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Show Y7 VROVO EVENING S AGE SIX JIERALD, TUESDAY, -- AUGyS-T 28,-1028- ..' May Seek Divorce I '""""11 1928. COPYRIGHT rp , CHAPTER I", " Vhen Sybil Thorne was younger, 1 her picture appeared every day two 4 the social columns, it s" usually caplioned". "Boston's irest Bud." Society editors heaped praise and r.pliments upon her. Oi.u of aium glared her to he "the most popxJ and'Jhe most beautiful" debut- . Another pro- to of and fball4Wnl--do-nM,Tingwe--TTlotrreheruTced h :r . tariBt'CUMlpllgiwl'j-M'-han,.lcitt- e '. Sybil-brave- -- TKirtP-th- - .,,,w e Jikgold..wQ--mmninithotw- : 11 f.k -- -- ' n.led-.it-'-'M- patl &Jix-j,he.JlQ- ":t dtf-san- e. m -- A f V" "t"'n"un'J"' . aiL - He left, a note for her with a : for- - John,, but the family had dls-boy at camp. 'A. little' suaded her.5 .oinrR'vol1r note, scribbled with a stubby "pen-- 1 , Y.-on a sheet of cil C, A. paperrtr, Goodby, little girl, goedby. I ny you so,-tprecious wife- - be rather t8J)te Nobody Mally to'be- you I loye knows, you see, that yotf were actu- I i ally planning to be married." She carried it for months ownl But I want them to! cried" Sybp. herr-drethe front of next her !'X'm-o iioud of of ' having been heart. Girls that summer were his sweetheart. I WANT everybody heart-broke- j. n j Ohrive . g.-e-.it ' Wales .visited. ...America, .....they changed their sartorial effects, and I embraced baggy, models. Girls became independent. Married women, who had found work" ---- -' tan Utfeialrw. covered that they like L!UL part-- j :lM$jc beca me s'.ic was so unusually jreity, Pe"pW ri" believe almost yiythjng of a girl with beautiful stu pj) asesseo, X3, i.u:uoura certain cyair.ictry or rnrm iid loveliiiosa- - of - fa4or. Sybil's. --ve re beautiful pools of velvety giftness, flecked with little darts of oniil itxs ail .IJJfJViy HIU11, i'orypanoTpand she makes up her like a bleeding gp so they look .asn in ner paie iace. . , t t ' hn k k .nd . tempers. ! ; - ehool7ecaTmVflmart-and..- temperament deal to robably has had a good nwith fashioning her life. But ,.ien of course, there was the war. h war bungled a ioi oi mini,"war Sybil Just missed being a ride. -- At Miss Mlddleton s seioci toarding school all through the 1 j i ' - fathering. -- I'm sick to death," she told her lead. I want to DO going across." ?' Her father choked on his rice ! fiudding "Nothing of the sort," he I 'khleeted. I when neJL caught his treath. "Are you crazy, Sybil?" uumuvcu. rier momer was d ' "Don't you think,quite dear, she mildly, ."that your poor father and I have enough to worry ..' ibout as jt. IsT"- Mrs. Thome's eyes were blue and aded. She knit from morning until light and denied herself all luxur-es- .! Tad, the child of her heart, as at Toul with Battery A of the and there were terrible 101st, Idings those day of slaughtering in Jeiehprey and the Somme. Mrs. Thorne had two records that she played over and over on the phonograph: "There's a JLong. Long Trail A'Wihding, Into the Land of My. Dreams,", and "Over There." She thought Tad probably sang them in France, and it made her him. V , feel nearer-tAs she wound the machine and adjusted the needle, the same thought was always In her min- df the life I ... l . t J When Craig looked at her, Sybil always thought of a bit of a jingle: "Blue was the slcy, blue a3 your eye, which is the terrible reason why It's easy to live and hard to die." i K...u . ' I wasatch Lay Mash fww.ios. 100 lbs.vWasatch Cairy Feed 100 lbs. r7a8tcb, Scratch, Peed 60 lbs.. Wheat, sack returned .l.I.... 100 lbs. Wheat, sack returned .:.. V...::..'.:.:-".-....""..$2.- -- 100 , cu 1 00 lbs. ..1.15 S1.90 :....'........, $1,85 Ij .. :.:.....::r. Ulfalfa Meal 15 $2.50 $2.10 ' SI 45 :...'L1ZZ $1.50 CASH ON DELIVERY s - hand-to-han- - "j I i ........ if i - ' thisr -- two-cou- SeSTti v,..hugh u, - ;,s ' TJ . ''"li" """J "f ! uw .rw ... " all-ju- . 1 J I to Capler-rs-comingT)ur- : hr - -.f 's- she-bega- iu 1 .... 1 it re - ... i.i .w i- -u '. V. MilC Bl, people draw r .. And for- - three '"'in com disdain.