Bellefonte, Pa., July 2, 1926. : SHOES. (Continued from page 6, Col. 4.) Hampton came alone, and even Solo- mon, in all his glory, was not arrayed as Hampton! But the Girl continued to wear the blue serge and the broken shoes, even though Tony, wincing, had heard Hampton tell her that she’d be a knock-out in a black velvet gown and satin slippers. Even though Hamp- ton had gone into alluring details as he described the second-act gown of a certain leading lady—one whom the Girl had long worshipped, and from afar. “1d like t’ see you in a party dress,” Hampton had said. “Say, you'd be there, kid—there. An’ I'd like t’ see them pretty feet of yours dancin’ th’ daylights outer silver shoes with buck- les t’ ’em.” The serpent in Eden? Maybe he wore a checked suit and looked pity- ingly at the ten pink toes of Eve. Who can say! A more stupid man than Hampton would have rushed the Girl, hoping to dull her brain with the glitter and the thrill of life. But Hampton was in no way stupid. His staying away from the shop for two long weeks was a sign of his supreme subtlety. Even Tony grateful though he was for the interlude, felt a strange fore- boding. And the Girl, coming in nearly every evening, was nervous and restive. Twice she mentioned Hampton to Tony. “That guy—you know, wit’ ring,” she asked, -“d’you guess he moved outer this here neighborhood ?” And again: “He had coin, the boy—" she mused. “I guess he could show the girl he liked a good time, all right Y Then with an air that proclaimed success and ready money even as a fanfare of trumpets would proclaim victory—Hampton came back. Came back one evening, and seated himself beside the Girl with an easy laugh and a bit of gay badinage as casual as it was deadly. And from the Girl's sud- | den excitement—that she either couldn’t or didn’t try to hide—Tony knew that the absent treatment of Hampton had heen successful. He was not surprised to see them walk together out of the door. To see them stand talking, under the glare of a street lamp, before they separated to go their opposite directions. He was glad, in a dull way, that they did separate. But he—even as he knew that he had long watched a losing bat- tle—could vision the approaching end. That night, as he fastened the door of his little shop, as he went slowly in the direction of his lonely lodgings, Tony moved wearily, stiffly, as an old man moves. And the eyes of him— wistful as the eyes of a stray puppy, and as warm as old wine—were cloud- ed with the tears he could not shed. It was the next day that the Girl i pill My, Ue i Case No. 110 Wadsworth Case No. 111-A One watch cannot doit all— Are you forcing your strap watch to serve on ell occasions, formal as well as informal? Do you expect of it that highest accuracy which only a pocket watch can give? Or is the full burden placed on your pocket watch, - makin g it serve even for sports, and in summer whet you wear no vestrregardless of the inconvenience to you? In either case, you are asking too much of your watch. For complete watch ser- vice, 8 man must have two timepieces—a strap watch for convenience and style, and a pocket watch whenever the vest is worn or whenever highest accuracy is essential. Let us show you our large assortment of the newest styles in both types of watch, dressed in the celebrated Wadsworth Cases. They set the fashion for watches today. F. P. Blair & Son Bellefonte, Penna. Jewelers and Silversmiths th’, made a date with Hampton—the very | next day. Hampton was leaving the ' shop as the Girl came in, and Tony heard him speak. in the assured tone of a man who had won. ' “Tomorrow,” he said—and in his | voice was the note of authority that { Tony had heard him use to the ser- "vile men who no longer followed him into the shop—‘tomorrow we'll step out a bit, see?” But first we'll do some shoppin’.” His narrowed eyes swept "over the Girl’s shabby figure. “I got some swell friends, an’ we might run inter ’em. And—well, they won’t get no chance t’ say I'm a bum picker. | An’ besides—" | The Girl laughed, but beneath her laughter Tony could sense a creeping note of hysteria. | “Say,” she rallied, but weakly, “I ‘never let no—no feller—buy clothes (fer me. I—It aint right! You | ain’t—" Suddenly pride flared into "her face. Her head, with its heavy crown of twilight hair, was lifted. “You ain’t ashamed of—of me?” Her tone held more than a question. “No matter how I'm dressed—you