once he thought tlutt she was Justified. "When We went by her house last nigh D *s « .. i _ u ; 1.1 hud bet o ne. he was un­ to te ll her about yo u r lietulpche and s t c :-..ih r i d ti'I. w! l 1e r m o . h r t FC b <* I92Î H ALSEY E N T E R P R ISE PAHE 3 worthy to be even touching his oap to h e r! And as she nodded and went ’ ••I'1 Fred. can’t get out o f It. T he us M llla'd gone up to Chicago yester­ did become serious ettow h to p -tn t ' ' n l,,r* ,n ,he 'fra t' "«Id we had to briskly on, he would have given any­ day afternoon w ith her aunt, and said out that a university was dl£em »< from a high school. I and they suid we couldn't resign, thing to turu and w alk a little way she left a note for you, and she said “I t ’s not like havin’ to u*e ore big elther’ ■*»«■ »'» h«'i Joined. . They with her, fo r It seemed to him th a t thia you were sick I te tte r take It and might fum igate bis morals. But he give It to you. I was goln’ to bring It room as a headquarters, you know. I 8,1,1 we lu , t had ,o K° »hrongh It. and lacked the courage, and, besides, he over to your hour a fte r breakfast.” Ramsey. Everything a all split up. and i a fte r a while we’d get used to It anil she might happen not be In a single * not mind It so much " considered him self unfit to be seen He found it. "H e e !" walking w ith her. “I w ill I” Ramsey Insisted. “I Ramsey thanked ,,‘m feebly, and de­ one of your classes.” couldn't any more stand up there on He had a long afternoon of an­ parted In a state of partial stupefac­ “You don’t know my luck I" the a f­ guishes, these becoming most violent my feet and get to spoutin' about tion, brought on by a glimpse of the flicted boy protested. ”1 wish I ’d gone when he tried to face the problem of instabilities o f life. He had also, not to H arvard, the way my father wanted sociology and the radical metempsy- his future course tow ard M llla . H e chorus of the mettyphysical bazoozum relief, but a sense of vacancy and loss; me to. Why. this Is Just the worst did not face it at a ll. In fact, but mere­ than I could fly a flyln' machine. Why, You’ll see! for M iU *, out of his reach, once more nuisance I ever struck! ly writhed, and had evolved nothing She’ll he In everything there Is. Just became mysteriously lovely. when F riday evening was upon him “Oh. that wasn't anything,” Fred Pausing in au alley, he read her the way she w»s back home.” and M llla w aiting for him to take her Interrupted. “T h e only one that talked tote. H e appeared to he corroborated by to the “hand concert” w ith "A lb and like that, be was that Bllckena; he's “D e a rie : Thought I ought to call the events of the next day, when they Sade. v H e made shift to seek a short a tutor, or something, and really a ou up hut over the 'phone Is Just nix attended the first meeting to organize Interview w ith Albert, Just before din .Copyright,by DouMeday. Page C om The masculine ele­ member of the faculty. Most o' i he 'or explanations as Mama and Aunt the new class. »pctny ner. less would hear everything and ment predominated. but Dora Yocum S Y N O P S IS “I got a pretty rotten headache, and 'bought I might seem cold to you not was ele"ted vice president. * * ? E ’ thE , " , t * r ’ S\ ‘ e He We° ' “ • ,rYou iny stomach's upset, too," he said, I h her, halting at the front step«. C H A P T E R I . —W it h his gr& ndfath r aylng anything sweet ou account o f see?” Rumsey said. “D idn’t I tell drooping upon the Paxtous’ fence. “ I ■m all R a m a e y M ilh o lla n d Is w a t c h X a T i , “WeU’ « nl«ht. M llla .” he said. hem listening and you would wonder you? You see what happensT* been gettln' worse every minute. You ¿ « ° r*Th.n , . ^ y *“ why I was so cold wheu telliug you But a fte r that she ceased fo r a time , ‘° , " ' s i l t i n g tomorrow and Sadie go by Mllla'a, Albert, and t u h w Z c iv u .V"1 1 “ “ “' • ' eler»n °* c iv il w a r, endeavors to im oreas the good-by for a w ile maybe weeks. It is to Intrude upon his life, and he adm it­ night? Albert and Sadie are.” tell her if I ’m not there by ha’-pas'- this way Uncle Purv wired Aunt Jess ted that his harassment waa less grave “I can't tomorrow night," she told seven, tell her not to w ait for me any : S L X ^ X l~ r hU * u X “ - he has Just taken In a big touring cur than he had anticipated. There were him w ith obvious regret “Isn't It the longer." on a debt and his vacation starts to­ about five hundred students In the worst luck! J got an aunt cornin’ to “ How do you mean ‘w a it’ ?” A lbert morrow so If they were going to take freshman class; he seldom saw her. rJEH A i> T E R , H .