- ' ,,: I npn- thiifav Trnii "iu. inn norrtt Trixie BeUe. from the " a.- - Midnight Fol- alea statuary in the node. The newspaper ohtained the " lnos Present." and lo eu . inornes led all the rest, Ij andjasortof 1 . - y .;. ":- youth - l -- Loyally Tad defended her .1..,. h1 riirnr ...n aatrl Qha'.a ail ,mc ou ... only Mtinr crazy. Grief has turned lulle- 1 .... aerAu, ,i,a,.u thiak.' ..UM,U mane a woman finer." reminded hi. .i. ti. - ..- BREAD BUDGET REDUCfei) HALF fickie ginrwho8; sywi has , Bla" ta'king first I; "",,BU Mn Thorne. in her M neartSybil --waa . thorouehlv... .. uuaqraoie. 1 I. 1 ri think." she told nnA ...1,.. enLme-tobeJ. cujr irl, Lve We are,putling,ouiahe-rnof- it, de- licious break baked In Salt Like , City at half jprice, llere is - aien centexactly qualitynand sfze (16 oz.) bread that's equal to any lOc bread on the market. Cul side of. any -- and decide-- f Z or- yourself, then make yourself the gaiiicr by securing a full pound loaf of; White or Whole Wheat -i- Jread at tour stores at only 5 cents per loaf. Raisin Bread 7c. " . -a f good made such an awful bi.ni. . trying to be bad." . Clrls of her old crowd k. " h,f my mama ,1. "'e i ounger Married Set. A vt" -- r . Mier Set .yuiiKcr divorced ineywerethe TJ j Sybil were drifting apart ?. COUpl pf e68s-- ' she told him. affably one day. And stretching himself laiiiy? he retorted good naturediy: ; You are making a hit t Ofi yourself, old girl.. Wh yon iarry Craig Newhall?" . itang - rf, " tnat hd o..u.. Partjcurar. property. Most girls have been dellht- - .. 111 T comrto 8un"neyoung Newhall - . assumption, for Craig was probably the most, eligible bachelor Jos- .vtvTu.-.u- iTT19 graduation hl r Decause of his . -s- ection from Harvard? to isaom People shop more wisely when they pay cash, and are doubly wise when they shop in an O. P. $kaggs System Store. The superiority of the brands of merchandise found on our shelves is nationally recognized,"; and yet, we are able to sell these brands to you at only a shade above our cost because of Jhe combined big volume of our dozens of stores. What's more there is no salesman to overstock you. You buy; just exactly what you want and in the quantity desired, when food shopping here. jy-ni- DUV" as Ponrila ...111 aX FOURTH WEST "'high-pressure- !' i '40. SOtTH Ti . . I E 1 ... . .. INOUSTRIAL y ques-jione- ; ' Of mi DlflASCH rUOWhll . T"""."' ,u : like gold from the sun that shone blouses cut so low Ineffectually her father patted wearing on Devens, and blue eyes with black her shoulder. ' . that she could look down and see lashes. -- Thny. had takea. hU books i "Thute, there. SybiL Do you love the folded edee neekinir ud from the ironrnim ana grvsn jiim argunrwunj ninTriittle-gii'- i? ribbons of her little satin camisole. wiuctuio kill other boys lull or short while. Mother doesn't realize,: Whenever she was alone she read pronu.te, and a trench knife, in case I know. Naturally, she's frantic It again and again. " By Christmas, en- - about Tad. d he met. a youth in Your mother is not as i with kisses and with tears, It was counter and could not use his gun. young as she used to be, and she's worn so thin it was falling apart At the moment Sybil experienced apt : to be- - high strung these days. Then Sybil put it in the box where to blond one reaction the only Take things, easy. Sib. God knows she kept hei trinkets, under the it's hardrenough to have Tad over puffy blue satin pad that lined the beauty of him. He thrilled her. was his name John Lawrence there."" cover. And when she slipped it Ana it was plain tnat he was a . there, a crushing sense of finality private through accident only Ob The roads about Devens and into came over her. As if that waa the And - it'a pretty ...tough - on viously he had antecedents. Family, Ayer were dusty and not. conducive end. As if John. Lawrence had Mother. . You're too arn smart to that sort to romance, but beyond the traditions, treeding-al- l camp poriahed with his last, crumbling go dragging 'round like an old wo-of thing. He talked easily. . Pres n orchard stretched where leafy' Protestations, and she would never man. It's a good world, after all. ently it developed that ha had been apple trees made welcome shadows. ova mm again. . And we're only young once." second-yea- r at Yale man. He AiitUe He brought men to the house, and And that night a cable came: rest way fromthe stood a belonged to Tad's fraternity. Tdrs. old tree with twisted limbs "Missing in action." urged her to make up parties. Thorne became interested. Perhaps gnarled "We're a girl short. Svbll." he and a crotch where ld sit They tried to buoy, her up. To her husbandhe knew Mr. Law and love.