Bellefonte, Pa., March 30, 1917. ¢Copyright, by McClure Publications, Inc.) (Continued from last week.) SYNOPSIS. CHAPTER I—At her home In the Street, Bldney Page agrees to marry Joe Drum .mond “after years and years” and talks to K. Le Moyne, the new roomer, CHAPTER 1I—Sidney’s aunt Harrie who has been dressmaking with Sidney’ mother, launches an independent modiste’s lor. Sidney gets Dr. Ed Wilson's in uence with his brother, Doctor Max, the successful young surgeon, to place her ir the hospital as a probationer nurse. CHAPTER III-K. becomes acquaintec in the Street. Sidney asks him to sta) on as a roomer and explains her plans foi financing her home while she is in the school. CHAPTER IV—Doctor Max gets Sidney into the hospital school. CHAPTER V—S8idney and K. spend ar afternoon in the country. Sidney falls into the river. CHAPTER VI—Max asks Carlotta Har. vison, a probationer, to take a motor ride with him. Joe finds Sidney and K. al the country hotel, where Sidney is drying her clothes, and is insanely jealous. CHAPTER VII—While Sidney and K are dining on the terrace, Max and Car: lotta appear. K. does not see them, bul for some reason seeing him disturbs Car: lotta strangely. CHAPTER VIII—Joe reproaches Sidney She confides to K. that Joe knows now she will not marry him. CHAPTER IX—Sidney goes to training school and at home relies more and more on K. Max meets K, and recognizes him as Edwardes, a brilliant young surgeor who has been thought lost on the Titanic K.'s losing cases lost him faith in him- self and he guit and hid from the world CHAPTER X-—Carlotta ' fears Sidney Christine Lorenz and Palmer Howe are¢ married. The hard facts of her new life puzzl. Sidney. CHAPTER XI—Max continued his flir. tation with Carlotta, who becomes jealout of Sidney. K. coaches Max in his work, but remains a clerk in the gas office. Outside of her small immediate eircle Anna’s death was hardly felt. The little house went on much as be- fore. Harriet carried back to her busi- ness a heaviness of spirit that made it difficult to bear with the small irrita- “Take Me Away, K.” She Said Piti- fully. tions of her day. On Sidney—and in tess measure, of course, on K.—fell the real brunt of the disaster. Sidney kept ap well until after the funeral, but went down the next day with a low fever. “Overwork and grief,” Doctor Ed said, and sternly forbade the hospital again until Christmas. Morning and evening K. stopped at her door and inquired for her, and morning and eve- ning came Sidney’s reply: “Much better. I'll surely be up to- morrow.” But the days dragged on and she did aot get about. Downstairs, Christine and Palmer had entered on the round of midwinter gayeties. Palmer's “crowd” was a ' Hvely one. There were dinners and dances, week-end excursions to coun- iry houses. The Street grew accus- tomed tc seeing automobiles stop be- fore the little house at all hours of the night. Johnny Rosenfeld, driving Palmer's car, took to falling asleep at the wheel in broad daylight, and voiced his discontent to his mother. “You mever know where you are with them guys,” he sald briefly. “We start out for half an hour’s run in the eve- ning, and get home with the milk wag- ons. And the more some of them have had to drink, the more they want to drive the machine. If I get a chance, I'm going to beat it while the wind's my way.” But, talk as he might, in Johnny Rosentelds’ loyal Lieart there was no thought of desertion. Palmer had giv- en him a man’s job, and he would stick by it, no matter what came. One such night Christine put in, lying wakefully in her bed, while the clock on the mantel tolled hour after hour into the night. Palmer did not come home at all. He sent a note from the office in the morning: I hope you are not worried, darling. The car broke down near the Country club last night, and there was nothing to do but to spend the night there. I would have sent y®u.word, but I did not want to rouse you. What do you say to the the- ater tonight and supper afterward? Christine was learning. She tele- ohoned the Country club that morning, and found that Palmer had not been there. But, although she knew now that he was deceiving her, as he al- ways had deceived her, as probably he always would, she hesitated to con- front him with what she knew. She shrank, as many a woman has shrunk nefore, from confronting him with his lie. But the second time it happened she was roused. It was almost Christmas then, and Sidney was well on the way to recovery, thinner and very white, but going slowly up and down the stair- case on K's arm, and sitting with Harriet and K. at the dinner table. She was begging to be back on duty for Christmas, and K. felt that he would have to give her up soon. At three o'clock one morning Sidney roused from a light sleep to hear a rapping on her door. “Is that you, Aunt