—In th e schoolroom. a visit from Chicago, and she's crazy Inquired. "You don’t expect her to .................... fe A fte a rd j . n > ears , » 'i v i rw ww r j, . R n a am in s aey e y waa not a trip they better start right way so and when he did It was not more than about playing T h e Hundred.’ and ctMue pokin’ along w ith Sadie and me, ( Aunt* Jess' Invited d istin g u ish e d fo r rem ark ab le _ ------- . ____ a b ility . me. Now dearie I a distant glimpse of ber on one of liu h m '.« “ Pcvdmmced dislikes wire wam* ,n d P«P“ "aid I haf to stay in do you? S h e ll keep on g lttin ’ there nt have to pack and w rite this in a tniry the campus paths, her thoughtful bead ~ m ~ “ cto“ ^ ; x c'.ta,b ^ ; . rId " „ ° '¿‘ V foor to p l,v IL Sh“ a » » “ «• home Just the same, because she so-you w ill not be disappointed when bent over a book as she hurried to a the preco city o f lu tle Dor* Y « “ » '° her* thr* * or ,o u r days, and I wouldn’t have anything else to do, if you come by for the B. C. to-night. Do classroom. This was bearable; and In you don’t come like she expects you to. not go get some other girl and take the flattering agitations of being She hasn't got any way to stop w a it­ her for I would bate her and nothing sought, and even hunted, by several C H A P T E R I I I , —In h ig h school w h e r e 1 w o rs t ’ U C k r in’ r ______ _ iu this world would make me false for "fratern ities" simultaneously desirous he and D o ra a . r re e classm atas. h a m se y , He w .s doleful, but ventured to be At this, Ramsey moaned, without a f­ S,o b t J ° ,e e l ,h a l «>r l ¿ « llsh l» to one second to my kiddo boy. I do not of hla becoming a sworn Brother, he literary. “ Well, what can’t be helped hh. ' r , u Pe r‘o r i,y. and the vlndic- fectation. “I don't expect I can, A l­ know Just when home again as the almost forgot her. A fte r a hazard»"« tlveneaa he generates becomes a la rm in g bert," he said. " I’d like to If I civuld. must be endured. I ’ll come aroum c u lm in a tin g in the resolution th a t s on» folks think I better stay up there for month the roommates fell Into the when ¿he’s gone.” d a y he w ould •» h o w " her. hut the way It looks now, you tell her a visit at Aunt Jess and Uncle Purvs arms of the last “fra t" to seek them, He moved as i f to depart, but gh* I wouldn't be much suprised maybe I »evH o ie e ,p ,t )ve by °>« f* l r one, to his great gone to bed,” she said absently. And the next morning he woke to long till nothing more w ill Interrup t of the Eleven. constern ation. However, they were In a tn id i i t- ”1 s’poae so.” the dialings of remorse, picturing a our sweet friendship." “Well, good night, Ramsey." She C H A P T E R V —T h e a cq uaintance ripens the older brethren o f their Or.i - M llla somewhat restored In charm “W h a t on E a rth 's etait,- As a measure of domestic prudence, whose duty It was to assist in fl.e R am eey and M ills openly "keeping com- said this, but still did not release his \a ltln g hopefully at the gate, even ha ,lX- w hile th e fo rm e r's pa ren ts won ry?” Ramsey tore the note Into Irreparable der H is m o th e r Indeed gJSs » fa " i . arm, and suddenly, In a fluster, he fe ll proper maneuvering of their young <•» ifte r the half-past seven, and then, as fragments, but he did this slowly, to express some disa p p ro va l o f his choice that the time he dreaded had come other» Juat kind of blab t time passed and the sound of the dis- and w ithout experiencing any of thé reers. that, although support o f 'he even n ln tin g th a t D o ra Yocum would be Somehow, without knowing where, ex 'varsity teams was Important. the> around, and what any o f eui ant horns came fa in tly through the i-h fl-h ™ .? u l u b l® com paaion, a suggestion revulsion created by MiUa's form er w h ich ths y o u th receives w ith ho rror. must neglect neither the spiritual nor cept that It was somewhere upon what 'arkness. going sadly to her room— Io get off their rheata hardly aiuo» missive. the Intellectual by-products o f under seemed to be a blurred face too fu l! ed to terrib ly much." >erhapa weeping there. It was a pic- He was melancholy, aggrieved that CHAPTER VI graduate doings. Therefore they be­ of obstructing features, he