?AI/uiBAecr‘C.SAMesTai X tenth instalment She raised her hand, holding the glass, toward her lips, but when the hand reached her Ups there wasn’t any glass in it. For Dick very firmly, indeed, had taken it from her fingers. “You’ll not drink to that toast, Bllen,’’ he said, and he wasn't, now, the same man who lad kissed her a moment before. “In tact, you’ll not drink to any toast. In fact, you’U not drink at aiir Tony set down his glass so carefully, upon a table, that it asight hare been a bomb. He walked across the room rather slowly, and as he came the crowd fell away from him. The man who made the music put his accordion behind him—it was a good accordion, he never risked it! Tony came across the floor— ke came so slowly that it seem ed as it he must be tired, and he didn’t speak until he was so close to Dick that their coats were almost touching. “After all,” he said, and his chin had an ugly line to it. ‘‘tak as they come. In studios or 10 front parlors—call ’em drawing rooms, if you like—^have it your own way! I’ve done my kissing early—and so’ve you, if I ^can tell anything about it—but El len hasn’t. Bllen’s different from the rest of us. She—her name was Church before she married your boy friend—and the name suited her! Ellen hasn’t gone a- round kissing. She’s kepi away from that sort of thing. She’s the kind that always leaves \the party, and goes home early . . Jane sipped very daintily from her glass. It might have been molten fire that she sipped. “auil,*’ she said, "it does seem strange, doesn’t it? I mean another man giving orders to a girl on her wedding day. Kiss ing her—on her wedding day!” “That’s the way I feel about it myself.” growled Tony. ■ “Of course, 1 couldn’t have ex pected that you’d understand,’’ Dick said. He turned on his heel, and then swiftly he turned back again. “I wonder if you’ll agree with me. Brander,” he said, “in this, at least! I’d like to tell you that fng it by and large, Ellen is mar ried to me. not to you. Whether! I think Ellen’s all in. You know, she drinks, or not, is no business i your.self. that she was crying of yours, and me.” It concerns us. Ellen when you came to my studio, to call for her. She was crying be- Dick had set Ellen’s glass up- i cause ’she was nervously ex on a nearby-table. It bubbled, all 6y itself, and where the struck it. it was golden. hausted. Tliafs why 1 didn’t light ' want her to do any drinking— I she’s never had a drink, you see. “I should say so, too, old man.’’; in the whole of her life. The he said. “.All of the worthwhile things in the world concern onlv you two, at this moment, food (lod. boy—I';n older than yon are. and I'm very lon.l of Ellen, and when I see you mak ing fools of yourselves . . .“ poor kid’s shot quite to pieces. I think, Ttrander. that I’d better But, i take her home- “ Claire hadn’t said anything for a long time. Hut site spoke, now. “I told yon, Dick,'' she said, “a while hack, that this wasn't “You wouldn't consider it l'.c-|ymir scr.ap. I'm saying it again, mg foolish.’' Tony asked, “this j For heaven's sake, lay off this business of ki.ssing a married ' Inittiiig in! " Toinati when her husband was \ Ellen was solihing. Round Tight here'? When he'd scarcely j tears were creeping down her bad the time—’" the hoy's voice cheeks. shook, suddenly, “to ki.s.s her- “Hick's right,” .«he wa.s sob- himself ..." ' hing. “I don't want cliampagiie ""I'd say it was darn toolish." j —ami I don’t want to .stay at Diek answered. “I’d say it wa.s a i U’.is party, either. I want to go so-mrietely dreadful lapse, I’m i away from liore! .lane, she’s ashamed of myself. Brander. and ■ right, too. We’re different—” I apologize to you and to Elien. ft’s only that I’m so fond of El len--" The girl in the white satin frock, who leaned so nonchalant ly against the bar, was interrupt-j him. ing. “I want "Thai'.k goodness for that!" said Gay. Tony WU-. s^nritig a! Ellen. She was con.-icio’us of the stare, althongh she wa.sn’t looking at to go “Besides,” she drawled, “kiss- here.” she repeated away from wildly, “I ing doesn’t mean quite so much I want to go home. to you folk who are Bohemians. I “After all, it there's any see- Love isn’t such a staple thing! ing home to be done, I’ll do it! with you. With ns— people like Tony and me—it’s more import ant. We don’t take sex as a mat ter of course . . .“ Ellen’s .pyes were filliag. It was twenty-four hours .since she had met Tony, sTnee she had first met him—it was twenty- four lifetimes. She couldn’t speak. Neither could Dick, but a marnoii to flat, she After all Ellen’s me!" said Tony. “But.’’ Dick’s tone was “but man, she acts as if scarcely knows you!" Tony’s face was an ugly mask. “Whether she acts that way or not.” he .said, “I'm her hus band!’’ And— “>10 matter how I act." said white rage possessed him. But Eilen. “and no matter whether Gay, coming forward with an we’ve been foolish or not-—that’s empty, slim stemmed glass in her | beyond the point. Tony's right- hand, was protesting. he’s my husband. He’ll take me “I’d like you to know,’’ said home,’’ Gay.'and her face was a saucy] With her head erect, she walk- gamin’s face, “that some of us | ed past Claire, past Gay who had take sex as it comes, and kisses j been kind, and Sandy, and even etip dMkt ev%A itesM Diek’p M Into liet copt, pad oppned thp. door that led from ^thp 8pm Sonci to tho ptroet. ” ’ . The ptrpiks were pulet It was, 1^ter than they, either of tteai. had thought.^ Tony drove ...ente- fulll^] until he reached the broad glittering , avenue that bisected the city. "Wlhere toT*’ he anW,tloned, then. Ellen's eyes, which were al most inclined to droop with fa tigue, opened very wide. “Why, you know r^y address,’’ she said. “Take me there.” .. Tony’s voice was cold and hard. "I suppose you’re too inno cent to realise,’’ he said, “that people usually go to hotels on their wedding night. This is supposed, you know, to be our honeymoon.” “But,’’ Ellen's voice was neith er cold nor hard,' "but—how can It be, Tony? We—-aU evening it's been so.strange—^1 day! We can’t he married, just ^ because I’m wearing a ring. I can’t be your wife Just because—” "I thought,” said Tony, “that my ring was supposed to be enough, as long as my worldly goods went with it—that seems to be the consensus of opinion, too. And this evening—begin ning at the moment I found you in Alven’s arms, ending vrhen he kissed you (oh, hang his feel ing that you’re a little sister!)— seems to prove that you were being as honest, about your emo tions. as you said you were!’’ Ellen’s jaw was clamping down hard. “As tar as Dick goes,’’ she ■said, “1 don’t think he acted very much less like a brother than your Jane acted like a sis ter. I don't see that you’ve got any special license to talk as you | do!” I Tony’s jaw, also, was set. j “I guess.” ho said, “that we’d better go to your room, at that. We’ve got to talk this thing out. you and I.’’ They reached her room. It was ] siu'li a cool, sweet litllo room I Hiat tlm tears rushed to Ellen's j eyes as she switched on the light. | She’d bought everything in that | room, hor.self—she’d made the i curtains and the dayhed cover; i she’d painted the furniture. It! wa.s such a prim little room—it was virginal, almost. A man' like Tony could never understand luiw mncii it stood for. Tony sank down into a deep chair. He siglied. again. This time, however, it was an appre-* elptivt Ilf b. alcp.” lie iiildr "vrb«i get hare!* ^ EUpb WPS remevin gber hate ^ and the Jacket that- aha wora.fT •1 Wtib," might have Md t. tra liked "'Vn athar, But rm"titni« tt Sba ran bar flngara through bar . “Do you know.'* be said ,;..at last, atratehjng bit' legs out la front ot'btffl, “thera’g.baan'a lot of'. excitement and drinking and smoking, but we haven’t bad anything to eat since luncheon. Maybe we!r^ hungry. Maybe that’s what’s wrong with us.” Lite was like that. It caught you up to the heights of hyster ia. It lowered you gently into the caiin of homely things. , I could make us tried egg sandwiches,”’ said Bllen. “Be hind that screen there la a kitch enette sort of arrangement. I often cook my own supper, and always my ewn breaktMt There’s milk, too!’’ Tony wiggled his toes, in their shiny brown shoes. “That sounds swell," he said. So Ellen retired behind--the siereenjand^it WHn’t long before the pleasant sputter of trying— and the even more pleasant, odor of melting butter and toasting bread, began to drift from around the screen. Tony sntfed appre ciatively. “We’re keeping house al ready,” he called out, to Ellen. It was as if there had never been any melodramatic, ugly scenes. Ellen called back: “I like this a lot beter than the Sans Souci.’’ And Tom answered: “I’ll say I do, too!” They ate their sandwiches eagerly, and drank their milk, from gayly painted five and ten cent store trays. There were olives, too, and cookies, and pre served peaches. It wac like a party—a juvenile sort of a party. Ellen, as she bit into her sand wich, knew that she had been ravenous. Maybe that -was what was the matter with them—may be they had been hungry. Many to the way I fMl about Atvan. He’s a ulcc gay, anfl I don’t donbt g good arttot~-bat T’m afraid beto out. So tar. as I’m coneamd.” % "Diek,” Ellen roia and dgMa4 her tray away to tbo kltohanetto place, “Dick to so regalar, Tony, yon must understand that. Jle’d asked me to marry him, yes. But never—never—has'be ever IMss- ed me, before this day—^you’ve got to believe that! And hf’ll never kiss me again, I’m euro— unlees 1 tell him to. You can count -on Dick, Tony. Dick to a gentleman.’’ - A "And Jane." eaid Tony short ly,, ."to a gentlewoman. Yon can count on her!" , Bllen eonid. have killed herself for saying It,' but sbe>, epald|»'t '1& foaght iKi! :ake «m -^alw iaagbt to of her father. — _——, permoft. ''^'•ni net let you get ne,*^ she nlASu trifle breathlessly, more man a trifle wildly^ *Tony*i arm grew'‘tighter; he hadat.unite eanght the wordi. Bnt I have got you!" he said. "You’ll never get me,’ she woaprjiistter nlBf that. wm Jane." O’" Next Wieek.^ mm unfcocw o said. "Not .j:.itelly; Remember Celis. Coaite Ben r . help herself. "Jane didn’t make it Yen’ easy for mo;.tonight,’’ she saTd. "I didn't think she aeted Uito a gentlewoman, exactly. ' She gave me a rotten time.” Tony was flushing, but oddly enough, he held hto peace. “I don’t think she behaved very well, either," he said. "And 1 don’t know whether of not she was in love with me. Our fami lies were friends—our summer places were adjoining. I‘m fond of Jane, too. She rides well and plays a swell game of golf, and tennis, and she can dance.” "I can dance," said Ellen. She offered it babyishly,' as an apol ogy because she couldn’t ride or play golf or play tennis . . . Tony agreed “I'll say you can dance,’’ he agreed.. All at once he was com ing across the little prim room —and then he was on the arm of Ellen’s chair, and his arm was around her. “I’ll never forget our first dance together,’’ he said. "Will you—my darling?” But even as their lips met, Ellen found, herself wondering ATLANTIC GREYHOUND "LINES Noitli WiBusboro^ L«Mir, Morganton and Asheville Bm Effective Decmbcr 10, 1034 One Hour Qnidfer^ . , Service to Arfievifle, N. C. . Lv.'SiOO a. m M^nston-Salem Ar.9:00 pjiL-^ Lv. 9:80 a.m.!! North WHkeeboro — Ar. 6:80 Lv. 9:40 a. m ^ Moravian Frib _— Ar. 6d0 p.m. Lv. 9:60 a. m Boomer i-i-.l Ar.6:10pj Lv. lOK* a. m Kinga Creek Ar.6:60i Lv. 10:80 Lenoir Ar. 5:86pj Ar. 11:00 a. m. At. 12:00 m. — Hkkoiy Ar. 10:45 a. m. - Ar. 11:00 a. m. _ At. 11:40 p. m. .... Ar. 1:00 p. m l^arhil; Rock ]fecHie Hartiand.. ,._z. Morganton . Idarton — Asheville — Ar.8:46pjD.^ Ar.7:45pjB.« Ar.6:16pjn. Lv.2:00pjn. Lv.2KK)pjn. Lv. 12:46 p.m; truce has been declared over a! whether her father had said that. sandwich! Many a : fried egg ^ home has been reunited across j E.VECL'TOU'S NOTICE preserved i-eaclies and a dish of j Having qualified as "executor little cakes. | of the estate of E. F. Spainhow- ! Hut even so, there were things ; er, deceased, all persons holding to he said -this pleasant inter lude couldn’t go on forever. .\s .she ate her second cooky, slowly, Ellen wished that the argument might start, so that it would the sooner he over. Ellen precipitated the crisis. She was alwa.vs saying things she didn’t intend to say. "Could Jane cook’’’’ she asked. Tony shrugged. claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same to the undersigned execu tor on or before December 10th, 193.5, or tlii s notice will| he plead in bar of recovery. All per sons owing said estate are noti fied to make prompt payment. This December 8th. 1934. A. E. SPAINHOWER, Executor Estate E. F. Spain- hower, Dec’d. 1-14-61. 1935 License Plates for the Town of North Wilkesboro are now on sale at the Caro lina Motor Club office at the Yadkin Valley Motfjr Company. 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