Chapter 16 Minis! strolled in a field of viol, . ' 'with the Hart babies. Thor- v,-;. a little river where a singing fish lived, and it all was very beautiful arid happy-. |!ut lire engines were coming with t trifle din of bells. She tried'to gather up the children. They'd < an. t:-areil! And the field turncu into a X.•>.u to the hospital. Trixie is worse and wants to sop you. They u-Iopiinn ed. It’s unusual, but—will y.-u be ready?” "Merle! Is it the—the end?” "I think so, dear. I’ll come tight Poor Trixie! With her bitterness am) her broken illusions 'ah'! her im petuous gleams of kindlin' . Trixie; wi^h blue hand clutching the . he. 1 - no, fight the black ghosts! Trixie had wandered someway. A good girl. .Ju t wandered. Mimsi threw on her clothes and he dream of the violet field tangled .x: th the picture of Trixie wandering, Someone said something once . . . Oh yes. in the white church with the white tower where Tranquility gath ered Sunday mornings. "Who wandercth out of the way'of understanding—” Trixie, wanderin'? nut of the way of understanding. With the black ghosts . .Trixie . . Merle put his arm around her against the jolting of the taxi on ihc rough pavements of East Side street <. Far downtown they turned; tasted ‘lit: musty tang of the East River. Bellevue sprawled like a sulky mon ster .-behind its high walls. They were challenged at the gates; passed :.’'''y! Say. v.luu V r T"' . "r? Aw- " | •* V poor -Trixie'!" t'inlr kill. Something gotta ami M She W; ■'ll ■want t■ A h; merit i it damj I wa Yur k. M'l'u ( to drop "I" watch wh.f pcrhrr; v-ay fired. : .'U', you nit-i)m y ■’ 1 oti wanted to > fed on?” rdo\v of the old 1■ ed the wax '• “Hairy rlort icon ajLrrv.i not yet, i '.ISC - .•on did it you ili iii’t jit1 1'irotUC a 1)1 MS'1 lace anil left Tired. Lisle!-. g"> me, Wi ll h< r. Merle. She Jerk's a nice oli", ■■'"•like'. No. filter. I j Y. I K' I I hi The ‘i< stay on in the life ! Hat. It was cheap. Perhaps - he | cf!uld get an ther -girl'to go in with ' her. At the studio Hie.-worked fever j h!y. White was .'a hard taskmaster. Vet when he praised in r effort? she felt a h'.-rty triumph- that she' of’-p mistook for happine s. Late one aft-moon when White was scrambling about on hi staff- id and r he was bcralmg over her draw ing. board, the door opened and Perry came in. Even .before he. walked across the great, dim room—even on fore she saw Ids fare clearly—:-n? felt his at,ruction. Reaching out like a magnet; drawing her against her will. He stood besida her meekly, .it.-, eyes were gray and dir turhlingly in Stihoti TWRircl' \ &yANTHONYfANTHONY ;| nrnirrwFiWf ”/’LL WAIT TILL ? THE PRICE OWfS;i3AW POWN^P-1 < > WAITING until the price comes down is a waiting game that doesn’t always pay dividends. We a; advising the1 purchase of real (’state1 j now and we’ll tell you why if | you’ll call. ! exceptional bargain 8 room two story residence on South l.aFayotte street, known as the Albert Putnam home place, fin* location for residence or business, front I ing Belmont Cotton Mill prop erty 97 feet and depth of 170 , feet oh 20 foot alley, beauii 5 ful shade and our price is very reasonable at *5.500.00. on terms of 1- ’ cash, balance, one and two years. ! GOOD* BUY— 5 room bouse two blocks of square, water, bath, sewer age, new home, nice section and priced at $0,150.00. For $900, terms 1-3 cash, balance 0 and 12 months we can sell a very desirable lot 50x125 fed in the Love prop erty just off the Cleveland Springs Road, joins with the most desirable residential property in Shelby. BUSINESS LOT— 40x190, corner lot in good retail and wholesale district and the price is only $10,000. < t f t 5 PrtoflE 246 1 AWTH0NY&.ANTH0NY r-T" 1 •'•' >'• uccause of dark heavy lashc*. •lino i," in- said, “I've wanted to ' ■ you. V m know why, 1 acted like compute cad and I've been sorry ‘■•cry tniniKe. I don’t sun:'*:*-.* you <■■ a • • ft. But won't you try ?