kissed her “I don’t care. I couldn't do It at ure to wring him with shame and pity, she should treat him so. She turned Instantly away In tin came members o f the college Y. M . C. all I" >ttf was followed by another which Vacation, In spite o f Increased leis­ darkness, her hands over her cheeks A. and o f the “Lumen Society." lectrlfled him, for out of school he “W ell, the way It lonka to me," Fred C H A P T E R V II ure, may’ bring inconvenience to people and in a panic Ramaey wondered If ht According to the charter which It lid not lack Imagination. W hat If ohaerved, “we »Imply got to ! From In Ramsey’s strange but not uncom­ hadn’t make a dreadful mistake. had granted Itself, the “ Lumen Sod Vlbert had reported his Illness too wbat they tell me, the freshmen p H e never saw her again. She aent mon condition. A t home his constaut "S’cuae m e !” he said, stumbling to Ivldly to M llla? M llla was so fond! to do more than anybody. Every • him a “picture postal” from Oconomo- I ety” was " an " "Organization of male a ir was that o f a badgered captive ward the gate. “ Well, I guess I got woe, Wisconsin, which his fath er ‘ nd .«tudenta”- , so “advanced' What If, in her alarm , she should cooie er F rid a y night. It ’» all freshmen plaintively sLleitf under Injustice; and to be gettln' along back home.” here to the house to Inquire o f his engaged from the fam ily m all, one was this university— "fo r the develop- nothin’ else. You get a postal can. he found It difficult to reply calmly He woke in the morning to a great ment of the powers of dehste and or­ mother about him? W hat I f she told on Monday rooming In your mnll, and morning at breakfast, and considerate­ when asked where he was going— an self-loathing; he had kissed a girl. Mrs. Milholland they were “engaged It aaya ’Assignment’ on It and— a rd - ly handed to him w ithout audible com­ atory, Intellectual and sociological Inquiry addressed to him, he asserted, Mingled w ith the loathing was a curi­ The next moment Ramsey was project then It’s got w ritten underneath what ment. Upon it was w ritten, “Oh. you progress, and the discussion of all m at­ every tim e he touched his cap, even ous pride In the very fact that caused ters relating to philosophy, metaphys­ Ing a conversation between fils mother Ram sey!" This tvas the last of M llla. you h af to do the next F riday nlg> to hang It up! the loathing, but the pride did not last ics, literatu re, art. and current events." and M ills In which the la tte r stated -oratio n or debate, or maybe Ju> Just before school opened, In the The amount o f evening w alking he long. H e came downstairs morbid to that she and Ramsey were soon to he autumn. Sadie Clews made some reve­ A statement so form idable was not I wouldn't even tell Albert. T! did must also have been a tria l to his breakfast, and continued this mood without a hushing effect upon Messrs. married, that she regarded him as a t didn't get any w ire from Qie urn lations. “ M llla did like you.” said nerves, on account of fatlgtie, though Milholland and M itc h ell; they went afterw ard. A t noon Albert Paxton ready virtually her husband, and de­ Sadie. “A fte r that time you Jumped about the touring c a r; It was her cou- the ground covered waa not vast. M il brought him a note which M llla laid manded to nurse him In the creek to save her she liked you to their first “ Lumen” meeting In a aln M ilt that Jumped ou the train uud la's mother and fath er were friendly state of fear and came away little asked Sadie to ask Albert to give him. In a panic he fled from the house be­ better than any boy In town, and I ceme down and nxed It all up for people, but snw no reuson to ‘‘move reassured. “D e arie: I am Just wondering If fore breakfast, going out by way of a guess If It wasn’t for her counsln M ilt M llla to go on the trip , and every­ out of house and home,” as M r. Rust " I couldn't get up there," Ramsey you thought as much about something side door, and he crossed back yards up In Chicago she would of liked you thing. You see, 'tamsey, »lie waa M id, when M llla had “callers” ; and declared. “I couldn’t stand up there so sweet that happened last night aa and climbed buck fences to reach Al the best anywhere. I guess she did, tUi »ed back a couplr o f times In school on account o f the Intim ate plan of before all that crowd and make a I did you know w liat. I think It was before she came