-- . Beneath iU shade the sustain their own faltering hopes. usel to say. "Dick's glrl went back rence's colonel- .- perhaps he could lovers clung. That doesn't tniun hp'i rlunl on him. Won't 'you fill in like help him. Officers' JTraining School, Kood sPrt I'ck' Wright you r" When he Svbll. Probablv he'. In hnr,ii! know. DuWtJJjvdarlingr or something. He's a prince of a felow John Lawrence protested. Oh, no kissed h , he felt her tears in his ' mustn't take on like this! Don't . f cour"' "he through Tad. really. He would make the grade lips saltY HniTT bittersweet please him, she went some "Darling! DARLING!" He said It givP up hope.Everythng may be all right. Expected, to tell the . . an right. , " to be chosen for the. next over and over, t The .Eighteenth Amendment had Perhaps this very minute Tad is truth, t.. J'How. old verv "uulwa8 Sybil?" areyouBiatelistening to these same words." TheV"""8 rvershrced" deaoT "Eighteen." she told him. ,'J" , migmn t ne snow thmiehU addiinlftndi.eomf0rtt " r -daring "So .young;"- - he whispered, . "So tears. "Dead, I tel. i "l-- a maae a "'uu"u her immeasurably, after the strange to ivf He h to me In cam. tour - iitue, ana. so young." Inspeetion-witof a all offidream, young fashion of women in anguish. e iv.., ,,p8 She regarded Sybil mournfully. sluicing enviously irom every his"Old ear were DarracKs. Uie and Sybil "Come to Mrs. Ward's with me Urget of w ne Lit Iso, no,, I, can't." He held her er a fflrl wnulrl Ia IniultsH if un,. tonighL.4learJL she. invited. "Tliei e'M jn, a In JUm. irom come "i, mlRht bacSaOr Aftet the warilfe had been vei y 0f feredJler, aigarer-oToTfefige- ff a new. way ot making, bandages aside idoorway Lawrence, statidine shot for the women to procede up. I mightn't come back at, gay for Sybil's rowd. John Law-- ! if you didn't not cutting atv pulling him .n .t .. nil" . . ... I rum R whu i through, put'lils hand on Svb-t miHinv Tnsn I c-uji, mnninR threads, A woman from the Met ' I aoiuiers , everywnere naa oeen ,,t1 iLnensiie-tUirnJjraveIy- Jli me recora a in oeaa, emvraBolnelnin8 of mustered'out ropolltan service, and women the way he did it. A possessive sort never show US. ' Ir. . i let you, were still" feline tfiemrX)ouehbov forgive myself if Id . of ' I pressure, gentle and compelling. go like thia" ,. 'Tad: came home.- romantically I walked -- where aneels feared tn .,. , Sybil declined wim svant grace. was-en- ly 18, and it electrified "I'm Sick of Red Cross soirees. She Angel: rie was kissing her hair. 'bronzed, andvs "different" looking, ! tread, and . gobs were, household he."--'- , IV. Then she tok the. pins out of i. sha said....: Something about his "eyes, and the pets. It "was eminently respectable -""': ' i Tears to gray streak thaa-ra- n psyche, and shooticltdown,eye&r through his for ."nice" glrla, to. scrape iaoqualftt- X tremu. Before they left she had promised please him. So that he took It In nair. Me was very sweet to Sybil, ance wttn . men In - uniform. The really think," lously "I really think, Sybil, you to write. It was a girl's patriotic his hands, and le$. slip through his and" talked to her . of ''deathless marines had become social Hons, ought to have a little m . s duty in those days.- She promised fingerft'caressingll And the next glory" and "heritages." . He nave Everywhere the ws with Tad-cv- e. there also to send some fudge and a cake, year, when Sybil liad' it bobbed. her a bit of verse of Alfred Noyes' hitting pretty. Unless, of course, he e . I , , . and everything."