ILLUSTRAT! ATTORNEYS, ATTORFEAY AP LAY Eniarosth Bh Tae Lov@ of Done Bouse SYNOPSIS. John Valiant, a rich soclety favorite, suddenly discovers that the Vallant cor. poration, which his father founded and which was the principal source of his wealth, had failed. He voluntarily turns over his private fortune to the receiver for the corporation. His entire remaining possessions consist of an old motor car, a white bull dog and Damory court, a nexg- lected estate in Virginia. On the way to Damory court he meets joey Dand- ridge, an auburn-haired beauty, and de- cides that he Is going to llke Virginia Im mensely, Shirley mother,, Mrs. Dand. ridge, and Major Bris ow exchange rem Inlscences 4d which it is revealed that th 3 Valiant's father, and a man named Sassoon were rivals for the hand of Mrs. Dandridge In her youth Bassoon and Valiant fought a duel on her account which the fosmer was killed Valiant finds Damory court vargrown with weeds and creepers rehabilitate tha place Valiant Shirley from the bita of a snake, whi bites } Knowing the deadliness of t bite, ‘ay sucks the poison from the wound 1! saves his life, Vallant le for the first time that his father left Vir gina on account of a duel in which Doe tor Bouthall and Mailor Bristow acted as his father's seconds. Vallant and Shirley become good friends Mrs Dar iridge fainta when she n Valiant for the first time. Valiant vers th he has a fortune in old walnut trees raaris toarnament, a survival of the jou foudal times, is held at Damory the last moment Valiant takes of one of the knigxhts wi eiters the lists He wins iirley Dandridge as queen ismay of Katherine } rt. who is i in m who caused an who looks so m ley, uncertain fr was love ant's pisto i Kin zg. a } Bristow had ag" his with . 3 4 to change her Aerts fatally wounded hy Gree fora dying he confesses ridge that he had kept 1 r had written to her CHAPTER XXX! Continued. In the little haircloth trunk back In her room lay book. It held a few leaves torn from letters and many ings From there she had known of his work. his marriage, the great cess for which his the name that from ing, the had so seldom taken lips. Some of them had d« his habits and idiosyncrasies, an altered personality, and aloo or loneliness that had set his and made him, way, a stranger to those who should have known him best. Thus her hold a double image these shadowed forth, she had loved, in the locket she we breast, It printed on Valiant porch at have risen, grave, He wri Mar rr eling that in net Shirley Frpr 1 Ar Ty an old scrap newspaper clip: name had stood upon her alt with hints of ye art tm on ia mind h ome to » ETAYE man and man outhful face was re always on her this face that heart, and wt the whose 3 was her had stood Rosewoo en before her 1, it had instinet, from on seemed that had tten! nof kent silence! He had It like a muffled bell ant was gone with room by lay that who would never s the Hfelong friend-—who had failed her thirty years ago! and in a tin box a m away ter. “He won't rouse through her But pealed Vali- th Beauty her youth; in old rr al ¥ peak to ber near again, ile a let lay the doctor | He Went Upstairs, Into the Bedrooms One by One. had said, but a little later, as he and Valiant sat beside the couch, the major opened his eyes suddenly “Shirley,” he whispered. Shirley?" She was sitting on the porch just outside the open window, and when she entered, tears were on her face The doctor drew back silently: but when Valiant would have done so, the major called him nearer, “No,” he panted; “I like to see you two together.” His voice was very weak and tired. As she leaned and touched his hand, he smiled whimsieally, “It's mighty curious,” he sald, “but | can't get it out of my head that its Beauty Vald ant and Judith that I'm really talking to. Foolish—isn’t {t?" But the idea seemed to master him, and presently he began to call Shirley by her moth o's name, An odd youthfulness crept into his eyee; a subtle paradoxica’ boylshness. His cheek tinged with “Where's color. The deep lines about his mouth smoothed miraculously out. “Judith,” he whispered, "“—you— sure you told me the truth a while ago, when you said--you sald—" “Yes, yes,” Bhirley answered, put- ting her young arm under him, think ing only to soothe the anxiety that geemed vaguely to thread some vague hallucination. He emiled easier,” he sald. again. “It makes ft He looked at Valiant, his mind seeming to slip farther and farther away. “Beauty,” he gasped, ‘you didn't go away after all, did you! [ dreamed it—I reckon. It'll be- right with you both.” He sighed peacefully, and turned to Shirley's and closed. | so glad,” he muttered, “so i didn't really do it, Judith. been the—only- | —l—eaver did.” The doctor went swiftly to the and beckoned to Jereboam. now, Jerry,” he said in a quickly.” The old the couch Is you' gwine as Is vo'? Mars’ The cracked but loving voice struck the of the falling se 8 major opened his “I'm glad It nave door "Come in low his knees by ried * Jer on he void nee 3 ais For a last time th CHAPTER XXXII. Renunciation. grim gse that The haste gathered Its dene : uildos whose be joyful mper as his r took him Into icoming armas. Next day the major was carried to his in the myrtle At the ce the old crowded to (ts doors. pled a Ramble place at others, he knew, were he. The ame diml iy bark trail final At h was nt ©» reat 1 St drew’s ger ehure cu me side——the older friends that late afternoon through fa ia to clothe with subtle the as colors the rector he read the ponses ly, and their Valiant the Go tor faces face of grim yond Many glanced will had been were tears on m thao ness him few there n that Jered DOREOR BE Miss Mattie between, Sue was be and wan sat Rickey Snyder. Shirley's ing amall shoulders ae if it would stay the grief that )K them The darkened Miss hell » ail the yut the of sho evening before had been further by chiid’s disappearance Mattie Sue had sat through night in tearful anxiety. It was Valiant who had solved the riddle {In her first wild compunction, Rickey ed out the story of her meet Greef King, his threat and terrorized silence, and when i of this he had guessed her He had the de the and [ns] whereabotts the Dome, in i which on a snowy night had rescued her her shabbiest | and trinkets left behind, taking with her only a string blue glass beads | that had been Shirley's last Christmas 8lX Years ago, here in dress, of “Let me stay!” she had walled not fit to live down there! It's all my are in Hell's Ha'f-Acre and ever!” Valiant had car i ried her back in his arms down | mountain- wal He thought of this now as he saw | that arm about the child in that pro | tective, almost motherly gesture. made his own heariache more unbear {able. Buch a little time ago felt that arm about him! He leaned his hot head against the cool plastered wall, trying to keep his mind on the solemn reading. But Shir- ley's voice and laugh seemed to be running eerily through the chanting lines, and her face shut out pulpit and lectern. It swept over him suddenly that each abominable hour could bat make the situation more impossible for them both, He had seen her as she entered the church, had thought her even paler than in the wood, the bluish shadows deeper under her eyes, Those delicate charms were in eclipse. And It was ha who was to blame! It came to him with a stab of en. lightenment. He had been thinking only of himself all the while. But for her, it was his presence that had now become the unbearable thing. A cold sweat broke on his forehead. * for | am a stranger with thee, and a sojourner; as all my fathers were, O spare me a little, that I may recover my strength before 1 go hence : The intoning volee fell dully on his WMS, To go away! il ought to stay h i forever To pass out of Le life, to a future empty of her? could he do that? ed from her in the rain he had felt a frenzy of obstinacy. It had seemed so clear that the barrier must in the end yield before their love. He had never thought of surrender. Now he told himself that flight was all that was left him. 8She-—her happiness—noth- ing else mattered. Damory court and its future-—the plans he had made— Valiant name-——in that clarifying in- he knew that all these, from that May day the Red road, stant on about her. She had tion of all. “Lead, kindly gloom" The voices the unvested choir rose clearly and some one at his side ering that this had been ‘favorite hymn. But heard the service was ended the illed the big yard while the nt words were spoken at the been the inspira. Light, of the he was whisg major's en Wh i : § i i She Tried to Coming te Years Agol Letter Thirty imagine That Her—Then. Valliant, standing with saw Shirley, with her mother and the doctor, pass out of the gate, She was not looking towerd him. A mist was before his as th drove away, and the fon of her re waver 4 t i wry 1 ing and Indistin¢ pale blurred the rest, ayes they nained face He realized vard cking iy to ty and the sexton door He was em was went taide % i t » the church gate, and ju to him. It was Lusk They had not u Even ight sf the s 11 KLION. Valiant all ¢ seemed to have los youthfulness, It w sleaplessness, and that touched 16y stood Vallant knew ted to say. about the bush.” “I've got reckon Shirley" touched the young “Yes,” he said, “I think [ know.” no new thing, with me sald the other hoarsely. "It's been three vears. The night of the ball, I thought that-] don't mean ask what you might have a right to resent but I must find out. Is there any reason why I shouldn't try my luck? Valiant shook his head. “No.” he sald heavily, "there i¢ no reason The boyish look sprang back to Lusk’'s face. He drew a long breath “Why, then 1 will.” he said “J=1'm sorry if I hurt you. Heaven knows | the #t ou one { is spoke AR had a him look what uffering once. ch other, while tl r had wa beat stammering somethin I that sald to ask you've won't guessed that Valiant fellow's arm “rer it's to He grasped the other's hand with a and Valiant ightclenched at his side. . - - - » * . A later Vallant climbed th sloping driveway of Damory court. It seemed to stare at him from a thou sand reproachful eyes. The bachelor red squirrel fron his tree-croteh down at him askance. The redbirds, flashing through the hedges, Fire-Cracker, the peacock, was shrieking from the upper lawn and the strident discord seemed to mock his mood. little make no other. brought grown to be a part of It, should remain laid to the walnut grove. As his fa ther had done, he would leave behind | him the life he had lived there, and | the old court should be once more | closed and deserted Uncle Jefferson and Aunt Daphne might live on in the | cabin back of the kitchens. There | was pasturage for the horse and the cows and for old Sukey, and some acres had already been cleared for planting. And there would be the swans, the ducks and chickens, the peafowl and the figh, A letter had come to him that morn. ing. The corporation had resumed utiness with credit unimpaired. Pub ie oririon was more than friendly and they iow. A place waited for him there, and ove of added honor bh 8 concern already looked forward to a new ca- jut he thought of thrill. The old life There were still spaces somewhere this now with no no longer called. wide unpeopled less needed, and there der the great gray columns, his steps spiritless and kmgging. The Virginia creeper, trailing over {ts end, waved to and fro with a sound like a eigh. 18 would it be before the lawn was once more unkempt and draggled? Before burdock and thistle, mulle and Spanish-needle return to smother the clover? Before Damory court, on which he had spent such loving Leno would lle again as it that afternoon when had rattied her on Uncle Jefferson's crazy hack? Before there would be for him, in some faraway corner of the world, only Wishing-House and the Never land? In the fore the 1 would lay he thit oment be- eyes on its . phrase hall he stood a m fireplace, his carven motto, “1 clinge the pear-thrust He wander restlessly through the was like a & began to 111 like ng-room looked the little lady | had a 1 rowliin been dy seomed Devil-John, yf his leap ically at | The shu i threw them light ing from and weaving a in the prisms of ET open erce the yell the figures +h t Lou BAN inhbows the bed ros then passing ‘halr-back r a frame the wal childish slood records of The dolls now rade and #1 ttle dress-pa in glass ht solors tha cares, prints In brig were shutters me time on the fear people, on ie the H opened i i and stood » efore he turned and went downstairs rough the rear door he could and Aunt Daphne sift impet-vine plecing with kitchens 3 +. ’ 10 in calico ¢ t BiiCO quilt and Qa little equ: and green utive darkies were sg looking up at her = ¢, while a wary ban. iously about their Ire d rawied * 5 : de roostah say. wnt Aun ‘Or wifes, Daph? roostah he ho Oey ! O00 1 come! Hah oon! Mars’ to all he Young come! Uo Mars’ Young Young Mars’ come!’ En dey all mighty skeered, ‘case Mars’ John he cert'n’y fond ob fried chick’n. But de big tub key gobbler he don’ b'leeve ‘tall. Doubtful-—doubtful lak dat. Den de drake he peep eroun’ de cornah. en he say, ‘Halsh! Haish! Haish!® Fo’ he done seed Mars’ John comin’, sho’ nuff jut et too late by den, fo’ Aunt Daph she done grab Pull en Mars’ John he gwine bery evenin’ fo’ he Now you chillun runs erlong home ter yo' mammies, en don’ yo’ pick none ob dem green apples on d« way, neidah”™ it was not till after dark had come that Valiant said goodby to the gar den. He loved it best under the star light. He sat a long hour under the pergola overlooking the lake, ot iet, he could dimly see the green rocks, and the white froth of the water bub bling and chuckling down over their ¥ The lifted and out the little lamps of stars. Under its light a gossamer mist robed the land scape In a shimmering opalescence, their values and became transmitted to sil ver eentinels, watching over a de mesne violet-velvet shadows filled with sleepy itterings and stealthy ngs and the odor of wild honey- suckle, At the last he stood before the old Suzdial, rearing its column from its pearly clusters of blossoms. “1 count no hours but the happy ones:” he read inscrip with n indrawn Then, groping at its base, he the ivy that had once rambled and drew up the tangle again he stone disk. His Bride's-Gar ’ Lie moon finally fv of tw tion the library, an hour big black later, sitting arias Sure z tan) plgeonholed desk, he “oy spd . i tonight on the le Jeflerson am leaving tes Une will 3 note in not stay Dar more pair very far feelin at are and I shall . always!” CHAPTER XXXII. The Voice From the Past. the A . r : fe Th eft the here dridge AITIAR box the the key while tt room her hands she sat since first the littl sy 1} lain In 1¢ had been Now was her palm like a all afire the a aimost hat 1 that | Thirty imagine etter's hen years gol bors had i Loo, jen ae to her she that have have room } © ONTINUET Value of Talk. Talk has the reputation of cheapest thing is being the there As supply to do with values, doubtless the sup counter value Things that qualit ¥ If talk were conf done are cheap lack enduring ned to the things the thing said, it would have a greater value Some one asked Edison if he experi. enced much inconvenience on account He replied that he thanked God for it every day, since it protected him from the distracting ef- fect of other people's talk. He could thus live his own life, think his own thoughts, do his own work in his world of silence more than to idea Concerning Battle of New Orleans Has Been Found to Be Correct, bs Interest in the slumbering cotton. battle plan in an abandoned trunk in | the celler of the St. Charles hotel | Little is known about the drawing or the other centants of the trunk which has remained unnoticed for years in a dark corner. Five veterans of the battle have added their signatures to the remark. able map to attest the fact that It is 8 mis representation of the battle plan as made under the direction of Andrew Jackson by his military engi: neer, H. Laclotte. It shows a line of cotton bales which a marginal note says was 1,000 feet long with a pro longment extending 600 feet Into the woods. Some historians deny the story about the use of cotton bales. The live veterans who say seph 8t. Cyr, Jean Lamothe, Gervals. appear ir the footnotes. ly, says the New Orleans Item, as it will be of servico for the staging of the battle, which is to be one of the leading features of the Exposition of Big Ideas, ————— Translator of “Arabian Nights.” The "Arablan Nights” did not be come familiar to Europeans until 1704, when Galland translated them into French, Scholars cast doubt on the authenticity of some of Galland's work, accusing him--like FitzGerald and Omar Khayyam-—of inventing rather than translating, but with the pubiie the success of the tales was immediate and immense. Galland used to complain that the students, re turning home in the early hours of the morning, would knock at his door and demand the recitation of a tale, w. BisRinor walrxs Broglish sad Germans. Ofos, Orider's Rushang Building J-BNANT Pals ATTORNEY -AT-LAW Penns Valley Banking Company Centre Hall, Pa. DAVID HK. 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