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I could coin . _ feeling of relief when she ‘ir jeakmg of IIGI' _-‘ 3 ou IW' “"1"” was0n_:th%t!uBtt:ea‘t;lli0wwli:g she was beyond lovers s °°3|,:::ll,il‘:§l`g was sure. nEvei°¢;tt ire ma|n,.tl at home iiiore oh Plli “Viale "’°‘“" "" me deugti Ili' html :uptime she used to ZlV9“d° 5 I e u e invited. Aiitl he ha olne esgt xcrs to renitiin out. Ihad earine H0 Pak? a f“" “‘"“° ““5' ‘"° °§i£§.‘;““.¥..“”..; 91| AHC? and “ne h d to entertui play. lou see, it is al' Vh V ll _,_ middle aged husband yi ell lou are ,V.(,,mg_ lf you inyite young People lie is bored. yall 11;'-0 people liis age you are bore .V dp; ll doesn't seein to inakrz niuci] h _ meme tn plnylng bi dgeV wiet er one in young or old If they can play X, fairly good gatne. ‘I tried in other ways. 100. 10 llliake our lioiiie attractive. I had pracgsgd ,tally s‘iice he gave me t-he ii y grand piano, atid occasionally we would have a musical evening. I had read somcwliere that .t was the wii'e's fault. if her husband spent his evenings out - that it was becau_se he was noi. interested ,and entertain- ed nt home. But I'don t believe ivlio- ever wrote that was young and had .inarrietl a iniddle-aged mail with his habits all fixed. A club is a habit like anything else. At least his club was like Ev- erett. I tried not to be unhappy when hu said he was going there. tried to think how mucli better it was than Vlf lie were going to_see some woniiiii-like \\ alter I\ciiip did,--but often I init abused, neglec- tt-d, bcraitsc ot' that old club which- seenied to I-nltl_ so ilriicli of interest for him. A V "l declare, it' you area t. jealous oitliat poor iiiaii's club,” Alice Sloane wit-li wlioiii, I had lieroiiie very intiiiiatc, tent-ictl_ I had been gruiiibliiig that I couldn't get Ev- erett ttiplay t-at-ds that evening be- rtiitst- he Iitttl telephoned nie he n-otiltl not b-i lieiiie for tliitiier; that l;t- was uoitii: to tliiic ui the club. 'i"ht~ii she titlded: “Sei'iously. Sim- drti, I think it is better for men anti wmiicii both occasionally to spend :tn ovmiiiig or several of them for tliiit iiiattor, apart. We get stale. \\'li_v, I liczirti ti woman say the other thiy tliitt slit 'knew what her hus- baiiti was going to stty before hc cvvti elicits.; his mouth! 'l`liitik how :ii\'l`llI tiiat would he! I :ini always i'atiit>i° glad when Diiaiic gives me an crciilng to tiiyselt' -- that is. of course, provided I kilow where lie is. ; 5% iii? I ` '~ ' '___ ` Y 7- __ _V - V / _ ,_ ~"'s f - - --VV .f 1_;_. Y -I _ _ __ ,VW- ;*i on fem in lltll appmranetgmfndf °-\_\ I J Don't hurbordeltructive "nu among' \ hurteeth. Use MENNEWB CBEAH DENTIFRICE. It dutrrlyl Barml °-Dvlialm ruth and keen the cav- ities of the month also and nal. ltlennstfsi cR€iSt*ri"~b“e|itl'»|i_‘.-Vgice I fuss about and look over ii lot of rubbish, and tr? new ways of comb- ing lliy hair - and a thousand and one things I wouldii`t do Il he were at lionic.' "But you could do all those things during' the day, and so have the evening together," I objected. "No, I couldii't! I'iii always being interrupted. Then, too, it isn‘t half the fun to do them days. But aside front all thai, Sandra. I love Duane. I doil’t want him to tire of me. I would feel terribly to have him say he knew what Iwtis going to say every time I opened my moiiili, as that wotiiun dill oi' liei' husband. I try to study uittl read too when 1 ani alone. A woman cuii't get by nowaduyn` with the ease she used to There are too many of us. and some are too clever by far." “You funiiy girl. I didn't know you were so serious." - "Seriousl tliat’s only sensible. By the way. I have joined a morning reading club. Woii't you go too ” “Of course I will! l'd be delighted too." Then I added: "That-is, If Ev- erett tloesn't object. Ile is rather particular and dlfiicult about some tliiiigs-wlici-e l go._,,wlt,Vli whom I associate. He thinks me `a. baby yet, even if I have a big l.ioy.’.’ "I‘iii flattered that hejthinlcs nie all right," Aliccwsiiid ltiugliingly. as she rose to go. “Don‘t forget to ask hitii about the t-lass; _and don’t bc jealous ot’ his club." ~ I‘Il ;‘ettteiiiber; and l'll try not. to he Jealoiis." i JUNIOR HAS A Nt-.W NURSE t‘Il.-\|"l‘I‘}lt t‘.\.\IV. , .\ly boy was two years old. Miss Lane liittl renialtied tliitil lie wits nieiitlcd _ Miss Pierce was ti little younger than I. She was pretty, ngi'eeable and congenial. I was delighted at hrst was obliged to accede her capable. Junior had had several slight ill- nesses, aside froili cutting his teeth and Miss Lune. had carried him through without any trouble; yet with it good deal of anxiety on my part. ‘Ile was it titie big boy for his ago, and so cunning. When he was two I said that was the cunning age, and tliei°eafter, every year, until lie wits seven I repeated tho suiite thing! Miss Pierce iitted in our household from the ilrst. Mrs. Gray and Hetty liked her .is well as the other ser- vants. Tlis ha-by-took to her :itz once; us also Vdi;1 Everett. __ "I think she is going to do nice- ly." he said ti few days aftei' her arrival. “She seems intellIgent,is§ good to look at, and will be an ud- ditioil to the household." "Yes - I think -- she will tl0.`. "l rejoined, thinking only that he had said “she is good to look at." Suppose I had brought someone itlto the liuiise only to have Ev- erett. fall in love with tier? Net yet had I stopped fretting because I felt I had not possessed the same kind of love he _gave Leola. I was ltl0rB` sure of his affection as time passed but. it was quiet, undcmonstrativs rl --I L_ I The True Specific against Couslls TAROL Made from extracts of Tai' and Cod Diver Oil. Gives prompt relief in cases of Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Grippe, Wll‘>0Pill8 *Cough and all other ailments of thc respiratory tract. V 01| Sole Everywhere. DR. ED. MOIIIN In C0., Limit:-ll. Quebec. Canldln-_ ` _ __ , i ---vs_! _ _ V ? in-' _ - kry. ` 20 iiiontlis, tlicii Everett had yielded to my persuzislons and hired 11 youiig wotnaii. a. graduate from a babies' Iios-phal, anti highly recom- IE? have so pleasant ti person arouii instead of Miss Latte. whom I never had learned io like although I affection whiiei craved the passion t still kept, I do not pretend to ex- plain why. I knew every word by heart. and I slrely did not intend to show it _to him. I never had told hiiii of the visit from the wife of the man who had of that strange visitor who had come and gone, like a ship in the night. (then it was with pity, as I visual- Hed again 'ber face-from which Vail joy seemed to have fled. The woman who loving a inan, living wttlrhlm, had watched him die with the name of careless. pleasuredovlng Leola on his lips! ' W _‘ "Someday I- may tell him. “I said to -myself when thinking of Leola. f'Bome day l‘lll tell hoin how that other woman called her ‘a vanipire,‘ Perhaps then lie? won't love her so Well," but -is yct I had not the cour» age to do so. Now my jealousy was again arous- ed. I watched Miss Pierce closely. yet I could not see that she sought to- attract Everett in any way. But the slightest attention to her on lils part would make me furious, and terribly unhappy. . “Have I done anything' to offend or annoy you, Mrs. Graham? she asked one day when Everett had gIveii'Iier some little thing-a rose, I tliliik it was. He had brought me a bex of flowers. I was out of the room. Wlicn I came in neither of them heard nie. Miss Pierce was ex- claiiliing upon the -beauty of the flowers and lic selected one and .gave it to lier. I had tunicd and crept tluietly from the room. When Everett brought me the 'flowersp I tookt them most uiigraciously, scarcely thank- ing him. He looked hurt, but said nothing. Icouln not act _natural with Miss Pierce, hence her _ques- tion. “No, you have done nothing." the rose was pinned at her waist, and to save my life I oculd not avoid look- ing at it. She flushed, but said no more. A little time afterward when she cattle to me about something, It had disappeared. I felt ashanied, but its usual apol- ogized to myself by muttering: “I couIdn’t lieip it," that was my plea when I did such things. It was my nature to be jealous, and so I could not help it. I_ wished urdently that I could make every girl iuiderstzuid, to give way to jealous impulses is n sure road 'to unhtippilieas. To love, to trust - that is happiness. ' l RGSE AGAIN ' l (IIIAPTER CXXVI. ~ _ Rose had gone home at last__ Gone to stay--so she said. She had not yet asked for ti divorce. I, for one, felt she never would. There is some- thingin a. small town hringingnp that still made divorce seen; a sort of disgraceful thing, although in cities it was scarcely a lline days wonder. Tlieii too, Rose loved Walter Kemp badly as he treated her. And _wlieti a woiiitln loves a nimi she "clings to any hold she may have up- on him as long as she can. "Her heart is near the IJi'ealtiug- nohit," Mother wrote. “‘Slie seems to have lost all interest in everything. Her father .wants Rose and het mother to travel. I-Ie cannot leave his V business, however, and Mrs. Graildoii hates to leave hint. I think Rose feels chtigriiied amd embarras- sed because ot' her old i'rlends.| There is no need; there is nothing but sympathy for her in their young hearts. I tlilnk it will be ti lesson to some of tlieiu. A girl's parents are Iier best t'rlends. If Rose had con- sulted hers, Iie,- father would have looked up Mr. Kenlp’s record, and front what Mrs; Grantlon tells me of him. I alll sure Rose would not have married him. New site is ashamed and humiliated." There was miicli more in Mother's letter, but that was all about Rose. I sat right down and wrote her a long letter. By and by I would ask Everett to let me have her for a short visit. It would do her good, perhaps. 'And I was so sorry for her. When I suggested it to Everett he offered iio opposition to my plan, although he did not appeal- particular- ly pleased. ` “It will bring back all that hap- pened while slie was here before," he reiil’ndcd me. lie had always re- sented Iier running away to get mar- ried while visiting nic. He never had quite iiclicvetl that her ftttliorV did not blame him iii some way, or think he might have .prevented the niarrluge, ttlthougli Rose had told them Everett didn’t even know she was acquainted with Walter. But we iiecdii‘L have worried. When I wrote Rose asking her to make me it visit, she replied refus- ing, and giving as_ one reason just. what Everett had suggested: that it would bring Walter's courtship back too vividly. ' "I doil’t feel that I' could bear it - not just yet. 'l`|ien too. I ani not - -»"""""""' _ GUARDI§N"""‘ f - , /_ ~» good com lor anyone these present everything looks dark to me. What _VIV shqlad do without them. a. time, andqth:;¥fY0uifor the invi- tation. _lt is 3 you to want me »_;,_-9_2 i ate expression be gave his first wife. day|,‘St|'l'tg§'.` Tirbaps afternf* have - 75;_‘_;" "'~' _ _ The |1019 |1186 f0\ll\d B-Hd which been with father and mother longei ' '* -1' llild frllliled me B0 -llrwcll GSODY. 1 I shall grow more cheerful, but at _' 'I _ after the way~I'obused your hospital- 'V ff, loved Leola. Occasionally I thought tty,"' 1" » ° Itbought site would feel that way," was Everett'u only remark when I read bint that portion of her letter. '_ _ . “Poor” Rose. She was such ti gay, fun»im/ing girl. She was the livellest of as all." lint itosc, ci-fryrlting was pushed Ironi my mind soon after I receiv- eddier letter, because of my jealous suspicions of Miss Pierce. One morning I was a bit late in getting down to breakfast. She and Everett were in close conversation In the hall. Their heads were close together and they were talking in an undertone so that I could dlp. tingiilsli nothing they said. When they ‘heard nie they sprang apart, I thought guiltily, and I saw foro she turned and bade me good- morning. I responded in a freezing tone, at which she gave nic a deprecatitig glance and moved on. Everett bur- ried himself in ills paper, so did not notice my silence. He kissed me when he MMV prom. filing to be IIOIJJQ Carly, then went out whistling gayIy_ Wliut did he cure If I had been 1iurt by his at- »tention to Miss Pierce in tlieliousc where I wus iiiistress? lie was as bi1_d_-alnios'-as Walter Kemp, I said in niy t,liougIits._ And all day I kept to myself, ioiiely and' miser- able. tho deamon Jealousy again in Possession _ ` ANOTHER UNHAPPV DAY CHAPTER CXXVII. Late iii the afternoon i ordered Vthe car and went for a ride. I went alone. I had noticed what I thought on eager look on Mitts Pierce's face, and so out of sheer perverslty I would not even bake Junior and leave her free to do as she might wish for an hour or two. ~ lneither knew or cared where I went.. I leaned back and nursed my jealous thoughts. It had been, al- ways would be, Leola, that first wife. Then it had been Irma Barton. Now it was to be Marta Pierce. What a name for a dependent, almost it ser- vant, I thought sneerIugly_,--'Martu.’ Surely Everett's.- penchant for odd names was always catered to in every- woman he seemed to care for at all. Leola, Irma, Sandra and Mar- ta.. - ` I 'lt was iiearly time to dress for dinner when I -returned, no liappiei- because of my Tide. I realized there was- an unusual activity in the din- ing room, but if I gave it a. thought at all it occurred to me that Mrs. Gray- was- talking to the servants, perhaps tliitiiiig fault with smile- tiiing, I played a t'cw` moments with .luiiioi', then went into my own room to dress, That eager light was Still in Marta. Pierce's eyes, What could it mean 1', I heard her croon- ing'6ve,- Junior as she ptit him to beth und thy lips curled. Was she so happy because of Everett’5 atten- t'Ioits,' she must needs sing? Right then and there I made up my mind she should go. I would say nothing to Everett. But the next day I would start looking up another nurse. Of course site must, bc coin- petent. llut she need be neither pretty, nor young. I almost regretted letting Miss Lane go. Site might have staid with us a Ilundred years and I shoul‘dn't have to feel jealous of her. _ ' In a spirit ol` perveisity I put on the most unbecoming dress I had. When I looked at myself in the inir- ror i-i picture of Miss Pierce camo before ine. and I quickly took it oil' and calling Betty to help ine, I dressed as elaborately as if I were going out.. “You look lovely!" lletty said when I was ready lo"go down. What allctl them all? I-letty loo had an eager look in her eyes. Sup pressed excitement fairly radiated ways miserable and I knew il, Bu I was iii one of my moods of self pity, In which I could see nothing but the dark outside of the clouds, anti had no wish to see the silver lining which is always to be found if we look for It. I heard Everett come in. Why didn‘t Ile come upstairs I crept to the nursery door and listened; Had Miss Pierce gone down, and were they again talking contldntally? , I heard her iiiovlng about .the nur- sery and returned to my mom slightly relieved. Then after a few moments Everett came up the t-ttntrn vrhistling gally. “Why all this elegance?" he naked as 'he kissed nw wltli unusual ten- derness. » "Oh, I felt like dressing up, tlinvn all!" I ntiswtwctl itngraclonsly. We always di'essed fin* dinner, but nn. I it-is wt-_ were antitrust 1 itsiamii put "` ` ` i V _ _ on my very best diitiier clothes ns I It takesia had doiio that night. "Yoit .lofik w~i~_v taliariiilnlg, but - Q _ » o r - not very Iiapp_\'_ Anything gone __ lolnt 0 Wraps?" » » ' ~ -“No~no'_liiiig_" ' l V _ _ _ “'i\hen l'li i-tin in and-say ~g¢,0,;. ` _ _ ‘V night to Jiuiitir. und get intojny tugs Mrs Gray said dinner was nearly ‘.. Ii Take the advantage of the Up-To-Dfals 'i' ji" Blake H ready." V ' I started to follow him into tha __ and th0t‘0l1gll‘Cl0HlllUg lflallt °f u it of V V _ Vtijitrseryi 'rites i iniwti. Na. t' wuutti ict them ht- together If he wanted to mek im i her ‘S sp I I _ ‘VK ' : VhiinVbyegoiti; ith, iinndi cloulndilight 132,; _ soinnt_ltiiigV!'i I listened. Gfgaf GOCOPQC Stl°B€i \ Dlllyed .lust il moiiiont wth » JVu‘nioi', I Ho left the iinrsery door open lie then I tllviiicily beard bltn say. You did its I nuke you tar - i Charlottetnwn V , "Yus. Everything I; all ready." 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