-Shstumbled from or socks. . That was patriotic, (too. she saved all that was cut away, In' that he had clipped from an English uuppeneu 10 o- or t On Sunday the Thornes motored memory of John's kisses on the room and the J paper . in Parlfl. and Sybil carried looking for. a Job. incapacitated, they heard her at the phonograph ito' Devens, accompanied by it in her purse until it crumbled "Sybil SYBiL: Club women were beginning to again "Over There Over There " Mr. Thorne, who handed "around 'Oh, John, I love you so." to pieces. get excited, and talk reforms. For Before she went they had clanned He Jook a liking . Sybil put her fingers in herjears. But all the time she knew it wis a prima wave hit the -- country., cigarets grandly. to Lawrence and invited him Mown to be married that week. "Oh, Lorj " she. muttered. .la Grand Pretense. Th world was And even, the girls--wegoing "Ybu must remember," her father for dinner. rThe. following week Sybil drove home with her head full of noble words and fine phras-- . craxy, ,Thy rolled their stocking. In awhirland ber heart full of es. People told her sternly, "that your mother's the young man obtained a 3' and checked their fiorsets when they meant them thought they most of " it- At warm "gladness. Johnjwould get a out tney didnTTeany."" - h - . f i went ;to dances. Eventually Tiervesare all-o- n "ofedge, Don't-l- et leave, and. spent they , me tiear any more thls"taik about Thorne'yplace-a- t- Wlannorr 2 furlough. "Perhaps the family "TThfjczcould teirrher johnrlted ! discarded thenr aKjogetherr but that f In the evening Sybil showed him would let them have the nlaee t for humanity till they were goiftg across. It's nonsense utter black waa not until later. , ' nonsense the moon over the water and walk- - Wianno for a few days.. That would in their faces. She , know he' didn't I . Cosmetic into sprang and favor, fc I 4s ' ed with him along the beach.'. Little," be lots more fun than: a hotel, or want to ie for humanity, or t glory, women began to make up like Jeze- lie never knew that the tjext day waves splashed mournfully on the ."traveling. And she would get break- - or anything else. He wanted to bels.. v Sybil went to Y. M, C. A. head-- I sandiondJhe 'moon, scuttled be fast mornings "The evils of the war" became pobovers and muf- live for her. It wasn't fair. All about-"sadr- ed quarters and volunteered for over- - hind a cloud. The night was fear- - nns, and puffy omelets, ", golden the-iattrusts" People "talked seas service, for presently there was omely beautiful. brown. There would be, wonderful "making the world safe for democ-- 1 despairingly lpgan. of "the of the i "i j- BY and wife. The wionci 101a it himself, in his cud .T0.be sure. Sybil was doing any manna nV 9 l luoiwn inmgs. One daj oui a marriage license vitleu-uiThe intentions wer mac evening m the papei-n and, when. . renorter Thorne's place on Beacon hilf, foi F.i-mjmiu a story, Sybil met .." them; calmly . ... to, r.k. to know. And 'taste'! What do neres notning it." she an , care about.'taste'l" nounced. , "The . crowd was drink She took John's picture and ..u "n, my aarea me. I'm awfully two little t flags above It, and " aanamea. iiut truly, it It on her dressing table with kept a oet : flowers .in . front of It .She read Of course, the Daner nl,' his letters .constantly-an.abandup.i There were front ra oned herself to a frenzy of extrav kT """"i'8- - witn sybil's remark -. -agant grief. u'rinienieni in red Inl, t "Can't you try to snap but of it Thorne wept, and Mr. Thorne raved. Sis T" begged, Tad. "It isn't doing 7 u wunaiaeraDle con- John any good, you know, He tcI". v .... ... .. :i ",. -. . wouldn't want you to take on like i. r"Tk tt itre some ni-- I'm flooQed-her-tnotht- - ' nis race, "''" 10 'ppea go nome to his ; V- fut they know, toe """""i oyoii. when he kissed her on mm ' - MCLtON INSTITUTI RKtSAffCH - . Mint.. objector," DIVdOKOAT : i a rconscientious FlY-TO- X - 'hat.Mrs. Van Dusen had threaten d to sue her for alienation of phii . . . .. .i uciiii8 vans arrections. Sybil had laughed when she hear aoout it "Tiey have to prove very specifit uuiikb in a suit like that." she said may be an bat no oT,; THAT kind of an rsrv " People knew 'of Colonel Bixby'i She threw iner icniuinis nw.-"way, and Miss Middleton put her as a Bolshevist, !ybll used to say; and that, in those ay, was regarded as a great heresya" n i night at-- dinner, she threw . j. t'erbal. bombshell " Intq the family upward in irorosi No fly of Is fragrant and xaoaquito can escape. ' harmless to people. JEvery bottle guaranteed. f FLY-TO- X Tad became Involvodin an H'fnlt The girl threatened suit,-n- d Mrs Thorne .had a nervous breakdown The "Young Thornes'1 became th talk of thtLtow- n- Everyon kiw about Sybil's indiscretions but he parents.-rTh- ey knew, for lnfnne. 1917 she lomoa nea bandages .and made - Innumerable jags of cretonne with draw strings, knit face t n each bag she. put a J loth of uncertain dimensions, package of cigarets, a, bar of sweetm hocolato, a pair of socks ana '.leeveless sweater. she rebelled. i' Duringso vacation SIMPLE!" she fumed. "It's that tCrazy old sweaters and socks wasn ioft't match! Afghans and tinn "I'm r method.-lSpra- I 'dnterof " .. work- Miss Brown when she became legally speaking, Mrs. Smith, re mained Miss Brown. Plain gold bands grew slimmer, and about thf time had. succeeded li; popularizing platinum, wedding rings were terhporarilvpnsse was much discussion abou? f Freegre,Love. - i i. Fly swatting la old fashioned messy, unsanitary. Use the' easy and pleasant .the-pfaf- Sybil could talk a creature of moods Her . wai:.'."dl- ing knowledge of shorthand ranked conversational Frencn. Marriet" women, in. business and es sions, retained their maiden names r r t cvnm the time - it." Their incomes pften doubled, and some times tripled the famijy budgets. lounger girls, went. .to work. Daugh- ra ui me very Deoi ian)iiies" entered .business colleges.. Commercial w.-i- It was jo IUll. FL8 ES Of th fi ffi ft avt? snnporttn g them-4; ilvea that way ever since. IC. w'.ien i;ho first got' t Sybil jrself talkfnl.abo'it. ier-d- b! PLEAS w'r'.i iUo tiiO lu'.ui" vas .:"you.h rubj 'et for tirad" and tears. orthy""cit!scnff formal vigilance ". j pinch-backe- ss pur-whl- .3 jf st and profess- feeling. .it' V " nA m. "no-body- 'd a-t- his gorgeous blouse. land i gy,n wanted to wear maucning . 9 ..illilii h - That night John Iwrenee'rT'cgPSiffhV "nf fhe"dmn:ihintfa't-Tiit-- rd ment entained for JIoboken, and jof hi beautiful whipcord breeches .. -. -- d e ""T AW I Y I" lad,"i, and wondered what they membership fh the finest Jegal ' were going to do. about it Import)-an- t firm in the city. .l ( "perrons were interviewed i on He was long and thin, and brpwn what they, thought of the Modern life coffee with cream In" it And Girl. (Desiring to, be broadminded, his eyes were blue, When they eulogized 'her, notf knowipg he looked at amazingly her contemplatively, what it was all about. .And tneaa- bit of a time, she went, from bad to worse. Sybil always .thought of a Someone had coiped the word jingle: the aky, blue as your, eye Flapper. And the Flappers, little "Blue was 4o Which Is the terrible reason why. sisters to the War" prtdes,-"toodressing exactly alike. ,'They wore It's easy to live, and hard to 'die." colored skirts of homespun,- frayed , Now she glanced curiously at Tad. of hem- ! Why, Taddy," she parried, about the bottom,-Insteawant to marry me, ; I'm med. Brilliant little sweaters that -iV-- r " " . Flat. soled just -a they called ..slip-on- s. " -tshoes everyone, until hen,- had Irresolutely she paused. How worn "high heels. Andj'large 'hats fnnMch. for-- a to tell her brother? - : girl Ma.lalrQ.wjslappe.dotM .aides of heir heads.' They cut their (To Be Continued) The London stage again may see hair, and called it "Castle Clips," for , ; Irene Castle,, who had lost. her own the pretty star that it knew aa SyU . 