* If there'.; anything I can do—or Kay!” All the swagger gone. The faint a:r ■'i' dirr.ion, the knuWingn*:« all g n •« Ills meekn,: •. The one thing to make you forge, whatever he didn't \v . i> > on to remember! ‘‘Why it’:- all right. Perry. Of course it's a!! right. I entiles** it was partly my fault. I’m sorry too. ,r what 1 did.” rid' tfhg!e i f his hand on your arm. The in.ima-y of Ilia■■silence. A s e >11 th; t held you. A spell like th- warmth of- thir, sparkling wire. Wipe he’d give - yoti. This Pei ry. The tig-.v? The tiger’.; claws? I’m busy now. Perry. Same otl,::i time.” lie wont, leaving the spell. 1, lay upon you as you went out V to I tie twilight. Tutu down the avenue from Fifty--event1’ street; walk si.MS tle; shake it off. But tu- - 1 S| g in the f! t. Spring when you’re ninety Pause at Fifieth street. the stately dory «f .he (’»lhe«'.i. . P-r hato in there ... Psp the great doors- fearfully le-t Kiacorifi tliAcpvef that you’re not a Catholic Pat once iaside—oh, the beauty! Ilpr.ahing, overwhelming '* t!v beauty! The lofty grandeur; the ■; !m! In the midst of th” city’s hur ry rnd noise, the calm! Why you could rest here: you could throw p!f th” things that kept drag ging you i hi way and that. Korn* - thing.pevn« .ual in the calm. Not to bo moved by the little affairs of men. —the hurry and noise beating upon it. Bontliijr liko shallow waves on t>e j eternal hills. Somethin* to follow you, like a benediction . . • • a’hc v.as rested aiul full of pcu trouble tics . : be rat at th» table in the kitchen , over a pot of tea, dreaminjt. i The'tats at the door would he lie.'* ; ?)cr hoy; she called ‘•Come,” lustily. i The door rWUtiK hack. It war I’tvv. “ Minis!—’’ Shr t1 id; a stop forward. Then ids i arm;- were it'-uumi her hungrily, fiercely, achinp; at her shoulders, ! broakintj her waist. lhl wa • crumb r upon her eyes, her l'!», her i throat. The manic of him; the temptation • of him! Terry! lie v.w some! Why? |dome nod portc without ? word? i ;.,a ii tp’d ;e she went to the t C \N PIRATE FOR honc and gave MerlcY. number. A j woman voicb answered. She rccog- : sized the crisp, clipped syllables f,.r i >1. Huer's, and hung up the rcceiv* All alike! All playing the game cst -1 o- goodness feed can do for a Hock of baby chicks, just give U3 a ring and say “I want Purina Chick Startena and Purina Poultry Chowa for my chicks.” Purina Chows have the stuff in ’em, and we just want you to feed Purina for a few weeks and then compare your chicks with any flock in , this part of the country I Start them right ^ from the very begin- \ ning — and see what even the first three weeks will do. -WEBB BROS., Phone 205. - Shelby, N. C. Fortunate youth THE educational opportunities for the boys and girls of the South are keeping pace with the leadership of the South in the economic progress of the Nation. This is seen in the following facts: In the last twelve years more than $125,000,000 has been spent for the construction of new school buildings in the states of the South * served by the Southern. In 1900 there were less than 73,000 school teachers in the states of the South served by the Southern, and the appropriation for education amounted to only 90 cents per person living in these states. In 1922 the appropriation was $6.85 per person, and the number of trained teachers had increased to 139,309. Inl900only64.8percentofthechil dren of school age in these states attended school, while the average for the nation as a whole was 72.4 per cent. But in 1922, the latest year for which complete figures are available, 81.4 per cent of the children in the states of the South served by the South ern attended school, while the average for the nation as a whole was 81.2 per cent. The growth in the educational facilities of the South, as tyell as the number of children that can^ take advantage of them, is one of the fortunate and direct results of the prosperity that has come to the South. %e Southern The Southern Railway System has contributed to prosperity of the South, as a tax-payer, as a large em ployer of men and women—and as the transportation agency which carries Southern commerce to and ^om world markets, regularly, dependably and economically