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Show . j t THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUND AY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1920. T HE Continued freen preceding Ttt-IE- pat. fore long, jrtiat more twribte likely than that she wanted a little bit ot money against her young mans return and' had took this wicked way to oome by ttT But then wonders were done to the land and the widow of old huntsman Jack Toms waa proved to be in the right; for shed treated to Providence through thick and thin and believed that hi the long run Providence never let down nobody that really grunted. It came about, of all places, at the little tabernacle of the Primitive Baptists at Ash; burton, and them most concerned to the business heard with their own ooxp and saw with ' their own eyes. And a vary great leeeon Im sura, to an unbelieving people and ooch aa say the Lord ot Hosts be tired of mankind hi general atfd weary of their goings on. There waa a revival meeting, and Mr. Btadea had got,, down a very line gospeller with a wohderful flow of speech and a way of searching to the heawt. He waa a big success from the first evening, for ho had the bleeaed gift of throwing light into the dark places and waking the sleeping soul with the trumpet of righteousness. A big hearted, hard bitten man, hot genial aad not pulled up; becauee hed been a bad un himself in his time, and only saved from the burning by the voice ot God In the month of his fellow man. And now it was his pride aad privilege to do to others aa hed been done by end bring old aad young to the penitent bench and help the good work of gathering souls tooths harvest. Twee his third evenlng-and- , of course, Parmer Turtle and his wife supported the Chapel, because their dmighter was married to the minister. Their son went also, and being turned a good bit mors serious of late, had took to Showing an interest in the business of the eon I, which aint common among young men with their way to make to the world. Anyway he attended the revival meetings with his parents, and Susan alway sat beside em when they came. But much to the amusement of his family after the discourse on the third evening, when the people who hzub caught the holy fire rose to go to the bench, or testify, if young Tom didnt rise up also! As hed had the light for years, there didnt seem no reason why he should do any such thing, and l believe his father was a Mt annoyed with him for the moment; but young Tom didnt go up; he went out, and so Parmer mind was set at rest, for be, doubted not the youth had business elsewhere that railed him. If hed known, however, what that business was, Mr. Turtle might have been a good bit surprised; end indeed he was so before the night had ended. , In a word, the heart of the amazing young man was smote at Jest. Hed gene to the place tor him in police station, age-31tthts opinion than the penitents bench; ao'd there hed told his story so far as the details was concerned, though all the fire and agony and horror behind it he never toML It was left for understanding men and women, who know where love may land a mao, to see his sufferings and his madness through the veil darkly. Toung Tom had failed into a frantic pa , the poor chap whan ho Kstenod to the gtrr downfall and hoard aha way put awayt tor thraa mortal year. Ha was a pood aort of man aad wouldn't bailor a word. In troth, ha property raved about it aad didn't rest, band till he'd pot peradaaloa to tea Joanna. Aad ha did aaa her, with two polio wucoon in tha room, and found bar calm aad oteadfaat, but thin and lonpwaya 1ms beautiful than when last hed said pood-hy- . She told him she waa Innocent, and ho doubt twas a great llpht In her darkness that ha believed tt, and more hed wait for her and leave no stone unturned mean time to right her against the world. Bo' ha left bar aad took work on tha land not far from Ashburton; but as for righting s her, or doing anything to clear up the at Pour Ways, of course he soon found that no power of man could work that. " TVs a case for God Almighty, said Mrs. Toms, "and you know shes innocent. Bob, and so do I, and so do Mrs. Blade her that waa Susan Turtle. She was a very faithful friend to Joanna and never believed a word against her to the last. And, trusting in Providence, same aa I do and same aa my husband alefkys did, I believe a time must come when Joanna will be cleared." Mrs. Toms, you see, had great faith, and . she was so well thought upon that, despite Joannas disgrace, none turned away from her mother, though none but felt only too sure that things were as they seemed to be. Per if Joanna had looked to be married be or-foo-t, buat-nes- , or ston for Joanna from the moment she set foot to Poor Ways. He'd made loVe to her .fierce and terrible from the first, end shed .told him from the beginning that it couldnt be and she didnt love him. Shed made It clear also that her heart waa not her own; bat sine her engagement to the sailor was a secret and shed promised Bob Truaeo.t never to speak of dt, she didnt; and ypung Tom didnt believe it. or wouldnt believe, when she spoke of an understanding with another man. In secret he fought for her with all the firs and fury of first lovs and made her Ilfs a very difficult business no doubt; hut he Md hts heart from his parents eyes, aod her- sense of right was such that she felt she oooktot do anything about it, or tell her trouble, but only appeal do him to spare bar. He was deaf and blind, however, stole the things one end then planted em upon her. He knowed,. when dallying . with her to the past, that'ahe kept the key' of her box to her little handbag, and when the was ip the dairy and the houge empty hed gone to her room and got aa Impression of the Je-j- in a hit of dough and had on made far ways off, whore he wasn't known. Then, th'day she was out, be put all the things in her box, end having already planned the firs, took a handkercher and a letter. The devil never put an easier job into the mind of a mad man. Aad when she'd gone everything waa rip for the wheat stacks. He set a light to them hlmselfand went to bed; and when all had gbne to reel after the fire, he crept down again and put handthe letter hed half burned and kercher where they must be found after. And everything fell out exactly as he had or- s dirt scratcher and I wasnt. Too dod blasted lonesome for me, that minin game. Big BUI Blagdens gotta be where there's folks or he aint no good. So I pulls Into Dawson, whipsaws me a few thousand feet of green plank and erects the Blagden house, which was the first hotel above Chilcoot to draw trade with Cohan stuff. But somehow things was a bathtub Instead of a bar. Yes, sir! calmer than usual; me tilted back grace A reg lar bathtub, which was some enterprisln In them ful in the desk chair readln some days ' and in that latitude, Im tollin' buek-and-w- bonest-to-goodne- ss post-seas- baseball drool. Swifty Joe you. "bounds reasonable, says I, "although easy In the gym and tryln I never that far. titill in Dawson, to hum The Lots Nest through his are you got up n front teeth, tho first steam of the Me? 6ays he. Why. Lord love you, hissin gentle in the radiators, and man, Ive been out of there moren fifteen years. Aint you ever heard of the sunshine filterin into the front winBiagdens, Wyoming? d dows from street cheerful. "Sorry, aays I, but TU have to pass. Thats the .picture. Named after you, eh? And then comes these heavy footsteps By me. says he. "First year I was on the stairs, the front office door is mayor. When the boys came to me and me to head the ticket 1 told em swung open vigorous, there's a thud like asked No, Sir! says I, You don't get someone droppln" a wardrope trunk on flat, Big Bill mayorln over any place with an the floor, and the next I know Im being such onery, flea bitten, triflin' name hailed enthusiastic by this big stranger as Siwash City. Alius did hate a Then you naane it,' anywav. with the generous cut mouth, tbs How about puttin It on the .they says. tan Stetson and the nimbly "map aa Biagdens? says I. Done, savs e they. And Biagdens tt Is. Why nolj voice. I own clean third of the town Well, well, well! he lets off, like he Don't and the Opera House block, and I expect this site, was startin an auction. half Interests In more'n a dozen ranches must be Shorty McCabe himself. Eh?" out Yellow Root way? Net to mention At that I twists my neck so 1 can give New Blagden House. Here! Lemme the to and free htm the up and down, Im admit its a long ways up and quits a give you one of my cards. w ays down. savs I, Inspectin' the young "Thanks, Also, between the dusty No. 11s planted solid on the floor and the placard he hands me. about the size of Course, Mr. Blaghigh crown of the alfalfa lid theres a the jack of spades. den any friend of Hank Allisons Is good deal of width. Now Mr. am. that a than better I Youre rope B.agflen stuff. guesser Or else my memorys Shorty', he breaks in, "for any friend of Mister, says I. Is a friend of mine and nty gone back on me. I don't place you at Hanks friends call me Bill." all." How'd you All right. Bill," says X. "You wouldnt," says he, "for this Is my first trip east of Denver since I was leave old Hank? no hlghern a jackrbbit can jump. "Oh, sluin' pretty ss a elnnamon bear Bill. says Either that must have been a long on a cottonwood Mump, rollin spell back, says I, or else you got your "Found him and the Missus limouIn blue a Boise around big bright growth quick. Haw. haw!" says he, as Impetuous as sine as regal as the biggest pair in the a freight engine snortin up a grade. deck. Goin on to New York, eh? says Jest like Hank Allison said Id find you, he. TVell, If you need somebody to point and the bright lights ready to set upYea-u-and take notice any out Main Street Hank a alius lust you call on my old friend Shorty Mctime of day. and thats right, my boy." And he gives me a Cabe. I sure will, say Lsee. shoulder pat that almost drives me the first thing I done, you Til do "and L sayfc bottom. right. "Perfectly through the chair I whui I can to FVlend of Hank AllOhl" aays I one holdin big No, up says Bill, isons, are you? that vou Am I? sayv he. Say, didn't we lo- paw. Dont vou get the Idea Bill hands. cate the Bluebird together, and work got a tenderfoot on yourwhen he's this double shifts alnkln' tha shaft, and live Blagden may be green on fried pork and chewin tobacco and far from the ranges but he don t need I alius was leadin around any. Not me. hope until we made our strike? We sure an easy mixer. Drop me anywhere that did. Course. Hank stuck to It longern 1 did. and cleaned up his pile in lesa'n they talk United States and I'll get two years after I'd aold out and gone along. Every time. was born "Its because I like people. 1 reckon. driftin north. But then. Hank Any kind, all kinds. Thats what got me Into tho hotel business and kept me there. Why, even now. Ill bet there sin t on In fiftv that checks out of the New Blngden but what Ive swapped grips with em, at least. I take em as they corns, from shoe drummers to sporty English lords strsved down from Banff or Victoria with their guns and flehln rods, snd mostly theyre as willin to chat with me as I am with them.. Makes em feel at home, you know. T Learn That Pyramid Pile Come sgajn. Brother,' I tell em, and Brio galrk Retie! remember stay as long as you can. Andhere ia Itching, Blevdlag ar to give voure aline welcome. Were Pro (ragtag Pile. as you as we much got and you the beet oflit the have want I of my boye 't. Pyramid Pile Suppositories bring fice and my dinin' room girls trained to biassed relief In tbs prlveoy of your a with Greet same. the gueet every do smile.' Is my motto, and anybody who can't do that soon gets eased off the pay roll. It's simple enough, and It works. You get back what you give out. whether Its grins or grouches. snd its me for the grins, every time. Eh. 8horty?"I. Its worth tryln, any way," says Only you may find some of us here kind of weak on returning a grin. "Ill chance that, aays Bill. "My notion Is that folk are pretty much alike, from sheepherders to Wall street brokers. ou. And I If you like m, thev'll Ilk must s:vy, Short v. I'm partial to the human race. Yeauh! Cant atlr the mixture too thick for me. Im right to home in a crowd, for I can feel that every man In tight la one I could make s friend of If I had half a chance. Thats why Its such ad rest to me to get a big place like thli. Im roln' to have a whale of a time. too. Shorty, lust knockin' around among all you good people for a couplen Yea Cna Cheerfully Rscoauaead Pyramid of werke. Might ecem like a big nrooo-zltloto some, getttn folksy with five earn home from itching, bleeding or and 1 may miss and millions all at a whack, But protruding plies, hemorrhoids I'll make a some of em, at that. such rectal troubles. Get a 10a box have a aayln' It. at box They A good stagger single druggist. today of any has often been sufficient. You can out my way, A heart aa big a Bill have a free trial paokag by send-ln- g Riodgen's.' and while some of that may ba due to my alse, maybe the rest la tbs coupon below. baaed on something else. Lets hope so. .to Now I'U juat moeey along and get setPRKH SlUPt court)!! list'd cttMraNY. tled at my headquarters. rnuaiD US rmaue SMf , Manhe. Mirk. ' "Where you stopping, BUI? I sake. Kindly mt bm t Pne aeapta et fweald "Aint picked out a place yet." sayt PUe SaMUlWHw, Is ytals araietw Bill. "Want to look em over first, and then when I find S likely lookin Joint I'll sss es sseessessse lust camp down, stow mr bag, swap a few ye me with the boys behind the desk, tssssieessssssses and proceed to circulate around town. rity Ill he In off and on, most likely." Thats right." save L "Let me know When you get loeeted. And with a friendly wav he swings up that hundred-poun- d grip in hie right hand and goes braisin' out te hobnob with New York. Who was your husky friend?" sska Jo. Ts husrrers ot hpiiriwr. bpeeois and Nruu Swifty 1 tell But hes aa much your him. Diavdera, Dr. Mart Treatment tivra quick rebel friend ea ha la mine. I add tend tor genreen FRF.K Ira bottle. How Sake Swifty. that? PR. W. H. MAY, 54 Pearl S- t- New Yorl Why," says I. ha's come on special sea-so- Forty-secon- wide-brimm- ed double-bariton- Thank Yoijil, Good Fortuno '.r Ur? ' ' to be chummy with all of us everybody In town. Says so. Ahr-r-- r chee! grunts Swifty. How do they get that way? About then, though, our first reg'lsr showed up; and insetad of explainin about Bill Bladgen ablg heart and how much he liked peop'e, I had to show the manager of an advertisin' agency how to cover up Jus ribs with hla left elbow and steam In s half-arpunch with his right. After him came the vice president of an Insurance company who was takin apparatus work to reduce hisBUIbelt meaaure. and so on, until I forgot complete. It was gettin on towards closin' time and I was out at the deck again, checkin' up our dates for the next dav. when I hears draggv lootsteps crossln the front office floor. G ancin around I discovers Big Bill, still totin that heavy grip. Eh Couldnt you find a says T. place to euit you? He drops the bag and slumps weary Into a chair. Shorty, says he, whats the matter with this dad burned town? Why?" says I, what's wrong? Seems to be full up. says he, bustin fu'l. Whyv here I been huntin around all day, from one hotel to another, and let me shoot me for a Siwash if they In anywhere. Are you havin' an annual or what? roundup, Oh. nothing special, 1 guess. says I Our hotels are like that most of the time. Then what are all them room clerks so mad about?" he demands, Strike you hat wav flo they? says 1. If it had been only bno or two of em," he goes on, 1 might have thought they'd been on a party the night before and Id happened along when the,- was feelin s bit snappish. But it's a common Yaps and snarls was all 1 complaint. could get cut of any ef em." Huh! says I. Spring your grin on em. did you?" He nods I And they wouldnt grin back? asks. "Grin! says he. Why, I could hardd ly get one of them young was, squirts to look sideways at me. It with-, No, nothing left, or Not a room, out so much as turnin' their heads. See hiAe, Brother.' I savs to one young gentr who was busy poliahtn his fingernails and buazin In the ear of the blonde cashier, dont you think you could stow a stranger from Wyoming somewhere for the night?' 'Bon't you know what spells? ha comes back at me crisp, and then turns his back. Another one simply glares at me. Oh. come now! I aays to him. Lets talk this over soclahle. All I want Is a bed and a but he yawns In mv face and wulks off. A dosen others acted about the same. Sav, do all hotel clerks here hate everybody that way, or 1b there something o a fit of about me that throws rage? I Oh. expect they treat everybody about alike," aays I. "You don't say? says BUI. Makes It very nice for the stranger,' don t It? Why, youd think I'd come sneakin In to ask for a free handout, or that I was somebody caught kickin' a cripple, or playin theyd an aco from my sleeve But what do I do sleep In the park? I assures Not whtls I'm here, BUI, You must have been battln' him. around In what we call our lobster district, where the tourist tide Is generally highly But you'd find thorn big prsttv hotel kind of expensive, anyway. Now, lets see If I can think of some smaller, side otreet rlaco where why, sure! There's tho King Charles, that Billy Clark manage I'll tow there. Maybe you know the King Charles? On of these homelike little joints where they have three stuffed chairs snd a sick rubber tree tn the and an A merles n lobby, two plan dinin' room done In old Ivory, with pink candle ohades on tha side tables. About a dozen reg'lar New Yorkers live there the year round because they get permanent rates and have hogged rooms with real sunlight In 'em. The others are folks from Grand Rapids and Dee Moines mid Houston, who have been tipped off by friends nnd come to stay two or three weeks at a time while thv do daughter's, trousseau shopping, and mother has her teeth fixed up. Borne ot em work up a noddlnt acquaintance with each other, and the head waiter calls 'em by name, and If tliev can stand the eggs-an- d coffee they feel almost as much at heme as If they was back where they could shake the furnace snd put out the and didnt see. that he was persecuting a woman whod got no use for him and never would have. He kept on hoping against hope, aa lovers will, and at last the time came tor Joanna to go, for she couldnt stand no mire. She never for a moment thought tha$Ave would drive the man into crime, nor did she guethat after hed made her mad one evening and she had spoke bitter words to him and called him a mean coward and bid him leave her alone, that his baffled paseloris would turn into bitter hatred. But so they had done, and all the flood of love In him turned to bitter gpll and he set out to ruin her. Which he had done. HU unsleeping fires drove him to this wickedness and he made his plot according, m 1 11 - sllck-huire- all-fir- n-- o 'em-int- ed bell-ho- cat. My friend Clark don't happen to be In sight when we blow In, but I tackles the young gent with the toothbrush mustache who's subbin on the 'phone exchange while the day operator fixes herself up for a. speedy getaway whan the night girl shows up, I beckons to him soross the desk. i "Say, I want you to take rare of my friend Blsgdeq, from Wyoming," I be He on her,for.a Mn Nothing left," cuts In the clerk, plug-giNo. .til in on a wrong wire Mr. Blag-de- n Just a minute," says I. has Nothing, I tell you," he snarls at mA peevish. Grin at him. Bill," I suggest a "Grin n' been" - hard." Ain't got a grin left In me, Shorty, . says BUI. Then I expect I'll have to do It my Here, you young sport wav," says L with the Ingrowln' grouch! Where's the manager?" He stares sullen at me a minute and ,i Don't know," then concludes tp answer, Around somewheie. I supsays he. pose. Well, suppose you unwind youiselt from that stool and go find him." says 1. "On the Jump now." But I tell you we he begins. says "No, you can't tell me anything. I don't want to talk to any human I. dill pickle like you. Get Billy Clark lor me and get him qulok. sir," says he. And inside of three minutes Mr. Clark has arrived and discovered that they can give Mr. Blagden a nice double room and bath with a lovely air shaft exposure one theyd been holding for a party frorft Scranton, Pa., that hadnt arrived on sqhedule. "All right, Billy,' eays I "It atn 1 far back to Scranton. And, by the wav. ! you ought to make that room clerk ot j yours wear a muzzle. He 11 he biting somebody on the leg If you ain t care- fuL Well, so long. Blagden. All fixed j up now so you can enjoy yourself, eh?, What's your program?" Ob, I'm goln to see a few good shows. ' says he, and do a little business and maybe lay In some new shirts and lancv neckwear to spring on the bovs back home. Chiefly, though. Im primed for pleasure and mtxln' around. 1 ; "Aint discouraged with us. eh? . asks Not me, says he. "Your hotel peo-- 1 pie aint just the kind T hanker to meet, j hut I expect the rest will be different. Much obliged. Shorty. And It must have been about three days later before he drifts Into the studio again. He ain't weartn' that wide expansive smile he had when he fir t came. His Jaw seems to he set sort of scrappy and theres a hard look In his eyea Also I notice that he s luggln the grip once more. "Why, you aint leavin us so soon, ere you. Bill? I asks. You bet 1 am, savs he. Now that don't listen folksv at all, Whats the matter? says I. 1've played the part of a stray pup long enough, that's all, says Bill. .Why," says I, "you don t mean some of our good people have forgot to greet you with a smile?'' 8mile! Honest, Shorty, says he. I ain't seen anybody puli anything that looked like a smile since I landed in this All I've had handed big, messy burg. me was uglv looks and snappy remarks. Ive been snarled and yappedI at more ever was In the last three days than before I helped Sour Sam Miller drive a freight mule team into Cripple Creek, back when I was s youngster. Thats too bad- - Bill," says L Wliat you been trvln to do? em to take my Nothing but get money for this and that. save he. Looks like perfectly good money to me. too. Its what they passed out to me at the bank; all new, crinkly bills. But say, most of your fo'ks seem to hat strangers so that It pains 'em even to take their money." I shakes mv head, puzzled. Let's have a few .details," says I. Well, take these barking hvenss In I says he. your theater 'box offices, picks opt a musical girl show that 1 thought I'd like to see, so I strolls up to the window, shoves In a five and asks For when? he asks. For for a seat. tonight.) eon, says I. 'Cant you read the sign? savs he. 'What sign? says Sold out I. tinder your nose, save he. Want me to sing for ttila performance. No. son, eays I, nor I It for you? me for dont want you to black-jac- k But he simply slams the winaskin dow shut and a doorman shoves me out. I got about the came at two other place Then I quit. that They .waent quite ss rough as do-Where In the stores, but almost. I asks a some me shirts young find lady in this Altmakers establishment. Ruhlly, I cswnt ssy, say she. Awsk I did. after hed got the floor walker. through havin s long peAonal chut with at the s haughtly lookin young femalesavs he. Shlrter ladies glove counter. he shoots at Flfthaieleovertwodownleft.' or a mile half rambled me. But after Id so snd finally found tha shirt counter the young gent In charge didnt aeeni He threw s few sammuch Interested to waitin on a ples at me snd went pompous old boy with a red tie ami a cane." , Yee." I admits, "some of em ere land im media.ta aad waa away almost before the full size of the truth came to be known. He wanted to go te prison. I believe; but his father sent him to Canada instead; aad Joanna and her mother never did anything against him, though they well might, twas thought to lew. by-on- o, Joanna, .however, decided that she wasnt much surprised to bear the bitter truth. She knew before the end that the man hated her with a deadly hatred, and when' she wae asked why she never told about him persecuting her for love, or tried to make a ease against him for her own good names sake, he explained that like tbs simple creature she was. Father always told ms that if a man altered marriage and I didn't take him, I must ' never mention the subject, or name the mans name, out of honor end fairness to him," she said. " and whatever father told ms to do, I always did do." That .was Joanna; and when she cams out of p risen, a generous government only said she wae dismissed without a stain on her character, but never offered a penny piece for all she'd been called to endure! Govern' menta never got no spar money when tie only a question of their honor. That never troubles em. But the nation's a thought higher minded than the government, thank God, and a very tidy purse corned along afore the girl took her Sailor. And such a wedding she had at Ashburton so would have done credit to a royal princess. dained. But then he had to pay the devils wages, and after three months of tidy torment, with the thought of his ruined life and that girl In prison, he began to wlJh he was dead. In truth he thought to slay himself, and if he had. without confessing, the wrong would have gone hidden till the Trump; but thats where Providence took up the running, and it was mercifully put in his heart to own up and take the oonsequenoes. Somebody had to pay, of course, but tis the way of great evils that dften the innocent be called to suffer worse than the guilty. It killed his mother. Sh 'wilted sway like a gathered flower, and died six months after. By then young Tom was to Canada, for ho left Eng tCburrlgtt: U3S: Mr The CMcocoTribaaeJ don't often work up grudge against five million people, but I sure got on now. And Im goln' to square accounts l with 'em If I have to stick in business to the end of my days." I'm bettln he keeps hts word, too. Course, It aint going to reform our room McClux the clerks 1920, and box office men, or wean 'em by (Copyright, from their snappy ways; but many a gay Newspaper Syndicate) soap drummer or cloak and suit salesman who by rights ought to register from Yonkers or Hackensack, N. J., is going to make the mistake of their Uvea by breezin' up to the desk at the New BlagHut no more. Anybody that den and wrltln New York after their Charlie or Joe to take care of em right I waitress. New In from York after this. tablea em to Even towed thelaign Shorty, names. And theyll come away wonderin' good dinin room and passed tha tip to" the gets special treatment mighty special. I why. They Tell It to Shorty WAS a quiet, peaceful morning In the Physical Culture studio. Not that IT we usually open the day with a roughhouee act or are in the habit of startin work with a duet or any crash-ban- g George EDEN PHJLLPOTTS By F the-hote- By Sewell Ford mm, woziAwWiSe iimniiiiHil raw turn ktn s, ! J ! i , 1 r ""Theylrs the ones t ran against." say "I got kind of dlecouraged tryln to buv thlnge. But It dont seem to make what you want tn do t here, thev can spot you for s stranger vou know you're crauhtn and they'll let In where you don't belong. I got It from office boys, from' Subway guards, and from traffic cons. Hey you fresh Jay Olt back on there! a cop yell at me. the sidewalk.' And I was only trjln to cross the street." On Fifth avenue against the traffic, eh? I suggests. "I expect It wae." sava BUI. "Anv-w-he about everything I did aeemed to wrong and to get em peeved witW me. So I'm checkin' out. Im Juat on too manv In this tows, and theyre all on to aa If thev waa on sets last It Every sore at me for comlntr on Well, tf (her feel that way about It I'll pull out. But pay. Shorty, when I get back to tha New there goln' te be a quick Blagden change In the policy, "How? aaya I. "Well, you aee." he goea on. "we've alwav kind, of hopped around when any New Yorker rerlaered out there, put oureelvee out, you know, to give him the beat w had. I've met 'em at the door myself, led 'em to the desk ant told he. 1' DUOAPT'PIANO Upright and Grand Models ' The worlds most wonderful musical instrument Pitderewski, Hofmann, Bauer, Ganz, Grainger and a host of other worlds greatest artists indorse the Duo-AReproducing Piano and make rolls for it exclusively. DUO-ARis more than a player-piano- .' 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