[1 cumesm—— - ” p— CORY R/CHT BY THE BOBSBS or SYNOPSIS. —f Be Le Comte de SBabron cavalry, takes to hizx quarters to raise by hand a motherless Irish t r pup. and | names it Pitchoune He with the | Marquise d'Esclignae and meets Miss Ju Ha Redmond, American | He ta or dered to Algiers is notoallowed to | take servants Miss Redmond takes care ited ¢, who, longing for his m ; away from her The marquise plans to marry Julia to the Duc | de Tremont Pitchoune follows Sabron to Alglers, dog and master meet, and Sabron gets permission to keep his dog with him The Du Amerie eiross wounded In an engage + dry bed of n A Ciress an river Pitcl fter a | leaves him INarguiss doubts After CHAPTER XXIII, Two Love Stories. If it had not been for her absorbing thought of Sabron, Julia would reveled in the desert and the new periences. As it was, charm magic and the fact that traveled over it helped her the inter val In the deep im seemed have ex its and he $e nde LO 8lqQuUre rable silence she to would either penet to hear her futu She believed that it be a wonderfully happy one, or a hope- re speax her. “2 lessly withered life “Julia, I cannot ride exclaimed the comtesse She was any farther!" an excellent horsewoman and had ridden all her life, but riding had cons 15te yf ter in thé Bois de Boul it Julia's tireless gallops toward an ever goal “Forgiv> me, and brought her friend's side It cool the day, fourteenth day since Tremont had left | her | of late a can noon and was somet to follow disappearing sald Miss horse the Was of Ww ul rr i - ” —— wrote about it to Mon- from went into battle” “And that's all?" urged Madame de Maine ’ “That's all,” said Miss “You tell a ma chere.” “Is “Have you come to ? Voyons!” love story very badly, | it a love story?” Africa for char silent, A seize her heart, stifle | poverty of her story She sat turning her cof-| her fingers, her She little any love Julia was to the her, great reserve to love struck between eyes ver: had never this presence of downcast tell She to tell But the real, and she saw his eves looking upon her she had them heard the sound of voice but one thing have her Sabron might Yet was story was so clearly as often that Seen his meant her. She her letter to him, rescued he had fallen the remembered from the field She raised her eyes de | appeal in them where to Comtesse a Maing, and there Wan an The Frenchwoman leaned over and She learned her. le purpose asked nothing more She had not discretion to no At sat out in the moor and night they as the radiance day mds wey 141 54 +5 Wad IRE Wrapped in their warm cov ulia and Therese de la the snow J Maine the door of heads it seemed ugh their hands could the sky At a |] around and there came to them the Azrael, rugs hefore and above thelr he SIArs go t » the low tha snatch little dis ts sat the dying fire plaintive thei; 8 he led excursion A wind blew from | the west, lifting their veils from their fe I iresh kFelmets and brir the mimosa into they had ridden ward sunset, ar second ea of hose The in glory oi hung over the west Althou fectly sion and its importance, it one Wor them of Tremont other tha had been spoken between and Sabron natural interest and anxiety night have been tw r pat ents horses, western | The star id their caravan,” mused Madar Maine 1 not thought poetical) 116 3 I'l Julia aa to leac home.” Madame de Ia rf and Frenchwoman's ¢ periect mocking Maine turned her fac: The ally Julia saw tears in her eves control was thir sing aings brigh the treated The touched Julia “Therese!” can mont gayety of her eves exclaimed the Ameri ‘It is only fourteen days'” Madame de la Maine laughed. There was a break in her voice. “Only four | teen days,” she repeated. “and any one of those days may mean death'” She threw back her head, touched | her stallion, and flew away Jike light. and it waa Julla who first drew rein “Therese! Therese! We go any farther!” “Lady!” sald Azrael He drew big black horse up beside them. “ must go back to the tents.” | Madame de la Maine pointed with! her whip toward the horizon. “It is! eruel! It ever recedes!” * » * *. - » . “Tell me, Julia, of Monsieur de! Sabron,” asked Madame de la Maine abruptly. : “There is nothing to tell, Therese.” | “You don’t trust me?” “Do you think that, really?” In the tent where Azrael served them their meal, under the ceiling of | Turkish red with ita Arabic charac | ters in clear white, Julia and Madame | de la Maine sat while their coffee was | served them by a Syrian servant “A girl does not come into the Sa. hara and watch like a sentinel does not suffer as you have suffered. ma chere, without there being something to tell” ‘ “It fs true,” said Miss Redmond, | girl. cannot his We | i i i i “and would you be with me, Therese, | if 1 did not trust you? And what do you want me to tell? she added naively. The comtesse laughed, “Vous etes charmante, Julia!” “I met Monsieur de Sabron.,” sald Julia slowly, “not many months ago in Tarascon. 