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Every Day Brings to Our Door Something :l'/:al Is Good to Do and That It Never Will Come Our Way to Do Agai
- +THE GEORGIANS MAGAZINE PAGE=—
“We Three’ ---or the Human Triangle
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/ ZTal AL / ~ e bNe (1 QAL APTE KL IE W T
In the Garden of Eden the Snake Was the Third in the Triangle
4 E THREE'--sounds pleasant and chummy and
harmless. It might be a boy and a girl and a
dog. And so you shall begin happily the reading
of “‘We Three.” But in a way that is rather good for you--
you will not stay happy long! Good for you if perhaps you
are drifting into the dangerous play of tinkering with an
other man’s edifice of lovethe structure that holds all that
he holds worth having, that is made of his effort and daily
honesty, that he rears slowly, a precious shrine, about his
wife and babies and the world that they make for him!
“For ‘We Three' is a man who loves and builds, an
aimless, lightsome, lovable wife, and a clever, wrongly
trained idler, who, having nothinf more absorbing to do,
mec a finger among the airy, frail arches of the first man’s
est little castle and brings it down in a heap. He gives
you the key to all his disastrous flutterings in his first few
gages. Lays his poor cards, unknowingly, on the table. And
ere vou will read vour greatest lesson.
“There is a story for the wife of a man a finger that
points at you and bids you take your love and your husband
as soberly as you can for all your lightheartedness. There
Thus Nell Brinkley Writes of Gouverneur Morris’s GreatSz‘ory ofHamaanfemHEAßST’S MAGAZINE. sk I
Rolling Stones A
Story of To-day
By ANN LISLE.
(Novelized from the play Ly Edgar
g_e!vyn. now running at the Harris
heater. Cogyrixhl. 1915, by Interna
tional News Service, sole owner of se
rial rights.)
(Continued From Yesterday.)
“That’s not true,” interrupted Buck,
emphatically. “We've been out of
this town, and we never saw RBraden.”
“Then whete is he?’ demanded Den
nison,
“] don't know,"” said Rvder.
="Don't kiow, eh? Well, I' guess
there's no usd going any furincer with
this. Come on. Get your hats,” re
plied the detective, grimly, indeed.
“But you're wrong,” cried Dave. *I
never saw the man-—wouldn't know
him if I did see him. Honest to good
'ness, I'm giving it to you on the level,
We never killed Braden. We never
saw him!"
“You'll get the chance to tell all
that in court,” replied Dennison
quietly,
Buck Takes the Burden
Of the Case to Himiself. o
But suddenly Buck had made up
his mind. He saw what a weak \\'ll-1
ness Dave was. He, knew the boy
hangs any wife's portrait that you may stand before and look
in the eye, seeking your own lacks therein. A picture to
make you reach in terror for the lasting things, vour hus
band's safe, if sometimes busy hand, a.decent, bill-paying
existence, quiet evenings by wour own hearth, umr your
baby’s little white bed. Did you ever think that there ARE
no realities in the castle-building of an interloper?
“This one of “We Three' admits he dreams of the South
Sea Islands, and worries about the plumbing of the neigh
bors! These castles of wrong-dreaming are ‘%uring enough,
but they never have rock at the base of their lovely colonnafivs
~—only quicksand, and salt grass that bears dead-sea frui{
which, when you bite into it, pours dust into your mouih.
They who turn from the whofesome things and reach for
the dreams that are made for night-thinking, whose belicf
that they are misunderstood and living in a tame pasture
§rows monstrous and leads them to despoil their green
amiliar flelds and take to the mountin tops with an unright
ful third, can never be made to see/
“But if they would only wait! The radiant thing that
the third man seems to be will melt and fade into his actual
shape-—just a man- idle, disloyal, unhealthy, sickly colored,
unsane-—a poor figure of a thief who will nine times out of
was frightened to death and unable
to face a situation in which after all
he would never have found himself
had Buchanan Ryder stayed out of
his rather incompetent young life. He
meant to eliminate Dave from the
whole matter and pay whatever bit
ter reckoning his own recklessness
Inecutred. “Wait a minute,” he said,
“it it's goihg to be like that you'd
better take me. I'm respeonsible for
the whole thing.”
Dennison looked impatiently from
one to the other of these young fools.
“Say, which one of you did de it?"
And together the “voung fools”
chorused: “We did.”
“Just to make sure, I'll take you
both,” said Deunnison.
Norma's farewell was rather tear
ful, but Anna walked over te Buck
and laid her hand !n his with a fen
derness she had not dared express
when she feared it would weaken
Buek's determination to face the
penalty of his wrongdoeing. “You
must be brave. This is only what
we expected.”
“I won’t let him go,"” shrieked Nor
ma. “l won't let him leave me like
this”
And she was spared the necessity
of “letting him leav® her like this" by
the dramatic entry of a dishevelad
Jap Walter, followed by a pufling and
potmpous Fulsom Rice.
“Here they are—all of them. 1
guess we're just in time,” shouted
Walter vindictively.,
“Hold on a setond,\ Whe's this?"
denfanded Dennison.
At which Mr. Rice introduced him
self and Dennison exchanged compli
ments with him.
Jap Accuses Dave ;
Of Robbing the Safe.
Dennison’'s my name. I'm a de(ec-;
tive, |
“Then vou'ré the very man we
want,” erfed Rice. “I demand that
these men be arrested on the charge
of conspiracy.”
“And burglary” panted Jap.
In Modern Life the Snake Is Replaced by ““The Other Man”, a Snake More Dangerous
ten throw away his haul once he is out of the house with it!
“YOU cannot believe you can see him so-—-but as surely
as you wait you will. The shine is in your eyes, you see!
“We Three' if you read it and think-—will clear vour brain
of its twist and set your back to the glare. Whether you are
an incipient one of “Three’ or not it will give you a jog, and
a cleverly-told, truthful story.
“There’s a story for the man who is walking in a garden
where he has no right to be - playing the part of the creature
who slmke in Eve's ear long ago and took Paradise away
from her in a breath. A probe that, if only folks could
THINK hard cnou{gh about il, should cleanse and sweeten!
There is a story for the man who builds and loves—and
allows his wife to ride every day with another man!
“But the biggest story of all is for those who have
children. It V)uls vou on a platform for the world to see-—
it strips you bitterly for sending a boy into the great high
way of the world without anchorage, without a grip on some
truth, without home-gplendors to hark back to, without be
lief and a home-port of wholesome harborage back of him,
without child sahities tc reach back to as into a treasure
bag. to hold himself steady and in the middle of the roud
when he comes to the gusty places that twist his mind about
“What burglary?” questioned Den
nison,
“Don’t you believe a word he says.
He was after the money himself, but
we beat him to it,” cried Dave, to
give some incriminating evidence.
. Jap glared at him and went on
sérenely. “This man broke into my
office and robbed the safe of the
weekly pay roll.”
“Your office? Ha! Ha!" chortled
Buck Ryder.
“Why, he worked for me,” said
Dave. “Just an employee, that's all.
And now Miss Norma Noggs broke
in with a childish c¢ry, “They can't
arrest you. 1 won't let them!"
“My child, this man is a criminal,”
said Rice smoothly.
“1 don't care,” eried Norma of the
Auffy head. *I love him and I'm go
ing to marry him.”
“And forfeit your inheritance? 1
can't pérmit you to do such a thing,”
reported Rice, ‘
“l" don't care anything about the
old money. 1 just want my Jerry.”
“It's mighty sweet of vou to feel
'that way, Norma, but I wouldn't be
much good to vou in jail,” said Dave,
trying to carry it off with a manly
air.
“That's common gense,” said Rice,
approving of the impostor for the
first time in his own knowledge. “Do
your duty, Dennison, and arrest this
man for burglary.”
“Just a minute, Mr. Rice. I've got
thesé men on a more serious charge."
“YWhat could be more serious?” ask
ed Rice. .
“Murder,” said Dennison, stuccinctly,
“Murder!” cried Jap and Anna,; al
most ih unison, while Norma could
find nothing better to do than teo
burst into loud sobs.
“Whose murder?’ demanded Rice,
praetically.
But Anna had staggered across the
room and got Buchanan Ryder's hand
in hers.
“Theé murder of Jericho W. Bra
den,” announced Dennison, in a tone
of calm self-satisfaction.
; “Oh, that's impossible,” interrupted
Jap.
from this to that. Human nature reverts to childish things.
“My mother never said that,” is a man's unspoken cry. And
if his mother never said that—-it is the WRONG way. The
dog of a quarrelsome family shows his teeth abroad.
“The boy without standard and some fixed idea of where
the line between right and wrong lies is a restless drifter—
seeking and never finding, unable to find the solid middle of
the road, blown from hedge to ditch, full of unstable dreams,
a pebble in the greal cogs of life, unfixed, a menace star
drift! And to be pitied. And fought shy of if you happen to
be a whimsical, friveling wife.
“Send your small ship of a boy out of port to the hi?h seas
with all you can give him of a wholesome home of fixed
custom and ideas. For he can reach back over the years to
that and find help. For no matter what changeable winds
come, Home’s wa¥V-—if it had any-——will seem Sle right and
the besl. And there will always glimmer through his puzzles
the ideal that he set out with.
“Here is the big idea in ‘We Three’—that the home with
an unflxed, aimless existence and a clouded ideal, turns out
a man without philesophy, a rudderless bark that becomes
in time a dcrelict that rams an honest, harbor-bound ship
that knows its trail on the trackless sea!”
“Why is it?" asked the detective.
Mr. Walter smoothed his ruffled
hair%and smiled pleasantly.
“Because I'm Braden.”
“You!" gasped Buck.
“Jericho Braden, of Walla Walla,”
continued the erstwhile Walter.
“Gee, but I'd like to believe you,”
breathe@ Mr. Fulton, fervently.
“Now, Norma, dear, you see why
you mustn't do anything rash,” said
her guardian. “If you pergist in mar
rying this young man the entire es
tate would revert to Mr, Braden.”
Norma Loses All Taste
For the Estate.
Norma dried her tears and beamed
again on a world that was not proving
impossibly eruél to her, after all.
“I don't care; I love him, and I'm
going to marry him:”
“My dear child,” protested Rice,
“you must——4 0y
“Mr. Walter” interrupted. “Hold
on, Rice, You mustn’t try to force
this girl."”
“You have a verv good reasom for
By NELL BRINKLEY.
Copyright, 1915, latersationsl News Besvice,
net doing so, but T sha'nlt permit such
a sacrifice,” replied Rice, sarcasti
cally.
But Dennison had not enjoyed being
shoved entirely out of the game of
which he had been absolute master.
“Don’t be in such a hidrry, please. I
don’t know anything about this other
thing, and I don't want to, but I'm
interested in finding Bradefi.:'
(To Be Continued.)
When Baby Comes
Refore baby comes there is a period
whén experienced mothers are glad to
aid the expectant mothers. They urge
}the use of Mother's Friend, obtainad
at any drug store, because this safe,
harmiless external remedy ig positively
necessary, since it brings rellef in eas
ing the muscles, cards, tendofis and
ligaments - involved, and unnecessary
pain is avoided; thus it serves to ease
the mind and has a beneficial efféct on
the nervous system. In mafy caseées
Laused, morning sickness and otßer
distresses are aveided.—Advertise
ment.