died at his desk, American history when the dispute beworn out In the service of the republic tween England and her rebellious colThe third generation of Adamses did onies sent hlui to the Continental connot produce another President, but It gresses, where clear heads were headdid keep up the family tradition of ed to see that Independence was Indiplomatic service to the nation, and esevitable and union of the colonies If there were any way to evaluate sential. While most Americans think comparative worth of national and Inof the Revolution mainly In terms of ternational service It might show that George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, the contribution of Charles Francis i'.enjamln Franklin and a few others Adams was Just as great as were of speclaeulur deeds, the true history those of John and John Qulncy. Orig of those times could not be written inally a Democrat, he turned Whig In Without the name of John Adams. It defense of freedom and union. After fwas he who had much to do wi!h a career as editor and congressman, bringing congress to the point of de- his great opportunity came when Linclaring Independence; his was the coln and Seward sent him to the post master stroke which caused the adop- his father and Ms grandfather had tion of the Sew England troops around held minister to England. There he aiooton as a Continental army and successfully checkmated the Confedwhich checkmated Intercolonial Jealerate attempts to secure recognition, ousies by placing Ceorge Washington, and when his firmness forced Lord In Virginian, In command; he deserves Russell to forbid the English-buil- t who principal credit for establishing rams to leave the shipyards for Conthe American navy, and he furnished federate service, lie sealed the doom many of the political Ideas on which of the southern cause. And as a memthe new nation based Its government. ber of the Alabama claims commisI The International career of the sion bis conciliatory spirit tempered I j SlfsVfgjt v3 ' mil Kgea VfeJT W$T VG; V . WfM ' Y- tcQ'sTvV S I ag - C a?3 " Si5-.V- I ' 4" . t r , -- (til i," M f 3S4ft I rfWCl jFfV I ?1 $ fe o 4. SlRLTER Raleigh V vi if St t if Q the excessive demands of his colleagues, convinced Great Britain of the fairness of the American cause and won a Just settlement. The fourth geueratlon Is remarkable for the fact that the Adams genius was scattered among four sonsr which accounts perhaps for the fact that no one Is so outstanding as had been representatives In the previous genera-dons- . ' Only one, John Quincy, turned to politics and he, having chosen the unpopular Democratic party, had little chance to rise to prominence, Charles Francis was first a writer and then a business man. He became president of the Kansas City Stockyards association and later president of the L'nlon Pacific railroad. He led his ;tate In railway regulation, but he was never very well satisfied as a business man and later returned to writing. Perhaps the greatest of the four was Henry Adams who won his distinction In the field of literature. His book, "The Education of Henry Adams," has been called "the most autobiography, though It was not so Intended, that American has produced." Nearly as famous Is his 'Mont St. Michel and Chartres." Brooks Adams dabbled in law and In writing history without making any profound Impression upon either. In his "Epilogue," the Adams historian carries the recftd of this remarkable American family down to the present when he writes: "On September 20, 1S24, John Qulncy "Adams wandered among the tombstones of the family burial plot at . Qulncy musing on the past and future of his line. 'Four generations of whom very little Is known' he wrote In his diary, than Is recorded upon these stones. There are three succeeding generations of us now living. Pass another century and we shall all be mouldering In the same dust, or resolved Into the same elements. Who then of our posterity shall visit this yard? And what shall he read engraved upon the stones? This Is known only to the Creator of nil. The record may be longer. May it be of blameless livosl' "The century has passed. We have seen the generations, and today a third Charles Francis, a son of John Qulncy's grandson, John Qulncy, Is head of the family. A Harvard graduate, like all his family since John; for thirty years treasurer of the univerall his family; a sity; a lawyer, likewho defended the famous yachtman American cup against the British; a man true to the family tradition and honored In his community, he sits In the cabinet at Washington as secretary of the navy which was founded by well-know- e SCIATICA? thought-provokin- John. "John Qulncy's wistful hope has been fulfilled: 'The record may be longer. " S bj Wutaro AglPIRlS J'upl!-Pints!--Fih- 'nSCa r j , Sa-ba- I Nwpapr L'nlon.) jm-ouanes- a "UCUST f LOVtf i, |