In our class and I anyway, because she hadn’t seen him their small dwelling a visitor’s only speech, or debate In a debate, to save the sweetest thing. I send you one fo r about a year then. don't know how old she la and she alternative to spending the evening my soul and gizzard I Why, I'd Just w ith this note and I hope you w ill "W ell, that afternoon she went don't look old yet, but I'm pretty sure w ith M r . and Mrs. Rust as well as keel right over and h af to be carried think it Is a sweet one. I would give aw ay I was over there and took In she's at least eighteen, and she might w ith M llla , was to Invite her to “go out." you a real one I f you were here now everything that was goln’ on, only sh. he over. I didn’t think such a great out w alking.’ “ W ell, the way^ I understand Jt,” and I hope you would think It was made me promise on my word of honor I desl of this M llt'a looks myself, hut Evening a fte r evening they walked sweeter still than the one I put in this he’» anyway twenty-one year» old, and and walked and walked, usually In note. It Is the sweetest thing now you got a good position, and all their fam ­ are mine and I am .vours forever kiddo. ily seem to think he'» Juat fine I I t I f you come around about frlila y eve wasn't hla fath er that took In the tour­ It w ill be all right, aunt Jess w ill he ing car on the debt, like she auld she gone hack home by then so come early was w riting you; It waa M ilt himself. and we w ill get Sade and Alh to go to H e afarled out In business when he the band Concert. Don’t forget what was only thirteen year» old, and this I said about my putting something trip he was gettln* up fo r hla fath er sweet In this note, and I hope yon w ill and mother and M llla was the first think It Is a sweet one but not as vacation he ever took. W ell, of course sweet ns the real sweet one I would she wouldn’t like my tnlllo' you, but like to— I can’t see the harm of It, now every­ A t this point Ramsey Impulsively thing’s all over.” tore the note Into small pieces, lie “A ll— all over? You mean M llla'a turned cold as his Imagination pro­ going to be— to he married?" jected a sketch of his mother in the "She already Is," auld Sadie. "Thpy act of reading this missive, and of got m arried nt her Aunt J ess anil Un­ her eapresaion as she read the sen­ cle Purv'a house, up In Chicago, last tence: “I t is the sweetest thing now Thursday. Yea, a ir; thnt quiet, little you are mine and I sm yours forever M llla'a a regular old m arried woman by this time, I expect, R a m s e y ! " kiddo." H e wished that M ills hadn't' written "kiddo.” Hl.e called him that, When he got over the shock, which sometimes, but in her wann little voice waa not until the next day, one pre­ the word seemed not at all what It did dom inating feeling rem ain ed : It was In Ink. He wished, too, that she hadn't a gloomy pride— a pride In hla proven said she was his forever. m aturity. H e waa old enough, It ap­ P ausing In an A lla y , H a Read H a r N ote. Subscribers paying in advance are the Suddenly he was seized w ith a hor­ peared, to have been the same thing mainstay of a small-town taper. W ith« bert Paxton the more aw lftly. T h u ror of her. as engaged to a person who was now out subscribers no advertising could be creature, a ladies' man almost pr«?e» a M arried Woman. Ills manner thence- * Moisture brok> out heavily upon had, and advertising is wliat brings in slonally, was found exercising w ith so him ; he felt a definite sickness, and, forth showed an added trace o f seri­ retu ns to pay expenses. electric Iron and a p air o f flannel tmu- wishing for death, went forth upon the ousness and self-consideration. •ers in a basement laundry, by way ot Subscription money pays for w hite pa­ streets to w alk and walk. He cared H aving recovered his equl|M>lae and stirring his appetite for the morning not whither, so that his feet took him per and presswork. W hen subscribers something more, he entirely forgot Hint E ven ing A fte r E ven ing T h e y W a lk e d meal. in any direction away from M llla, do not pay in advance the publisher has , moment o f humble adm iration he hod and W a lk e d and W a lk e d . "See here, Albert," his friend said since they were unable to take him felt for Dora Yocum on the day of h's to pay these items fifty-tw o weeks be­ breathlessly. "I got a favor. I want away from himself— of whom he had flattest prostration. When he saw her fore he gets returns W ith several hun­ company— at perhaps the distance of you to go over to M lU a ’a— ’’ as great a horror H e r loving face w as sitting In the classroom, smiling bright­ h alf a block— w ith Albert Paxton and dred subscribers in arrears this amounts “I'm goln’ to finish preaaln’ theye continually before him, and Its sweet­ ly up at the teacher, the morning of 8adl<» Clews, though Ramsey now and to a heavy burden to a m«n of small trousers," A llw rt Interrupted. “Then ness made his flesh creep. M llla had the school's opening In the autumn, then felt disgraced by having fallen meant, whereat in paying in advance I ’ve got my breakfast to eat." been too sweet. all his h um ility had long since van­ Into this class; fo r sometimes It was each subscriber has to produce o nly “ Well, you could do thia first.” said When he met or passed people. It ished and she appeared to him not apparent that Albert casually had his Ramaey, hurriedly. “I t wouldn't h u rt $1 SO. seemed to him that perhaps they were otherwise than as the scholar whose arm about Sadie's walat. This allured you to do me thia little favo r first. able to recognize upon him somewhere H e lp the publisher to carry h it load complete proficiency had alw ays been Ramsey somewhat, hut terrified him You Just slip over aad see M llla for the marks of his low quality. so Irksome to him. and he can give you better service. more. He didn’t know how such m at­ me, if »he's up yet, and I f she I s n ' t ' "S ofty! Ole sloppy fo o l'” he mat­ “Look at h e r!” he m attered to him ­ ters were managed. In Halsey a m ajority of the people pay you better » a lt around till she is. be­ tered. addreslng himself. “Slu-hy self "Same ole Teacher’s Pet I” Usually the quartet had no destln* for th eir paper in advance, but a few of cause I w ant you to tell her I ’m a ole mush! . . . Spooner!” And tlon ; they Just went "out w alking’ Now and then, as the days and sea­ them in town and many outside are in whole lot better this momlng. Tell lie added, “ Youra forever, kiddo!” until ten o'clock, when both girls had sons passed, and Dora's serene prog arrears. Moat of these, if they realized her I'm pretty near practlck'ly all right Convulsions seemed about to aeize to he home-—and the boys did, too, reaa continued, nevei checked or even what an improvement could be made in again, Albert, and I ’ll prob'ly w rite her him. but never adm itted It. On F riday eve flawed, there atlrrei! w ithin him some the paper w ith a little monny, would a note or something right soon— or In Turning a corner w ith hla head nlngs there was a "puM lc open-air con lingering» of the old determ ination town, he almost charged Into Dora a week or so, anyhow. You tell her— " probably pay promptly. That i t the cert by a brass hand In a small park to “»how” h e r; and he would conjure "Well, you act pretty fu n n y !” A lb ert j Yocum. She waa homeward bound way to make a good neW-paoer in a and the four were always there up a d ay -d m tu i o f Dora In loud In- exclaimed, fum bling In the pockets of from a piano lesson, and tarried s small town. A ll must co-operate. M ills hung w-elghtlly upon hla arm. mentation, w hile he led the laughter his coat. “ Why can't vou go on over ! rolled leather caae of sheet muaii — and they dawdled, d riftin g from one Send ns your local news. An editor o f the apei'tulors Hut gradually hla and tell her yourself? But Juwt as It something ha couldn't Imagine M llla aide of the pavement to the other as feeling about her came to be merely alone cannot make a good country news­ happens there wouldn’t be any use they slowly advanced. A lbert and Sa­ carrying—and In her young girl's dull oppression. H e waa tired of paper. your goln' over there, or me, either." dress, which attempted to he nothing die, ahead of them, called “good night" having to look at her (as he slated "W hy not?" else, she looked as wholesome as cold from a corner, before turning down the It ) and he thanked the I» g d that the "Mills ain’t there," said Albert, still spring water. Ramaey had always fe lt aide street where Sadie lived; and tim e w ouldn't he so long now until searching the pockets of hla joat. that she despised him and now, ail at he'd he out of that ole achoel, andg then all he'd baye^to do he'd Juat t a k e ! Illustrations bu x ■^' Irwiki , 4 A FEW Words to Our Patrons .4’ a a a £2^ gOfc a a a a & &