ain’t . ashamed 7” The man’s voice was all at once soft. The man’s hand was suddenly i lying upon the hand of the Girl | “Ashamed of you,” he murmured, and almost—for a moment—Tony thought Hampton was telling the truth. “Say —how ’d you get that way? It’s only that 1 want you t’ have things.” { The Girl’s head drooped. It was a [long moment before she spoke. And then, “Where’ll I meet you?” she ask- ed. | Hampton laughed. And it was the , confident note of his laughter that rmade Tony’s hand tighten on the | blacking brush he held. “Better meet me right here,” he said, “as close t’ six as you can make it.” He turned, with never a backward glanee, to the door. Tony left, tne coin that he had tossed lying upon the dusty floor and went methodically about the work of cleaning the Girl’s slippers. They were so thin in spots that he was afraid to rub hard. As words of warning and advice. It was only as he reached for the dingy rag which supplied his art’s final touch that he summoned up the courage to speak. “You an’ him~—" he queried, and no listener could have guessed the tu- mult in his mind as he jerked his head in the direction of the door through which Hampton had passed, “you an’ him—will you be marry? Yess—7” The Girl's slim, tired hand flew up until it rested against one hot cheek. She did not answer at once. But her voice scarcely held a tremor when when finally she spoke. “If you wasn’t so dumb, Tony,” she said at last, “I’d say you was fresh. But—well, you ain’t meanin’ any harm, I guess . ... No— me an’ Mr. Hampton ain’t goin’ t’ get married. He’s got a wife somewhere—he says.” Tony did not make comment. But something in the -~tense- -set-ef his shoulders, something in‘the hands that clenched tight upon the dingy polish- ing rag, goaded the Girl to further speech. “An’ you ain’t got no right t’ think, Tony,” she cried swiftly, “that he’s more t’ me than just—" she hesitated, “a good friends. You ain’t got no right, Tony! Only—well—” the words came in a rush, “say, a woman’s got- ter have pretty clothes. She’s gotter have ’em. An’ sometimes it don’t seem that no price is too much t’ give for ’em. Fat dames with dyed hair— they come t’ my counter every day. Wearin’ di’'monds an’ fur coats. An’ I've had these shoes all winter—an’ I ain’t bought a dress fer a year. Bein’ good is all right in stories, Tony. But it don’t get you nowhere in life. Not nowhere! Sometimes I think I'd sell my soul fer a velvet dress” (Oh, Hampton, Hampton!) The USCO BALLOON A handsome, sturdy balloon tire at a low high-shoul. pi nl ries the name, mark and full warranty of the United States Rubber Comipany. —trade marked and For Sale By to the Wise— You can now buy USCO Balloons, High-Pressure Cords and Fabrics by the United States Rubber Company —at a price which will make non-trade-marked, unwar- ranted tires a dead issue with you. Even lower than mail order tires. USCO hasalways been a wonderful value and today USCO Tires, built by the owners of theworld’s largestrubber plantation, are a better value than ever. Let us tell you more about them. warranted P. H. McGARVEY, Bellefonte HARRY J. BEHRER, State College he brushed them lightly, gently, he was longing to ask quéstions, to offer’ “an’ silver slippers with buckles to em.” The Girl was crying as she walked past Tony and out of the door, but her head was still high. All during the next morning, all through the: long afternoon, - Tony worked like an automaton. With his hands fumbling at the tasks they us- ually acompanied so deftly. With his feet dragging as they walked about his little shop. But with his brain leaping ahead to the appointed hour. “As close t’ six as you can make it!” so Hampton had said. Tony’s heart was a burning weight in his breast when the noon was strik- ing. By three o’clock his cheeks were flushed and his eyes fever bright. At four he spoke his thoughts aloud, thereby astounding a short and palyid customer. “I will maybe keel him!” said Tony simply. The customer did not wait for the final rubbing down of his calfskin boots. At five Tony was all a-twitch with nervousness. At five fifteen he sent two customers away, telling them abruptly that he was closing the shop. At five thirty Hampton came, bland, smiling, twirling a cane—a cane with an ivory horse’s head as a handle. Dressed in a new suit of light grey, grey-topped shoes, and a pearly-tint- ed hat. As he seated himself leisure- ly in the bootblacking chair, he was humming a little tune. And Tony? Automatically he reached for" his brushes. For his blacking box. For the tools of his trade. While murder lay in his heart, he began to rub black paste into the boots of the man who hummed a tune. While hate surged through his soul he asked his usual question. “You want ’em high polish—yess ?” he asked. Hampton ceased to hum. He look- ed down benignly. into the little boot- black’s face. He spoke. “Sure Ido!” he said genially. “Sky’s th’ limit tonight, Tony!” His ancestors—bred of the feud and the vendetta—would have ended the matter with a curse and a stiletto. But Tony had drifted away from his ancestors on the tides of a new world. Blind with hate, he reached for a new bottle of liquid polish. It stood on a shelf at the elbow of Hampton, a tall bottle and dangerously full. Did Tony’s hand tremble as he drew it from its place, or did anger ctnfuse him, or was it by intent that the bot- tle slipped from his grasp? Who shall say! Only, as the sticky contents of it spread like an ugly spider across the grey of Hampton’s suit, as flying, gummy blods of liquid attached them- selves to the pearl grey of the man’s hat, Tony stood erect, placid, with a half-smile—that might have reflected either bewilderment or triumph—up- on his lips. As Hampton, with an ugly snarl, sprang forward, he did not flinch. As the fist of Hampton, shooct- ing out, closed one brown, wistful eye, he made no sound. Nor did he try to defend himself. Only at the opening click of a door, only at, the h Girl’s star cry, did his body quiver. man in: love does not like to be seen as a weakling, even though he is a bootblack. He tried to speak, but his English vocabulary was so small, so very small! And then the fist of Hampton again crashed into his face, and tke room swam, strangely, in a black and crimson mist. Perhaps it was the touch of her hand smoothing his forehead that brought Tony back to painful reali- ties. Perhaps it was the sound of her voice speaking as if from a distance. Speaking—but not to him. “Y! big bum,” the voice was say- ing. “Sure I blame you! You, with yer so't voice an’ all, beatin’ up a poor little guy half yer size. What if he did Wreck yer clothes? He didn’t mean to. An’ you got other suits, ain’t yer? I've a good min’ t’ call a cop, So I have!” Threugh the eye that was not cles- ed and painful Tony could glimpse the blurred figure of Hampton. Through ears that strained against the tumult of returning consciousness he could hear, tie man’s voice. “Say, you got a gall,” Hampton was retorting. “Call a cop—t’ get me? Try ar’ do it! You little rat from a bargain basement. In yer old dress an’ shabby shoes!” Tony could not see the Girl, but he could feel the arrogance in her straigktening figure as she spoke. ~ “You beat it,” she advised tersely, “while th’ beatin’—Mister—is good. An’ remember this: it ain’t every girl that has th’ nerve t’ wear shabby shoes in this town—see? That has th’ nerve t’ keep on wearin’ ’em— You—" the voice shook strangely, “you beat it!” The door closed with a slam that caused the little shop to quiver. Hampton had gone. And Tony, lying still,i felt a sudden, new moisture up- on his bloody face. All at once he realized that the Girl was crying in a sileat way that was quite terrible and at the same time almost splendid. He sensed, rather than knew, that the sobs came as much from relief as they did from sorrow. Struggling to speak —struggling against his lack of vo- cabuléry as well as against physical weakness—he managed a sudden halt- ing sentence. “Sometime,” he muttered through bruisel lips, so faintly that the Girl had tb bend her head to catch the words “sometime—you - will - let - me jake - you - to - a - movie-yes ?” Alliat once the Girl’s sobbing turn- ed—it a miraculous way—to laughter. Her hirth was half-hysterical, per- haps, but it was not unkind . ... Good Housekeeping. Tor Those Country Roads. When stuck in the mud, the sim- plest Mlan is to set the emergency brakeg so as to just bind the wheels a bit.! This offers each wheel enough resisttace so that the power dashes back ind forth from one wheel to the otheriand is forced to actuate each one gadually rather than be divert- ed by the differential entirely to. one wheel, This is a good tip to recall during a heavy rain ten miles from the min road. 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