clock andâ€" h which I ived at ‘the threeâ€"thirty c anything! lute silence : have been "The Starâ€" slide tromâ€" rong music. i virtuoso! drum playâ€" in ~Sousa‘s vhat shades ut into it! the bombs : the boilerâ€" or counter= my car out inedâ€"iff anâ€" rise. "It‘s z quickâ€"deâ€" a reversion the major nt crescéenâ€" of a courtâ€" fense guns age. ; i show for e‘re â€" eight e out here y chances play that h," apoloâ€" e know all ether ‘ more royal red us by They had y down the advantages over most: around the t into melâ€" the correct if you had een the exâ€" randmother iumped into r.‘ All the ing just as discouragâ€" tists would ieir instruâ€" At length bassâ€"drum ay regardâ€" the drunmâ€" Tenwether. 7 loudly to deaf," t‘s all for isiastically onel Stewâ€" :tinghead utâ€"stretehâ€" hearty old d a closeâ€" appreciate reply that myself adâ€" e gate the in the air nd Grandâ€" jerk as if 99 ay 9, 1929 that the ause this came up â€"We had a lovely time that afterâ€" noon. The old soldiers were as eager to play as children. In the summerâ€" _time they had lots of visitors, but in . the winter it was rather dull. The Home is on Three Bears Lake, eight miles from the town of Fair Oaks at _ the other end where the railroad staâ€" â€" _tion is. As a consequence few people _ take the trip in winter except for some special reason. . Comrade Abel Dreyenfurth had lost ‘‘~2 leg at Antietam. That did not inâ€" terfere with a lively desire to dearn the foxâ€"trot, and Maryella spent an â€"hour teaching it to him.. C Thursday, May 9, 1929 As Comrade Klingman was in the room and Pilk Henwether. spoke in his ordinary tone of voice, there seemâ€" ed little doubt: of his feelings receivâ€" ingâ€" a jolt. * 5 "That‘s the chief objection I got to the Home," said Pilk Henwether, hardly raising his voice above a shout. ©There ought to be some female véetâ€" crans. I‘m durned if I like washing dishes." § 52k "It ain‘t so bad, though," Pilk went on, "whenr you come to think that Henry has only got one arm. He says the other one was shot off at Chanâ€" cellorsville, but it‘s. my private opinâ€" ion he lost it running a buzzâ€"saw after the war was over. Anyhow, he Craws an extra allowance as a oneâ€" armed man." The dinner was good, all except the dessert, which was a fallen angelâ€"food cake with iceâ€"cream. + "Henry Klingman made it," Pilk confided,."and I think it‘s punk, if you want my honest opinion. But I wouldn‘t let him hearâ€"me say that be. cause it would only hurt his feelings." . The unde@taker‘s ‘bus arrived just before dinner. We all ate together in a large messâ€"hall. The dwellers at the Home cook their own meals and do all their own housework. wind instruments all froze up. I told ‘ the boys not to blow damp, but I guess they couldn‘t help it." l He looked at me suspiciously, but apparently saw no guile in my eye because he went on cheerfully: "Never mind," I soothed. It‘s probâ€" ably all for the. best." The bassâ€"drummer Pilk Henwither, discovered in me a kindred soul.‘ "I like you, Mr. Bilbeck," he conâ€" fided at the top of his voice. . "I can sort of tell what you are talking about because you make faces when you speak." ~ "It will be all right when we get inside and thaw out the horns. Then we‘ll play it again for you." , CARPENTER AND BUILDER THE SWEDISH ART METAL CO., Inc. Gust W. Lofgren, N. S. representative Screens and Doors Repaired Sharpening Tools _ â€" Any Outside. Work Cement or Mason Work â€"â€" Highland Park, Ill. 153 N. Second St. Tel. H.P. 457 ART METAL WORK (Continued Next Week) 239 Heghwood Avenue Highwood, 111. Phone Highland Park 1799 A. MENONI P I E RCEâ€"ARROW (Factory Branch) = § 2420â€"22 South Michigan, CHICAGO. _ Telephone Michigan 2400 James G. Barber Service Station, 1508 Elmwood Avenue, Evarston NOT any more than people are attracted to a rare work of artâ€"or anything else of outstanding fineness â€" by . its price, are Pierceâ€"Arrows sold through the purse appeal. But this doesn‘t mean that Pierceâ€" Arrow owners buy extravâ€" agantly, or without definite regard for value received. Where the new Straight Eight by Pierceâ€"Arrew is concerned, no other ‘fine automobile, inâ€" cluding its own illustrious predâ€" . ecessors, ever offered so muchâ€"in beauty, in fashion, or in performanceâ€"inevery _ _ THE NEW STRAIGHT EIGHT BV 125 Horsepower Engine e 85 Miles perHour ¢ 133â€"inch and 143â€"inch Wheelbases Nonâ€"shatterable Glass « Fender or Bracket Headlamps optional without extra charge. PIERCEâ€"ARROW SALES CORPORATION FROM $2775 TO $8200 AT BUFFALO In purchasing a car from income, the average allowance on a good used car usually more than covers the initial Pierceâ€"Arrow payment rice doesn‘t sell _ PIERCEâ€"ARROWsS â€"â€" T HE PR ES $ P Body and Engine by Pierceâ€"Arrow â€"and Pierceâ€"Arrow in ever3 part expression of actual dollar‘s worth. j ' ‘ But there is more than that to Pierceâ€" Arrow ownership: There is the unfailingly de= lightful reassurance of possessâ€"â€" ing the most distinguished :otf all automobilesâ€"the very finest . thing of its kind. j Arriving at the psychological moment, the new Straight Eight is meeting today the greatest waiting demand in all Pierceâ€"Arrow history. 31