Harriet?” she called. “It’s Christine. May I come in?” Sidney unlocked her door. Christine slipped into the room. She carried a candle, and before she spoke she looked at Sidney’s watch on the bedside table. “I hoped my clock was wrong,’ she said. “I am sorry to waken you, Sid- ney, but I don’t know what to do.” “Are you ill?” “No. Palmer has not come home.” “What time is it?” “After three o'clock.” Sidney had lighted the gas and was throwing on her dressing gown. “When he went out did he say—" “He said nothing. We had peen quarreling. Sidney, I am going home in the morning.” “You don’t mean that, do you?” “Don’t I look as if I mean it? How much of this sort of thing is a woman suppose to endure?” “Perhaps he has been delayed. These things always seem terrible in the middle of the night, but by morning—" Christine whirled on her. “This isn’t the first time. You re- member the letter I got on my wedding day?” “Yes.” “He's gone back to her.” “Christine! Oh, I'm sure you're wrong. He's devoted to you. Oh, I don’t believe it!” “Believe it or not,” said Christine doggedly, “that’s exactly what has hap- sened. I got something out of that little, rat of a Rosenfeld boy, and the rest I know because I know Palmer. He’s out with her tonight.” The hospital had taught Sidney one ching: that it took many people to nake a world, and that out of these some were inevitably vicious. But vice aad remained for her a clear abstrac- ion. There were such people, and be- »ause one was in the world for service yne cared for them. Even the Saviour 12d been kind to the woman of the itreets. But here abruptly Sidney found the reat injustice of the world—that be- ‘ause of this vice the good suffer mo-e han the wicked. Her young spint ‘ose in hot rebellion. “It isn’t fair!” she cried. “It makes ne hate all the men in the world. >almer cares for you, and yet he can lo a thing like this!” Christine was pacing nervously ap nd down the room. Mere companion- ship had soothed her. She was now, »n the surface at least, less excited han Sidney. “They are not all like Palmer, thank 1eaven,” she said. “There are decent nen. My father is one, and your K,, 1ere in the house, is another.” At four o'clock in the morning Palmer Howe came, home. Christine met him in the lower hall. He was rather pale, but entirely sober. She confronted him in her straight white gown and waited for him to speak. “I am sorry to be so late, Chris,” he said. “The fact is, I.am all in. I was driving the car out Seven Mile run. We blew out a tire and the thing turned over.” Christine noticed that his right arm was hanging inert by his side. ey fy. vin CHAPTER XIIL. Young Howe had been firmly re- solved to give up all his bachelor hab- ts with his wedding day. In his indo- ent, rather selfish way, he was much n love with his wife. But with the inevitable misunder- standings of the first months of mar- riage had come a desire to be appreci- ited once again at his face value. Jrace had taken him, not for what he was, but for what he seemcd to be. With Christine the veil was reut. She knew him now-—all his small indo- ences, his affectations, his weaknesses. Later on, like other women since the world began, she would learn to dis- semble, to affect to believe him what 1e was not. ’ Grace had learned this lesson long ago. It was the A B C of her knowl edge. And so, back to Grace cami Palmer Howe, not with a suggestion t« renew the old relationship, but fo! comradeship. 1 Christine sulked—he wanted goo( cheer; Christine was intolerant—hs wanted tolerance; she disapproved o: him and showed her disapproval—h¢ wanted approval. He wanted life tc be comfortable and cheerful, withou recriminations, a little work and muck | school. play, a drink when one was thirsty Distorted though it was, and founde on a wrong basis, perhaps, deep in his heart Palmer’s only longing was fol happiness; but this happiness must b¢ of an active sort—not content, whick is passive, but enjoyment. : “Come on out,” he said. “I've got 8 car now. No taxi working its head ofl for us. Just a little run over the coun try roads, eh?” It was the afternoon of the day be fore Christine’s night visit to Sidney. The office had been closed, owing to a death, and Palmer was in possessior of a holiday. “Come on,” he coaxed. “We'll go oul to the Climbing Rose and have sup- per.” T “I don’t want to go.” “That’s not true, Grace, and you know it.” “You and I are through.” “It’s your doing, not mine. The roads are frozen hard; an hour’s run into the country will bring your colol back.” “Much you care about that. Go and ride with your wife,” said the girl, and flung away from him. The last few weeks had filled out her thin figure, but she still bore traces of her illness. Her short hair was curled over her head. She looked curiously boyish, almost sexless. Because she saw him wince when she mentioned Christine, her ill temper increased. She showed her teeth. “You get out of here,” she said sud- denly. “I didn’t ask you to come bak, I don’t want you.” “Good heavens, Grace! You always knew I would have to marry some day.” “I was sick; I nearly died. I dida’t hear any reports of you hanging around the hospital to learn how I was get ting along.” He laughed rather sheepishly. “I had to be careful. You know that as well as I do. I know half the staff there. Besides, one of—"” He hesi- tated over his wife’s name. “A girl 1 know very well was in the training There would have been the devil to pay if I'd as much as callec up.” “You never told me you were going to get married.” Cornered, he slipped an arm arounc her. But she shook him off. “I meant to tell you, honey; but you got sick. Anyhow, I—I hated to tel you, honey.” He had furnished the flat for her There was a comfortable feeling of coming home about going there again And, now that the worst minute of com EST “I'll tell you what we'll do,” he said. “We won't go to any of the old places. I've found a new roadhouse in the country that's respectable enough to suit anybody. We'll go out to Schwit- ter's and get some dinner. I'll prom- ise to get you back early. How's that?” In the end she gave in. And on the way out he lived up to the letter of their agreement. The situation ex- hilarated him: Grace with her new air of virtue, her new aloofness; his comfortable car; Johnny Rosenfeld’s discreet back and alert ears. The adventure had all the thrill of a new conquest in it. He treated the girl with deference, did not insist when she refused a cigarette, felt glowingly virtuous and exultant at the same time. When the car drew up before the Schwitter place, he slipped a five-dollar bill into Johnny Rosenfeld’s not over- clean hand. “I don’t mind the ears,” he said. “Just watch your tongue, lad.” And | Johnny stalled his engine in sheer sur- | prise. “There's just enough of the Jew in me,” said Johnny, “to know how to talk a lot and say nothing, Mr. Howe.” Johnny Rosenfeld at eighteen had developed a philosophy of four words. It took the place of the Golden Rule, the Ten Commandments, and the Cate- chism. It was: “Mind your own busi- ness.” True to his promise, Palmer wakened the sleeping boy before nine o'clock. Grace had eaten little and drunk noth- ing; but Howe was slightly stimulated. “Give her the ‘once over,” he told Johnny, “and then go back and crawl into the rugs again. I'll drive in.” Grace sat beside him. Their progress was slow and rough over the country roads, but when they reached the state road Howe threw open the throt- tle. He drove well. The liquor was in his blood. He took chances and got away with them, laughing at the girl's gasps of dismay. “Wait until I get beyond Simkins- ville,” he said, “and I'll let her out. You're going to travel tonight, honey.” The girl sat beside him. with her eves fixed ahead. He had been drink- ing, and the warmth of the liquor was in his voice. She was determined .on one thing. She was going to make him live up to the letter of his prom- ise to go away at the house door; and more and more she realized that it would be difficult. His mood was reck- less, masterful. Instead of laughing when she drew back from a proffered caress, he turned surly. Obstinate lines that she remembered appeared from his nostrils to the corners of his mouth. She was uneasy. Finally she hit on a plan to make him stop somewhere in her neighbor- hood and let her get out of the car. She would not come back after that. There was another car going toward the city. Now it passed them, and as often they passed it. It became a con- test of wits. Palmer’s car lost on the hills, but gained on the level stretches, which gleamed with a coating of thin ice. “I wish you'd let them get ahead, Palmer. It's silly and it’s reckless.” “I told you we'd travel tonight.” He turned a little glance at her. : | What the deuce was the matter with “I'm Going to Be Straight, Palmer.” their meeting was over, he was visibly happier. But Grace continued to stand eyeing him somberly. “I’ve got something to tell you,” she said. “Don’t have a fit, and don’t laugh. If you do, I'll—I'll jump out of the window. I've got a place in a store. I'm going to be straight, Pal- mer.” “Good for you!” He meant it. She was a nice girl and he was fond of her. The other was a dog's life. And he was not unselfish about it. She could not belong to him. He did not want her to belong to any- one else. “One of the nurses in the hospital, a Miss Page, has got me something to do at Linton & Hofburg’s. I am going on for the January white sale. If I make good they will keep me.” He had put her aside without a qualm ; and now he met her announce- ment with approval. He meant to let her alone. They would have a holiday together, and then they would say good-by. And she had not fooled him. She still cared. He was getting off well, all things considered. She might have raised a row. “Good work!” he said. “You'll be a lot happier. But that isn’t any reason why we shouldn't be friends, is it? Just friends; I mean that. I would like to feel that I can stop in now and then and say how do you do.” “I promised Miss Page.” “Never mind Miss Page.” The mention of Sidney's name brought up in his mind Christine as he had left her that morning. He scowled. Things were not going well at home. There, was something wrong with Christine. She used to be a good sport, but she had never been the same since the day of the wedding. He thought her attitude toward him was one of suspicion. It made him uncom- fortable. But any attempt on his part to fathom it only met with cold silence. That had been her attitude that morn- ing. women, anyhow? Were none of them cheerful any more? Here was Grace as sober as Christine. He felt out- raged, defrauded. His light car skidded and struck the big car heavily. On a smooth road per- haps nothing more serious than broken mudguards would have been the re- sult. But on the ice the small car slewed around and slid over the edge of the bank. At the bottom of the de- clivity it turned over. Grace was flung clear of the wreck- age. Howe freed himself and stood erect, with one arm hanging at his side. There was no sound at all from the boy under the tonneau. The big car had stopped. Down the bank plunged a heavy, gorillalike fig- ure, long arms pushing aside the frozen branches of trees. When he reached the car, O'Hara found Grace sitting unhurt on the ground. In the wreck of the car the lamps had not been extin- guished, and by their light he made out Howe, swaying dizzily. “Anybody underneath?” “The chauffeur. He's dead, I think. He doesn’t answer.” The other members of O'Hara's party had crawled down the bank by that time. With the aid of a jack, they got the car up. Johnny Rosenfeld lay dou- pled on his face underneath. When he came to and opened his eyes, Grace al- most shrieked her relief. “I'm all right,” said Johnny Rosen: feld. And, when they offered him whisky: “Away with the fire-water. 1 am no drinker. I—I—" A spasm of pain twisted his face. “I guess I'll get up.” With his arms he lifted himself to a sitting position, and fell back again. “Huh!” he said. legs.” “I can’t move my (Continued next week.) Good Authority. A school-mistress asked her class to explain the word “bachelor,” and was very much amused when a little girl answered: “A bachelor is a very happy man.” “Where did you learn that? asked the mistress. “Father told me,” the little girl re- plied.—Tit-Bits. ——Subsecribe for the “Watchman.” CASTORIA Bears the signature of Chas, H.Fletcher. In use for over thirty years, and The Kind You Have Always Bought. Dry Goods. Dry Goods. LYON @& COMPANY. Special For Easter! Our buyer has just returned from the Eastern mar- kets, and through advantageous buying, will have Special Sales on the following lines for THIRTY DAYS ONLY. LOT 1.—Fine white Voile Waists, new large col- lar, embroidered and lace trimmed. Value $1.50. Special price - . - - 98¢c. LOT 2.—Ladies’ and Misses’ Spring Coats in checks and plaids, all colors. Values $8.00 to $10.00. Special price . . - - $5.00. LOT 3.—Ladies’ and Misses’ Suits in check, black and colors. $15.00 and $18.00. Special $10.98. (Ladies’ White Canvas Shoes, 8-inch top, | Value $3.00. - - - Special $2.48. LOT 4.— Men’s Black and Tan Working Shoes. L Value $3.50. - - - Special $2.48. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANAAAAAS RUGS. RUGS. RUGS. By a lucky buy we can again show those Matting Rugs 9x12. Value $10.00. - - Special $5.98. Tapestry Rugs, new designs, 9x12. Values $12.00 and $15.00. . - - . Special $9.98. Come in and get our Special Prices on Axminsters and Wilton Rugs. Watch our store as this season we are prepared to sell goods for less than wholesale prices. Lyon & Co. «+» Bellefonte. Shoes. Shoes. Big Reduction on the Price of Shoes YEAGER'S SHOE STORE For One Day Only, March 31st. Saturday, I will reduce the prices on certain lines of Shoes. This reduction does not cover all Shoes, just Shoes listed below. It is a case of I need the money, you need the Shoes. Soft-sole Shoes for the baby - - 20C Men's $4.00 Dayton Shoes - - $3.00 Men’s $3.50 Moose-hide Shoes - - $2.50 3 Men's $3.50 Scout Shoes - - - $2.50 Boys’ $3.00 Scout Shoes - - . $2.25 Ladies’ $4.00 Nurse Shoes . - - $3.00 Childs’ $2.50 Tan Shoes - - $1.75 Men’s $7.00 Dress Shoes - - - $5.00 This is a bonafide reduction; every pair of shoes is worth just one dollar more than I am selling them for on this special day. Remember the day— SATURDAY, MARCH 31st ONLY. YEAGER'S, The Shoe Store for the Poor Man. Bush Arcade Bldg. 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA.