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PAGE TWO
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In Old e - ■ ,xV'./7
"Virginia = . v cy WM?/'
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Cigarette Tobacco ± \ / \ <•■_, «& \
was born i / /w( --- u '
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J' < ■- v = _ xian>.
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\ W' ~i “One Sunday morning a particularly ven-
t .-^fe<—-.-§^XX: XaM; X‘ / turesome redskin, having discovered that the
»&£ i. ' '®3t "SX?- sentinel on duty had fallen asleep, crept up
within ljow sh °t of the meeting house and dis-
i /p fl charged a darning arrow through an open win-
dow - The careless sentry was placed in the
~ jar W V" stocks for 6 hours and fined 50 pounds of
- —From story by P. A. Bruce.
The fragrance of golden Virginia
is in every Piedmont
Sun-ripened, mellow Virginia—that’s what
gives that full flavor to Piedmont cigarettes.
When you smoke a cigarette made of
Virginia mixed with other tobaccos, you are
missing some of Virginia’s fragrance and flavor.
But when you smoke Piedmonts, you are
getting all of it with every puff because
Piedmonts are made entirely of Virginia.
RThe Virgin ia Cigarette
SI
NOTE—In England, where Virginia tobacco has the
preference, a smoker pays as much for his Virginia » M
rsfc" the best Turkish tobacco. Because over there B |J ?4%M Q/*i
both kills of tobacco pay the same Import duty. JI X»r JlCr®, C*
But in this country Virginia tobacco costs you less
than Turkish tobacco because Virginia is grown in /% & 1 O
this country and, unlike foreign-grown tobaccos, TCII* I ®>C
carries no Import duty. ■>
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HgSly P/. St. Louis, Mo,
l^ House in the Wirtd
For Sale By
WINDSOR PHARMACY
AMERICUS TIMES RECORDER.
Sandra The
Jealous
SANDRA FLINCS TRUTH AT HER
• HUSBAND. I
CHAPTER LXXI
IW AS only a child, spoiled and
1 jealous, high-spirited and reckless.
Things had happened so swiftly; so
much had been if not disagreeable,
yet not quite pleasant, that I was dis
couraged and bitterly unhappy.
Naturally curious, my curiosity
had only been whetted concerning
Everett s first wife instead of satis
fied. Had he taken me in his arms
and told me of her, explained that
he had loved her, but now he loved
me, too, I think—l am not sure—
that we would have been spared
much sorrow.
I felt hart and chagrined when he
said I was not to receive any men
callers. He had no slightest reason
to think I cared for any one' save
him, and when a man called to in
quire if I had recovered from the
shock and fright of an acident, he
hadn’t even felt grateful for. the
courtesy—simply said I was not to
receive him, that Hetty could convey
Imy messages.
Well, I would receive them, just
as Leola did. I was determined to
pattern my life after hers as nearly
as my knowledge of her would per
mit, simply because I had been told
that Everett loved her so passionate
ly that he could deny her nothing,
nor could he find fault with any
thing she did. At least, he did not
because he feared if he did, she
might leave him, so independent was
he.
I did not know that Walter Kemp
was a young man whose name had
acquired an unpleasant notoriety in
Hendon because of his philandering
ways with women regardless of
whether they were married or not. I
do not know that it would have made
any difference if T had. I thought of
him only as related to the accident
and treated him as I imagined Leola
would have treated I,lm. I was gra- i
ciously polite, as I considered it,
nothing more..
The days after Everett came home
were exciting ones; He had a detec
tive take a list of all the burglar
had stolen. He had the servants all
called together so the man could
question them. Thomas was not
quite as well, and the hospital called
up to inform us. James was rest
less, and needed attention from Mrs.
Gray. Altogether we were a disor
ganized household, and I knew that
Everett blamed me as the cause. He
had said:
“Had you obeyed me and remained
at home, instead of attempting to
go with me when I had said I would
not take you, none of all this would
have hapepned. You only took Het
ty to see her friend as an excuse to
do something you knew I would not
approve. The accident followed. If
you had not bought a ticket that bur
glar might not have gotten away
with the jewels. And”—
“I suppose I am to blame because
the burglar cam& at all, I pouted.
“Do be reasonable. lam blaming
you for nothing you might not have
avoided had you obeyed me.”
“My father doesn’t talk of ‘obey
ing’ to mother. He did it to me be
cause I was only a child—he thought.
But if I was old enough to be mar
iried, T am old enough to do as I like,
as long as I do nothing wrong.” I
had rehearsed this little speech until
I knew it by heart. And had only
waited for a chance to deliver it. I
was sure it would make Everett an
gry, but I was not prepared for
what I saw in his face.
“You are incapable of judging
what IS right or what is wrong.”
“Thank you!” His reply stung
me to add “From what I hear, you
were not so severe with your first
wife. You must have cared a lot
more for her than you do for me.
Everyone says you let her do any
thing she wanted to. Even that old
Mr. Harrison who was at Alice
Sloan’s last dinner, told Alice he
supposed you had married me be
cause I resembled her. Maybe you
think it is pleasant to hear such
things all the time. I’d like to run
away somewhere wdiere no one lived 1
who knew I was ‘Number Two’ as he
called me.” Tn desperation I had
run on, saying much more than I had
intended, or was wise.
“You might be called a worse
name,” Everett was grayly white
with anger. “Go to your room at
once and remain until you can at
least avoid breaking all the rules of
good taste.”
“You’d break them, too, if I had
been married before and people
called you—‘Number Two!’” I fairly
exploded the words then almost
ran from the room.
Tomorrow—The Papers Carry. The
Burglary Story.
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If you are away from home and
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your wife can treat him if she has
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day you may need it tomorrow. G.
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Distributor. ’
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1919,