4 via Hawkes,-bu- t who for more than after a fever, and wore what she had left short 'of necessity. u. Sybil had come to accept Craig a year hasjieen Lady Ashley, wife- - Brothers of the men be as aert--ef lover, and Tad hears an jf the heir to tho Earl of Shafts-bur- y, Lord Ashley has advertised gan to grow 'up. They werefor the most part, 'ar decadent lot, their de- amazing recitalHn the next chap- - in English papers that he no lopger eb ficiencies emphamzed Theyz were called Parlor Snakes, Cake Eaters and Lounge Lizards. AWjrst they went Jnfor skimpy, d suits with higV waiat lines. ..They cultivated a carriage that rivaled the popular Debutante Slouch, and became Danoing Fools ii AWT.-- With long hair. When the Prince t - Ik? -- ,, a gin ana ner daughters those days. 3:'trv?0ir!r;rrw"ferwimiviy ' brother al me. Jront meant 'aa much! whit--- . aco or.e. of the . , She s just furlousv" Sybil told her A 'tihW-'totheras-Ta- d and to .contest a "befause I .dare to think ? father, japrs, kuujliiiig Thome ' - (about John Instead of thinking of c' 'Miss Bos' fin, rescued an jutt that, Tad . r6m. and blessed minute. Her t fh. r ieri'.ncc " ;4boy'a every in danger-nd.B- he doesn )caj BrV.e - la She made it even harderv ' '.sIonTPtettH i Gill?" Suddenly, Inexplicably. Sybil fell care. .anything about MINE. : I'm ii'i love." She went one all ;B4 Sybil "Isn't exae tiy aglFl any ens wanner mother to day to Dev- expecled to'. Worryabout-Ta- d even mustn t take ieJ ivThmne's employ. ;TrH?fK about John." oacn to H first Ti luTnThg-Ci-rte The boy was a buck private In' Sybil, strangleda sob "It John iv:arJtjftijU.aen she grew up; i juuwiucra mem nas w gor i u sne saio. "Ana m Ii.va ar.er this fashion 0f JH 4jjj, . ' e mother wouldn't-tara bit I know golrtrh.brtlvft0..hl-:buldic.1"o'l''cenia wiifc-ne or tnem was a tall, slim .she wouldn't, , Oh, daddy, I'm so rd ' at. iked her corsets "a t a damre and proe.ftcled to the youth, with chestnut hair,' bleached 'wretched!" Tiint .f thO'ic- reckless -. hi t AINU iV IMC And nights, racy'"', People couldn't really mean days on the beach, soon. gloriously long. They would-swim- , it, or they woulda't forget-sin the moonlight, and lie on thebtbing seemed.to make much afterward. - '. Iference, except having a good time. Sybil had ,a private convictlpn Everybody wanted a good time.-- , that a week of love in June was Even Tad He loolt(.A so hand-wort- h a whole month of it In the Qme , unform, with his swaager winter-timShe hugged herself in- English cap and.hia ailver shoulder wardly wtttf little Bntici4ato.ry shiv-:h.,- .. Tftd had come home a ca- era. ..But presently ecstacywas, tainwith. a .Croix de .Guerre, and shadowed by grim forebodings, aiyi two wound stripes'. His mother was the fears of a woman for her be- - tremendously proud of him, and . i !wanted loved who is In danger. . him to go. everywhere with "But I will be brave' she vowed. her She hated to have him get "And I will make him very happy, baqk to eivles, but the second day to go, I home he went to his tailor for some Then, if he should-hav- tint 1nthe. , . a rif thatrraa will mmLiiim with a mile " , ., . .mothera and , roor yoii piaying witn areams. . , If yoll, hnew how I hate the a ruling that ho reiative of soldier's. , And Sybil was fearfully lovely, lwouldbe acceptedL and Sybil re-- , She stood with her face to the sea, while the wind whipped her dress signed hcrselg to the inevitable I tried,'' she told herself savage-- 1 of misty stirft about her and blew ly..'"God knows I don't want to her hair to "Xhn's cheek. Then he play with gauze while .Tad and the took her in his' arms, and kissed I ' rest of them " her, , .. 4 She choked on the very thought. After that parental Often at night she saw Tad lying displeasure and motored to Devens ttTa"pool of blood." Jtis. ve the away sometimes. Or there , tinir her to take the was a great hole in his chest. And, ' affair d acquiescence. If newannt quite ueau, ne was' Her mother thonuh sh admitted j gasping trying to say something, john "seemed like a nice young ? She und Tad were, such pals, IUmai,'Vf re wived 6iv the romance washardonagirltocutbandag.es! Then between Svbll and .her They have sown the wind, and the whirlwind." Hosea VIII, 7. ley shnll 91 NEA SERVICE . 71 East Center N |