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Here is the list of my hosts as representative a body both for men and newspapers as any journalist could desire to entertain him: Edward Bell Chicago Daily News Sam Blythe Saturday Evening Post Curtis Brown New York Press John T. Burke New York Herald R. M. Collins Associated Press Herbert Corey Associated Newspapers Fred Grundy New York Sun Edward Keen United Press Ernest Marshall New York Times Roy Martin Associated Press H. B. Needham Collier's Weekly Frederick Palmer Everybody's Philip Patchin New York Tribune Fred Pitney New York Tribune J. Spurgeon New York World W. Orton Tewson New York American J. M. Tuohy New York World

As the event turned out it was certainly not our imaginations that were at fault. As time passed without bringing any further sign from Mr. Tuohy my hopes gradually died out, and I fixed in my mind a date upon which I would abandon all expectations of securing the appointment. Scarcely had I reached this determination when I received a telegram from Mr.

To confide is one of the all but universal longings perhaps needs of human nature. Susan's honest, sympathetic eyes, her look and her habit of reticence, were always attracting confidences from such unexpected sources as hard, forbidding Miss Tuohy.

But Miss Tuohy had made her point with Susan had set her to thinking less indefinitely. "I must take hold!" Susan kept saying to herself. The phrase was always echoing in her brain. But how? how? And to that question she could find no answer.

Susan had to turn away, to hide her pity and her disappointment. Not only was she not to be helped, but also she must help another. "You might get a job at the hat factory," said she. Mrs. Tucker was delighted. "I knew it!" she cried. "Don't you see how He looks after me?" Susan persuaded Miss Tuohy to take Mrs. Tucker on. She could truthfully recommend the old woman as a hard worker.

Tuohy asking me to lunch with him the next day at the Cafe Royal in order to meet Mr. Ralph Pulitzer, who was passing through London on his way back to America after a visit to his father.

Thus ended my interview with Mr. James M. Tuohy, the London correspondent of the New York World. My next step was to call upon the second inquisitor, Mr. George Ledlie. I found him comfortably installed at an hotel in the West End. He was an American, very courteous and pleasant, but evidently prepared to use a probe without any consideration for the feelings of the victim.

As she was turning in some work, Miss Tuohy said abruptly: "You don't belong here. You ought to go back." Susan started, and her heart beat wildly. She was going to lose her job! The forelady saw, and instantly understood. "I don't mean that," she said. "You can stay as long as you like as long as your health lasts.

It was, indeed, at his suggestion that these Memoirs, which have proved the pleasantest literary task ever undertaken by me, were begun and were placed in the hands of Messrs. Hodder & Stoughton in England and of Major Putnam in the United States. Mr. Fred Grundy, Mr. Patchin, Mr. Tewson, and Mr. Tuohy were also among my "first-nighters."

Susan was not much surprised when Miss Tuohy went on to say: "I was spoiled when I was still a kid by getting to know well a man who was above my class. I had tastes that way, and he appealed to them. After him I couldn't marry the sort of man that wanted me. Then my looks went like a flash it often happens that way with us Irish girls. But I can get on.