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MAGAZINE.
Little Bobbie’s
Pa
The Three of ’Em—Betty and Danny and Billy
By NELL BRINKLEY
By WILLIAM F. KDUL
I STAYED up late wttti Ma last nite
beek&ue Pa went to a lodge bank-
wet & Ma sed she wud feel lone-
pum up In the country If I dident stay
up & keep her cumpany. I guess Ma
'vas kind of scared, beckaus wen we
are In the city thare Is always the
poleece to call up & up In the country
thare lsent any poleece. So I stayed
up.
Pa was awful good, for him. He
knew Ma & me was up waiting for
him, so he dldent stay vary long at
the# bankwet. He was hoam at 11
o’clock, but he brought a man with
him & the man had drank too much
champane & Pa had enuff too.
Mister Hathaway, sed Pa, here Is
my fleet, waiting for me. Wife, sed
Pa, thla Is Mister Hathaway of Call-
fomy. Bobble, this Is Mister Hath
away of the Golden West. He la a
•koller & a gentelman. It does my
art good to run Into a Westerner
' ggenn, sed Pa & I was telling Mister
Hathaway he wud have to stay here
tonite insted of going to a hotel.
You have a wonderful fambly, sed
Mister Hathaway, wen he was taking
off his overcoat, a wonderful fambly.
He hadent saw us at all, he was look-
. lng on the floor for a peg on wich to
hang his overcoat on.
Yes, I think thay are wonderful,
sod Pa.
“It la a wonderful thing to«have a
wonderful fambly, sed Mister Hath
away. I used to have a wonderful
fambly too, a wife & son. but that
was long ago. Thay are sleeping
thare last sleep now, out ware the
blue Pacific rolls endlessly In upon
the golden strand. Then Mister Hath
away beegan to cry.
Thara, thare, sed Ma, doant feel so
badly. Let me hang up your coat &
talk thi/s chare.
These teer9 are unmanly, sed Mister
Hathaway, but wen I think how
happy I once was, A see how happy
yure husband is now, I must weep.
The workings of Fate are inskra-
tabel, he sed. Then he tried to set
down on the back of the chair & Ma
helped him into his seet.
Tell me all about the bankwet, sed
Ma. Did you have a nice time?
How cud I have a nice time, sed
Mister Hathaway. The guests were
smiling & the wine was sparkling,
but 1 cuddent touch It. It wud have
choked me, he sed. beekaus my hart
was away out In the West, ware the
blue Pacific thunders aggenst the Seal
Rocks. Then he began to cry sum
moar
I was out thare three years ago
with my husband sed Ma, & we saw
all the seals on the rocks. Thay was
very cunning. I thought, thay played
around so happy.
Of course thay played around hap
py, sed Mister Hathaway. Why shud-
dent thay be happy. Did them seals
have any wunderful fambly lying un-
der the green sod of my native state?
rfo, thay did not. Who dares to say
that they did? he hollered.
Nobody, my deer Mister Hathaway, j
sed Ma. Plees calm your self. You
shuld at lees* have sipped sum of the
wine, sed Ma. It wud have cheered
you up.
The wine, the sparkling, mocking
'wine, sed Mister Hathaway. Take it
away from me! Why shud I drink
it. sed Mister Hathaway Then he
went to sleep in the chair & Ma
■ iped the teers off his cheeks A sed
Poor man, I haven't the hart to skold
i.o v. Ma is a deer Ma.
Then Pa put his friend to bed.
The Cure for
Jealousy
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
MAIDEN MEDITATIONS.
I N Fate's menu most of us have to
be satisfied with a half-portion of
love and a demi-tasse of happi
ness. ,
Don't be sure that a man in in love
with you Just because he runs after
you; reserve judgment until he gets so
agitated about his cherished “freedom”
and “independence” that he runs away
from the little girl who Is threatening
them.
H ERE they are—the three of ’em. They sing through all
my days. Nobody seems ever to get tired of the
sentimental tale of a Man and a Girl and Love!
