^PUBYM.AYRES Thirteenth Instalment ? Hmu cotlasaa aad b aaat to tka coantn tk? ?ara of Sr. DoaS Ratkbooc. who lira near his lips move at be tried tc male, but he could find no words. Then suddenly ha went down on Ml knees, encircling her with his arms, hiding his face against her. "Don't send me sway, Diana. . . . 1 love yow sa . . . HI do anything ym want aiiji thing in the wide world? it tfibr you won't send me away." !>?? Diana tore his hands from about her. i "If? too late," she said again, and ? then, breathlessly, "Don't make me [ hate you, Dennis. t He stood op, his face convulsed with ; agitation, bat now she no longer pitied t him: she was onljr conscious of that I sick, ashamed feeling that was almo?t > physical. : " ? _ , ^ He went OB pleading, imploring, , reminding her of all rt>ey had been i to one another? all they would yet be. 1 Diana put her hands orer her ears, i She feh that it w^s more thM she I could bear; she felt as ttl?e were try | ing to strip her nskfd instead ai trying Alreatty the felt a* if London tepr. ?rated her to completely from Uill Starling and the cottage that it aaemed as i I the could never really have been there, other time* ft teemed as if she were just in London marking time for soma miracle to happen that would five bar back the happiness for which she longed She had heard nothing of Rathbooe since his letter: the letter to which the had Written a dozen? twenty re plies and destroyed them alL What was the \ue of writing to him. He would not answer. Mils Starling had denarted for her pilgrimage to Normandy with fifty "Don't ?Sdm^way^Dian^^^^IoT^Ottj^^ toeow and protect tar. as Rathbono would hare done. ???*??* "iMtbrolcfnly: If you only knew bow you're hurt fflf me. He misunderstood that, eacerly grajping it a* a sign that he was to be forgjTw; be made the fatal mistake of trying to take her in his anas. Diana fled away from him, porting the width of the little room between theia staring at him with wild eyes. TJcn"t touch me? don't ever dare to touch me again r she stammered They stood hwkiag af one another y '*.$?* ^ mortal enemies; then waterman said thickly: "If I go ?way now Diana . . . I shall never come bade.* Diana felt her lip* twitching into a smite, bat she repressed it and an swered gently ? "I'm sony. Dennis-good-bye." Waterman left the cottage with as rnnch dignity as he could command. relied so often before, and she had always been sarry. Soon? to-morrow of, . ?HAPTER XX She was stffl hi LidolTi ritfc V? ' b* ducovwe*', wonderful ? ?*wie who, bo ihe declared. ?lno, ? could cure ft ; so fcS "IgZite* 1 DJ-TbHiA on her rftloi V* ' >iy.the *??">? cold. pounds in her pocket. She had written a pathetic note of gratitude to Diana and had sent her a picture postcard after her arrival, of the sea beating against a gigantic rock. The Creature had ihed a few tear* when "he said good-bye to Diana, and Jenny had wept copiously. Diana had felt like weeping herself when she looked from the window of Mrs. Gladwyn's big Ralls to wave Rood -bye to her little group of friends : Mr. Shnrcy, Jonas, Miss Starling, Jen ny, and one or two women from the neighbouring cottages. ? s Since then life had gooe on very much the same as before. She had not seen Dennis Waterman again, bat she had been told that he had followed his wife to Paris. Poor Linda! Diana had heard who the gray haired man was for whom she had been waiting that night at Palmeiro's: Mrs. Gladwyn had got the whole star] complete before she had been back in London a couple of days. ^ k* "His name is Anthony Jevoos," she informed Diana. "Apparently he and Linda Waterman have known one an other for years." "A married man?" Diana asked without much interest. "His wife has been in a lunatic asylum for fifteen years," Mrs. Glad wyn said with relish. 1 always think it is iniquitous, tying a man to a lun atic. That is a case where divorce is stUsed ? if it ever is." she add ed righteously. "Ferhaps he didn't want to divorce her," Diana said. "Well, be is free at last, poor man," her aunt went on. "She died about twa months ago, when the Watermans were in America, so I suppose the next thing we shall hear will be that there is a divorce there." She looked at her niece sharply as she spoke, bat Diana's face was in different Diana and Mia. Gtadwyn were din s' at the Fosters' that night Diana had only consented to fo un der extreme pressure. She disliked Mrs. Foster: she was a "climber" of the most flagnul type who shamelessly "collected celebrities," and who scan | daliicd them as toon as they had left [her boose. Jonas 'had written her that Rath Wl house was up for sale, and Donald was going to live in AmeAca. Diana permitted herself on* moment I^t bear it long She greeted her hostess with a gut smile and discovered her aunt tnfartahiy seated in a big chair with a large cocktail and a plate of caviare at her eSww. Diana looked around the room with out Mfeswst The same old crowd one always met everywhere. Diana spoke tame* two of them and refused a cocktail. People were still arriving, ? starchy footman announcing their names at the door in stentorian tones. "Sir William and Lady Marley." Lady Marley had been a chorus girl, and there had been a violent love af fair with a minor prince to her credit before she caught old Sir William on the brink of Hie (rave and suddenly became respectable "Dr. Donald Rstbbooe??" Cortmwd Next Week SENATOR BAHKI.KV DEUVERS | BRISTLING KEYNOTE SPEECH , (Continued from page one) | able and unequlTocal. There la no I reason why the people ihonld be de ceived or deluded. There ia no reas on why a political declaration ahould look In every direction and eee^notfe 3a order, therefore, to -$btal" . the nteeent will of ttm American of snlreraal c. sc &ka controversy, this convention ihonld In the platform hare to be a4orted recommend the passage by C'Sngreee of a resolution repealing the Eigh teenth Amendment and IU submls ?ton to the p?>ople of- the mtetf" through convention! whose delegates shall b* <$ioMt? trpoa tMs Issue alone "If the people are to paaa again equivocal tertfesThtf to make; their decision lntelllgenVtind certain.^ m "If their verdict of retaining the .Eighteenth AmenA mqnL is Hut Conetltntton, let ere* y true citizerffof the nation accept the decision a oft*, abide by It In letter ?aA In spirit. Rcmsl VeHlrt. "It the Twtoct shall -be lor the repeal of the"?HWW?fBl ' tBen let e-rtxj brand* At the ?atfcnal. town meil eiefc&2\l ?, Jowrf, poMess to protapt fli f&tefc in the obaerrimce and enforcement of law which they shall enact to CO? ymsi " ' 1 ' ' ? tral, reg?late or prohibit Um tra?c In Intoxicating llqaort." The temporary chairman went back to 1?I0 and reviewed the In tervening years of Republican lead ership. The Harding administration he described aa "the darkeat chapter ot public botrayal.ln the hlatory of this or any nation.** On President Coolldge and Secre tary Mellon he heaped the blame for "an orgy of speculation and Infla tion that had no foundation In real values." "Stocks were manipulated, prions pyramided, then split up, then dis tributed among Innocent people un der the opiate ot fabulous financial hopes built up by the. most gigantic campaign of official ballyhoolng ever witnessed In the annals of Amerlcau history," he exclaimed. Under President Coolldge. Berk ley said, expqnsBft of the aatlonal government lncrea^pd "more than $660,000,000." He gave credit to the present Democratic House for reducing President Hoover's re quests for appropriations "by more than J100.000, 000." row, Wiley Perry, W. O. Stone. the Hsmdsrson * Cedar Rock, or Ivy or 'ivory Road, bounded as Lji derson ft Cedar Rock or Ivy or Ivory Road, corner for Lot No. I, thence SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of the power tDd authority contained In that cer tain Deed, of Trust executed to the undersigned Trustee on the 13th day of May, 1981, by Julius Lehman, Wid ower, which instrument is recorded la the Public Registry of Franklin County In book 299, page 75, default having been made in the payment of the jiote therein secured, and at the request of the holder of said note, I will, on MONDAY, AUGUST 1ST, 1932 at ct about the hour of 12: o'clock noon, sell at public auction at the courthouse door ia Louisburg, N. C., to the highest bidder for cash, that certain lot or parcel of land situate In Louldburg Township, Franklin County, North Carolina: Beginning at a stake on the nor thern border of sidewalk on north side of Nash Street in the Town of louisburg; thence .along said border of said street S. 49 l-2