HELP YOURSELF GET WELL FAST F you have been ill, and it seems as if never would get your back, you need the won- derful s and rebuilding qualities of 's Pepto-Mangan, It has helped thousands of invalids and Suvalttots 10 . back their strength, put on finn flesh, eat well, sleep well, feel well and BE well! Your druggist has Gude's Pepto- Me uid or tablets, as you pre- Gude’s epto-jangan Toniciand Blood Enricher Vaseline US Pee CARBOLATED PETROLEUM JELLY No skin break too small for notice. Be very wary of cuts, scratches and skin abrasions, no matter how slight. ‘‘Vaseline™ Carbol- ated Petroleum Jelly—applied at once—Ilessens the possibility of infection. It comes in bottles— at all druggists and general stores. CHESEBROUGH MFG. COMPANY (Consolidated) State St. New York Every " Vaseline” product is recom mended everywhere because of its absoe lute purity and effectiveness. » Not a Laxative Nujol is a lubricant=—not a medicine or laxative — so cannot gripe. When you are constipated, not enough of Nature's lu- bricating liquid is produced in the bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Doc- tors prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natural lubri- cant and thus secures regular bowel movements by Nature's own method = lubrication. Nujol TRE rte A LUBRICANT =NOT A LAXATIVE | When the body begins to stiffen and movement becomes painful it is usually an indication that the kidneys are out of order. Keep these organs healthy by taking LATHROP'’'S . g A GOLD MED, Theworld’s standard remedy for kidney; liver, bladder and uric acid a Famous since 1696. Take regularly and keep in good health. In three sizes, all druggists. Guaranteed as represented. Look for the name Gold Medal on every box accept no imitation Bird Well Named. ptarmigan Lagopus thought, to the close resemblance of the bird's feet to the feet of the hare: the legs belng thickly covered with short feathers right to the very claws. This thick, warm clothing of the legs, whose life is spent on mountain snow- field or cold plains, Ancient Whipping Post. Delaware's whipping post dates back to the picturesque old Swedish fort days of 1654. The original pil lory is still standing In the court yard of New Castle tounty, MAKE IT YOURSELF! Hair wave, gloss, golden-glint, shampoo and other personal items can easily end quickly be made. Send for FREE list with instructions or in- clude Se and recelve your cholce of a 15¢ package of Ingredients. Economy Drug Co, Newark, N. J.—Advertise ment, Noe That? We want our friends to think about us, but not to reflect on us—~Boston Transcript. Wright's Indian Veyetabls Pills conialn nothing but vegetable Ingredients, which act as a tonle and purgative by stimu. and not by Irritation. Advertisement. wil! it you don’t feei superior you not offend by acting superior. BRI IONS BOs ov - > ®" 8 678" 876" $88 ) Brown and Company CHAPTER Xill—Continued, pn | Eaton was distinctly frightened by the revelation he just had had of San- tolne's clear, implacable reasoning re. garding him; for none of the blind man's deductions about him had been wrong-—-all had been the exact, though Incomplete truth, It was clear to him that Santoine was close —much closer even than Santolne himself yet appreciated-—to knowing Eaton's identity; It was even prod able that one single additional fact— the discovery, for Instance, that Miss Davis was the source of the second telegram received by Eaton oa the train—would reveal everything to Santoine. And Eaton was not certain without any new not reach the any moment. So would truth unalded at before this happened. But so long as left the act until outside : that was open only room with It, he he had recelved and he had not help; he could nat not from received As reviewed, these of Harriet ; ghe | his mind ngid again at her . this time, met his, but immediately. » door, him aim, glanced she made no He went ou n) r and elosed the inn the outer doors to Bl: everal you, was not ine asked cCOuYersa- “yi while she - which for 3 correspondence I me “Yes, Father.” “I would rather 3 Ory Very after me: d¢ not have his inquiry, to give whole attention t You yourself will “Yes, Father. Do you want any- Avery to me “Not of you; send CHAPTER XIV Donald Avery Is Moody. Harriet went down the stairs the study; she passed through father; then she returned to the study, She closed and fastened the doors, and after glancing about the room, she re safe to the right of the door. slid back the movable panel, opened the safe and took out a bundle of corre. She closed safe and panel the correspondence to her father's desk, she began to look over it This correspondence—a consider with wire clips and the two envelopes bound with tape which she