Sometimes I think I do—when I’m stumped for an idea
and I lean my head on my hand and my brain goes round and
round—yet always comes back to the three that seem to flicker
behind all my days—a Betty, a Billy, and Danny.
I appeal for an idea to my mother, or the Gentle Cynic.
My mother smiles and puts her brown head to one side.
“Why, make a picture of a Man, a Girl—and Love!”
And she ends up triumphantly as though she had
thought of something new.
And the Cynic gives me an amused look from the bachelor
face of him and says, “Oh, make a pictnre of a Man. Love—
and a Girl!” He thinks he HASN’T thought of anything new.
And they’re both right. It’s new and it’s old. And there
I go—making a picture that holds the darling three of them—
Nell Brinkley Says:
Betty and Billy and Danny—whatever the idea.
Here they are—with no idea behind—just the three actors,
making their little bow She is sometimes blond, sometimes
gypsy-dark. Always her month is full and hiring. She walks
with the grace of the wind in the grasses. There are always
little lines that make her fairy-like on her high-instepped feet.
And she is always in love.
Danny is a “wishtfnl,” warm-bodied slip of a boy—some
times called cherub. He has a slow and melting eye and a
taking way with him. He is greedy of hearts. He is the big
actor in the drama—and even when he is in only a moving
pictnre—-where he’ll never hear their nraise—the people clap
and whistle. And if you’ve one.* had his rose-leaf, steel-strong
hand around your heart, you'll remember it, I swear! lie
looks a jolly outlaw.
Billy is—why, he’s the Man. Lots of men don’t like
him—but the girls all do. I wonder what that means. A blond
man wondered to me, roughing up his Viking, goldy mop,
“Why, you make his hair forever BLACK!”
Maybe I have a tender spot for black hair because my own
is blond. But that isn’t the whole reason—the why of it is
most practical and earthy—I make 1 it black because I need a
black spot in the picture so many times—and his head often
is the only place for it.
And when the picture cries aloud for BLACK, why Billy’s
blond head must go.
He is the actor with the yearning pyes, the eagle nose, the
tender mouth. And he follows Betty with wide arms the world
around, crying, “Come to me, picture girl—lift up your lips
to me!”
He’s always in love. too.
It’s a mutual admiration affair—“arms all ’round!”
Here they are, the three of them—the pawns that I move
about in different figures day by day
A9
Now that ships that fly In the air
and pictures that talk have come true,
some genius may discover a way to
make platonic friendship work.
Be careful about your "Innocent
flirtations”—It is easy to start some
thing, but not quite so simple to stop
It when you have had enough. The
party of the second part may wffnt to
keep on going.
Benefited Many Who
Had Lung Trouble
BEHIND CLOSED DOORS
By ANNA KATHARINE GREEN
q§3
One of the Greatest Mystery Stories Ever Written
(Copyright, 1913. by Anna Katharine
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— ,ues A physician pronounced my disease ;
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dclpUi*. P* • for booklet telUn*
and additional evidence.
TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT
The packet might have been removed
from the table before that gentleman
took his place at the curtain; and, if so.
the probabilities were that he did not
even know of its existence.
As he asked himself this question, he
raised his head and unconsciously
glanced about. As he did so his eyes
fell on a certain chintz-covered sofa
that filled one corner of the apartment
in which he sat; and remembering that
it was the one article which Genevieve
had requested to have brought over
from her old home, he rose hurriedly
and approached it. It was old, it was
ugly, it was uncomfortable; he
had
never seen her lie or even sit on if, and
yet she had not been easy till it was
brought into the house and established
in this bijou room, where each and
every object surrounding it was a work
of the highest art and greatest expense.
There must be a reason for this inter
est in so Incongruous an article. Could
it be—he did not complete his thought
but rapidly stooped and ran his hand
around the Reat. ,
He stopped suddenly. He had touched
something smooth and firm and round.
It was a roll of paper, and the moment
he drew it out he recognized it for the
one he was in search of by the looks of
the writing upon it and the small thread
of blue ribbon that surrounded it.
But before pursuing the matter fur
ther; before even undoing the roll he
held in his hand, he went In to look
at his wife again, for he was not easy
long away from her side, and though
the minutes had been few since he had
seen her, an occurrence of such impor
tance had taken place that it seemed
a/ if hour^ instead of minutes had
When he returned, he closed the doors
between and took up the roll. About to
pierce the secrets of another soul, he
had a moment of recoil. But an In
stant memory of his purpose gave him
the hardihood he required, and, tear
ing off the simple blue ribbon that held
the sheets together, he smoothed them
out before him, and took his first glance.
Great heaven! this was no man's writ
ing; nor was it such as he would ex
pect from the woman he believed Mil
dred Farley to be. It was—he stoped
wth a gasp, looked around him to see
that he had not lost control of his reas
on, and then glanced back. The effect
upon him was the same, ft It was not
his own wife’s writing, it was so like
it. Jumping up, he procured the two or
three notes she had written him before
' they were married and compared them
| with the lines lying before him. The
j chirography was identical. The words
j he was destined to read were Gene-
; vieve’s! written to whom, and for what?
This was the secret it had now become
his duty to unravel.
Glimpses of a Buried History.
Meanwhile Mr Gryce was engaged
upon quite a different search. Con
vinced by Mrs. Cameron’s evasions and
by the ravaging effects of his examina
tion upon her that a murder and not a
suicide had taken place 1-n Genevieve
Gretorex’s room, he found it had become
( his duty to discover what motive this
petted child of fortune could have had
for desiring the death of so humble a
person as her dressmaker, as It had
become that of the doctor to establish
the sufficiency of Mildren Farley's own
despair for the tragedy which termi
nated her existence.
He went, therefore, to work upon this
matter with his usual vigor and pre
cision, his method of procedure having
one point in similarity with that of Dr.
C||r<eron. Tills was that it started with
a fact of which he had spoken to no one
an<l which dated hack to the moment
when Mrs. Gretorex first heard from hiR
lips that her daughter had been inter
ested In a person by the name of Farley.
That name—he was sure of R—had
awakened memories in the elder wom
an’s breast which were connected with
some secret she sought to hide and
which it disturbed her to think had been
discovered by her daughter. Whatever
the secret was. whether of honor or dis
honor. happiness or unhappines, it wa.i
evidently one that he ought to make his
own; for upon these old family secrets
present crimes often hang like the final
link upon the end of a rusty chain.
To Mrs. Olney's house he therefore
repaired, and after some talk with that
lady, sat down before the trunk which
held the effects of Mildred Farley. But
he did not remain there long, for the
letters he found were such as he had
seen before, and consisted of school girl
notes, interesting enough to the writer
perhaps, but of no value to one on the
search for any kind of knowledge. Be
sides it was not in the letters written
to Mildred that he expected to find the
clew he was seeking. If the secret he
was after was an old one. he would he
more likely to discover tokens of It in
the correspondence of the mother. 80
he sought out Mrs. Olney again with
the quostion as to where he should look
for souvenirs of Mrs. Farley.
Whereupon he was directed to an old
chest in the attic, which, being emptied,
produced more than one packet of Just
such letters as he desired to see, old
letters with discolored wrltin, some of
them bearing the date of ten years
back and some of them of twenty. With
these in his hand he felt that he held
the key to the widow's history, and
going back into the room provided for
his use by the accommodating landlady,
he set about perusing them with all the
care and circumspection of which he
was capable.
They were from various persons, most
of them women, and H was not long be
fore he discovered that those signed
wMth the name of Annie showed the
most familiarity with the widow’s af
fairs, as well as expressed the most af
fectionate Interest in her. To these
therefore he paid the most heed, and
was soon rewarded for his efforts by
gaining a very good idea of Mrs. Far
ley’s earlv life and circumstances.
They were such as are very apt to
follow a runaway match such as hers
had evidently been; six months of ex
treme Joy, followed by sickness, want
and growing neglect on the part of hirn
who led her Into this trouble. A few
months later and the sickness had in
creased and the poverty deepened; then
some blow, dreadful but keen, called out
the hurried line, “O, my poor darling,
bear up till I come; you shall not en
dure this fearful grief alone!” after
which there was a lapse of letter writ
ing on the part of this person for
months, and when it was taken up
again the frequent expressions of sym
pathy for her correspondent's widow
hood, showed what this grief had prob
ably been; though there were other and
less comprehensible allusions to some
great sacrifice she had made, which
threw an air of mystery over this por
tion of the correspondence that for some
time the detective found It impossible
to penetrate.
Not till he read In a much later let
ter, “I hope your sweet little Mildred is
well; I wonder If the other one has
flourished as rapidly and looks as well,”
did the light he was seeking break lb
upon this seemingly commonplace his
tory. Then indeed he appeared to catch
a glimpse of something that might lead
him. out of the maze his imagination
had wrought for itself, and he ad
dressed his attention to the remaining
letters of the packet with renewed in
terest. But beyond a sympathetic word
here and there, and some expressions
of relief that Mrs. Farley had had th
courage to reiaau i of her bur
den in order that the rest might be
sustained, he found nothing to corrob
orate his suspicions till he suddenly
stumbled upon these words at the be
ginning of a letter dated from New
York:
i
“I have news for you. I have seen
her, and she Is as much like Mildred
as any little lady brought up in the
lap of luxury could be like a child
who has not always had two pairs of
shoes for her feet. I met her as she
was going to school. I was on the
sidewalk in front of the house, and she
passed so near me I could have caught
her in my arms. Why didn't I?
“She would only have thought me
crazy, and that wouldn’t have done me
any harm, while the letting her go by
me as if her sweet body did not con
tain a drop of my blood did. But her
rich dress and the haughty way In
which she held up her head overawed
me, and I did not even follow her down
*he street, though I own my heart went
after her almost as much as if she had
been my own child. What grief, what
longing must be yours! I appreciate it
now that I have seen with my eyes this
facsimile of the darling you have re
tained for your own solace.”
And this letter was signed Annie like
the rest, and bore a date only ten years
back.
After this Mr. Gryce was not aston
ished to find a change in the direction
of the epistles addressed to Mrs. Far
ley. From being sent to a small town
in Ohio, they were now Inscribed to a
certain number in Bleecker street. New
York. The widow had moved herself
and her child to the great metropolis,
and henceforth the letters recognized the
fact that a stern conflict was going on
in her breast, that, added to her daily
struggle for bread, was fast undermin
ing what little health she had.
At last, words of condolence took
the place of words of hope, as the two
struggles culminated; followed by sud
den congratulations that she had found
strength in her weakness, and had not
only been saved from breaking a most
solfemn oath, but had found in the
child who shared her life fortunes a help
and comfort that would yet compensate
her for all she had lost and suffered.
And then a sudden failure on the part
of Annie to write; with hurried lines,
manifestly from some other member of
this same Annie’s household in which
hope was expressed that Mrs. Farley
was well and news given of the invalid,
as Annie was henceforth called; winding
up with this single injunction in the old
handwriting, "Do be careful; Mildred's
happiness as well as that of the other
depend-M upon keeping things as they
are. Remember your oath.”
And the packet was exhausted. But
what had he not learned? Or, at least,
what was he not at liberty to surmise?
Procuring the date at which the first
mention of Mildred was made, and stor
ing up in his deep memory the name of
the trswn from which came these letters
Annie, he left Mrs. Olney with
a sen..© of great professional compla
cency, notwithstanding the secret dread
which sprang upon the track of a crime
destined to plunge a beautiful woman
and a noble man into a pit of shame
and dishonor.
What he did with the facts he now
gleaned and what result followed his
pursuit of the unknown Annie to her
place of residence. 1 leave him to teil
for himself In the ensuing chapter.
To Be Continued To-morrow.
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Qs.
Y OUR husband’9 sister is Jealous
of you and wants to get him
away from you. does she. little
woman? You’ve been married two
years and every time you’ve quar
reled, it’s been about that sister or
something she tried to get your hus
band to do. She makes fun of you
and he can’t see it. She gets you
into false positions and he can’t re
alize it. She makes you believe your
husband wishes he’d marry the girl
he was so sw’eet on before he met
you and you cry and tell him you
wish he’d married his old sweet
heart, so there!
Doesn’t Do Any Good.
And then he's cross and won't
speak for a day and you wish you
were dead and she always happens
In to see you Just at that time and .
gets you to tay things you don’t
mean and, oh dear, what shall you
do, and was ever a human being to
afflicted before?
There, there, little girl, don't cry.
It doesn’t do a bit of good, the cry
ing. It does harm—lots of harm—
that’s why the jealous sister is al
ways making you do it, she wants
to do you harm, poor silly, small-
minded thing, and you are playing
right into her foolish hands, you
funny little woman, you.
Turn right around in those tracks
of yours and turn to-day—thla very
hour. She wants to make you quar
rel with your husband well, don’t
you do it. Be sweet to him, sweeter
than sugar ever dared to be. Tell
him how nice he is and how good to
look, at, and how clever, and tell
him you are sorry for the old sweet
heart. She must feel dreadfully at
having to give him up—and say you
don’t blame her at all for loving him,
and tell him you think his sister Is
sweet and tell sister so, too.
Every time sister tries to hurt
your feelings, act as if you thought
she loved you sincerely and was
trying to help you and be, oh so
grateful and so good and so loving.
Tell lister how much brother loves
her, and how you admire him for
it. Tell sister how you love brother
and how anxious you are for brother
to love you. Tell brother that you
want sister to like you—and never,
never let her dream that you think
she is mean, or scheming, or Jealous,
or anything that she should not be.
Don’t understand, don’t see, don’t
realize—don’t you know that a soft
bran wall is the bet* thing In the
world to keep out a bullet? They’ve
found that out in the army. Don’t
let a lot of fool tacticians know more
than you do. Be soft, be sweet, be
yielding—and she can’t even touch
you.
Don’t Fight Back.
Fight back and she’s got you
beaten before she begins. That's
what she wants—to make you fight.
Don’t satisfy her. You won brother
from all the rest of the world full of
girls, rte must have liked something
about you to make him do that.
Find out what that something is—
and practice it clay and night and all
the time—sister couldn’t keep him
away from you whf?n he was just a
sweetheart. Why, she hasn't even a
chance now that you are his wife.
Make his home the sweetest, pleas
antest place on earth for him. Let
her do all the quarreling, all the
lighting, all the disagreeable things.
Associate yourself in his mind with
all the pleasant things—a low voice,
n light laugh, a happy smile, a good
dinner, quiet peace; love and laugh
ter. Sister can never tight that com-
blntion in all the world. Try it and
you’ll be amazed to find how it
will work.
Nearly.
"Dear Mabel,” he began, "do you love
me?
“O-h, George!”
“Don’t you, Mabel? Just a little tiny
bit?”
"Well, y-e-s, George.”
“And if I married you would your
father give us t separate establish
ment?”
"Yes, George.”
“And take me Into partnership?**
“Yes, George.”
“And would your mother keep away
from us except when 1 Invited her?”
“Seh would, George ”
“And your brothers and sisters, too?**
"She would, George.”
“And. of course, the old gent would
settle my debts?”
“Of course, George.”
“And buy an automobile and provide
you with a handsome dowry?*’
"Yes, George.”
“Darling, will you marry me?”
“No, George!”
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