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Sylvia
of the
Minute
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Copyrlgt% Nh{J g&%?éehlead & Co,
CHAPTER X—Continued
23
He drew a long, deep, quivering
breath. Well, he woulp have an ex
planation of this mystery if he had
to drag Meely by force into the parlor
car to face either her empty chair or
her living counterpart!
“Meely !”
She turned with a bound and at
sight of him, her duil face expressed
surprise and pleasure. “Well—of
—all—things! Mr, Creighton yet!
Well, me, I'm that took back, Mr.
Creighton! What brang you to New
York over? Come on,” she said, mak
ing room for him beside her, “and set
down here, side by each—ain't? My
land’s sakes!” she exclaimed as he
obeyed her, “ain’t you feelin’ good,
Mr. Creighton? You look that pale!
Most like a dead one! What ails you.
anyhow? Are you mebby car-sick? 1
got awful car-sick goin’. But comin’,
I'm feelin’ right good. I was to New
York over to look for a place. I'm a
right good cooker and I heerd they
paid good cooks in New York as much
as five dollars a week. With room
and board yet! So I says to Pop, 1
says—"
She stopped short, reached for a
coat that was crushed between her
and the window, slipped it on and
stood wp. “Come, St. Croix,” she
spoke naturally, “the game’s up of
course. Let’s go back to our chairs—
if you're not embarrassed to walk
through this train with my pompa
dour! I thought this the quickest,
easiest way to make you see how I
do it! For I'm in the way of being a
professional actress, St. Croix, and
‘make-up’ is my strongest point.”
Her countenance was concerned and
sympathetic as, sitting opposite him
in the parlor car, she considered his
white-faced suffering. Was she cruel,
she wondered? But surely, this was
“coming to him"—he deserved ft!
~ And yet he looked so ghastly! Per
haps he might kill himself and it
would be her fault! Well, would that
be as bad as what he had plotted to
do to “Meely Schwenckton”? It would
not!
“T'll tell you, St. Croix, all about it
{f you want to know,” she suggeste:l
in a troubled voice, her face almost
as pale as his own. “I'm sorry if I've
hurt you terribly, but think how you
were going to hurt me!”
“Not you!—the girl you pretended
to be,” he said huskily. *“And such a
girl would not have been hurt! A girl
like you can’t judge for one like Mee—
of the Schwenckton breed!”
“Better than you ecan, St, Croix!
You would have rulned her life for
her!”
“Not if she'd been what she
seemed!” he insisted, his voice low
pitched and hoarse,
“What she seemed was an ignorant,
stupid, but perfectly decent girl! And
after the pitiful note Mr. Schwenck
ton wrote you which you thought was
about me! It was about his daughter
Nettie, who he knew was in love
with you. Tt was she that sent you
that fudge.”
“How the h-—l you ever managed
the devilish coup!” he exclaimed des
perately.
“The queer thing, St. Croix, was
that there wasn't a thing premeditat
ed about it—it all just happened. 1
just fell into the thing step by step.
I'll tell you. - I'll begin with the mole.
! knew that was a landmark for you!
So I put flesh-colored court plaster
over it and powered the spot with
flesh-colored powder.”
He stared at her helplessly.
“The big mistake you made, 8t
Croix, was In not knowing I was the
teacher of Willlam Penn school, Net.
tie Schwenckton wasn't, You had us
mixed. I was the teacher; and |
boarded at the Schwenckton farm.”
“But—but,” he stammered, “then
Marvin helped you put this thing over
on me!"
“Oh, dear, no! He had nothing to
do with 1t!"”
“Do you swear to me he didn't know
who you were?" St Croix demanded
with Jealous suspiclon and resent
ment,
“Well, he certainly did suspect me
for a fraud and a bluff when he heard
me tench Unlited States geography !
But he didn't know anything more
about me than you did. Now, I'll tell
youn ALL! [l've always been mad to
go on the stage or the sereen, 1 man:
aged to serape together enough money
to go to Paris to study dramatic art
a few months, Then 1 got a small
part in an English repertoire company
that played In the proyinces and |
earned enough to buy my passage to
Amerlea, the only place, 1 was told,
where sereen stars earned anything.
1t was an awful risk, vy coming here,
1 had so little money. But [ reas
sured my anxious parents by telling
them that If 1 got stranded I'd send
cut ap § O 8 to the Creighton family,
Meantime, as Marvin has Jilted me,
Mother and Father decided there was
no obligation upon us, now, to tell
your family of my adventure and my
ambition, until we saw how I suc
ceeded on the screen, if at all!”
“But it has surely been understood
all along, Sylvia, that I was eager to
take Marvin's place—"
“There wasn't any place te take,
St. Croix. Marvin may think, in his
pride, that he jilted me—but the fact
of the case is that I jilted him first. 1
never would hear of marrying either
of you! But my poor parents needed
your money so badly, they always
hoped I'd change my mind, and so
they never broke it to any of you that
I'd backed out. Well, I came 'over
to America in the utmost ignorance of
everything I should have known:
rather expecting to take Hollywood
by storm!—feeling quite condescend
ing in offering my talents (which 1
myself greatly admired) to the Amer
ican managers; and not knowing that
Hollywood was three thousand miles
from New York. Fortunately, 1
learned a few needful facts on the
way over. My deck chair happened
to be next to a young American wom
an who had been a country teacher.
She told me all about herself—how
she had gone over in June with the
student-teacher excursion and had met
and fallen in love with a man on the
ship, a young college professor. As
soon as they'd landed at Plymonth,
they'd gotten married, traveled all
summer and were now on their way
home, She told me the first thing
she’d got to do when she got home
was to send in her resignation to the
country school she was to have taught
if she had not met her fate and gotten
married. When she mentioned the
state, county and township where she
was to have taught, T recognized them
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“You Made Love to That Girl and
Would Have Despoiled and Rav
ished Her.”
as the uddress of the Creightons.
Next thing I was telling her my story :
and when she learned how little money
I had, she was appalled; and when
she told me Hollywood was three
thousand miles from New York and
that it took five days and five hundred
dollars to get there, 1 was panic
stricken. So we fixed up a plot. Her
parents’ home was in Reading, Penn
sylvania, and her husband and she
were going there umll‘hls college
opened. She invited me to go home
with them and she would give me her
normal school diploma and lend
me the use of her name, Amelia
Schwenckton (now no longer her
name), and I could go and appropri
ate her school for a few months, until
I'd saved enough to go to Hollywood.
“She was really a young woman of
quite a feverish imagination, I do as
sure you. Her Schwenckton relatives
had never seen her (they're very dis
tantly related) so I could pass myself
off to them as their cousin, The thing
appealed to me not only as a solution
of my penniless predicament, but as a
jolly adventure, especially as I knew
the school was In the neighborhood of
the Creightons’ home! I'd have a
chance, T thought, to look them over
without their knowing It,
“Of course, St, Croix, T meant to
make myself known to your family
very soon. But T had not realized
how difficult that was going to be, 1
got in deeper every day. And It was
such fun, I didn’t want to give up my
lark and my freedom and become
Lady Sylvia! And it was all such a
marvelous school of acting for me; 1
was proving to myself, that I could
net—mastering that dinleet with Its
extrnordinary Inflectlons: and sue
coeding In taking you In, Bt, Crolx, so
far beyond my highest hopes!
“It was when you were polnted out
to me, St, Crolx, at that barn dance
that the ldea first eame to me to
puss myself off to you as a Pennsyl.
vania Duteh girl—for 1 thought it
wonld give me such A chance as no
girl had ever had befora to learn to
know my possible futuve hoshand !
“I'm afrald,” Bt, Croix murmured,
“you think you learned to know him
too well !
“I'm afrald, Bt. Croix, 1 44!
“Do you think It was falr to take
me unawares ke that?”
“Why not?"
Suddenly a new peglization eame
to him that turned him o degree cold
er than he already was, “But If you
were the teacher,” he exclaimed, “why,
then, it was you that Marvin was all
the time seeing at that schoolbouse
CHARLTON COUNTY HERALD
It was to you my father pald site thom
sand dollars to get away! My G—a!™
“Yes} wasn't that a sprightly scene!
That's what I'm going to see:your fa
ther about, I ran home to England
with that money to feed my starving
parents, Now I'm going to make a
clean breast of it all to your father
and then if he'll let me borrow what
I've still got of that five thousand, I'll
g 0 to Hollywood with it. The only
blot on my family escutcheon,” she
sighed, “is my having taken that bribe
from your father! But I needed it.”
“Will you tell me,” demanded St.
Croix, frowning darkly, “is Marvin in
love with you?”
“I'm sure I don't know, He never
told me so, the one time I met; him
unprofessionally.”
“And you are perfectly confident,
are you, that Marvin had no suspicions
at all as to who you were?”
“I fancy he had several suspicions.
Oh, St. Croix, it's going to be awfully
embarrassing, facing them all! Espe
cially your awful father after my tak
ing that money from him! It makes
me shudder! When we get there, St.
Croix, let me walk in behind you, will
you?—and I promise to bring up a
good, solid rear in the procession!
Oh, but I'm nervous about it!"
“To see you sitting there looking
like Meely Schwenckton and tal¥ing
straight English !—it’s the d—t knock
out I've ever experienced!” St. Croix
almost groaned,
“Didn’t T do the part to the life?’
she amazingly appealed for applause.
“Now I can go to Hollywoeod not only
to offer Myself, but my Piece as well
—for I've written a scenario of this
weird, wild escapade, St. Croix; that
they can’t resist! You'll see yourself
in a ‘movie’ and find out just how—
just what you're like!”
“Sylvia!” He leaned forward and
took her hand. (They had their end
of the car pretty much to themselves,)
“Give up this Hollywood idea! You
know how 1T love you—" :
“‘How,”"” she repeated thoughtfully,
a 8 she gently withdrew her hand.
“Yes, I know ‘how'.”
“But look here! You're not going
to hold me to account for treating
yvou like the creature you pretended
to be!”
“What sort of a creature was.)
pretending to be?”
“You know what I mean, Sylvial"
‘“Yet you made love to that ecrea
ture! A man's standards,” she shook
her head over it, “are certainly low!”
“They're high enough when it
comes to choosing a wife, Sylvia!”
“Then let a woman's standards be
as high when choosing a husband!”
“You don’t know life, my dear, or
you wouldn't say such an impossible
thing! My own standards are far
more fastidious than the average!”
“Gracious !”
“If you'll marry me, Tl worship
and reverence and adore you all my
life long!” G
“My dear St. Croix, T can’t imagine
anything more uncomfortable than be
ing ‘reverenced'—heavens! You've
known Meely Schwenckton much
longer and better than you've known
Cousin Sylvia and I'm afraid if you
married me, you'd be far more likely
to bully and browbeat the meek and
lowly Meely than to ‘worship, rev
erence and adore’ the Lady Sylvia!
You're so used to bullying me, 1
couldn't risk it!”
“You actually believe I could ever
for a moment confound you with the
stupid, wulgar girl you pretended to
be?"
“You made love to that girl and
would have despoiled and ravished
her!”
He winced and looked shocked.
“Please! Such words on your lips!”
“Bunk! Bosh! You would have
done to her what you consider inde
cent even to speak of to me! Do you
think I forget what you told her of
vour feelings, shout your marriage?
You said to her. ‘I will marry my cous
in because I shall enjoy the prestige
this marriage will give to me and to
my children.' You weren't even hop
ing for love in your marriage. That
you would find outside of marriage—
with girls like Meely Schwenckton !”
“I hadn’t seen you then, Sylvia!”
“You were planning to marry one
girl while you were trying your best
to seduce another! And In the face
of that, you dare to speak of marriage
to me?”
“Yes! Because I love you! T was
mad about ‘Meely' and you are she—
with just the difference that turns de
sire Into worship !
“I'm afraid, St, Crolx, that Marvin's
repudiating we Is more to my taste!
You see, my dear cousin, I know too
well how unchivalrous you are to
womanhood, how you dishonor It and
ravage it!"
Again he wineed and drew back, *1
cunnot bear,” he frowned, disgust In
his eyes, “to hear such coarse lan
gunge on the lips of a girl T respect "
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Ancient Stone Unveiled
The “Brus Stane,” which dates
fram 1304, and was lost for 150 years,
was recently Installed permanently In
the staircase of the town hall at
Annan, Scotland, At the ceremonies
the unvelling was by Sir Robert
Bruce. The stone was originally
purt of the ancient “Custle of Brus"
at Annan, After Its disappearance
for a century and a half it was found
ten years ngo In a North Devon
gurden,
——————
Obstinacy Defined
Obstinacy 18 will asserting ftself
without being üble to Justify Itself,—
It Is persistence without a reasons
hle motive,~lt Is the tenselty of selps
love substituted for that of peasot
and conscience~Amlel,
e . ————
Go through \ife secking a “kicy
und you'll probubly get severak
Improved Uniform International
* Lesson "’
(By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. 1., Dean
Moody 31bla [nstitute of Chicago.)
(©. 1928 Western Newspaper [Tnion.)
- Lesson for May 27
THE WICKED HUSBANDMEN
uLESSON TEXT—Mark 12:1-12; 13:1-
GOLDEN TEXT—Jehovah knoweth
the way of the righteous; but the way
of the wicked shall perish.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Some Wicked
People Punished,
JUNIOR TOPIC—The Wicked Hus
bandmen,
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP
lC—Playing Fair With God.
YOUNT PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP
IC—The Misuse of Nationai Privilege.
L. Demanding the Fruit of His
Vineyard (Mark 12:1-12),
1. The man (v. 1).
The certain man who planted the
vineyard is God Himself, ‘
2. The vineyard (v. 1). |
This means Israel (See Isa. 5:1-7,
Jer, 2:21, Ps, 80:8).
The Lord went to particular pains
to make this nation separate. He be
stowed peculiar favors upon it,
3. The husbandmen (v. 1).
These were the rulers and teachers
of Israel, even members of the San
hedrin. They were the spiritual
guides of the people.
4. Servants sent for the fruit of the
vineyard (vv. 2-0).
These were the various prophets
whom God sent to the nation. The
maltreatment and rejection of the
prophets are fully set forth in the
Seriptures.
5. The well-beloved son sent (vv.
6-9).
The son here is the TLord Jesus
Christ, God's only and beloved Son.
He came into their midst.
6. Their punishment (vv. 9-12).
Jesus now asked them for their own
verdict upon such villainous ingrati
tude. He took the place of a judge
and pronbunced judgment upon them
on the basis of their own verdict.
They not only rejected the kingdom,
but the Son who was King; there
fore the kingdom was taken from
them and given to a nation bringing
forth the fruits thereof.
11. The Son of Man Coming In
Glory (13:1-37).
This is part of the well known
Olivet discourse. It gives a pro
phetic view of the course of time
from its utterance just before the
crucifixion to the second advent of
cn:g. Two great facts are before
us in this prophetic utterance, the
destruction of Jerusalem and the sec
ond coming of Christ, The one was
near, having taken place within forty
years of the crucifixion of Christ; the
other is still future, The order of
events as outlined are:
1. Moral condition of the world
during Christ's absence (vv. 1-13).
This pictures the present age and
the result of preaching the gospel.
In this age many shall come saying.
“I am Christ and shall deceive
many.” There shall be wars and ru
mors of wars, Natlon shall be pitted
against nation and kingdom against
kingdom, with earthquakes In divers
places, accompanied with famine and
pestilence, The witnesses of Christ
shall be persecuted and arraigned be
fore rulers and kings. Brother shall
betray brother to death and the fa
ther the son, Children will rise up
against their parents and cause them
to be put to death, The preachers of
the gospel shall be hated for Christ's
sake,
2 The days of the tribulation (vv.
14.23).
In this time the Antichrist will ap
pear according to the prophecy of
Daniel, So severe will be the perse
cution that except the Lord shorten
the days no flesh could be saved, but
for the elect's sake the days shall be
shortened,
8. The great advent (vv. 24.31),
This shall be preceded by great
physical disturbances In the world.
The moon shall be darkened, the
stargs of heaven shall fall, “Then
shall they see the Son of Man com
ing in the clouds with great power
and glory and He will gather His
elect from the uttermost parts of the
earth and heaven,”
4. Instructions in view of the com-
Ing of the Lord (vv, 52.34),
The day and the hour of His com-
Ing are unknown to man, In view of
this uncertainty we should wateh and
pray.
111, Warnings.
Running through the thirteenth
chapter Is the exhortation to take
heed, In teaching the lesson It would
be well to gather them up In thelr
order,
1. Take heed against decelvers
(v. D).
2 Take heed to yourselves (v, ).
8, Take heed ngalnst the time of
| the Lord's coming (v. 33),
The one command to all Is “wateh”
‘ .
The Cross and Discipleship
| The cross I 8 the pattern of service
and suffering for the disciples of
Christ., The great demand of Jesus
wns and Is for people who can suffer,
It I 8 of no use teylng to get the cross
out of discipleship, They go together,
and will, untll the world has been re
deemed, —~Charles Brown,
. e e c—— —
An Active Faith
Belles Is the acceptance of a map,
Faith s the taking the voyage.—ltev,
J. H. Jowett, D, D,
Takes Life Seeking
Burial With Husband
Budapest.—So that she might
be buried with her husband,
Mme. Beatrice Kern, one of
Hungary's most beautiful wom
en, committed suicide a few
hours after her husband's death,
Mrs, Kern was the daughter
of Doctor Hampel, an archeolo
gist, and a niece of Frank
Pulszky, art historian, Her hus
band was a professor of music
and eritic-composer.
Professor Kern died of apo
plexy while working at his desk
one evening. In the early hours
of the morning Mme. Kern
turned on a gas jet and took
her own life. The two bodies
were buried side by side.
MAN KILLS WIFE *
IN JEALOUS RAGE
Tken Inflicts Fatal Wounds
on Himsel?,
St. Louis.—Samuel Balin, seventy
years old, died at City hospital here
of wounds which he inflicted with a
knife after stabbing his fifty-eight
year old wife, Pasie, to death at the
Jewish Orthodox Olld Folks’ home,
where both lived.
Balin, a retired merchant, and his
wife had resided at the home for eight
months. Recently he became angry
when he saw his wife in friendly con
versation with another resident, Mi
chil Waisman, in the corridors of the
home. For two days he quarreled with
his wife and then he was observed
walking nervously back and forth in
front of the door of the third floor
room which he occupied with his wife,
Several minutes later screams were
heard in the room. Mrs. Lena Gill
man, the superintendent, and occu
pants of rooms in the same corridor
ran to the Balin room,
Mrs. Balin was dead on the floor
with a knife wound in the neck. Her
husband, uneonscious and with his
throat slashed, was a few feet away.
A large knife was found near him,
Removed to the hospital, Balin was
unable to make a statement.
A coroner’s verdict of suicide and
homicide was returned at the inquest
following testimony by police, resi
dents of the home and attendants,
Balin was extremely jealous and be
came frantic when his wife was out of
his sight for half an hour, it was tes
tified. He made two visits to the
kitchen of the home the day before
the murder, explaining once that he
was looking for his wife and again
that he was seeking a knife with
i which to “cut buitons.,” He stabbed
his wife and himself with his pocket
knife.
The PBalins, married 40 years, are
survived by three daughters, two sons,
sixteen grandchildren and two great
grandechildren, Balin had been mar
ried twice, his first wife dying of
natural causes,
Bandits Are Sentenced
to Learn Commandments
Lincoln, Neb.—Learn the ten ¢om
mandments, go to no shows for a
year, drive no cars, stay away from
each other, get into no trouble, and
learn the oath of citizenship, was the
sentence handed down to three young
boys, Edward Studnicka, seventeen;
David Butler, fifteen, and Charles Me-
Lees, fourteen, by Judge Shepherd in
Juvenile court here. The youths had
previously pleaded guilty to 20 car
thefts, one burglary and a dozen pet
ty robberies.
The boys, who declared they “did
it Just for fun,” were eaptured
through the efforts of a suburban vig
flance committee, organized to comb
the territory after the thefts had be
come too numerous for the police to
handle,
The trio were paroled to their par
ents but failure to obey any of the
drastie provisions listed means a pro
longed sentence in the state industria)
school at Kearney,
Teeth Marks in Neck
Convict Man of Holdup
New York,~Teeth marks in his neck,
which were Identified by the vietim
who put them there, caused the con
vietlon of Bedford Willlams, Forty
five, West Indian negro, who Is al
leged to have several other convie
tions against him which, according to
the distriet attorney, will mean his
golng to prison for life,
Willlams was charged with holding
up Louls Davidson, a salesman, last
November In a hallway and taking a
wateh, ring and 88,
“I wns able to ldentify Willlams
positively by the teeth marks I made
in the back of his neck,” Davidson
suld on the witness stand, “We had
quite n struggle In the hallway, 1
grabbed Willlams, although he had
shot me through the hand and through
the übdomen.”
Steals Jail Lock
Buffalo, N, Y.~Apparently wishing
to have some souvenir of his residence
in the Jull here, a prisoner stole the
loek off his cell door Just before he
| was freed,
‘, Teacher Saves Twelve
| Mount Vernon, Il —Seeing n severe
windstorm appronching, Cole Shelton,
a tencher here, marched his 12 pu
plls out of the schoolhouse Just before
) it collnpsed,
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L V
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Voice of the Sluggard
The laziest man in Beacon was dis
covered recently, He was sound
asleep when his wife, awakened by
the fire siren, nudged him and said:
“Wake up, honey, I think the whole
town is on fire, The sky Is all lit
up. Wake up, wake up!”
The husband woke up slowly, indo
lently arose and sleepily felt the four
walls of his room, yawned and
stretched with a grunt and murmured
to his spouse:
“The walls are still cool,” and he
returned to bed.—Beacon (N. Y.) Pa
per.
Always look on the bright side of
things—and if you are buying them i#
is well to look on both sides,
Money is a necessity; so is dirt.~
Haliburton, i
o
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b\ )l—\_
The
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Truck Driver
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temperatures of the sy
modern high-compres- T
sion engine. Alsoanew
patented solid copper g™
gasket-seal thatremains -
absolutely gas-tight B
under high compres. @/
sion. Special analysis &2
electrodeswhich assure
a fixed spark-gapunder P 8
all driving conditions,
Spark Plugs
Dependable for Every Engine
Sell new uurnvtiwly displayed Be
enndy speclulties to stores, Big prof-
Its, rapid repeaters; exclusive terrl
tory, Sales experience not absolutely
necessary, Write lmmediately for par
ticulups, LAWRENCE MARABLE, P,
0. Box 971, Richmond, Va.
SPECIAL PRICE ON THE WONDERFUL
Prize Winning “Ononda’ Cheysant hemuin
beautiful Incurved cream-white; tinted cen
ter, 1 don, b 00; 3 dox, §1; 80, $1.30, Golden
Ball, same price, FOLLIN'S CHRYSAN
THEMUM FARM, Bumter, 8, O,
Ntomuneh, Skin and Al Constitutionnl dis
onnes succsssfully treated without special diet
by nonseptic therapy ;| safegunrd your health;
addross to me rgr enne today, Prof. Raab,
T Mangana do Gomes Bldg,, Havana, Cuba
e sA~ c———. ——————————
Farn 535 to lr Per Week, Mllml mnum’
California Perfumen, Twelva 360 bottlen o
sorted odors and full fnstructions sent on
reecipt uf'zl. THE ETERLING CO., 647 No.
Arden Bivd,, Mollywoed, Calif,
Phonograph Records Fleetrienlly Recorded,
13 intent melootions excellent tone, sl.lO do-
Hvered; rmug‘lmlu oatalog on request, M. Doers
Ninger, 404 Kast 168 rd ML, Now York City,
Nalesmun—<Full or Part Time, Kvery restau
rant needs ginss, china, ete, Low cash prices,
CHE CO, B, V, Clucinnatl, Ohlo,
MAMMOTH WHITE PEKIN DUCKLINGs
batehed by spocinlists, I;l‘h-n Hat furnished,
RIDUEWAY HATCHERY, Laltue, Ohle,
W. N, U, ATLANTA, NO, 21..1928,