had put into the safe the day before—made up spoken to her. These letters repre sented the contentions of willful, pow- erful and sometimes ruthless and vio. lent men. Ruin of one man by an other—ruin financial, social or moral, or all three together—was the inten. tion of the principals concerned In this correspondence; too often, she knew, one man or one group had car ried out a flerce Intent upon another: and sometimes, she was aware, these bitter feuds had carried certain of her father's clients further even than personal or family ruin; franid, vio lence and--twice now--even murder were represented by this correspond. ence; for the papers relating to the Warden and the Latron murders were here. She had felt always the horror of this violent and ruthless slide of the men with whom her father dealt ; but now she knew that setual appre. ciation of the crimes that passed ns business had been far from her, And. strangely, she now reglized that it was not the attacks on Mr. Warden asd her father—overwhelming with horror as these had been—which were bring. ing that appreciation home to her. It was her understanding now that the attack was not meant for her father but for Eaton. Though Harriet had never belleved that Eaton had been concerned in the attack upon her father, her denial of it had been checked and stifled be- cause he would not even defend him. self, She had not known what to think; she had seemed to herself to be walting with her thoughts in abey- ance; until he should be cleared, she had tried not to let herself think more about Eaton than was necessary. Though he was involved with her fa- ther In some way, she refused to be wis against her father, but clearly he was not with him. How injury he had suffered was some sueh act of man against man as these let Wail Safe to the Right of the Door. ra and statemer presented? She oked carefully thro 1 all the nits of she could wot find anything which hb pushedethe thinking. elped her ton's side: It was be ng to help Eaton that d been killed. We ready to hel new as much abe apparently, ha from his own now Keeping it father included. had underst this long bef on for Eaton on the train and, in p » cnuse of his considerate treatme him all through. of being Eaton's manner to her father, she felt feeling toward bim a feeling which to explain to herself as sympathy. 3 ner ire herself-t his attd flooding her, lat She got up suddenly and went to the door and looked into the hail; a servant came to her. “Is Mr. Avery still she asked, Miss Santoine; with Mr. San. tolne?” “No, out.” “Thank you.” She went back, and bundling the correspondence together as it had been before, she removed the books from a he has wall-safe corresponding to the one to the right of the door from which she had taken the papers. The combina. tion of this second safe was known only to her father and herself. She put the envelopes into it, closed It, and replaced the books, Then she went to her father's desk, took from a drawer a long typewritten report of which he had asked her to prepare a digest, and read it through: conscious. ly concentrating, she began her work. At three she heard Avery's motor, and went to the study door and looked out as he entered the hall “What have you found, Don?" she inquired, “Nothing yet, Harry.” “You got no trace of them? “No; too many motors pass on that road for the car to be recalled par ticulariy. I've started what inquiries are possible and arranged to have the road watched In case they come back this way.” . He went past her and up to her fa- ther. . 8he returned to the study and put away her work, Dinner was served In the great Jacobean dining room, with walls pan. eled to the high ceiling, logs blag Ing in the big stone fireplace. As they sented themselves, she noted that Avery seemed moody and uneotnimu- nicative ; something, clearly, had frei. tated and disturbed him: and as the meal progressed, he vented his frrita- tion upon Eaton by affronting him more openly by word and look than he had ever done before In her pres ence, She was the more surprised at his doing this now, because she knew that Donald must have received from her father the same instructions as had been given herself to learn what. ever was possible of Eaton's former position in life, Before Eaton's entrance into her life she had supposed that some time a8 8 matter of course, she was going to marry Donald. In spite of this, she had never thought of herself as apart from her father; when she thought of marrying, it had been always with the idea that her duty to her husband must be secondary to that to her father: that had pted Avery not because hut essential to rying Donald would permit her life to go on she knew ghe Donald become n« ary 0 her he now _ece he had ¥ oecCnuse much ns it wis and a power; wlial position wealth and was feeling that he hings, that his COnsSCious Was while bh + 1} em + only ieht for: by 4 ght for: but that “You down, don't mind my ecaliing Hurry; it Is so long had few minutes gether,” he pleaded, “What is it asked, "Only to see you, dear—Harry.,” He took her hand again: she resisted and withdrew it. “I can’t do any work tonight, Harry. I find you since we even a aione to you want, Don?" she more the evening isn't here; your i suppose.” “No; I have it, Don.” “You? “Yes: Father didn’ ered by that work just 1 tell you?” “He and told me that, of that he had asked me as much as you could : Id he do that?” “I thought that 3 need them, I'll get it them? She got up ar Papers, Dao You 3 12 went toware iG put them ; tene it was aving Im 41 dinner, but she hes ise and leave ti} linher cigars and the sculine convers: men ather's orders before she is terseting nsrucio Toward iimself and } or a time, idly then, as no servan » hall hils footsteps ten and she mistook for ti got up suddenly and mentarily ose Avery, she upstairs, It her rooms that she of this from ght But she had fow ated that was that Avery again been In her minutes when her apprec action 5 shrank she seeing that “Will You Come Down for a Few Min- utes, Please, Marry ™ house telephone buzzed, and answer. ing it, she found that it was Donald speaking to her, “Will you come down for a few minutes, please, Harry?” Some strangeness In his tone per. plexed her. “Where are you? she asked, “In the study.” She went down ni once. Ag he came to the study door to meet her, she saw that what hed perplexed her in his tone was apparently only the remnant of that frrliation he had showed nt dinner, He took her hand and drew her into the study. she CHAPTER XV Santoine's “Eyes” Fail Him, Eaton, coming rather breakfast He chose his breakfast on the sideboard, and servant set them before him on him, he inquired after Miss down morning, found the dishes waited fasted some time before and with her father: Mr. Avery had breakfasted; Mr. Blatchford not yet down. As Eaton lingered over his breakiast, Miss Davis passed through the hall, accompanied by a maid. The mald admitted her into the study and closed the door: afterward, the maid remained in the hall busy with some morning duty, and her presence and that of the servant in the breakfast room made it imposcible for Eaton to attempt to go to the study or to risk speaking to Miss Davis, A few min utes later, he heard Harriet Santoine descending the stairs; rising, he went out into the hall to meet her. “I don’t ask you to commit yourself for longer than today, Miss Santoine,” he said, when they had exchanged greetings, “but-—for today-—-what are the limits of my leash?” “Mr. Avery Is going to the country club for lunch; 1 believe he Intonds to ask you if you care to go with him.” She turned away and went into the study, closing the door behind her. Ea- ton, although he had Onished his break. fact, went back into the breakfast room, He did no! know whether he would refase or accept Avery's invita tion ; suddenly he decided. After wait. ing for some five minutes there over a second cup of coffee, he got up and crossed to the study. “I beg pardon, Miss Santoine,” he explained his interruption, “but you did not tell me what time Mr. Avery is likely to want me to be ready to go to the country club.” “About half-past twelve, I think." “And what time shall we be coming buck?” “Probably about five." (TOU BR CONTINUED) WAS Low also was WRIGLEY'S The Great Americas Sweetment provides pleasant action for your teeth, also penetrating the crevices and cleansing them. Then, ft digestion. Use WRIGLEY’S every meal--see much betier you feel. y too, aide after how A = i Good to the last drop | Elore than a slogan ¥ to the man whose travels have taught him how bad coffee can taste; it is a downright stale ment of fact, | MAXWELL I HOUSE COFFE ene Ee - Fa Many Species in Kentucky. In Kentucky, which is a center of belt, are there book of for Tree associa- the cone-bearing lowed iif of of school estry of American species Mexico trees Virtue reward if it can cessity, is its me ne Own hi his foibles, but he never 3 anecdotes of his bovhood days. Write Now for 32-Page at] how good a cigarette really can be made Orchard Man (fF years’ sxperience in growing, packing, marketing Northwest apples) wants position in East. Strictly rellable and capable of managing orchard and packing house Fess refs. CO. Peterson, Dox 25, Stratford, Wash, WANTED--MAN WITH AUTO pte IIT ATE am Amnsan Frofuch Cor Dept. A. Cleveland, y save East 28rd Btrest, NEW
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers