THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL, Pa. Sr “I'l try. I'mo not very good. 1do a | him. Of all the women he had known, good wany things, you know.” she had most truly sod unselfishly Here, strangely enough, it was the | loved him neellor who fumbled for hand Very nearls { swi the { itn of {in whieh Olga a — ET EE RE ES LS ST ASTI RNY BORDER, WARNED TO MMITTEE’S PLANS how far your |, y | You have |, nand William he | he ttiich had spel iis nuers . Jare thin int, he to go to the 1odge, lock that night Kam knocking at the door of wentment. entering with it You will “1 need a lantern,” “wy a dra There's draft 100 1 ge ross her knee. In lonked very young-—— No unused al v1s padlock and CHAPTER XIV. The Crown Prince's Pilgrimage The d hen OI n in the nigh thing." On + ¢dny when she s&h i returned, the countess rouse erase] Th ning of such a pilgrimage ‘uriously, while enough to send for Black Humbert, | dawned suddenly on the bo} is o3 . r bar in the kitchen below. He had | filled, and because he consider t un- me to her by whi hat she was malingering un- {manly to weep, he slid from hair | came, the terrorists olors gain will 4 « wan | leaders and speech secure the put into believed t {til he saw her, but her flushed and | and to the window, wopl even g i hollow cheeks showed her condition. |} n afraid he's going to die | kneelir she turt 4 ie : “You must return and explain,” she | aaid, in a smothered voice { mind. It was poss ; if cenled. re, will Sop : aid. “I shall need more time, after {| The chancellor followed him to the | be made plausible, with her assistance, time, the Prine e Ferdinand all.” | window, and put an arm around his | And at the vision it evoked-——Mettlich's Otto. Who will SUSE Fi When he hesitated. she added: | shoulders, “Even that would not be horror and rage, Hedwig's pul ng | 108 Bone antastic gard “There are plenty to watch that 1 do | so terrible. Otto.” he sald. “Death, | tears, her own triumph-—she took a atval : die kos?" inauired ‘oll a not escape. I could mot, if I would. | fo the old, is not terrible. It is an deep breath. Revenge with a ven But the Ne UY ed “He Adel I have not the strength.” | open door, through which they go glad. | geance, retaliation for old hurts and | bert in a salad voice, iy ean “If madame wishes, I can take a let- | ly. because—because those who have | fresh injuries, these were what she | YOU Set a day, W the king may es {n | Ally? 1 thought all hung on the king's death.” | Karl Left Her There at Last. ' ith blood ard al * panue- | . bt ter.” | gone ahead are walting just beyond: found on her knees, while the beil of hell break loose, [by one. No one knows where, but all | She pondered over that, interlacing the valley commenced the mass, snd | Karl failed bor. She clinched | suspect. Student meetings are pro-| her fingers nervously as she reflected. “Are my mothor and father wait- [a small boy, very rapt and very earn- | hibited, The yearly procession of “I will send no letter,” she decided, | ing?” est, prayed for his grandfather's life countess did not sleep. 8he veterans is forbidden, for they trust “but I will give you a message, which | “Yes, Otto” Yet the bargain came very close to King Karl becomes acquaint. ed with the troubled state of the country in the next install. ment. Il i brain, | none, even their old soldiers, The you can deliver.” [ie considered. “And my grand {being made the other way that day, ’ , With every fiber of her Ke mmoning her arguments. She would | council meets day after day in secret “Yes, madame,’ | mother?” and by Karl himself, i 1 them, for she kKnew-—npone better | session.” “Say to the committee that I have “Yeu On the day of the pilgrimage Karl | ¢ great a handicap was hers.| “But the army" | reflected and that 1 will do what they “He'll be very glad to sce them all | found himself strangely restless and _. . ved Karl, and he knew it. What! "They do not trust the army.” ask. As far,” she added, "as lies in lagnin” | uneasy. Olga Loschek haunted him, (TO BE CONTINUED) win her strength had become he r| Karl's face was grave. Something my power. 1 can only try.” “Very happy. indeed. But we need | her face when he had told her about ————————— — RKDeSS, [of the trouble in Livonia he had “That is all the committee expecta” | him bere, too, for a while, You need the letter, her sagging figure when he | Japanese are planning to link two Yet she was composed enough when. | known. But this argued an immediate | he sald civilly, and with a relief that | him and—1. So we will go and pray | had left her, | of their islands with a rallroad tun. before the sun was well up, the ma- | crisis, | was not lost on her, “With madame’s | to have him wait a little longer be Something like remorse stirred on nel, 4.000 feet of which will be under chine dr up ‘a the village before “On the king's death,” the countess | Intelligence, to try 1s $0 succeed.” | fore be goes away, How about it?" (him. She had taken grest riska for | the sea.