1 saw him several times, | and then he went away.” i “And then?” urged Madame de la Maine eagerly. : “He left his little dog, Pltchoune, with me, and Pitchoune ran after his master, to Marseilles, flinging himself | into the water, and was rescued by | was married,” sald Madame ne, “when | was sixteen iia d nearer | rew a little in the shadow - .1 1 » 8 real ove ome At Night They Sat Out in the Moon: | light, our terrace. He was very | “Throughout our childhood, until 1 | was sixteen, we teased each other and fought and quarreled.” | “This is not a loveaffair, Therese,” sald Miss Redmond, i “There are all kinds, ma chere, as | there are all temperaments,” said | Madame de la Maine. “At Assump- | tion—that is our great feast, Julia | the Feast of Mary—it comes in Au gust-at Assumption, Monsieur de Ia Maine came to talk with my grand- mother. He was forty years old, and | Julia put out her hand and took the “1 married Monsieur de la Maine in six weeks,” sald Therese. “Oh,” breathed Miss Redmond, "hor: rible!"” Madame de la Maine pressed Julia's hand. “When it was decided between my grandmother and the comte, 1 escaped at night, after they thought I had gone to bed, and I went down to the lower terrace where the weeds grew In plenty, and told Robert. Somehow, I did not ‘expect him to make fun, al though we always joked about every- thing until this night, It was after nine o'clock.” The swept ward the desert. “A only not like this was never but that many years “1 thought at first that Bob would kill me—he grew so white and terrible, He seemed suddenly to have aged ten years. | will never forget his cry as it rang out in the night. ‘You will marry that old man when we love each oth- er? 1 had never known it until then, “We were only children, but he I knew it then,” comtesse one hand to moon like this chere., There me ma moon to for it then.” She waited for a long time. Over be nothing but one vell of light. The singing, but and Julia grew her the cara seemed to come out of the moonlit mist, rocking, rocking the camels and the huddied fi had fairly Arabs heart stopped echoed before eyes van she walted for And be changed in her mind suffered from his ye ed boy, defrauded of his early love seemed to her that he would forever A man with, a warm-heart Y it now Tremont was a charn figure to lead Sabron “Therese, she murmured, “won't you teil me?” “They thought | sald the Comtesse to Maine had gone bed,” de la went back to my un by a little stair and 1 ¢ what life " I ci 3 case, seldom uss found mys 1 i i Was alone, and | knew what it meant yor, But girls to be p horrified twentiath Julia, the interrupted are not id in century “They Robert 3 France, my are Gear venteen, His USLINS AND SILKS PARISIENNES TURN TO DELICATE MATERIALS FOR RELIEF. War Has Brought So Much Nursing and Needlework That Dainty Gar. ments for Hours of Leisure Are Imperative, We are becoming more and more in- fatuated with the delicate musling and simple silks. A sort of reaction set in, We have to occupy ourselves 80 much with nursing .nd needlework that it seems a relief to clothe our persons in dainty and lovely gar ments when we take a few hours’ holi- under the These immense amount a charity ing call fete comes “holiday for gigantic | an Oi finds a quiet moment, writes Idalia de Villiers, Paris pondent of Boston Globe A dress { tion MOouss corre the which attracted Ritz de my atten the of black made bordered with at Was eline BGie | a plalted slip crepe de chine frock is hung straight from the made of ivory This seemed to be a wliite i one-piecsa It | ders, & celglure | picturesque tilly and lovely little blouse sho i of velvet There w & chan il coat in fine black the bodice opened over a made of | chiffon and fine lace The lace sleeves of the semitransparent is to the that drawn on blouse They and banded band of were over were bishop in ti biack at velvet nmed worn with inued Madame and it shone on wedding das tareat and land Africa There was “1 did not Madame died said husband CHAPTER XXIV The Meeting IU'nder the sun, under the nights Tremont, wi toward the d gtante ful forced to neyed were he was have been cu have 1 Charlies Ji bet weer traveled by the Not slowly. slowly 1 mont sick man once rode day after day did the soldier for any time regain his reason. He woul ¢ Foie Tom coma to delirium, and times Tremont thou to breathe his COvers, of a WAX—a carried as a vq offering altars of desert warfare ONTISUED) man Slender, emaciated like the wounded under Sabron lay in soldier man tive to Tey BY. « Things That Have Been Condemned § 4 banished from our tables all commodities which — like pota have been condemned in print our diet would be decidedly monoto “Food faddists are most aggres we them preach that we should give up meat, tobacco, alcohol, soup, starch (including bread and potatoes), suit, tomatoes, bananas, strawberries and have also witnessed movements for giving up boots, waist spring mattresses, cold baths, linen clothes, woolen clothes, sleeping more than six hours, sleeping less than nine hours and lighting fires at the bottom.” Some Lost Motion, A Philadelphia mathematician has figured it out that the telephone com- panies lose 1256 hours’ work every day through the use of the word “please” by all operators and patrons. Another has discovered that the froth on the beer pays the freight Bot as yet no one has estimated the total horse power wasted in swallowing cigarette smoke and forcing it through the nose instead of blowing it from the moutn. Newark News Scandinavian Housekeeping. In Scandinavia the peasant wom en who worked all day in the flelds, have had their fireless methods of cooking for a long time. While break. fast was cooking, the pot containing the stew for dinner was brought @o a boil then placed Inside a second pot, and the whole snugly ensconced between the reather beds, still warm from the night's occupancy. Some of these women had a loosened hearth #tane and a hole beneath, Smart threecornered toque of satin bound with navy blue silk rib bon white Navy blue mounts and bows aud a hig! wel deep gauntle covered wit! I spoke in i pop slarity of | ric hed with the theses Were open-work en ry English style i dresses are ritable works | the skirts being worked In cated designs almost and the it is rather the fashion to mount skirts of this oves 1 Some of these ve of compli to the knees oats worked all over helio- pale-colored slips, order i I tropes, or pale pastel blue This { fon, and for ¢ oid Colors is a revival of an when subtle { chosen the slips the result | CUT FLOWERS IN THE HOUSE | Most Effective Form of Decoration, to Which Too Little Attention is Usually Given, No feature of household can do more to render a room attrac tive than the use of flowers proper arrangement of flowers is an art, demanding study. The Japanese spend years in acquiring this art; but the average person gives to the ar rangement of cut flowers no more thought than is given to the most un esthetic of household tasks the matter of vases. A vase should be considered always in connection with flowers—not as an object of art by itself. Vases of distinctive colors should be used carefully; a neutral tint, green or glasg vases are safest, If you have vases of very positive shades use them only for flowers with which they will harmonize. Yellow pottery, for example, is lovely if filled with yellow flowers or with a combi nation of blue and yellow flowers. Low yellow or purple bowls filled with pansies are a delight to the eye. A gray ginger jar filled with dusty miller and sweet alyssum is a thing of beau. ty: the shimmering silver gray of the foliage and the white of the blossoms harmonize perfectly with the soft-gray jar Another common mistake in arrang- ing flowers is to overcrowd the vase, Never bunch flowers, Each should be put in the water separately to insure Fa good effect. A long strip of lead colled to fit the bottom of vases is the best device for keeping flowers upright. It is not so expensive as the CHILD'S DRESS Of striped satin biue taffeta The new trimmed with four with dress smock! girdle with the rows © lace gathered around the neck siceves of the same material £ FOR THE THROAT AND NE Dutch and Eton Style in colored Boas Give to the Face Collars of Qrder-. Soften ing Effect Lace Curtains Renewed r net cur the powder i args imber of « PRANTL PN PN china or wire arrangements ¢ or the further i ner aqdvar be purchased the same has being squeezed any size A pretty Aaron's rod to hang on the COREY into i # device for flower Water int each opening, and in. Trailing vines clematic, honeysuckle are ceedingly pretty in an Aaron's rod cut between the joints set e1e.~ ex corners of the room are tive, and are to be had vers {a in attrac good col ber rain smocks very convenient things, not only for the rainy day. but for use in clear weather on such oo casions as she goes boating, fishing, motoring or golfing. It is suggested that everyone who owns a motor car should provide himself or herself with two or three of these handy garments for guests. They are made of dull black leather in fairly light weight and are long and full skirted. The double panel of the front has snap fastening and the collar fastens close under the chin, while the wrists are drawn in with elastics to insure absolute pro. tection. These smocks are done up in individual rubber bags. RO SAN Sr A, Fashion's Whims, Dimity and flowered organdie are very fashionable, and lavender, the color of colors in prim victorian days, is very much preferred. ATTORYEYS AT LAY Raory Brogs | BELLEFONIR Ba fMosewors Owvis, Bowes 4 Onvis | Consultation in Baglish and German AR. H. B. SPARGLRES ATTORNEY AT LA® BELLEIONTRY Prastioes In all the cour Consultation English and German. Ofoe, Orider's Rusbagy Puliding be (CLEMENT BALE - ATTORNEY AT LAW PELILRFONTR, Po. Ofios B. W. corner Diamond, due Goose @ ( Pest National Bank. by Penns Valley Banking Company Centre Hall, Pa. DAVID RK. RELLER, Tashievw Receives Deposits . . . @& Discounts Notes , 4 “ 80 YEARS EXPERIENCE Traoz Manes Dewrons Corvmiawts &a Anyone sending a shetoh and puickly ssosriatn sur opinion free w mrention is probably Piguiatie © tons strictly conf dential. Handbook on sant Trea (Fidest enor fOr seoort Patents taken through Mess & special noice, without caarge, ia the Scientific American, ANE Ls Tl Wed ear | four monihs, $1 pyall newsd UNN & Co ze ame New | Progen (1Mne Money to Loam em Ties Mortgage Office ts Crider’s Stone BELLEFONTE Pa Connection |. H.Q. STROHMNEIER, GENTRE MALL, . . . . . Fan Manufaocturer,ef and Dealer in | HIGH GRADE ... MONUMENTAL Weoumr/ in all kinds of Marble am QOranite. ea ee la - was cari gt A — ROALSBURS TAYERN - axon ROA Fabdituven SERS OLD FORT HOTEL sRARD ROYER ne he by Loostion | Gee me Booth of Oaners Hall retain, fe i] wears prepared Sr a uel DR. SOL. M. NISSLEY, YETERINARY SURGBON. ——— A graduate of the University of Pesa’s ——
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers