MAIDA’S SHIPWRECKED WOOER By H. M. EGBERT (Copyright WwW. G. Chapman.) by AIDA stood still and looked at the black object upon the beach. At first thought it was a seal, washed ashore after the great storm that had whipped up the shingle in great ridges all around the lighthouse rock. Then she saw that It was a man. She held her breath in terror. Pres- ently ventured to draw nearer. It was young man, with dark hair and a pale face, the tan of the neck in a V where the shirt lisclosed the white of the skin she she a ene open colla a moment Maida did not know Then, moved by compas she kneit beside him and ed his head upon her knees, while ghe to revive him, chafing his hands and dashing sea water upon his face. Ail the while her heart beat furious. She had never seen a man before, whit to do. sion, rest. tried ly. except some occasional sea captain, grizzled and bowed, who rowed out to the lonely and the who brought oil and provisions in his motor boat. Maida's mother had kept the light- man lighthouse, house ever since Maida was born. had lived alone, tending light ceaselessly, a worn and eled, hard-featured, taciturn old wom- there 1 bought her daughter to read Maida had spoken of her the world but 3 gestion aroused ! 's fury to such a degree that Maida had at last to acquiesce in her lot as evitable, The - sea captains, looked at her afraid of the grim whose loneliness had turned brain They spoke to Malda hurriedly, and always watched to avoid the old light. an, who sel had m spoke, taught Often and write, She books and desire to see the very outside ; sug- the mother come i in- they been though had old woman, pityingly, her e house keeper's anger. The young ma a pair of dazzlingly blue eyes on Maida. “Am I dead and are you a fairy?” he asked. “No.” Inch He gr tered. “Let n She hi om ( pened answered Maida, rock. ined, * he } Stand “1 remen " mut- we see if 1 1. i him to iis wot stood t i 1 fousl he sen impossible. “1f me,” said t “Why? In regarding her curiously. men. She quired d Maida. » place where I can fo opportunity young man, Maida. “The You can stay there and you Mother leave up the store- you won't comes ing iv?" asked the “yes.” of the tower. answered base , a food. 8 oil from will me to room. you?’ EO 8000, answered the “I think,” he hing is broken after all It feels as If a rib had can” as 1 man, groan + A “AS soon young added, -in my side, gone.” Maida got him to the base of the tower and made him comfortable upon some sacking. The young man himself out at He told her how he had been on the bark that had gone ashore two miles away the night be He had been the only survivor when the lifeboat swamped, ‘He had clung to it until the waves washed him ashore off Inch rock. Then he had remembered nothing. Maida listened In fascination as he told her his story. He was the only son of a rich importer, an Englishman who had settled In the Canaries and married a Spanish lady. He, too, had been tired of his island. His father, reluctant to lose his only child, had at last granted him permission to sail on a voyage to Boston, to which port he had consigned an Importation, He spoke of his own island home in terms which aroused every dormant desire in the girl to travel. His own father had spent his youth in the Unit- ed States, and, strangely enough, not far from the lighthouse—at Seabury, on the Maine coast, “Malda! Maida! child?” Malda started in terror and ran up the lighthouse stairs as her mother summoned her. “Where have you been, Malda?" “On the shore, mother,” faltered the girl, and she lowered her eyes, unable to meet her mother's piercing gaze, “Aye, dreaming of sweethearts, I'll warrant. All my words to you for nothing. Didn't I refuse a handsome young fellow, and rich, who loved me to distraction, because I had learned all men were villains?” “Yes, mother.” “You'll stay with your old mother, Malda?' The voice was pleading now, and it was the first time Malda's mother had ever pleaded with her, The girl's eyes filled; she nodded and turned away. But those stolen hours were the sweetest In which the girl had lived. They loved each other at sight, she and the young mdn in the basement of the lighthouse. They planned =a thousand things, When he got well he was to confront Malda's mother . . “some stretched Case, fore, Where are you, boldly, and demand Maida by natural right. If she refused, they two would | go away together in the next sea cap tain's boat that touched at Inch rock Maida listened with beating heart Canaries, of reject bride; his father, who would the his son made of the tropical trees and | cholee of a So i The nights and man had recovered injury, And’ they e the method of breaking the crazed old woman Malda feared her mother no longer. She to have unfolded from girlhood to womanhood in those three days; and, if sensible of it, her | mother's toward her had insengibly altered. On the fourth night the mild air and a brilliant them from the cellar, new the old | woman ed, she al ways sat, ght, thincking- of what Maida It safe If they kept tower, wandered her three young days parsed from planned news to ver the above, seemed us demeanor moon Above, they he beside tempted 1 n would sented the | never knew, under the together, and { as : wis on kiss, Insensible of the time, they wandered on. Suddenly slight them, them mother, frantic, with rage an She s! and Nook passage of startled Malda’'s d grief. ! bab fl noise Before stood her fist at Maida bled incoherently. “Come, mother, sald we pli 1 ¥¢ iyed man, “I own trick, but It 3 washed +} where the dear a A na £ 1 lives, “Ay sobbed e, you've I the old her, I'll kill the tower and “Now, mothe yo You haven't created her ight Who er today? except tell » Malda Ol somet and sneer when 1 tell the belle Ma stand ory ths young “I do." she {8° n was Just English wanted me Maida. I knew it So [ came here, “There me—the young He care let him. pity and not love, there's and r man might trust my girl none other, one Geoffrey Hale in th The young man, attentively, started forward. “My father!” he cried. “You are Louise Troy. He has often spoken of you. Look at me, mother. Don't you see my father's face in me?” Incredulously the old woman seized him by the shoulder and stared into his eyes, Suddenly a mask seemed to fall from her face. “I have-—lived sald solemnly. IJ" He caught her as she stumbled for. ward. But he knew that, having her day, she could rest peacefully till her night ended. wanted to for couldn't would #1 nie alive to like him, but to world.” had then a who and for this good she her. day,” to “Ila Fiddler Crab One of Oddities of Nature There 18 one member of the crab family for which the Latin name is Gelasimus, meaning “laughable.” The name seems appropriate, for he is a very queer little fellow, says the Mont. real Star. The male has one claw of Immense size, the cher being quite small. The big claw is brightly eol- ored, and when he ru he waves it about as If he were energetically beckoning, or playing stirring tune on a violin; hence he i« often known as the “calling erab” or “fiddler crab.” Fiddler crabs Inhabit various parts of the world and usuaily are found in large numbers on muddy or sandy flats left dry by the tide, where they may be seen hurrying over the sand or peering out of their holes, into which they vanish when alarmed. The holes, about a foot deep, are made by the crab digging up and carrying away mud or sand. 4 Excess Baggage! “This ear has four-wheel brakes" began the salesman, “Applesauce!” snorted the flaming youth. “Show me one with four ae celerators and no brakes.” le Iv a business for vision and forehandedness @? G LL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA BE EL as + 3 Wik Abi rarat NR, SUBSCRIBE FOR AND ADVERTISE IN ‘THE REPORTER